THE EMMANUEL MOVEMENT
RELIGION PLUS PSYCHOTHERAPY
From
– Understanding and Counseling the Alcoholic
Howard
J. Clinebell, Jr. (1956)
The Emmanuel Movement is of salient
importance to anyone who would help alcoholics. Though it is no longer in
existence as a movement, it is anything but a mere ecclesiastical museum piece.
Its goals, working philosophy, understanding of man, conception of alcoholism,
and even some of its methods are worth emulating today. Here was perhaps the
earliest experiment in a church- sponsored psychoreligious clinic. Here was the
first pioneering attempt to treat alcoholism with a combination of individual
and group therapy, the first attempt to combine the resources of depth
psychology and religion in a systematic therapeutic endeavor. During its course
the movement attracted many alcoholics and became well known for its success in
treating them.
The movement came into being on a stormy
evening in November, 1906, at the Emmanuel Episcopal Church in Boston, when the
first "classes" for those with functional illnesses was held. The
guiding genius of the movement was a brilliant Episcopal clergyman named Elwood
Worcester. His associate throughout most of its course was the Rev. Samuel
McComb. Both men had had extensive graduate study in psychology and philosophy.
Worcester had a Ph.D. from Leipzig where he studied under Wilheim Wundt,
founder of the first psychological laboratory, and
physicist-psychologist-philosopher Gustav Fechner.
For a long time before 1906, Worcester had
had a growing conviction that the church had an important mission to the sick,
and that the physician and clergyman should work together in the treatment of
functional ills. As a preliminary step he consulted several leading
neurologists to ascertain whether such a project as he had in mind, undertaken
with proper safeguards, would have their approval and cooperation. A favorable
response was received, and the plan was launched.
The Emmanuel program of therapy consisted of
three elements: group therapy administered through its classes, individual
therapy administered by the ministers and staff at the daily clinic, and a
system of social work and personal attention carried on by "friendly
visitors." The growth of the movement was phenomenal. Three years after
its inception, a California disciple could write:
The work, begun as a parish movement, has
grown so that the local demands have overtaxed a large corps of workers while
importunate calls from many cities in this and other lands for knowledge of the
work, and pitiful calls for help from sick ones everywhere have to be put
aside. .. .Meanwhile, in two years the work has been taken up by ministers of
many faiths who see in the new movement a return to the faith and practice of
the Apostolic Church. These. . .are finding new power in their work.
This disciple also described the manner in
which plans were being put into operation for training ministers who wanted to
use the Emmanuel technique in their parishes, and for setting up the movement
in large centers. By 1909 the movement had spread abroad and was represented in
Great Britain by a committee under the title "Church and Medical
Union." The Emmanuel clinic in Boston was deluged by patients. During one
six-month period nearly five thousand applications were received by mail alone.
Of these only 125 could be accepted. Hundreds of clergymen and many physicians
were visiting Boston to study the methods. Influential physicians like Richard
C. Cabot gave their support to the movement.
The first definite book on the movement was
Religion and Medicine, The Moral Control of Nervous Disorders, which appeared
in 1908. Demand for this book was so great that it went through nine printings
in the year of publication. For twenty-three years Worcester continued as
rector at Emmanuel. The movement continued to flourish there and in other parts
of the country. The need for help was so great that often a line of patients
cued outside the church. In 1929 Worcester resigned from his parish in order to
give full time to the movement. A considerable sum of money had been received
to carry on the work, so the movement was incorporated as the Craigie
Foundation. In addition to the patients which he saw at his home, Worcester
accepted many invitations to conduct week long clinics and lecture series in
prominent eastern churches. In 1931 Worcester and McComb produced Body, Mind
and Spirit, a book which showed clearly the development of their thought
following the earlier books of the movement. For all practical purposes the
Emmanuel Movement as such came to a close with Worcester’s death in 1940.
It is noteworthy that three outstanding lay
therapists for alcoholics in this country, Courtenay Baylor (who carried on the
work at the Emmanuel Church for a time after Worcester’s death), Richard
Peabody, and Samuel Crocker, were products of the movement. A lay therapist is
a nonmedical practitioner who specializes in helping alcoholics professionally.
For a description of the method of treatment used by Courtenay Baylor, see
Dwight Anderson’s "The Place of the Lay Therapist in the Treatment of
Alcoholics," Q.J.S.A., September, 1944.
The
Method of Treating Alcoholics
The Emmanuel classes were held once a week.
In this group experience, alcoholics were lumped together with patients
suffering from other functional illnesses treated by the clinic. A disciple of
the movement, Lyman P. Powell, who had tried the technique in his own church, describes
the procedure:
Any Wednesday evening from October until May
you will find, if you drop in at Emmanuel Church, one of the most beautiful
church interiors in the land filled with worshipers.. .A restful prelude on the
organ allures the soul to worship. Without the aid of any choir several
familiar hymns are sung by everyone who can sing and many who cannot. A bible
lesson is read. The Apostles’ Creed is said in unison. Requests for prayer in
special cases are gathered up into one prayerful effort made without the help
of any book. One Wednesday evening Dr. Worcester gives the address, another Dr.
McComb, still another some expert in neurology or psychology. The theme is
usually one of practical significance, like hurry, worry, fear, or grief, and
the healing Christ is made real in consequence to many an unhappy heart.
Other subjects discussed at the classes
included: habit, anger, suggestion, insomnia, nervousness, what the will can
do, and what prayer can do. The class was always followed by a social hour in
the parish house. Reporting on the results of these group experiences, Powell
says: "Though the mass effect of the service is prophylactic, it is not
uncommon for insomnia, neuralgia and kindred ills to disappear in the
self-forgetfulness of such evenings."
The heart of the Emmanuel therapy was the
clinic. Before a patient was accepted for treatment, he was required to have a
careful diagnostic examination by a physician and in some cases, a
psychiatrist. If psychosis or organic pathology was disclosed, the individual
was not accepted. If the disease appeared to be simply functional, the
applicant was registered for treatment and directed to the rector’s study. In
the case of alcoholics, it was felt by Worcester that they should be seen every
day, especially in the early phases of their treatment. The new, nonalcoholic
habits which the "psychotherapy" was implanting were to be treated as
tender shoots until they took firm root. The patient was felt to need the daily
support of the therapist until these new habits were firmly rooted, after which
the therapist met the patient once or twice a week. Just how long the average
alcoholic treatment took is not clear from the literature. No cases of
alcoholism were listed among the quick cures - i.e., those effected in one or
two sessions. A treatment period of at least several months seemed to have been
involved in most of the cases cited.
The treatment itself included "full
self—revelation" in which the patient poured out all the facts - physical,
mental, social, moral, and spiritual — which might have any bearing on the
sickness. This catharsis was felt to have a curative effect in itself often
serving to "unlock the hidden wholesomeness" of the patient’s inner
life. The second phase of the treatment consisted of "prayer and godly
counsel." This apparently was aimed chiefly at teaching the patient the
techniques of prayer and helping him strengthen his spiritual life, rather than
praying for the individual. The third phase was the use of relaxation and
"therapeutic suggestion," the latter administered in some cases while
the patient was under mild or deep hypnosis. It is noteworthy that although
Worcester began by using hypnosis in many different types of difficulties, he
eventually limited it to use with some alcoholics. Apparently he felt that the
alcoholic needed the more powerful effect of hypnotic suggestion.
"The patient is next invited to be
seated in a reclining chair, taught to relax all his muscles, calmed by
soothing words, and in a state of physical relaxation and mental quiet the
unwholesome thoughts and untoward symptoms are dislodged from his
consciousness, and in their place are sown the seeds of more health-giving
thoughts and better habits."
During the course of the movement there
occurred a highly significant transition in the thought and methodology used.
The change consisted of the gradual incorporation of psychoanalytic techniques,
as Worcester began to learn of the dynamic psychology of Freud. This was
accompanied by diminishing dependence on suggestion, the therapeutic device in
vogue in the early days of the movement due to the influence of Worcester’s
European training with the physiological psychologists. Worcester stoutly
defended the method of psychoanalysis. In 1932 he wrote: "I cannot agree
with Stekel who advises that analysis be attempted in alcoholic cases only
after other means have failed. I have found it helpful to begin my treatment
with an analysis of childhood and youth." Worcester used standard
psychoanalytic techniques such as dream analysis and the probing of early
memories as a part of his therapy.
Like others who have attempted to use such
techniques with alcoholics, Worcester had encountered the problem of breaking
the addictive cycle long enough to allow the therapy to have some effect. He
developed his own unique solution which he felt was responsible for his success
in keeping the patient sober while therapy got a foothold. The solution
consisted of two parts: (a) making the analysis relatively brief; (b) combining
analysis with his earlier method, therapeutic suggestion.
From insight gained through analysis of
alcoholics, Worcester arrived at a profound understanding of alcoholism:
"The analysis, as a rule, brings to light certain experiences, conflicts,
a sense of inferiority, maladjustment to life, and psychic tension, which are
frequently the predisposing causes of excessive drinking. Without these few men
becoming habitual drunkards. In reality drunkenness is a result of failure to
integrate personality in a majority of cases. Patients, however darkly, appear
to divine this of themselves, and I have heard some fifty men make this remark
independently: "I see now that drinking was only a detail. The real
trouble with me was that my whole life and my thoughts were wrong. This is why
I drank."
He went on to say:
"It is this consciousness of crippling dissociation of powers, of
inhibition and repression which predisposes men to drink. In alcoholism in its
early stages they find release of their faculties, the dissociation of their
fears and inhibitions, as so many have said, "A short cut to the
ideal."
The aim of Emmanuel therapy was the
reconstruction of the inner self so that the alcoholic could remain abstinent
-Worcester had no illusions about alcoholics becoming social drinkers. There
was a conviction that this reconstruction of personality must utilize the
resources inherent in the person. Psychoanalysis was an important technique for
releasing these resources.
While Worcester came to regard analysis as
essential, he also observed that "few drunkards have been cured by
analysis alone." He recognized that their are two levels to the alcoholics
problem - the underlying psychic conflicts and what he called the "habit
itself," the effect on the nervous system of continued inebriety and the
craving resulting therefrom. Analysis, he had found, had little effect on the
latter, whereas suggestion often "supplied immediate help and permanent
immunity from the return of the habit." His working hypothesis was that
analysis relieved the psychic problems, "reducing the problem presented by
the drunkard largely to a physical habit." Suggestion effected a
strengthening of the will and a distaste for liquor so that the physical habit
could be controlled.
Fortunately Worcester gives a sample of how
he administered therapeutic suggestion to alcoholics: "Most alcoholics are
highly suggestible and I have found a few who failed to respond to the
technique intended to induce mental repose and abstraction and physical
relaxation. When the patient had obtained this condition, I should address him
in low monotones and offer him repeated suggestions, positive and negative,
somewhat as follows: "You have determined to break this habit, and you
have already gone days without a drink. The desire is fading out of your mind,
the habit is losing its power over you. You need not be afraid that you will
suffer at all. In a short time liquor in any form will have no attraction for
you. It will be associated in your mind with weakness and sorrow and sickness
and failure. These thoughts are very disagreeable to you and you turn away from
them. You wish to be free, you desire to lead a useful, happy life. Liquor is
your enemy, but you are overpowering it and in a short time it will have no
power over you at all." Then as a person accustomed to depend on alcohol
for sleep, when deprived of it, are apt to suffer from insomnia, I should add
suggestions as to sleep and rest."
In addition to the suggestions given by the
therapist, the patients were taught autosuggestion so that their treatment
could continue between sessions.
The third phase of the Emmanuel program
consisted of the "friendly visitors," whose purpose was "to give
the environment of the patients care similar to that provided for their bodies
by the physicians, and for their minds by the clergymen."
"Very often patients... .need more than
anything else a friend to show personal sympathy and interest, to encourage
them, and to make sure they are following the prescribed directions. Victims of
alcohol especially need this assistance to prevent relapse after the
conclusions of treatment before they have acquired full self—reliance."
Worcester and McComb reported that the
system was very successful. They pointed out that alcoholics profited from
becoming friendly visitors to other alcoholics who were beginning their
treatment and that they made very effective visitors. One thinks immediately of
the A.A. system of sponsorship and the principle of Twelfth Step work in this
connection.
"Our patients... .need occupation to
keep them from being self-centered. Clerical work has been found useful, but
the best results have come from sending them as friendly visitors to others
less fortunate. Not only does this have a good effect on the visitor, but new
converts are proverbially enthusiastic, and the alcoholic who finds himself
released from his bondage is a most valuable assistant in encouraging and
keeping up to the mark patients who have just begun."
The friendly visitor system was administered
by a committee which included several trained social workers. Through this
system the alcoholic was aided in finding employment and, if necessary, given a
financial loan for a limited time while he adjusted his life. The friendly
visitors often helped the patient readjust in the area of his family life.
Philosophically the Emmanuel Movement stands
in contrast to the approaches studied previously. All of Worcester’s writings
reflect the conception that all life is permeated by the divine spirit, a
belief which had its roots in the panpsychism of his teacher, Fechner. In
discussing "Mabn’s Life in God," Worcester wrote:
"The secret of all spiritual religion
is the union of the human soul with the divine soul, the belief that man’s
spirit and God’s spirit are in their essence one. Without this belief man’s
relations with God become formal and external. The world, robbed of the
haunting presence of the indwelling deity, becomes irreligious and
profane."
Because he held that the spirits of God and
man are in their essence one, Worcester did not think of man as depraved or
lost in sin. Man’s spirit is a part of God; his realization and healing consist
not in surrender to an external Power, but in the redirecting, releasing, and
reeducating of the inherent powers —the hidden wholesomeness — of the spirit
within. This positive conception of man contrasts vividly with mission and
Salvation Army doctrines of the impotent, sinful man who can be saved only by
surrender to an external Power. Rather than seeing man’s beatitude in the
abnegation of self, Worcester felt that the purpose of therapy was to help the
person "find freedom and to discover a better way of life for
himself." Prayer was considered an important means of releasing the divine
energies within the soul trapped by one’s neurosis.
Worcester felt that many religious workers
in the field of healing had made the mistake of supposing that God can cure in
only one way. God cures by many means. An act of healing, whatever the means
used, is religious, since the divine spirit permeates all of life. The healing
of bodies and spirits by medicine, rest, kindness, and self—understanding is
just as much an act of God as healing which depends on prayer and suggestion.
Further, healing of the mind and spirit is not some sort of divine magic but is
the divine spirit working through the orderly forces of nature. This general
orientation provided the basis for a thoroughly cooperative relationship
between the various healing disciplines involved in Emmanuel therapy.
In his view of man Worcester (in contrast to
previous approaches) held to a thoroughly unrepressive attitude toward man’s
desires and feelings. He recognized that the tendency, especially among
Christian thinkers of the past, has been to deny these factors in human life.
Concerning the conflict between reason and conscience on the one hand, and
emotion and desires on the other, he writes:
"The first step toward a possible
solution of this fundamental problem of human life.. . . is to recognize the
legitimacy of both these elements of our being. In our disposition to do this
lies whatever superiority we possess over former generations and our chief hope
for the future."
This handling of the problem reflects
Worcester’s psychoanalytic orientation.
The problem of responsibility, a key problem
whenever religion and psychology meet, was handled in a realistic manner by
this approach. Worcester could not have fallen into freewill moralism
concerning alcoholism. For one thing, from the beginning of the movement, he
recognized alcoholism as an illness. Further his training in psychology had
acquainted him with the role played by the subconscious mind in all behavior,
including alcoholism. In 1908, long before the idea had become generally
accepted, Worcester wrote:
"We believe that there is a
subconscious element in the mind and that this element enters into every mental
process. Our daily life is influenced far more than the shrewdest of us suspect
by the subconscious activity which is at work, exercising a selective power
even in apparently accidental choices. Hence the real cause of our acts are
often hidden from us."
Worcester was convinced that "it is the
subconscious that rules in the mental and moral region where habit has the seat
of its strength." Further, he believed that therapeutic suggestion was able
to unfluence and guide the subconscious mind into paths of health. As the
influence of Freud grew in his thinking, the importance of subconscious factors
was further enhanced.
There was another reason why Worcester
avoided a moralistic conception of alcoholism and human ills in general. As
early as 1908 he had recognized that the first six years of a child’s life are
the most important and determinative of his life. It was therefore relatively
easy for him to accept the findings of the psychoanalysts in this area. In his
last book he wrote: "The great psychological thinkers and workers, Freud,
Jung, Adler, and others, were quick to perceive the significance of childhood
as the chief determinant of life."
An
Evaluation of This Approach
How effective was the Emmanuel therapy in
breaking the addictive cycle and providing initial sobriety? And how successful
was it in providing long-term sobriety? It is impossible to answer these
questions with certainty, since the movement no longer exists and apparently there
are no quantitative records. For several reasons, however, it seems probable
that the Emmanuel movement enjoyed a relatively high degree of success in
providing at least temporary sobriety. We know that the Emmanuel workers
accepted for treatment only those who wanted to stop drinking and who came on
their own volition. A.A. experience has shown that these mental attitudes on
the part of the alcoholic are essential prerequisites for successful therapy.
These Emmanuel requirements meant that only patients who were "at
bottom" and who would accept responsibility in asking for help would be
treated. Second, we know that the Emmanuel therapists had the advantage over
"straight religious" approaches of having medical assistance - a valuable
aid in effecting initial sobriety. Third, we know that suggestion administered
as in this therapy by a person with status, exercises a powerful control over
behavior. This is especially true in the case of insecure and dependent people,
such as alcoholics frequently are. Fourth, we know from various reports that
suggestive therapy has produced impressive results with alcoholics. Prior to
the Emmanuel movement, Charcot treated 600 cases over a twenty—year period and
reported 400 "cures." Tokarsky of Moscow reported that 80 percent of
the 700 alcoholics he had treated were cured, and Wiamsky of Saratow claimed
about the same percentage of cures out of the 319 cases he treated.
Unfortunately, no definition of "cure" was given in these reports.
It seems probable that many of those who
gained temporary sobriety through Emmanuel therapy stayed sober for an extended
period. The fact that Worcester and McComb over the years acquired a reputation
for success in treating alcoholics indicates that many of their patients must
have stayed abstinent. In 1932 they were able to report: "It is well known
that we have obtained as good and as permanent results in these fields as any
other workers." If most of their cures had been short—lived, they would
not have enjoyed this reputation.
Several cases are presented in Emmanuel
literature which show that sobriety extended over long periods. Worcester
tells, for instance, of treating a very difficult alcoholic with homicidal
tendencies who had been given up as hopeless by the doctors. At the time of
writing the man had enjoyed seven years of sobriety. Worcester reported having
little success in treating "dypsomaniacs" - apparently the equivalent
of periodic alcoholics as contrasted with "ordinary alcoholics"
(steadies). In spite of this, he tells of successfully treating a woman
"dypsomanic," who had been judged hopeless by two psychiatrists.
Worcester writes:
"As I have kept in contact with this
woman, I can say that she was cured in the sense that for twenty—two years
there has been no return of the fatal cycle, not a drop of liquor has passed
her lips." That a good deal of success was enjoyed by the movement, even
in cases where relapses occurred, is shown by Samuel McComb’s statement:
"There are other cases of alcoholism where a relapse has occurred, but it
has only been temporary; and fathers and sons have been restored to their
families with what a joy only those who have felt the curse of intemperance can
realize."
Writing in 1931, the Emmanuel leaders could
report, "On the whole our successes have been far more frequent than our
failures." This statement was made with the perspective of twenty-five
years of experience in the movement.
There are many points at which the Emmanuel
approach was superior in theory and practice to the evangelistic approaches.
While recognizing the importance of group experience, the Emmanuel approach
also supplied individual psychotherapy. This combination of individual and
group therapy represents an obvious advance over the mass evangelistic
approaches. As the Emmanuel approach came to incorporate psychoanalytic
procedure in its therapy, it dealt to some degree with the underlying causes of
inebriety, rather than simply relieving or changing symptoms. Worcester’s
observation that alcoholics respond best to relatively brief therapy concurs
with modern findings.
The Emmamuel approach achieved an
integration of the healing resources of medicine, psychology, social work, and
religion. In the Salvation Army we saw a certain eclecticism in which the
resources of other professions were drawn on as supplements to the basic
religious approach. In contrast, the Emmanuel workers saw medicine, psychology,
and social work as integral parts of a total "religious" approach to
healing. The medical and psychiatric screening of patients not only protected
the church clinic but also improved the possibility of a favorable outcome.
The goal of Emmanuel therapy - to promote
the freedom and growth of the individual by releasing inner resources, in
contrast to authority-centered approaches,- is in keeping with the healthy
needs of the alcoholic. We have seen that alcoholics often have neurotic needs
which encourage the formation of immature dependency relationships. Their
healthy needs are for increased self—esteem and constructive autonomy. In
contrast to previously studied approaches, which encouraged dependency and
surrender to authority, Emmanuel thought encouraged independence and growth in
responsibility. Worcester shunned the use of exhortation and persuasion as
being "wholly out of place in treatment." They may provoke opposition
on the patient’s part, or, they may even be dangerous, because they impose the
teacher’s personality and philosophy on the patient instead of allowing him to
find freedom and to discover a better way of life for himself."
Instead of depending on religious thrill and
a sudden, dramatic conversion, Emmanuel therapy relied on the gradual type of
religious change. It seems clear that Emmanuel’s psychotherapy offered greater
possibility of lasting change than was true of the evangelistic approaches. The
Emmanuel workers recognized that evangelistic approaches have value for some
alcoholics; they also saw that many alcoholics cannot be reached by those
approaches. Powell, an Emmanuelite, wrote: "While men like Gerry McAuley
and the Salvation Army leaders have done something, the emotional motive which
they use does not avail in every case."
The Emmanuel approach recognized fully that
the alcoholic needs individual and group support during his recovery. The
"friendly visitor" system combined the principle of A.A. sponsorship
with the resources of a social caseworker. Undoubtedly this friendly,
individual attention and help were major factors in the success of the
approach.
The approach was well equipped to help the
alcoholic find real self—acceptance and release from guilt. Its superiority lay
in its splendid conception of alcoholism and its understanding of the
psychodynamics’ of human behavior. Twenty—seven years before A.A. began, this
approach was regarding alcoholism as a disease to be treated like other
functional diseases. In this early period there was a degree of moralism
connected with the conception of all functional illnesses. The influence of
psychoanalytic concepts gradually removed this moralism, revealing the manner
in which behavior is conditioned by early experiences and by unconscious forces
which are not subject to the will.
The therapy sought to reduce the alcoholics’
guilt rather than to enhance it as in the previous approaches. It achieved this
by its disease conception of alcoholism and its positive conception of man,
allowing the therapist to establish a nonjudgmental relationship with the
patient. By means of his acceptance of the patient, the therapist was able to
help the patient achieve self-acceptance. Self-acceptance, it is well to
remember, implies a sense of being accepted by life. This the Emmanuel
therapist was well equipped to convey because of the positive, life-affirming
philosophy and theology of the movement. There is a sense of course, in which
the experience of "accepting oneself as being accepted," to use Paul
Tillich’s description of salvation, results from any psychotherapy which is
successful. Emmanuel therapy apparently was frequently able to convey this experience.
When guilt is reduced, the energies previously employed in the guilt and
self-punishment process are freed and made available for therapeutic ends.
Forgiveness was achieved in Emmanuel therapy
not by petitioning an authoritarian Deity, but by modifying the unmerciful
superego of the patient. McComb wrote as follows concerning what he called the
"New England or Quaker conscience":
"The great need here is for a new
conception of God. The mind must be taught to rest in his fatherly love, in his
tenderness and grace. . . .By the constant presentation to the mind of these
ideas the conscience is gradually lightened of its morbidity and the will is
set free to act."
Rather than concerning itself with specific
"sins," the Emmanuel approach focused attention on the underlying
causes of these symptoms - namely, the sick personality. This also aided in
reducing the alcoholic’s guilt load. In addition, the
psychoanalytic concept that alcoholic behavior is determined in large measure
by subconscious factors (beyond the realm of willpower) had a tremendous
guilt-reducing effect. The positive conception of man and the recognition that
his drives and feelings are not inherently evil both contribute to healthy
self-acceptance on the part of the patient. Likewise the conception of the
healing process as resulting from the release of inner resources (as contrasted
with external divine intervention) tends to enhance self—esteem by enabling the
patient to feel a sense of achievement in his improved condition. It also
serves to keep the responsibility for healing with the patient. The alcoholic’s
inferiority is reduced not by identifying with a powerful authority-figure, but
by becoming aware of his "higher and diviner self" which is his most
real self.
The Emmanuel workers recognized clearly that
religious symbols can be employed in ways that promote maturity and health.
They threw their influence behind the latter. As a result we do not find the
emphasis on fear and guilt which was present in the previous approaches.
With only minor changes, the mature Emmanuel
concept of alcoholism would be acceptable in the most enlightened circles
today. In one way it was superior even to the A.A. conception. Because of its
orientation in depth psychology, it recognized that the selfishness and egocentricity
of the alcoholic are actually symptoms of deeper problems and conflicts. This
is in contrast to the A.A. position which does not seem to recognize the
symptomatic nature of selfishness. (It should be added that many individual
A.A.’s, particularly those who have had psychotherapy, do recognize the nature
of selfishness.) Because of deeper understanding of personality, the Emmanuel
therapy was beamed more accurately at the roots of alcoholism than is the A.A.
therapy. Its use of psychoanalytic techniques in its therapy provided it with
the practical means of getting at these underlying causes. Such techniques are
not present to any great degree in A.A. The Emmanuel approach was superior to
A.A. in that it made individual as well as group therapy available to the
alcoholic. Further, because of its psychoanalytic grounding, it was less
repressive than A.A. in its attitude toward the self.
In spite of its areas of theoretical
superiority, it seems probable that from a practical standpoint, Emmanuel was less
effective than A.A. Its therapy was less adequate than A.A. in that it lacked
an all-alcoholic support group. Further, it did not capitalize fully on the
recognition that helping other alcoholics help the alcoholic patient to stay
sober himself. Nor did it capitalize on its recognition that one alcoholic has
a natural entree to another. Even though its goal was nonauthoritarian, its
therapy was dispensed by an authority figure. It lacked the advantage of A.A.’s
self-help orientation, particularly the feeling on the part of the A.A. member
- "We’re licking this thing ourselves" and "This is our
fellowship." Since the Emmanuel approach was dependent on professionals,
the number of alcoholics who could be helped was quite limited as compared to
A.A.
The central weakness of the Emmanuel
approach to alcoholism would seem to be the use of suggestion. Although
Worcester’s therapeutic aim — increasing the freedom of the patient - was
psychologically sound, his method actually defeated his aim. The thing that was
not recognized was that suggestion is an essentially authoritarian tool, that
it substitutes the authority of the "suggester" for the autonomy of
the individual, thus establishing an unconstructive dependence on the
therapist. The Emmanuel workers did not realize that the "strengthening of
the will" which they observed in alcoholic patients was actually the
result of the projection of their authority on the patient. Carl R. Rogers
includes suggestion under "Methods in Disrepute" in his discussion of
counseling. He writes:
"The client is told in a variety of
ways, "you’re getting better," "You’re doing well,"
"you’re improving," all in the hope that it will strengthen his
motivation in these directions. Shaffer has well pointed out that such
suggestion is essentially repressive. It denies the problem which exists, and
it denies the feeling which the individual has about the problem."
It should be noted that suggestion was
generally accepted as a therapeutic device during the early period of the
Emmanuel movement. In fact, medical schools were teaching the technique as a
healing tool. As we have seen, the Emmanuel workers put decreasing emphasis on
suggestion as their knowledge of psychoanalysis increased. Though their
methodology became relatively less repressive, it would seem probable that the
effectiveness of their psychoanalytic procedures must have been vitiated in
part by the continued use of suggestion.
Worcester was insightfully accurate in
recognizing the two levels of alcoholism and in his belief that something had
to be done to hold the addiction in check while psychotherapy sought to deal
with the underlying causes. Unfortunately, the device he employed (suggestion)
impeded the effectiveness of the psychotherapy.
Why did this movement not survive? First, it
was centered around two strong and unusual personalities. There were few
clergymen with the kind of training and general qualifications possessed by
Worcester and McComb. Apparently the movement was not successful in training
younger men to carry on the tradition. Second, the fundamental methodological
weakness of the movement may have contributed to its demise. The continued use
of a repressive device like suggestion over a long period of time may have
resulted in diminishing enthusiasm and decreasing therapeutic return. Of course
there is a sense in which the movement continues in its influence on the
clergymen whose interest in psychotherapy and healing was stimulated by their
contacts with the movement, its literature, or others who had felt its influence.
What
We Can Learn from the Emmanuel Approach
The Emmanuel Movement was the first
organized attempt to apply the joint resources of psychology and religion to
the problem of alcoholism. Its degree of success suggests the
possibilities that lie in this direction. It
was the first approach to understand and seek to treat the underlying causes of
alcoholism. In spite of its methodological error, its general orientation was
positive and life-affirming, so much so that its critics labeled it "hedonistic."
The practical values as well as the psychological validity of this outlook have
been discussed in our evaluation.
This approach provides an impressive
demonstration of the importance in dealing with alcoholics of one’s conception
of alcoholism and the human situation in general. In its understanding of the
psychodynamics’ of alcoholism and its incorporation of psychoanalytic insights
and methods, this approach was decades ahead of its time. In these regards, as
in the handling of the problem of guilt and responsibility, the Emmanuel
Movement has a great deal to teach many religious leaders today. Among other
things it provides an example of the way in which a psychoanalytic orientation
can mediate the acceptance of God, thus enhancing self—acceptance. As we have
seen, it did this, not by encouraging surrender to an external deity, but by
resolving inner conflict, thus releasing God-given resources within the
personality. The resolving of inner conflict was achieved through
psychoanalytic techniques which were based on a recognition of the dynamic
significance of the unconscious and by an actual accepting relationship with
one of God’s children, the therapist.
The Emmanuel Movement pioneered in the field
of church-sponsored psychotherapeutic clinics. Its story should cause organized
religion to reflect on its general role in a society plagued by widespread
neurosis and inadequate facilities for treatment. Startled by the overwhelming
influx of patients, the Emmanuel leaders wrote:
"The mere fact that disinterested
clergymen and physicians were willing to be consulted.. . .has brought persons
to us in such numbers that, although we have a good-sized staff, it is
impossible for us to see one person in five for a single conversation. This one
fact should cause the Church to reflect. Why should there not be adequate
assistance for men and women who desire and need personal, moral and spiritual
help?"
Although this was written many years ago,
the question is still relevant and pressing in our day. A partial answer is
emerging in the pastoral counseling movement and the two hundred or so
church-related counseling services which have been established in recent years.
Reproduced in whole from the book
Understanding and Counseling the Alcoholic by Howard J. Clinebell, Jr. (1956)