Addiction
An article by Robert Hemfelt, Frank Minirth, and Paul Meier; from
The Answer Bible.
Can any human activity become an addiction? Yes. When carried to an extreme, any behavior can
veer out of control and become the dominant, driving force in a person's life. It can master her. It can consume
him.
Whatever the habit, the two-step pattern is always the same. The first phase is the mental
preoccupation - the obsession. The thought of the activity gabs hold of the person and preoccupies him or her to
the exclusion of everything else. The person cannot shake loose of it. At this point the shopaholic is absorbed,
even obsessed with the idea of a buying binge. She wants to acquire, collect and possess. In the case of the
relationship addict, he is obsessed with the notion of taking charge of the relationship, and perhaps even taking
charge of the other person. After obsession comes the second phase: acting out the obsessive thought. This action
is the compulsion. The relationship addict or the shopaholic loses control, gives in to the mental preoccupation,
and is compelled - even driven - to do whatever he or she feels necessary. She shops. He flirts. Or, in the case of
other addictions, he or she might exercise, work, worry, scrub, or gulp mega-vitamins incessantly.
The list of compulsions is practically endless. Here is a list of some of the most common
compulsions divided into six groups:
Money matters
Health and wellness
Work and play
Service and voluntarism
Relationships
Perfectionism
Related Bible Text: Proverbs 25:28; Jeremiah 17:9-10; Romans 6:11-14; Philippians 2:13-15
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