How
do you justify calling alcoholism an illness, and not
a moral responsibility?
Answer
Early
in A.A.'s history, very natural questions arose among
theologians. There was a Mr. Henry Link who had written
"The Return to Religion (Macmillan Co., 1937). One day
I received a call from him. He stated that he strongly
objected to the A.A. position that alcoholism was an illness.
This concept, he felt, removed moral responsibility from
alcoholics. He had been voicing this complaint about psychiatrists
in the American Mercury. And now, he stated, he was about
to lambaste A.A. too. Of course, I made haste to point
out that we A. A.'s did not use the concept of sickness
to absolve our members from moral responsibility. On the
contrary, we used the fact of fatal illness to clamp the
heaviest kind of moral responsibility on to the sufferer.
The further point was made that in his early days of drinking
the alcoholic often was no doubt guilty of irresponsibility
and gluttony. But once the time of compulsive drinking,
veritable lunacy had arrived and he couldn't very well
be held accountable for his conduct. He then had a lunacy
which condemned him to drink, in spite of all he could
do; he had developed a bodily sensitivity to alcohol that
guaranteed his final madness and death. When this state
of affairs was pointed out to him, he was placed immediately
under the heaviest kind of pressure to accept A.A.'s moral
and spiritual program of regeneration - namely, our Twelve
Steps. Fortunately, Mr. Link was satisfied with this view
of the use that we were making of the alcoholic's illness.
I am glad to report that nearly all theologians who have
since thought about this matter have also agreed with
that early position. While it is most obvious that free
will in the matter of alcohol has virtually disappeared
in most cases, we A.A. 's do point out that plenty of
free will is left in other areas, It certainly takes a
large amount of willingness, and a great exertion of the
will to accept and practice the A.A. program. It is by
this very exertion of the will that the alcoholic corresponds
with the grace by which his drinking obsession can be
expelled. (N.C.C.A. 'Blue Book', Vol.12, 1960)