Jesus and A.A.
Dick B.
Copyright 2012 Anonymous. All rights
reserved
There are some great comments here regarding Mike Spencer’s Finding Jesus at A.A. I believe it can
be accessed by clicking on Jesus and A.A. or through http://Jesusshaped.wordpress.com.
As a recovered AA who cherishes the sobriety I found in A.A.
over 26 years ago, I like those who at least see that A.A. can be
beautiful--beautiful with all its warts and with all the Bill W. shortcomings.
But the beauty for me really came when I discovered and later researched in
depth A.A.'s real roots in the Bible--emanating from direct prayer and Bible
study, and also from the multitude of Bible versed ideas taught by Rev. Samuel
M. Shoemaker, Jr., Rector of Calvary Episcopal Church in New York to his
fledgling alcoholic student Bill W. And this history is important if one is to
understand how important it is that the truth about the early A.A. Christian
Fellowship in Akron is accurately reported. Simply put, the topic is “Jesus and
A.A.” The documentation can be found in Dick B., The Good Book and The Big Book: A.A.’s Roots in the Bible.
I'm not keen on labels. Too Fundamentalist. Cultlike.
Protestant Liberalism. Evangelicals. Not-god-ness. Spiritual but not religious.
A.A. Jesus talk. What matters is not what someone labels an AA or the A.A.
fellowship. What matters is where the fellowship came from, what it originally
espoused, and where it changed with the passing of time.
Let's begin with a simple topic: "Jesus and A.A."
Let's make our first question: What did cofounders Dr. Bob Smith and Bill W. do
when it came to Jesus.
Here's a quick
answer. When asked a question about the
A.A. program, A.A. cofounder Dr. Bob's usual response was: "What does it
say in the Good Book?" When at his lowest of lows, Bill Wilson remembered
the "Great Physician." Dr. Silkworth had told Bill that the Great
Physician (Jesus Christ) could cure him.
Then Bill's long-time drinking friend Ebby Thacher visited
Bill and told him that he (Ebby) had been to the altar at Calvary Mission (run
by Calvary Episcopal Church), and Bill concluded Ebby had there been born
again.
What did Bill do? He checked out Ebby's testimony at the
church. Then he went to Calvary Mission seeking the same kind of help Ebby had
received. Bill W. went to the altar; and, as Mrs. Samuel M. Shoemaker told me
on the phone, "made a decision for Jesus Christ." Bill's wife Lois
later declared that Bill had in all sincerity gone up and "handed his life
over to Christ." And Bill wrote in his autobiography "My First Forty
Years" that "For sure I'd been born again."
Later, Bill wrote on what is now page 191 of the Big Book
that the "Lord" had cured him.
With that, whatever one wants to make out of A.A., its
Twelve Steps, and the fellowship meetings, the fact is--without any
labeling--A.A.s were required to profess a belief in God and accept Jesus
Christ as their Lord and Savior. And today, many a Christian or person who
wants God's help is now starting with the unearthed fact that "old
school" A.A. and its Christian Fellowship very much resembled the
principles and practices reported in the Book of Acts and often called--as A.A.
itself was at first--"First Century Christianity at work."
I think those historical facts can help a lot in finding the
good features that still remain in A.A. today. See also The Conversion of Bill W. (www.dickb.com/conversion.shtml)
Dick B., Hawaii
Dick B,
ReplyDeleteGood insight and thought to a pressing problem in A.A. As a Christian, I am often confronted with my belief and the message of "higher power". I think if you do the research(even wikipedia gets most of it right)you will find as you wrote "1st century christian work" in action. Keep the faith!