Recovery from Humanity for Latter-Day Saints

Recovery from Humanity

for Latter-Day Saints

What is Recovery from Humanity?

It’s the recognition that suffering is not only emotional or behavioral, but a deeper spiritual condition — losing our way, losing clarity, or becoming entangled in distraction and aversion — and the recognition that we can be restored through connection to the love of Jesus Christ.

Recovery from Humanity for Latter-Day Saints offers a Christ centered path to healing through gospel principles, personal accountability, and spiritual transformation. This Structure of Sustainable Recovery is written for participants, sponsors, families, and anyone seeking to understand the spiritual architecture of successful recovery programs. Wherever you stand in the process, you’ll find clear principles that strengthen agency, deepen discipleship, and support lasting change through the love of the Savior.

This framework brings together the strongest elements of major recovery traditions — spiritual, secular, therapeutic, and communal — by revealing the universal structure beneath them and grounding it in the love of the Savior. It does not replace existing systems; it illuminates the architecture that makes them work while clarifying the simple epistemology of change — how we come to know truth through experience, commitment, and transformation.

Built on clean logic, lived experience, and the teachings of Scripture, this edition offers a clear, principle driven path for Latter-Day Saints seeking healing through the love and grace of Jesus Christ. It preserves the doctrines of repentance, confession, forgiveness, and sanctification while honoring the real complexities of addiction, trauma, and human struggle.

There is no “easier, softer way” here — only a transparent, honest framework that clarifies the mechanism of repentance, strengthens daily commitment, and invites readers to walk with Christ at their own pace. This is not a simplified version of recovery. It is the clear version — one that finally makes sense because it draws clarity from the best of what is available in the recovery landscape while remaining fully adaptable to the Latter-Day Saint worldview and the hope of real healing.