A
Good Question by a Good Writer
By Dick B.
Not
too long ago, my friend Mel B.,
who is a prolific writer for A.A.
and Hazelden, graciously thanked
me for a copy of one of my books.
Then he said: “Dick, I now have
a shelf of your books. Where does
it all end?” That’s a good question.
And the answer lies in how it
all began and what gave rise to
the search. Actually, Mel played
a role in that beginning, along
with A.A.’s former archivist Frank
Mauser (now deceased), Dr. Bob’s
son Smitty, Willard Hunter (an
Oxford Group speaker), myself,
and a small A.A. group that presented
two large conferences on early
A.A. history in Marin County,
California, in the early 1990's.
Each event was called “A Day in
Marin.” And each went to the heart
of A.A.’s spiritual beginnings,
with the foregoing men as speakers.
Where
Our Spiritual Roots Were When the
Search Began
Much
has been uncovered and discovered about
early A.A. in the last decade. But let’s
start with what we had about 1990.
About 1954, Bill Wilson and his
secretary Nell Wing began taping
the remarks of our founders and
pioneers. In 1957, after A.A.’s
St. Louis Convention was over
and Bill had finished having a
manuscript edited by Father John
C. Ford, Bill felt it appropriate
to publish that work as Alcoholics
Anonymous Comes of Age: A Brief
History of A.A. Then, over
a span of twenty-six years, in
more than 150 articles, Bill wrote
bits and pieces and fragments
of history. And these were later
assembled and published by the
AA Grapevine, Inc. in The Language
of the Heart. Dr. Bob died
on November 16, 1950, and Bill
W. died on January 24, 1971. And
much has been uncovered and discovered
about early A.A. since those dates.
Ernest Kurtz received a Ph.D. in
the History of American Civilization
in 1978 and began to study history
after professional experience in
both religion and psychology. In
1979, Dr. Kurtz published Not-God:
A History of Alcoholics Anonymous.
In June, 1983, Bill Pittman completed
a work in partial fulfillment of
his Bachelor of Science Degree at
University of Minnesota; and by
1988, the work was published as
AA The Way It Began. Meanwhile,
with Bill Wilson gone, historical
interest was stirring at A.A.’s
General Services. Bill’s former
secretary Nell Wing phoned Clarence
Snyder in Florida and said that
New York just didn’t know the oldtimers..
She asked permission to send an
A.A. staff person to interview Clarence,
because, as she put it: “You know
them.” And, of course, Clarence
did, having been one of the original
40 pioneers, a sponsee of Dr. Bob’s,
and the founder of A.A. in Cleveland
where initial growth and success
rates had been phenomenal. Out of
this venture came DR. BOB and
the Good Oldtimers (an A.A.
“Conference Approved” book). It
was published in 1980. Its sequel
(a biography of Bill Wilson) was
published by A.A. in 1984 with the
title Pass It On.
John
H., the 1990 Seattle Convention,
and the Gap
By
the summer of 1990, I had been
sober a little over four years.
I had been quite active in A.A.,
serving as a secretary, treasurer,
general services representative,
and in other service jobs in various
A.A. groups. I had sponsored a
good many men in their recovery,
been to many area conventions,
and had my appetite for history
thoroughly whetted. Here’s the
reason.
Prior to 1990, John H. (a young
A.A. friend now dead of alcoholism)
said to me: “Dick, did you know
that A.A. came from the bible?”
John knew of my interest in the
Bible, and we both had the same
A.A. sponsor. But I replied that
I did not know anything about
A.A. and the Bible. I’d never
heard such a thing. I said knew
nothing about that story and had
never heard it from our mutual
sponsor or grandsponsor or in
any meetings. So John said: “Read
DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers.”
And I did just that. And I became
excited. To be sure, Dr. Bob was
quoted as saying that A.A.’s basic
ideas came from their study of
the Bible. The DR. BOB
book said that the Bible was stressed,
and that early A.A. was known
as a “Christian Fellowship.” It
said the early Akron meetings
had been described as “old fashioned
prayer meetings.”
From that historical piece, I hastened
to read Pass It On and saw
that early AAs had wanted to call
their society The James Club, because
they favored reading the Book of James.
I picked up Bill Wilson’s A.A.
Comes of Age, but was surprised
and disappointed to see no references
to the Bible and very little about
the Oxford Group, from which a number
of A.A.’s Bible ideas came.
With that, I went to A.A.’s International
Convention in Seattle. I expected
to find there the specifics. But
alas, there were none. I wound
up at an archives meeting where
the Bible was not mentioned; the
Oxford Group was alluded to; and
a panel member had one book on
the Oxford Group which he showed
me after the panel discussion
was over. I kept hearing them
talk of “Frank.” And I discovered
that “Frank” was the General Services
archivist from New York. I asked
Frank what he had on Sam Shoemaker,
a mentioned leader of the Oxford
Group. And Frank said he knew
very little but would send me
a list of Shoemaker titles. Interestingly,
he sent me material from Bill
Pittman’s AA The Way It Began
and a short pamphlet by the Oxford
Group’s Willard Hunter and A.A.’s
Mel B.
The bottom line, however, was: At
an international convention of A.A.
held 55 years after A.A. began,
I could find no details about A.A.
and the Bible, what the Oxford Group
believed, what its relationship
to A.A. was, or how A.A. came to
base its Steps on Oxford Group practices.
I could find nothing on Shoemaker’s
role other than laudatory statements
by Bill that Sam should be listed
as a “co-founder” of A.A. and a
wellspring of its spiritual ideas.
The literature early AAs read was
mentioned in small part, but there
was nothing on what that literature
contained or that it was primarily
Christian. There was nothing at
all on what Anne Smith had contributed
or on the journal she shared with
AAs and their families. And there
was nothing specific about “quiet
time,” except a mention in a 1938
report that Quiet Time was a “must”
in the program and that it was observed
in the early meetings and homes
and also by individuals.
The
“Agenda” Began to Crystalize
I
am sure my interest in our spiritual
roots proceeded from various crucibles.
(1) At eight months of sobriety,
I had been in the VA psychiatric
ward in San Francisco and was going
nowhere, except to A.A. meetings
and group therapy. I was filled
with fear. I shook like a leaf.
I was sufficiently brain damaged
that even I could tell I didn’t
know what I was talking about. And
on and on. I was “sick.” So, at
the urging of my older son and his
wife, I began studying the Bible.
Things on the love of God, the healing
power of God, the forgiveness of
God, and the deliverance that could
come because of what Jesus Christ
had accomplished for those who chose
to accept him as Lord and believe
that God had raised His on from
the dead. The result was almost
instantaneous. The fear left. I
began seeking God’s guidance instead
of trying to program my future,
events that lay ahead, and the rest
of my life. Peace arrived at last.
In other words, reading the Bible
and believing what it said had resulted
in my deliverance, just as it had
for early AAs (but I didn’t know
about the early AAs yet). (2) I
had been an attorney, a very good
one, trained at Stanford, Case Editor
of their Law Review, a practitioner
for 35 years, and an experienced
researcher. But I had become a drunk
and had resigned from the bar in
disgrace after having seizures in
A.A. and being hospitalized in a
treatment center. Nonetheless, my
zeal for research and discovery
had apparently survived. (3) I was
having difficulty understanding
why people were talking about a
“higher power” instead of talking
about God as the Twelve Steps and
Big Book and early AAs had done.
I saw Bible words and phrases quoted
verbatim (but without acknowledgment)
in A.A.’s Big Book. I saw Bible
words like Creator, Maker, Father,
Father of Lights, Spirit. Bible
phrases like “love thy neighbor
as thyself,” “faith without works
is dead,” “Thy will be done,” and
so on. (4) Most of all, as my mind
returned, I wanted to get away from
the nonsense that was common fare
in the meetings I attended: Absurd
names for God like “Ralph.” Half-baked
prayers” Self-made religion with
people saying they didn’t like their
church; they didn’t like to hear
about the Bible; and that it was
against the Traditions to mention
Jesus Christ. As a solution, they
said that A.A. was their religion.
(5) Finally, I wanted to help the
people I sponsored, help them with
the truth about God, and help them
understand the rock on which I felt
recovery and A.A. itself must have
been founded. But I had to know
the facts..
And
the “Agenda” Was. . . .
What
it boiled down to for me was simple.
I wanted to know if A.A. really
took its basic ideas from the Bible.
And if it did, I wanted to know
what those ideas were. I could see
that the facts were not to be found
in A.A. Conference Approved literature
or in the meetings I attended or
the Conference Speakers I heard.
I had read Nan Robertson’s Inside
AA. That book indicated that
there were archives to be seen,
founding families that could be
interviewed, and significant historical
places that could be visited. That
too became a part of the agenda.
Without interviews, no facts; and
(as a lawyer) I had interviewed
dozens of witnesses. But there was
more. Early writings and talks had
to be studied for references to
the Bible, to Christian literature,
to the Oxford Group, to Sam Shoemaker
and to Quiet Time. That meant travel
and research. More important, I
realized from Bill Pittman’s book
and from a reference or two in Dr.
Kurtz’s book that there was plenty
of Oxford Group and Shoemaker and
other spiritual literature that
had never been examined, analyzed,
or made available to AAs. So reading
many thousands of pages became part
of the agenda. Again what was the
main agenda? To see if A.A. ideas
came from the Bible; and, if they
did, what those ideas were and how
they impacted on the Steps, the
Big Book, and the Fellowship. And
if the facts could be documented,
then to make sure that they were
made available to AAs themselves,
to Al-Anons, to clergy, to the treatment
community, to the government, and
to non-profits. But the dissemination
part had to wait on the research
and travel and then on the writing.
And, as a lawyer often finds when
he begins to seek and unearth evidence,
the real truth is often vast and
surprising and often badly distorted
by previous investigations and prejudices.
I
found, from many years of law
practice, that if the truth is
diligently sought, it usually
can be unearthed. Moreover, lots
of new truths emerge. That’s the
case whether you are looking at
raw evidence, interviewing witnesses,
or searching collateral leads.
It’s also true when you are searching
for the “purple cow” precedent
case that will show what the law
actually is or should be in your
case. Many many times, I have
had a hunch that turned into a
lead that turned into a case or
a fact that won the day. That’s
what’s good about the law. When
you’re not drinking too much!
Anyway, the quest for A.A. history
and Bible sources had all the
same ingredients as preparation
for a major legal case, and there
was to be no disappointment.
For example, I had read in DR.
BOB that our co-founder had
given away all of his spiritual
books (very large in number).
But when I went to Akron and visited
Dr. Bob’s daughter Sue Windows,
I was greeted by her trips to
the attic to bring down Dr. Bob’s
books. And the books had Dr. Bob’s
name inscribed by him in them
along with the date he had obtained
them. Dr. Bob’s son and daughter-in-law
came up with an equal number of
books they had. And then I could
see that Dr. Bob had read the
Bible, books about the Bible and
Jesus Christ and prayer and healing
and love, and so on. I read those
books. Charlie Bishop published
my Dr. Bob’s Library, and
Ernie Kurtz wrote the Foreword.
Then, from Kurtz’s book, I found a
reference to a notebook Dr. Bob’s
wife had kept. I contacted Dr. Bob’s
daughter, my friend Bill Pittman,
my friend Frank Mauser, and Bill’s
secretary Nell Wing. My objective
was to see and study Anne Smith’s
notebook. I submitted a letter to
the Trustees of A.A. through Frank
with a supporting letter from Sue.
And I obtained Anne’s journal. I was
aghast. Anne had written this journal
between 1933 and 1939. She had recorded
all the Bible ideas, Oxford Group
and Shoemaker ideas, the Quiet Time
practices, the Bible verses, and even
the literature early AAs were reading.
Later, through my friend Dennis C.,
an A.A. historian, I was to learn
that Anne had shared this journal
with AAs and their families every
morning at the Smith home. Sue Windows
said the AAs came there for “spiritual
pablum.” After more interviews and
reading, I discovered that Anne was
called “Mother of A.A.” and for good
reason. Her journal contained the
heart of the program before it was
committed to writing.
Next, I tackled the Oxford Group.
I read and read. I was put in
touch with all the early Oxford
Group people who were active when
Bill and Bob were in the Oxford
Group. And I put together twenty-eight
ideas that came from the Oxford
Group and could be found in A.A.
Later, I found dozens of actual
phrases in A.A. that paralleled
those in the Oxford Group. I got
the lead to those phrases from
Pass In On. I got the phrases
from the Oxford Group people I
interviewed. And I documented
them from Oxford Group books.
Bill Pittman published my first
Oxford Group/AA book for me and
also my first Anne Smith book.
Endorsements from Dr. Bob’s kids
and from Oxford Group people were
easy to come by because they all
wanted the facts known.
I’ll not go into all of the search.
But I interviewed all the Seiberling
children, T. Henry Williams’ daughter,
and Sam Shoemaker’s wife and daughters
to find out what actually took place
at those early meetings and the facts
about the contributions of Henrietta,
T. Henry, Sam Shoemaker, Anne Smith,
Dr. Bob, and Bill’s Oxford Group circle
in New York. I went to the Akron newspapers
for 1933 when it all began. Lo and
behold. The entire story was emblazened
in the papers with the very kinds
of expressions by Oxford Group people
in Akron that AAs themselves use all
the time: self-centeredness, meditation,
resentment, fear, and so on.
In other words a simple agenda
in 1990 to learn if A.A .came
from the Bible and what it had
borrowed from the bible turned
into a major, ten-year quest that
unearthed spiritual sources, ideas,
practices, and literature that
AAs had never heard of for decades.
Yet these sources in some cases
were codified in the A.A. program.
And because they were not known,
different expressions and complete
distortions emanated from them:
God became a tree. Religious became
spiritual. Bible became “books.”
Quiet Time became “meditation.”
Revelation became “intuition.”
And the Serenity Prayer (which
begins with the word “God”) became
“acceptance.”
There are many searchers today. Some
collect books. Some start groups.
Some write books. And I’d like to
mention several of the writers. Mel
B. has written New Wine which
summarizes some
of our sources. Mary Darrah has written
Sister Ignatia which chronicles
the work of the dedicated nun who
helped Dr. Bob at St. Thomas Hospital
once the Big Book was written and
the Oxford Group tie was broken. Mitch
K. has written a book on Clarence
Snyder and the Cleveland picture (How
It Worked) which began in 1939
just after the Big Book was written
and where the astonishing 93% success
rate was achieved with the early program.
There are works now on Father Dowling,
who met Bill after the program was
developed and became Bill’s Roman
Catholic “sponsor.” There are studies
of Bill’s sponsor Ebby Thacher, of
Bill himself, of Sam Shoemaker, and
books galore on the Oxford Group.
But the heart of the early A.A. program
as reported by trustee-to-be Frank
Amos in 1938 and the details about
it were consistently ignored and specifics
could not be found until my quest
began.
For
the first time in perhaps 50 years,
the spiritual history of A.A. made
an appearance at an International
Convention. Not at the Convention.
But as near to it as you can get.
Just as near as the drunk junk booths
at the other end of the Convention
buildings. A group of dedicated
AAs rented a church next door to
the Convention and presented a video,
many of the early spiritual books,
and many historical books (including
all of mine). A panel of speakers
(most of them early dinosaurs) covered
reminiscences. But why not at
the Convention? Why not at all the
Conferences and Conventions? Why
not in the meetings? Why not in
A.A. Conference Approved Literature?
Why not in full at Dr. Bob’s Home?
Why not at A.A. General Services
in New York? Why not a complete
uncovering of A.A.’s connection
with the Bible, with Quiet Time
and what it meant, with the Oxford
Group, with Sam Shoemaker, with
Anne Smith the Mother of A.A., and
with the religious literature that
fed the program?
Well, our agenda was to get the
facts about A.A.’s biblical roots.
And the facts have largely been
unearthed. Then, we wanted to know
what that had to do with A.A.’s
success rates then. We know now
that early A.A. claimed a 75% success
rate among “medically incurable”
alcoholics who really tried. We
know the names of most of
these people because their pictures
are on the wall at Dr. Bob’s home
and their names are written in rosters.
Bill Wilson claimed an 80% success
rate. Early Cleveland A.A., which
grew from one group to thirty in
a year, documented a 93% success
rate and has the names and addresses
to confirm the fact. And Jack Alexander
wrote in his 1941 Saturday Evening
Post article that there was
a 100% success rate among non-psychotics.
Today, TV and radio shows are filled
with people talking about the drug and
alcohol problem. They seldom talk about
the solution of early A.A.: the power
of God as recorded in the Bible and
utilized in the early fellowship. The
dissemination of the truth about
early A.A. and its reliance on God is
now probably the greatest “agenda”item
on our plate. And progress is being
made. There is growing interest among
AAs and churches, where the present
failure rate of perhaps 90 to 95% is
a matter of common knowledge and grave
concern.
As A.A.’s former archivist Frank
Mauser said in so many of his talks:
“Whenever a civilization or society
perishes, there is always one condition
present. They forgot where they
came from.” We now know for sure
that A.A. came from the Bible, as
Dr. Bob said it did. And we know
many of the specifics.. There’s
lots of history concerning the details;
and day by day, the gap is being
filled by those searching and researching
for more of the truth.
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