The
Four Absolutes–Still More Revealed
Additional
Source Materials From Beginning to
End
By
Dick B.
The
Overview
This
is the concluding article in my
series on the Four Absolutes. You
can get the full picture as I researched
and wrote it by reading three of
my titles:
(1)
The Oxford Group and Alcoholics
Anonymous
http://www.dickb.com/Oxford.shtml
(2)
New Light on Alcoholism (Rev.
Shoemaker)
http://www.dickb.com/newlight.shtml
(3)
Anne Smith’s Journal (Dr.
Bob’s wife)
http://www.dickb.com/annesm.shtml
The
articles are designed to give you
accurate information concerning
the origin of the absolutes in Speer’s
book The Principles of Jesus;
their expansion in Wright’s
book The Will of God and a Man’s
Lifework; their adoption in
the writings of Dr. Frank Buchman,
Rev. Sam Shoemaker, and other Oxford
Group writers; and their use in
Akron’s first A.A. group as explained
by Dr. Bob, his wife Anne Smith,
and the AA of Akron pamphlets of
the early days. Furthermore, unless
you have knowledge of the sources
in the Bible from which the Absolutes
were taken by Dr. Speer, Professor
Wright, Frank Buchman, and the others,
you will simply be looking at a
lot of individual and diverse opinions–"opinions"
being idea that don’t always find
great favor in the A.A. community.
The early saying about them was:
"Give me news, not views."
Let’s
Start with Professor Henry B. Wright’s
Book
Our
Oxford Group/A.A. friend, Rev. T.
Willard Hunter, wrote that Professor
Wright of Yale probably had more
influence on Oxford Group Founder
Dr. Frank N.D. Buchman than anyone
other than Buchman’s own mother.
Wright’s key book was The Will
of God and A Man’s Lifework
(New York: Association Press, 1924).
It was copyrighted in 1909. Its
studies were originally prepared
by laymen to meet the needs of students
in the Association Bible Classes
for Seniors of the Academic and
Scientific Departments of Yale University.
Wright’s title is a classic for
one who wants to know the origin
of the many Oxford Group ideas Frank
Buchman borrowed from Wright.
Wright
begins his book with a chapter on
the will of God. Then he quotes
Jesus and the Apostles on the subject.
Then he quotes varied verses in
the Bible and statements by early
thinkers like Professors Horace
Bushnell, Henry Drummond, and William
James. He dwells at length on the
principle of absolute surrender
of self, the relationship of surrender
of self to spiritual experiences,
the decision to do God’s will, the
concept of willingness, the universal
will of God as found in the Bible,
and the "Particular Will of
God for Each Individual Man."
Then
comes his presentation of the "Four
Touchstones of Jesus and the Apostles."
Wright begins with the verse in
1 Thessalonians 4:3: "For this
is the will of God, even your sanctification.
. ." Continuing these theme
in Thessalonians, Wright defines
God’s injunctions: (1) Purity–1
Thessalonians 4:3-5--abstaining
from fornication, possessing your
vessel in sanctification and honour,
and not in the lust of concupiscence.
(2) Honesty–1 Thessalonians 4:6–"That
no man go beyond and defraud his
brother in any matter. (3) Unselfishness–1
Thessalonians 4:11-13–peaceableness,
etc. (4) Love–1 Thessalonians 4:9-10–"for
ye yourselves are taught of God
to love one another."
Then
Wright discusses the absolutes in
detail. As to "absolute purity,"
Wright quotes from Bushnell, Speer,
and the Bible; and he plunges into
the specific verses dealing with
being "pure in heart,"
and abstaining from fornication,
uncleanness, passion, evil desire,
adultery and foul stories. And you
can find Dr. Bob himself referring
to these same sins. Wright takes
a similar approach as to "absolute
honesty" (dealing with cribbing,
sharp dealing, lying, disclosing
of confidences, and exaggeration).
So too "absolute unselfishness"
(speaking of denying one’s self;
avoiding bitterness, wrath, and
anger; being kind, tenderhearted,
forgiving, peaceable, gentle; and
eschewing envy, greed, and lawlessness).
Finally comes his discussion of
"absolute love" (quoting
so many of the verses in the Bible
on love). The point is that Professor
Wright did not wing it when it came
to defining the "absolute"
standards of Jesus. He went straight
to the Bible and quoted what the
Word of God had to say on each subject.
Therein lies the value and importance
of his writing.
Bill
Wilson seemed to have lots of trouble
with the "absolutes."
He emphasized in his Big Book that
"we are not saints" and
"we claim spiritual progress
rather than spiritual perfection."
He just plain ignored the four absolutes
as such. But this seems the product
of guilt about his own womanizing
and profiteering, rather than disdain
for the principles themselves. And
he would have done well to repeat
explicitly what Professor Wright
had to say about falling short:
Disobedience
is a deliberate, voluntary
transgression of purity, honesty,
unselfishness, or love; the refusal
(not necessarily the failure) to
obey one’s conviction of the right
(Wright, The Will of God,
supra, p.223).
After
the dedication, the truly surrendered
man has made a contract with God
to be always pure, always
honest, always unselfish,
always loving in deeds of
self-expression; he may fail now
and then, but he corrects his mistake
as soon as he realizes it and presses
on, so the channel is always open.
Through compelling convictions of
purity, honesty, unselfishness or
service, which his vow requires
him to translate at once into action,
he can now be led into fields of
provision and out of paths of danger
(Wright, supra, p. 251).
Dr.
Bob said to the end of his life
that he felt the Four Absolutes
were important and were "yardsticks"
for testing appropriate behavior.
I personally do not find the Big
Book itself compromising on the
importance of honesty, unselfishness,
and love. Moreover, the Big Book’s
remarks on its restitution steps
and on the Tenth Step call for picking
yourself up, correcting your mistakes,
and seeing what can be done to improve
things by following spiritual principles.
Rev.
Almond’s Foundations For Faith
More
than sixty years after Wright spelled
out the Biblical concepts supporting
the Four Absolutes, Reverend. Harry
J. Almond published Foundations
For Faith (London: Moral Re-Armament,
1975). This was almost 100 years
after Speer had promulgated the
ideas from the teachings of Jesus.
And Almond did a crackerjack job
of discussing the Four Absolutes.
He picked up the Oxford Group saw:
"Sin is The Disease. Christ
is The Cure. The Result is a Miracle."
He pointed out the commands of the
Bible which define the sin or disease–the
Ten Commandments (Exodus 20:3-17),
Jesus’s definition of the things
that come from within, and defile
a man (Mark 7:20-23); Jesus’s statement
that whoever relaxes the least of
these commandments and teaches men
to do so shall be called least in
the kingdom of heaven (Matthew 5:19);
and Paul’s statement that those
who violate the commandments will
not inherit the kingdom of God,
but that some were washed, sanctified,
and justified in the name of the
Lord Jesus Christ and in the Spirit
of God (Almond, supra, p. 2).
Almond
wrote that the "moral standards
as tests" must be absolute;
otherwise they are not standards.
Almond quotes Jesus from Matthew
5:48: "You, therefore, must
be perfect, as your heavenly Father
is perfect." Almond also points
to many specifically relevant verses
defining honesty, purity, unselfishness,
and love. It is a guidebook to the
real meaning of each standard.
Many
have asked me where A.A.’s Fourth
Step inventory came from. Almond
gives one explanation of it origin:
"To recognize sin it might
be good to stop here, and with pencil
and paper take a few minutes to
note every point that comes to mind
and conscience where your life has
not corresponded with theses absolute
standards: Honesty, Purity, Unselfishness,
Love" (Almond, supra,
p. 5). Sam Shoemaker went through
that very process in 1919 in China
and often spoke of it in connection
with "self-examination"–the
precursor of A.A.’s Fourth Step
moral inventory.
Origins
in "A First Century Christian
Fellowship"
Very
soon after Frank Buchman began gathering
a group of friends around him, those
people were calling themselves "A
First Century Christian Fellowship."
And that name was in common usage
by those friends and by what soon
became the "Groups" throughout
the 1920's. Rev. Sam Shoemaker frequently
called the Oxford Group by that
name, as witnessed by his remarks
in Twice Born Ministers;
and I have many announcements and
invitations I obtained from James
and Eleanor Forde Newton that describe
the Oxford Group as A First Century
Christian Fellowship.
If
you go back to the Oxford Group
beginnings, you start primarily
with the title by Howard Arnold
Walter, Literary Secretary, National
Council Young Men’s Christian Association
of India and Ceylon. Walter wrote
this title in conjunction with Professor
Henry B. Wright and Reverend Frank
N.D. Buchman. It bore the name Soul-Surgery:
Some Thoughts on Incisive Personal
Work, and was published in 1919.
Its major topic dealt with what
later became called the 5 C’s–Confidence,
Confession, Conviction, Conversion,
Conservation [also called "Continuance"].
These five principles, in turn,
became the heart of the ideas behind
A.A. Steps Three through Twelve,
as Bill Wilson himself was later
to write in The Language of the
Heart. The point here is that
author H. A. Walter made much of
what Sherwood Eddy had bidden as
the third step in soul-winning:
that step was to "make the
moral test" (Walter, Soul-Surgery,
Connecticut: Record Press,1920,
p. 69). Walter cited a pamphlet
by Sherwood Eddy and Frank Buchman,
titled "Ten Suggestions for
Personal work," which I have
not yet located. But the third point
was "Make the moral test;"
and Dr. Bob’s wife Anne picked up
on this expression in her spiritual
journal. So making the A.A. origins
of making a moral test came at least
as early as 1919.
Now
go back to the next hard-to-find
title: Clarence Irving Benson,
The Eight Points of The Oxford Group:
An Exposition For Christians and
Pagans (Melbourne: Humphrey
Milford Oxford University Press,
1935). Benson has a chapter (IV)
on "Daily Checking The Four
Absolutes" (pp. 44-57). Though
I could find little evidence that
Benson’s book itself was read widely
either in the Oxford Group or by
the A.A. pioneers, there is clear
language in that book that somehow
found its way to Alcoholics Anonymous.
Thus Benson speaks of a business
inventory, checking the books, and
taking stock (p. 44). He says:
The
Group takes the four absolute standards
of the life of Christ–Absolute Love,
Absolute Purity, Absolute Honesty
and Absolute Unselfishness. These
are applied as daily tests of life
in all its issues. This practice
of regular self-examination in the
light of Christ has proved to be
of genuine practical value in our
Christian development" (p.
45).
He
deals with the issue of "perfection"
and says Christ did not ask the
impossible. He simply asks that
man emulate God as the perfect Father
(pp. 46-47). Benson then refers
to 1 Corinthians 13 as the summary
of perfect love–a chapter that was
highly favored in early A.A. Benson
further quotes evangelist Dwight
Moody for these words: "If
you want to be miserable, look within.
If you want to be distracted, look
around, but if you want to have
peace, look up" (p. 56). He
quotes Paul: "I love; yet not
I, but Christ loveth in me."
He adds that we are not merely trying
to approximate to a standard without
and separate from us, but God begins
to dwell in us. We are not called
to conform to an outward code, we
work out a living principle that
is within us (pp. 56-57). And if
so many today, and Bill Wilson yesterday,
could have studied and understood
the heart of the Four Absolutes–the
Christ in you declaration–they would
not have been so quick to put their
senses knowledge to defining absolutes
in human terms or rejecting them
as human impossibilities.
The
Picture as A.A. Developed
In
the mid-1930's (when A.A. was founded),
there were plenty of discussions,
and books with discussions, of the
Four Absolutes. Dr. Bob read the
books and circulated them. What
is The Oxford Group was one,
though it was not written by an
Oxford Group person. But the most
popular was certainly Arthur James
Russell’s For Sinners Only (New
York: Harper & Brothers Publishers,
1932). It was mentioned in Anne
Smith’s Journal. It was read and
circulated by Dr. Bob. And it was
immensely well-known and widely
read by Oxford Group people. I have
found copies in the library of every
Oxford Group person to whom I have
talked.
A
few points in For Sinners Only
will help us conclude this summary.
Russell essentially devoted an entire
chapter to the Four Absolutes (pp.
267-277). He covered the common
Buchman teachings about sin and
then introduced Buchman’s moral
standards as follows:
Christianity
has a moral backbone. And let us take
for convenience four of the simple
moral standards that we see in Christ’s
own life–honesty, purity, unselfishness
and love. Those standards are absolute.
No one has ever yet proved He compromised
on any one of those four. Let us take
them one by one and see how we measure
up to His standard (p. 269).
Using
terms familiar to both Oxford Groupers
and AAs, Russell tackles each of
the absolutes in detail. He cites
Scripture, and he gives examples
of shortcomings. His portion on
unselfishness will ring on familiar
A.A. ears in Russell’s discussion
of Self. Dealing with a well-known
and old A.A. foe, Russell says:
Then,
again, there is self-centeredness.
Most of us are born rotating on the
axis ego, and continue to do so until
the end of our lives, often at an
increasing rate. One result of that
is that we are never able to keep
friends for any length of time. It
not only loses us friends, but often
keeps us from bothering to make them.
. . . And now for one of the biggest
monsters of the self–self will. We
simply want our own way and will not
yield (pp. 274-275).
Those
familiar with the A.A. philosophy
as stated in the Big Book will quickly
recognize the foregoing and many
other A.A. expressions that poured
out of Russell’s 1932 Oxford Group
book. Russell ends the absolutes
chapter with a plea to ask for a
"Christ-controlled life"
where he is "Lord and Master
of all" (p. 277).
A
Suggestion
If
you’d like to know what the Four
Absolutes were really intended to
be, where they came from, and how
they can be understood today, particularly
in A.A., I believe the foregoing
resources will be most helpful.
They’ll put these moral standards
in Godly terms for you instead of
mere human opinions of what some
person thinks is "right or
wrong."
END