Reflections on How to Hold “Old-School,”
Akron-Style A.A. Meetings
By Dick B.
© 2013 Anonymous. All rights reserved
Forming the Group
Our most recent
published suggestions on how to conduct “old-school,” Akron-style A.A. meetings
are embodied in our two titles:
Dick B. and Ken B., Stick with
the Winners! How to Conduct More Effective 12-Step Recovery Meetings Using
Conference-Approved Literature (Kihei, HI: Paradise Research Publications,
Inc., 2012): http://mcaf.ee/ok81l; and
Dick B. and Ken B., Pioneer
Stories in Alcoholics Anonymous (Kihei, HI: Paradise Research Publications,
Inc., 2012): http://mcaf.ee/rh0gw.
Those forming a
group should, like the Akron pioneers, believe in God, establish their
relationship with Him through His Son Jesus Christ, and look to both, as well
as to the Bible, for answers to their problems. Or, they should be persons who
want that type of help.
The qualifications
for “membership” should be that a newcomer wishes to end the use of alcohol and
addictive drugs in his life forever; that he will do whatever it takes to
accomplish just that; and that he will surrender to God for relief from his
problems—recognizing that neither he nor any human power has been able to cure
him of his illness.
The group should
begin its efforts with a prayer to their Heavenly Father for His power, love,
guidance, and suggestions for conducting the group. This is the beginning of
reaching democratically an informed group conscience on the group content.
Agenda items should
include keeping a written record of all group decisions; selecting a Secretary;
adopting a name; selecting the time and place for meetings; developing a format
for the meeting; and deciding on what literature shall be used and where it
shall be placed for view and use.
Conducting a Meeting
·
“Old-school”
Akron A.A. opened its meetings with a prayer by the leader, reading from
Scripture, and then having a selected individual give a brief “lead” (talk).
·
The
content of a talk should cover very briefly the speaker’s problem that brought
him to the fellowship, what he learned about the original Akron A.A. program,
what he did that fitted that mold, what his “vital religious experience” (if
any) or “turning point” was; how he surrendered to God, learned from the Bible
what obedience to God’s will included, practiced daily via Bible study, prayer,
Quiet Time, and the reading of religious literature; what he has done to help
others get well; and what he still needs to hear.
If
the speaker wishes to discuss the Big Book or Twelve Steps, his remarks should
be focused on the language of the Big Book and of a Step, what he did, where he
turned to God for help, how the Bible and prayer helped him, and what he still
needs to hear.
Drunkalogs
and war stories were simply not a part of the early meetings. And Dr. Bob
specifically said they didn’t amount to much.
·
There
should be group prayer and a group quiet time for communicating with God.
·
If,
based on the speaker’s presentation, there is a group topic; and the Secretary
should permit very brief questions or comments to be raised by members present.
·
If there
are members or newcomers who have not yet made a “full surrender,” the meeting
should briefly adjourn; the prospect should be escorted to a private place by
two or three selected leaders; the prospect should kneel in prayer; and the
leaders should pray with him.
·
The
prayers should consist of three parts:
(1) The newcomer professes his belief in God—Hebrews 11:6; and he
accepts Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior—Romans 10:9 and John 3:16.
(2)
Then the newcomer asks God in the name of Jesus Christ to take alcohol and
drugs out of his life forever.
(3) Then
the newcomer petitions God in the name of Jesus Christ, with thanksgiving, and
according to God’s will, to meet his particular needs as to guidance, healing,
and forgiveness, as well as serving and glorifying God and serving God and
others.
·
Attention
should be called to the literature table and how to use it.
·
The
meeting should adjourn with a group prayer.
Variations as to Meetings
Each group, after
asking God for His guidance, should be autonomous and free to decide what to
include in meetings and how many meetings should be conducted in a week by the
group.
·
There
should be a special period for orienting newcomers as to what Alcoholics
Anonymous is all about, and the resources that are available—with particular
emphasis on reliance on God, study of the Bible, prayer, obeying God’s will,
and helping others as much and frequently as possible. See DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, page 131.
·
There
can be a Quiet Time meeting patterned on those conducted by Dr. Bob’s wife each
morning where she opened with prayer, read Scripture, led the group in prayer,
read from
her journal, and discussed godly subjects raised. See Dick B., Anne Smith’s Journal, 1933-1939 (http://mcaf.ee/okuca).
·
There
can be a Big Book or a Twelve Step meeting where heavy emphasis is placed on
using and reading from the Big Book and informed leadership as to how to take
each Step. See Our A.A. Legacy to the Faith
Community workbook by three Clarence Snyder Sponsee Old-timers and Their
Wives (available from www.CameToBelieve.org).
·
There
can be a Bible study group--with particular emphasis on the three segments Dr.
Bob said were considered “absolutely essential:” See The Co-Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous: Biographical Sketches: Their
Last Major Talks (A.A. Literature Catalog item # P-53); and Dick B., The James Club and the Original A.A.
Program’s Absolute Essentials (http://mcaf.ee/v1nh9)--in both cases dealing with the Book of
James, Jesus’s Sermon on the Mount, and 1 Corinthians 13.
·
There
can be an A.A. history study group--utilizing the forthcoming “Bill W., Dr.
Bob, and the Cure of Alcoholism: The Rest of the Story” video series by Dick B.
and Ken B. for teaching.
Other
history topics could include: (1) The roots of A.A. in Vermont. (2) The
Christian upbringing of Bill W. and Dr. Bob. (3) How the first three AAs got sober.
(4) The original seven-point A.A. program summarized by Frank Amos. (5) The 16
practices of the Akron A.A. “Christian fellowship” members. (6) The resemblance
of the early Akron A.A. “Christian fellowship” to the practices of the Apostles
as recorded in the Book of Acts. (7) Where Bill W. got the ideas for the Big
Book and 12 Steps before they were changed. (8) The “Broad Highway” established
by the last-minute changes in the printer’s manuscript of the Big Book before
it went to press. (9) The immense support (still present in A.A.’s own General
Service Conference-approved literature) for the “old-school” practices and for
applying those practices in today’s Fellowship.
Gloria Deo
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