Drugs

Stranraer GO Team 2022

Having had to cancel a planned GO Team to advertise a ‘Let’s Talk about Drugs’ event in September 2020 due to Covid, we were glad it was finally able to go ahead on 14th-17th April (with the team arriving the night before and leaving the morning after).

While recent teams have carried out a variety of tasks, this one was focused on leaflet distribution. We gave out leaflets to the town of Stranraer as well as Castle Kennedy - and also gave out some in the town centre on the Saturday afternoon.

In the evenings, the team had the opportunity to spend time in the homes of various folk in the congregation, which proved to be times of great mutual encouragement. On the first evening, we also watched a video of a talk on ‘Understanding Addiction’.

The audio from the advertised talk on ‘What makes us human?’ can be found here, while Trevor Wills’ story of redemption from a background of drug abuse can be watched below:

Let's Talk About Drugs

On Sunday 17th April, we’ll be hosting an event at which Trevor Wills will tell his story of drug addiction and the hope and new life that enabled him to break free.

On the morning of the same day, our minister, Stephen, will be speaking on the subject: ‘What makes us human?’

All are very welcome to attend. Refreshments will be served following Trevor’s talk in the evening.

See the leaflet below for more info:

Drug addiction: Is there any hope?

Scotland is known for many things: its history, castles, culture, islands, mountains, lochs, authors, humour. But sadly we’re also now known as the drug death capital of Europe. While drug deaths in 2021 fell slightly after rising for seven years in a row, deaths per million still far outstrip rates anywhere else in Europe. The death rate here is more than three-and-a-half times that of England and Wales. The number of drug-related deaths in Scotland has increased substantially over the past 20 years and is now almost three times higher than it was a decade ago. Almost two thirds of the deaths were of people aged between 35 and 54, with the average age increasing from 32 to 43 over the past two decades. The gap between deaths in the most deprived and least deprived parts of the country have also widened, with those in the most deprived areas now 18 times more likely to die a drug-related death.

Here in rural South West Scotland, we’re far from exempt from the dependence, despair and death that drugs bring. A couple of years ago a BBC documentary entitled ‘These pills may kill you’ explored the record rise of drug deaths in Dumfries and Galloway. The documentary highlighted the rise in black-market drugs being sold on social media. One former drug addict from Dumfries said that he used to roam the streets for hours to find the drugs he was looking for – whereas ‘Now, go on to Facebook, go on to What’s App, two minutes, sorted. And maybe only 20 minutes later it's delivered’. This has also led to changes in the type of substances that people are using, with drugs in pill form like Xanax rising in popularity.

Nicola Sturgeon has described the issue as ‘shameful’, but fierce debates have raged as to what to do about it. Methadone has been at the heart of drug treatment strategies since the 1980s – when it was introduced to combat the risk of HIV through drug users sharing needles – but its use has been widely criticised by recovering addicts and drugs workers.

In 2019, the SNP backed decriminalising the possession and consumption of drugs, and last year Scotland’s Lord Advocate announced that simple possession of Class A drugs should no longer be treated as a serious criminal offence. Tom Buchan, a former president of the Association of Scottish Police Superintendents, described the move as ‘a surrender – the white flag has come up’. In fact, the Scottish Government would like to go further and introduce so-called shooting galleries (officially sanctioned drug consumption rooms where addicts can inject themselves), but have so far been blocked by Westminster. Meanwhile, drug-related hospital stays as a result of cannabis use reached an all-time high in Scotland last year. In fact, cannabis-related admissions to psychiatric units have increased by 74 per cent since the Class B drug was effectively decriminalised in Scotland six years ago.

But amidst all the darkness, some are finding hope. One of my fellow football chaplains, Stuart Patterson, from Easterhouse in the East End of Glasgow, was interviewed by the BBC a few years ago about his journey from heroin addict to pastor. ‘There is hope’, he says. ‘The love of God in my life has made the difference’. Another testimony of change comes from Stephen McCallum, from the Niddrie estate in Edinburgh, whose story was featured in the Sun. He was an addict and drug-dealer for 19 years, but found hope through his local church. His brother had become a Christian a few years before, and while he was happy for him, Stephen thought ‘people in the church wouldn’t have time for guys like me’. And yet he went along – and not only realised that the people were different from what he expected – but he also found the new life that Jesus offers.

In our own church, we have people with similar stories. In fact, in a few week’s time, my friend Trevor Wills is going to come and tell his story of how the use of recreational drugs became an addiction that he couldn’t get out of. But now he’s left it all behind and is an elder in his church. As he puts it, ‘this is my story of drug use, and the hope and new life that enabled me to break free’. Trevor will be with us at 5:30pm on Sunday 17th April and we would love for many to come, hear his story, and find the hope that he has found.

Related articles

Completing the Tenner (Review of Stuart Patterson’s book)
Methadone programme 'is a black hole', says drug misuse expert (BBC)
Is there an alternative to being parked on methadone? (BBC)
Is Jesus Enough for Drug Addicts? (Mez McConnell)
Poverty Safari – Darren McGarvey – An Important Book

Published in the Stranraer & Wigtownshire Free Press, 31 March 2022

Completing the Tenner

Book review by Ian Murphy. Stuart Patterson and Stephen both serve as football chaplains:

41RIrrGFJdL.jpg

Scotland’s drug abuse epidemic has been back in the headlines recently. Stuart Patterson is someone who escaped it - but only because of God’s intervention. Completing the Tenner tells of his story, from growing up in Easterhouse in the East End of Glasgow, through heroin addiction, and recovery thanks to the Christian charity Teen Challenge.  

The story rests on a phone call his mother receives when Stuart is visiting her, trying to complete the tenner (borrow enough money to pay for his next fix). The man on the other end of the line asks to put Stuart on. He’s a Christian minister, and he is able to persuade Stuart to enrol in a rehab programme. Soon he is on an overnight coach to a retreat in Wales where he is able to kick his drug habit, and begin the journey of conversion that eventually leads him into the ministry himself. 

There are some great reminiscences about his childhood in Glasgow, the gang wars and drug culture. My only criticism is the book’s length: some of the early chapters - interesting as they are - could be abridged somewhat. There are really two books here: a childhood memoir and a conversion testimony. But the narrative really takes off with that phone call. 

The book does owe a debt to the seminal work, The Cross and the Switchblade, about David Wilkerson’s ministry in New York a generation earlier. In fact, the Teen Challenge mission, which rescued Stuart, sprang from it! 

This is a story of the light of the Gospel of Jesus Christ reaching into the darkest and most desperate of circumstances. It proves that there is no one who is too far gone to receive God’s saving grace!  I would recommend this book to anyone who is struggling with addiction. 

Once an Addict

Book review by Ian Murphy:

addict-book-cropped_1000x1500-1.png

Once an Addict by Barry Woodward is an inspirational story of God’s transforming power. It tells of his 15-year heroin addiction before his conversion to Christianity.

Though he came from a fairly good background he was drawn into a world of drugs in 80’s Manchester. It is a vivid picture of a dark underworld – a daily struggle to feed his habit. Barry’s drug addiction takes him through spells in prison and psychiatric hospitals.

Like many a conversion, his story turns when all seems lost. In his early 30s he moves away from the city and is rehoused in Rochdale. He has split up with his long-term girlfriend, he’s still addicted to methadone, and on benefits – isolated in a new environment, a world away from his drug dealing days in Manchester. His life changes with a chance encounter on a bus. A man sits down beside him and Barry notices a borstal dot on his face (an old prison tattoo) and this gets him into a conversation. It transpires that this man attends a local church and a fellow worshipper is a neighbour of Barry’s. When he’s invited along, he has misgivings about attending a church full of “respectable” people (sound familiar?). In time, though, his life is transformed by worship, prayer and bible study. Listening to a cassette given to him by one of his new friends he has his moment of epiphany. He excitedly calls his pastor. “I’ve just found my calling – I want to be an evangelist!” His pastor replies calmly, “Let’s pray about it.”

After a couple of years at Cliff Bible College in Derbyshire, Barry leaves to set up his Proclaim Trust and to this day tours the world telling his inspirational story. It is a great testimony to God’s providential work in a most unlikely convert!