Saturday, June 30, 2012

A.A.'s Spiritual Roots and Our Planned Vermont Tour


A.A.’s Spiritual Roots: They Center on New England



An International Christian Recovery Coalition Fall Leaves Workshop

Informative Visits to Historic A.A.-Related Locations in Vermont



By Dick B.

© 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved



Come Join Us!



Here are some principal leads:



          www.dickb.com/turning.shtml



          www.dickb.com/drbob.shtml



          www.dickb.com/goodbook.shtml



          www.dickb.com/Akron.shtml



          www.dickb.com/drbobofaa.shtml



          www.dickb.com/conversion.shtml



We are planning a Fall Leaves Workshop centered on the New England Area and definitely zooming in on historic A.A.-related locations in Vermont: the Green Mountain territory of Bill W.’s and Dr. Bob’s youth. It’s where my son Ken and I identified and examined in great depth some of the Christian roots of A.A. And we gathered an immense amount of historical evidence, embodied it in our books and articles, posted it on the Web, and included it in our www.ChristianRecoveryRadio.com presentations. But there’s nothing like the excitement of seeing it all for yourself with excellent guidance.



If we can get the response and assured funding of our own travel from Maui to Vermont, you will be able to participate in September 2012 events involving:



1.      St. Johnsbury and Dr. Bob’s boyhood home;

2.      North Congregational Church—the Smith Family church and location of the historical collections in Dr. Bob Core Library;

3.      Identifying Akron A.A.’s  “Christian fellowship” program with Dr. Bob’s Young People’s Society of Christian Endeavor;

4.      The immense historical resources in the St.  Johnsbury Athenaeum (library);

5.      The St. Johnsbury Fairbanks Museum, the Courthouse where Dr. Bob’s dad was probate judge, the former location of the YMCA building where Dr. Bob’s father was President;

6.      St. Johnsbury Academy—where Dr. Bob’s mother was a teacher and later an historian, where Dr. Bob’s father was an examiner, and where Dr. Bob attended daily chapel and weekly church services and Bible studies, and participated in YMCA events;

7.      East Dorset and Bill W.’s birthplace;

8.      The Wilson House where Bill W. was born and where many A.A. meetings, seminars, and tours and offered;

9.      The Griffith House where Bill was raised by his maternal grandparents for several years and where he studied the Bible with his maternal grandfather, Fayette Griffith;

10. The Griffith House Library which probably contains the largest collection

of A.A. historical books and articles and pamphlets and memorabilia of

any place in the world

11. East Dorset Congregational Church, where Bill, Bill’s parents, and

both sets of grandparents attended; and where Bill attended church and

Sunday school, along with revival and conversion and Temperance meetings;

12. The Bill and Lois Wilson gravesites;

13. Manchester, where Bill attended Burr and Burton Academy, attending its

required daily chapel and four-year Bible study course, and was its president

of the Young Men’s Christian Association during his senior year; and

     14.Your optional personal detour to see the Fall Leaves display.



Want to come? This tour and workshop will give you a take on A.A. history, A.A. historical collections, and A.A.’s Christian roots and origins you’ve probably never heard about or understood. It will provide you with important keys to the Christian upbringing of Dr. Bob and Bill W.  It will show you more about real “spirituality”; ie., the relationship with God that the Big Book talks about. You visit a location with thousands of A.A.-related historical items. It will take you to an area filled with New England charm. It will be far more than just a walk through a memorial building or two. It will be at a time when the Fall Leaves displays and Leaf pickers are about. And Dick B. and Ken B. will be there to show you what’s what.



What is needed to make it happen:



Prayer.



A real interest in learning something very vital about “old-school” A.A. ideas and their applicability today.



A zest for a guided tour to inspect and handle scads and scads of historical evidence, attend meetings if you wish, and hear Dick B. and Ken B. report on 22 years of research as you move about and stop for some short talks.



Benefactors to provide funds for our travel are needed.



Your plans for a car or car pool with friends.



Accommodations at the St. Johnsbury Marriott hotel and in East Dorset.



And an essential willingness to walk, look, listen, and learn.



Since this will be an International Christian Recovery Coalition workshop, we are looking for a cadre of Christian leaders and workers in the recovery arena who want to learn and pass on to others what we’ve found and you have actually seen.



This will be unlike other history and archive conferences, seminars, and forays.



You’ll see and enter the buildings. You’ll pick up and examine the historical items. You’ll explore on your own, too. You’ll hear from two speakers who have researched, written about, and spoken about the whole scene—many times.



This may be the only time in your life that you will have such an opportunity.



July is the month to plan and let us know if you’ll be coming and when. It is also the month to help fund our trip. And then to make your car and hotel reservations.



If the light is green in July, we’ll go. In August, we’ll act. If the light is other than green, at least you’ve had a chance to make the trip or plan a future one.                                  



For more information, contact Dick B. by email at DickB@DickB.com.



Gloria Deo

Friday, June 29, 2012

AA Historian Dick B. Radio Interview of Bill Boyles of Delaware


The Dick B. Friday, June 29th Radio Interview of Christian Recovery Leader Bill Boyles of Delaware

On


A Project of International Christian Recovery Coalition



Dick B.

Copyright 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved



You Can Hear the Archived Radio Show Right Now



_________________________________________________________



You may hear Dick B. interview Christian Recovery leader Bill Boyles on the Friday, June 29, 2012, episode of the "Christian Recovery Radio with DickB" show here:



http://goo.gl/w3UZs



or here:



http://www.blogtalkradio.com/christian-recovery-radio-with-dickb/2012/06/29/dick-b-interviews-christian-recovery-leader-bill-boyles



Episodes of the "Christian Recovery Radio with DickB" radio show are archived at:




Synopsis of the Bill Boyles Radio Interview



“From the rock-bound Coast of Maine to the shores of Sunny California.” That’s a phrase I used to hear long-winded political speakers use when I was a kid. But ChristianRecoveryRadio.com can expand on this in several ways. Our interviews of Christian Recovery Leaders are now rapidly expanding “from the rock-bound Coast of Maine to the tip of Florida to the sunny beaches of Maui, Hawaii.” And soon we’ll be able to say “round the world with Christian Recovery Radio interviews.”



In just a few weeks, we have heard the voices of Christian recovery leaders in Toronto, Vermont, Connecticut, New York, Miami, Delaware, Pittsburgh, Akron, Tennessee, Kansas City Missouri, Austin, Oroville California, Los Gatos California, Brentwood California, With  many other diverse places to follow shortly



Today’s guest was Christian recovery leader Bill Boyles, recovered alcoholic and addict, Executive Director of Won Way Out Inc. in Camden Wyoming Delaware, and about to celebrate his 25th anniversary of freedom from alcohol, drugs, gambling, and other problems.



On a personal note, I met Bill Boyles many years back when I was doing a series of eight annual A.A. Heritage Seminars at Wilson House, East Dorset, Vermont—birthplace of A.A. cofounder Bill Wilson. Bill Boyles attended two of those seminars. And I could readily see that he was one of those AAs who understood the importance today of learning and talking about the Christian roots of the recovery movement and of Alcoholics Anonymous itself. In fact, Bill helped organize and fund our Second Nationwide Alcoholics Anonymous History Conference which was held in Delaware. He soon became known in his area as the “Book Man.” Bill literally purchased hundreds of my A.A. history titles (and later Life Recovery Bibles, and also A.A. Conference-approved literature) and distributed all of them free to alcoholics and addicts and churches and meetings all over the Delaware Area. Recently, Bill traveled all the way from Delaware to Brentwood, California, to be one of the panel speakers at the International Christian Recovery Conference at Golden Hills Community Church in Brentwood.



Bill began his drinking and drug and gambling life as a youngster. He paid his dues to psychiatrists, institutions, A.A., and various other recovery fellowships. Though a figure on Wall Street and a graduate of Columbia. Bill crashed. He lost it all—his job, his fiancĂ©, and just about everything else. He was in the position of putting a gun in his mouth and being afraid to shoot it or not to shoot it. So he cried out to God for help. He went to a rehab in Southern New Jersey and had a spiritual experience where the Lord spoke to him. And everything changed.



He got a Bible, read it, and loved it. He went to A.A. and got a sponsor, went to meetings, and took the Twelve Steps. But for five years, he had no formal religious affiliation. He just did his own personal Christian work. Then he acquired a copy of DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers. He realized he had been missing something the early AAs clearly had – Jesus Christ as a power, and the power into which he needed to tap.



An old-timer asked if he knew of the Dick B. books. He acquired and studied my book, The Good Book and the Big Book: A.A.’s Roots in the Bible (www.dickb.com/goodbook.shtml). He came to my Vermont history seminars, and he also acquired a passion to launch out. He left a fine job in Delaware and established a Twelve Step treatment program called “Won Way Out.” It had an adult male facility for about 12 men (which, after a fire and renovation, will soon handle 18-20). The facility is licensed and has counselors. But its focus is on the Twelve Steps and the Word of God.



Bill’s beliefs have led him to share Christ liberally, conduct a discipleship program, and share his experience, strength, and hope. But also the importance of Jesus Christ. His mission has become to put Jesus Christ back into the Twelve Steps by pointing to early A.A. Christian roots and successes. His folks do seminars and hospitals and institutions outreach, they distribute Bibles and the Dick B. books. And they do a lot of work in one-on-one small groups. Bill points out that   a good many tell of having a bad experience with religion. His answer: Do a proper Fourth Step, list that resentment, and overcome it through the Steps.



He carries his message by speaking in church pulpits from time to time. However, he targets the un-churched. He does some Overcomers Outreach meetings. But he points out that Celebrate Recovery is for the churches, whereas his focus is on those who have no church affiliation.



Bill has The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide and our new book Stick with the Winners: How To Conduct More Effective 12-Step Recovery Meetings Using Conference-approved literature.

He uses both to enhance his own Christian recovery approaches. He plans a women’s facility before long and also will focus on broadening the message-carrying wherever possible. And, for a well-rounded and effective approach to Christian recovery today, one can do no better than to acquaint himself or herself with Bill Boyles of Won Way Out, Inc. in Camden Wyoming, Delaware.                                                                                                     

  




Gloria Deo

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

The Co-Founders of A.A. Pamphlet P-53 Available Online

In our many meetings, conferences, workshops, and articles, International Christian Recovery Coalition has been urging Christian leaders, workers, and newcomers to obtain from Alcoholics Anonymous World Services up to 500 of A.A. General Services Conference-approved Pamphlet P-53. We have found so few in the hundreds of meetings we've attended, and we've concluded that this brief pamphlet on The Co-Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous: Biographical Sketches Their Last Major Talks is a sadly neglected door to what Alcoholics Anonymous really was and is like.

We still urge you to acquire the pamphlets, put them on literature tables, put them in sober clubs, put them in Central Offices, give them to sponsors and sponsees, quote them in your talks, and pass them out to AAs, Christian leaders and workers, and others as widely as possible.

In addition, this important pamphlet can be read online:

http://www.aa.org/pdf/products/p-53_theCo-FoundersofAA.pdf

If you get a copy, read a copy, pass along a copy, go to the URL, and utilize Pamphlet P-53, you will find that the last major talk by A.A. Co-Founder Dr. Bob in Detroit in 1948 is fully reported.

There Dr. Bob tells of his Christian upbringing in Vermont. He tells how he got sober through prayer. He tells how the visit of Bill W. to Akron was, in Henrietta Seiberling's words, "manna from heaven"--an answer to the prayers for Bob's deliverance. You'll find Dr. Bob speaking of his excellent training in the Bible as a youngster in Vermont (www.dickb.com/drbobofaa.shtml). You'll find him speaking of how the first three got sober by turning to God and studying the Bible when there were no Steps, no Traditions, no drunkalogs, and no meetings or Big Book as there are today.

You'll find Dr. Bob saying that the oldtimers believed the answer to their problems was in the Bible (www.dickb.com/goodbook.shtml), You'll find him calling attention to the Bible's Book of James, Jesus' Sermon on the Mount, and 1 Corinthians 13 as being "absolutely essential" to the Akron recovery program. www.dickb.com/JamesClub.shtml.

You'll find him telling of the daily fellowship meetings they had, giving rise in part to the many remakrs calling early A.A. First Century Christianity at work. And you'll find him pointing out that the basic ideas for the Twelve Steps came from all the study and effort that had been going on for the preceding four years in the Bible.

You'll find Bill Wilson calling Dr. Bob the "Prince of All Twelfth Steppers."

And you'll see an A.A. that relied on the power of God in ways that you never knew before.

"Don't leave home without it." Read it. Share about it. Enlighten your suffering friends. Pass it on to others. Counter all the nonsense god ideas, all the "spirituality" talk, all the "not-god-ness" labels, and all the erroneous remarks about where A.A. ideas really came f rom.

Again, you can start your journey now with P-53 on the internet at:

http://www.aa.org/pdf/products/p-53_theCo-FoundersofAA.pdf

dickb@dickb.com.

Dick B. Radio Interview of Canadian "Akronite" Mark G.


Dick B.’s Christian Recovery Radio Interview on June 27 of Mark Galligan, Christian Recovery Leader from Ontario, Canada

Hear This Interview Now




Dick B.

Copyright 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved



Listeners today heard a very down-to-earth, AA Christian give a nuts and bolts interview on his many years in A.A., his ups and his downs, his miraculous deliverance through prayer, and his extensive sponsorship of newcomers. That guest, our guest Mark Galligan. is a long-recovered alcoholic and very active in A.A. He is a businessman. He lives in Ontario, Canada. He is a Christian Recovery Leader and has been a participant in International Christian Recovery

Coalition since its inception in July of 2009.



_____________________________________________________________________________



You may hear "Dick B. interviews Christian Recovery leader Mark Galligan" on the June 27, 2012, episode of the "Christian Recovery Radio with DickB" show here:



http://goo.gl/7OLJ5



or here:



Dick B. interviews Christian Recovery leader Mark Galligan, June 27, 2012

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/christian-recovery-radio-with-dickb/2012/06/27/dick-b-interviews-christian-recovery-leader-mark-galligan



Episodes of the "Christian Recovery Radio with DickB" show are archived

___________________________________________________________________________



Synopsis of the Mark Galligan Interview Today



Mark entered Alcoholics Anonymous at age 19. Like many an AA, he was ordered to enter the fellowship to avoid a very difficult sentence. His first sponsor was an uncle who sobered up with Bill W. in 1939. Bill W. spoke twice at their A.A. meetings; and, as Mark and many others have observed, Bill droned on for two and a half hours each time. Mark was given a tattered copy of the First Edition of Alcoholics Anonymous and a Bible. He was told, at the beginning, to read the first half of the Big Book—three pages at a time; and he was advised that on completing that assignment he would have taken the Twelve Steps and be ready for service to others in the fellowship.



Mark’s uncle was his first sponsor. And the uncle had been sent to Akron to learn from Dr. Bob. The uncle learned and vigorously passed along the early AA emphasis on the Bible and shared fully about it in A.A. meetings—sometimes discreetly and sometimes vociferously. Mark’s area had a large stock of archival material including letters signed by Bill W. and Dr. Bob, and many written by Cleveland’s founder Clarence H. Snyder. The Snyder correspondence was filled with references to Scripture.



Mark attended our international Christian recovery leaders conference in May of 2009 at Mariners Church Community Center in Irvine, California. He was one of the speakers and watched over our substantial exhibit table in company with Dr. Robert T., a professor of medicine from South Carolina and a devoted Christian. At the Irvine Conference, Mark was attracted to our original printers manuscript of DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers which is an A.A. General Service Conference-approved book we acquired from its owner Dennis Cassidy of Connecticut.



Over his 45 year span in A.A., Mark has become convinced of several major facts:



(1) AAs do not stop drinking because they stop going to meetings. They stop drinking only when they stop praying and then stop going to meetings.



(2) The present-day dropout rate in A.A. is enormous; the success rate abysmal. And there is a solution available from the early A.A. program.



Mark himself has not been without the bumps in A.A. At one point in 1976, he went to the Olympics, his wife was suicidal, and his wife had killed their son while driving under the influence. Depressed, Mark went on a binge, and wound up in a jail in Florida. Another time, again suffering from depression, he went on a binge, drove his high performance car straight into a tree; and he wound up in a jail in Arkansas when he had never before been in Arkansas. Mark was badly injured. He was DOA at the hospital. The doctor said, “Bag him and tag him.” But a persistent nurse brought him back to life. He went into a coma for 16 days. When he came out of the daze, he found three Menonite brethren on their knees beside his bed. One was a minister. The other two were AAs.  They laid hands on him and prayed for him; his obsession to drink was lifted. And that ended his drinking for good.



Mark became very interested in Dr. Bob’s Home in Akron because he knew about the importance of the Bible in its early days. He met Ray G. [who has also been one of our interviewed Christian Recovery Leaders]—long-time archivist at Dr. Bob’s Home. Ray gave him a copy A.A.’s Pamphlet P-53, The Co-founders of Alcoholics Anonymous: Biographical Sketches Their Last Major Talks. Mark was struck by the simplicity of the early program as described in that pamphlet covering Dr. Bob’s talk. Dr. Bob said in that talk that the oldtimers believed the answer to their problems was in the Bible. He added that the parts they considered absolutely essential were Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount, the Book of James, and 1 Corinthians 13. As stated, Mark has taken a particular interest in the printer’s manuscript of DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers we hold. And this manuscript is of special importance because of the written changes and the full names of the early AAs it describes and quotes. It is filled with material on early A.A. Bible study, old fashioned prayer meetings, Quiet Times, Christian reading and daily devotionals, surrenders to Jesus Christ, and the original A.A. Christian fellowship founded in Akron in 1935.



Mark began making plans to obtain, make copies of, and digitalize our manscript so that it could be seen all over the world.



(3) Mark has become very distressed over the practice becoming more and more common in the fellowship of refusing to let AAs have ready access to, study, copy, and use the large body of historical materials found in recent years. He also wants to acquire the DR. BOB printer’s manuscript and a host of our other A.A. historical materials and support our project to place such items where they can be accessible and open to view at the Dr. Bob Core Library in Dr. Bob's boyhood village of St. Johnsbury,Vermont.



Mark has been a frequent speaker and sponsor. Today, less speaking, but still a big focus on sponsorship. He was told to read the Bible and learn recovery according to the will of God. And he was quick to point out that God’s will is found in the Bible. His A.A. group call themselves the “Akronites” because the focus is on the early A.A. program that was so successful in Akron during the 1930’s. It is also very much influenced by Clarence Snyder and the Cleveland A.A. program that was spun off from Akron. In DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, Clarence was reported as having this conviction about the Cleveland AA program begun in May of 1939. It incorporated the Bible, the Oxford Group’s Four Absolutes (Honesty, Purity, Unselfishness, and Love), the Big Book, and the Twelve Steps just published. It also incorporated “most of the old program.” See DR. BOB, p, 131 for a summary. Clarence said at page 261:



That’s the trouble. They take it so casually today. I think a little discipline is necessary. I think A.A. was more effective in those days. Records in Cleveland show that 93 percent of those who came to us never had a drink again. When I discovered that people had slips in A.A., it really shook me up. Today, it’s all watered down so much. Anyone can wander in now.



Following the lead of Dr. Bob in Akron and Clarence Snyder in Cleveland, Mark has a Christian study group with a 90% retention rate. Mark observes the 10% are unable for mental reasons or unwilling thoroughly to follow the program. The “Akronites” follow up with the newcomer regularly on the phone. They recover in their Christian walk, he said,  if—like early AAs—they have accepted Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior.



Mark will be back again to tell us more of his story, plans, and efforts.






Gloria Deo

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Managing Director Burke Tells of Historic Wilson House in Vermont


Synopsis of Tuesday, June 26, Christian Recovery Radio Interview by Dick B.

of Bonnie Burke (formerly Lepper), Managing Director of Wilson House



Dick B.

Copyright 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved



First, you can hear this tremendous interview of Bonnie Burke right now as follows:



You may listen to Dick B.'s interview of Christian leader Bonnie Burke on the June 26, 2012, episode of the "Christian Recovery Radio with DickB" show here:



http://goo.gl/H21G0



or here:



http://www.blogtalkradio.com/christian-recovery-radio-with-dickb/2012/06/26/dick-b-interviews-christian-recovery-leader-bonnie-burke



The "Christian Recovery Radio with DickB" show episodes are archived at:

www.ChristianRecoveryRadio.com





The Interview by Dick B.



You are in for a heartwarming treat as you listen to Bonnie Burke, Managing Director of the Wilson House and Christian Recovery Leader, tell of her life, and her meeting her former husband Ozzie Lepper—who restored and founded Wilson House in East Dorset, Vermont.



The features at this unusual historical site are: (1) Wilson House itself is the birthplace of A.A. Cofounder Bill Wilson, who was born in a little room behind the bar, and whose final resting place is located at a nearby cemetery where his wife Lois is also buried. It functions as a non-profit inn, with A.A. and other meetings, and with regular educational seminars on alcoholism, A.A. history, spiritual roots, and other subjects germane to alcoholism. (2) Griffith House and the Griffith Library mark the place where Bill W. received most of his Christian upbringing as a youngster in Vermont. Today it houses a beautiful, well-maintained library containing thousands and thousands of books, articles, pamphlets, manuscripts, news items, memorabilia, records, and papers pertaining to the history of Alcoholics Anonymous and to its Christian origins, history, founding, original Christian Fellowship program in Akron, and its successes. (3) Since the restoration of both sites, Wilson House has become listed in the National Register of Historical Places. The library is open and accessible. Wilson house hosts guests at its Inn and visitors from all over the world. It has morning Quiet Time, A.A. meetings, Town meetings, meals, seminars, and retreats. (4) One of its little known features is the East Dorset Congregational Church which lies between Wilson House and Griffith House. Bill W.’s paternal grandparents were among the founders and officers of the church and owned Pew 15 which the family members occupied as they attended. Bill W.’s grandfather Willie Wilson—a drunkard—became saved and sober there for the rest of his life after a spiritual experience atop nearby Mount Aeolus. Bill’s parents were married in the church and lived in the parsonage for a time. The church covenant, creed, sermons, and teachings which my son Ken and I were privileged to view place strong emphasis on salvation and the truth of the Word of God. Bill attended Sunday school and church there. And he witnessed revivals, conversion meetings, and Temperance meetings. His maternal grandparents, the Griffiths, regarded East Dorset Congregational Church as their family church and regularly attended also.



Bonnie Burke’s own story is inspiring. She is from New Hampshire and Massachusetts, spent most of her life in New Hampshire, was devout in her Christian faith, and spent a great deal of her life as one very much involved in helping disabled. She and her first husband had three children, and her husband was completely disabled for many many years. Following his death, Bonnie was invited to go on a “blind date” with Ozzie Lepper. As she put it, Ozzie arrived in a red jeep, looking like Santa Claus (he had white hair and a long white beard), and a dog in the back. Ozzie explained to her that he was manager the Wilson House which he was restoring; and he told her much about Alcoholics Anonymous, East Dorset, and his dreams regarding the restorations. Before long, he and Bonnie were married; and they toiled long long hoursl developing Wilson House, conducting tours, answering questions, and managing details.



Ozzie explained that the Wilson House was erected to enable people to give thanks to God for the sobriety they had achieved with His help through Alcoholics Anonymous. Griffith House was erected to house thousands and thousands of A.A. items of literature—including the more than twenty-three thousand of my own books and historical papers donated by my benefactors.

Bonnie remembers the grand opening of the Griffith Library when Ozzie was ill and seated in a lawn chair outside. I was there. And Ozzie declared that his work was finished. Ill for a substantial period, Ozzie passed away. And in July of 2011, Bonnie married Tim Burke, who lived nearby the Wilson House in East Dorset.



Bonnie is writing a book about the Wilson House, and it will contain ample additional details. For eight years, she and Ozzie invited me to give seminars each year on the history of Alcoholics Anonymous and its Christian Recovery roots. Each endorsed my books. And I was given complete freedom to speak and teach on A.A. as it really was.



Wilson House is a 501©(3) Foundation, tax exempt, with contributions deductible. Ozzie never took a paycheck for his years of labor and dedication to the restoration. He kept the lights on bright at night to display the House as a place of peace, hope, and thanksgiving. The House welcomes financial contributions, in kind donations, historical items, and volunteers. And each year, its newsletter reports the benefactions that keep in thriving.






Gloria Deo




Sunday, June 10, 2012

The Great Need for Challenging Speakers to Speak about History

A.A. and AA.’s Own Talent
Let’s Get Our Speakers, Sponsors, Historians, and Archivists Producing
By Dick B.
Copyright 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved
Put A.A. and 12 Step Speakers, Sponsors, and Historians to Work! Now. Look at the Talent Before You Right Now!
Right now, take a look at the speakers, sponsors, historians, archivists, and secretaries you know or have known in your A.A. or 12 Step Fellowship. I’ve been involved with hundreds of them, and you may have been too. Many are talented, experienced, and articulate speakers and, in fact, good instructors. They are also caring, loving, giving people. But what are you hearing from them today?
There are hundreds, probably thousands, and of women and men in the recovery movement who have never studied A.A.’s basic text or learned how to take people through the Twelve Steps in accordance with the Big Book’s own instructions. There are far more who haven’t a clue about A.A.’s history and roots, and haven’t any idea where the recovery program got its ideas. And many of these have never opened an A.A. history book, been to an A.A. history conference, or even cared to learn our history.
Why?
Generally speaking, it’s because many have previously had no resources to work with or with which they cared to work. Sometimes because they just don’t care. Or because they think their hearers won’t laugh, cry, applaud, or want to listen if they use those resources to help others. Or often because most resources will not serve the required purpose.
What are their resources? The Big Book contains virtually no history. Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions contains virtually no history. Conference Approved pamphlets by the dozen tell you nothing significant about history. And the two or three significant A.A. history books either omit the details, omit entire segments of history, or focus on what the writers think or thought AAs should hear, rather than on what actually occurred. And are treatment programs, conferences, and workshops any different?
Ask yourself how much you heard about history in a treatment program or rehab. Are sponsors any different? Ask yourself how much your sponsor talked to you about A.A. history. Are certification courses and facilities teaching even the rudiments of history or the techniques by which the early pioneers sought God and were healed? Ask someone who is certified. Ask them about history, and watch them go blank.
Then there are the “history” books currently proliferating outside the fellowships. Do they talk about God? Do they talk about the Bible? Do they mention Jesus Christ? Do they talk about the literature early AAs read? Do they detail the contributions of such major A.A. influences as Anne Ripley Smith and her journal, the books and teachings of Rev. Sam Shoemaker, the life-changing program of the Oxford Group which underlies the Steps, the devotionals which were a major part of Quiet Time, and even the Bible itself? For it was quite clear that the Book of James, the Sermon on the Mount, and 1 Corinthians 13 were considered absolutely essential to the early program. But how often have you ever heard them read, discussed, or studied in your program or by your conferences or by your sponsor or by any counselor you’ve encountered?
Would Talented Speakers, Sponsors, and Counselors Revolt if Challenged?
Dr. Bob never let a pigeon loose from the hospital without asking him if he believed in God. Then he insisted they get out of bed and accept Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior. In his little known interview in 1939, Dr. Bob told how he read the Bible with each hospitalized newcomer. Have you ever put that historical set of facts to, and asked about them to, a potential speaker, sponsor, or treatment facilitator?
When asked a question about the program, Dr. Bob usually replied: “What does it say in the Good Book?” Have you ever called that fact to the attention of  those we mention? The Big Book states clearly that “God either is, or He isn’t.” Have you ever asked a speaker or instructor if he agrees? Bill and Bob were speaking at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles before thousands of AAs and their families. Bill commented on the “religious element” of A.A. and the need for “Divine Aid.” Have you ever inquired about these? The Big Book says a number of times that its stories were written to tell how, from the writer’s own viewpoint and experience, he “established his relationship with God.” Have you ever asked a speaker or instructor to do likewise? At the Shrine Auditorium talks by Bob and Bill, the entire audience rose in tribute to Dr. Bob. And he succinctly suggested that all “cultivate the habit of prayer” and “study the Bible.” Have you ever asked your teachers about that one? Or if they have ever even heard or talked about the fact?
We now know that A.A.’s many roots included United Christian Endeavor, the great Evangelists like Moody and Sankey, the Salvation Army, the Rescue Missions, the Oxford Group, and even the Young Men’s Christian Associatio. Have you ever asked that these be explained to you? The 12 Step roots included Dr. Carl Jung’s views on “conversion,” Professor William James’s views on the variety of conversion experiences he’d studied. Do your instructors talk about these? Dr. William D. Silkworth told Bill Wilson and Silkworth’s other patients that the Great Physician Jesus Christ could cure them? Have you ever heard that? Have you ever had the Four Absolutes, the Five C’s, Quiet Time, and Conversion explained to you in terms of their A.A. significance? They represent the heart of what Bill codified in the Big Book and Steps from the Oxford Group.
What a Speaker Can Be and Do
The so-called Conference and “circuit”speakers that are entertaining and dynamic attract crowds. How many people have rushed to hear Clancy I., Gene Duffy, June G., Eve, Poor Richard, Geraldine D., Frank Mauser, Earl Husband, Joe McQ., Charlie P., Father Martin, and dozens of others—because these men and women are entertaining and dynamic. I’ve heard them all, and I’ve been entertained. They’ve made me laugh, and laughter is either “the best medicine” or a great help. They’ve made me cry, and emotion is part of needed enthusiasm. They’ve made me admire what they’ve done and what they’ve become. But how many times have you or I heard them talk about the early A.A. fellowship?
Can they? Could they? Will they? Would you have the courage to ask them?
We’re big in A.A. about “love and service.” We claim our “code” is “love and tolerance.” We even insist that our “leaders” are but trusted servants. And in fact, all speakers, sponsors, and counselors are “but trusted servants.” And what do trusted servants do? I’d like to think they do what they are told! But nobody tells these speakers what to say, nor the “staff” at World Services, nor the editors of the AA Grapevine—at least not you or me. Why?
The “servants” are beyond the reach of the masters, and their instructors are long dead and gone. They are peopled or persuaded by professionals, universalists, revisionists, and timid unbelievers. The servants clearly dote on pleasing everyone. If they write a piece of literature like a Daily Reflections, they’d rather get 365 different views from 365 alcoholics, one for each day, than to select from the hundreds of pieces of biblical, prayer, meditation, Quiet Time, and Christian literature which were part and parcel of early A.A.
How Long Will You Wait?
We’ve reached the point in Twelve Step history where there are few, if any, who ever met, talked to, or learned directly from Bill Wilson, Dr. Bob, Anne Smith, Henrietta Seiberling, Sam Shoemaker, Dr. Silkworth, or even A.A. Number Three—Bill Dotson. Speakers cannot speak from experience about these people. But they can learn! And why not tell them you are concerned!
Speakers can, could, and would (if asked) spend the same amount of time looking into A.A. history resources that Joe McQ. and Charlie P. spent in studying the Big Book so that they could explain it and teach it to our members all over the world. And now even these servants have already or are hanging up their jock straps as they play “the last quarter of the game,” as Charlie P. put it to me before he died.
Instead of bemoaning the absence of “old timers” or “elder statesmen” or “people who knew or were sponsored by Bob or Clarence Snyder” or those archivists who have studied and know the archives, why not bring up a new crop? Would you rather listen to Eli Whitney tell you how he invented the cotton gin, or would you find it more instructive if a football star told you how he and his team won the Super Bowl?
Look at the Early Teachers
Our founders were humble. Our founders were students. Our founders were ever on a quest to learn more. Our founders believed in God. Our founders read the Bible. Our founders read all kinds of religious literature. Our founders put their learning to use in directly working to help others with what they had found. Dr. Bob read the Bible three times to refresh his memory before helping others with Bible materials. He circulated the Christian literature he read. Anne Smith was in the trenches, reading her Bible, suggesting literature, and teaching from her journal. So was Henrietta Seiberling. So were Mr. and Mrs. T. Henry Williams. And so was Bill until he got hung up with depressions shortly after he published the Big Book. Bill’s spiritual mentor Rev. Sam Shoemaker never stopped writing, preaching, and teaching. And these, plus Dr. Silkworth, were the people who handed us the most information.
And What About You!
Are you willing to look for speakers, sponsors, and programs that will provide you and others who need help with a full platter of information? Are you willing to read whatever you need to read to learn what you’ve been missing? Are you willing to organize meetings, fellowships, seminars, and conferences that will tell others our history? Are you willing to pass along what you learn? Are you willing to stand up and be counted when someone asks if you believe in God, if you believe in the importance of the Bible to AAs, if Jesus Christ has any place in your heart, and if you attend a church or Bible fellowship or Christian study group?
Are you willing to be a student, a researcher, a learner, a speaker, a teacher, an organizer, and a supporter of the quest to learn the truth and carry it to others in order to help them recover, get well, and be cured?
Wouldn’t you rather promote and pass on information about the program Frank Amos described when he told of the seven-point program in Akron that had produced such astonishing results? It’s all right there for you to see in A.A.’s own DR. BOB and the Oldtimers on page 131. You don’t even have to go to the bookstore or library. Surprise! You can study the Book of James, the Sermon on the Mount, and 1 Corinthians 13 by buying a used Bible and reading it. You don’t even have to go to church or to your rabbi, minister, or priest. Although it could be very helpful!
If you don’t want to be one who does or leads, are you willing to support those who do? Do you realize that in the World Services offices of A.A. itself there are scrap books that contain hundreds of newspaper clippings and articles that tell of the cures early AAs claimed they had received at the hands of their Creator. Have you thought of ordering, reading, or donating one where it will actually help someone? Are you circulating the Co-Founders pamphlet where Bill and Bob told bits of our history in their last major talks?
And, if you found great joy in learning what the Big Book was all about and how to take the Twelve Steps properly, are you willing to start or join a group that does this and studies history as well?
The Bottom Line
Have you helped a drunk today? Do you belong to a group that really carries out its primary purpose of helping the alcoholic who still suffers? Do you vote with your feet when you hear a speaker, a sponsor, or a counselor who talks about “higher powers,” about that strange “spirituality,” about the meetings he attends, about how much he drank, about how much trouble he had, and yet who never mentions whether or not he established a relationship with God and has had something more than a dry drunk or a passive sedentary position in his life?
Think about it. Think how much you can help others if you are able to tell them what God has done for you, what God did for the pioneers, and how they learned about Him from the Good Book!
Dick B., PO Box 837, Kihei, HI 96753-0837; dickb@dickb.com; www.dickb.com; http://drbob.info; 808 874

Gloria Deo

 


Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Dr. Bob's Home - Henrietta Seiberling Gate Lodge - Founders Day Focus

Akron, Ohio AA Founders Day—the Seiberling Gate Lodge—and Dr. Bob’s Home to be Honored by
Norman Vincent Peale People and Guideposts Publications
 By Dick B.
Copyright 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved
AA Founders Day in Akron, Ohio, is always an important and popular event among AAs and alcoholics who flock by the thousands to celebrate the founding there in June of 1935 of Alcoholics Anonymous.
Recently, the excitement has been heightened by the restoration of the Gate Lodge on the huge Stan Hywet Estate and Gardens where Akron’s Seiberling family notable Henrietta Buckler Seiberling lived with her three children (deceased Congressman John Seiberling and his sisters Mary and Dorothy). For it was Mrs. Seiberling who received A.A.’s first effective witnessing contact from Bill Wilson. And she then introduced the two cofounders of AA (Bill Wilson from New York and Dr. Robert H. Smith of Akron).
This year there will be a new Founders Day focus in the Akron area. Famed Christian preacher Dr. Norman Vincent Peale had many important contacts with A.A. and its founders. Dr. Peale was a good friend of A.A.co-founder Bill Wilson. He was a good friend and minister to Dr. William D. Silkworth—the “little doctor who loved drunks.” He was a close friend of Rev. Samuel M. Shoemaker, Jr.—whose Calvary Church in New York hosted many early A.A. Oxford Group meetings, whose Calvary Mission was where Bill W. and Bill’s “sponsor” Ebby Thacher made their decisions for Christ, and whose numerous books and sermons inculcated sound Christian principles into the Twelve Steps that he and Bill Wilson fashioned together in 1938.
This year, Ron Glosser of Akron (recipient of a prestigious Norman Vincent Peale award) and a major personal factor in the recent restoration of the Seiberling Gate House museum,will be on hand to celebrate the growing number of visits to the Gate Lodge, the Stan Hywet Estate, and the Alcoholics Anonymous historical treasures now open for inspection at the Seiberling Lodge.
In addition, Edward Grinnan (Editor and Vice President of Guideposts Publications) will fly to Akron from New York for the 2012 AA Founders Day. Guideposts magazine was a major Norman Vincent Peale publishing entity. Bill Wilson wrote articles for Guideposts and revealed to Dr. Peale (who later told me personally of the) little-known details of the two “conversion experiences” in the Wilson family—experiences that set the stage for A.A.’s “spiritual experience” solution to the ravages of alcoholism.
Ron Glosser and Edward Grinnan will help kick off A.A. Founders Day for 2012 at the Seiberling Gate Lodge; and on Friday, June 8, they will be interviewed on ChristianRecoveryRadio.com by A.A. Historian Dick B. of  Hawaii. The two notables will share on the A.A.—Norman Vincent Peale—Bill Wilson—Dr. Bob Smith—Henrietta Seiberling—and Dr. Bob’s Home as historical treasures in the Akron area. Edward Grinnan is also author of The Promise of Hope: How True Stories of Hope and Inspiration Saved My Life and How They Can Transform Yours (Plus 9 Keys to Powerful Personal Change).
Dr. Peale’s role in A.A. History is enormous. His book The Art of Living was owned, studied, and circulated among Akron AAs by their leader Dr. Bob. See Dick B., Dr. Bob and His Library. Rev Peale’s book The Positive Power of Jesus Christ recounted the message that Bill Wilson’s physician Dr. Silkworth told Wilson--that the “Great Physician” Jesus Christ could cure Bill of his alcoholism. And Peale’s famous book The Power of Positive Thinking pulls together the comments of several vital early A.A. influences.
For example, he quotes A.A. “founder” Professor William James: “The greatest discovery of my generation is that human beings can alter their lives by altering their attitudes of mind.” Peale emphasizes some early A.A. principles and practices—the power of prayer, quiet time with “the Lord,” getting “a deep spiritual experience so that you have something to give people that will help them,” Reading and believing “the Bible as it tells about the goodness of God and the immortality of the soul,” and learning “to have a real fellowship with God and with Jesus Christ.”
Discussing the strange and little understood recovery concept of a “higher power,” Dr. Peale wrote what he later said to me personally in the hour I spent with him: As to Alcoholics Anonymous, “One of their basic principles is that before a person can be helped he must recognize that he is an alcoholic and that of himself he can do nothing; that he has no power within himself; that he is defeated. When he accepts this point of view he is in a position to receive help from other alcoholics and from the “Higher Power”—God. And Dr. Peale told me emphatically in our hour together that he had never doubted that A.A. Bill Wilson’s “Higher Power” was God.
These ideas are among the important ones that Peale admirers Ron Glosser and Edward Grinnan will be sharing with celebrating AAs in Akron this June, 2012 celebration of A.A. Histor.
dickb@dickb.com

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

The Dick B. Interviews of Christian Recovery leaders on Christian Recovery Radio.com

My guest is International Christian Recovery Coalition participant, Father Bill W. of Texas.

Bill is currently Chairman of the Episcopal Diocese of Texas Recovery Committee.

He has been a continuously sober and recovered alcoholic for 40 years. He has been involved in the treatment field for about 40 years. And he was ordained an Episcopal Priest about seven years ago.

Father Bill has held executive posts in many treatment programs which included those in Arizona, Texas, and Louisiana. He then became President and CEO of Austin Recovery--a 250-bed facility--from which he retired recently. In his recovery work, Bill placed emphasis on prayer, meditation, and Quiet Time--helping those already in fellowships like Alcoholics Anonymous to find God.

Father Bill W. actively participates in the International Christian Recovery Coalition Speakers Bureau  (www.ChristianRecoveryCoalition.com). He has spoken at several of our conferences.
About 10 years ago, he began writing articles for the monthly publication Recovery Today.

Bill has become a leader in the Christian Recovery field. And in the Recovery Ministries for the Diocese, he heads two committees--one in Houston and one in Austin. These are currently engaged in organizing their outreach--determining where they want to go, what they want to be, and what their mission statement should be. They will be teaching others about the history of A.A. and the recovery movement, about old-school A.A.'s "Christian fellowship," and about the importance of prayer, meditation, and Quiet Time among those seeking recovery from alcoholism and addiction in the 12-Step arena.