The Oxford Group is not the only source of A.A.’s principles,
practices, and language. The Bible is the major source.
Quiet Time, the teachings of Reverend Sam Shoemaker, the
materials in Anne S’s Journal, and the Christian literature
A.A. pioneers read are all of major significance. And
we have written at length on them elsewhere in books,
articles, and seminars. Moreover, one needs to note the
difference between A.A.’s Akron root (where A.A. was born)
and A.A.’s New York origins (where Bill W. received many
specific Oxford Group ideas). Both Akron and New York
alcoholics were conversant with the Oxford Group, but
not all looked at it in the same way. Dr. Bob saw it as
a source of ideas. Bill W. tended to see it as a program
that led to a relationship with God. The real picture,
the real connection, and the real facts lie in between.
A.A. is not the Oxford Group. And, most assuredly, the
Oxford Group is not A.A. In fact, the development of the
Oxford Group since publication of the Big Book has taken
Oxford Group activities to a totally different place than
it took A.A. in the period about 1938, just before the
Big Book was written.
How, then, can you describe the real Oxford Group Connection
of A.A. Unfortunately, it has been expunged in part by
the editorial work of Father John C. Ford and Father Ed
Dowling on A.A. Comes of Age and in Twelve Steps
and Twelve Traditions. It has been clouded by ever-recurring
and erroneous statements linking the Oxford Group to the
Nazi Party in Germany. It has been lost through Bill W’s
insistent accreditation of Rev. Sam Shoemaker with the
mantle of "American Leader of the Oxford" and
the "well-spring" of A.A.’s ideas and steps.
Almost no one quotes an early, leading, Oxford Group leader
and writer’s statement: "The principles of the Oxford
Group are the principles of the Bible" (Day, The
Principles of the Group, p. 1). Finally, the
real Oxford Group connection has been virtually discarded
in A.A. literature and meetings, along with the Bible,
Quiet Time, Sam Shoemaker, Anne S’s Journal, and the literature
early AAs read.
Fortunately, the last 11 years of research and the accumulation
of some 23,900 historical items including hundreds of
Oxford Group and Shoemaker books in our resource center
in Maui has made microscopic looks at Oxford Group ideas
and Alcoholics Anonymous codifications of those ideas
a reality–just simply unknown to most today.
We’ve covered most specific details in our titles The
Oxford Group and Alcoholics Anonymous: A Design for Living
That Works (www.dickb.com/Oxford.shtml
); New Light on Alcoholism: God, Sam Shoemaker, and
A.A. (www.dickb.com/newlight.shtml)
and Turning Point: A History of the Spiritual Roots
of Alcoholics Anonymous (www.dickb.com/Turning.shtml)
and in other works (www.dickb.com/titles.shtml)
The
Important Oxford Group In-put Time Line
There was no "Oxford Group" prior to 1919. There
was no "Oxford Group" prior to the time the
press gave a tiny group of travelers in Africa the Oxford
"group" name in 1928. And basically, there was
no "Oxford Group" in America, at least, after
1938 when the idea and name "Moral Re-Armament"
were embraced by Oxford Group founder Dr. Frank N.D. Buchman,
just prior to the beginning of World War II. Finally,
the name in America has now been changed to "Initiatives
for Change." And you will look long and hard to find
any resemblance between today’s activities (which often
involve a Roman Catholic Cardinal, the Jewish Rabbi of
London, the Dalai Lama, and a supportive Japanese business
executive, who has no connection with Christianity whatever.
Many of the ideas which formed the heart of the Oxford
Group’s life-changing program came from Christian evangelism,
revivalism, and writings which achieved wide-spread importance
and acceptance in the 1800's. They are seldom mentioned
among activists in today’s Moral Re-Armament program.
Perhaps the one remnant is an occasional reference to
one or all of the "Four
Absolutes" or "Four Standards"–honesty,
purity, unselfishness, and love. These "standards"
were framed in the late 1800's by Dr. Robert E. Speer
in his book The Principles of Jesus, and embraced
and expanded by Frank Buchman’s major mentor, Dr. Henry
Wright, in the early 1900's in his book The Will of
God and a Man’s Life Work.
It probably would be quite accurate to say this of A.A.’s
"Real Oxford Group Connection." Nobody invented
it. It came through being borrowed from many sources.
It developed over a period of some twenty years. It is
embodied in a number of titles, with different subjects,
different approaches, and different authors. In fact,
this is what Bill W. often said of A.A. itself. Nobody
invented it. It was borrowed from many sources. And–what
should be said of the Oxford Group and Alcoholics
Anonymous–the basic ideas came from the Bible. Just as
Dr. Bob said they did. A fact that Bill W. never disputed
or rejected.
Major
Published Oxford Group Works
We have covered these before. They are listed at great
length in The Books Early AAs Read for Spiritual Growth,
7th. ed. (www.dickb.com/bks_early.shtml)
and Making Known the Biblical Roots of Alcoholics Anonymous
(www.dickb.com/makingknown.shtml)
We must have more than 500 important Oxford Group titles
here in Maui at our Resource Center. But in this piece
we will just summarize those which will provide the reader
with some solid chewing, information, and documentation!
And by the way, that’s the reason for all the footnotes,
bibliographies, and appendices in my books. So you can
look and find out for yourself.
Important
Early Sources for Principal Oxford Group Ideas–acknowledged
its Leaders
I like Streams, which was published by Mark O.
Guldseth in 1982. The book has a real feel for the flow
of sources from people like Horace Bushnell, Henry Drummond,
F.B. Meyer, Dwight L. Moody, Robert E.. Speer, and Henry
B. Wright into the thinking of Frank Buchman and the writings
of Oxford Group people. To mention just a part of their
contribution, these sources from the 1800's contributed
a widely known flow of ideas, including (1) The Will of
God. (2) The inspired Word in the Bible. (3) The guidance
of God. (4) The principles of Jesus, as summarized in
the "Four Standards." (5) The major importance
of "sin" as a barrier to a relationship with
our Creator. (6) The "art" of life-changing
involved in the well-known principles of "Confidence,"
"Confession," "Conviction," "Conversion,"
and "Continuance." You can hear these principles,
in one form or another, on any Billy Graham Crusade, in
A.A.’s last three steps, in the Books of Acts and Romans,
and in the law respecting confidential communications,
etc. (7) Witnessing. (8) Fellowship. (9) Amends and restitution.
You can find these ideas in the Sermon on the Mount and
the Old Testament and other teachings of Jesus. You can
find them in a court of equity. You can find them in the
criminal justice system. (10) The Ten Commandments. (11)
The love of God and of others, including our enemies.
(12) Searching the Scriptures, praying, meditating on
the Word, and setting aside a "Quiet Time" or
"Morning Watch." (13) Accepting Jesus Christ
as one’s Lord and Saviour–a much discarded, but primary
element in early practices (John 3: 1-8; John 3:16; Romans
10:9).
In sum, Frank Buchman and Sam Shoemaker and Bill W. never
claimed to have invented the foregoing principles that
found their way to early A.A. As Bill W. said, they were
the common property of mankind. And they sure weren’t
something that was "distorted" or "poisoned"
by the Oxford Group. Just read the Bible. Read any of
the non-Oxford Group books Dr. Bob read and recommended.
See Dr. Bob and His Library (www.dickb.com/drbob.shtml).
Read the pamphlets published by early Akron A.A. And read
the speeches of Dr. Bob and Bill W. when they were on
the same platform before Dr. Bob died..
Opponents of this or that religion, church, religious
idea, or religious book so often try to place their target
in a box. Then they label it. Then they condemn it. Often
just because it doesn’t fit their "box." But
they frequently have never mastered the facts about it.
Half truths, biased summaries, and basic prejudices lead
away from God, the Bible, and the truth, rather than toward
it–when it comes to so much "history," including
that about early A.A.’s biblical roots, and those of the
Oxford Group.
Some
Major Contributing Oxford Group Literature in its AA Input
Era (1919 to 1939)
Soul Surgery: In my judgment, the first
"real" Oxford Group book was Soul-Surgery, published
in 1919. It was intended to be the collaborative work
of H.A. Walter, of Buchman’s mentor Henry B. Wright, and
of Frank Buchman himself. It set forth a life-changing
program–the so-called Five C’s–that Frank Buchman called
"God’s art" for cutting out sin and "opening
the way" to a relationship with God. In Confidence,
Confess it, become Convicted of it. Get rid of it by Conversion–an
experience of God. And Continue the changed life. All
of these ideas directly influenced Bill Wilson’s Twelve
Steps.
Rev. Sam Shoemaker’s Writings: Often ignored
are the powerful, articulate, and simple early writings
of Rev. Samuel M. Shoemaker, Jr., There are many, and
they are covered in my various bibliographies. They are
virtually reviewed in my title New Light on Alcoholism.
They include Realizing Religion, Religion That
Works, Confident Faith, How to Find God,
If I Be Lifted Up, The Conversion of
the Church, National Awakening, The Church
Can Save the World, and A First Century Christian
Fellowship. Those who focus too much on the "Oxford
Group" tend to ignore the immense personal influence
that Shoemaker had as a member of the Oxford Group, as
a personal friend of Bill W., and as one that Bill called
a "Co-founder" of A.A. and actually asked (at
first) to write the Twelve Steps themselves–steps in which
Dr. Bob played no part at all as to the writing stage.
The Life-changing books Anne S. and Dr. Bob recommended:
Begbie’s Twice-Born Men and Life-Changers;
Foot’s Life Began Yesterday; Shoemaker’s Twice-Born
Ministers; and Russell’s For Sinners Only.
There were others of less popularity: Kitchen’s I Was
a Pagan; Charles Clapp’s The Big Bender; and
Amelia Reynold’s New Lives for Old..
"Doctrinal" Descriptions of Various Principles:
Almond’s Foundations for Faith; Sherwood Day’s
The Principles of the Group; Julian Thornton-Duesbury’s
Sharing; Philip Marshall Brown’s The Venture of
Belief; the anonymous What is the Oxford Group;
Harris’s The Breeze of the Spirit; Weatherhead’s
Discipleship; Benson’s The Eight Points of the
Oxford Group; Leon’s The Philosophy of Courage;
Phillimore’s Just for Today; and Winslow’s Why
I Believe in the Oxford Group.
The Bible study, Prayer, and Guidance literature:
Carruthers’s How to Find Reality in Your Morning
Devotions; Chambers’s My Utmost for His Highest;
Fosdick’s The Meaning of Prayer; Holm’s
The Runner’s Bible; Jones’s Victorious Living;
Forde’s The Guidance of God; H. Rose’s The Quiet Time;
Cecil Rose’s When Man Listens; Sangster’s God Does Guide
Us; Streeter’s The God Who Speaks; The Upper
Room; Hadden’s Christ’s Program for World-Reconstruction:
Studies in the Sermon on the Mount; Harris’s An
Outline of the Life of Christ; Hicks’s How to Read
the Bible; Viney’s How Do I Begin?; and Winslow’s
Vital Touch with God and When I Awake; Tileston’s
Daily Strength for Daily Needs
Biographical: Austin’s Frank Buchman
as I Knew Him; Buchman’s Remaking the World;
Howard’s Frank Buchman’s Secret and That Man
Frank Buchman; Hunter’s World Changing through
Life-changing; Lean’s On the Tail of a Comet;
Spoerri’s Dynamic out of Silence; Thornhill’s
The Significance of the Life of Frank Buchman.
Recent accounts by oldtimers: Belden’s Beyond
the Satellites: Is God Speaking–Are we Listening;
Blake’s Way to Go; Harriman’s Matched Pair;
Lean’s Cast out your Nets; Martin’s Always a
Little Further; Mowat’s Modern Prophetic Voices;
and Twitchell’s Frank Buchman: Twentieth Century
Catalyst;
Some criticisms: Brown’s The Oxford Movement:
Is it of God or of Satan; Dinger’s Moral Re-Armament:
A Study of Its Technical and Religious Nature in the Light
of Catholic Teaching; Hensley’s The Oxford Groups;
Niebuhr’s Christianity and Power Politics; Van
Baalen’s The Chaos of Cults; and Williamson’s Inside
Buchmanism.
Conclusion
You don’t have to like the Oxford Group to learn about
it. You don’t have to condemn it to disagree with it.
And you don’t have to block it out of A.A.’s past to prevent
people from believing in its ideas. But, if you want to
understand A.A.’s Big Book, Steps, Slogans, and Fellowship;
and if you don’t want to make up your own understanding
of the spiritual program early A.A.'s developed, you’ll
want to know the full, the fairly reported, and real facts
about A.A.’s real Oxford Group connection. For our introduction,
see (www.dickb.com/index.shtml)
If you are one of those, you’ll have to do a lot of reading
and learning. You know what they say in A.A. about "opinions."
In fact, they used to say in the Oxford Group and in early
A.A.: "Give me news, not views." And I hope
I have.
Copyright
© 2003 Dick B.. All Rights Reserved.
Part
1 | Part
2 | Part
3 | Part
4 | Part 5
Dick B. is a retired attorney, living in Hawaii and student
of the Bible. He has more than 15 published titles
to his name.
e-mail:
dickb@dickb.com
*
In accordance to our Traditions, names of known AA members
have been edited for anonymity.