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A REFORMED CRITIQUE OF ALCOHOLICS
ANONYMOUS
R. Scott Clark, D.Phil *
Associate Professor of Church History and Academic Dean
Westminster Theological Seminary in California
Introduction
The Twelve-step movement and the language of co-dependency has become an
accepted part of evangelical church life. It has not always been so nor is the
status quo necessarily right and good for the church. This essay is a plea for
reconsideration of this trend in the light of Biblical teaching and Christian
doctrine.
The Program
Alcoholics Anonymous was born in the midst of the religious turmoil in the
1930's, in the midst of a great ecumenical fervor, growing anticipation of a
war in Europe, and a fight between Fundamentalists and Modernists for the
religious and theological soul of the nation's Christians.1
In 1935 in Akron, Ohio, a sudden spiritual experience relieved
one stockbroker of his obsession with alcohol.
Following a meeting with an alcoholic friend who had been in contact
with the Oxford Groups of that day....Though he could not accept all the
tenets of the Oxford Groups, he was convinced of the need for moral
inventory, confession of personality defects, restitution to those harmed
helpfulness to others, and the necessity of belief in and dependence upon
God.2
That broker and his physician friend armed with a description of
alcoholism and its hopelessness created their own synthetic
spiritual remedy for their malady. What followed was an explosion in
popularity any church growth program would envy. By 1939 membership had
reached 800, with the support of Harry Emerson Fosdick, and the Episcopalian
magazine Liberty. In 1940 John D. Rockefeller declared his support for AA By
1941 AA had 2000 members and the support of Jack Alexander in the Saturday
Evening Post The mushrooming process was in full swing. AA had become a
national institution.3
In this same time period the group began to formulate its creeds and
confessions known as the Twelve Steps and Traditions.4 In 1939 they produced
their authoritative book: Alcoholics Anonymous called by the group the Big
Book.5
Some forty years after its seminal meetings the group has blossomed to
50,000 groups world wide in 110 countries and membership is conservatively
estimated at well over 1,000,000. Its strength lies not only in numbers but in
the attractiveness of its program, i.e., its anonymity, and its eclecticism.
There are very few alcoholism treatment centers not wholly controlled
intellectually by the theology and methodology of AA.
It will be useful to know a little bit more about the Oxford Groups from
which AA has borrowed its methods. The Oxford Groups were founded by a
Lutheran minister, Frank Buchman, in the early twenties. They gained their
nickname from informal house parties around Oxford University. They called
themselves the First Century Christian Fellowship. Their emphasis
was upon mystical guidance, akin to the Pentecostal Word of Knowledge, if not
as dramatic, surely as subjectivist.6
Focus was not upon the Bible as the revealed Word of God, but upon personal
experience. The movement later became known as Moral Rearmament
when Buchman declared that the nation could not save itself (1938) with guns
but with guidance from God.7
Much of his evangelism in the USA was centered around Park Avenue and had
its headquarters in a local New York City Episcopal parish. There is also an
intellectual connection with modern positive thinking movements such as that
led by Norman Vincent Peale and later Robert Schuller. There were four
absolutes upon which he insisted:
1.Perfect Honesty
2.Purity
3.Unselfishness
4.Love
Five C's for which the group is known are:
1.Confidence
2.Confession
3.Conviction
4.Conversion
5.Continuance.8
It was a relatively simple matter to adapt the nine points listed above to
the self-help methodology of AA.9 It has also been a regular practice of AA to
borrow liberally from the Bible and the Christian tradition while denying
their substance and meaning.10
One cannot doubt that AA considers itself a religion. The very words of the
founder, Bill W., are quite clear in this respect.
I had always believed in a Power greater than myself. I had often
pondered these things, I was not an atheist...I had little doubt that a
mighty power and rhythm underlay all. How could there be so much of precise
and immutable law, and no intelligence? I simply had to believe in a Spirit
of the Universe, who knew neither time nor limitation....With ministers and
the world's Religions I parted right there....To Christ I conceded the
certainty of a great man, not too closely followed by those who claimed
Him...My friend suggested what seemed a novel idea. He said, Why don't you
choose your own conception of God? That statement hit me hard...I stood in
the sunlight at last. It was only a matter of being willing to believe in a
power greater than myself. Nothing more was required of me to make a
beginning ...There I humbly offered myself to God, as I then understood Him,
to do with me as He would. (italics original).11
The Big Book is a combination of the Bible and Augustine's Confessions for
Alcoholics Anonymous. Just as the Christian turns to the heart warming story
of Augustine's conversion after that great intellectual struggle with the
foolishness of the Gospel, so this collection of stories stands as an even
more authoritative account of the spiritual journey of the Founding Fathers
and authors of the Big Book.12 The Big Book is, authoritative for AA because
it was written by alcoholics for alcoholics and most of all because, in their
words, it works.13
The Disease?
How should Christians understand the behavior of the alcoholic? Is
alcoholism the result of an allergy (their early explanation) or a disease
(their more recent explanation) which makes the drinker not responsible for
his abuse, or is it sin? Alcoholics Anonymous interprets Bill's problem as a
disease. Modern medicine has never been able to find any solid evidence of a
viral or bio-chemical cause for alcoholism.14
Whatever the cause, they assert that only certain people who can treat the
alcoholic's problem: other alcoholics. In AA this is accepted dogma. The first
thing an AA member learns is that his problem is unique, that he has a
disease, and that no one else understands him but other alcoholics. These are
the cornerstones of the first tradition and the first step.15
Biblical Data
What does the Lord say? Drunkenness as we all well know is condemned
universally in the Bible. Not drinking. We think immediately of the
injunction: Be not drunk with wine but be filled with the Spirit. (Ephesians
5.18) In fact there are at least thirty separate passages dealing with
drunkenness and drinking in some way. Scripture is very realistic in its
portrayal of drunkenness. It describes what behaviors accompany it, what it
leads to, what a drunkard is like and how he will be punished.
Proverbs 23.29-35 warns vividly of the folly of drunkenness. Earlier in the
chapter we are warned of the consequences of excess. These are not ivory tower
descriptions. The writer speaks of the attraction of the wine, how it
sparkles, and the morning after red eyes, bed spins, hang over and the
repetition of such behavior. The prophet Isaiah describes the filth of vomit
such that there is no clean place, and drunkenness such that no one wishes to
do the work of the Lord (Isaiah 5.11; 24.2; 28.1-7). One of the marks of a
rebellious son is drunkenness (Deuteronomy 21.20). Israel's sin is described
in terms of drunkenness (Ezekiel 23.42; Joel 1.5).
Paul, in warning the Thessalonians to watch for the advent of Christ,
reminds them graphically of the nocturnal life of the alcohol abuser(1
Thess.5.7).16 He warns the Corinthians that they ought to neither associate
with drunkards nor should they expect drunkards to inherit the Kingdom of God.
(1 Corinthians 5.11;6.10)
These are not isolated patterns. This is the Bible's description of
addiction to alcohol. There is a clear acceptance of the fact that
if abused, alcohol can have devastating spiritual, social, and physical
effects. The biblical writers, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, were
fully aware of the behavior which is now called alcoholism. Yet it is never
once treated remotely like a disease. It is always classed with other sins:
fornication, adultery, over-eating, homosexuality, murder, stealing etc. By
implication, alcoholism does not appear to be considered a disease any more
than the other sins mentioned along side it.
There are no Biblical grounds for distinguishing between alcoholism and
what God's Word calls drunkenness and addiction to alcohol. It is true that we
don't usually consider the high school senior who gets drunk for the first
time on prom night an alcoholic. The Bible however doesn't distinguish between
the professional drunk and the amateur. Is a sin any less a sin if it is
committed once instead of a hundred times?
A given sin does take on a different character once it becomes habitual.
The effects of one type of sin may be more devastating than the other. Still,
there is no Biblical warrant for calling any transgression of the Word of God
a disease simply because it becomes habitual and life dominating. As we will
see, nearly any sin can take on that character. At the suggestion of John
Murray and Jay Adams, we will take Ephesians 5.15-20 as our guide for the
Biblical solution to the problem of excessive drinking.
Be very careful then, how you live--not as unwise but as wise, making the
most of every opportunity, because the days are evil. Therefore do not be
foolish, but understand what the Lord's will is. Do not get drunk on wine,
which leads to debauchery. Instead, be filled with the Spirit. Speak to one
another with psalms, hymns and spiritual songs. Sing and make music in your
heart to the Lord, always giving thanks to God the Father for everything, in
the name of our Lord Jesus Christ (NIV).
Paul's words are the revealed will of God, our rule and the rule for the
alcohol abuser as well. Paul says to put off one behavior/lifestyle to put on
another. It is not implied that it is a short or simple process, but only
that, by the grace and Spirit of Christ, it must and can be done.
This is the consistent message of the New Testament. Colossians 3.10 says
the same thing, put off the old and put on the new. There is a new creation,
in Christ. There is growth in grace by the power of the Holy Spirit. All of
Paul's commands assume the life giving work of the Spirit described in
Ephesians chapter one. These are evidences of the sanctifying work of the
Spirit.
Personal Responsibility and Religious Authority
AA's second tradition explains their view of religious authority. For AA,
God's will is discovered either privately, or through the collective
conscience of the local meeting. In this, AA substitutes its own rules for
God's Word. AA's fourth step speaks of a fearless moral inventory.
Without God's Word, how can one make such an inventory? By the experience of
others? By one's pre-alcoholic experience? There is no way to determine
certainly what man is, or what life is, once one forfeits the biblical
doctrine of man. The absence of an absolute standard against which to judge
behavior results in moral and spiritual confusion.
The Doctrine of God
The reader will note an abundant use of the word God in the
Twelve Steps and Traditions. A God concept is crucial to their system, as a
regulative notion, or a useful idea. He is, however, quite unlike the God of
the Bible, not a God who speaks. So when the second step says, came to
believe that a Power greater than ourselves... AA does not mean the
self-existent, Triune God of the Bible.
It is inescapably true that the very language of the second step, a
power greater than... refers to an impersonal force. The anonymous god
of AA is also mute. The god of AA cannot speak to humans because their god is
an it. In the nature of things, however, one can not have personal
relations with an impersonal entity. Therefore to camouflage their implicit
agnosticism, AA speaks of the god of AA as a Him.
To any Christian who has ever said, I believe in God the Father
Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, AA's agnosticism should be most
obvious and disturbing.17 The Christian God is Triune. That is, he is one God
in three persons, therefore he is the beginning of personality. Because he is
personal, he speaks to us, he knows us and can be known by us. The God of the
Bible is ...a Spirit, (John 4:24) infinite, (Job 11:7-9) eternal, (Ps.
90:2) and unchangeable, (James 1:17) in his being, (Exod. 3:14)wisdom, (Ps.
147:5) power, (Rev. 4:8) holiness, (Rev. 15:4) justice, goodness, and truth. (Exod.
34:6-7)18
AA tells the Alcoholic to worship God as we conceive of Him.
This is the very thing the Bible does not want us to do. God's Word says,
I am the LORD your God...You shall have no other gods before me
(Deut. 5.6-7).19 What AA calls god, the Bible calls an idol. We are precisely
called not to make up our own gods, but to turn away from them to the true and
living God who made and redeems us.
The Doctrine of Man
Because God is personal, and we have been made in his image, we are
persons. Hence one of the reasons AA is so harmful is that it ignores the
Bible's teaching that man is created in the image of God. Ephesians 4.24 says
that we were created in the image of God in knowledge, righteousness and
holiness of truth.
The Christian faith is that he was crucified to restore us as the image of
God, which image will be consummated at the last day. Man as the image of God
is essential to Christianity, but not to AA. If, with AA, we deny this
doctrine, Christ died for nothing. For Christians such an idea is blasphemous
(Gal 2.21).
AA says that alcoholism is not sinful pattern of behavior, but a loss of
sanity. There are grave consequences to describing sin as sickness. P. E.
Hughes said,
Sickness is not penalized: it is treated. ...Being sick and the victims of
forces beyond their control, they must be sent off for treatment.
...There is ample evidence of the way in which this therapeutic benevolence
may be tyrannically extended beyond corrupt and violent persons to those who
are politically or religiously out of line in the eyes of officialdom and who
are consequently placed behind prison walls or in the wards of
mental hospitals ostensibly for the purpose of being
treated and cured.20
The spiritual consequences of describing sin as sickness are even worse. To
refuse to describe alcohol abuse as sin is to implicitly deny humanity to the
sinner by robbing him of moral responsibility before God. We hold sinner
accountable for their actions to because the responsible moral agents with a
mind, and a will. To categorize sinners as victims is to rob them of their
moral agency and hence their personality.
To refuse to describe alcohol abuse as sin is also to deny hope for the
patient. A disease may be hopeless, but there is a Savior for sinners.
For these reasons God's Word pushes us away from thinking of any sin in
terms of personal irresponsibility to personal responsibility. How can we ask
of the person struggling with the sin of alcohol abuse any less than that
which God demands of him?
To deny that one drink led to another, and for whatever sinful motivation,
the sin became habitual and life dominating, leading to other sins and
disastrous consequences of all sorts, is not to deny the greatness of the sin,
but rather it is to put that sin in its biblical perspective. If we neglect to
put the problem of alcohol abuse in its proper terms, sin and redemption, then
we deny needy sinners the help they so need and can find only in Christ.
Christ and Redemption
Christianity is centered in the incarnation (taking on our humanity),
obedient life and death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, the only begotten
Son of God, the second person of the Trinity.21 Because Christianity is so
Christ-centered, it is necessarily exclusivist and intolerant of other
religions. Jesus taught us to think this way when he said, I am the way,
the truth and the life, no one comes to the Father but through me (John
14.6).22
AA, in contrast, is simultaneously universalist (embracing all world
religions) and exclusivist (rejecting all other world religions except their
own). On the one hand they speak as if there is no one true faith. On the
other hand, they also say that they alone have the true way of deliverance
from addiction to alcohol. This makes them effectively the one true
religion.23 Either claim (universalism or AA's exclusivism) is patently
incompatible with Christianity.
AA also never describes the human condition in terms of sin and therefore
never speaks of redemption in Christian terms. In contrast, the Christian
religion begins with Adam and our fall in him. It finds salvation for sinners
in Christ and his righteousness for us, received by faith (trusting Christ)
alone.
If there was no first Adam, whose fall and sin is imputed to us, there is
no need for a second Adam, Christ, whose obedience and righteousness is
imputed to us. AA's apparent rejection of the heart of Christianity is the
most serious (and most disheartening) consequence of their teaching.
Christians and AA
Many Christians, including Evangelical and even Reformed Christians, have
said that the disease model is sufficient to explain the success of AA and its
offspring. Several writers have even tried to justify the synthesis of the
pragmatism of AA with various Christian forms. One notable attempt was the
late G. A. Taylor's A Sober Faith (1953). Taylor is remembered in Reformed and
Presbyterian circles as the editor of the Presbyterian Journal
In the preface, Russell Dicks called Taylor a friend of both the Church and
AA.24 This is only half true. Taylor wished to be a friend to both, but such
is impossible. One cannot have two masters. He must love the one and hate the
other.25 Taylor fails to make necessary and biblical distinctions between AA
and Christianity. Christianity is God's covenant relation to and redemption of
his people from their sins, but AA is not.
Taylor says,
In its own unique way it [AA] goes about leading men and women to God who
never before gave Him much thought. I hope the more conservative of my
brethren who may feel inclined to question AA's theology at this point will
withhold their judgment for the moment. AA's success constitutes a powerful
recommendation for its methods.26.
With all due respect, Christians cannot withhold theological or moral
judgment upon a vaguely utilitarian basis. Other sects, e.g., Jehovah's
Witnesses, also claim to lead one to god, but it is clearly not the God of the
Bible. Isaiah complains about hand made idols, Paul complains about those
whose god is their belly. If the god to whom one is brought is not the Lord
Jesus Christ then it is vanity. There are no intermediate steps to God.
In fact, AA is not the worship of the true and living God but is
specifically applied peer pressure to alter a particular behavior pattern,
often by replacing one addiction for another, in the nature of the case,
bottle support for group support.27
Taylor's claim that, at some point, every serious member of AA is
confronted by necessity with Christianity is simply not true.28 In fact the
leading currents of thought are moving away from the more overtly religious
emphasis of years past to a more mechanistic and secular faith. The authority
of Bill and the other founders of AA is also waning. After all isn't one
persons experience just as normative as anyone else's? Agnosticism reigns in
AA. God as we conceive of Him and the authority of God as He
is expressed in our group conscience, has taken its natural course. If
someone became sober without any god, then god isn't strictly necessary. Of a
course the god which began as a useful idea gives way to bare agnosticism.
Taylor admitted the parallels between Christianity and AA. Rather than
chalking these apparent similarities up to plagiarism, Taylor says that there
is just the right amount of religion in AA to make it effective without
scaring this diseased person away from Christianity. After all, he says,
alcoholics are notorious for their bad feelings about religion. Taylor thinks
AA is a good introduction for Alcoholics to Christianity.29
Taylor's biggest error was to deny the biblical teaching regarding human
responsibility for sin. By saying as he does, with AA, that alcoholism (or any
other excessive behavior for that matter) is a matter of treating a disease
then one has removed the problem from the proper sphere of reference (sin and
redemption) and conceded that biblical revelation, the work of Christ and the
means of grace (preaching of the Word and sacraments) are insufficient for
redemption and the Christian life.
God's Word consistently describes our lot differently. All have
sinned and fall short of the glory of God (Romans 3.23). All hold down
the knowledge of God in unbelief (Romans 1.18). All are prone, by nature, to
hate God and their neighbor. The Christian view of the matter is that the
alcoholic, no matter how tragic his case, has no advantage over the average
son of Adam in that respect. The answer does not lie with a synthesis of
obvious Christian behaviors and doctrines (or facsimiles thereof) with modern
disease models.
The answer lies in real repentance and faith in the living God, the second
person of the Trinity, the Jesus who died for sinners and was raised again for
our justification and who through the Holy Spirit effectively calls us to
faith and who gives us new life and who makes us holy in himself.
What is the real difference between addictive sexual behavior and
alcoholism? Once one becomes addicted to the sensations of orgasm he does not
want to quit and will order his life around it. The question is not how much,
but why, the inappropriate and damaging behavior continues? The
why of the behavior is the same. All human beings are addicted to
sin. Who of us in our old life was not? This is not to deny that alcoholism is
not damaging, but to assert that all sin has its own form of fallout. The
affects are different in some regard, but the progressive nature of the
addiction begins with the will to sin. The effects of sin do not justify
calling a sin a disease. In which case habitual drunkenness is no more a
disease than habitual use of pornography. Neither sin is excusable no matter
what the cause.
A 1982 book by A. C. DeJong, Help and Hope for the Alcoholic, is little
improvement over Taylor. DeJong takes the middle road. DeJong's approach is
very similar to Taylor's because his belief is that the Bible does not speak
about the abuse of alcohol, (or that what it says is outdated), that
Alcoholics Anonymous is a useful adjunct to the Church, and most importantly
that alcoholism is not sin, but a disease.30
DeJong says that he once thought that alcoholism is sin, but since his own
recovery (from alcoholism) he has come to see the error of that position.31
The reason for the change in his position was not exegetical (determined by
detailed study of the Word of God) but experiential. DeJong, on the strength
of his experience and assumptions, recommends all his alcoholic parishioners
to AA and to all its subsidiary organizations.32
Like Taylor, DeJong argues that to call alcoholism a sin is not helpful.
DeJong says that if the effects are this devastating, and no rational person
would inflict this much damage upon himself and loved ones, not even a sinful
one, then the cause must be disease over which the alcoholic had no control.
DeJong admits that there is no known cause of the disease and that the origin
of the disease is a mystery.33 DeJong still claims that for a non-alcoholic to
call alcoholism sin is prideful.34
DeJong wants us to believe that AA is Biblical. He uses Scripture to
support each of the Twelve Steps.35 DeJong admits that the alcoholic starts
out in sin but he says that, in the end, the alcoholic is really a victim and
not a sinner.36
Where Scripture and AA part ways, DeJong consistently follows the AA
program. He makes the astonishing claim that alcoholism is not self inflicted.
How then, one asks, did this catastrophe take place? He has already admitted
that there is no known cause of the disease, nor any substantial medical
support for the disease claim, so who or what secret and dark force foisted
this disease upon him?37
In each chapter DeJong gives a summary of the meaning of one or more of the
Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous. Chapter four deals with
unconditional surrender. The third of the Twelve Steps.38 He
compares this surrender to the biblical descriptions of contriteness,
repentance and brokeness of heart.39
On the surface this seems appropriate, but in fact it is distinctly
unchristian. How? Even when the later steps speak of our wrongs
and character defects they are not gauged against the Word of God
which is the only standard against which sin can be judged (1 John 3.4; Romans
7.7). In the Bible, to repent of one's sins, to acknowledge the depth of one's
sin and misery, entails fleeing to Jesus who lifts our burden and replaces it
with His light yoke.
This is not what AA has in mind. One does not, when he admits that he is
powerless over Alcohol, confess that he has held down the
knowledge of the Covenant God in unbelief, sin, and rebellion. Instead what
the alcoholic admits by this confession is his lack of moral responsibility
for his situation. He confesses that his disease has gripped him to the point
that it has begun to control him above all his other defects. Moreover he
confesses these slips to a god of his own imagination--to himself ultimately!
These are two fundamentally different confessions of faith.
DeJong makes another breathtaking claim, in contrast to Taylor, that AA is
not a religious fellowship because it does not require subscription to a
specific set of doctrines for membership. He also contradicts reality. The
Twelve Steps and the Twelve Traditions are in fact a catechism and confession.
AA is a confessional religion. There is not any non-religious or neutral
confession of a god. Either one confesses the God of the Bible or he is an
unbeliever.40
This helps us get to the heart of DeJong's problem. At every point he
allows the alcoholic to remain in charge. The Bible simply forbids such an
approach. DeJong has simply ignored the Biblical data we surveyed earlier. It
is clear towards the end of the book, where he quotes the AA Big Book more and
more, that his position is driven by a bible but not the revealed Word of God.
Never does the Word of God allow such self sufficiency. Clearly DeJong has
somehow justified to himself the sacrifice of a biblical world-view for that
of Alcoholics Anonymous. At every one of the Twelve Steps, important
differences can be shown between what the Bible teaches and what each Step or
Tradition teaches.
Your Church and the Alcoholic
Phillip Yancey calls AA The Midnight Church. There are ways in
which AA is like a local Church. What attracts alcoholics to AA is the
fellowship, mutual support and acceptance they find in AA.41 Members are bound
together by a common struggle against a common problem.
Like other para-church groups, AA grew up in a vacuum left by the church.
In the past Christians have encouraged the growth of AA by looking down at
alcoholics as sinners of a special sort. When Christians treat the alcoholic
as though his sin was worse than ours, we've reinforced the idea that only
alcoholics understand other alcoholics and that the church is irrelevant to
the alcoholic.
It is not as if there is no alcohol abuse in the church. The truth is that
there is more alcohol abuse and addiction than many recognize. By ignoring it
and giggling about drinking problems, we have sometimes pushed the alcoholic
into the arms of AA. Just as we have become sensitive to the needs of those
facing the crisis of abortion, divorce, or spouse abuse, the church should
make an effort to become aware of the specific symptoms of alcohol abuse so
that we can spot it and address it in our own congregations. We cannot expect
the alcoholic struggling with alcohol addiction and abuse to trust us, if
we're not willing to admit that those who confess Christ sometimes fall into
the sin of alcohol abuse.
To correct the problem Christians much first realize that it is God's will
for sinners of all sorts to find their fellowship, acceptance, mutual support,
and strength within the bonds of the local church, the Christ confessing
covenant community, composed of confessing believers, redeemed sinners, saved
by grace.
No one can confront any life-dominating sin apart from the saving grace of
God in Christ. The first step toward freedom from alcohol abuse is to turn
away from all sin and to place one's trust in the righteous obedience of Jesus
Christ as our substitute and Savior (Acts 2.28-9; 10:43; Romans 1.16-7; 10.17;
Gal 2.16).
The location of our life in Christ and the source of our daily help is the
grace of God administered in the congregation through the preaching of the
Gospel and the administration of the sacraments.
In Ephesians 5.18-20 Paul gives explicit directions in this regard. Paul is
assuming that in Christ we are a new creation with new life patterns and new
friends. Paul suggests that part of the new life means being subject to our
brothers and sisters in the visible body of Christ instead of alcohol.
Second, we Christians must make a commitment to accepting the alcohol
abuser into our midst, as someone no more or less dependent upon God's grace
than we. If we as the visible community of the redeemed truly see ourselves as
lost sinners saved by grace, then how can we not accept other sinners into our
midst? How can we distinguish between one type of pre-Christian behavior and
another? We can't and neither should the alcohol (or other substance) abuser.
Notice how Peter classes alcohol abuse in 1 Peter 4.1-4.
Therefore, since Christ suffered in his body, arm yourselves also with the
same attitude, because he who has suffered in his body is done with sin. As a
result, he does not live the rest of his earthly life for evil human desires,
but rather for the will of God. For you have spent enough time in the past
doing what pagans choose to do--living in debauchery, lust, drunkenness,
orgies, carousing and detestable idolatry. They think it strange that you do
not plunge with them into the same flood of dissipation, and they heap abuse
on you (NIV).
The Apostle Peter frankly recognizes the difficulty of leaving the old life
behind and uniting with a new group of friends, the church. Verse four,
They think it strange... seems to indicate even that some of the
believers were being persecuted by their old drinking buddies. The verse also
illustrates the need for the alcoholic to replace his old associations with
new ones (cf. 1 Corinthians 15.33). The church is God's agency for the helping
the alcohol abuser.
Third, we must make a commitment to dealing openly with one another about
our sins. Here we need to reclaim territory we have conceded to AA. In an AA
meeting there is usually a remarkable degree of openness in the meeting to one
another. Pretense is difficult in a room full of people who have been doing
exactly what you have been doing and telling the same lies. If someone is
having a difficult time of it, he is encouraged to seek help from a qualified
fellow member and even from the group as a whole. This seems to fit the
situation envisioned by the Lord in Matthew 18.15-19 and by Paul in Colossians
3.16. and by James 5.16.
Fourth, we must become available to serve one another. We are all sinners.
Any sin could be life dominating. It is not necessary to be an alcoholic to
serve the spiritual needs of the alcoholic.
Part of that ministry requires the mature, sober alcoholic to go on call
(much the way a doctor is on call) for a 24 hour period. When on call one's
phone might ring day or night with call from a fellow member who is about to
fall off the wagon. Strong bonds of love and mutual encouragement
are formed when one spends the night holding another's hand who is shaking and
vomiting under withdrawal symptoms. Do we love one another in Christ as much
as AA members love each other?
Would it not make a difference in one's life, when tempted to commit some
sin for the thousandth time, one knew that there was a Christian friend one
might call who would show the love of Jesus by giving encouragement, praying
with one, taking one out for coffee and providing some redirection? I think it
would.
Fifth, there are a many Christians who attend AA, who live a dual life,
because they believe the Church will scorn them because of their past alcohol
abuse. This is very sad. It is the Church who has the good news for
alcoholics--sin will not have dominion over believers! (Romans 6.14).
Those Christians who are leading this double life must help the Church
learn to deal openly with alcohol and drug abuse. Christians with an alcoholic
past must trust their brothers and sisters in Christ enough to show them how
to minister to the addict.
Conclusion
The Church has been entrusted with the great commission to make disciples,
even of alcoholics. AA constitutes a field of hurting, gospel needy people,
white for the harvest. The question is, are we hungry enough to harvest?
It may be old fashioned, but we must describe to the alcoholic the depth of
his sin and misery, how he can be redeemed from all his sins and misery and
how he is to be thankful for such redemption.42 Obviously the presentation of
the gospel must be sensitive and thoughtful and will vary from case to case,
but the essentials, as we will see, cannot be compromised, even (or perhaps
especially) for one as desperate as the alcoholic. We dare not throw too short
a rope to a drowning man. Only the gospel rope will do.
Bibliography
Adams, J.E., The Christian Counselor's Manual, Presbyterian and Reformed:
Phillipsburg, 1975.
-- Competent to Counsel, Baker: Grand Rapids, 1970.
Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Alcoholics Anonymous, AA World
Services: New York, 1976.
Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Twelve Steps and Traditions, AA
Grapevine and AA World Services: New York, 1953.
Crossman, R.H.S., Ed., Oxford and The Groups. Blackwell: Oxford, 1934.
DeJong, A.C., Help and Hope for the Alcoholic, Tyndale: Wheaton, 1982.
Henry, C.F.H., Christian Personal Ethics. Baker: Grand Rapids, 1957, repr.
1979.
Henson, H.H., The Oxford Groups. Oxford University Press: London, 1933.
Hughes, P. E., Hope for a Despairing World: The Christian Answer to the
Problem of Evil. Presbyterian and Reformed: Phillipsburg, 1977.
Leon, P., The Philosophy of Courage. George Allen and Unwin: London, 1939.
Machen, J. G., The Christian View of Man. Banner of Truth Trust: Edinburgh,
1937, repr., 1984.
Shipp, T. J., Helping the Alcoholic and His Family. Prentice-Hall:
Englewood Cliffs, 1963.
Taylor, G. A., A Sober Faith: Religion and Alcoholics Anonymous. Macmillan
Company, New York, 1953.
Wisdom, C., Alcoholic's Anonymous--A Biblical Critique of AA's View
of God. Man, Sin and Hope, The Journal of Pastoral Practice, 1986.
Endnotes
* This paper was written originally as a 1988 article for the Reformed
Herald. It was subsequently revised as a class handout for the Theology of
Culture course at Wheaton College, 1995. Revised December, 1998. (c)2000 R. S.
Clark. All rights reserved.
1 Alcoholics Anonymous, xvii.
2ibid
3 ibid. xviii, xxii.
4 The 12 Steps are:
1.We admitted we were powerless over alcohol--that our lives had become
unmanageable.
2.Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to
sanity.
3.Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as
we understood Him. (emph. orig.)
4.Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves.
5.Admitted too God, to ourselves, and to another human being the exact
nature of our wrongs.
6.Were entirely ready to have God remove all these defects of character.
7.Humbly asked Him to remove our shortcomings
8.Made a list of all persons we had harmed, and became willing to make
amends to them all.
9.Made direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so
would injure them or others.
10.Continued to take personal inventory and when we were wrong promptly
admitted it.
11.Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact
with God as we understood Him, praying for knowledge of His will for us and
the power to carry that out. (emph. orig.)
12.Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these steps, we tried
to carry this message to alcoholics, and to practice these principles in all
our affairs.
The 12 Traditions are, in part:
1.Our common welfare should come first; the personal recovery depends upon
AA. unity. Each member of Alcoholics Anonymous is but a small part of a great
whole. AA. must continue to live or most of us will surely die. Hence our
common welfare comes first. But individual welfare follows close afterward.
2.For our group purpose there is but one ultimate authority--a loving God
as He may express Himself in our group conscience. Our leaders are but trusted
servants; they do not govern.
3.The only requirement for AA. membership is a desire to stop drinking. Our
membership ought to include all who suffer from alcoholism. Hence we may
refuse none who wish to recover. Nor ought AA. membership ever depend upon
money or conformity. Any two or three alcoholics gathered together for
sobriety may call themselves an AA., provided that, as a group, they have no
other affiliation.
5.Each group has but one primary purpose--to carry its message to the
alcoholic who still suffers.
10.Alcoholics Anonymous has no opinion on outside issues; hence the AA.
name ought never be drawn into public controversy. No AA. group should ever,
in such a way as to implicate AA., express an opinion on outside controversial
issues--particularly those of politics, alcohol reform, or sectarian religion.
The Alcoholics Anonymous groups oppose no one. Concerning such groups they can
express no views whatever.
12.Anonymity is the spiritual foundation of all our traditions, ever
reminding us to place principles before personalities....we of Alcoholics
Anonymous believe that the principle of anonymity has an immense spiritual
significance...It reminds us that we are to actually practice a genuine
humility. This to the end that our great blessings may never spoil us; that we
shall forever live in thankful contemplation of Him who presides over us all
(Alcoholics Anonymous, 17; Twelve Steps, 5ff).
5 The Big Book has revised several times since its publication.
6 Pentecostal Christians teach a sort of on-going revelation and that God
speaks to Christians directly and about specific things apart from the
Scriptures. See W. S. Hudson, Religion in America, 378 ff., W. W. Sweet, The
Story of Religion in America,423ff, H. H. Henson, The Oxford Groups, 5; P.
Leon, The Philosophy of Courage, 112ff.
7 Sweet, 423
8 Hudson, 378. The historical relationship between AA and the Oxford Groups
is hinted at in the quotation from the Big Book above in the phrase,
though he (Bill W.) could not accept all the tenets....
These tenets, though attached originally to an apparently Christian para-church
organization, are not distinctively Christian, if only because they do not
flow from a distinctively Christian confession. That is, there is nothing
about them which requires one to be a Christian to practice them. The
assumption of this essay is that Christianity is a unique religion in that it
is divinely revealed, its God is triune, and its doctrine of redemption and
ethics are organized around the God-Man Jesus Christ, who died as a substitute
for all his people. Christian ethics is nothing more or less than the grateful
response by the redeemed to God's grace toward sinners in Christ.
9 ibid. xvi.
10 For example, it is a regular practice to recite the Lord's Prayer in
their meetings. Jesus prayed Hallowed by thy name, or Your
name is Holy, with the clear intent of declaring that God's name
(Yahweh), indeed God Himself, is distinct morally and in his being from
humanity. Yet in step three and tradition two AA rejects explicitly such a
view of God. Jesus prayer is exclusivist in that it implies that there are no
other gods besides the God of the Bible.
There are other hints of the Bible in the Twelve Traditions of AA Some
examples of such borrowing: tradition three speaks of the gathering of
two or three an obvious reference to Matthew 18.20, For
where two or three of you are gathered in my name, there I am in their
midst. The Twelve Steps and Traditions refer to God as Him,
complete with the uppercase pronoun traditionally reserved in English for the
Biblical Deity. Interestingly, the published prayers of AA are even written in
a sort of 17th century English, apparently to lend them an air of tradition
and authority.
11 Alcoholics Anonymous,12-3. See also, Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions,
132ff.
12 Chapter four of the book even contains an apologetic for their doctrine
of God and their view of revelation.
13 Many AA meetings close with the chant, keep coming back, it
works.
14 L. P. Jacks, Oxford and the Groups, 129; J. Alsdurf's , review of H.
Fingarette's The Myth of Alcoholism As a Disease, Alcoholism: Is It a
Sin After All?, (Christianity Today, February 3, 1989). See also L. M.
Thomas, Alcoholism is Not A Disease, in Christianity Today,
October 4, 1985. For a contrary view see. A. Spinkard's article in
Christianity Today August 4, 1983, 26.
15 A. Spinkard, 26; T. J. Shipp, Helping the Alcoholic and His Family,
91ff.
16 See the similar exhortation in Rom.13.13.
17 The first article of the Apostles' Creed says, I believe in God
the Father almighty, maker of heaven and earth.
18 The Westminster Shorter Catechism, Q/A 4.
19 The Revised Standard Version, (New York: Oxford University Press, Inc.)
1973, 1977.
20 P. E. Hughes, Hope For a Despairing World: The Christian Answer to the
Problem of Evil,26-7.
21 The Westminster Shorter Catechism Q/A 22 says, Christ, the Son of
God, became man, by taking to himself a true body, (Heb. 2:14,16, Heb. 10:5)
and a reasonable soul, (Matt. 26:38) being conceived by the power of the Holy
Ghost, in the womb of the Virgin Mary, and born of her, (Luke 1:27,31,35,42,
Gal. 4:4) yet without sin. (Heb. 4:15, Heb. 7:26)
22 From the New American Standard Version.
23 Alcoholics Anonymous,46-7.
24 ibid, the preface, vii.
25 Matthew 6.24.
26 A Sober Faith, 4ff;52.ff
27 ibid., 32ff., esp.42.
28 ibid., 59.
29 ibid., 35,78,87.
30 ibid., 18, 38, 41.
31 ibid.,18.
32 ibid., 14, 57.
33 Thus Jay Adams calls the use of the word disease in the context of
alcoholism meaningless.
34 De Jong, Help and Hope for the Alcoholic, 18,21; Cf. J. E. Adams,
Competent to Counsel, xiv.
35 Help and Hope for the Alcoholic, 31ff.
36 ibid., 22.
37 ibid., 35.
38 ibid., p.59ff.
39 ibid., 61.
40 ibid., 114.
41 Phillip Yancey, The Midnight Church, Christianity Today,
February 4, 1983, 96. Yancey gives an overly sentimental and unbiblical
description of Alcoholics Anonymous. He is quite correct, however, when he
calls it a unique church. Although he does not seem to realize
what this implies. He too has bought into the idea that somehow Alcoholics
Anonymous reflects the true spirit of the early Church, a church without all
those nasty doctrinal disputes that bother the organized Church. In so doing
he confirms the connection with the Oxford Groups. He brushes over what he
calls the Christological question i.e., how a Christian could
actively take part in the worship of an unknown god or even more to the point:
propagate such a faith without compromising his Christian faith; with the
worst kind of defense: well the church is full a hypocrites and the alcoholic
is getting his needs met, so what is the difference? The most blatant
inaccuracy, however, in the article is his insistence that AA requires the
alcoholic to take responsibility for his actions. This is not the case. While
there is a mild formal protest that, yes, the alcoholic is responsible, the
chief doctrine of the faith is that alcoholism is the result of a disease not
sin, therefore, ultimately, the alcoholic cannot be fully responsible because
no one can justly be held responsible for actions committed under the
influence of a disease over which he had no control.
42 This language is drawn from the second question and answer of the
Heidelberg Catechism, a Reformed confessional document first published in
1563.
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