SauceBowl
In this heartfelt episode of SauceBowl, host Marq sits down with Linda, the long-time CEO of Adult & Teen Challenge Ohio in Columbus. With more than 41 years at the organization, Linda shares her remarkable personal story, the heart behind the faith-based residential recovery program for women struggling with addiction, and the timeless principles that keep the ministry thriving. Linda grew up in a high-integrity but non-Christian home marked by strict rules and legalism. Music was rare, dancing was viewed as demonic, and “good girls” didn’t go to college or listen to secular songs. She married at 17 and had children, but everything changed when her fifth-grade son came home after being called a “Christian” at school—a slur in his classmates’ eyes. Shocked by how negatively her son viewed faith, Linda pulled her four children from public school and enrolled them in a Christian school. That decision opened the door to Teen Challenge. A group of women from the program attended her church; one caught her son’s eye, leading to a chaperoned prom date. Curious, Linda invited the women to her home for pool parties and cookouts. Her entire family fell in love with the program. In 1985 she began volunteering, started a Bible study, and never left. Adult & Teen Challenge Ohio is a long-term (14-month) residential program that is completely free to participants. Women receive room, board, meals, health support, cognitive classes, and deep discipleship—all sugar-free, caffeine-free, and smoke-free. Linda emphasizes that real help isn’t a quick fix or a sermon. It’s being real. The women arrive broken, often after numerous programs, and they can spot insincerity instantly. The staff and volunteers focus on creating a safe, inviting home environment, honoring detox needs without rushing women into classes, teaching them to study the Bible for themselves (many graduates know Scripture better than some pastors), and replacing enabling with tools for lifelong strength. Linda stresses: “We don’t have to preach God to live God.” The transformation happens through consistent, lived-out faith. One of the most powerful moments in the conversation is Linda’s story from 2006. As the new executive director, she inherited a collaborative $89,000 grant (her portion eventually $59,000). After purchasing much-needed computers, the funders reminded her the program was faith-based but she could not mention Jesus—only “higher power.” Linda looked at the computers, then looked at the women she served, and said, “I feel like a hypocrite.” She returned the remaining $59,000. It was a painful financial hit, but she refused to compromise the message that had changed so many lives. God has provided ever since. Throughout the interview Linda returns to several core ideas: Submission is powerful—when understood biblically, it is mutual and freeing, not oppressive. We were created to worship—people will fill that void with something; the question is whether it’s the true God or a counterfeit. Discipleship over quick fixes—sustainable change comes from deep roots in Scripture and relationship, not slogans or 2-week programs. Money is a tool—never the source. Her parents taught her this long before she knew Christ; it shaped her decision on the grant and still guides the ministry’s fundraising (no fees for residents). To anyone on the fence about recovery, Linda offers this: “Where will you be a year from now if nothing changes? You were created for more than life under the bridge. Come see what a safe home, real relationships, and the love of God can do.” From a strict, music-less childhood to leading a ministry that turns “lumps of coal into diamonds,” her life shows what happens when someone simply says yes to God—and refuses to compromise when the cost is high. Want to get involved? Visit adultteenchallengeohio.org or call 614-697-2450. Whether you need help, want to volunteer, or simply support the work, the door is open.
27 episodios
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