AA Step 3: Surrendered Will

Tim Hayden

Co-Founder

Tim is passionate about serving others, leading people to Christ, and more specifically breaking the stigma of addiction and mental health in the Church and across the world. Tim merges his desire to further the Kingdom with 18 years of experience in the Corporate IT world where his background has ranged from working for small startups to leading national teams at global software companies. Tim graduated from Mount Vernon Nazarene University with a bachelorโ€™s degree in Business Administration, Marketing, and Communications. Tim and his wife are active in their church community serving in the youth department, marriage mentoring, and life group mentoring. In his spare time, Tim enjoys spending time with his family in the great outdoors camping, mountain biking, and snowboarding. โ€œDo all the good you can, by all the means you can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you can, to all the people you can, as long as ever you can.โ€ โ€“ John Wesley
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In Step 3 of AA, members are encouraged to โ€œturn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood Him.โ€ Surrender is not a weakness. It is not passivity. And it is not abandoning responsibility. Biblically, surrender is an act of trust, choosing to align oneโ€™s will with Godโ€™s will rather than insisting on self-direction.

Addiction frequently thrives on self-will: โ€œI know whatโ€™s best,โ€ โ€œI can fix this myself,โ€ โ€œI donโ€™t need help.โ€ Step 3 challenges that mindset. It invites us to admit that self-reliance alone has not brought freedom and that lasting recovery may require depending on a higher power.

The Power of Surrendering Control

Many people start using drugs or alcohol to deal with intense feelings, trauma, anxiety, or uncertainty. The illusion of control, such as “I can stop anytime” or “I can handle this on my own,” becomes part of the addiction and self-destruction itself.ย 

Step 3 of AA asks us to stop letting our own will be the only thing that guides our choices. This doesn’t mean you should stop being active or stop taking responsibility. Instead, it means letting go of the exhausting need to control people, events, and outcomes.ย 

When we stop fighting reality and begin accepting guidance, whether from a Higher Power, recovery principles, or trusted support systems, anxiety often decreases, mental clarity improves, and healthier decision-making becomes possible.

Control vs. Acceptance

Control says: I must manage every outcome.
Acceptance says: I will faithfully do my part and trust God with the results.

Control is often driven by fear, such as of loss, uncertainty, or discomfort. Acceptance, on the other hand, is rooted in faith. It does not mean approving of painful circumstances. It means acknowledging reality and trusting that Godโ€™s direction is wiser than impulsive reactions or cravings.

In recovery, this might look like seeking guidance through prayer before making a decision, submitting to accountability, or resisting the urge to manipulate situations for immediate relief.ย 

Why AA Step 3 Is A Turning Point in Recoveryย 

In Step 1, you admit the truth: alcohol (or addiction) has taken control, and life has become unmanageable.ย 

Step 2 brings hope by opening the door to the idea that help is possible, that a Power greater than yourself can restore you to sanity. But Step 3 moves away from awareness and belief systems to real-world doing and decision-making.

Step 3 asks you to choose a new way of living and to stop trying to run everything through fear, control, or sheer willpower. It encourages you to โ€œturn your will and your life overโ€ to the care of a Higher Power as you understand it. That doesnโ€™t mean becoming passive, ignoring responsibilities, or waiting for God to fix everything. It means letting go of the exhausting belief that you have to do recovery alone.ย 

Step 3 becomes the foundation for everything that comes next and sets the groundwork for the intentional process of change. Step 3 is the moment someone stops just thinking differently and starts living differently, one choice at a time.

What Surrender Looks Like in Daily Lifeย 

Surrender in recovery is not dramatic; it is small, consistent decisions and daily practice. Surrendering in your daily life can look like this:

  • Pausing before reacting in angerย 
  • Calling a sponsor instead of isolating
  • Attending a meeting when motivation is lowย 
  • Accepting feedback without defensiveness
  • Choosing honesty over avoidance.

Surrender also means releasing outcomes. Doing the next right thing without obsessing over how everything will unfold. And trusting the process even when discomfort arises. Over time, these daily acts of surrender build resilience. They shift recovery from a battle of willpower to a practice of willingness.ย 

5 Bible Quotes to Support Step 3 of AAย 

  1. Proverbs 3:5-6: โ€œTrust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight.โ€

  2. Psalms 37:5: โ€œCommit your way to the Lord; trust in Him, and He will act.โ€

  3. Matthew 6:33: โ€œBut seek first His kingdom and His righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.โ€

  4. James 4:10: โ€œHumble yourselves before the Lord, and He will lift you.โ€

  5. 1 Peter 5:7: โ€œCast all your anxiety on Him because He cares for you.โ€

Christian Rehab for Men: Find Strength in Transformationย ย 

AnchorPoint Recovery in Arizona is a Christian rehab rooted in neuroscience and guided by the NeuroFaithยฎ model as developed by Dr. Jeffrey Hansen, PhD., integrating faith and evidence-based therapies to treat trauma and addiction. We offer several levels of care to guide patients through their recovery journey from start to finish.ย 

Although treatment plans are personalized to the needs of each individual, AnchorPoint follows a unified therapeutic frameworkโ€”much like the AA modelโ€”that emphasizes surrender, accountability, and connection to a higher purpose.ย 

By helping men move beyond self-reliance and isolation, we guide them toward healing that integrates brain science with faith, restoring meaning, identity, and hope beyond addiction.

We work with a variety of insurance plans and are committed to reducing financial barriers to care.ย 

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