The Fellowship

Meetings & Liturgy

"For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them." — Matthew 18:20

Join Us

Weekly Online Meeting

When

Every Sunday

7:00 PM CT

Where

Google Meet

Online — all are welcome

Get the Link

Join via Linktree →

Google Meet link found on our Linktree

About Our Meetings

Simple. Catholic. Effective.

Each Catholic Steps meeting focuses on one attachment only — alcohol, drugs, pornography, anger, anxiety, or any pattern of sin that has become unmanageable. This keeps the sharing focused and the community tight.

Meetings are open to any Catholic who identifies with the attachment being discussed. Visitors without that particular experience are welcome to sit quietly and listen, then speak with the chair afterward about finding the right meeting.

Meetings can be held in person — in a parish hall, a home, or any gathering space — or online via video call. The liturgy is the same in both formats.

Meeting at a Glance

01Chair opens — Hail Mary
02Preamble read aloud
03The 12 Steps read aloud
04Ten Commandments read aloud
05Chair shares on a topic (3 min)
06Open discussion
07Chair closes — evangelization check-in
08Lord's Prayer — hands held

The Full Liturgy

Meeting Script

Printable Version

The Catholic Steps book by Saul Hernandez tells the story behind the fellowship and the spiritual foundation of the 12 Steps. Available on Amazon.

Get the Book on Amazon →

Resources

Free Online Resources

We have compiled a collection of free materials to support your walk through the Catholic Steps — prayers, step guides, scripture references, and more. All resources are freely available to download and share.

Access Free Resources →

Start a Group

Bring the Steps to Your Parish

Starting a Catholic Steps group is simple. All you need is a willingness to chair the meeting, a copy of the liturgy, and two or three people ready to gather in His name.

Choose your attachment focus, set a regular time and place, follow the liturgy, and let the Sacraments do the rest. The chair does not need to be a priest or deacon — only a Catholic willing to serve.

For guidance on starting your group, visit our Linktree or reach out directly by email — we are happy to help.