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As far as checked pasts- even with serious repentance and devotion to God, it will always be a struggle. If someone had an addiction, it's not so much that they repented and now they are acceptable to date but that they are and will always be a work in progress.
For example, my ex.bf was very straightforward with me about some anger problems he has and gave me past examples with his ex's, he told me about the verbal abuse towards her, he told me about the physical abuse he had from his father, and how he loathed himself. He seriously repented for everything he had done, sought counselling, is a devoted Christian. But regardless. This stuff came up towards me when I was with him. I came along beside him to his counselling sessions. But at then end of it all, the past was too much in the present and destroyed us.
For example, my ex.bf was very straightforward with me about some anger problems he has and gave me past examples with his ex's, he told me about the verbal abuse towards her, he told me about the physical abuse he had from his father, and how he loathed himself. He seriously repented for everything he had done, sought counselling, is a devoted Christian. But regardless. This stuff came up towards me when I was with him. I came along beside him to his counselling sessions. But at then end of it all, the past was too much in the present and destroyed us.
see, i understand your views, but i think there is a huge difference between someone who has been actively abusive and someone who just made some personal mistakes that didn't really ' harm ' anyone but themselves along the way.
( just to clarify, i am not saying that someone who is an alcoholic or drug addict can't hurt people before they reach sobriety and have a major change in heart and shift in perspective... but there is a difference between hurting people because you are destroying yourself and it affects their lives, and having a cluster b personality disorder in which one actively takes their abuse out on people. )
as far as overcoming addictions and therefore always being a work in progress... that doesn't seem like a complete statement to me, because aren't we all ?
however i will say, on the topic of abuse, through all my experience with life in this area i have not known of one case personal or otherwise where an abuser changed for the better. ever. i have read tons and lived this enough to know something about it.
on the other hand i know alcoholics and drug addicts who have been sober for 4 to 10, 20 and 30+ years or more. of all those i have met they are amazing, humble, wise, deep and compassionate people who now live perfectly normal lives. they are capable of being honest with themselves and have repented of all the poor decisions they made in the past and are normally quite ashamed that they ever fell into such a trap. they continually do work to grow and mature in all kinds of ways and are some of the loveliest people i have ever had the pleasure of meeting.
the great thing about them is that they understand about second chances and they understand a lot about intense pain and self loathing, and i have seen in them a quality that i do not find in even very many christians. it is this... they *value* life and every moment they have on this earth now, so much, because they know what it is to truly suffer and lose everything because of something they have done by their own hand. in the aa groups i have attended where i live, i find almost all the people more genuinely humble than i think i have found in any church i have been in.
maybe it's because i understand them and they understand me. there is something like a sparkle in their eye that reminds me of the feeling i get with Christ. a joy and celebration of each moment of life, knowing how delicate it is and how fortunate we are to be alive and have the chance to turn away from bondage. i don't get that depth from any of the churches i have attended. most people in those places don't seem to have gone to the dark corners of knowing what it is to be *truly* humbled and helpless, having never hit the ' rock bottom ' of self loathing that recovered addicts know. the honesty and embarrassment of knowing you did not do your best by others or yourself, and of course God.
i have also found this with many people who have had near-death experiences.
there is so much i could say on this, but i'm pretty tired.