Jon Bellamy spoke with an ex-alcoholic & a Senior Legal Adviser
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Jonathan: Wow
John Cartledge: She put up with me for about ten years and then separation. Then she divorced me, we actually got divorced a few days after I'd gone into Strangeways Prison in 1977.
Jonathan: And you were in there I presume because you needed to steal money to be able to buy the alcohol. Is that right?
John Cartledge: Yeah. At that time I'd progressed to drinking on the park benches. That was me lifestyle and the only topic of conversation on the park benches. I mean alcoholics that you see on park benches, you don't see them as much now because they're not allowed, but they're not there because they're trying to enjoy a drink; they're there to avoid the withdrawal symptoms from drink. You develop a tolerance and you've got to have that level of alcohol in you brain and body; more particularly your brain and when that alcohol level reduces then that's when the withdrawals come in. I was on tranquillisers as well for twenty years. Your whole life is just stealing and discussing in these parks, discussing where you can steal for your next bottle; who's in the court that morning. John was most of the time, when I was in trouble.
Jonathan: When you look back now, you look at the affects of that alcohol on your life; the breakdown in your marriage, in and out of prison, how come those things, the implications of those things wasn't enough to stop you drinking at the time?
John Cartledge: I don't know. I don't know the answer. I was powerless - I was powerless to do anything about it. I tried every possible avenue to stop drinking. Anything you can - counselling, halfway houses, Christian halfway house, the church, alcoholics anonymous periodically for ten years; all to no avail.
Jonathan: Now finally there did come a day when things changed and you were in hospital at the time. What was the story there?
John Cartledge: Yeah. For the umpteenth time I was in this mental hospital in Warrington. It was a mental hospital. And I was nearly dead when I went in this time. This was 1991. The only thing I hadn't tried was Jesus. I'd been introduced to Jesus a few years previous. I'd gone to this evangelistic meeting and I'd made some sort of decision. I wanted a magic wand. Some instant cure for me alcoholism. But me life remained the same. But when I went into this mental hospital this time, I said there's only one way I can go and try and find out more about Jesus. I'd always been known even on my sickness benefit book, I had a disease called alcoholism, an illness. But when I studied the word of God in this mental hospital I didn't see anything relating to drink as an illness. It was all a drunkard and a sinner and I actually asked God to forgive me of my sin rather than saying I was a sick person. The Bible says you know I was calling God a liar, saying I'm not a sinner. Well I realised it was revealed to me that I was a sinner and I had to repent from my sin. If you repent from your sin and asked God to forgive you, you receive His Holy Spirit. And I received the fullness of His Holy Spirit. Immediately the desires I had to drink had gone! The things I hated I loved and the things I loved I hated. It was a complete apostle Paul dramatic conversion.
Jonathan: So it was the power of God's Spirit that came inside you that brought that change?
John Cartledge: Yeah. It was exactly that. The power of God's Holy Spirit changed my life and instantly from then I wanted to serve God.
Jonathan: How's it been since then? Just to finally rap on the alcohol side. Have you wrestled with temptations in that since then or has it been total freedom?
John Cartledge: Total freedom. I went straight into mission work and I've been in mission all over Europe and Africa. In fact I've just come home yesterday.
Jonathan: What did you do in Africa?
John Cartledge: I set up a book ministry, the Malak Christian Book Ministry. I take containers of books over. I built a centre, with a storage depot, a reference library, a house and we donate thousands of Christian books in a place where there was none previously to me going.
Thank you so much for your informative book.It has been a real encouragement to me .I have a young friend who grapples with alcohol and its results and It has and continues to be a great resource for myself.I would appreciate any details of courses or leaflets to help me point these precious young people to our Saviour and away from addiction of any type.Thank you