Article 14
The Oxford Group and Alcoholics Anonymous, Part 2 by Dick B. Part Two The Steps, The Facts, The Oxford Group
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Article 14
The Oxford Group and Alcoholics Anonymous,
Part 2 by Dick B. Part Two The Steps, The Facts, The Oxford Group The Steps People in A.A. who are intensely enthusiastic about the
Twelve Steps of recovery are fond of rejecting any
"smorgasbord" approach to those Steps. They’ll say,
for example, "The Steps are numbered for a reason."
And they rail against those who "take" and/or
"practice" such of the twelve as appeal to them, yet
leave the remainder of the Steps alone. I’m not convinced that many really do accept or reject in
this manner. Those who are timid about the program are more
likely, I believe, to: "balk" at the Fourth Step;
"lie" or withhold facts in their Fifth Step;
"misunderstand" and underestimate the important
principles behind Steps Six and Seven; simply fail to complete
Steps Eight and Nine; and somehow overlook the
"continuity" purpose of Steps Ten, Eleven, and Twelve.
The last category, for example, might include those who say,
"I practice all of the Steps every day,"
or "I do one Step each month," or
"I’m doing all the Steps again." When
confronted with a more appropriate order, they may dodge the
criticism by arguing that the steps are "suggestive"
only and contain no requirements. In other words, they probably
don’t ignore any of the Steps. Many–particularly the
timid--just haven’t done or perhaps are unwilling to do the
hard work involved in completing the first nine steps and
applying what they’ve learned in "continuing" to
practice the principles involved in the last three steps. The same thing applies when it comes to learning our
spiritual roots. There are at least six major spiritual roots:
(1) The Bible. (2) Quiet Time. (3) The teachings of Rev. Sam
Shoemaker. (4) The life-changing program of the Oxford Group.
(5) The writings of Dr. Bob’s wife Anne Ripley Smith. (6) The
Christian literature they read. Added to these six roots are: (7) Some of the ideas of
Professor William James (whose very words were used by Rev. Sam
Shoemaker in his writings, and whose book The Varieties of
Religious Experience was read by A.A.’s founders). (8)
Some of the ideas of Dr. Carl Jung about conversion. (9) Some of
the new thought phrases of Ralph Waldo Trine, Emmet Fox, and
several "transcendentalists." And then: (10) Some of
the fall-out from Dr. William Silkworth on the
"disease," "allergy," and "psychic
change" concepts. (11) Richard Peabody on some of the
"treatment" notions covered in his title The Common
Sense of Drinking–also read by the founders and containing
language similar to that found in A.A.. The more you research the more you find that our official,
"reported" history has actually cluttered up the
historical facts themselves. Thus there has been a failure even
to explore or detail Dr. Bob’s work in Christian Endeavor as a
youngster. This gap leaves this root of Akron’s "old
fashioned prayer meetings" ignored as a major Bible root.
Moreover, the failure to write about Lois Wilson’s
Swedenborgian beliefs, family church membership, and her own
affiliation–together with Bill’s exposure to those
influences--leaves out this possible "spiritualism"
influence on, and support for, Bill’s "spook
sessions." It also may contribute to a failure to mention
Lois’s stated opposition to "conversion," "soul
surgery," and possibly even to the Bible itself. The latter
being a matter of omission rather than explicit opposition. A problem definitely arises out of a "smorgasbord"
approach to our spiritual roots and parts of roots. If
you pick at some, pick out some, and push out others, you don’t
have the "Program." By "Program," we mean
whatever Frank Amos meant when he came to Akron and thoroughly
investigated Dr. Bob and those features which had produced such
astonishing successes at Akron No. 1–A.A.’s first group.
Worse, you can’t attain an understanding of the
"Program." It is easy to call it too religious, too
Christian, too Protestant, or too Oxford Group–leaving the
program itself to float in a sea of unbelief. You may overlook the Bible because it is so little mentioned
today. You may not appreciate the importance of Quiet Time
because it has been so hacked up by later "meditation"
and "reflection" and "twenty-four-hour"
books. You may ignore the immense influence of Rev. Sam
Shoemaker because the details of his specific role and
contributions have been missing until recently. You may decline
to look at the Oxford Group principles because of long-standing
Roman Catholic and other opposition to Dr. Buchman and his work
some 50 years ago. You may just plain miss the work of Anne
Smith because her "journal" has been so long on the
shelf–in fact, virtually banned from the history scene at her
own home in Akron today. And you may omit the Christian
literature early AAs read because it is voluminous and, for
some, controversial. You may, as I did for quite some time, fail
to appreciate or study the effect on A.A. "theology"
of the ideas of William James, Ralph Waldo Trine, Emmet Fox, and
others. In so doing, you may not realize the confusion and
conflict fostered by putting some of our spiritual sources in
your thinking, ignoring others, and believing everything in
front of you was and is divinely inspired and just hunky dory. What Steps? You won’t spend much time digging in our early
"Program" without realizing that, at its peak
percentage-of-success period, which commenced in 1935, there
were no Steps. No steps? No steps!" To assure your
consideration of that fact, let’s look at the record: "Dr. Bob, noting that there were no Twelve Steps at
the time and that ‘our stories didn’t amount to anything
to speak of,’ later said they were convinced that the
answer to their problems was in the Good Book" (DR
BOB and the Good Oldtimers, p. 96). "As Dr. Bob recalled: ‘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’." (DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers,
p. 97). "Dorothy [Snyder Murphy] recalled the 1937 meetings
when ‘the men would all disappear upstairs. . . After
about half an hour or so, down would come the new man,
shaking, white, serious, and grim. And all the people who
were already in A.A. would come trooping down after him.
They were pretty reluctant to talk about what had happened,
but after a while, they would tell us they had had a real
surrender. I often wonder how many people that come in now
would survive an experience like that–a regular old
fashioned prayer meeting’." (DR. BOB and the Good
Oldtimers, p. 101). "But Bill did get to see John D. Rockefeller, Jr.,
who dispatched Frank Amos out to Akron to investigate what
was going on. Mr. Amos, who was soon to become one of A.A.’s
first non-alcoholic trustees, did a thorough job of
investigating what he referred to as the ‘self-styled
Alcoholic Group of Akron, Ohio.’ He called on Dr. Bob and
attended meetings. He questioned members and nonmembers,
including professional associates of Dr. Bob. . . . In his
report to Mr. Rockefeller in February, 1938, Mr. Amos said.
. . . ‘they [the stories of the men, their wives, and in
some cases their mothers]. . . were all remarkably alike in
‘the technique used and the system followed.’ He
described the ‘Program’ as follows: ‘1. An alcoholic
must realize that he is an alcoholic, incurable from a
medical standpoint, and that he must never again drink
anything with alcohol in it. 2. He must surrender himself
absolutely to God, realizing that in himself there is no
hope. 3. Not only must he want to stop drinking permanently,
he must remove from his life other sins such as hatred,
adultery, and others which frequently accompany alcoholism.
Unless he will do this absolutely, Smith and his associates
refuse to work with him. 4. He must have devotions every
morning–a ‘quiet time’ of prayer and some reading from
the Bible and other religious literature. Unless this is
faithfully followed, there is grave danger of backsliding.
5. He must be willing to help other alcoholics get
straightened out. This throws up a protective barrier and
strengthens his own willpower and convictions. 6. It is
important, but not vital, that he meet frequently with other
reformed alcoholics and form both a social and religious
comradeship. 7. Important, but not vital, that he attend
some religious service at least once weekly’." (DR.
BOB and the Good Oldtimers, pp. 128-31). I remember sitting in Wisconsin in the home of an experienced
AA. That was several years ago. We listened to the taped
interrogation of Ed Andy, an A.A. oldtimer from Lorain, Ohio. Ed
Andy is dead now. But at the time, he was questioned again and
again as to how he "took the Steps." Most of the time,
he simply responded with talk about other things they did in the
old days. But he also frequently said, "There were no
Steps." I really don’t think his interrogators understood
him because they were not that conversant with the
"Program" that Frank Amos and Dr. Bob explained as set
forth above. The A.A. questioners seemed not to believe that
this old duffer had been sober so many years without taking
"the Steps." But there were no steps! The "Program" was
described by Frank Amos. And Amos accurately reported what the
pioneers did. They renounced alcohol. They surrendered
absolutely to their Creator for help. They worked at removing
"sins" from their lives. They had devotions in the
form of prayer, Bible study, use of religious literature such as
The Upper Room, and seeking revelation from God in what
was commonly called a "Quiet Time." They helped
alcoholics get straightened out. They fellowshipped with other
believers. And they often attended a weekly religious service.
No steps! No Oxford Group program. Just the simple acts
described above. Their actions and their Program were influenced to a greater
and greater degree by what was in the Bible, in Oxford Group
writings, in Anne Smith’s journal, and in the religious
literature. And they followed much the same prayer, Bible study,
quiet time, and witnessing ideas Dr. Bob had learned in his
youth in Christian Endeavor in St. Johnsbury, Vermont. The Steps Appear Some–unduly impressed, or disturbed by, the Oxford Group
influence on A.A.–have asserted that the Oxford Group had six
steps. But it didn’t. I have talked with, corresponded with, and
studied the literature read by almost every significant Oxford
Group survivor in the United States and also several abroad.
Most have seen and in fact helped critique my title The
Oxford Group and Alcoholics Anonymous: A Design for
Living That Works. That title documents my finding that
there really were about twenty-eight Oxford Group ideas
that impacted on A.A. You will see from my title Anne Smith’s Journal,
1933-1939, that Dr. Bob’s wife covered–long before the
Big Book was written in 1938--all of the twelve step ideas Bill
eventually put in A.A.’s basic text, the Big Book You’ll see
from my title The Good Book and The Big Book that all of
the twelve step ideas really did stem from Bible principles,
just as Dr. Bob said they did. And you’ll see from New
Light on Alcoholism: God, Sam Shoemaker, and A.A. that the
same type of Bible language parallels can be found in the
writings and speeches of Rev. Sam Shoemaker, just as could be
inferred by Bill W.’s tributes to Sam. If you look at one of earliest Oxford Group pamphlets–written
by Sam Shoemaker’s good friend Rev. Sherwood Sunderland Day
about 1922–the following statement appears on page one:
"The principles of ‘The Oxford Group’ are the
principles of the Bible." And whether you are reading Sam
Shoemaker’s work, Oxford Group writings, Anne Smith’s
Journal, The Upper Room, or even the new thought ideas of
Emmet Fox, you’ll find the Bible cited and at the core of
almost all the thinking. From all this, you will see that neither the Bible, nor the
Oxford Group, nor the writings of Rev. Sam Shoemaker, nor the
Quiet Time literature, nor Anne Smith’s Journal, nor the other
religious writings studied by A.A. pioneers said anything about
"six steps" or "twelve steps" or any
formalized step program at all. As A.A.’s Conference Approved Pass It On correctly
observes: In later years, some A.A. members referred to this procedure
[an alleged six word-of- mouth steps Bill said had been employed] as the six steps
of the Oxford Group. Reverend T. Willard Hunter, who spent
18 years in full-time staff positions for the Oxford Group
and M.R.A., said, "I never once saw or heard anything
like the Six Tenets. It would be impossible to find them in
any Oxford Group-M.R.A. literature. I think they must have
been written by someone else under some sort of
misapprehension" (Pass It On, page 197 and
footnote 2 on page 206). The fact is that Bill Wilson himself described his
word-of-mouth "six steps" in several different ways
(See Dick B., The Akron Genesis of Alcoholics Anonymous,
pp. 256-60). How he referred to our Creator seemed to depend
upon the time and the circumstances and the audience. The
description which I believe to be the most accurate rendition of
what early AAs really did as to reliance on our Creator can be
found in The Language of the Heart at page 200. There,
Bill describes "step" number 6 as "We prayed to
God to help us to do these things as best we could." In
this rendition, Bill felt there were six steps (certainly not
Oxford Group steps)–the last one referring to
"God" our Creator as "God," just as Bill did
almost 400 times in the Big Book. And this usage as to our
Creator is consistent with the wording of the very first draft
of the Twelve Steps where "God" our Creator and
Heavenly Father is also referred to as "God"–not
some "power" or "higher power" or "God
as we understood Him." (See Pass It On, p. 198). The Twelve Steps "appeared" in 1934 If you read pages 12 to 15 of the Third Edition of the Big
Book, and a couple of earlier lines in Bill’s Story, you may
be puzzled at seeing all of the Twelve Step ideas on those pages
and seemingly propounded by Ebby Thacher to Bill Wilson at Towns
Hospital in 1934. This situation prompted me, during my visit to
Stepping Stones, to give special attention to three different
early Big Book draft manuscripts written by Bill Wilson. And the
startling fact is that Bill relates in detail almost all of the
Twelve Step ideas and the explanation of those Steps in specific
terms that Ebby taught him in 1934. These explicit and lengthy
historical portions from Bill’s "story" or
"reflections" as he then called them (which I have set
forth in Turning Point: A History of Early A.A.’s Spiritual
Roots and Successes) more than justify the assumption that
the Twelve Steps basics–biblical in nature as Dr. Bob and Rev.
Sherwood Day said–were floating around in rather concrete form
in 1934. In fact, they could well have been passed to Ebby at an
earlier point either by Ebby’s mentor Rowland Hazard or by
Rev. Sam Shoemaker himself. You can see the remarkable detail in
the early pages of my title, Turning Point: A History of
Early A.A.’s Spiritual Roots and Successes. And where might Bill’s alleged "six steps" (that
preceded the Twelve) have come from if they weren’t in the
Bible, Quiet Time, Shoemaker, the Oxford Group, Anne Smith’s
Journal, or the Christian literature AAs read? Actually, during A.A.’s formative period from 1934 to 1939,
mixed into the various analyses and descriptions of Oxford Group
ideas, were the following alleged "six basic
assumptions" of the Group: (1) Men are sinners. (2) Men can
be changed. (3) Confession is prerequisite to change. (4) The
changed soul has direct access to God. (5) The Age of Miracles
has returned. (6) Those who have been "changed" must
"change" others. See Kurtz, Not-God: A History of
Alcoholics Anonymous, 1979, p. 49. Also, Lois Wilson had described "the Oxford Group
precepts" as: (1) Surrender your life to God. (2) Take a
moral inventory. (3) Confess your sins to God and another human
being. (4) Make restitution. (5) Give of yourself to others with
no demand for return. (6) Pray to God for help to carry out
these principles. In fact, however, neither the so-called
"six assumptions" nor Lois’s six Oxford Group
"precepts" adequately reflects the complete Oxford
Group thinking that impacted on early A.A. The
"assumptions" are, in no sense, biblical; yet the
Oxford Group principles avowedly were. Lois’s
"precepts" were also not biblical; yet Dr. Bob said
A.A.’s basic step ideas were based on study of the Bible. In sum, it is very doubtful that Dr. Bob would have
subscribed to the idea that the original A.A.
"Program" had four steps, six steps, eight steps, or
twelve. His own Christian Endeavor background and extensive
studies of the Bible led him to the very simple program Frank
Amos described; and I have found no particular evidence to
indicate Dr. Bob did not use those simple Bible ideas in
bringing recovery to the 5000 alcoholics he personally helped in
Akron. And What of the Oxford Group and Our Twelve
Steps I believe it might be fair to say that A.A. had three
approaches to recovery in its earliest days: (1) An approach
directly related to recovery and based primarily on the Bible
and reliance on our Creator–applied by Dr. Bob and the Akron
pioneers (See The Good Book and The Big Book: A.A.’s Roots
in the Bible). (2) An approach that was not directly related
to recovery but involved a "life-changing" program
whose principles were biblical and were applied for recovery–applied
primarily in the East, prior to, and then in, early A.A. (See The
Oxford Group and Alcoholics Anonymous: A Design for Living That
Works). (3) An experiment by Bill W. and Dr. Bob utilizing
both approaches and culminating in the Big Book text whose (a)
"Steps" were based primarily on the Oxford Group’s
aim of attaining a life-changing experience of God and
continuing in that experience, and whose (b) Big Book
"text" was possibly much more influenced than the
Steps by the Bible and yet propounded several inconsistent and
even conflicting theories on alcoholism as an
"incurable" mental, physical, and spiritual malady;
required a "conversion" that was more
"change" than a "born again" experience; and
"action" seemingly focused more on doing things
than on believing the truths which the Bible said would
make believers free (See Turning Point: A History of Early
A.A.’s Spiritual Roots and Successes). As to the Steps, however, and even as to many explicit
phrases in the Big Book, you can’t ignore the Oxford Group’s
immense influence on A.A.–coming from the Oxford Group’s
twenty-eight principles such as: (a) God is Almighty and our
Creator; (b) God’s Plan; (c) Our Obedience, (d) Initial belief
that God is; (e) Surrender of your "will" to God; (f)
A "turning point"--leading to "steps"
embodied in the OG’s 5 C’s--(g) Confidence, (h) Confession,
(i) Conviction, (j) Conversion, (k) Continuance)–five
"steps" that would eliminate "sin"
"blocking" one from God and others; (l) Making
restitution for harms caused by sins; (m) Making
"daily" surrender that continued to apply the
"steps;" (n) "Growing" spiritually through
Bible study, prayer, and Quiet Time observances enabling receipt
of God’s revelation; (o) Becoming "God conscious" as
the result of such obedience; (p) Witnessing to what God had
done that the person had been unable to do for himself; (q)
Fellowshipping; (r) Serving; (s) Practicing Christian
principles, made available to believers by their new-found power
of God in Christ which is mentioned in 2 Corinthians 5:17. This article is simply a synopsis of what I believe is the
practical result of A.A.’s Oxford Group exposure from 1934
through approximately 1941. Much more about the Oxford Group,
and also our other spiritual roots, is covered in detail
by my fifteen titles listed and described at http://www.dickb.com/titles.shtml
(Alcoholics Anonymous History). END
Dick B. is a retired attorney,
living in Hawaii and student of the bible. He has more than 15
published titles to his name including Courage
to Change |