Treatment for Pornography Addiction
CCA counselors work with individuals and couples navigating the personal and relational impact of pornography addiction, within a framework that takes both the clinical and spiritual dimensions of the struggle seriously.
The Cycle Can Be Broken
Pornography addiction is one of the more isolating struggles a person can face. It often develops quietly, over time, and by the time someone recognizes it as a problem, shame has usually been building for a while. The cycle is familiar: use, regret, resolve to stop, use again. Most people caught in it have already tried to stop on their own, more than once.
What makes pornography addiction particularly difficult is its accessibility. Unlike substances that require some effort to obtain, pornographic content is available at any moment on any device. The neurological patterns that develop around compulsive pornography use are real and well-documented. They affect attention, mood, relational intimacy, and a person's sense of self. Over time, life begins to revolve around the behavior in ways the person did not choose and does not want.
CCA's counselors are trained to work with pornography addiction from both a clinical and a faith-informed perspective. Many people who struggle with pornography addiction describe a profound disconnect between who they want to be and what they find themselves doing. That gap is exactly where this work begins.
If you are ready to take a step toward something different, we would be glad to come alongside you. Contact us to request an appointment with a pornography addiction therapist near you.



What Pornography Addiction Treatment Involves
Pornography addiction is not simply a matter of willpower or moral failure. Research into compulsive sexual behavior has identified measurable changes in brain function that occur with habitual pornography use, particularly in the reward and impulse-control systems. Understanding this does not remove personal responsibility, but it does reframe the problem in a way that makes treatment more effective.
How Common Is Pornography Addiction?
The scope of pornography use, including within the church, is broader than most people realize. According to Covenant Eyes, pornography use is widespread across demographics, age groups, and faith backgrounds, with regular exposure beginning for many people in early adolescence. The effects tend to compound over time, particularly when use becomes habitual before adulthood.
The data from within Christian communities is worth sitting with honestly. A 2023 Barna study of U.S. Protestant senior pastors found that 18% reported pornography use as a current personal struggle, and an additional 49% said it had been a struggle in the past. Among pastors under 45, those numbers rose to 26% currently and 57% in the past. In other words, fewer than one in five younger pastors reported no personal history with pornography use.
What makes these numbers particularly significant is what the same study found about disclosure. Among pastors with a history of pornography use, only 32% had told another pastor, 18% had told anyone in their congregation, and just 7% reported that most of their congregation knew. The struggle is far more common than it appears on the surface, and far more hidden.
This is not data meant to normalize pornography use. It is data that names the reality clearly: this is a widespread struggle that affects people across every corner of the church, and shame and secrecy make it worse, not better.
The Clinical Picture
Compulsive pornography use shares features with other behavioral addictions. Common signs include:
- Difficulty controlling or stopping pornography use despite repeated attempts
- Increasing amounts of time spent viewing pornography
- Using pornography to manage difficult emotions such as stress, loneliness, anxiety, or boredom
- A growing sense of shame, secrecy, or disconnection from others
- Negative effects on relationships, work, or daily functioning
- A growing gap between personal or spiritual values and actual behavior
These are not signs of weakness. They are signs that the behavior has taken on a life of its own, and that support is warranted.
Get Started with Porn Addiction Counseling Near You
CCA has more than 90 locations across Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia, New York, Arkansas, and Kentucky, making it straightforward to find a pornography addiction therapist close to you. Scheduling is simple and can be initiated online. If you are ready to take the next step or have questions about what to expect, we look forward to hearing from you.

Frequently Asked Questions
- A persistent inability to stop or reduce use despite wanting to
- Spending increasing amounts of time viewing pornography
- Using it to cope with stress or difficult emotions
- Experiencing negative consequences in relationships, work, or daily life
- A deepening sense of shame or secrecy
- A growing disconnect between personal values and behavior
- If any of this sounds familiar, speaking with a trained counselor is a reasonable and worthwhile next step.