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THE
CHRISTIAN CENTURY, February 22, 1950
ALCOHOLICS
ANONYMOUS SPURN A TRAP
How
many churchmen noticed an inconspicuous item in the
press the other day which reported that Alcoholics Anonymous
of
New York had turned down a bequest? A "grateful woman
member,"
according to the story in the New York Times, had bequeathed
the
organization $10,000. A spokesman for A.A., in explaining
why it
refused the money, said that "members have discovered
they cannot
mix money and its management with the spiritual nature of
the
work they are trying to do." The newspaper added that
"acquisition of property or money other than that raised
by
passing the hat at their own meeting" is feared by
A.A. because
it "tends to divert members from their primary task
of helping
drunkards."
This
will probably sound quixotic to many a hard-pressed
parson or finance committee chairman. Yet there is something
involved in this A.A. decision which churches and church
organizations can wisely ponder. Endowments always look
good at
the start, but the late Julius Rosenwald knew their stultifying
long-range effects when he provided that his great Rosenwald
Fund
must be liquidated, principal and income, in less than a
generation. Nothing can take the crusading zeal out of a
congregation or an organization faster than knowing that
all the
bills have been paid in advance and will continue to be
paid
whether or not anyone lifts a finger. Endowments can do
as much
damage to the vitality of churches and reform bodies as
doting
parents generally do the sons and daughters of the rich.
Alcoholics
Anonymous undoubtedly could have made good use of
that $10,000. But we have far more confidence in its future
now
that it has showed wisdom enough to turn it down.
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