Since 1928, Wayside Cross Ministries has been a haven for the homeless and impoverished in the Fox Valley area. By the body of Christ and through the…
Christian ministries that walk with men and women through addiction recovery — combining clinical care, biblical foundation, lasting community, and the hard, slow work of building a new life one day at a time.
Christian nonprofits in this focus area that have been verified against The Most Trusted Standard.
Since 1928, Wayside Cross Ministries has been a haven for the homeless and impoverished in the Fox Valley area. By the body of Christ and through the…
Addiction is devastating families. And the cost of quality treatment has made it nearly impossible for most of them to get the help they desperately…
Since 1914, Bethesda Mission has been a missionary arm of the local church, reaching out to men, women and children of all races, nationalities, and…
Big Table exists to see the lives of those working in the restaurant and hospitality industry transformed by building community and caring for those…
City Mission of Schenectady, founded in 1906, is dedicated to sharing the Gospel of Jesus Christ in word and deed. Our ministries are seeking to…
At City Relief, we connect people who are hurting and homeless to resources they need to survive, and the hope they need to try. When everything…
City Rescue Mission has been serving the homeless and needy through the love and compassion of Jesus Christ since 1946. The Organization provides…
CityTeam Ministries dba CityTeam is a non-denominational Christian non-profit organization founded in 1957 with operations in California, Oregon and…
God offers everyone a full and satisfying life, but not everyone embraces it. We’ve foundthat many struggle with difficult life experiences, which…
Crossroads Mission is committed to glorifying God by serving those at their crossroads of life. Crossroads Mission offers individualized program…
Homeless shelter, with programs to help the homeless get back into society.
Downtown Rescue Mission is a rescue mission ministry providing meals, shelter, clothing, and discipleship programs for men, women, and families with…
148 nonprofits
Christian addiction recovery ministries take many forms — from long-term residential programs to outpatient counseling to peer support — meeting people at every stage of the journey from addiction to lasting freedom.
Twelve to eighteen month residential programs combining biblical teaching, work therapy, counseling, and community living — research-supported timeframes for sustained recovery from severe addiction.
Licensed treatment facilities offering medical detoxification, psychiatric care, individual and group therapy, and evidence-based addiction treatment — integrated with Christian faith content.
Structured group homes for people in recovery — providing community, accountability, and stable housing during the critical year after intensive treatment ends.
Christian counselors, recovery groups, and ongoing support for people working through addiction without residential care — often the bridge between crisis and lasting recovery.
Counseling, retreats, and resources for the spouses, parents, and children of those struggling with addiction — recognizing that addiction reshapes whole families, not just individuals.
Vocational training, job placement assistance, and re-entry support — helping people in recovery (including those leaving prison) build the stability and purpose that sustained sobriety requires.
Addiction does not discriminate. It reaches into every demographic, every income level, every kind of family. The opioid crisis alone has killed more Americans than every war fought since World War II. Behind those numbers are real people — fathers, mothers, sons, daughters — and behind each of them, families that have prayed for years, lost sleep for years, hoped against hope for years.
Addiction is also not simply a sin to be repented of, nor simply a disease to be medicated. The mature Christian recovery movement has come to understand addiction as a complex reality with biological, psychological, social, and spiritual dimensions — each requiring real attention. Programs that address only one dimension while ignoring others tend to produce short-lived results.
What Christian addiction recovery offers — at its best — is the full picture. Clinical care for the body. Therapy and counseling for the mind. Community and accountability for the social life. And the foundation of biblical truth that addresses the deepest question of all: who am I, and what am I for? Programs that combine all four dimensions, over the long timeframes recovery actually requires, see lives genuinely transformed.
And remarkably, much of this work is offered free or at minimal cost — sustained by donors who believe that someone trapped in addiction shouldn't be locked out of treatment by inability to pay. In a field where private treatment can cost tens of thousands of dollars, the existence of high-quality, accessible Christian recovery programs is itself an act of faith made possible by donor generosity.
Beyond our standard verification framework, here are factors specific to addiction recovery ministries that thoughtful donors often weigh.
Some Christian recovery programs are licensed clinical treatment facilities with credentialed counselors; others are faith-based discipleship programs that don't claim to be clinical treatment. Both can be effective for the right person. Look for ministries that are transparent about their operating model — not faith-based programs that imply clinical capabilities they don't have, or vice versa.
Sustained recovery from severe addiction typically requires twelve months or more of structured support — far longer than the 30-day programs that dominate the commercial treatment industry. Look for ministries offering meaningful long-term programs (six months, twelve months, or longer), or transitional pathways that extend support beyond initial treatment.
The majority of people in addiction also have underlying trauma, mental illness, or both. Excellent recovery ministries understand this — addressing trauma in therapy, recognizing co-occurring disorders, and not treating addiction as a problem that can be solved by willpower or conversion alone.
Modern addiction medicine widely supports the use of medications like buprenorphine for opioid use disorder. Christian programs vary — some integrate medication-assisted treatment; others reject it on theological grounds. Neither approach is inherently wrong, but families considering a program deserve to know which model it follows. Look for ministries that are transparent about their position.
The addiction recovery field generally lacks rigorous outcome data. Excellent ministries are working to change that — publishing realistic completion rates, sobriety milestones at one and five years post-program, and honest accounts of relapse. Beware of ministries whose impact claims rest entirely on testimonials without supporting data.
The highest-risk period for relapse is the first ninety days after leaving structured treatment. Excellent recovery ministries don't end at graduation — they provide alumni community, ongoing accountability, employment support, and pathways to continued recovery. Look for ministries that treat post-program support as a core program, not an afterthought.
Explore verified Christian addiction recovery ministries above — or browse Christian ministries by other causes, locations, and award levels.