Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Orders from A.A.?


A.A. Authorities, Directors, Managers, Conference or Board Leaders Give You an Order or Tell You What You Can’t Do, Say, Discuss, or Read

Some Words of Comfort for Those Who Receive Such Messages

By Dick B.

© 2014 Anonymous. All rights reserved

[AAs seldom appear at meetings or offices looking for a scrap! Many are attending meetings not only to overcome their drinking problems, but also to escape the miserable consequences of their own excessive drinking. Even better, they’s like a new life. They want a way out. They don’t want a way into the boxing ring. Yet scarcely a week goes by that we don’t receive heart-wringing emails, letters, visits, or phone calls from some fellowship member who has encountered a purported authority or “bleeding deacon” at an A.A. office, group, or meeting who has just told them what they can or can’t read. What they can or can’t say. What they can’t bring to a meeting. What they can’t name their group or meeting. Or that or they will be denied an A.A. listing because some office manager, secretary, or clerk asserts “authority” that supposedly says it violates some Tradition or is not Conference-approved. Of course you can always vote with your feet and attend some other meeting, group, or office. You may also get a coffee pot, take it and your resentment out the door, and form your own meeting. I’ve been at meetings where police were called, fist-fights occurred, insults were hurled, and shouting had become the norm. There has even been A.A. backed-litigation instituted.

But don’t you really want peace, freedom, friendship, help, and victory over the ravages of alcoholism?  We have yet to see an armored vehicle, a machine gun, or tear gas. But the consequences of riotous behavior may be getting drunk, getting disgusted, getting mauled, or getting as far from A.A. as your feet will carry you.

However, overcoming alcoholism and its consequences may be your objective, or if fear and shame and anger are ruling your life, or if you haven’t yet learned to cease drinking, trust God, clean house, and turn your attention to helping someone still suffering, your time has come.] And here are some thoughts from A.A. literature that may help:

“This Is Life for Us; You Can’t Keep Us Out.”

“Tradition Nine states: ‘A.A., as such, ought never to be organized, but we may create service boards or committees directly responsible to those they serve.’ . . .

. . .

What we really mean, of course, is that A.A. can never have an organized direction or government. . . .

            . . . It [Alcoholics Anonymous] does not at any point conform to the pattern of a government. Neither its General Service Conference, its General Service Board, nor the humblest group committee can issue a single directive to an A.A. member and make it stick, let alone hand out any punishment. . . . Groups have tried to expel members, but the banished have come back to sit in the meeting place, saying, ‘This is life for us; you can’t keep us out.’ . . . An A.A. may take advice or suggestions from more experienced members, but he surely will not take orders. . . .

            One would think that A.A.’s Headquarters and General Service Conference would be exceptions. Sure the people there would have to have some authority. But long ago Trustees and staff members alike found they could do no more that make suggestions, and very mild ones at that. . . . We recognize that we cannot dictate to fellow members, individually or collectively.

            . . . Great suffering and great love are A.A.’s disciplinarians; we have no others.”

[Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age

(New York: Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc., 1957), 118-20]

Gloria Deo

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Celebrate Hope at Hope by the Sea: Christ-Centered Addiction Treatment


Celebrate Hope at Hope by the Sea

 Christ-Centered Addiction Treatment


 

By Dick B.

© 2014 Anonymous. All rights reserved

 

A Few Words about Our Review of Christian Recovery Facilities

 

My son Ken and I formed the International Christian Recovery Coalition in July of 2009 (www.ChristianRecoveryCoalition.com); and that same month, we held a conference on the grounds of Hope by the Sea in San Juan Capistrano, California, at the invitation of its staff member Bobby Nicholl. The Coalition is an informal fellowship of participating Christian recovery leaders, workers, newcomers, and members of the public who see the role that God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible played in the recovery movement and can play today for those afflicted alcoholics and addicts who have suffered long enough and want God’s help. The Coalition is Bible-friendly, recovery-friendly, and 12 Step-friendly; and it today has participants in all 50 states and more than 15 brother and sister countries.

 

But the story of healing by the power of God which played such a vital role in the origins of the recovery movement from about 1850 forward surged with Christian organizations and individuals who turned their attention to helping the down and outers recover from their misery and troubles. Those who labored the hardest and produced the most effective results included the Young Men’s Christian Association; Gospel Rescue Missions; great evangelists like Dwight Moody, Ira Sankey, and F. B. Meyer;  the Salvation Army; Congregationalism; and the Young People’s Society of Christian Endeavor. Beginning in the early 1920’s, A First Century Christian Fellowship (later to become known as “the Oxford Group”) made contributions to aspects of some recovery efforts.

 

Out of these efforts grew the successes of the Christian recovery people, based primarily on several simple principles: (1) Cessation of all use of liquor and abuse of drugs. (2) Belief in God and coming to Him by accepting His Son Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior (which was known in early Akron A.A. as making a “full surrender”). (3) Obedience to God’s will. (4) Growth in understanding and service through Bible study, prayer meetings, “Quiet Times,” and the reading of Christian literature. (5) Helping other suffering alcoholics and addicts find a way out by the same method.

 

But the scene changed. Focus began to shift more and more toward battling liquor, eliminating saloons, Prohibition, and medical-psychological remedies. Then came A.A., with its focus on God and relying on Him for cure of alcoholism, and simple principles much like those of the First Century Christians as seen in the Book of Acts, such as Christian Fellowship, Bible study, prayer, Quiet Time, restitution, and helping others.

 

But the scene changed again not long after A.A. was founded. Medical models, counseling, dual addiction treatment, secular theories about how to prevent relapses and how to help patients recover, the funding of recovery with insurance backing, the erecting of huge treatment institutions, and focus on “evidence-based” recovery rather than “faith-centered” recovery began to dominate the recovery scene. And reliance on God began to slip through the cracks. Hostility toward religion, promotion of atheism, efforts to suppress talk of God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible appeared. And thousands upon thousands of suffering Christians were baffled by the new “believe in anything or nothing” attitude that was emerging.

 

Today, the Christian recovery movement is again charging ahead. We have spoken at many 12 Step and Christian recovery meetings; met their leaders; noted the degree of focus on the power and love of God, on God’s son Jesus Christ, and on the Bible; and found a number of fellowships, leaders, and facilities which are involved in helping Christians and potential Christians(!) seek healing and a new life through reliance on the Creator of the heavens and the earth.

 

Celebrate Hope at Hope by the Sea is Today’s Subject

 

Here is the description that Celebrate Hope at Hope by the Sea provides of its Christian treatment program:

 

Celebrate Hope is a Christian residential drug and alcohol treatment center located in the beautiful coastal community San Juan Capistrano, California. Our faith-focused mission is to minister the love of Jesus Christ to those who are in pain and are suffering from drug and alcohol addiction. Christ centered treatment is the core component of our program, along with Celebrate Recovery® which is a ministry of Saddleback Church.

[“Celebrate Hope at Hope by the Sea” pamphlet/brochure/folder--consulted 8/17/2014]

 

As I mentioned earlier, my son Ken and I have visited the main office of Hope by the Sea and have spoken at a conference held there. And our principal contact was and is Bobby Nicholl, Admissions and Intervention staff member of Celebrate Hope at Hope by the Sea. His address is PO Box 1480, San Juan Capistrano, CA 92693. His email address is Bobby@celebrateanewlife.com. He has a strong Christian background and long experience in treatment industry. And he is welcoming, congenial, and articulate in his conversations with those that call him for help at 800.631.7753. Bobby freely offers answers to all kinds of recovery-related questions and recommends alternative choices for treatment. And we will let him tell you the rest if you choose to call.

 

Important Features of Their Program

 

What has struck me about a number of Christian treatment or Christian recovery residences is how much of the early A.A. focus on the Bible, salvation, prayer, quiet time, and Christian literature is not present. Sometimes there is just a weekly Bible study. Sometimes a chaplain is on call.  But often there is little about the renewed mind, fellowship, witnessing, and healing.

 

In contrast, I believe the Celebrate Hope at Hope by the Sea Christian treatment program comes much closer to hitting the mark. Their pamphlet/brochure/folder I quoted earlier also states:

 

What We Offer: (1) Christ-centered treatment. (2) Residential treatment. (3) One on One Therapy. (4) Group Therapy. (5) Intervention Services. (6) Life Recovery Bible. (7) Boundaries Workshop. (8) Celebrate Recovery®. (9) Worship at Saddleback. (10) Daily Christian Devotionals. (11) Individual Christian Counseling.

 

The program is very strong, especially considering its similarities to the early A.A.’s “Christian fellowship” program in Akron which was focused on living in the homes, breaking bread together, Bible study, group prayer, optional worship at church, and use of Christian devotionals. Celebrate Hope at Hope by the Sea’s individual Christian counseling--which could allow for discussion of healing, Bible, sanctification, witnessing, and fellowship with like-minded believers—particularly caught our attention.

 

Gloria Deo

Saturday, August 16, 2014

Webinars That Will Target "Training the Trainers"--Those Providing "Hands-on" Work with Suffering Alcoholics and Addicts


Our Webinar Programs Target “Training the Trainers"—Those Recovered Leaders Providing “Hands-on” Work with Suffering Alcoholics and Addicts

 

By Dick B.

© 2014 Anonymous. All rights reserved

 

Why Short Trainer Webinars Can Help

 

[Who are the “Christian leaders and workers in the recovery arena”—the “trainers”—we so often speak of? What information and training about the roots of A.A. are they seeking today? Do they understand and notice the emphasis today in A.A. General Service Conference-approved literature on God, the Creator, the Maker, the deity specifically described from the Bible and incorporated in each of the four editions of Alcoholics Anonymous, the “basic text” of the Society of Alcoholics Anonymous (affectionately known as “the Big Book”).]

 

Christian leaders and workers in the recovery arena should want a full and accurate body of knowledge coming from the basic ideas early AAs studied in the Bible--basic ideas stemming from their reliance on a vital religious experience enabling them to “find or rediscover God.”

 

Christian leaders and workers in the recovery arena should be ready to recognize the gap between the original Akron A.A. “Christian fellowship” program and the Christian origins of A.A. from the 1850’s forward. They should understand that carrying the A.A. message today can be much more effective when one embraces A.A.’s roots, its formative days in the summer of 1935 when the first three got sober, and the Akron A.A. “Christian fellowship” program founded in 1935.

 

They should also learn how to harmonize the roles played by God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible in the highly-successful, original “old-school” A.A. with today’s 12-Step recovery programs.

 

They need to remember that the A.A. of today is open to anyone who has a desire to quit drinking. And that today’s A.A. admits those of many faiths (including Christianity!) as well as those who have no belief in anything at all. They need to understand both “the new version of the program, now the ‘Twelve Steps’” Bill W. included in the first edition of the Big Book published in April 1939 [Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, 162], and “old-school” Akron A.A. founded in June 1935 and summarized by Frank Amos in February 1938 [DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, 131].

 

Their approach to recovery should be grounded on love and tolerance, producing love and service. And they should understand that the tolerance that today’s A.A. values so highly should preclude intolerance toward those who espouse “old-school” A.A. and its emphasis on surrender to God by accepting Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior, obedience to God, spiritual growth through prayer and Bible study, and heavy emphasis on helping others get well.

 

The A.A. message of today that emphasizes lack of belief in God or belief in anything at all is simply a script written to please those who don’t tolerate, actually fight to keep the full A.A. story (“the rest of the story”) from, and/or don’t like, AAs who want all the facts about their Fellowship today. The AAs who want the facts often don’t have “a dog in the race” when it comes to talk about “spirituality,” “higher powers,” and the lack of need for belief. These same, present-day AAs who want the facts may be able to tolerate nonsense gods and self-made religion. They may even tolerate criticism of the Bible, God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the early A.A. “Christian fellowship” in Akron. But scores of them are more and more offended by remarks in meetings to the effect that they can’t talk about their own relationship with the Creator, their own Bible-based prayers, and their own choice of how and where to worship.

 

Christian leaders and workers in the recovery arena may joyfully report that, when A.A. cofounder Dr. Bob was asked a question about the program, his usual reply was: “What does it say in the Good Book?” [DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, 144]. Dr. Bob said that he didn’t write the Twelve Steps and had nothing to do with the writing of them. But he said he believed the studies, efforts, and teachings that had been going on in the Good Book since 1935 certainly must have influenced the writing of the Twelve Steps. [The Co-Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous (P-53), 14].

 

In fact, there are many ideas and practices concerning God and prayer meetings in “old-school” A.A. that are just as relevant for some in today’s recovery scene as they were when originally reported many years ago in A.A. General Service Conference-approved literature.

 

No Intent Here to Return A.A.’s Two Million Membership Back to Early A.A.’s Akron A.A.’s Christian Fellowship of the 1930’s

 

The foregoing is not a plea for the return of A.A. to its Christian roots and practices of 1935. Nor is it a plea for making others in today’s A.A. like phrases in the Big Book and other A.A. General Service Conference-approved literature such as Creator, Maker, Heavenly Father, Master, Christ, “faith without works is dead,” “Thy will be done,” and other actual quotes or paraphrases of biblical ideas.

 

Rather, it is a factual statement that Christian leaders and workers in the recovery arena today (the “trainers”) often want and need to know the whole A.A. story and to impart it to trainees. They need to keep love and tolerance in the fore as the A.A. code this very day. And they need to express, and show newcomers that newcomers have a choice to hear and believe, the truth-- without fear of restraint, prohibition, criticism, or rebuke.


The Trainers, the Newcomers, Troubles, and Unique Needs

 

Anyone who endeavors to work with newcomer alcoholics and addicts quickly discovers how “sick” such a suffering soul may be. Some may call his deeds and their consequences “sin.” Some may see but not recognize deep depression. For sure, the trainer will hear the sobs, note the terror, witness isolation and loneliness, and even recognize the newcomer’s continuing obsession, craving, and yielding to ever-present temptation.

 

There is usually confusion, forgetfulness, disorientation, guilt, shame, and even remorse in the mind of the newcomer, Then there is trouble—trouble with police, jail, prison, probation, parole, courts, attorneys, divorce, family battles, custody battles, debts, unemployment, failures to appear, suspension of licenses and insurance, and delinquent taxes and tax returns. The pile seems insurmountable. Relief may be seen by the suffering soul as a lost cause—as a very long tunnel with no end. And mental stamina for the newcomer is often taxed to the hilt.

 

Sponsors, pastors, lawyers, speakers, physicians, counselors, treatment programs, and other care-giving efforts may not be the specialty or study subject of a trainer. But they inevitably are part of the scene. And if the trainer is to comfort and help the newcomer, the trainer may be able to point him to the directions he must take to find the exit. The trainer may be able to give him the boost or recommendation—whether the scene is in a hospital, a court, a jail, treatment, or in a meeting-- toward a recovered and useful life, and bring him into fellowship with others who have made the grade. In fact, that trainer is very apt, based on his own experience, to see a dozen areas where he can be of service to God and to the newcomer, and thus hold the up the pamphlet, the signpost, the Bible, or the Big Book that maps out the recovery route.

 

“Old-School” A.A. (Featuring the A.A. “Christian Fellowship” of Akron) Can Be the Trainer’s First-rate Helper in the Process

 

Training as Individuals, Groups, Meetings, even Classes?

 

After 25 years of research, travels, interviews, conferences, studies, trips to archives and libraries in many states both near and far, my son Ken and I assembled and even donated thousands of records and manuscripts and books to such excellent repositories as the Wilson House in East Dorset, Vermont; North Congregational Church of St. Johnsbury, Vermont (location of the “Dr. Bob Core Library”); the Seiberling Gate Lodge in Akron, Ohio; and “the Shoemaker Room” in Calvary Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. But those repositories are not readily accessible or even generally reported to the millions of members who flow through today’s A.A.

 

Through the years, plenty of conferences have hosted our own presentations of A.A. history and Christian Recovery. But that meant our spending thousands of dollars for travel and accommodations, for meals and lodging, and usually for just a short weekend period. The facts were presented. But not in one geographical location. They were often embodied in books, articles, radio talks, and even phone conversations. Thousands of resources. But often as unknown as the rest of the A.A. story itself which is so essential to full recovery today.

 

Reading A.A. and other recovery-related literature; watching movies, films, videos and plays that touched on A.A.; and even traveling afar did not produce harmonious, reliable, complete “old-school” A.A. that told members where they came from, or where explanations could be found and documented. Nor where the spiritual ideas came from. Nor how the principles and practices had developed—even though often-conflicting, confusing, acrimonious, incomplete, and highly-subjective writings or talks have begun to abound based on the opinions or guesses of those interested in A.A. and its history. In fact, there may well be more groundless “wisdom of the rooms” being passed around today than carefully researched and reported facts.

 

My son Ken and I developed two major solutions for helping to fill the information gap and disseminating explanatory resources that would provide answers for those who wanted information about missing parts of the story of A.A.’s history and its ingredients and/or based their recovery journey on the power of God.

 

One solution meant broadcasting as widely as possible facts about:

 

1.      (a) A.A. itself; (b) First Century Christianity; (c) the Christian upbringing of A.A. cofounders Bill W. and Dr. Bob; (d) the organizations and leaders who contributed some very simple biblical and Christian recovery ideas about abstinence, resisting temptation, turning to God for help, obeying God's will, growing in understanding through prayer and Bible study, and (e) the appropriate message to be conveyed to those who still suffered. Those simple A.A. Christian beginnings were tops in priority. Also how the first three got sober; and the principles and practices of the first recovery program of the Akron A.A. “Christian fellowship.”

 

The body of accurate, pertinent facts is immense. Yet the vast majority of these facts—particularly those highlighting the roles played by God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible in early A.A.’s astonishing successes—have still not reached or impacted in a significant way either the professional, academic, government, treatment, medical, religious, or the alcoholism and addiction trenches. And those facts have certainly not received much careful study.

 

And we have summarized for you the large quantity of resources we have gathered. They are presented in my 46 published titles and over 1,700 articles. See www.DickB.com. They are also presented on our new website: www.AAHistoryChristianRecovery.com.

 

2.      The story of what has been missing from today’s 12 Step scene. The limited dissemination of what has been seen or heard from our efforts.

 

Tens of thousands have visited our websites, our blogs, our newsletters, our radio shows, our conferences, seminars, and our writings. But the complete facts, the full details, the needed tools for recovery, the application of “old-school” A.A. in today's "new version of the program . . . the ‘12 Steps,’” have still not impacted the majority of today’s A.A. members because of a prevailing attitude of censorship and limitation “in the rooms” that has produced an information blockade.

 

Consequently, Christian leaders and workers in the recovery arena (the “trainers”), the trainees, the drunks and addicts still suffering in the streets, and the message carriers have been much limited in outreach.

 

Only when today’s suffering, afflicted people are taught what A.A. cofounder Bill W.’s friend Ebby learned and passed along to Bill—the message that God had done for Ebby what he could not do for himself—will a joining of “old-school” principles and practices of 1935 and thereafter in Akron seem consistent or applicable with a seemingly-fixed conception of the “inclusiveness” and “broad highway” that A.A. literature has promoted for decades.

 

Ending the Information Blackout and Putting Together “the Rest of the Story”

 

There has been a repeated exchange of opinions and speculations as to the importance of A.A.’s roots and successes in the early days. There have been repeated discussions of, and requests for information about, “old-school” A.A. as seen in Akron’s “Christian fellowship” of 1935 and later; A.A.’s demonstrable biblical roots; and the vast body of Oxford Group, Shoemaker, Carl Jung, and Dr. Silkworth facts and records still lying in some assembled, albeit, accurate puddle of viewpoints and objections.

 

That end result has given rise to our forthcoming webinars. They will gather those Christian leaders and workers in the recovery arena (the “trainers”) who really want to learn and pass on to trainees, newcomers, and others “the rest of the story” about A.A. effectiveness. Accurate accounts—when beefed up with where A.A. came from, the varying forms it has taken, and how to report “the rest of the story”—will present to AAs and those wanting God’s help the role of God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible in the recovery arena.

 

We plan to present the long-missing or unreported facts in short webinars. Small chunks of facts about A.A. history will be presented in a form that will be easily understood, easily remembered, easily passed along, and easily retained for other and later use.

 

That's our objective; and now you know! Let’s keep it thorough. Let’s keep it accurate and truthful. Let’s keep it simple in format. And let’s allow Christian leaders and workers the world over to see and evaluate what they may wish to incorporate in their work with others today—the long record of what A.A. was willing to learn and did learn and apply when it was founded..

 

Gloria Deo

Thursday, August 14, 2014

Digestible Bites of Recovery Facts Presented in Our New, Group Presentations

Now that 25 years of research has been completed, the emphasis will be on teaching the actual facts--the "rest of the story", and the ignored links--in digestible bites. The basic documentation is available in 46 titles, 1700 articles, blogs, newsletters, and personal conversations. But the wide dissemination now will allow viewers, speakers, diverse training folks, and leaders to conduct their own programs in their own ways, but to have access to regular input from Dick and Ken.
 
How? Radio, videos, webinars, interviews, and ample, personal communications, facebook, twitter, and other media. Expensive travel to conferences will be replaced largely by specific, brief, topical segments that will help trainers, help trainees, enhance recovery, and help others.
 
Mindless meeting chatter, war stories, and entertaining circuit speakers can give place to groups that learn chunks of recovery facts, ask questions, receive pointers to resources, and make comments. Fellowship, Big Book study, Step study, history study, and information about the role played and that can be played by God, His Son Jesus Christ, the Bible will enable old school A.A. to supplement the experience of members in helping others with today's spiritual tools.
 
No change in A.A. Just enabling serious recovery facts to beef up learning at a local, personal, nationwide level.

Sunday, August 10, 2014

Our Forthcoming Webinars


Our Forthcoming Webinars

Bill W., Dr. Bob, and the Cure of Alcoholism: The Rest of the Story

By Dick B.

 © 2014 Anonymous. All rights reserved

Brief Webinar Sessions to “Train the Trainers” Through Local, Small, Recovery Leadership Groups that Condense 100 Years of Available, Adaptable, “Old-School” A.A.’s Vanishing  and Priceless Recovery Treasures and Victories We Need to Know

A Word or Two about How This Series Can Change Individuals, Groups, Repeated Relapses, and Sluggish Recoveries

Even before their Society was founded in 1935, suffering alcoholics and many care givers believed that alcoholism could be cured by the power of God. They believed recovery itself could also be substantially enhanced. They believed revolving door relapses could be prevented. And they believed an important relationship with God could be established to enable the afflicted to be healed, to guide them in the steps of Jesus Christ, and to achieve all that it means to become a child of the living Creator.

For more than 25 years, Dick B. (a long-sober, Christian, active in A.A.) and his son Ken B. (a Bible scholar, ordained Christian minister, and communications specialist) have traveled and spoken widely, researched, read, interviewed, and published. They’ve reported to those afflicted with and affected by alcoholism what they have been missing in recovery and healing. Many, if not most, have scarcely learned the origins, principles, and history of their fellowships. Many have wearily listened to distorted or misrepresented chatter amounting to the wisdom of the rooms. Many have never heard, met, or read the writings of dedicated Christian recovery leaders and workers. Nor realized their immense influence on early recovery successes.

Considering today’s rampant recidivism and relapse histories, many an afflicted person has had more than enough misery and trouble despite continuing in a downward spiral. One which, a century ago, was arrested by experienced, compassionate, Christian leaders whose main focus then was helping the desperate down and outers, and the derelicts unable to or unsuccessful in changing their lives.

Despite the billions spent on alcoholism and addiction problems, many suffering souls have been detoured from the original A.A. path to a relationship with God. They have often neither learned much about or believed in the power of God, the sacrifice of His Son Jesus Christ, and the road map to God’s solutions in the Bible. They have been deprived of the rest of the story of Christian recoveries. They have never learned or applied the principles and practices of the early Akron A.A. “Christian fellowship” members—principles and practices that many call “old-school” A.A. Principles and practices paving the way even during first century Christianity.

A gaping information hole exists today, largely because--in little more than 75 years of existence, their fellowships have often side-stepped or even obscured the original “God” part of recovery and opened their doors to atheists and agnostics; focused on the idolatrous idea that some nebulous, fictional, “higher power” can somehow perform the miraculous. They have often been side-tracked into believing that God, His Son Jesus Christ, the Bible, clergyman, church, and religion are just unneeded—even offensive--nuisances that clutter up a divine solution and replaced it with a simplistic blind faith. A dubious conclusion that twelve, suggested, secular steps can, without the power of God, produce an understanding of, and affinity to. God’s love, power, forgiveness, healing, grace, and mercy. Yet emphasizing that today’s members can be atheists, agnostics, unbelievers, or side-standers in the vital march to find a spiritual awakening that will remove their affliction.

The “Rest of the Story” in Small, Digestible, Webinars--Shared by Us with You-- Who Are and Very Much Want to Be Informed Trainers in the Trenches

The message that God can do for the alcoholic what he cannot do for himself no Longer Requires Expensive Conferences and Eloquent Circuit Speakers. It’s about Bringing to Your Leadership Gatherings by Webinars a Piece-by-Piece Body of Facts that Talk of What God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible Enabled Early AAs to Utilize and Apply and Can Still be Harmonized for Today’s Afflicted the Key Elements of Depending on God for Recovery, for Relapse Prevention, for Healing, for Fellowship, and for Spiritual Growth

·         Some Trial Run Plans for our brief Webinars:

Each be brief. Each will be free. Each will have only a limited number of participants.  Those who want to be taught and teach accurate information. Each will be a recovered Christian group leader, Christian recovery fellowship leader, recovery pastor, recovered Christian treatment program leader, or a Christian recovery residential program leader of groups of Christians in recovery. Participants may be Christian recovery professionals who are counselors or interventionists or recovered Christians or who are speakers, or are sponsors who want to found and conduct Christian recovery groups or who already belong to a recovery fellowship. They may include a group leader, speaker, or sponsor—in a gathering which relies on God for help.

·         Selection of Participants for the small groups.

We will contact three or four leaders who have expressed a desire to train. learn,  and train others; or we will welcome such leaders as simply want to participate in the seminars. Ken B. will contact or should be contacted by those desiring to participate; and Ken may be reached at 808 275 4945 or Ken@condo.gmail.com. We will then select and notify participants of the webinar, its topic, and its timing.

·         Examples of Topics that will be taught.

We will select a topic or series of topics related to a particular part of the rest of the story. An example is set forth below.

·         Actual Conduct of a Webinar.

First, Dick B. and Ken B. will present a brief training discussion on the particular webinar  topic. They will invite comments from participants. And the webinar will conclude with suggestions from the participants or the presenters.

·         Documentation of the training facts presented.  We have published 46 books, over 1700 articles, blogs and newsletters, and comments. And we have, as well, conducted radio shows, videos, and conferences. And all materials have been carefully described and documented in footnotes and published records. These will be mentioned and certainly made available for reference but not be part of the brief webinars

 

·         An example of a webinar topic: “The Christian upbringing in Vermont of Bill W.”:

 

Includes The East Dorset Congregational Church in Vermont; the Wilson family’s contributions to, participation in, and support of the church. Grandpa Willie Wilson (the alcoholic) and his vital religious experience on Mount Aeolus where he was cured of alcoholism for the remaining eight years of his life. Bill’s attendance at both the church and at its Sunday school. Bill’s recollection of sermons, hymns, temperance meetings, revival meetings, and conversions, as well as family religious events. Bill’s attendance at nearby Burr and Burton Seminary in Manchester, Vermont. Bill’s required attendance at daily chapel—sermon, reading of Scripture, hymn, prayer meeting. Bill’s presidency of Burr and Burton Young Men’s Christian Association. Bill’s four year Bible study course at Burr and Burton. The required attendance by scholars at services and events of the nearby Manchester Congregational Church. Bill’s turning his back on God at graduation time when his girl-friend Bertha Bamford died unexpectedly in surgery.

 

·         Brevity of webinar is supplemented by the well-documented facts available on our new website (www.aahistoryChristianrecovery.com); in our books, articles, websites, blogs, radio shows, newsletters, and many posted resources. The webinars themselves are presented to highlight the topics trainers need to hear, research, learn, and teach.

·         Many other topics will be put in webinar form as time permits, resources are available, requests are made, and progress is evident.

 

Gloria Deo

Friday, August 1, 2014

So you'd like to form a recovery group. . . .


So You’d Like to Form a Recovery Group. . . .

Dick B.

This introductory snippet will be brief. And we’d like to have you begin by telling us why you want to form a recovery group, what you are opposed to, what you favor, and your suggestions.

Day in and day out, we receive phone calls in Maui (808 874 4876) or emails (dickb@dickb.com) at our residence.

In which the caller says he wants to start a recovery group and asks what to do.

We have a number of books and guides that can be helpful and often send along some of these to be read by the inquirer. But this is a grass roots series of articles

We will start with several suggestions and questions: (1) What people do you want to be members of the group? AAs or NAs or believers? (2) Are you willing to ask a small group of friends, some folks from your church, some “members” you’ve met in A.A. or in treatment or in prison or in church or at school or at work? (3) Is your purpose to learn how to help those who still suffer? (4) Are you willing to acquire, read, and discuss the tools that truthfully report the facts—the newly reprinted First Edition of the A.A. Big Book, The Co-Founders of A.A. Pamphlet P-53, DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, Alcoholics Anonymous Comes of Age, and The Language of the Heart? (5) Are you beginning this quest because angry at a member, a sponsor, a leader, or motivated by anger with a meeting or a member or a church or at a treatment program, or the fellowship? (6) Are you willing to select as the leader of the group someone who is known for his or her knowledge of the Steps, the Big Book, the real origins of A.A. ideas, the religious ideas that produced A.A., the parts of the Bible like the Book of James, Jesus’s Sermon on the Mount, and 1 Corinthians 13 that were the heart of the basic ideas of early A.A.? (7) Will you freely read, study, and discuss “non-Conference-approved literature” that helps understanding of A.A., its origins, its co-founders, its original program, and the substantial changes and new version of the program adopted four years after A.A. was founded? (8) Are you willing to start with a small group?

Again! Let us hear your thoughts, ideas, and suggestions before you ask us questions or begin to form your group.