The First International Alcoholics
Anonymous History Conference
September 6-7, 2013
Portland, Maine
[A.A.’s Dr. Bob was a
member of Christian Endeavor (Big Book, 172), founded here 2/2/1881]
Featuring A.A.
Historian Dick B. of Maui, Hawaii, and Special Guests
Conference Theme:
“The History of Alcoholics Anonymous:
Another View Which Includes Its Christian Beginnings in New England”
Meetings, Roundtables, Speakers, Research, and Workshops in
Portland, Maine
[Plus: (1) Possible
A.A. history research tour of Dr. Bob’s birthplace, St. Johnsbury, VT, 9/8-10;
(2) Free At
Last Group A.A. meeting, Wed., 9/11; 5:30 pm potluck dinner; 7:00-8:30 pm
speaker discussion meeting; guest speakers Dick B. and Ken B.]
Main Conference Location:
The First Baptist Church of Portland, Maine
360 Canco Rd., Portland, ME 04103;
http://www.firstbaptistportland.org/
Conference Schedule
Friday, September 6 –
Begins at NOON – Admission Free; Registration Required
Workshop presentations by those prepared with materials –
separate rooms or group conclaves, depending on the size of attending
participants and the desires of them and of the presenters
Opening prayer by Ken B.
Welcome and Introduction by Dick B. and Ken B.
One Hour for each presenter
Father Bill
W., Texas, Chair, Episcopal Diocese of Texas Recovery Committee – Quiet
Time
Mark
Galligan, Ontario, The Akronites and Canadian Successes
Gary Agnew,
Connecticut, A.A. History, Veterans, Prisons
Rev.
Michael Liimatta, Missouri, Rescue Missions, Vets, Homeless, Alcoholics
Victorious,
Salvation Army, City Vision College
Jim
Haselhuhn, Washington, Pictures of our Vermont, Cleveland, and Akron research
Tim
Kolstad, Colorado, Clarence H. Snyder and the Came to Believe Retreats,
Workbook
Break for Dinner
7:30 to 9:30 PM – Roundtable discussions with presenters and
conference participants – moderated by Dick B. and Ken B.
Conference – All Day
Saturday – September 7 – Begins at 9:00 A.M.
9:00 am to
9:45 am: Conference
registration (cont.), coffee and tea, hospitality
9:45 am to 9:55 am: Conference introduction and prayer
by Ken B.
9:55 am to 10:00 am: Welcome
by Wally C.
10:00 am to
10:50 am: Session One: The 12
Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous – Russell Spatz, Miami Attorney, Alive Again, Cross-Florida
Conferences
11:00 am to 11:50 am: Session Two: A. A. Dick B. and Ken
B.: Origins, History,
Founders, and
Facts
12:00 pm to 1:15 pm: Lunch
Break: On your own
1:15 pm to 2:05 pm: Session
Three: Dick B., Sponsorship Today – The Neglected Sponsor
2:15 pm to 3:05 pm: Session
Four: Dick B. and Ken B. Four: Orienting,
Prepping, and Informing
Newcomers
3:15 pm to 4:15 pm:
8 minutes each for the Friday
presenters to summarize their
work and invite
discussions with conference participants
during the
weekend
4:30 pm to 6:30 pm: “Stick
with the Winners!” – Dick B. and Ken B., Two Closing Sessions
Five: The Vermont Story and
Christian Training of Bill and Bob; how the first three AAs got sober; original
Akron A.A. Group Number One Christian Fellowship Program
Six: Personal Stories of Pioneers;
and Conference-approved
Literature that Supports their
Message of Reliance on God; Applying Old School A.A. in Recovery Today
Closing Prayer by Ken B.
Optional Networking Dinners and Discussions with speakers,
presenters, participants
Conference Mission
The mission of this conference is to present an accurate and
comprehensive picture of Alcoholics Anonymous history which includes the roles
played by God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible in early A.A.’s astonishing
successes.
Of alcoholics who came to A.A. and really tried, 50% got
sober at once and remained that way; 25% sobered up after some relapses; and
among the remainder, those who stayed on with A.A. showed improvement. [Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th ed., xx]
Records in Cleveland show that 93 percent of those who came
to us never had a drink again.
[DR. BOB and the Good
Oldtimers, 261]
Your Heavenly Father will never let you down! [Dr. Bob in Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th ed., 181]
Bill [W.] looked across at my wife and said to her,
“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.” [AA #
3, Bill D., in Alcoholics Anonymous,
4th ed., 191]
When we [Bill W. and Dr. Bob] started in on Bill D., we had
no Twelve Steps, either; we had no Traditions.
But we were
convinced that the answer to our problems was in the Good Book. [Dr. Bob in The Co-Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous:
Biographical Sketches: Their Last Major Talks (item # P-53), 13]
Conference Audience
This conference is for members of 12 Step Fellowships
(including old-timers, speakers, sponsors, newcomers, and garden variety drunks
and addicts); other International Christian Recovery Coalition “participants”;
physicians, clergy, recovery pastors, and other Christian leaders and workers
in the recovery arena; and professionals working in the fields of intervention,
detox, treatment, sober living, counseling, psychology, and psychiatry.
Conference Registration
Admission for the First International Alcoholics Anonymous
History Conference is FREE! Registration is required. For more information
about the conference please contact Ken B. by email at kcb00799@gmail.com or by
phone at 1-808-276-4945. To register for the conference, please send to Ken B.
by email at kcb00799@gmail.com: (1) your name; (2) your postal mailing address;
(3) your email address; and (4) your telephone number. Ken B. will send you by
email a confirmation as to the acceptance of your registration.
If you would like to make a donation to help offset the
costs involved in putting on this conference, please contact Ken B. by email at
kcb00799@gmail.com or by phone at 1-808-276-4945. Thank you!
Ongoing Conference Developments: Expansion!
Substantial, valuable, expansive changes are here announced
as to the First International Alcoholics Anonymous History Conference in
Portland, Maine, and related events over the seven-day period from September 6
through 12, 2013.
We are delighted to see many valued and distinguished
registrations for this admission-free conference pouring in. Dick B. and Ken B.
will be available to meet with many leaders and speakers before and after the
Friday and Saturday conference events.
And a number of Christian leaders and workers in recovery
arena from around the world will be giving presentations in which they will
tell us about what they are currently doing in the recovery arena; how well the
work is going; how others can help; and their vision for the future.
We are looking forward to having speakers and others
attendees from throughout the United States and from other countries
participate in the First International Alcoholics Anonymous History Conference.
Conference topics will be diverse; e.g., Quiet Time and the Eleventh Step; The
Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous, Sponsorship; Focus on Newcomers; the
real, historical, Christian roots of A.A.; and how “old-school” A.A. ideas can
and should be applied in today's recovery fellowships and programs as a
powerful opportunity for those who want God's help in overcoming alcoholism and
addiction, and who are willing to go to any lengths to get it.
As our list of speakers grows: to include in such areas as
the Wilson House, Burr and Burton Seminary, the YMCA, Rescue Missions, Evangelists,
the Salvation Army, Congregationalists, and Christian Endeavor, so also will
our topics.
Are you one of those would like to learn more about the
following topics:
• “Old-school”
A.A.—particularly as it could be observed in Akron and in Cleveland during
A.A.’s earliest days;
• How much
A.A. has changed since Bill W. included what he called “the new version of the
program, now the ‘Twelve Steps’” in the first edition of Alcoholics Anonymous
(“the Big Book”) published in April 1939 (see Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of
Age, 162); and
• How
“old-school” A.A. principles and practices--which drew on the power and love of
“the God of the Scriptures” (as Bill W. called the Creator of the heavens and
the earth on page 284 of The Language of
the Heart: Bill W.’s Grapevine Writings)—may be applied today. Using A.A.
General Service Conference-approved literature, and without “violating the
Traditions.” Even in a Fellowship that certainly today includes Christians,
Jews, Moslems, Hindus, atheists, agnostics, unbelievers, and those with no
belief at all.
There is room in our Society for all when one heeds both the
spirit and the letter of key statements in the Big Book, such as the following
one about the Twelve Traditions:
. . . [W]e had to evolve principles by which the A.A. groups
and A.A. as a whole could survive and function effectively. It was thought that
no alcoholic man or woman could be excluded from our Society; that our leaders
might serve but never govern; that each group was to be autonomous . . .
This was
the substance of A.A.’s Twelve Traditions, . . . [N]one of these principles had
the force of rules or laws. [Alcoholics
Anonymous, 4th ed., xix]
There is no room in our Society for those who try to
blockade free exercise of rights and privileges by any particular approach so
long as that free exercise maintains the primary purpose of carrying the
message to alcoholics and addicts who still suffer. There is plenty of room in
the Fellowship for the individual who wants to share with the newcomer
. . . in his own language and from his own point of view the
way he established his relationship with God. [Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th ed., 29]
And who wants to make known the major role that God, His Son
Jesus Christ, and the Bible played in early A.A.’s astonishing successes
(according to A.A. General Service Conference-approved literature), and can
play in recovery today. Room for those who want truth, not opinion. Room for those
who help, instead of criticize and hinder. Room for those who want healing,
instead of in-and-out bondage, temptation, and relapse. Room for those that
recognize that the heart of A.A. was and is “the Solution”:
There is a solution. . . .
The central fact of our lives today is the absolute
certainty that our Creator has entered into our hearts and lives in a way which
is indeed miraculous. He has commenced to accomplish those things for us which
we could never do by ourselves. [Alcoholics
Anonymous, 4th ed., 25]
Sound familiar? Of course! That was the message Bill W. said
his friend Ebby T. had carried to him:
But my friend sat before me, and he made the point-blank
declaration that God had done for him what he could not do for himself. His
human will had failed. Doctors had pronounced him incurable. . . . Then he had,
in effect, been raised from the dead, . . .
Had the
power originated in him? Obviously it had not.
. . . It
began to look as though religious people were right after all. . . . My ideas
about miracles were drastically revised right then. [Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th ed., 11]
The “solution” set forth in the Big Book of Alcoholics
Anonymous is grounded on the Creator’s entering into the hearts and lives of
those who have come to believe that Divine Aid is the solution for their
alcoholism; and those who have recognized that they can't help themselves, that
probably no human power can, that God can and will, and that they can choose to
exit from the "medically incurable" category and enter into the
“recovered” category.
Tens of thousands—if not hundreds of thousands--of
Christians and potential Christians are currently involved in, or will soon be
entering the rooms of, Alcoholics Anonymous and other 12 Step Fellowships. They
are puzzled by talk of nonsense gods, higher powers, spirituality, and atheism.
They are often intimidated by remarks in meetings to the effect that talk of
Jesus and the Bible (and sometimes even talk of God) is against “the
Traditions,” and/or that the Bible is “not Conference-approved.”
They need not be puzzled or intimidated! A major purpose of
the First International Alcoholics Anonymous History Conference is to educate
those who want to know about the facts of A.A.’s history and A.A.’s Christian
predecessors who were successful in healing alcoholics and addicts. You will
meet Christian leaders and workers in the recovery arena who work with
garden-variety alcoholics and addicts; as well as those who are knowledgeable
of various disciplines and areas of study, including religion, medicine,
psychiatry, “old-school” A.A., the origins of A.A., the founding of A.A., and
the original “Christian fellowship” of A.A.
Many of the conference speakers have had the opportunity to
observe what both Bill W. and Dr. Bob stressed: (1) Love and tolerance as our
code. (2) Love and service as the essence of the program--old and new--and the
form it took in A.A.’s early days and is taking today.
A Further Conference Update
The First International Alcoholics Anonymous History
Conference will be held in Portland, Maine, on September 6-7, 2013. The
conference itself will run from Noon. to 9:30 p.m. on Friday evening, September
6; and it will continue from 9:00 a.m. until about 6:30 p.m. on Saturday,
September 7, at the following location:
The First Baptist Church of Portland, Maine
360 Canco Rd., Portland, ME 04103
http://www.firstbaptistportland.org/
Dick B. and Ken B. will be staying at the following hotel
from September 5-12:
Hilton Garden Inn Portland Airport
145 Jetport Blvd., Portland, ME, 04102
1-866-767-0278
Dick B. and Ken B. check in Thursday, September 5, and check
out Thursday, September 12. Dick and Ken will be available for pre- and
post-conference personal, small-group, and workshop meetings with Christian
leaders and workers in the recovery arena. These meetings will cover:
• Dr. Bob’s
wife, Anne Smith, and Quiet Time-Eleventh Step practices and resources, and
other subjects being formulated as speakers emerge. The meetings are broadening
in number and topic as Christian leaders and workers in the recovery arena are
registering right now; and
• Working
with impaired physicians, nurses, pharmacists, dentists, attorneys, and other
licensed workers. **
We may also offer a side trip to St. Johnsbury, Vermont
(about three hours away)—birthplace and boyhood home of A.A. cofounder Dr.
Robert Holbrook Smith—leaving Portland, Maine, on Sunday afternoon, September
8, and returning Tuesday evening, September 10, and allowing for two full days
of research and touring with Dick B. and Ken B. Here is the schedule of
meetings:
Other Meetings and Events with Dick B. and Ken B., September
6-11, 2013:
Fri., Sept. 6,
10:00 am to 9:30 pm: Pre-conference
personal and small-group meetings, meals,
and workshops available with Dick B. and Ken B.
Sun., Sept. 8, to
Tues., Sept. 10: Portland:
Personal meetings with Dick B. & Ken B.; and/or
Possible side trip to Dr. Bob’s birthplace, St. Johnsbury,
VT.
Wednesday, Sept.
11: Portland: Morn./afternoon: pers. mtgs. w/Dick & Ken B.;
Evening: Dick B. speaking at regular A.A. meeting
To register for “The First International Alcoholics
Anonymous History Conference” (Admission is FREE!), or for more information
about the conference, please contact Dick B.’s son, Ken, via email at
kcb00799@gmail.com or on his cell phone at 1-808-276-4945.
Please join us in Portland September 6-7, 2013!
Gloria Deo
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