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The
Four Absolutes*
More Revealed
By Dick B.
Comments
by Dr. Bob's Wife Anne in Her Journal
A
Word or Two about Anne's Discussion of the Absolutes
We've
previously covered the origin of the Four Absolutes in Dr.
Robert E. Speer's The Principles of Jesus and the expansion
of them in Professor Henry B. Wright's The Will of God and
a Man's Lifework. And we will shortly produce another article
with some of the more contemporary comments about the Absolutes
(honesty, purity, unselfishness, and love) by Oxford Group
writers and Dr. Bob while A.A. was shaping its program between
1935 and 1938. But there's much to be learned from the comments
and teachings that Dr. Bob's wife Anne Ripley S. shared
from the journal she wrote between 1933 and 1939. Her comments
are particularly important because Anne shared them with
AAs and their families during A.A.'s developmental years;
and they were frequently topics for discussion in the morning
quiet times held by Anne S. at the birthplace of A.A. during
the pioneer years [See Dick B., Anne S's Journal 1933-1939:
A.A.'s Principles of Success, 3rd ed. (Kihei, HI: Paradise
Research Publications, Inc., 1998)]– http://www.dickb.com/annesm.shtml
John R. (now deceased) was one of the longest surviving
of the A.A. pioneers. He made this statement about how Anne
S's Journal was used at the beginning of A.A.:
Before
one of these meetings [the morning quiet times at Dr. Bob's
home], Anne used to pull out a little book [her spiritual
Journal] and quote from it. We would discuss it. Then we
would see what Anne would suggest from it for our discussion.
Though
many in and out of A.A. have since written their own statements
about, and interpretations of, the Four Absolutes, the most
accurate source of how they were used and defined in early
A.A. is unquestionably the material in Anne S's Journal.
And this accuracy is needed because the Absolutes are frequently
the subject of discussion and writing in various A.A. groups
and conferences today.
Bill
and Lois W. often spoke of Anne S's impact on A.A.; and
the following are two of Bill's pertinent comments about
Anne's teachings:
[Bill
W.:] Bob and Anne and Henrietta [Seiberling] have been working
so hard with those men and with really wonderful success...
Anne and Bob and Henrietta have done a great job [Letter
from Bill W. to his wife Lois, from Akron, in the earliest
days. See DR. BOB and The Good Oldtimers, p. 108].
[Bill
W.:]... Clevelanders had gone to Dr. Bob's home, sitting
with him and Anne over cups of coffee at their kitchen table.
Eagerly they had absorbed knowledge of their problem and
its solution and had breathed deeply of the remarkable spiritual
atmosphere of the place [See Alcoholics Anonymous Comes
of Age, p. 19].
Anne
S., Our Moral Inventory, and the Four Absolutes
Anne–following
the example of many in the Oxford Group–often referred to
the Four Absolutes as the Four Standards, the Standards,
the Moral Standards, and the Moral Test. Early in her Journal,
she wrote:
It
is absolutely necessary to face people with the moral test.
Fundamentally, sin is independence toward God, living without
God. Seeing one's self as God sees one, brings hatred out
of sin [Dick B., Anne S's Journal, supra, p. 30].
Speaking
about Jesus's sermon on the mount (Matthew 7:1-5), Anne
wrote:
Who
checks another checks himself. If I have an urge to check
because of personal feelings, I am not seeing in light of
Christ's love. Criticism born of my own projection. Something
wrong in me. Unless I can crystallize the criticism, I had
better look for the mote in my eye [Anne S's Journal, pp.
30-31].
Anne
advocated testing or checking one's own conduct against
the four moral standards of Jesus Christ. She said:
Test
your thoughts. It is possible to receive suggestions from
your subconscious mind. Check your thoughts by the four
standards of Christ.
Make
the moral test. 4 Standards.
Basis
of an Interview. Is a challenge on the four standards.
What
thoughts do I expect? Am I ready to write them down and
willing? It is not making my mind a blank but trusting God
to use my mind, my thought life and my imagination. First
of all come uncomfortable thoughts of wrong relationships
with family, friends and people I work with. Resentments
to be faced and set right. Restitution to be made, bills,
letters, untidy desks, or house to be send straight.
Behind
every general need is a particular moral need, so that a
general surrender will focus into one point.
Surrender
on one's moral issue. Destroy the thing that [not able to
decipher] nearest. Then the next step becomes plain. [The
quotes above may be found in Anne S's Journal, pp. 32-33]
Anne
was no less specific and clear that she was referring to
the Four Absolutes in the foregoing discussion of the moral
standards. She declared:
Why
I [not able to decipher the next words] had been absolutely
honest, but not living.
[Referring
to Jesus's commandment of love:] Follow Christ's absolute
commandment.
Absolute
honesty demands that we no longer wear a mask.
Sharing...
It is being honest even after it hurts.
Every
time we register aloud the new attitude and change of heart
with absolute honesty another bridge is burned behind us
and another stake is driven in to anchor and mark our progress.
Check
your life constantly by the four absolutes. [The quotes
above may be found in Anne S's Journal, p. 33.]
Dr.
Bob shared his wife Anne's belief in the importance of the
four absolutes. He called them "yardsticks" (See references
in Anne S's Journal, pp. 33-34). Bill W., however, had no
such enthusiasm. Bill shifted the gears from listing, checking,
and examining for honesty, purity, unselfishness, and love.
He replaced that inventory with one that searched for resentment,
self-seeking, dishonesty, and fear. Anne, however, was no
less relentless in her journal about the importance of finding
and purging the "negative sins" to which Bill referred.
She specifically called for rejecting and correcting resentments,
self-centeredness, dishonesty, and fears (Anne S's Journal,
pp. 35-36). And, as can be seen from the foregoing quotes,
Anne not only addressed rigorous honesty, purity, unselfishness,
and love in the inventory process, but also in the "sharing"
process [precursor of the Fifth Step]. See Anne S's Journal,
pp. 36-41. Anne used sharing language that found its way
directly into A.A.'s Fifth Step: "I must share to be honest
with God, myself & others" (Anne S's Journal, p. 39). Also,
Anne wrote: "Being honest to God, self and other people...
It is being honest even after it hurts. It is giving your
real self to another person" (Anne S's Journal, p. 77).
Anne
Never Overlooked the Creator, His Son, or the Bible
As
established in our first article, the four absolute moral
standards came directly from the Bible, according to the
construction given them by Dr. Speer. One should therefore
never overlook God or Jesus Christ or the Bible in studying
and interpreting the Four Standards. And why? Because, in
the view of the evangelists and scholars of the 1800's who
espoused them, the later Oxford Group writers who adopted
them, and the early A.A. pioneers who used them, these were
God's standards. They represented to "cardinal teachings
of Jesus Christ" as one A.A. pioneer put it. They came directly
from the specific Bible verses we mentioned in Speer's The
Principles of Jesus.
If
you get these facts under your belt, you will see what Dr.
Bob, Anne, and their Oxford Group friends were talking about
when it came to the issue of a need for "perfection" in
using the Four Absolutes as moral standards. They spoke
only of "yardsticks" and "goals" and "targets." But W. ultimately
rejected the absolutes, claiming they required drunks to
try to get too good by Thursday (See Anne S's Journal, p.
122). But such a statement reflected Bill W's lack of understanding
of the Bible, the meaning of "Be ye therefore perfect,"
and the interpretation given this concept by the Oxford
Group people and by A.A.'s other founders.
For
example, concerning the rigorous demands of the "beatitudes"
in Jesus's sermon on the mount (Matthew 5:3-11), Anne had
carefully stated that they stood for Christ-like virtues
to be cultivated (Anne S's Journal, p. 135).
And
here's what Anne had to say about that cultivation and the
sources of information to be applied (as found in Anne S's
Journal, pp. 82, 78, 72):
Of
course the Bible ought to be the main Source Book of all.
Start
the person on a new life with simple, concrete and definite
suggestions, regarding Bible study, prayer, overcoming temptation
and service for others.
Let
all your reading be guided. What does God want me to read?
Claim
from God humility, patience, courage, faith and love.
I
must let Christ run my life–always self before.
Don't
try, but trust. Any kind of goodness that you try to achieve
with effort will be self-righteousness which has self in
the center. That is why it is repellent. "Not having mine
own righteousness" is Paul's phrase [See Philippians 3:9].
The only effort we need to put forth is that of daily surrender
and daily contact with Christ. We find release not by our
own efforts but by what Christ does for us and in us when
we open every area of our lives to him.
The
quality of life is an adventure not an arrival. We surrender
to God from more and more and from more to maximum. As E.
Stanley Jones says, "Christianity is an obtainment not an
attainment and the more we obtain, the more we see there
is to obtain." Maturity comes from fuller self renunciation
and surrender and often it takes new experience to bring
us farther along the way. The goal is "Be ye therefore perfect,
even as your Father in Heaven is Perfect [Compare Matthew
5:48 in the sermon on the mount].
The
Place to Find the Facts Is in Our Pioneer History
To
my knowledge, regrettably A.A. itself has never published
the contents, or even excerpts from, Anne S's Journal. I
was provided with a copy for study, quotation, and publication
by A.A.'s Trustees Archives Committee and its archivist
Frank M., at the written request of Dr. Bob's daughter Sue
S. W. And that Journal, and my book about it, are (to me)
the greatest single product of my 12 years of research into
the spiritual roots of A.A.
If
you know the Big Book, the Steps, our Fellowship, our literature,
the Oxford Group, and certainly the Bible, you'll begin
to see exactly and specifically where–as a practical matter–our
spiritual principles came from. matter. Take a look at Anne's
Journal. You'll see Big Book phrases, Step language, A.A.
Biblical ideas, Oxford Group expressions, and our slogans
(even "one day at a time"). In fact, as one historian wrote
in substance: "the A.A. language in Anne's Journal leaps
at you." And why not! Bill W. and Dr. Bob sat with Anne
daily in the great summer of 1935. Anne wrote down the materials
from 1933 to 1939 when Bill published his Big Book. Anne
had them with AA's and their families.
What
a place to find the facts. About our history. And about
the Four Absolutes [Check out Dick B., Anne S's Journal
1933-1939, 3rd ed. (HI: Paradise Research Publications,
Inc., 1998)].
Copyright
© 2003 Dick
B.. All Rights Reserved.
*
In accordance to our Traditions, names of known AA members
have been edited for anonymity.
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