Higher Power
By Dick B.
© 2013 Anonymous. All rights
reserved
Some of us spend a lot of time asking the question “What is a
Higher Power?” Sometimes, the answer is, “Something.” Sometimes, the answer is
“Somebody.” Sometimes, the answer is “Anything that keeps me from drinking.”
Others say “it” is a light bulb, a radiator, a chair, the A.A. Group, the Big
Dipper, a rock, “Her,” a tree, a rainbow, or “nothing at all.” But whatever we
hear, such answers sound pretty screwy to some of us. And they certainly
are.
However, the more the answers, the more the questions, because those
“light bulb” and “Big Dipper” phrases don’t answer questions, they just raise
the question, “What is it?”
Historically, the “higher power” phrase comes
from New Thought writers like Ralph Waldo Trine, William James, the Emanuel
Movement people, including, perhaps, Bill W.’s friend Victor Kitchen. See Dick
B., God and Alcoholism: Our Growing Opportunity in the 21st Century, 2002, pp.
89-101, ISBN 1885803346 (http://dickb.com/Godandalcoholism.shtml); Turning
Point: A History of Early A.A.’s Spiritual Roots and Successes, 1997, pp. 1-10,
163-172, ISBN 1885803079 (http://dickb.com/Turning.shtml).
But what is
it?
Dr. Bob’s wife Anne Ripley Smith simply called the nonsense names a
“funk hole” See Dick B. Anne Smith’s Journal 1933-1939: A.A.’s Principles of
Success, 3rd ed., 1998, pp. 91. 119-120, ISBN 1885803249
(http://dickb.com/annesm.shtml)
Let me tell you how three old timers
approach the answer to what a “Higher Power” isn’t:
One old timer--the
oldest--was my friend Jim H. from Maryland. He lived to 100 years old and got
sober just about the same time that Bill Wilson did. In fact, Jim knew Rev. Sam
Shoemaker and met Bill Wilson at early Oxford Group meetings. In his later
years, Jim came to know me and endorsed a number of my books. Jim’s answer to
the “higher power” nonsense involved s a “take-away” approach. He said to me and
wrote: “If you take God out of the program, you have nothing.”
Another
old timer--the archivist at Dr. Bob’s home--is my friend Ray G. Ray takes a
large collection of A.A. history materials around the U.S., conducts workshops
at conferences, and tells it like it was. Ray’s approach to the nonsense phrase
was to “identify” the “highest power.” Ray frequently said: “My higher power
isn’t conference approved; but his Father is!”
A third--an old timer from
Oregon whose name is Gene--phoned me to say that he was involved in both A.A.
and N.A., and was speaking at a world convention of N.A. He said he was
interested in our early A.A. history and in my research, and wanted to bring his
higher power back into the program. He said that Jesus was his higher power, and
he knew that the early A.A. program was a Christian program. We got to talking
about “singleness of purpose,” about the common features of A.A. and N.A., and
about the drift of both away from God. At the end of our conversation, we both
agreed that today’s crowds in A.A. and N.A. are really not single anything—not
just alcoholics, not just addicts, not just believers, not just unbelievers, but
in fact not much of any of these if they just stayed sick and didn’t get into a
fellowship and didn’t focus on getting well. Gene said that he no longer
introduced himself in speeches by saying “I’m Gene, and I am an alcoholic” or
“I’m Gene, and I am an addict.” Today he introduces himself as follows: “I’m
Gene, and I am a responsible member of the program.”
So this little
article is addressed to those who are or want to be “a responsible member of the
program.” And want so to identify themselves. Who is a responsible
member?
Let’s take a cue from the three old timers I just
quoted.
A responsible member is one who does not seek, or want, to take
God out of the program. It’s neither his privilege nor his right.
A
responsible member who is a Christian is one who makes it clear that the
Creator, his Father, is “Conference-approved”—certainly not “Conference
dis-approved.” He knows that most “Conference-approved” literature refers to
God, establishing a relationship with God, the Bible, biblical phrases, and the
early A.A. Christian Fellowship.
A responsible member may certainly be a
person who gets well by turning to “the Lord”—as Bill Wilson and Bill Dotson
(A.A. Number Three) said they did (Big Book, p. 191). He was not required to
turn to “the Lord”, and his A.A. forbears were either; but he has that privilege
and right.
A responsible member is one who would rather focus on what God
has done for him once he sought God, than on sparking conflicts over definitions
about who is sick from what, about what the nature of a “higher power” is, about
what “it” is or isn’t, about what the meaning of “is” is, and/or about who
satisfies the requirements for “membership” and who doesn’t.
One of the
reasons I enjoyed and still enjoy the Fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous is that
I never tried to substitute any kind of “higher power” for Almighty God. Another
is that I never got thrown out when I mentioned God. Or even when I mentioned
the Bible. Another is that I used the same terms to describe Almighty God that
were used by Dr. Bob, Bill Wilson, and the other pioneers—Creator, Maker,
Father, God, Father of lights, Heavenly Father, and Spirit. Another is that I
soon gave up thinking I could expect others to stop using the phrase “higher
power” to describe their “Something,” or “Somebody,” or “not-god” philosophy.
And I am, like Gene, “a responsible member of the program.” At least I think so,
and that is what counts for me. My job is to be of maximum service to God and to
carry the message to those still suffering from alcoholism. That’s our primary
purpose, and it works!
dickb@dickb.com, 808 874 4876
Gloria Deo
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment