A.A./Carl
Jung/Rowland Hazard/Ebby Thacher
Myths or subjects of Hindsight Quarterbacking
Dick
B. ©2005
The
Core of Early A.A.
One
of A.A.’s core New York underpinnings, as
embodied in the Big Book and Twelve Steps,
is the “solution”—a conversion experience—said
to have been prescribed in the 1930’s for
Rhode Island businessman Rowland Hazard
by Swiss psychiatrist Dr. Carl Jung. Jung
recommended it as the necessary ingredient
for Rowland’s overcoming his alcoholism
characterized by Rowland’s having the “mind
of a chronic alcoholic.” But it’s really
under fire!
At this late date, you might wonder at the
relevance of the following questions: Did
Rowland Hazard ever treat with Dr. Carl
Jung at all? If so, did Jung tell Rowland
his primary hope lay in a transforming religious
conversion? If Rowland was treated by Jung,
was it only after the previous, alleged
formative A.A. events that had led Rowland
from Jung to Ebby Thacher and in turn to
Bill Wilson—who co-founded A.A. thereafter?
Finally, if Rowland actually recovered,
did whatever success Rowland achieved come
from following Jung’s advice, or through
his treatment by therapist Courtney Baylor
and the Emmanuel Movement, or by his simply
undergoing a life-changing experience in
the Oxford Group?
I don’t know for sure the answer to any
of the foregoing questions.
The
Challengers
But
I seriously suspect the validity of the
evidence presented by those who would answer
“no” to most of those questions. Those people
who today are claiming there is no record
of the Jung/Hazard treatments. Those “new
thought” advocates who are laying Rowland’s
successes at the feet of the Emanuel Movement
and the therapist Courtney Baylor. Those
who seem to reject the fact that a number
of alcoholics well known in Oxford Group
circles (Rowland Hazard, F. Shepard Cornell,
Cebra Graves, Victor Kitchen, Charles Clapp,
Jr., and later Jim Houck) attributed their
sobriety to their having followed Oxford
Group principles and practices.
I question this belated historical challenge,
and the adequacy of the evidence on which
it rests. For the challenges seem more calculated
to lambaste the Oxford Group, the Bible,
evangelical Christianity, and “religion”
than to prove that these vital ingredients
were never the heart of early New York’s
recovery program. That their historical
challenge deserves attention is not disputed
by me– especially as I look at the secularization
in the A.A. atmosphere of today. But these
newly presented theories repudiate the foundation
stones of A.A.’s Big Book premise. That
premise is that you must establish a relationship
with God by a conversion experience. That
you do so by taking 12 life-changing steps.
Many AAs have accepted that premise, and
their stories are, in part, related in A.A.’s
Came to Believe are neither factually substantiated
nor historically reliable.
After 15 years of research into the history
of Alcoholics Anonymous, I would challenge
the revisionists by pointing to a good deal
of evidence they have either ignored, minimized,
or inadequately refuted.
The
Real Rowland Hazard/Carl Jung Facts
First,
the most compelling piece of evidence as
to the accuracy of the story Bill Wilson
wrote about Rowland Hazard and Carl Jung
can be found in the extant correspondence
between Bill Wilson and Dr. Carl Jung himself.
I personally have copies of the correspondence
that I obtained with permission from Bill’s
home at Stepping Stones. And see Pass It
On. NY: Alcoholics Anonymous World Services,
Inc., 1984; Francis Hartigan, Bill W.; Lois
Wilson. Lois Remembers, p. 93 in a letter
to Bill Wilson.
Second, the Rowland Hazard/Carl Jung account
has been related by Rowland Hazard personally
to many on the New York A.A. scene—people
such as Bill’s sponsor Ebby Thacher, Rowland’s
pastor Dr. Samuel M. Shoemaker, Jr., Rowland’s
Oxford Group colleagues—F. Shepard Cornell
and Cebra Graves, Bill Wilson himself, Professor
Philip Marshall Brown of Princeton, and
Shoemaker’s associates Rev. W. Irving Harris
and his wife Julia.
Third, many others with no axe to grind
have repeated the story. Bill Wilson has
written several times on several different
occasions of the Rowland/Jung events. So
has Rev. Sam Shoemaker who personally knew
and worked with Rowland. So has Rev. Irving
Harris. And so have Oxford Group friends
of Rowland such as James D. Newton, Eleanor
Forde Newton, Victor Kitchen, and Hanford
Twitchell.
Fourth, as if seeking to enshrine the account
in the very foundation of Calvary Church
in New York, the story persists to this
day as visitors are guided through Calvary
and shown the stained glass windows in the
church which are dedicated to Rowland Hazard—A.A.’s
Rowland Hazard, as their literature remarks.
The
Defective Challenges
Those
who are known to espouse the rejection of
Hazard’s visit are long on their support
of the Emanuel Movement and New Thought
and clearly deficient in their familiarity
with the Oxford Group, with Oxford Group
writings, and with Oxford Group members.
They make no claim of having read or interviewed
or reviewed the works and remarks of the
Oxford Group people just mentioned.
They make much of dates, but little of facts.
They purport to have reviewed Carl Jung’s
records years and years after they were
made. But they cannot and do not cite the
entirety of Jung’s records or even claim
to have examined them.
The detractors reject the very theory that
enabled Bill Wilson to sell his whole East
Coast version of the Alcoholics Anonymous
road to recovery. That version, simply stated,
was: (1) That the “medically incurable”
and seemingly hopeless Rowland Hazard was
told by Dr. Carl Jung that medicine could
not help Rowland, but that a conversion
might. (2) That Rowland sought a conversion
via the Oxford Group—which happened to prefer
the expression “change” in its own unique
parlance for seeking for persuading “converts.”
(3) That Rowland was changed and cured;
sought out Ebby Thacher; and taught Thacher
the Oxford Group life-changing principles.
(4) That Ebby then had a conversion—albeit
by accepting Jesus Christ at the altar at
Calvary Rescue Mission (a fact seldom mentioned
by historians). (5) That Ebby’s witness
persuaded Wilson to go to Calvary and himself
accept Christ (a fact seldom if ever mentioned
by historians). (6) That Wilson then soon
checked into Towns Hospital for treatment,
was again indoctrinated by Ebby in the Oxford
Group life-changing principles, and submitted
himself to God as Bill said he then understood
God. (7) That Bill had his resultant “hot
flash” conversion experience in which Bill
“found God,” and never drank again. (8)
That Bill consulted the famous book by Professor
William James on Varieties of Religious
Experience, concluded that he had validated
his own conversion in one of these experiences,
and that James’s “deflation in depth” was
also a necessary condition to conversion,
and (9) That deflation in depth, application
of Oxford Group principles, receiving a
consequent conversion or “spiritual” experience
as the result, was—when coupled with the
Oxford Group idea of “sharing for witness”
and thereby helping others to such an experience—the
essence of a program developed by Bill Wilson
himself in company with Rev. Sam Shoemaker
and embodied in the language of Bill’s Big
Book and Twelve Steps suggested as a program
of recovery.
And I believe the erroneous hindsight quarterbacking
of several detractors of the Oxford Group/Conversion/Rowland
Hazard/Carl Jung story (these being Dr.
Ernest Kurtz, Dr. Glenn Chesnut, and Dr.
Richard Dubiel) demonstrates in content
that the analysts just plain missed the
boat when it came to thoroughly investigating,
describing, analyzing, and critiquing the
actual events described above.
What
has been demonstrated
There
is ample evidence today that as many alcoholics
get sober and stay sober outside the rooms
of Alcoholics Anonymous as do so within.
There is ample evidence today within the
fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous that
between one and five percent of today’s
members do get sober and stay sober within
the rooms of Alcoholics Anonymous.
There is, to my satisfaction, observable
evidence that a great many long-time sober
AAs today got sober and stayed sober within
A.A. whether they were Jews, Protestants,
Roman Catholics, agnostics, and possibly
even atheists.
There is, to my satisfaction , observable
evidence that many sober AAs today came
into the fellowship, grabbed a Big Book
and a Sponsor, studied the Big Book, “took”
and endeavored to practice the principles
of the Twelve Steps, and remained sober.
There is, to my satisfaction, observable
evidence that among those A.A. believers—be
they Jews, Roman Catholics, or Protestants—there
are many who believe in God, pray, study
the Scriptures, seek God’s guidance, attempt
to find and apply His will, and provide
love and service to others within the fellowship.
That being true whatever the religious convictions
of their neighbors may be. This legion of
helpers has helped to make A.A. as famous
as it is.
There is, to my satisfaction, observable
evidence that far too many AAs, therapists,
treatment center people, clergy, physicians,
and counselors have little or no knowledge
of A.A. history, of its Christian roots,
or its early program in Akron, or of the
enormous difference in the success rates
in early A.A. as compared to those today.
There is, to my satisfaction, irrefutable
and abundant evidence that: (1) In early
Akron A.A., Bill Wilson—AA number one; Dr.
Bob Smith—AA number two; and Bill Dotson—AA
number three, all believed and stated they
had been cured of alcoholism by Almighty
God. (2) The program of recovery that was
developed and used in Akron between 1935
and 1938 produced cures of alcoholism among
75% of those members who really tried and
completely gave themselves to the program
that was specifically described by Rockefeller’s
agent Frank Amos after careful investigation
in Akron. (3) That the Akron program was
far different—definitely Christian in character
and fellowship—than the one which Bill Wilson
fashioned in New York primarily from Oxford
Group life-changing principles taught him
by Rev. Sam Shoemaker and embodied in the
Big Book and Twelve Steps. (4) That if any
AAs today were to hear of, learn, and apply
the program developed and used in Akron
throughout Dr. Bob’s life, those AAs would
achieve the same 75% to 93% success rates
that were achieved from the Akron program.
(5) That many of us in today’s A.A. (myself
included) have been in the trenches, have
grabbed the Big Book program with enthusiasm,
have dived into fellowship activities, have—with
or without knowing what early AAs did—received
the same help, healing, guidance, forgiveness,
and love of God that is still available
to those who want it and seek it. (6) That
there is virtually no likelihood that the
A.A. of today will, as a fellowship, ever
accept, endorse, apply, or return to the
A.A. of the pioneers. (7) That there is
still a rampant hunger within the ranks
of A.A. people today for facts about early
A.A.’s Biblical program, Christian fellowship,
and astonishing cures. (8) That if the early
A.A. facts are widely disseminated within
A.A. itself, there can be an enormous difference
in the lives lived, the sobriety attained,
and the service rendered by those who work
within the fellowship and emulate the program
which worked so successfully among the Akron
pioneers.
No
profit in ignorance
For
years, perhaps at least 50, AAs have drifted
farther and farther from any knowledge of,
or resources about, their early program
and its successes. For years, perhaps at
least 50, AAs have been fed an idolatrous
diet about higher powers and spirituality
and good deeds that supposedly represent
the real program of recovery. For years,
perhaps at least 40, AAs have increasingly
grown boisterous in their condemnation of
religion, Christianity, the Bible, and even
God—the number of such activists may well
be few, but the sound of their voices is
deafening and intimidating. For years, perhaps
as many as 65, AAs have been spoon fed myths
that detract from the Jung/Hazard/Thacher
conversion beliefs, the Oxford Group program
of the 1920’s and 1930’s, the vital importance
of Rev. Samuel M. Shoemaker, Jr. in New
York, the supposed failures of churches
and of clergy and of religion, and New Age
pap about strange gods, pseudo-Christianity,
and outright unbelief. For at least 40 years,
the spotlight has been focused on an irrelevant
Washingtonian Movement, an unsuccessful
Emanuel and New Thought movement (the latter
being unsuccessful in penetrating A.A. ranks),
and the shortcomings and supposed traitorous
beliefs of Oxford Group Founder Dr. Frank
N. D. Buchman.
All these tides have washed away valuable
history, vilified sound reports, and produced
increasing ignorance of what A.A. is really
about. In fact, the less that is known,
the less A.A. has to offer except for meetings
and abstinence—neither of which have had
everlasting success within or without A.A.
If A.A. is a spiritual program of recovery—and
it is; and if A.A. distinguished itself
originally in its reliance on the Creator,
the truths in the Bible, the power received
in a new birth, and the outreach of love
and service by ordinary drunks, then those
are the facts which should be made known.
This is true whether you believe in the
Creator, Jesus Christ, the Bible, the new
birth, and conversions or not. That is the
history that is missing in too many of today’s
“Bill W.” biographies, irrelevant studies
of tangential alcoholism movements, and
the long temperance events of past centuries.
Using
A.A.’s Real Early A.A. History to Compare
other present-day contenders
If
we are going to talk about the Washingtonians,
let’s start with the fact that God was not
part of their program. If we are going to
talk about New Thought, let’s start with
the fact that it rejected the born-again
faith found in early A.A. If we are going
to talk about conversion, Rowland Hazard,
Ebby Thacher, Carl Jung, and William James,
let’s start with the nature of the Oxford
Group, the religious beliefs of Carl Jung,
and the New Thought orientation of William
James. But if we are going to talk about
A.A., let’s start with the Book of James,
the Sermon on the Mount, and 1 Corinthians
13, and find just what ideas therein were
proclaimed by Dr. Bob to be absolutely essential
to the early A.A.’s basic program. Yet I
don’t see these discussed at all by the
quarterbacks. A few, however, are finally
beginning to recognize that they have never
really looked into, reported on, or accurately
summarized the real early A.A. history,
particularly the whole program in Akron,
the program as reported by Frank Amos to
Rockefeller, the United Christian Endeavor
roots of the Akron program, and the significance
of James, the Sermon, and 1 Corinthians.
I suggest contrasting and looking at the
materials in three of my latest titles:
When Early AAs Were Cured and Why; Twelve
Steps for You; and The James Club and The
Early A.A. Program’s Absolute Essentials.
End
Dick
B., PO Box 837, Kihei, HI 96753-0837; 808
874 4876; dickb@dickb.com
http://www.dickb.com/index.shtml;
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