Circling the Wagons to Drive Off
Documented History, Unwanted Divine Aid,
And Proven Recovery Ideas
Dick B.
Copyright 2012
Anonymous. All rights reserved
The longer dissertations, government grants, academic
gatherings, and religious writings attempt to describe Alcoholics Anonymous
History the more they seem to swerve away from God’s power and love and from
real recovery in Alcoholics Anonymous.
To be sure, candidates, government agencies, academia, and
religious commentators have their place
in examining the overwhelming problem of drug addiction and alcoholism. But,
when they try to exclude Alcoholics Anonymous, the Twelve Steps, God, Jesus
Christ, and the Bible from their writings, they do little to advance the rewarding
and effective grunt work involved in working with the despairing drunk and
addict who still suffers.
Let’s talk first of dissertations. It has been a long time
since a University of St. Louis Ph.D. candidate examined the theological influence
of Rev. Samuel M. Shoemaker, Jr. on Bill Wilson and the Twelve Steps. So too
since a lay minister laid out the rudiments of successful work in his best-selling
book God is for the Alcoholic. In due
course, these materials should have led to scholarly studies of the Christian
recovery movement and its impact on Alcoholics Anonymous. Instead, we have
statistics, psychological analyses, dissertations galore, discussions of
religiomania, frequent mention of an illusory spirituality and higher power,
and a supposed special Christian god that is the product of today’s A.A.
This while drunks and addicts need to be told the history of
what has worked. That means learning about—rescue missions, the Salvation Army,
Young Men’s Christian Association, the evangelists such as Moody and Sankey and
Meyer and Folger, the Great Awakening of 1875 in St. Johnsbury, Vermont, and
the Young People’s Society of Christian Endeavor. Instead, there is endless
chatter about the irrelevant Washingtonians, Anti-Saloon League, and the
supposed emergence of A.A. from the Oxford Group instead of the Christian
upbringing, Bible studies, and conversions undertaken by Cofounders Bob and
Bill. Undertaken long before A.A. was even a dreamed of remedy for the
medically incurable alcoholic.
Now let’s talk about grants. Daily, through the mail and on
the internet and in journals, there is an endless stream of mention about the
grants being awarded doctors, psychologists, scientists, sociologists, partnerships,
and institutions gathering statistics about every conceivable kind of human
behavior that might be involved in
alcoholism and drug abuse. Also about drugs that might alleviate the situation.
This, despite the fact that any former
or present-day alcoholic or addict who has overcome denial can tell the lofty
researchers that recognition of alcoholism can be reduced to 3 D’s and an R.
They are: Drink. Drunk. Disaster. Repeat. That’s the norm.
The issue is not the gathering of information about the
supposed “insanity” of self-destruction. The issue is to bring before the
suffering afflicted the success of the Christian recovery deliverance that took
place in the 1800’s, before Prohibition, and before and after A.A.
Let’s talk about the professors. Many have developed an irrelevant
jargon that seeks to put a label on every kind of behavioral or drug-related or
smoking or gambling excess except “more,” “self-destruction,” and
uncontrollability. This while early A.A. simply pointed to the wisdom of the
Bible’s Book of James and its importance in A.A. daily use. James deals simply
and directly with the guidance of God and the perils of yielding to temptation—with
prayer as a remedy. Early A.A., through its cofounders, declared that Jesus’s
Sermon on the Mount contained the underlying philosophy of A.A. And traces of
that Sermon can be found over and over again in A.A.’s Twelve Steps and Big Book.
Early AAs also pointed to 1 Corinthians
13 as containing most of the spiritual principles recovering people were to
shoot for and practice – not to mention prayer, Quiet Time, belief in God, acceptance of Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior which were “musts.”
And let’s talk about the few Christian writers who daily
pump out of context trivia from the Bible in company with the unappealing and
non-persuasive charges that A.A. is monolithic; that A.A. is permeated with
spiritualism and New Thought and freemasonry; that A.A.’s cofounders were—despite
substantial Christian upbringing—and could not possibly have been Christians;
that the 12 Steps are steps to hell and destruction; and that no Christian
should ever set foot through the doors of a 12-Step fellowship or meeting.
There was a time when newspapers respected the anonymity
traditions of A.A. There was a time when doctors would often say that A.A. is
the only thing that works. There was and is a time when churches were delighted
to provide meeting space for Twelfth-steppers. There was a time when famous
preachers like Rev. Samuel M. Shoemaker, Jr.; Dr. Norman Vincent Peale; Rev.
Harry Emerson Fosdick; and Roman Catholic advocates like Father Ed Dowling,
S.J. and Father John C. Ford, S.J., Father Pfau, and others were invited to
speak before large A.A. gatherings and conventions. There was a time when
meetings closed with the Lord’s Prayer. But all of this seems headed for
revision or extinction.
There are just a few caveats that should return A.A., N.A.,
and other 12-Step organizations to their rightful role of being responsible
when the hand of a suffering soul reaches out and cries for help in dealing
with a malady he seldom recognizes or understands.
The first is that A.A. itself grew out of a medical past
where alcoholism was considered “medically” incurable and that “self-help” was
considered futile. Reliance on God was the primary tool in A.A.’s spiritual
kit.
The second is that A.A.—though originally a Christian
Fellowship—is no longer able to be so characterized. For better or for worse,
many in the A.A. hierarchy and “membership” tend today to look on A.A. as a monolithic
gathering place where neither God, nor Jesus Christ nor the Bible are to be
mentioned; that only New York generated literature can be read; that one can
believe in a higher power that is a door knob or in nothing at all; and that
the ridiculous expression that A.A. is “spiritual but not religious” has a
resonating governing theme for meeting conduct.
The third that A.A. itself has very clear Christian roots,
phrases, and practices today. The words God, Creator, Maker, Father, Heavenly
Father, Father of Lights are used many times in A.A.’s basic text – the Big
Book of Alcoholics Anonymous. Love
and service were declared to be the essence of the Twelve Steps. Love and
tolerance were proclaimed to be the code for members. Biblical phrases like or
incorporating “Thy will be done; Faith without works is dead; Love thy neighbor
as thyself; Matthew 6:33 and 6::34” are embedded in present-day literature.
Finally, whatever the dissertations, scientific gatherings,
academia, and religious writers may say, those of us who entered the rooms of
Alcoholics Anonymous took some vital steps. We resolved to stop drinking for
good. We entrusted our lives to God’s care. We endeavored to obey His will as spelled out in the Bible. We
devoted substantial time to growth in spiritual understanding through Bible
study, prayer, Quiet Time, and reading Christian literature. And we were certainly
instructed to help the drunk who still suffers get well. And to be healed by
the same means. Those simple points were
the points A.A. cofounders developed in 1935.
Most of us are one, big, thankful crowd of cured alcoholics
who have found a new way of living without booze, trusting in God, cleaning
house, and helping others.
That is the testimony I offer. It is the testimony of a
growing number of long-recovered Christian alcoholics and addicts who rejoice
at finding a newcomer who wants God’s help and will go to any lengths to get
it.
Gloria
Deo
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