Response to Kelly
Clark article from A.A. Historian and Author Dick B.
The shorter the critique of Kelly’s article, the better. The
reason is that this man falls far short of being qualified to talk about A.A. history,
about the A.A. cofounders, or about the supposed monolithic body of Christians—in
and out of A.A. Hence the best advice for his readers is to disregard the
misspelling of names, the erroneous characterizations of the cofounders, and
the predisposition to tout a play in which he apparently had a financial stake.
The answer? Kelly fails to mention that the ideas of the cofounders were
generated from the 1850’s onward by Christian people and organizations who
wanted to help alcoholics and not condemn them. These were the YMCA; Salvation
Army; Gospel Rescue Missions; Congregationalists; great evangelists like Moody,
Meyer, and Clark; and United Christian Endeavor Society. Kelly seems totally
unaware that both cofounders were born and raised by Christian families, in
Congregational churches and Sunday schools, were avid Bible students, attended
daily chapel (with sermons, reading of Scripture, hymns, and prayers), and were
much involved with the YMCA, the evangelists, Christian Endeavor, and
Congregationalism. Bill Wilson, for example, took a four-year Bible study
course at Burr and Burton Seminary in Manchester Vermont. All three of the
first AAs were believers in God, Christians, and Bible students. All turned to
God for help and were cured and said so. And all were told to go out and help
someone. Moreover, Kelly seems to have ignored the fact that Dr. William D.
Silkworth told Bill that Jesus Christ could cure him; that Bill’s friend Ebby
Thacher had been to Calvary Mission, been born again, and was sober; and that
Bill did likewise and then within a matter of days, decided to call on Christ,
went to Towns Hospital, cried out to God for help, and sensed God’s presence in
his room. He declared: “Bill, you are a free man. This is the God of the
Scriptures.” Bill never drank again. Later, Bill wrote in his Big Book: “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.” Dr. Bob wrote in the Big
Book: “Your Heavenly Father will never let you down.” In those early A.A. days,
there were no such things as “spiritual experiences,” “spiritual awakenings,”
or “awareness.” There was the power and love of God at work. In fact, very
shortly, early A.A. adopted the principles and practices of the First Century
Christians as depicted in the Book of Acts. And the Big Book’s statement “There
is a Solution” defined that solution as the Creator’s entering into their
hearts in a way that is truly miraculous; and that He restored the believers to sanity. There is plenty of
documentation of all this in my recent titles: www.dickb.com/drbobofaa.shtm; www.dickb.com/conversion; http://mcaf.ee/s50mq; and http://mcaf.ee/gj7iw. And a modicum of study by
Kelly would help him realize the gaping holes in his knowledge of A.A. History
and of the early A.A.’s Christian Fellowship successes. Moreover, his memory of
the Big Book may be jogged by recalling Bill’s statement: “We have no monopoly
on God.” People have been getting sober without God or without A.A. for years
and years. But the end result for most, by the 1930’s was that they wound up in
a seemingly hopeless, medically incurable, last gasp state where God could and
did help them when He was sought.
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