New rehab center caters to LDS addicts

Residential facility off I-80 already has a waiting list

Published: Friday, Nov. 19, 2004 7:27 p.m. MST
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The last thing H.R. Brown was thinking about nine years ago was joining the LDS Church or starting a drug-and-alcohol treatment program.

"Mormon marketing" was a meaningless term if the Catholic man had ever heard one. As an alcoholic, most things outside your next drink are meaningless.

Wondering where he would land if he ever got sober, Brown saw what is now Renaissance Ranch. Now he looks back and sees what he calls a miracle because he experienced one there — and he continues to see them, small and large.

Tucked away just off I-80 in Parleys Summit, the new residential treatment center geared specifically to members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints doesn't have to market.

There's already a waiting list.

It is one of a number of service-oriented businesses springing up to serve the unique needs of Latter-day Saints whose theology regarding sin, redemption and the vital nature of healthy family relationships is well-defined.

Some, like LDSMingle.com or the new LDSSingles.com, market themselves openly, emphasizing the happiness that comes from new friendship or romantic relationships.

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Both Web sites attract thousands of visitors who are looking to share information and connect with others.

But the darker side of reality for many Latter-day Saints means they are living lives that don't match the values their faith espouses. It's something they often hide to avoid being ostracized, yet addiction of many kinds — particularly to pornography — plagues LDS families in numbers that reflect the national average, according to one study.

Pornography and addiction are often the topics of sermons by top leaders of the LDS Church, which sponsors regular education forums through Brigham Young University that offer advice on how families can deal with such challenges.

The number of forums has skyrocketed in the past decade, with the advent of the Internet and the church's growing membership, meaning services to deal with such problems are likely to be an expanding market for care providers in Utah.

Believed to be the first of its kind anywhere, the ranch offers a 60-day residential drug and alcohol program featuring an LDS adaptation of the 12-step recovery program that focuses LDS understanding of Christ's Atonement and the power of repentance.

Most clients come from the Wasatch Front and have participated in the LDS Church's own weekly addiction recovery meetings. But those who need residential treatment have had no LDS options — until now.

The 5,000-square-foot log cabin looks out over a meandering stream and fish pond. Ducks, chickens and horses call the place home, in addition to Brown's charges — boys and men who are there in a last-ditch attempt to redeem themselves before it's too late.

Recent comments

I would love to open an LDS program for women - any thoughts?

Anonymous | May 15, 2008 at 10:09 p.m.

HAve you found a good LDS program for girls? I have
a daughter I...

Anonymous | Dec. 11, 2007 at 1:27 a.m.

I was hoping there was a program for women. When you send your child...

Ellen | Oct. 18, 2007 at 11:45 a.m.

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Tom Smart, Deseret Morning News

Steve Brown, assistant clinical director; Kris Groves, addictions counselor; and H.R. Brown, intake director, at Renaissance Ranch.

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