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Other
Books Written by Dick B. that were Published
Dick's
books can be ordered from many major online book retailer's.
CONTINUED
- BOOKS 27 thru 29
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ISBN
1-885803-28-1
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UTILIZING
EARLY A.A.'s SPIRITUAL ROOTS FOR RECOVERY TODAY
(Wilson House Series #1)
As
his eleven years of research and writing on the
subject of early A.A.’s spiritual roots was
drawing to a close, author Dick B. was asked to
deliver another annual seminar at The Wilson House
in Vermont. By that time, he had substantially documented
six major biblical roots of early A.A.’s spiritual
program of recovery.
These
roots were defined as the Bible, Quiet Time, Anne
Smith’s Journal, the teachings of Rev. Sam
Shoemaker, Jr., the life-changing program of the
Oxford Group, and the Christian literature early
AAs studied. Each of those roots has been the subject
of major titles by Dick, but it seemed very important
to tie them together in simplified form so they
could be viewed as a unit and utilized as a unit
by those seeking recovery today the early A.A. way.
The title commences with a chapter on the spiritual
beginnings of A.A.
Piece
by piece, the author details what AAs took from
the Bible and utilized in framing the various Steps.
The same approach is carefully taken with "Quiet
Time"-–pointing out the importance of
accepting Christ and using the Bible (elements frequently
omitted in discussions of early A.A. "meditation").
Then follow the core Oxford Group ideas about God,
sin, surrender, the power of Jesus Christ, the life-changing
Five C’s, restitution, daily surrender, and
the concluding spiritual awakening with witness
and practice of principles. Again, their incorporation
into the Steps is described. A similar presentation
is given as to Sam Shoemaker’s teachings,
the materials Anne Smith (Dr. Bob’s wife)
used to teach the pioneers, and the subject matter
of the literature.
The
difficulty today is reviewed. Bill Wilson confessed
to a dilemma that he didn’t seem to know how
to solve. We point out the contributing elements-–Lois
Wilson’s universalization view, Roman Catholic
concerns, atheist hoopla, treatment jabber, additions
in publishing, and a conservative Christian recoil.
The
author suggests how a believer can still use the
A.A. program and its roots with success today. The
basic suggestion is to combine Big Book study with
historical roots study; and many across the United
States are now doing just that. Dick concludes by
urging that the Good Book be first on your study
list, then the details of Quiet Time as the pioneers
did it, then the contents of Anne Smith’s
journal, then taking the Oxford Group ideas as guides
to understanding rather than theology. Most of all,
returning to the early A.A. understanding of God
as He understands Himself.
A
practical, timely, simple review of the author’s
eleven years of research and how he has used it
to help more than 80 men in their recovery.
106
pp.; 6 x 9; perfect bound; 1999
Click
here to email Dick about this book
or give Dick a call
at: (808) 874-4876
to talk with him about his book. |
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ISBN
1-885803-94-X
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WHEN
EARLY AAs WERE CURED AND WHY
This
is the 22nd published title by A.A.'s leading historian
on the history, roots, program, and successes of
early Alcoholics Anonymous. It is of special importance
in that the author moves from historical documentation
to actual implementation. It tells you exactly how
the astonishingly successful program of early A.A.
was conducted and how those same elements can be
taught, studied, and applied today. If early A.A.
achieved a 75% to 93% success rate among "medically
incurable" alcoholics who relied on the Creator,
and really gave their lives to the program of cure,
why not you. Today!
186
pages; 6 x 9; perfect bound; 2006
Click
here to email Dick about this book
or give Dick a call
at: (808) 874-4876
to talk with him about his book. |
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ISBN
1-885803-31-1
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WHY
EARLY A.A. SUCCEEDED
The Good Book in Alcoholics Anonymous Yesterday
and Today
(A Bible Study Primer for AAs and Other 12-Steppers)
Early
AAs studied the Bible, took their basic recovery
ideas from the Bible, and stressed reading it. They
called it The Good Book. The Good Book was read
at the beginning of almost every pioneer meeting.
It was read at the Quiet Times held each morning
at the home of Dr. Bob and Anne Smith for AAs and
their families. It was the subject of almost every
book, article, and devotional they used in their
own Quiet Times. Bill W. later wrote Rev. Sam Shoemaker
that he would like to see Bible study groups of
AAs studying the Word "in church basements."
Well
and good! We know early AAs did study Jesus’
Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5 to 7), 1 Corinthians
13, the Book of James, Psalms 23 and 91, and many
other verses and chapters cited in the Christian
literature they circulated. But what precisely did
they study and borrow? Where do you begin today
if you wish to adopt their highly successful practice?
Just which portions will bring the power, peace,
joy, liberty, forgiveness, healing, and deliverance
from alcoholism and their other problems that early
AAs sought and achieved in relying on their Creator?
How do you begin if you are in A.A. or a 12 Step
program and want to understand the program by using
the Good Book in the way A.A.’s founders and
pioneers did?
Author
Dick B. has spent 11 years researching the Biblical
roots and sources of early A.A.’s program.
He has published 16 titles on the subject. And four
of his recent titles are specifically devoted to,
and useful for, Good Book study and Good Book groups
in recovery programs such as A.A., Al-Anon, and
the many other 12 Step groups. The four books, including
this very title, are: (1) The
Good Book and The Big Book: A.A.’s Roots in
the Bible; (2) Good
Morning!: Quiet Time, Morning Watch, Meditation,
and Early A.A.; (3) By
the Power of God: A Guide to Early A.A. Groups &
Forming Similar Groups Today; (4) Why
Early A.A. Succeeded: The Good Book in Alcoholics
Anonymous Yesterday and Today (A Bible Study Primer
for AAs and other 12-Steppers). We recommend
you obtain and use all four as a set.
This
particular title has the much requested, much needed,
and highly useful guides for AAs and other "self-help"
people in today’s recovery arena. The power
and deliverance and love of the Creator are available
today. They have simply been obscured by New Age
language on "spirituality," "higher
powers," "any god," and just plain
idols that abound in today’s literature. There
are plenty of books on Bible study. There is none
that addresses early A.A.’s own endorsements
of Bible study, its own approach to the Good Book,
and the particular "release from prisons"
that AAs and others need and can find in the Bible
itself. This is a "how to" book. It doesn’t
tell you what to believe, how to believe, or what
to join. It does tell you "how to" read
the Bible, understand early A.A. ideas and victories
founded on the Bible, and put the whole deliverance
picture together for yourself. The set of four books
will point up four different areas of need and the
solutions. First, what is the evidence in A.A. of
Bible ideas and language (The
Good Book and The Big Book). Second,
what is the meaning of real "meditation"
and Quiet Time as they were practiced (Good
Morning!). Third, how did they and
can you today accomplish coordinating recovery ideas
with God’s own ideas in groups (By
the Power of God). Finally, in this
title, just what can you look for and use in the
Bible now (Why Early A.A. Succeeded)!
Treat
yourself to the facts! You will no longer find them
in Twelve Step, Recovery, or Therapy writings. Yet
they were the heart of early A.A.’s "Program"
and successes.
340
pp.; perfect bound; 2001
Click
here to email Dick about this book
or give Dick a call
at: (808) 874-4876
to talk with him about his book. |
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