A.A.
Big Book and 12 Step Sources
Identifying
the Roots and the References
Dick
B.
Summary
of the Identifiable Sources
My
materials which have covered in much
detail the six major Bible sources
will be referenced in this article.
Those which cover the other sources
will refer to my own limited writings,
to other studies, and to the areas
where further research and writing
are appropriate and very much needed.
The identifiable sources,
in substantial totality, are:
The Six Major Bible Roots:
•
The Bible (King James Version)
which AAs called the “Good Book.”
• Quiet Time – the period
of prayer, Bible study, seeking of
guidance,
reading from sources such as Anne
Smith’s Journal and devotionals such
as The Upper Room, and discussing
of thoughts and ideas.
• Anne Smith’s Journal
– a booklet written between 1933 and
1939 in the hand of Dr. Bob’s wife,
with discussions of Bible, Oxford
Group, recommended literature, and
practical ideas for Christian living.
Whose contents Anne Smith shared each
morning at the Smith home with AAs
and their families.
• Oxford Group Principles
and Practices – some twenty-eight
ideas that impacted on the A.A. fellowship,
were codified into its Big Book and
12 Steps, and are contained primarily
in a large number of writings by various
Oxford Group activists—beginning with
the book Soul Surgery published in
1919.
• The Teachings of Rev. Samuel
M. Shoemaker, Jr. – Rector of
Calvary Episcopal Church in New York
in A.A.’s formative years, a close
friend of and teacher of Bill Wilson’s,
and the author of over 30 titles,
many sermons, and frequently published
articles whose language can be found
in the Big Book, Steps, and fellowship
jargon. Called by Bill Wilson a “co-founder”
of A.A.
• Religious literature widely
circulated among and read by Pioneer
AAs — books, pamphlets, and articles,
primarily Christian and Protestant,
by such popular authors as Henry Drummond,
Oswald Chambers, Glenn Clark, E. Stanley
Jones, Charles Sheldon, Harry Emerson
Fosdick, Emmet Fox, James Allen, Harold
Begbie, Samuel Shoemaker, Victor Kitchen,
Stephen Foot, and A. J. Russell. Also,
daily devotionals such as The Upper
Room, My Utmost for His Highest, The
Runner’s Bible, The Meaning of Prayer,
Victorious Living, Practicing the
Presence of God, and the Imitation
of Christ
Other
Significant Influences on Bill’s Big
Book and Steps:
•
William Duncan Silkworth, M.D.
— the psychiatrist in charge of Towns
Hospital in New York, who frequently
treated Bill Wilson for alcoholism,
seems to have fostered A.A.’s “obsession
and allergy” theories about the so-called
“disease” of alcoholism, and who wrote
the Doctor’s Opinion contained in
each edition of Bill’s Big Book.
• Carl Gustav Jung, M.D.
— the world-renowned Swiss psychiatrist
who treated Rowland Hazard, recommended
affiliation with a religious group,
and opined there was no cure for Rowland’s
chronic, alcoholic mind, except through
a religious conversion experience—the
solution thought by Bill Wilson to
have been the source of his own cure
and to be the foundation for the Twelfth
Step “spiritual experience” idea in
A.A.
• William James, M.D.
–- called by many the father of American
psychology, long dead before A.A.
was founded, a Harvard Professor whose
focus was on psychology, experimental
psychology, and philosophy, whose
work impacted the writings and beliefs
of Rev. Sam Shoemaker, Jr. and whose
book The Varieties of Religious Experience
was, to Bill Wilson, a validation
of his “hot flash” experience and
also a foundation of Bill’s First
Step idea about “deflation in depth.”
• Richard Peabody – an
alcoholism therapist whose title The
Common Sense of Drinking was owned
by both Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob and
who, though he did not teach reliance
on God and died drunk, appears to
have influenced Bill’s writings and
language with such ideas as “powerlessness,”
“once an alcoholic always an alcoholic,”
“no cure for alcoholism,” “surrender,
“half measures availed us nothing,”
and a few other therapeutic ideas.
Other
significant religious influences on
either Akron A.A. or Wilson’s Big
Book:
•
The United Christian Endeavor Society
–a worldwide organization, numbering
in the tens of thousands, consisting
primarily of young people supporting
their particular church. Espoused
most of the principles and practices
that characterized the unique Akron
A.A. Christian Fellowship program—conversion
to Christ, reliance on the Creator,
Bible study, prayer meetings, Quiet
Hour, fellowship, witness, love, and
service. Its ideas have simply vanished
from A.A. historical discussions yet
Dr. Bob’s participation as a youngster
seems to have poured into many specifics
of the Akron program, items that bore
little or no resemblance to Oxford
Group practices.
• The New Thought Movement
–a unique spinoff from conventional
Christian denominations that includes
Christian Science, Unity, Science
of Mind, Divine Science, Religious
Science, Psychiana, Society for the
Study of Metaphysical Religion, and
Process New Thought— probably contributing
unusual “spiritual” words to A.A.
language such as “Higher Power,” “Fourth
Dimension,” “Universal Mind,” and
other metaphysical terms differing
substantially from Biblical words
used by A.A. pioneers from their King
James Version Biblies, words such
as “Creator,” “Maker,” “Father of
light,” “God of our Fathers,” and
“Our Father.”
• New Age Ideas – though
identification of “New Age” as a “Movement”
is difficult and controversial, the
movement is said to focus on “One
World Government” and “One World Religion”
substituting its apparent new definitions
for words that have long established
meaning—words changing “Jesus” and
“Yahweh” to “the Christ,” “the Lord,”
and “the One” and then defining a
new theology that tells us we all
have Christ in us, that there is “a
new god,” and that man can be “saved”
by a “message” in which he “believes”
rather than believing on Jesus Christ
(John 3:16). Just read certain Big
Book language that implies that “faith”
in the “idea of God” can be found
deep within us; or the contemporary
writing that fashions “spirituality”
out of a “not-god”thesis, and that
“Something” saves but not Jesus Christ.
The
Bill Wilson Legacy
Bill Wilson was the author of the
basic text of Alcoholics Anonymous
and of the Twelve Steps of recovery
suggested therein. Questions have
been raised about the authorship of
the chapters “To Wives” and “To Employers”
in the Big Book; but Wilson said he
had asked Dr. Bob’s wife to write
the chapter to the wives, that Anne
Smith declined, that Lois Wilson (his
wife) was angry about the slight,
and that he wrote the chapter. As
to the “To Employers” chapter, I leave
that authorship quandary to someone
else’s research and conclusions.
Some A.A.-related shibboleths
to be discarded.
•
First, that there were “Oxford Group
Steps.” No! Non-existent. Both
Bill Wilson and his wife Lois suggested
that the Oxford Group (an A.A. source)
had six steps (. But the Oxford Group
did not have “six steps.”. They had
no steps at all, no six steps, and
no twelve steps, whatever you may
have heard.
• Second, that the Twelve
Steps were derived from the Exercises
of St. Ignatius Exercises or John
Wesley’s Principles of Holiness. No.
Not involved. Father Ed Dowling met
Bill Wilson after the Twelve Steps
were written. According to one writer,
Dowling “was interested in the parallels
he had intuited between the Twelve
Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous and
the Exercises of St. Ignatius. . .
. That . . . Wilson wearily confessed
ignorance of the Exercises at once
endeared the diminutive cleric to
Bill” (Kurtz, Not-God, p. 88). Parallels,
not product. And the same may possibly
be said of some of Wesley’s ideas
on works on grace and mercy. But I
have found nothing in the accounts
of A.A. or its Biblical progenitors
that suggests any significant relationship
at all between early A.A. and either
Ignatius or Wesley. In fact, as we
will point out, the Steps bear an
unmistakable Oxford Group imprint
and more precisely the imprint and
language of Rev. Sam Shoemaker, who,
Bill said, had taught Bill almost
every step idea.
• Third, that A.A. originally
had an alleged six “word –of-mouth”
steps. Bill suggested that there
were six word-of-mouth steps being
used before the Twelve Steps were
written (Pass It On, p. 197). That’s
possible, but these steps, if there
were any, were certainly not well
defined or consistently described.
Lois likened them to a supposed six
Oxford Group steps (Lois Remembers,
pp. 113, 92). Today, it’s quite clear
that the Oxford Group had no such
six steps (Pass It On, pp. 197, 206
n. 2). Moreover, there is no convincing
evidence to support Bill’s assertion
of a supposed six steps. Sometimes,
they were referred to as the Oxford
Groups six steps—which, as we have
said—did not exist. On other occasions,
Bill described these “word-of-mouth”
steps in varying and inconsistent
ways (See Alcoholics Anonymous Comes
of Age, p. 160; The Language of the
Heart, p. 200; Lois Remembers, p.
113; and my review in Dick B., The
Akron Genesis of Alcoholics Anonymous,
3rd ed., pp. 256-260). And he added
his own disclaimer that the six were
subject to considerable variation—which
they were (The Akron Genesis, supra,
p. 256). In fact, long after Bill’s
death, his secretary and long-time
aid Nell Wing personally handed me
one of the versions in Bill’s own
handwriting. But this version in no
way resembled Bill’s other descriptions.
The final myth about the “six steps”
seems to stem from a personal story
in the Big Book’s later edition which
purportedly was the story of Earl
Treat of Chicago. There is a description
there of a supposed six steps used
by Dr. Bob (Alcoholics Anonymous 3rd
ed., p. 292; Alcoholics Anonymous
Comes of Age, pp. 22-23). However,
Dr. Bob was then dead and the procedure
attributed to him uses words like
“Complete deflation” and “Higher Power”
that were simply not characteristic
of the descriptive words such as “God”
and “Heavenly Father;” the need for
abstinence; and the references to
“sins” accurately attributed to Dr.
Bob and his technique by Frank Amos
(See DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers,
p. 131). I therefore strongly believe,
that the descriptive words were not
those of Dr. Bob and that that portion
was most probably written or edited
and changed by someone other than
Earl Treat. Even a cursory glance
shows that Treat himself spoke of
a number of other “Oxford Group” procedures
that Dr. Bob used in Bob’s session
with Earl in Dr. Bob’s office. And
the first two of the supposed Bob
Smith six steps employ language that
I have never found in any records
of what Dr. Bob said in those days—deflation
in depth and “higher power.” These
were phrases and ideas that came from
Bill Wilson, and they were used by
Wilson long after the early Akron
days in which Dr. Bob and Bill formulated
the seven-point program reported to
John D. Rockefeller by Frank Amos
and specifically set forth in A.A.’s
Conference Approved biography of Dr.
Bob. In describing his actual writing
of the Twelve Steps, Bill spoke of
six ideas then in use, and he and
Lois both indicated he expanded the
six to twelve so that there would
be no “wiggle room” for those taking
the steps. The problem is that all
of the major ideas that Bill incorporated
into the twelve steps were in Bill’s
reservoir from what his own sponsor
Ebby Thacher had taught him in 1934—at
least four years before the steps
were written. (See Alcoholics Anonymous
4th ed., pp. 13-16; also my extended
treatment and review of the Stepping
Stones manuscripts and what Bill originally
wrote about the Oxford Group teachings
from Ebby and others, as found in
my title, Dick B., Turning Point:
A History of the Spiritual Roots and
Successes of Early A.A. They were
also in Bill’s reservoir of what the
Oxford Group had been teaching since
1919—the five C’s of “Soul Surgery,”
the “Four Absolutes” borrowed from
Dr. Robert E. Speer, the moral inventory
ideas that came from the Oxford Group
and Matthew 7:1-5 of the sermon on
the mount, the confession ideas that
came from James 5:16, the restitution
ideas that came from many parts of
the Bible, particularly the Sermon
on the Mount, the Quiet Time ideas
that began in the previous century
with the “morning watch” and writings
of F. B. Meyer, as well as the materials
in the first chapter of the Book of
James, the “spiritual experience,”
“pass it on,” and practice of spiritual
principles that came at the very least
from 1 Corinthians 13, the Ten Commandments,
and portions of the Sermon on the
Mount.
Some
have objected to my specific footnotes
and citations, but they are the foundation
of my writings. When I find something,
I identify its source if I can. Then
I identify its link to A.A. if I can.
And then I specify my sources so that
others can check them out and discuss
or dispute them if they wish. The
end result during the past fourteen
years has been heart-warming. This
despite occasional sarcastic remarks
now and then about my supposed “preaching,”
“agenda,” my being a “hobbyist.” That
keeps me out of the hair of some revisionists
and bleeding deacons. But the perpetrators
seldom if ever offer documentation
of any kind whatever that discusses,
disputes, or analyzes the sources.
Therefore I stick to the evidence
and let the nay sayers throw stones
if they care to. And a few do.
Now let’s get down to cases. Let’s
see what Bill Wilson, Dr. Bob Smith,
and Dr. Bob’s wife Anne Ripley Smith
had to say about the sources embodied
in the Big Book and Twelve Steps.
Then we can get specific about those
sources, the documentation, and the
references. And the references to
those specifics are described here
only in limited and in outline form.
Some enlightening statements
by A.A.’s “founders” as to sources:
• Bill Wilson wrote the following:
[I’ve
compacted them into the following,
though they were written at different
points in time:] (1) A. A. was not
invented. (2) Nobody invented Alcoholics
Anonymous. (3) Each of A.A.’s principles,
every one of them, has been borrowed
from ancient sources. (4) Having now
accounted for AA’s Steps One and Twelve.
. . . Where did the early AAs find
this material for the remaining ten
Steps. . . . The spiritual substance
of the remaining ten Steps came straight
from Dr. Bob’s and my own association
with the Oxford Groups, as they were
then led in America by that Episcopal
rector, Dr. Samuel Shoemaker. (5)
The early A.A. got its ideas of self-examination,
acknowledgment of character defects,
restitution for harm done, and working
with others straight from the Oxford
Groups and directly from Sam Shoemaker,
their former leader in America, and
from nowhere else. (6) [As to] the
“co-founder” tag [Bill wrote Shoemaker]
. . . I have no hesitancy in adding
your name to the list. (7) I’m always
glad to say privately that some of
the Oxford Group presentation and
emphasis on the Christian message
saved my life. (8) Now that Frank
Buchman [founder of the Oxford Group]
is gone and I realize more than ever
what we owe to him, I wish I had sought
him out in recent years to tell him
of our appreciation” (See Dick B.
Turning Point, pp. 12-13).
•
Lois Wilson wrote the following:
[Here
again compacted:] (1) Alcoholics Anonymous
owes a great debt to the Oxford Group.
(2) Bob already understood the great
opportunity for regeneration through
practicing the principles of the Oxford
Group. He stopped drinking. (3) God,
through the Oxford Group, had accomplished
in a twinkling what I had failed to
do in seventeen years. One minute
I would get down on my knees and thank
God. . . and the next moment I would
throw things about and cuss the Oxford
Group. (4) Finally it was agreed that
the book [Big Book] should present
a universal spiritual program, not
a specific religious one, since all
drunks were not Christian” (Lois Remembers,
pp. 92, 96, 99, 113).
•
Dr. Bob Smith said the following:
[Again
compacted] (1) When we [Bob and Bill]
started in on Bill D. [A.A. # 3],
we had no Twelve Steps, either; we
had no Traditions. But we were convinced
that the answer to our problems was
in the Good Book. To some of us older
ones, the parts we found absolutely
essential were the Sermon on the Mount,
the thirteenth chapter of First Corinthians,
and the Book of James. (2) It wasn’t
until 1938 that the teachings and
efforts and s studies that had been
going on were crystallized in the
form of the Twelve Steps. (3) If someone
asked him a question about the program,
his usual response was “What does
it say in the Good Book?” (4) I didn’t
write the Twelve Steps. I had nothing
to do with the writing of them. .
. . We already had the basic ideas,
though not in terse and tangible form.
We got them. . . as a result of our
study of the Good Book. (5) Members
of Alcoholics Anonymous begin the
day with a prayer for strength and
a short period of Bible reading. They
find the basic messages they need
in the Sermon on the Mount, 1 Corinthians,
and the Book of James.
Copyright
© Dick B.