The
Real and Complete Early A.A. History
Story
A.A. Had Two Founders, You Know
Tampa
Bay Clean and Sober Plenary Session
Address
Dick
B. © 2005
I
had the privilege, on occasion, of
sharing the podium with Dr. Bob’s
daughter, Sue Smith Windows of Akron,
Oho. And Sue frequently began her
talks with the statement:
“A.A.
had two founders, you know.”
The
problem is that a lot of us did not
know.
Nor did we learn about the Akron story
or the details about Dr. Bob and his
wife Anne Ripley Smith until months
or even years along our sobriety trail.
In fact, the chasm between the traditional
New York story and the seldom detailed
Akron story has grown so deep that
many have proclaimed there were “two”
A.A.’s—the one that one began in 1935
and was abandoned in 1938, while the
real “basic” program didn’t begin
until after the Big Book was released
in the Spring of 1939. Others thought
there had been a “split” between East
and West in the effort that began
with Bill and Bob in Akron on June
10, 1935. And, while the details have
been made murky and confusing by neglect,
the time is long overdue to see how
A.A. really developed, what its real
roots were, and how the complete historical
picture can help us all today as we
pursue A.A.’s real purpose – fostering
the mission of one drunk in helping
another.
Forget that, and you’ve forgotten
what Alcoholics Anonymous gave to
America in the 20th Century.
With
Two Distinctly Different Backgrounds
Though
seemingly never at odds with each
other, A.A.’s two founders William
Griffith Wilson and Robert Holbrook
Smith brought diverse, conflicting,
and often ignored backgrounds to the
recovery table.
Dr. Bob, the elder of the two, was
born in St. Johnsbury, Vermont. He
and his family were as Christian as
they come. His father taught Sunday
School at the North Congregational
Church for 40 years. His mother was
a fervent, church-going pillar of
that same church. The Smith family
did, in its church, what so many dedicated
Christians did in their churches (and
many still do). The Smiths often attended
four prayer and other services each
week Son Bob dived into Christian
Endeavor, the young people’s group
at the church.
Five times a week, Bob was fed the
Bible, prayer, Christian literature,
quiet times, conversions, witnessing,
and fellowship. This was long before
the Oxford Group was even a twinkle
in Frank Buchman’s eye. Later, Bob
attended St. Johnsbury Academy where
there was, among other strains, a
definite religious emphasis. And,
despite his drinking episodes, Bob
was linked to Christian churches and
membership throughout his life. When
he completed his college and medical
school educations, he married the
Christian lady Anne Ripley. He was
soon affiliated with St. Luke Church,
took his kids to Sunday School in
Akron, and later became—with Anne—a
charter member of the Westside Presbyterian
Church and worshipped there for several
years. Finally, Dr. Bob concluded
his church and earthly life as a communicant
at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in
Akron. Moreover, he read the Bible
from beginning to end at least three
times, devoted at least an hour each
day to reading mostly religious literature,
and had quiet individual prayer sessions
three times a day. During these, he
studied Scripture, some important
Bible passage, prayed, sought guidance,
and then, as he said, “went about
my Father’s business.”
Bll W.’s story is as different as
the night from the day except for
the fact that Bill too was born and
raised in Vermont – East Dorset, Vermont,
to be exact. I’ve found no record
of church participation by Bill’s
parents – before or after they parted
ways. Bill apparently was involved
in a Sunday School until age 12 when
he left in protest over a temperance
pledge.
Bill long characterized himself as
a conservative atheist. He said he
had never studied the Bible until
he came to Akron in 1935. He never
belonged to a church; and, despite
strong and deep friendships with Episcopalian
Rev. Samuel Shoemaker and Roman Catholic
Jesuit Priest Ed Dowling, never joined
either the Episcopal or Roman Catholic
denominations. Bill married a non-Christian,
Lois Burnham, in a Swedenborgian Church—a
marital tie that carried with it Lois’s
family who had been active Swendenborgian
clergy. Also Lois’s declaration that
she didn’t believe she needed a “conversion,”
and didn’t much care for the First
Century Christian Fellowship (the
Oxford Group) through whose auspices
her husband became sober. For his
part, Bill often said he had felt
superior to most Christians and that,
if he believed in any God at all,
it was the “god” of Science.
Such was the background of the two
Vermonters who founded A.A.
And
Two Different Starts in Their Search
for Sobriety
Before
Dr. Bob and Bill met each other on
Mother’s Day of 1935, each had begun
his sobriety in a totally different
way and from totally different starting
points.
Then sober for a mere five months,
Bill Wilson had nonetheless become
a zealot in pursuit of drunks to help—even
though he seemingly had no significant
message which would bring them deliverance.
By contrast, though drinking heavily
for the previous two and a half years,
Dr. Bob Smith had become a zealot
in pursuit of further Biblical knowledge.
Yet Dr. Bob seemingly had no significant
interest in bringing his Biblical
studies to bear on his drinking problem
or even on the drinking problems of
any one else.
Out of these two, totally different
beginnings grew a powerful combination
of talent and enthusiasm that has
enabled me, and a host of other alcoholics
and addicts, to remain clean and sober
for many years. Clean and sober, that
is, with a borrowed zeal that involved
helping others get better and a concomitant
zealous quest for a greater understanding
of God, our Creator, and greater knowledge
of how God’s power could be called
up to help when help from all other
human sources seemed unavailable and
ineffective.
In a sense, pioneer AAs drew on the
life-changing techniques of Oxford
Group “teams” in developing a method
for message-carrying—utilizing story
telling. For knowledge of what God
could do and expected them to do,
they plunged into the Bible. That
this Bible quenched their thirst for
spiritual knowledge is underlined
by the very name they affectionately
gave the Bible itself. They called
it “the Good Book.”
Emanating
From Two Distinctly Different Pre-Sobriety
Roots
In
the past fifteen years of research
and writing, I have taken the liberty
of bestowing two totally different
names on the two totally different
A.A. programs that marked the beginning
of our fellowship’s growth.
One I called the Akron Genesis. This
because A.A. co-founder Dr. Bob landed
in Akron, Ohio from Vermont to own
his home and conduct his medical practice.
A.A. itself was founded in Akron.
And the real A.A. success story grew
out of the work in Akron.
The other program, I have recently
called the New York Genesis. And,
although the real spiritual roots
of A.A.—even early New York A.A.—go
back much farther than New York, the
elements of the New York program were
produced by New Yorker Bill Wilson,
centered in New York, and mentored
on the East Coast by activists in
New York’s Calvary Episcopal Church
and its rector Rev. Sam Shoemaker.
The New York people ultimately produced
the second program which became embodied
in A.A.’s basic text and Twelve Steps.
Regrettably, the real nature and content
of the Akron pioneer program had been
overlooked, distorted, and minimized
by many AAs themselves, and by historians
and scholars. But it was this program
that achieved the astonishing successes
and success rates. And it is, I believe,
to this early program that some AAs
and 12 Step groups can look today
for help with alcoholism and a reversal
of today’s dismal 1 to 5% success
rates. I do not believe the answer
lies in more “treatment,” new treatment
models, critiques or religious controversy
or bashing. It lies in the power of
Almighty God and the way in which
He graciously guided the Akron pioneers
as they asked for His revelation and
also studied His Bible for His revealed
written will.
The
Roots of the Akron Genesis of Alcoholics
Anonymous
I
often call The Akron Genesis of Alcoholics
Anonymous (http://www.dickb.com/Akron.shtml;
http://www.dickb.com/drbob.shtml)
the “Dr. Bob Root” of A.A. Largely
because it got its thrust way back
in Dr. Bob’s youth at St. Johnsbury
Church in Vermont. From that venue
grew Dr. Bob’s belief that Bible study,
conversion to Christ, individual and
group prayer, a continuing quest for
God’s will and God’s guidance, strenuous
and demanding effort to obey God,
the reading of religious literature,
fellowship, love, and service—each
and all of them—contained the ingredients
for a new and abundant life in Christ.
According to his son Smitty, Dr. Bob
was really much more interested in
the “message” than in the views of
a “messenger.” Hence his ultimate
focus was mainly on Biblical fellowship
rather than on church activity like
that in which his parents had been
intensely involved. Perhaps too, it
explained his alleged disdain for
“sky pilots” although there is evidence
to refute that characterization.
In a nutshell, however, far too little
attention has been paid to the research
of Akron A.A. and to the huge United
Christian Endeavor Movement that had
begun in Williston, Maine in February,
of 1883, not long before Dr. Bob’s
birth in St. Johnsbury, Vermont on
August 8, 1879. That dynamic society
quickly spread its outreach like wild-fire
to a world-wide and astonishingly
large membership of some three million
five hundred thousand people. And
its remarkable membership numbers
and growth certainly equaled and probably
exceeded that of the combined memberships,
at their peak, of the much-discussed
Washingtonians, Oxford Group, and
Alcoholics Anonymous together.
Christian Endeavor societies were
numerous and their literature was
voluminous—with hymnals, guide books,
pamphlets, and newspapers, as well
as Christian books and articles. Their
focus, like that of early A.A., was
local. Yet their membership and conventions
were world-wide in scope. Their program
was very simple – much like the simplicity
in approach that was so much stressed
by Dr. Bob.
The
Christian Endeavor Tree
The
Christian Endeavor Society tree had
four, simple roots: (1) Confession
of Christ. (2) Service for Christ.
(3) Fellowship with Christ’s people.
(4) Loyalty to Christ’s Church (See
Francis E. Clark. Christian Endeavor
in All Lands. Boston: The United Society
of Christian Endeavor, 1906, p. 93).
Its founder, Dr. Clark, said it was
“an organization as nearly self-governing
and self-propagating as any organization
can be” (Clark, supra, p. 50)—with
these later to be descriptive of two
major group characteristics of its
A.A. step-child. The required, simple
pledge, or covenant, was:
Trusting
in the Lord Jesus for strength, I
promise Him that I will strive to
do whatever He would like to have
me do; that I will make it the rule
of my life to pray and to read the
Bible every day, and to support my
own church in every way, especially
by attending all her regular Sunday
and mid-week services, unless prevented
by some reason which I can conscientiously
give to my Savior; and that, just
so far as I know how, throughout my
whole life, I will endeavor to lead
a Christian life. As an active member,
I promise to be true to all my duties,
to be present and to take some part,
aside from singing, in every Christian
Endeavor prayer-meeting, unless hindered
by some reason which I can conscientiously
give to my Lord and Master. If obliged
to be absent from the monthly consecration-meeting
of the society, I will, if possible,
send at least a verse of Scripture
to be read in response to my name
at the roll call (Clark, supra, p.
252).
Christian
Endeavor In Summary
Extensive
research—still ongoing—establishes
to my satisfaction that the actual
practices of a Christian Endeavor
Society can be described as: (1) Acceptance
of Christ as one’s Saviour—with conversion
meetings to foster such decisions..
(2) Daily individual Bible study and
group Bible study meetings. (3) Daily
individual prayer as well fellowship
prayer meetings. (4) Study and topical
discussion of religious literature.
(5) Quiet Hour—involving individual
confession of Christ, Bible study,
prayer, and seeking God’s guidance.
(6) Support of one’s church. (7) Love
and service as the code of conduct.
The
Distinctly Different Oxford Group
Practices
Many
who are not familiar with Christian
Endeavor or its practices and who
are equally unfamiliar with the details
of early Akron A.A. meetings, practices,
and principles hold their noses while
joyously reporting—without justification—that
early Akron A.A. was a part of the
Oxford Group and therefore unsuccessful.
Simply not so.
The Oxford Group did not involve decisions
for Christ or conversion meetings.
Nor did it give special emphasis to
Bible study and prayer meetings. Nor
did it encourage the reading of much
Christian literature other than the
many Oxford Group writings themselves.
Nor did it allow for self-propagation
or self-government. The Oxford Group
founder Frank N.D. Buchman was the
boss, and Buchman called the signals
for his followers. Most significant,
the Oxford Group was primarily a life-changing
entity rather than an organization
that fostered conversions, Bible study,
prayer, and reading. It was, however,
derived from, and much involved in,
the pre-Christian Endeavor and pre-Oxford
Group practice of Quiet Time, which
was sometimes called a Quiet Hour,
and earlier called the “Morning Watch.”
The
Match-up of Christian Endeavor and
Early A.A.
In
almost every aspect, the Akron pioneer
Christian Fellowship, as they called
themselves, was a solid match in principle,
meetings, and practice for the Christian
Endeavor Movement in which Dr. Bob
had intensely—by his own characterization—been
trained as a youngster.
The proof of the Akron Christian Endeavor
pudding comes from comparing with
each other three types of societies:
(1) The long-ignored Christian Endeavor
groups. (2) The monolithic Oxford
Group and its self-characterized “First
Century Christian Fellowship” devoted
to “world-changing through life-changing.”
(3) The pioneer A.A. group in Akron,
which characterized itself as a “Christian
Fellowship,” had no national or international
leadership, and devoted itself to
Bible study, old fashioned prayer
meetings, use of Christian devotionals,
regular quiet times, conversions to
Christ, and serving God and their
fellow suffers by love and practical
service.
Today there is ample evidence to show
which society resembled which, and
which society differed from which.
The primary evidence can be found
in the A.A. Conference Approved title,
DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers (NY:
Alcoholics Anonymous World Services,
Inc., 1980). That excellent and official
A.A. history establishes that John
D. Rockefeller, Jr.’s agent Frank
Amos investigated the Akron A.A. scene
in great depth, specifically described
its ingredients, and left us with
a splendid and simple description
of its program that very little resembled
that of the Oxford Group or its principles
and practices, and yet—in almost every
particular—is a dead ringer for the
local Christian Endeavor proto-type
groups of Dr. Bob’s youth.
Christian
Endeavor’s “Five Great Principles”
British
Christian Endeavor leader Rev. F.
B. Meyer, who inspired both Christian
Endeavor and the later Oxford Group
founder Frank Buchman as to Quiet
Time practices, declared: “Christian
Endeavor stands for five great principles:
(1)
Personal devotion to the living Lord
and Saviour Jesus Christ and his will
in every department of life. (2) The
pledge obligation which implicates
the Spirit of God as the only source
of the endeavor. (3) Constant religious
training. (4) Strenuous loyalty to
the local church. (5) Interdenominational
spiritual fellowship to realize the
Lord’s prayer for spiritual unity
(Clark, supra, pp. 101-102).
Christian
Endeavor Societies carried on autonomous
local programs, centered on a particular
church. Those local groups embraced
– as did early Akron A.A. – confession
of Christ, Bible study, conversion
meetings, revival prayer meetings,
the Quiet Hour, love and service.
These local societies never crumbled
because of their collateral, though
sometimes outspoken, interest in temperance—a
political action that many claimed
to have sounded the death knell of
such groups as the Washingtonian Movement.
Add to this mix a specific focus on
helping of drunks—which Christian
Endeavor did not undertake—and you
have almost the prototype for the
Akron program which we will soon discuss.
The
New York Genesis of Alcoholics Anonymous
I
call the New York beginnings of A.A.
“The New York Genesis of Alcoholics
Anonymous.” I have chosen this name
of late in order to distinguish the
A.A. timeline on the East Coast of
the United States from the timeline
that began in St. Johnsbury, Vermont
with Dr. Bob’s youth and wound up
in Akron, Ohio. The New York story
is fairly well known, though some
of its ingredients are not. Unfortunately,
this New York timeline has become
“the” A.A. story – the one in Bill’s
Story, the one in many biographies
of Bill, and the one usually mentioned
by A.A. historians. It is, of course,
important if fully and correctly told.
But it really only reports on the
program Bill fashioned with his 1939
publication of the Big Book. It ignores
the details or Dr. Bob’s religious
training during his childhood to his
renewed religious quest in Akron in
the 1930’s. And it winds up highlighting
New York A.A. as an unhappy Oxford
Group offshoot instead of as a successful
Christian Fellowship offshoot unique
to Akron. Nonetheless, the New York
story is one which also needs fully
to be told. And here is what I believe
is an accurate synopsis.
Rowland
Hazard and Dr. Carl Jung
The
exact time of occurrence of the Hazard/Jung
events is murky and disputed. But
it seems safe to conclude that Rowland
Hazard, member of a prominent Rhode
Island family, had been suffering
the pangs of alcoholism for many years.
Around 1930 or 1931, he paid two different
visits to the famed Swiss psychiatrist,
Dr. Carl Gustav Jung. The first was
for treatment, but was followed by
Rowland’s return to drinking. The
second was for Rowland’s despairing
report to Jung that the treatment
had failed.
Whereupon Dr. Jung told Rowland that
Rowland had the mind of a chronic
alcoholic, and could never be helped
by human means, but might be cured
through a conversion. Jung recommended
religious association. Rowland sought
out the Oxford Group and followed
its life-changing precepts. And a
seemingly accurate conclusion as to
the resultant facts, would have it
that Rowland was permanently cured,
went on the start the A.A. ball rolling
with Ebby Thacher in New England,
and figured prominently in the subsequent
writings about, and activities of,
Rev. Sam Shoemaker, Jr. and Calvary
Episcopal Church in New York. The
Hazard/Jung events are often characterized
as an introduction by Jung of “conversion”
as a viable solution to alcoholism.
Ebby
Thacher and Rowland Hazard
Rowland
appears to have mastered the Oxford
Group’s life-changing principles and
practices. And certainly one of these
was the principle of Sharing for Witness—passing
on the message of what God had done
that the Oxford Grouper could not
do for himself. Rowland and a couple
of other Oxford Group friends (Shep
Cornell and Cebra Graves) procured
the release by a judge to their custody
of an alcoholic from Albany, New York,
named Edwin T. Thacher (often known
as “Ebby”). It seems quite clear that
Rowland Hazard thoroughly indoctrinated
Ebby with Oxford Group ideas.
This tutoring produced several results:
(1) Ebby learned the Oxford Group
life-changing ideas quite well. (2)
Ebby was placed in by Hazard in Rev.
Sam Shoemaker’s Calvary Rescue Mission
and there answered an altar call and
made a decision for Christ (facts
seldom correctly or adequately reported).
(3) Ebby applied the Oxford Group
Sharing for Witness technique and
sought out his old alcoholic friend,
Bill Wilson, to give him a deliverance
message. (4) Though Wilson was kicking
and screaming, Ebby presented Bill
with a straightforward statement that
he (Ebby) had “got religion,” that
God had done for him what he could
not do for himself, and that, by learning
and applying the Oxford Group’s principles,
he had been converted and cured. The
Thacher/Hazard events are sometimes
characterized as constituting the
introduction into A.A. of the Oxford
Group’s “practical program of action”
as the method for achieving the conversion
ingredient of recovery that Dr. Jung
had told Rowland Hazard would be needed
for recovery.
Conversions,
Calvary Mission, and Bill’s Recovery
This
part of the story is frequently omitted,
distorted, or misinterpreted. But
15 years of research have now documented
some its important aspects. First,
Ebby went to the altar at Calvary
Mission, made a decision for Christ,
and was converted. Second, Bill Wilson
followed suit, went to Calvary Mission
stating that he wanted what Ebby had
received. Wilson soon responded to
the altar call, made a decision for
Christ, and was converted—though wandering
drunk and aimlessly for a short time
and then checking in to Towns Hospital.
Ebby visited Bill in Towns Hospital
and elaborated on the Oxford Group
“practical program of action.” Bill
followed directions, “humbly offered
himself to God as he then understood
God,” cried out “If there be a God,
let Him show himself,” and reported
having his famous “hot flash experience.”
Bill’s experience and recital of it
was much like that of his grandfather
in Vermont. It caused Bill to believe
that he had “found” God and had had
a conversion “experience.” Whatever
Bill had—whether at Calvary Rescue
Mission or at Towns or at both—Bill
Wilson never drank again.
The
Dr. Silkworth and Professor William
James Ingredients
Just
exactly how valid the so-called “disease
theory” of alcoholism may be is a
matter that has been discussed and
disputed for many years. And Dr. William
D. Silkworth, chief psychiatrist at
Towns Hospital, who had often treated
Wilson, may have espoused it. But
if we take Wilson at his word, Dr.
Silkworth, both during and after Bill’s
last hospitalization, imbued Wilson
with the theory that his malady was
both mental (an obsession of the mind)
and physical (accompanied by an allergy
of the body), and perhaps required
some kind of “moral psychology” to
cure it. The fact is that Dr. Norman
Vincent Peale later made clear that
Silkworth himself believed that the
“Great Physician, Jesus Christ” was
the one who could successfully cure
alcoholism. And, when Wilson reported
the “hot flash” to Silkworth, the
good doctor said he couldn’t explain
the event but could observe the change
in Bill, and that Bill should hang
on to what he had found. These events,
in context, have often been characterized
as linking the problem (alcoholism
as defined by Silkworth) with the
solution (conversion as prescribed
by Jung), which was produced by a
religious program – the practical
life-changing program of the Oxford
Group as Rowland had described it
to Ebby and Ebby to Bill.
While in Towns Hospital, Bill had
been given a copy of Professor William
James’s The Varieties of Religious
Experience. The book was reportedly
given to Wilson by either Rowland
Hazard or Ebby Thacher. Wilson believed
that the religious experience accounts
by William James, plus the professor’s
analysis of them, validated Wilson’s
own “religious experience.” Bill also
felt he had discovered from the James
book another founding recovery ingredient—that
the conversion or religious experience
had to be preceded by “deflation in
depth.” So at this point, Wilson felt
he had been cured through a program
that addressed seemingly hopeless
alcoholism, articulated surrender
of self through life-changing techniques,
and produced a resultant conversion
and relationship with God, which in
turn assured a cure for alcoholism.
One that needed to be told abroad.
This he began trying almost the moment
he got sober, but without success.
The
Interim Failure of Wilson’s Outreach
Regrettably,
secular, universalist, and revisionist
A.A. observers have erroneously fallen
for Bill Wilson’s own explanation
of his failure as an evangelist. Bill
said that he had been totally unable
to get anyone sober during the first
five months of sobriety when he had
chased drunks at Towns Hospital, at
Calvary Rescue Mission, and at Oxford
Group meetings. He concluded that
he had failed because he needed to
follow Silkworth’s suggestion that
he must hit his witnesses hard first
with the bald facts about “medically
incurable” alcoholism and then present
them with the Oxford Group program.
But, the record is clear from the
statements of Wilson and his wife
Lois that this effort produced absolutely
no successes, either with the drunks
they took into their home, or with
those approached during Bill’s outreach.
And these failures continued for some
time, as Bill himself related..
Apologists in A.A. and in the Oxford
Group have often chortled that, while
Bill got nobody sober, he himself
did not drink. Huzzah! But that’s
not a program or successful outreach.
The far more reasonable and logical
conclusion is that Bill was a messenger
without a message. He had never been
to church. He had never read the Bible.
He had not even had much sober exposure
to Oxford Group ideas; and he was
reportedly not a reader. How then,
could he have roused the drunks to
conversion and salvation!
A
Change of Scene in Akron
We
have told before and elsewhere the
story of the Wilson-Smith meeting
at Henrietta Seiberling’s Gate Lodge
in Akron (See Dick B., Henrietta B.
Seiberling: Ohio’s Lady with a Cause).
We’ve also recounted what Bill and
Bob did together in the summer of
1935 (See Dick B., The Akron Genesis
of Alcoholics Anonymous). But what
we have devoted our time to most recently
is the totally different scene Bill
encountered in Akron when he met and
stayed with the Smiths. Bill participated
in arranging hospitalizations, Bible
study, group prayers, seeking God’s
guidance, acceptance of Christ, Quiet
Times, and team outreach by groups
of individuals. And right away, these
efforts produced cures. Bob was cured
in a few weeks. A.A. Number Three
(Bill Dotson) was cured in a few days.
And so it went through the chain of
pioneers up to mid-1938 (See Dick
B., When Early AAs Were Cured and
Why).
A
Change of Program in 1939
Though
he was commissioned, after much argument
and a split vote in Akron, to write
a book reporting the Akron program
to the world, Bill did not do that.
He began work on his Big Book in mid-1938.
But from the beginning, its writing
and publication was a commercial venture
that he worked on with his partner
Hank Parkhurst. Bill drew on a variety
of new sources: (1) One was the alcoholism
treatment comments by lay therapist
Richard Peabody. (2) Another was the
New Thought ideas from Emmet Fox and
others. (3) Still another—and the
major one—was a prototype of the Oxford
Group principles as reduced from 28
to 12 and embodying almost the very
language Bill had learned from Oxford
Group leader Rev. Sam Shoemaker (See
Dick B., The Oxford Group and Alcoholics
Anonymous and New Light on Alcoholism).
(4) Moreover Wilson salted into the
language of the Big Book several New
Age counterfeits of Christian words
and phrases. (5) But he left out the
major elements of the Akron program:
the Bible, Akron’s Christian literature,
Anne Smith’s Journal, and Quiet Time.
(6) A new idea and a new language
were fashioned to appeal to atheists
and agnostics and those of non-Christian
faiths. (7) The simple United Christian
Endeavor principles and practices
from Dr. Bob’s youth were never once
mentioned. (8) The word “cure” was
deleted from A.A. vocabulary and replaced
with “once an alcoholic always an
alcoholic.” And the results seem to
have verified the validity of the
new, “no cure” proclamation in all
but a small percentage of fellowship
members.
The
Conclusions of Some
1.
Statistical surveys show that today’s
A.A. produces only a small percentage
of permanent abstainers – one to five
percent.
2. Documented records of the 1930’s
and early 1940’s show a 75 to 93%
success rate during that A.A. period.
3. Christian and atheist groups alike
point out that alcoholism can be cured
without A.A.—Christians stressing
the power of God, and secularists
the power of the will.
4, A.A. itself has stopped growing.
Treatment programs are being eliminated.
Treatment money is being directed
toward every conceivable malady that
will enable government or insurance
money to be received.
5. Watered-down A.A. (with ever-increasing
idolatry, simplistic emphasis on
Meetings, and the rejection of religious
beliefs and religious expressions)
has not
cut the mustard with enviable support
or results.
6. A huge number of alcoholics and
addicts, both within and outside of
A.A., are simply not recovering.
7. The time is long overdue for a
careful look at the early A.A. history
story.
Summarized, our suggested history
concerns an understanding that God
had done for real alcoholics what
they could not do for themselves.
And the remainder of my talks will
enable you really to see what our
Creator did and what the pioneers
did to produce real victories in recovery
battles within early A.A.
END
Copyright
© Dick B.