The
Books and Materials Early AAs Read
By
Dick B.
Early
AAs were readers. The Bible was the
written word of God. The daily devotionals
were written guides. Oxford Group
people wrote. Sam Shoemaker wrote.
Anne Smith wrote. And there were a
great many books available for reading.
Dr. Bob was an avid reader, and so
was his colleague Henrietta Seiberling.
Every pioneer A.A. meeting had tables
set out in T. Henry's house where
literature was available. Dr. Bob
recommended and circulated many books.
He kept a journal which recorded the
books loaned, and he quizzed the alcoholics
on the Bible and on the written materials
they had borrowed from him. Whatever
their proclivity for reading, early
AAs all attested to the presence of
the Bible and The Upper Room. They
mentioned The Runner's Bible. They
mentioned E. Stanley Jones books.
They mentioned Henry Drummond's The
Greatest Thing in the World. They
mentioned My Utmost for His Highest.
They mentioned James Allen's As a
Man Thinketh. They mentioned the popular
Glenn Clark books, Emmet Fox books,
and Harry Emerson Fosdick books. There
were religious books, and almost every
one elaborated on some aspect of ideas
AAs were borrowing from the Bible
and the Oxford Group for their basic
principles.
There was plenty of material on the
Bible, prayer, healing, divine guidance,
the Sermon on the Mount, 1 Corinthians
13, and the Book of James. There were
Oxford Group/Shoemaker materials on
finding God, changing lives, conversion,
the guidance of God, fellowship, witness,
and the teachings of Jesus. There
has, perhaps, never been a fellowship
with such diversity of subject matter
at the immediate beck and call of
its participants. Nor with such encouragement
of its study by the "leadership."
Dr.
Bob's Library
Dr.
Bob and everyone that knew him well
in the early A.A. days spoke of the
immense amount of reading he did.
He read the Bible through three times
and studied it daily. As he put it:
I read everything I could find, and
talked to everyone who I thought knew
anything about it (DR. BOB, p. 56).
[Of the Oxford Group books and the
Bible] . . . I had done an immense
amount of reading they had recommended.
I had refreshed my memory of the Good
Book, and I had had excellent training
in that as a youngster (The Co-Founders
of Alcoholics Anonymous, p. 11-12).
[To his son, "Smitty"] Well,
I should know something, I've read
for at least an hour every night of
my adult life drunk or sober (RHS,
pp. 37-38).
DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers
reported:
For the next two and a half years
[After January, 1933], Bob attended
Oxford Group meetings regularly and
gave much time and study to its philosophy.
. . . He read the Scriptures, studied
the lives of the saints, and did what
he could to soak up the spiritual
and religious philosophies of the
ages (p. 56).
Dr. Bob's daughter told the author
that her father frequently stayed
up late into the night studying the
Bible (Dr. Bob's Library, p. 13).
With the foregoing comments as a start,
the author was privileged to see the
huge number of books that Dr. Bob
had assembled, read, studied, and
circulated. The author saw them in
the home of Dr. Bob's daughter, Sue
Smith Windows, in Akron; and he saw
them in the home of Dr. Bob's son,
Robert Smith, in Nocona, Texas. Many
of the books had Dr. Bob's name and
address in them with the notation
"Please return." Dr. Bob's
Library lists the materials in detail.
But it is important to cover here
the subject matter to show how much
light it was able to shed on the ideas
A.A. pioneers were studying and borrowing.
The Bible
This aspect of Dr. Bob's reading was
considered so important that his Bible
was donated to the King School Group
(A.A. Number One), and it is taken
to the podium at the beginning of
each meeting, to this very day a ceremony
the author personally witnessed in
the company of Dr. Bob's daughter
Sue.
Books about the Bible
In the family's possession are God's
Great Plan, A Guide to the Bible and
The Fathers of the Church. It is also
likely that Dr. Bob read an Oxford
Group pamphlet by Roger Hicks (who
was one of the Oxford Group people
in Akron in 1933) titled How to Read
the Bible. Also An Outline of the
Life of Christ by Shoemaker's assistant
minister The Reverend W. Irving Harris
(written in 1935). Also The Lord's
Prayer and Other Talks on Prayer from
The Camps Farthest Out by one of Bob's
favorite authors Glenn Clark (written
in 1932). Without a doubt, we know
that Dr. Bob read Emmet Fox's book
The Sermon on the Mount.
Christian Classics
The Confessions of St. Augustine,
The Imitation of Christ by Thomas
a Kempis, and The Practice of the
Presence of God by Brother Lawrence
were all owned by Bob and were frequently
quoted by the writers whose books
Bob read.
The Life of Jesus Christ
Anne Smith recommended reading at
least one book on the life of Christ
a year for a while, commenting that
even more would be better. Dr. Bob's
daughter confirmed that Dr. Bob read
these. They included: Jesus of Nazareth:
A Biography by George A. Barton, The
Life of Jesus Christ by The Rev. James
Stalker, Studies of the Man Christ
Jesus by Robert E. Speer, The Jesus
of History by T. R. Glover, The Manhood
of the
Master and The Man from Nazareth by
Harry Emerson Fosdick, and Jesus and
Our Generation by Charles Whitney
Silkey. Most of these were quoted
in the source books Dr. Bob read.
Daily Bible Devotionals
These devotionals have been mentioned
before. They include Daily Strength
for Daily Needs by Tileston, My Utmost
for His Highest by Chambers, The Runner's
Bible by Nora S. Holm, The Upper Room,
Victorious Living and Abundant Living
by E. Stanley Jones, Handles of Power
by Lewis L. Dunnington, I Will Lift
up Mine Eyes by Glenn Clark, The Meaning
of Prayer by Harry Emerson Fosdick.
And probably the highly recommended
Oxford Group pamphlets: How to Find
Reality in Your Morning Devotions
by Donald W. Carruthers, The Guidance
of God by Eleanor Napier Forde, and
The Quiet Time by Howard J. Rose.
Books on Prayer
Dr. Bob was intensely interested in
the efficacy of prayer, and his library
bespeaks this interest. Among his
many books about the subject of prayer
were Glenn Clark's The Soul's Sincere
Desire, Starr Daily's Recovery, Mary
Baker Eddy's Science and Health with
Key to the Scriptures, Charles and
Cora Filmore's Teach Us to Pray, Emmet
Fox's Getting Results by Prayer, Gerald
Heard's A Preface to Prayer, Frank
Laubach's Prayer (Mightiest Force
in the World), Charles M. Layman's
A Primer of Prayer, William R. Parker's
Prayer Can Change Your Life, and F.
L. Rawson's The Nature of True Prayer.
Books on Healing
There is no doubt that Dr. Bob and
his wife relied on the healing power
of God. That fact is adequately reported
in A.A.'s own histories. But the collection
of their books, and the remarks in
Anne Smith's Journal show that they
owned and read the following: Christian
Healing by Charles Filmore, Healing
in Jesus Name by Ethel R. Willitts,
and Heal the Sick by James Moore Hickson.
The Sermon on the Mount
Dr. Bob's interest in Jesus' sermon
was exemplified not only by the many
times he studied and quoted it, but
also by the foregoing books as well
as the following specific studies
of the Sermon on the Mount: Studies
in the Sermon on the Mount by Oswald
Chambers, The Christ of the Mount
by E. Stanley Jones, The Sermon on
the Mount by Emmet Fox, and The Soul's
Sincere Desire and I Will Lift Up
Mine Eyes by Glenn Clark.
Love
Anne Smith devoted four pages of her
spiritual journal to Toyohiko Kagawa's
treatise on love, titled, Love: The
Law of Life. Dr. Bob often recommended
Henry Drummond's The Greatest Thing
in the World a study of the famous
love chapter in the Bible, 1 Corinthians
13. Anne often quoted 1 John 4:8 "God
is love;" and Dr.
Bob frequently spoke of God as a God
of love. He summarized A.A.'s ideas
as being, in their essence, "love
and service."
The Oxford Group
Dr. Shoemaker's books of the 1920's
and 1930's were, of course, Oxford
Group books, but the author found
in the possession of Dr. Bob's family
the following books written by other
Oxford Group people: For Sinner's
Only by A. J. Russell, He That Cometh
by Geoffrey Allen, Soul Surgery by
Howard A. Walter, What is The Oxford
Group? by the Layman with a Notebook,
Life Changers by Harold Begbie, Twice
Born Men by Harold Begbie (written
before the Group was formed), New
Lives for Old by Amelia Reynolds,
and One Thing I Know by A. J. Russell.
Anne Smith recommended some of these
as life-changing stories. Also some
of the Shoemaker titles written for
that purpose. It seems apparent from
Dr. Bob's remarks about the immense
amount of Oxford Group literature
he had read and the immense amount
of reading he did that his Oxford
Group reading included many more than
the foregoing titles.
Samuel M. Shoemaker, Jr.
Moreover, one could not, as Dr. Bob
said, claim he had read an immense
amount of Oxford Group literature,
without having read many Shoemaker
books. Shoemaker was the most prolific
Oxford Group writer, was in touch
with Oxford Group people in Akron,
and was a close friend of Bill Wilson's.
Therefore, though the following were
the Shoemaker books the author found
in possession of Dr. Bob's family,
there must have been many others:
Children of the Second Birth, Confident
Faith, If I Be Lifted Up, The Conversion
of the Church, Twice-Born Ministers,
and One Boy's Influence. There were
also popular Shoemaker pamphlets,
titled Three Levels of Life and What
If I Had but One Sermon to Preach?
Quiet Time Books
Dr. Bob and Anne, and even Bill and
Lois Wilson practiced Quiet Time.
And the Smiths were well versed in
a number of books on the subject.
Some were previously mentioned. The
following were also popular: When
Man Listens by Cecil Rose, God Does
Guide Us by W. E. Sangster; The God
Who Speaks by B. H. Streeter; How
Do I Begin? by Hallen Viney; and When
I Awake by Jack C . Winslow.
William James and Carl Jung
Bill, Bob, and many early A.A.'s read
Professor William James's The Varieties
of Religious Experience (cited by
name in A.A.'s Big Book) and Dr. Carl
Gustav Jung's Modern Man in Search
of a Soul. Jung was later called a
"founder" of A.A. as was
William James.
Other Spiritual Source Books
We will cover our bibliographies in
a moment. But here there should be
a list of some particularly popular
spiritual books early AAs read and
which were read by Dr. Bob as well:
James Allen's As A Man Thinketh; Glenn
Clark's Fishers of Men, Two or Three
Gathered Together, How to Find Health
Through Prayer, and Touchdowns for
the
Lord; Harry Emerson Fosdick's The
Meaning of Service, The Meaning of
Faith, As I See Religion, On Being
a Real Person, and A Great Time to
be Alive; Emmet Fox's Find and Use
Your Inner Power, Power Through Constructive
Thinking, Alter Your Life, You Must
be Born Again, The Great Adventure,
and Your Heart's Desire; the many
E. Stanley Jones books; Charles M.
Sheldon's In His Steps; In Tune with
the Infinite by Ralph Waldo Trine;
Psychology of a Christian Personality
by Ernest M. Ligon; and Religion Says
You Can by Dilworth Lupton.
Bibliographies
It
is not fruitful here to list every
book that early AAs read, particularly
the Oxford Group and Shoemaker books.
But the bibliographies in the following
books by Dick B. will provide complete
data on all the books believed to
have been available and read: (1)
Dr. Bob and His Library; (2) The Akron
Genesis of Alcoholics Anonymous; (3)
The Oxford Group & Alcoholics
Anonymous; (4) New Light on Alcoholism:
God, Sam Shoemaker, and A.A.; (5)
Good Morning!: Quiet Time, Morning
Watch, Meditation and Early A.A.;
(6) Turning Point: A History of Early
A.A.'s Spiritual Roots and Successes;
and the most complete and up-to-date
is (7) The Books Early AAs Read for
Spiritual Growth, 7th Edition.
What
Oldtimers Said
Some
books and pamphlets were very frequently
mentioned by A.A.'s pioneers. They
were: the Bible, The Upper Room, My
Utmost for His Highest, The Runner's
Bible, the Glenn Clark books, the
E. Stanley Jones books, James Allen's
As a Man Thinketh, Henry Drummond's
The Greatest Thing in the World, the
Emmet Fox books, Harold Begbie's books,
two Lewis Browne books, William James,
Carl Jung, the Oxford Group literature,
and Sam Shoemaker's books.
These are mentioned in A.A. histories.
And they were mentioned in pamphlets
and bulletins put out by A.A. offices
and groups. They were also mentioned
by many of the surviving families
and pioneers the author interviewed.
What
Did the Literature Contribute?
Many
of the core ideas that AAs adopted
were ideas that were covered in depth
by many different books and materials
they read.
Materials about Finding God
AAs were told by Sam Shoemaker, by
the Oxford Group, and by their own
literature that they needed to find
God and find Him now! Sam Shoemaker
wrote on this topic a great deal.
So did Leslie D. Weatherhead in books
that Bill Wilson owned or may have
owned. So did the other writers.
Materials Defining a Spiritual
Experience and Awakening
Throughout Bill Wilson's leadership
in A.A., he talked much of his famous
"hot flash" experience.
He pointed to William James's book
The Varieties of Religious Experience
as a validation of what had occurred
to him. It is fair to say that neither
Dr. Bob nor most AAs ever had anything
like Bill's experience. But their
reading did define for them what it
meant to be converted, to have a conversion
experience, to experience the presence
of God, and so on.
Understanding God
Shoemaker said you could understand
and know God by following Jesus Christ's
suggestion in John 7:17 by conducting
an "experiment of faith."
Once AAs abandoned the Bible, the
discussions of the Creator, and their
reliance on coming to God through
His Son, they began to lose understanding
of God. They began talking of a higher
power which could be a group, a lightbulb,
a door knob, a chair, and nonsense
which could not be found in early
A.A. nor in the literature early AAs
read.
Knowing God's Will
If early AAs wanted to know God's
instructions on faith, believing,
prayer, study of His Word, forgiveness,
healing, deliverance, love, restitution,
service, resentment, fear, selfishness,
dishonesty, their literature was replete
with road maps to pertinent sections
of the Bible and teachings about these
things.
Moral Standards
Early A.A. was not about "relationships
anonymous." Whether they read
the Bible, the Ten Commandments, or
the Four Absolutes, AAs were given
much instruction on how to behave
in accordance with God's will. This
is true today in only a very limited
way.
Quiet Time and Meditation
Early AAs were the recipients of specific
information on the biblical origins
of Quiet Time on what Quiet Time was,
and on how to practice it through
Bible study, helpful books, prayer,
listening, checking, and so on. Lacking
that information today, AAs have been
subjected to a barrage of "meditation"
and "reflection" materials
by writers who have put new spins,
new time-saving squibs, and a wide
variety of private interpretation
on what had originally been understood
as a substantial period of communion
with God.
Life-Changing
To this very day, A.A.'s basic text
speaks of the alcoholic's need to
change. Early AAs were given specifics
on what they were to change from,
where to obtain the power to change,
and what they were to change to.
Techniques for Effective Witness
There was no shortage of specific
information in early A.A. as to what
the message was, how to carry it,
and what to do with the newcomer.
If they simply looked to the Book
of Acts and the commentaries about
it, they were well supplied. Anne
Smith so suggested.
The Importance of Fellowship
Though they may not realize it today,
AAs received a rich body of instruction
concerning the body of Christ, from
the Book of Acts and the many Christian
materials they read. They learned
the intended meaning of the fellowship
of the Spirit, and how God worked
with His children where two or three
were gathered together.
The foregoing are just a few of the
topics covered in the hundreds of
books, devotionals, pamphlets, and
articles available for the taking
by early AAs.
Copyright
© Dick B.