When Confession Breaks the Illusion: Walking in the Light of Real Recovery

William James once wrote: “For him who confesses, shams are over and realities have begun; he has exteriorized his rottenness.”

Confession ends the exhausting work of pretending. It pulls what is hidden into the light—not to shame us, but to free us. In recovery, confession is not a one‑time event; it is a rhythm, a posture, a way of walking honestly before God and others. It invites us to step into authenticity, shedding the masks we often wear and revealing the true selves beneath.

When we consider the act of confession, it is crucial to understand that it goes far beyond simply admitting wrongdoings. It encompasses acknowledging our vulnerabilities, our fears, and our shortcomings. It is about facing the parts of ourselves that we might prefer to keep hidden or buried deep within. Confession invites us into a space of liberation, where we can experience the healing power of honesty, not just with ourselves, but with those around us.

Anchor verse – 1 John 1:9 – “If we confess our sins, he who is faithful and just will forgive us our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness.”

This divine reassurance underscores the importance of confession in our lives. This is never a one-and-done moment. Confessing our sins is an active part of our path and spiritual growth. There is a continuous invitation to engage in this practice, to reflect regularly on our actions and attitudes, and to communicate them with sincerity. The act of confession can take various forms: it might be through prayer, journaling, or discussions with trusted friends and mentors.

There is also a communal aspect to confession; it’s about allowing others to bear witness to our journey of growth. This sharing fosters deeper connections, trust, and support within our communities. Confession can also serve as a catalyst for accountability, encouraging us to maintain our commitments to growth and change.

And there is more to confessing than we may fully understand. What are some of the ways we may confess? And what does it refer to when it says to confess our sins? What exactly are we confessing? Most of us may answer that we are to confess any wrongdoing on our part. And that is definitely an aspect of confessing.

But it may also refer to confessing our failures, our doubts, and our feelings of inadequacy. It may involve voicing the pain we carry and the burdens we bear, creating an opportunity for healing. Confession is a profound act of vulnerability that invites grace and understanding into our lives, not only from God but also from those around us who may offer support and encouragement. Through confession, we can truly experience the freedom that comes with honesty, forgiveness, and a renewed sense of purpose on our spiritual journey.

Today – we are going to take a look at how confession is the very courage to stop pretending. To step out of the idea that we need to fake it till we make it. And to see how this all ties into a twelve-step recovery program for Christians walking a path of recovery, desiring to thrive in their sobriety.

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Facing Both Ways: When Christian Recovery Loses Its Direction and the Soul Begins to Drift

I have found moments in my own recovery journey, faith, and life when I realized I have been living divided. One part of my heart longs for God, healing, peace, and truth. Yet, another part wanted to reach back toward toxic patterns, unhealthy attachments, worldly validation, and spiritual compromise. And I found that I am not alone – many people today are exhausted, not because they do not love Christ, because they are attempting to face two different directions at once. This is the spiritual condition A.W. Tozer exposed quite powerfully within Chapter Seven of his work The Set of the Sail. The chapter is titled, Facing Both Ways. Tozer observed a Christianity that spoke Christian lingo while slowly adopting worldly values. He warned of a divided orientation – a soul that attempted to follow God while remaining emotionally attached to the systems that once kept the person in bondage.

For many of us fellow travelers, walking through recovery from addiction, codependency, family dysfunction, spiritual abuse, or faith crisis, this tension feels painfully familiar. Each of us desires freedom, yet sometimes we mourn the chains left behind. We seek Christ, yet fear surrendering our life and will over to His care. We pray for healing yet continue to entertain voices that have wounded us.

However, the Gospel never calls us to a divided direction. Christ invites us into His rest with a wholehearted orientation.

Anchor Verse – Psalm 16:8 (NRSVUE): “I have set the Lord before me; because he is at my right hand, I shall not be moved.”

A divided heart creates instability. Scripture teaches that “the double-minded are unstable in every way” (James 1:8, NRSVUE). Recovery becomes quite fragile when our own direction is unclear. Faith becomes shallow when we attempt to seek both the approval of God and the acceptance of unhealthy systems that tend to distract and lead us away from Him.

Today, let’s take a moment to reflect on how Tozer diagnosed modern Christianity with what he called dual orientation. Theology that faces God, yet desires continue facing the world. The result is spiritual confusion, emotional exhaustion, compromised conviction, and diluted discipleship.

Let’s face it: many Christians on a path of recovery understand this quite deeply and personally. Addiction itself is often rooted in divided affection – wanting peace while feeding into the chaos. Desiring intimacy while hiding in the darkness of dysfunction. Wanting God yet remaining emotionally tethered to destructive patterns.

Christ does not merely improve our attitude and behavior – He reorients the entire person. Are you ready for a spiritual reorientation of the heart, mind, and spirit today?

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Daily Devotional — The First Step

“Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” — Matthew 11:28

My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength is made perfect in weakness. For when I am weak, then am I strong.” — 2 Corinthians 12:9-10

“I know that I am nothing; as to my strength I am weak… but in His strength I can do all things.” — Alma 26:12

Most of us don’t realize it, but the first wound we ever carried wasn’t our addiction—it was the lie we learned as children that we had to survive by becoming someone other than ourselves. We learned to read the room before we learned to read words. We learned to manage chaos before we learned to manage emotions. And somewhere along the way, we mistook helplessness for identity.

That early training didn’t disappear when we became adults. It followed us into our relationships, our faith, our recovery, and even our self‑talk. We still brace when someone raises their voice. We still worry as if worry is a form of love. We still perform, please, fix, rescue, or disappear—because that’s what kept us alive.

But Step 1 interrupts the old script. It invites us to stop pretending we’re the hero of our own story and finally admit the truth: We are powerless. Our lives have become unmanageable. Not because we’re weak, but because we were never meant to carry the weight of being our own savior. This is a heavy realization, but it serves as the foundation for a new beginning—a chance to reframe our lives not through the lens of our past traumas but through the lens of possibility and divine intervention.

This is where the shift begins. This is where the “shoulds” lose their grip. This is where we stop inheriting identity from our past and start receiving identity from God. It’s in this profound moment of acceptance that we realize that our worth is not dictated by our past or the roles we’ve been forced into. Instead, it is shaped by love, grace, and the potential for renewal.

You’re reading this because you’re waking up. You’re recognizing the patterns you inherited. You’re seeing the wounds you carried. You’re noticing the survival roles you never chose. And you’re brave enough to ask what God might do with all of it. This act of awareness is powerful—it’s the beginning of healing, the first step towards dismantling the facades we’ve built over time. It encourages us to confront not only our behaviors but also the underlying beliefs that have served as barriers to our growth.

This devotional will walk you through that first sacred step— from learned helplessness to liberating surrender, from inherited identity to God‑given identity, from self‑reliance to grace. Each section will provide insights, reflections, and exercises designed to deepen your understanding and foster your journey toward authenticity and healing. It’s an exploration of the contours of grace and an invitation to build a relationship with a loving God who doesn’t demand perfection but rather seeks connection.

You’re not alone in this. You’re not broken beyond repair. And you’re not starting from scratch—you’re starting from truth. This truth can be unsettling, but it can also be immensely freeing. As you engage with these concepts and allow them to take root in your life, you’ll find yourself evolving into the person you were always meant to be—whole, healed, and deeply loved for who you truly are. The journey ahead may be challenging, but rest assured, it is also filled with hope, love, and the promise of transformation.

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Sacred Sobriety: Genesis 7:17-20 – When the Flood Prevails – Faith Endures

Every one of us knows what it feels like when the waters rise—when circumstances swell beyond our strength, when emotions surge without warning, when old patterns threaten to drown the progress we’ve made. Yet Scripture reveals a deeper truth: when the flood prevails, God prevails even more. The waters that overwhelm us never overwhelm Him.

Introduction

Welcome, fellow travelers. As we continue our journey through the Daily Exodus, we step into a moment where the floodwaters rise, the ark lifts, and God’s covenant faithfulness becomes the only stable ground in a world filled with uncertainty. In this tumultuous landscape, we find solace in the assurance that we are never alone. Today’s anchor verse reminds us that God does not merely rescue us from the flood—He carries us through it, guiding us with His unwavering love and strength. The same God who lifted Noah above the waters lifts us above addiction, shame, fear, and the remnants of our old life, empowering us to cultivate resilience and hope amidst adversity.

Anchor Verse — Genesis 7:17–20 (NASB2020)

“Then the flood came upon the earth for forty days, and the water increased and lifted up the ark, so that it rose above the earth. And the water prevailed and increased greatly upon the earth, and the ark floated on the surface of the water. And the water prevailed more and more upon the earth, so that all the high mountains everywhere under the heavens were covered. The water prevailed fifteen cubits higher, and the mountains were covered.”

As we traverse this challenging terrain together, let us hold fast to the promise that, just as the ark provided refuge during the storm, our faith acts as our shield, protecting us on this rugged path toward redemption and renewal. In the face of adversity, it is this unwavering belief that offers us solace and strength, enabling us to navigate the darkest valleys and climb the steepest mountains. Each step we take is guided by the light of our convictions, illuminating the way forward. Together, we can draw upon the deep well of inspiration that our shared journey nurtures, fostering resilience and hope as we strive for the brighter horizons that await us beyond the clouds of doubt and despair.

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