Q
- What purposes do the Twelve Concepts for World Services serve?
A
-"The Concepts to be discussed in the following pages are
primarily an interpretation of AA's world service structure. They
spell out the traditional practices and the Conference charter
principles that relate the component parts of our world structure
into a working whole. Our Third Legacy manual is largely a document
of procedure. Up to now the Manual tells us how to operate our
service structure. But there is considerable lack of detailed
information, which would tell us why the structure has developed as
it has and why its working parts are related together in the fashion
that our Conference and General Service Board charters provide.
"These
Twelve Concepts therefore represent an attempt to put on paper the
why of our service structure in such a fashion that the highly
valuable experience of the past and the conclusions that we have
drawn from it cannot be lost.
"These
Concepts are no attempt to freeze our operation against needed
change. They only describe the present situation, the forces and
principles that have molded it. It is to be remembered that in most
respects the Conference charter can be readily amended. This
interpretation of the past and present can, however, have a high
value for the future. Every oncoming generation of service workers
will be eager to change and improve our structure and operations.
This is good. No doubt change will be needed. Perhaps unforeseen
flaws will emerge. These will have to be remedied.
But
along with this very constructive outlook, there will be bound to be
still another, a destructive one. We shall always be tempted to throw
out the baby with the bathwater. We shall suffer the illusion that
change, any plausible change, will necessarily represent progress.
When so animated, we may carelessly cast aside the hard won lesions
of early experience and so fall back into many of the great errors of
the past.
Hence,
a prime purpose of these Twelve Concepts is to hold the experience
and lessons of the early days constantly before us. This should
reduce the chance of hasty and unnecessary change. And if alterations
are made that happen to work out badly, then it is hoped that these
Twelve Concepts will make a point of safe return." (GSC©,
1960)
Bill
W
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