Guest House is a non-profit charity dedicated to the care of Catholic priests, deacons, brothers, seminarians (and - since 1994 - religious women) who suffer from alcoholism, other chemical dependencies and other addictions involving food and gambling. Opened in 1956 at Lake Orion, Michigan, Guest House is the oldest and continues to operate from its kind anywhere.
Guest House has 68 permanent employees and 61 part-time employees and an annual budget of more than $ 7 million. Guest House operates two accredited care centers and an accredited Health Care Accreditation Commission (CARF). The one in Rochester, Minnesota is for priests and religious men and others, on Lake Orion, Michigan, is for religious women.
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Histori
Guest House was founded by Austin Ripley who is a nationally renowned mystery fiction writer and author of Minute Mysteries, a popular newspaper column featuring self-solving criminal cases, syndicated in more than 170 US newspapers..
Until the early 1940s, Ripley battled his crippling addiction to alcohol. As a recovering alcoholic, Ripley watched through pastor priests that the Catholic priests could not overcome their own addictions. Ripley decided to devote himself to the creation of a treatment program that respects not only the religious vocations of priests and other religious people, but also to maintain their human dignity. First opened in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin in 1951, the Guest House was founded on Ripley's deep belief that his program had to "save the individual, save the call," and in the right order. Guest House finally moved to Lake Orion, Michigan.
Ripley reopened the Guest House on Pentecost Sunday in 1956. The new location of the Guest House will be the former home of William Edmund Scripps newspaper on Lake Orion. Built in 1927 at a cost of over $ 2 million, Scripps Mansion is isolated and has plenty of land that provides a quiet environment for treatment. The purchase price of a large mansion in 1956 was a bargain for just $ 185,000; However, Ripley did not have enough money to meet the purchase price. He was able to raise money with the help of the Detroit Archdiocese, through various fundraising activities and with additional help from Archbishop of Detroit, Edward Cardinal Mooney. Mooney is deeply concerned by his own archdiocesan priest of alcohol and is very impressed when several people have recovered through the Guest House process in Wisconsin. Ripley acquired the necessary funds to make a purchase on loan.
Ripley reasoned, correctly, that these scholars did not have the support of the Church hierarchy (which at the time was the prime, punish alcoholic priest), and that the average priest was better able to recover in the care of the laity, but among them. his male vocation, education, and lifestyle.
When the need for service grows, Guest House finds that there is a long waiting time to enter. In the early 1960s, routine operation took Rip to the prestigious Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, which he felt was a good location for the second Guest House care center. In 1967, the ground was damaged for the Rochester Care Center and opened in 1969.
The Lake Orion Center, originally housed at Scripps house, is now located at a new $ 3.5 million facility on the same property. The new 16-bed center has the latest features for people with disabilities and for religious women who suffer from outpatient problems.
Guest House initiated a collaborative working relationship with the National Catholic Council on Alcoholism and Related Drug Problems (NCCA), whose offices are located on Lake Orion at the time. In 2007, Guest House and NCCA joined to assist the NCCA with its efforts to become a resource for the Catholic lay population, and for further efforts of the Guest House in this regard.
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Location
Guest House currently treats priests, deacons, religious and seminarians at three different facilities located in Minnesota, Michigan, and Mangalore, India.
The priest, deacon, and male religion were admitted to the Guest House center in Rochester, Minnesota (opened in 1969) where the organization enjoys a working relationship with the Mayo Clinic.
At Lake Orion, Michigan, religious women receiving service at a new and sophisticated center opened in 2007 and are designed specifically for sisters who have ambulatory problems. Between 1994 and 2007, religious women were treated on the same campus but at the Scripps home.
Treatment
Annual graduate Guest House joins nearly 2,300 alumni who live around the world, and among more than 7,500 who have been hospitalized since 1956. More than 2,000 still serve the Church as pastors, teachers, counselors, and missionaries. Alumni Guest House enjoys a lifetime recovery rate of at least 75% - which is a much higher percentage than their lay partners - and remains in service for an average of 20 years or more after treatment. Patients come from 165 dioceses and 120 religious communities throughout the United States and 48 other countries.
Primary care
As part of its primary mission, each year the Guest House recognizes up to 125 priests, deacons, brothers, sisters, and seminarians to one of two accredited care centers, CARF-accredited. There, every client remains for at least 90 days for intensive counseling, education, medical and nutritional support, fellowship, recreation and renewal and spiritual growth. In recent years, Guest House has expanded its services to include diagnosis and religious care with food and compulsive gambling/shopping.
Expanded programs
The Guest House program has grown from its initial concentration on alcoholism and other chemical addictions (such as prescription drugs), including religious care with eating disorders and compulsive gambling/shopping. All residents also participate in Alcoholics Anonymous or other appropriate "12-step" programs.
Ongoing care
After their inpatient care, clients are also enrolled in "Sustainable Care," a three-month, three-month program, a week-long return by clients to the center where they receive treatment. In Continuing Care, there is additional counseling, education, fellowship and time for more spiritual renewal.
Funding
Fully 50% of its annual operating budget comes from generous private benefactors through financial contributions from around the world or from special event funds and annual shipments. Donors can give cash and stock prizes instantly, remember Guest House as they wish, or form an annuity or trust for "planned" prizes. Guest House also has a memorial gift program as well as a program to organize Mass for donors' special intentions.
Guest House Institute
The second mission of the Guest House is the Church's hierarchical education in the reality of chemical-based addiction, restoration and tranquility, and the spiritual aspect of it. Toward this end, staff of Guest House Institute and Guest House, Inc. visit at least 50 dioceses and religious orders each year, provide annual conferences, workshops and seminars and maintain an active website.
The mission of the Guest House Institute is to promote the health and spiritual well-being of Catholics by providing educational services related to alcoholism and other addictions, and by promoting and providing research into addiction to alcohol and other addictions that affect the Catholic Church.
The Guest House Institute
- Develop training and educational opportunities for Church hierarchy, priestly, religious, and laity in regard to addiction;
- Working with seminarians, universities and dioceses and religious institutions to facilitate ongoing education and training for those who study for ministry;
- Offer family retreats, seminars and seminars for those affected by addiction;
- Provide a secret consultation to those in leadership and services dealing with potential or actual addiction problems;
- Work with them in parish ministries to implement programs that meet the needs of parishioners, being a friendly community for those who are addicted;
- Facilitate the education and training of Catholic professionals confronted with addiction complications in their work and ministry;
- Develop and implement an affordable continuing education experience for counselors and addiction ministers to improve their skills and understanding.
See also
- Scripps Home
References
External links
- Guest House
Source of the article : Wikipedia