Three Christian Recovery Projects
We Would Like to Undertake Right Now,
with Your Help
By Dick B.
© 2012 Anonymous. All
rights reserved
Christian Recovery
Project #1
Conducting, recording, and posting free of charge on www.ChristianRecoveryRadio.com
interviews with Christian leaders and workers in the recovery arena.
For many years, my son Ken and I have spoken of interviewing
key people we have met in our travels, such as members of Rev. Samuel
Shoemaker’s family, Dr. Bob’s children, Seiberling family members, Oxford Group
activists and Sam Shoemaker associates and friends, archivists, historians, and
devoted AAs and Christian leaders. During our September 2011 International
Christian Recovery Coalition North American Summit Conference at The Crossing
Church in Costa Mesa, California, I mentioned this idea publicly from the
platform. And we received a very positive response. As a result, we secured the
www.ChristianRecoveryRadio.com
domain name, began building a Web site, and posted some early audios and new
videos on the site.
Today, we know personally hundreds of Christians who are
long-sober alcoholics and addicts, historians, authors, archivists,
professional recovery people, treatment and sober living leaders, counselors
and interventionists, clergy, pastoral counselors, recovery pastors, or
otherwise informed and truthful people who can tell their stories, share how
they serve, and present their ideas for advancing the International Christian
Recovery Coalition’s mission. Because we know them, we can easily arrange
interviews, record them, and post them on the Web free of charge.
Christian Recovery
Project #2
Sharing with people in person, by phone, and via Skype how
and where to study A.A. history, develop Christian recovery outreach, and
conduct programs and group studies of various types that carry three important
messages: (a) Conference-approved literature supports Christians’ sharing in
their stories at 12-Step meetings and in their work with newcomers “how they
established their relationship with God”—including mention of Jesus Christ and
the Bible. (b) The seven principles and major practices of the early,
highly-successful Akron A.A. “Christian fellowship” are known from current,
Conference-approved literature, and are therefore well within the Traditions.
(c) The application in early A.A.—especially in Akron and Cleveland—of practices
of First Century Christianity as found in the Book of Acts produced much-desired
healing, love, forgiveness, power, and status as children of God.
Christian Recovery
Project #3
Publishing my existing and future research on the history of
A.A. and its Christian heritage in the form of print-on-demand books, and in
Internet-friendly forms such as electronic books, audios, and videos, in order to
reduce selling prices substantially (and to make possible free distribution
frequently). Help us make known the unknown, little-known, and/or
previously-distorted facts!
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