Bill W.: A Synopsis of Bill’s extensive Christian
background and beliefs that finally led him back to Christ and the new birth
and set the stage for conversion to God through Jesus Christ as one of the
required elements in early A.A.’s first group, Akron Number One, a Christian
Fellowship
Dick B., © 2013 Anonymous. All rights reserved
Bibliography materials and documentation can be found on www.AlcoholicsAnonymousHistory.com
[As a youngster in Vermont, Bill had repeatedly heard the
story of how his alcoholic grandfather Willie had been converted to God through
Jesus Christ on a mountaintop next to Bill’s village. Willie was saved, said
so, and never touched a drop during the remaining years of his life. And Bill
was no stranger to revivals, conversion meetings, temperance meetings, and
salvation teachings—the latter in his church and Sunday school
(1) Dr. Carl Jung had told Rowland Hazard that he had the
mind of a chronic alcoholic and that a conversion—a vital religious experience--might
heal him
(2) Rowland Hazard made a decision for Jesus Christ, joined
the Oxford Group, and worked actively with Rev. Sam Shoemaker.
(3) Rowland and two other Oxford Group friends told Bill
Wilson’s long-time drinking friend Ebby Thacher the solution that Jung had
proffered. Rowland taught Ebby about the efficacy of prayer. He informed Ebby
of a number of the Oxford Group’s Christian principles. Then Ebby was lodged in
Calvary Rescue Mission in New York.
(4) Meanwhile, Bill Wilson had made his third visit to Towns
Hospital. Dr. William D. Silkworth, Bill’s psychiatrist, had a long talk with
Bill. Silkworth had given Bill a virtual death sentence contingent upon his
continuing to drink. Dr. Silkworth, a devout Christian and a long-time
parishioner of Sam Shoemaker’s Calvary Church, told Bill Wilson that the “Great
Physician” Jesus Christ could cure Bill.
(5) In this same period, Ebby Thacher had made a decision
for Jesus Christ at Calvary Mission, gotten saved and sober, decided to witness
to Bill, visited Bill, and told Bill what had happened at the Mission.
(6) Bill decided to check out Ebby’s story and went to hear
him give testimony at Calvary Church.
(7) Bill decided that since the Great Physician had helped
Ebby recover, he might help Bill.
(8) Bill W. accepted Jesus Christ at Calvary Mission, wrote
in his autobiography that “For sure I had been born again.”
(9) Bill continued to drink, became severely depressed, and
thought: If there be a Great Physician,
I had better call on him.
(10) Bill staggered on to Towns Hospital drunk and very
depressed and was hospitalized.
(11) He said to himself, “I’ll do anything, anything at all.
If there be a Great Physician, I’ll call on him now.”
(12) He cried out, “If there be a God let him show himself.”
(13) He said the effect was, instant, electric. Suddenly my
room blazed with an indescribably white light.
(14) He continued: Then, seen in the mind’s eye, there was a
mountain. I stood upon its summit where a great wind blew. A wind, not of air,
but of spirit. In great, clean strength it blew right through me.
(15) The light and the ecstasy subsided. Bill became more
quiet. A great peace stole over him.
(16) Then he became acutely conscious of a presence which
seemed like a “veritable sea of living spirit.”
(17) He thought, “This must be the great reality.” And in
one account, he said to himself: Bill, you are a free man. This is “the God of
the Scriptures.”
(18) He said, “I thanked my God who had given me a glimpse
of His absolute Self.
(19) He said that faith had suddenly appeared—no blind
faith—but faith fortified by the consciousness of the presence of God.
(20) Briefly he stopped doubting God and said “this great
and sudden gift of grace has always been mine.”
(21) He never drank again.
(22) But he did have his “hour of doubt.”
(23) Dr. Silkworth appeared and sat by Bill’s bed. Bill told
Silkworth what had happened. Bill asked: “Doctor, is this real? Am I still
perfectly sane?”
(24) Sikworth assured him that he was sane. He said “You
have had some kind of conversion experience.”
(25) Ebby showed up at the hospital, agreed with Bill that
he and Bill had a release that was a gift, real. He handed Bill a copy of a
book by Professor William James. It was called “The Varieties of Religious
Experience.” Bill he had read it “all day.”
(26) The James book was filled with studies and stories of
the cure of alcoholism at missions such as the one founded by Jerry McAuley at
316 Water Street in 1872, and later (in 1882) at 104 West Thirty-second Street,
known as Cremorne Mission. In 1886, S.H. Hadley took charge of the Water Street
Mission. Hadley had been converted at Jerry McAuley’s Cremorne Mission, and in
the years of service in Water Street not less than seventy-five thousand
persons came to the mission for help. Hadley died in 1906.
(27) Before his discharge from Towns Hospital in December of
1935, Wilson had been inspired to help drunks everywhere.
(28) On his discharge, he raced feverishly to the streets,
the missions, the hospitals, the Bowery, Oxford Group meetings, and flea bag
hotels. He went with a Bible under his arm and insisted that drunks give their
lives to God.
(29) Bill’s story is briefly told as follows in the Big
Book: “Henrietta, the Lord has been so wonderful to me curing me of this
terrible disease that I just want to keep talking about it and telling people.”
(30) But in his first six months of witnessing, Bill was
unable to get a single person sober.]
No comments:
Post a Comment