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The Spiritual Beginnings of A.A.
By Dick B.
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Bill Wilson
often said: A.A. was not invented. He added: Each of A.A.’s spiritual principles
was borrowed from ancient sources. Regrettably, he provided very few specifics
as to those A.A. sources, or how they reached the A.A. fellowship.
Today, we can
supply specific details. They have been gathered over a period of ten years from
archives, interviews, historians, and the study of much literature. Those who
did the A.A. borrowing and fashioning were A.A.’s founders, Bill W. and Dr. Bob.
But one historical fact has been commonly lacking in discussions of the
contributions of these two men. Their sources, spiritual infusions, and beliefs
were totally different. Bill was a self-proclaimed conservative atheist, had
never belonged to a church, and never studied the Bible until after he met Dr.
Bob in Akron. Dr. Bob, on the other hand, was a longtime Christian believer,
church member, and Bible student. And most histories ignore these differences
and their A.A. impact.
Two Distinctly Different Spiritual Roots
One A.A. root
might properly be called the Carl Jung/Sam Shoemaker Source. It led to the
New York Genesis of A.A. Its ingredients are well-known and legendary, though
inaccurately reported. Unfortunately, the incorrect legend has become doctrinal.
A.A.’s other root could properly be called the Bible/Dr. Bob Source. It led to
the Akron Genesis of A.A.. Unfortunately, the facts about this root have been
virtually buried..
The New York Genesis and Jung/Shoemaker Source
We will dwell
little on A.A.’s New York beginnings because they have so often been recorded,
albeit misreported and distorted. To repeat, Bill Wilson, a Brooklyn
resident, was a self-proclaimed conservative atheist. He was never a church
member, and had never looked in the Bible at all until he came to Akron in
1935.
The Bill Wilson
picture as to A.A.’s spiritual beginnings begins as follows.
An East Coast
businessman named Rowland Hazard sought help for his alcoholism from Dr. Carl
Jung in Switzerland. After treatment and then relapse, Rowland was told by Jung
that he needed a conversion experience to recover. Jung defined such conversions
as union with God. He suggested Rowland seek religious association.
Rowland
therefore joined A First Century Christian Fellowship also known as the Oxford
Group. Rowland followed its precepts; recovered from alcoholism; helped rescue a
New Yorker named Ebby Thacher from alcoholism; taught Ebby the Oxford Group
ideas; and later also spent substantial time with Bill Wilson inculcating Wilson
with Oxford Group precepts. Ebby Thacher visited and convinced his suffering
friend Bill Wilson that he (Ebby) had got religion, that God had done for him
what he could not do for himself, and that he had been to Rev. Sam Shoemaker’s
Calvary Rescue Mission in New York.
A drunken Bill
Wilson then went to Shoemaker’s Rescue Mission, made a decision for Christ,
believed he had really found something, and checked into Towns Hospital in New
York. There Bill heard from Ebby some key Oxford Group principles. Bill also
then had what he often called his hot flash conversion experience. On release
from Towns Hospital, Bill was totally unsuccessful either in converting anyone
else or even in getting anyone sober.
But he
assimilated some major Oxford Group life_changing principles such as the Five
C’s, Four Absolutes, Surrender, Restitution, Guidance, and Witnessing. He
endeavored to carry to drunks his version of the recovery message. And he
finally carried it to Dr. Bob in Akron, Ohio, where an entirely different chain
of events had been in progress.
The Akron Genesis and Bible/Dr. Bob Source
A.A.’s Akron
Genesis began with Dr. Bob, his Christian church activities as a youngster, and
his excellent Bible training in that church and in Christian Endeavor..
Dr. Bob was
born and raised in St. Johnsbury, Vermont. His parents were pillars of the North
Congregational Church in St. Johnsbury. From childhood through high school, Bob
each week attended the Congregational church, its Sunday School, evening
service, Monday night Christian Endeavor, and sometimes its Wednesday evening
prayer meeting. These likely at the insistence of his mother. Yet, Bob continued
membership in Christian churches most of his life: St. Johnsbury Congregational
in his youth. Possibly St. Luke’s Protestant Episcopal Church.
Probably the
Church of Our Saviour in Akron, where his kids attended Sunday School. Then
Akron’s Westminster Presbyterian Church where Dr. Bob and Anne Smith were
charter members from June 3, 1936 to April 3, 1942.
Finally, a year
before his death, Dr. Bob became a communicant at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in
Akron.
Dr. Bob told
AAs he had nothing to do with writing the Twelve Steps. Nor did he have much to
do with the writing of A.A.’s basic text, the Big Book, other than to review
manuscripts as Bill Wilson passed them to Bob for approval prior to publication
in the Spring of 1939. But Dr. Bob did make some very clear statements about the
Bible and A.A. And it was in Akron where A.A.’s basic biblical ideas were honed,
tried, and then later put into terse and tangible form at Bill Wilson’s hands.
Dr. Bob said
A.A.’s basic ideas came from the Bible. Both Dr. Bob and Bill often stated that
Jesus’s sermon on the mount contained the underlying spiritual philosophy of A.A.
Bob often read to AAs from those Bible passages.
He pointed out
that the A.A. slogans First Things First and Easy Does It were taken
respectively from Matthew 6:33 and 6:34. When someone asked Dr. Bob a question
about the A.A. program, his usual response was: What does it say in the Good
Book? He declared that A.A. pioneers were convinced that the answer to their
problems was in the Good Book. He added: To some of us older ones, the parts
we found absolutely essential were the Sermon on the Mount, the 13th chapter of
First Corinthians, and the Book of James. In fact, James was so popular with
the pioneers that, according to Bill Wilson, many favored calling the A.A.
fellowship The James Club.
The Biblical
emphasis in A.A.’s Akron Group No. One involved much more. Meetings opened with
prayer. As mentioned, they were old fashioned prayer meetings. Bible
devotionals such as The Upper Room, My Utmost for His Highest, and The Runner’s
Bible were regular fare at the meetings, individual Quiet Times, and Quiet Times
with Anne Smith each morning at the Smith home. Quiet Time itself had distinct
Biblical roots. Scripture was regularly read at all meetings. Scripture, both
from devotionals and from actual reading of the Good Book, was often the
fountainhead for topics discussed at pioneer meetings. Bible study itself was
stressed. Dr. Bob called every meeting of early A.A. a Christian Fellowship;
and early A.A. was in fact an integral part of A First Century Christian
Fellowship. Also, as will be detailed in a later article, every single Twelve
Step idea can be traced to specific Bible verses and segments. Furthermore,
Surrenders were required in early Akron A.A. This meant accepting on one’s
knees Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour. Older members then prayed with newcomers
in the manner specified in James 5:16.
And how did all
this Bible material wind up in A.A.? Certainly not from, nor properly described
as through, Bill Wilson. It was the daily grist of the Akron experimental work
to deliver drunks.
There is a
final point. One that really marks the beginning of the Akron Genesis. Its
details were only recently unearthed in the author’s research. It has to do with
Christian Endeavor, the Christian church movement for youth to which Dr. Bob
belonged as a youngster. And that movement, its practices, and principles can be
seen as having great impact on many of the basic and unique aspects of Akron A.A..
These aspects differed from the Oxford Group approaches and principles with
which Bill Wilson had been indoctrinated on the East Coast. They did not involve
the Four Absolutes, 5 C’s, Restitution, Guidance, Witnessing, and other
distinctly Oxford Group ideas with which Bob and Bill were both familiar from
their respective Oxford Group connections.
The Akron
prayer meetings, Bible study, devotional literature discussions, confession of
Christ, emphasis on church affiliation, and Christian outreach were a distinct
characteristic of the Akron program. They were not emphasized in New York. They
showed Christian Endeavor influence on Dr. Bob.
Christian
Endeavor was a movement formed in Williston Congregational Church in Portland,
Maine on February 2, 1881. It was designed to meet the need of the church for
training young Christians. Activities included the weekly young people’s prayer
meeting. Each member promised to attend and take some part. A Bible verse or a
sentence of prayer answered the individual’s obligation of taking some part
aside from singing. In addition to prayer meetings, there were social
gatherings, missionary committees, music and floral committees, and committees
to visit the sick and poor and welcome strangers. The organization endeavored to
be self-governing and self propagating. It spread to Massachusetts, Rhode
Island, and Vermont. Then to numerous U.S. churches, to Hawaii, China, and many
parts of the world. In a few years, nearly 25,000 young people journeyed across
the United States to attend a convention in San Francisco.
Rev. Francis E.
Clark, Founder of the Christian Endeavor Movement, said the roots of the
Christian Endeavor tree were: (1) Confession of Christ. (2) Service for Christ.
(3) Fellowship with Christ’s people. (4) Loyalty to Christ’s Church. As to the
Confession of Christ, Clark said: Confession of Christ is absolutely necessary
in the Christian Endeavor Society. . . . Every week comes the prayer meeting in
which every member who fulfills his vow must take some part. . . . The true
Christian Endeavorer. . . .does take part to show that he is a Christian, to
confess his love for the Lord. . . . The covenant pledge. . . secures
familiarity with the Word of God by promoting Bible reading and study in
preparation for every meeting.
Rev. F. B.
Meyer, who later was to have a substantial influence on the Oxford Group and on
early A.A. ideas and was president of the British Christian Endeavor Union, said
Christian Endeavor stood for five great principles: (1) Personal devotion to the
divine Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ. (2) The covenant obligation embodied in
our pledge. (3) Constant religious training for all kinds of service. (4)
Strenuous loyalty to the local church and denomination with which each society
is connected. (5) Interdenominational spiritual fellowship.
The C.E.
founder, Rev. Francis Clark, summarized the C.E. covenant as follows: Trusting
in the Lord Jesus for strength, I promise him that I will strive to do whatever
He would like to have me do; that I will pray and read the Bible every day; and
that, just so far as I know how, I will endeavor to lead a Christian life. I
will be present at every meeting of the society, unless prevented by some reason
which I can conscientiously give to my Saviour, and will take part in the
meeting, either by prayer, testimony, or a Bible verse. As an active member of
this society, I promise to be faithful to my own church, and to do all I can to
uphold its works and membership.
Amos R. Wells,
Editorial Secretary of the United Society of Christian Endeavor, asked: (1) What
are the results we may gain from the prayer meeting? They are five: original
thought on religious subjects; open committal to the cause of Christ; the
helpful expression of Christian thought and experience; the cultivation of the
spirit of worship through public prayer and singing; the guidance of others
along these lines of service and life. (2) How can we get original thought on
the prayer meeting topics? Only by study of the Bible, followed by meditation.
First, the Endeavourer should read the Bible passage; then he should read some
good commentary upon it; then he should take the subject with him into his daily
life. (3) Are we to read Bible verses and other quotations? Yes, all we please,
if we will make them the original expression of our own lives by thinking about
them, and adding to them something, if only a sentence, to show that we have
made them our own.
If you read
A.A.’s DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, as well as our own titles on early A.A.,
you will see unique Christian Endeavor parallels and practices in what was
called the Akron Program. In fact, if you read the personal stories of the
pioneers in the First Edition of A.A.’s Big Book, you will see the practices in
action. To be sure, the Akron pioneers called themselves the alcoholic squad of
the Oxford Group. But their unique meeting structure was not like that of most
Oxford Group meetings or house parties. Moreover, the Akron practices were not
familiar to eastern Oxford Grouper Bill Wilson when he came to Akron. For Akron
meetings resembled Christian Endeavor meetings in a number of ways: As stated,
the Akron A.A. meetings were called old fashioned prayer meetings and
Christian Fellowships. Group study of the Bible, meditation. reading of Bible
literature, and discussion of topics from the Bible as they impacted on the
member’s life all contained ingredients different from those at Sam Shoemaker’s
Calvary House. So too Akron’s mandatory surrender to Jesus Christ, self_support
and self_propagation, emphasis on church religious training, fellowship with
like_minded believers, service, witness.
These Akron
elements caused it to be described as first century Christianity such as that
found in the Book of Acts, and these elements were the heart of Akron A.A.
Most assuredly,
common spillovers from Oxford Group life changing techniques were present in
both New York and Akron A.A. beginnings. But the Akron Genesis was biblical.
Melding the Roots was a Bill Wilson Project
In the midst of
substantial controversy, Bill Wilson obtained a split vote in Akron that
authorized him to write a basic text describing the steps pioneer AA’s had taken
to achieve their astonishing successes, which were said to be seventy_five
percent.
Bill took some
basic medical facts about alcoholism and the alcoholic that he had learned from
his own physician Dr. William D. Silkworth. Though he mentioned neither the
Bible nor Jesus Christ, he adopted much from the Akron surrenders. From the
Oxford Group, Wilson codified in A.A. the OG life_changing techniques. To this
mix, he added (using Oxford Group terms like spiritual experience and later
spiritual awakening) his own recovery experience, calling it the finding or
rediscovering of God. He left the unearthing of details to others, and the
digging goes on to this day.
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 The Christian Roots
of the Twelve_Step Movement.

Dick B. is extremely
pleased to announce that the foregoing article is one of a series which will be
run by
http://www.aabibliography.com on its FAQ/articles page on the Internet each
month. At the moment, there will probably be six articles (now 34 articles)
briefly covering the major aspects of A.A.’s spiritual history. Invite your
friends to check this site out for frequent articles by Dick B.
Dick is also pleased to
announce that the Lowe Family Foundation will shortly feature on its website (http://www.lowefamily.org/home.html)
and also widely distribute copies of the interview which foundation president
Kathy Lowe Peterson did with Dick during his recent visit to Washington, D.C.,
in March of this year. The topic is spirituality and the substance of the
interview will be very useful to its readers. The Lowe Family Foundation is a
public charity founded in 1997 to educate the general public about the disease
of alcoholism and its effects on families and individuals and to help families
by increasing awareness of the disease and the resources available to facilitate
the process of recovery.
We are very grateful to AA
Bibliography internet site and the Lowe Family Foundation for the opportunities
to disseminate facts about the history of early A.A.’s spiritual roots and
astonishing successes.
Dick B.’s web site on early
A.A. history:
http://www.dickb.com/index.shtml
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