History of
Alcoholics Anonymous
By Dick B.
© 2014 Anonymous. All rights reserved
One
of the reasons we are about to publish a video series and accompanying
guidebook is to get "the rest of the story" before those interested
in A.A. and 12 Step recovery. The title will be: "Bill W., Dr. Bob, and
the Cure of Alcoholism: 'The Rest of the Story.'" A.A. had several
different epochs, more and more being documented as research continues. The
first is how the first three got sober when there were no Steps, Traditions,
Big Books, War Stories or meetings like those today. The simple facts are in "The
Co-Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous. Next came the Akron Christian Fellowship
program. It was founded in June, 1935; and its first group (Akron Number One)
was founded July 4, 1935. DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers summarizes the program
on page 131. It was not an Oxford Group program. It certainly was not a
"spiritualist" program. It was
a program drawn from their belief that the answer to their problems was in the
Bible—particularly the Book of James, Jesus’s Sermon on the Mount, and 1
Corinthians 13. As Dr. Bob stated, its basic ideas came from three years of
study, teaching, and effort in the Bible, from which the basic ideas came.
Next, came Bill Wilson's purported "six" word-of-mouth ideas which he
said formed the basis for expansion to Twelve Steps. But these "six"
were controversial, not generally agreed upon, and presented in at least 4
different ways by Bill. Next, Bill worked with Rev. Sam Shoemaker to develop
the "new version" of the program. His work began in 1938 and was
published in the First Edition of the Big Book in mid-1939. In that version,
Bill claimed the sources were three: (1) Professor William James. (2) Dr.
William Silkworth. (3) Reverend Sam Shoemaker. Finally, came the great
compromise just before the First Edition went to the printers in 1939. The word
"God" was literally stricken from the Second, Third, and Eleventh
Steps. A strange hand-written insert attributed to Ebby Thacher was inserted at
the beginning of the typewritten manuscript and claimed that Ebby told Bill:
"Choose your own conception of god." But the evidence shows that Ebby
never made such a statement or held such an idea. The final statement in this
last phase was made by Bill when he said his little "committee of
four"--a secretary, a Christian, an atheist, and Bill--had made the
changes. Nobody else! But Bill said this was the great contribution of the
atheists and agnostics. You can get up to speed through my books (46), my 1600
articles, my newsletters, and by reading A.A. conference-approved literature in
full. Also, feel free to contact me at 808 874 4876 in Maui. God Bless, Dick B.
Gloria Deo
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