A Roundtable Series on A.A.’s
Roots in the Bible
Part One Dr. Bob and the Good Book
Dick B.
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Bible Roundtable Session One
Dr. Bob and the Good Book
Dick B.
The Significance of Dr. Bob’s Religious
Training and Knowledge of the Bible
Here is what Dr. Bob said
about Bible study and his training as a youngster:
From childhood through high school
I was more or less forced to go to church, Sunday School and evening service,
Monday night Christian Endeavor and sometimes to Wednesday evening prayer
meeting (Dr. Bob’s personal story, Alcoholics Anonymous, 1st
ed., p. 183).
I had refreshed my memory of the Good
Book, and I had had excellent training in that as
a youngster (The Co-Founders of
Alcoholics Anonymous, pp. 11-12).
I’m somewhat allergic to work,
but I felt I should continue to increase my familiarity with the Good Book
and also read a good deal of standard literature, possibly of a scientific
nature. So I did cultivate the habit of reading. I think I’m not exaggerating
when I say I have probably averaged an hour a day for the last 15 years
(The Co-Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous, p. 13).
I didn’t write the Twelve Steps. I
had nothing to do with the writing of them. . . . We already had the basic
ideas, though not in terse and tangible form. We got them. . . as a result
of our study of the Good Book (DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, pp.
96-97).
The Sermon on the Mount [Matthew chapters
5-7] contains the underlying spiritual philosophy of A.A. (a statement
frequently made by Bill Wilson and by Dr. Bob, Dick B., Why Early A.A.
Succeeded, p. 228).
If someone asked him [Dr. Bob] a question
about the program, his usual response was: "What does it say in the Good
Book?" (DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, p. 144).
For the next two and a half years,
Bob attended Oxford Group meetings regularly and gave much time and study
to its philosophy. . . . "I read everything I could find, and talked to
everyone who I thought knew anything about it," Dr. Bob said. He read the
Scriptures, studied the lives of the saints, and did what he could to soak
up the spiritual and religious philosophies of the ages (DR. BOB and
the Good Oldtimers, p. 56).
They [the early AAs] were convinced
that the answer to their problems was in the Good Book. 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
(DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, p. 96).
Here is what Dr. Bob’s
kids had to say:
There was no program. Dad and Mom and
Bill were working out the program. At that time I was getting involved
with quiet times they had in the morning. The guys would come, and mom
would have her quiet time with them. . . . They read the Bible, prayed
and listened, and got guidance (Remarks of Dr. Bob’s daughter Sue Windows,
Children
of the Healer, pp. 43-44).
Before there was a Big Book–in the
period of "flying blind," God’s Big Book was the ref reference used in
our home. The summer of 1935, when Bill lived with us, Dr. Bob had read
the Bible completely three times. And the references that seemed consistent
with the program goals were the Sermon on the Mount, 1 Corinthians 13,
and the Book of James (Foreword by Dr. Bob’s son Robert R. Smith, The
Good Book and The Big Book, p. ix).
Here’s what Bill Wilson
saw and reported:
[Of his stay with Dr. Bob and Anne
Smith in the summer of 1935]: I learned a great deal from you people [T.
Henry and Clarace Williams], from the Smiths themselves, and from Henrietta
[Seiberling]. I hadn’t looked in the Bible, up to this time, at all. You
see, I had the [conversion] experience and then this rushing around to
help drunks and nothing happened (Dick B., The Akron Genesis of Alcoholics
Anonymous, p. 64).
[Again, of the summer, 1935]: Each
morning there was devotion. After the long silence Anne would read out
of the Good Book. James was our favorite (RHS, p. 5).
[Again, of the summer, 1935]: We much
favored the Apostle James. The definition of love in Corinthians also played
a great part in our discussions (Kurtz, Not-God, p. 320, n. 11).
[Again, of the summer, 1935]: Bill
Wilson found himself in awe of Dr. Bob’s "spiritual knowledge" and cherished
the guidance of as each morning her pleasant voice read and interpreted
the Christian Scriptures and the Oxford Group devotional books (Kurtz,
Not-God, p. 31).
And others said. . .
Dr. Bob’s morning devotion consisted
of a short prayer, a 20-minute study of a familiar verse from the Bible,
and a quiet period of waiting for directions as to where he, that day,
should find use for his talent. Having heard, he would religiously go about
his Father’s business, as he put it (DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers,
p. 314).
Members gathered there [at the Smith
home] as well as attending the Oxford Group meetings at the home of T.
Henry and Clarace Williams. Early members described how, at their meeting,
Bob liked to sit with an open Bible on his lap, out of which a passage
would be selected at random and read. A discussion would then follow on
its relevance to the personal problems of those present. The emphasis was
on day-to-day living, how to cope with personal problems, and self-examination
(Nell Wing, Grateful to Have Been There, p. 81).
We had much prayer together in those
days and began quietly to read Scripture and discuss a practical approach
to its application in our lives (DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers,
p. 111).
Of course the Bible ought to be the
main Source Book of all. No day ought to pass without reading it (Dick
B., Anne Smith’s Journal, p. 82).
Morning Quiet Time–Bible
study, prayer, seeking guidance–was a foundation stone
We will have much more to say about Quiet
Time in another session. It had its roots in so much of the material Dr.
Bob read, the practices of the preachers of the 1800's, the Oxford Group
customs, and the immense amount of quiet time observances by A.A. pioneers.
For background, see Dick B., Good Morning! Quiet Time, Morning Watch,
Meditation, and Early A.A.
The important point here is that this
idea of morning Bible study, prayer, and listening for God’s "Voice" can
be found in the YMCA, the Christian literature fifty to seventy-five years
before A.A., and certainly fifty years before the Oxford Group. In fact,
it can be found quite frequently and in varying phraseology in the Good
Book itself. It can most assuredly be found in Christian Endeavor–the youth
group in which Dr. Bob was trained in these matters and into which we shall
now delve..
Christian Endeavor - A Glimpse at
Its History and Roots
Key Resource
and Reference Titles
Clark, Francis E. Christian
Endeavor in All Lands. Official ed., The United Society of Christian
Endeavor, 1908.
____. Memoirs of Many Men in Many
Lands. Boston: United Society of Christian Endeavor, 1922.
Guldseth, Mark O. Streams. Alaska:
Fritz Creek Studios, 1982.
Murch, James DeForest. Successful
C.E. Prayer-Meetings. Cincinnati: The Standard Publishing Company,
1930.
Spreng, Samuel P. History of the
Evangelical Church: For the Use of Young People, Members of the Evangelical
League of Christian Endeavor, etc. OH: Publishing House of the Evangelical
Church, 1927.
Wells, Amos R.
Expert Endeavor. A Text-book of
Christian Endeavor Methods and Principles.
Boston: International Society
of Christian Endeavor, 1911. |
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Beginnings, Founding, and
World-wide Proportions of Christian Endeavor
Reverend Francis E. Clark, D.D., LL.D.,
was the founder and President of the United Society of Christian Endeavor.
He was the author of many titles, the most important of which (for our
purposes) were Christian Endeavor in All Lands: A Record of Twenty-Five
Years of Progress and Clark’s autobiography, Memories of Many Men
in Many Lands.
February 2, 1881 marked the formation
of the first society of Christian Endeavor at 62 Neal Street, the Parsonage
of Williston Church, Portland, Maine. The movement grew with phenomenal
rapidity year by year in America. Foundations for large expansion of its
work were laid in India, China, Turkey, and Mexico. And in the Kingdom
of Hawaii, the first society outside the United States was established
in 1883. Large conventions followed with The National Christian Endeavor
convention of 1892 in New York City, being the most notable to that date.
Some 25,000 young people attended it at Madison Square Garden (See Many
Men in Many Lands, pp. 77-81, 107-08)
Williston Church is regarded as the
Birthplace of Christian Endeavor. But its seeds were sown much earlier
by the Puritans of the Massachusetts Colony. For in June, 1741, the young
people of the North Parish of Bridgewater (now Brockton) in Massachusetts,
adopted an agreement reciting that the youth, through the grace of God,
had been awakened to be concerned about the things that belong to their
everlasting peace and would remember their Creator in the days of their
youth [See Ecclesiastes 12:1: "Remember now thy Creator in the days of
thy youth. . ."]. But the years brought a great loss from the Sunday-school
and in Christian families of young people who did not walk in their fathers’
ways, and were lost to the church. And this meant the ushering in of what
was sometimes called the "Young People’s Era." Young Men’s Christian Association
was formed. Some thought there was a tendency to do "too much for the young
people rather than allowing them to do what they could for themselves and
others." The response was "that those who should be won for the Christian
life must minister, and not merely be ministered unto" [See Matthew 20:28:
"Even as the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister,
and to give his life a ransom for many"]. And the thrust of the new picture
was the Week of Prayer in 1881 when many young people were led to decide
to live for Christ and to acknowledge Him by joining the church (See Christian
Endeavor in All Lands, pp 18-33)..
In those days, everything pivoted on
the prayer-meeting. The Original Constitution declared the object to be
"to promote an earnest Christian life among its members, to increase their
mutual acquaintance, and to make them more useful in the service of God."
The most important clause of the constitution stated: "It is expected that
all active members of this society will be present at every meeting unless
detained by some absolute necessity, and that each one will take some part,
however slight, in every meeting." Clark said that the young men and women
who were members of Pastor Pennell’s class of young people and of Mrs.
Clark’s girls of the Mizpah Circle affixed their names to the consitution–twenty
names in all, including Pennell’s. Clark described them as "active, energetic,
fun-loving young people, just such as can be gathered in any church to-day.
But they were Christian young people. Their hearts were touched by love
for Him who gave Himself for them, and they sincerely desired to do His
will" (See Christian Endeavor in All Lands, pp. 34-41).
The first prayer-meeting of the society
was held a few days after the organization. A young man was in the chair
as leader. Forty young people, more or less, with Scripture verses and
sentences of prayer, and some with longer testimonies or exhortations,
held forth at that first meeting. Most important, Clark said it was "an
organization as nearly self-governing and self-propagating as any organization
can be had come into existence in Williston Church." Within a year, there
were at least four other societies, one in Rhode Island, another in Portland,
and still another in Vermont. (See Christian Endeavor in All Lands,
pp. 42-59).
We conclude the review of Clark’s lengthy
descriptions by pointing to the emergence of the "Quiet Hour." Clark recounts:
So it was proposed that those
who wished should band themselves together in a purely voluntary organization
called "the Comrades of the Quiet Hour." The name was chosen rather than
the similar name of "The Morning Watch" in order to give the utmost freedom
as to the time which should be devoted to meditation and personal communion
with God, though the morning hour was strongly recommended. Those who became
"comrades" agreed to spend fifteen minutes a day not merely in Bible-reading
and petition, but in genuine personal communion with the Unseen. . . and
testimonies began to pour in from all directions, of the exceeding value
of a "Quiet Hour" in personal experience. . . . Quiet Hour literature began
to abound; "Quiet Hours" led by some of the most eminent Christians in
the land began to be held [And the footnote names Rev. J. Wilbur Chapman
and William R. Moody among others] (See Christian Endeavor in AllLands,
p. 357)..
A look at the Principles and Practices
of Christian Endeavor
[Here, the most useful research guides
are Wells’ Expert Endeavor and Murch’s Successful C.E. Prayer-Meetings.
Professor Amos R. Wells was, among other things, Editor of The Christian
Endeavor World. Murch built upon the text-books of Wells and the works
of Clark and laid out hundreds of specifics for CE prayer-meetings and
other functions.]
Next come some vignettes which require
more research, some of which the author is
currently undertaking. It involves the
questions: What did Christian Endeavor do? And, what literature did they
study? For a beginning, let’s start with the "Official Edition,"Christian
Endeavor in All Lands, written by the Rev. Francis E. Clark, D.D.,
LL.D., Founder of the Christian Endeavor Movement. In this title, Reverend
Clark stated:
The roots of the Christian
Endeavor tree, wherever it grows, are Confession of Christ, Service for
Christ, Fellowship with Christ's people, and Loyalty to Christ's Church.
The farther I travel, the more I see of societies in every land, the more
I am convinced that these four principles are the essential and the only
essential principles of the Christian Endeavor Society. Let me repeat them:—I.
Confession of Christ. II. Service for Christ. III. Fellowship with Christ's
people. IV. Loyalty to Christ's Church (p. 93).
As to the first principle—Confession of
Christ—Clark said:
I. 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. . . . This participation is simply the confession
of Christ. The true Christian Endeavorer does not take part to exhibit
his rhetoric, or to gain practice in public speaking, or to show what a
logical prayer he can offer to God; but he does take part to show that
he is a Christian, to confess his love for the Lord. . . . The covenant
pledge is simply a tried and proved device to secure frequent confession
of Christ. . . . It also secures familiarity with the Word of God by promoting
Bible-reading and study in preparation for every meeting. . . . Our form
of confession is the prayer-meeting (Christian Endeavor in All Lands,
pp. 94, 96).
Clark also referred to the remarks of
the Rev. F. B. Meyer, who not only had a substantial influence on Oxford
Group development and on early A.A. ideas, but was president of the British
Christian Endeavor Union. Clark quoted Meyer as follows:
Christian Endeavor stands
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
(Christian Endeavor in All Lands, pp. 101-102).
A simple form of the much-mentioned "covenant,"
said Clark, was this:
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 (Christian Endeavor
in All Lands, p. 252).
According to Clark, "Every Endeavor meeting
has its topic, with many Scripture references and abundant helps" (Christian
Endeavor in All Lands, p. 261).
Clark mentioned and recommended a Christian
Endeavor text-book written by Amos R. Wells, Editorial Secretary of the
United Society of Christian Endeavor. Wells’s book was titled: Expert
Endeavor: A Text-book of Christian Endeavor Methods and Principles.
And here are some of the things it had to say about "the prayer meeting":
What are the results that
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 through singing; the guidance
of others along all these lines of service and life (p. 9).
How can we get original thought
on the prayer-meeting topics? Only by study of the Bible, followed
by meditation and observation. First, the Endeavorer 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 for five or six days, thinking
about it in his odd minutes and watching for experiences in his own life
or the lives of others, or observing nature and looking for illustrations
on the subject from all these sources (pp. 9-10).
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.
Always give the writer's name, or the part of the Bible from which you
quote. Commit the quotation to memory and do not read it (p. 11).
I have quoted these Christian Endeavor
segments because they provide real insight into the frequent comments in
A.A.'s DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers about Dr. Bob's intensive
study of the Bible, his ability to quote Scripture freely, his using Scripture
to explain questions about the A.A. program, his emphasis on and practice
of prayer three times a day, his stress on outside reading of Christian
literature, the prayer and meditation at early A.A. meetings, and the use
of "outside" (non-Oxford Group) devotionals. The quotations above also
underline Dr. Bob's own very clear and continued allegiance to Jesus Christ
and to Christian Fellowship throughout his days.
Christian Endeavor Principles
and Practices Traceable to Early A.A.
As Bill Wilson himself so frequently pointed
out, nobody invented A.A. Its ideas came from a number of people, books,
and movements. And mentioning one source does not mean that other sources
can be ignored. Thus, Christian Endeavor had no corner on the Bible-reading
market. Dr. Frank Buchman, founder of the Oxford Group, was said to be
"soaked in the Bible," hired a Bible teacher to lead Oxford Group people
in study, and often quoted the Bible and urged its study. Rev. Sam Shoemaker
was called a "Bible Christian," and there is scarcely a book or sermon
or article by Shoemaker that does not touch on the Bible. So also Anne
Smith’s Journal, the Quiet Time devotionals, and the Christian literature
early AAs studied. Morever, the progenitors and mentors of the Oxford Group
were also the mentors of other groups that contributed
Continued
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