Rabia's radical theology of repentance divorced from fear reframes addiction relapse as catalyst for renewal rather than moral failure, allowing parents to model resilience.
Rabia famously rejected the fear-based repentance model of her era, teaching that love of God—not terror of punishment—motivates true transformation. Applied to addiction and parenting, this dismantles the shame cycle that often precedes relapse. Parents in recovery frequently internalize messages that they are irredeemable; one slip triggers the narrative 'I'm a failure, my child would be better off without me.' Rabia's framework inverts this: each moment of awareness—noticing a craving, admitting a mistake to a child, seeking help—is an act of love and recommitment. Repentance becomes renewal, not self-flagellation. When a parent lapses and then chooses recovery again, they teach their child that humans are imperfect, that mistakes don't define worth, and that returning to values matters infinitely more than never falling. This theological reframing is psychologically liberating; it prevents the despair that deepens addiction. Children raised by parents who model this kind of courageous, love-based accountability develop resilience and emotional honesty.
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