By
Bill W
Copyright
© AA Grapevine, Inc, April
1961
The
phrase "God As We Understand Him" is perhaps the most
important expression to be found in our whole AA vocabulary. Within
the compass of these five significant words there can be included
every kind and degree of faith, together with the positive assurance
that each of us may choose his own. Scarcely less valuable to us are
those supplemental expressions - "A Higher Power" and "A
Power Greater Than Ourselves." For all who deny, or seriously
doubt a deity, these frame an open door over whose threshold the
unbeliever can take his first easy step into a reality hitherto
unknown to him - the realm of faith.
In
AA such breakthroughs are everyday events. They are all the more
remarkable when we reflect that a working faith had once seemed an
impossibility of the first magnitude to perhaps half of our present
membership of three hundred thousand. To all these doubters has come
the great discovery that as soon as they could cast their main
dependence upon a "higher power" - even upon their own AA
groups - they had turned that blind corner which had always kept the
open highway from their view. From this time on - assuming they tried
hard to practice the rest of the AA program with a relaxed and open
mind - an ever deepening and broadening faith, a veritable gift, had
invariably put in its sometimes unexpected and often mysterious
appearance.
We
much regret that these facts of AA life are not understood by the
legion of alcoholics in the world around us. Any number of them are
bedeviled by the dire conviction that if every they go near AA they
will be pressured to conform to some particular brand of faith or
theology. They just don't realize that faith is never a necessity for
AA membership; that sobriety can be achieved with an easily
acceptable minimum of it; and that our concepts of a higher power and
God as we understand Him afford everyone a nearly unlimited choice of
spiritual belief and action.
How
to transmit this good news is one of our most challenging problems in
communication, for which there may be no fast or sweeping answer.
Perhaps our public information services could begin to emphasize this
all-important aspect of AA more heavily. And within our own ranks we
might well develop a more sympathetic awareness of the acute plight
of these really isolated and desperate sufferers. In their aid we can
settle for no less than the best possible attitude and the most
ingenious action that we can muster.
We
can also take a fresh look at the problem of "no faith" as
it exists right on our own doorstep. Though three hundred thousand
did recover in the last twenty-five years, maybe half a million more
have walked into our midst, and then out again. No doubt some were
too sick to make even a start. Others couldn't or wouldn't admit
their alcoholism. Still others couldn't face up to their underlying
personality defects. Numbers departed for still other reasons.
Yet
we can't well content ourselves with the view that all these recovery
failures were entirely the fault of the newcomers themselves. Perhaps
a great many didn't receive the kind and amount of sponsorship they
so sorely needed. We didn't communicate when we might have done so.
So we AA's failed them. Perhaps more often than we think, we still
make no contact at depth with those suffering the dilemma of no
faith.
Certainly
none are more sensitive to spiritual cocksureness, pride and
aggression than they are. I'm sure this is something we too often
forget. In AA's first years I all but ruined the whole undertaking
with this sort of unconscious arrogance. God as I understood Him had
to be for everybody. Sometimes my aggression was subtle and sometimes
it was crude. But either way it was damaging - perhaps fatally so -
to numbers of non-believers. Of course this sort of thing isn't
confined to Twelfth Step work. It is very apt to leak out into our
relationships with everybody. Even now, I catch myself chanting that
same old barrier-building refrain, "Do as I do, believe as I do
- or else!"
Here's
a recent example of the high cost of spiritual pride. A very
tough-minded prospect was taken to his first AA meeting. The first
speaker majored on his own drinking pattern. The prospect seemed
impressed. The next two speakers (or maybe lecturers) each themed
their talks on "God as I understand Him." This could have
been good, too, but it certainly wasn't. The trouble was their
attitude, the way they presented their experience. They did ooze
arrogance. In fact, the final speaker got far overboard on some of
his personal theological convictions. With perfect fidelity, both
were repeating my performance of years before. Quite unspoken, yet
implicit in everything they said, was the same idea - "Folks,
listen to us. We have the only true brand of AA - and you'd better
get it!"
The
new prospect said he'd had it - and he had. His sponsor protested
that this wasn't real AA. But it was too late; nobody could touch him
after that. He also had a first class alibi for yet another bender.
When last heard from, an early appointment with the undertaker seemed
probable.
Fortunately,
such rank aggression in the name of spirituality isn't often seen
nowadays. Yet this sorry and unusual episode can be turned to good
account. We can ask ourselves whether, in less obvious but
nevertheless destructive forms, we are not more subject to fits of
spiritual pride than we had supposed. If constantly worked at, I'm
sure that no kind of self-survey could be more beneficial. Nothing
could more surely increase our communication with each other and with
God.
Many
years ago a so-called "unbeliever" brought me to see this
very clearly. He was an M.D. and a fine one. I met him and his wife
Mary at the home of a friend in a midwestern city. It was purely a
social evening. Our fellowship of alcoholics was my sole topic and I
pretty much monopolized the conversation. Nevertheless, the doctor
and his lady seemed truly interested and he asked many questions. But
one of them made me suspect that he was an agnostic, or maybe an
atheist.
This
promptly triggered me, and I set out to convert him, then and there.
Deadly serious, I actually bragged about my spectacular spiritual
experience of the year before. The doctor mildly wondered if that
experience might not be something other than I thought it was. This
hit me hard, and I was downright rude. There had been no real
provocation; the doctor was uniformly courteous, good humored and
even respectful. Not a little wistfully, he said he often wished he
had a firm faith, too. But plainly enough, I had convinced him of
nothing.
Three
years later I revisited my midwestern friend. Mary, the doctor's
wife, came by for a call and I learned that he had died the week
before. Much affected, she began to speak of him.
His was a noted Boston family, and he'd been Harvard educated. A brilliant student, he might have gone on to fame in his profession. He could have enjoyed a wealthy practice and a social life among old friends. Instead, he had insisted on being a company doctor in what was a strife-torn industrial town. When Mary had sometimes asked why they didn't go back to Boston, he would take her hand and say, "Maybe you are right, but I can't bring myself to leave. I think the people at the company really need me."
His was a noted Boston family, and he'd been Harvard educated. A brilliant student, he might have gone on to fame in his profession. He could have enjoyed a wealthy practice and a social life among old friends. Instead, he had insisted on being a company doctor in what was a strife-torn industrial town. When Mary had sometimes asked why they didn't go back to Boston, he would take her hand and say, "Maybe you are right, but I can't bring myself to leave. I think the people at the company really need me."
Mary
then recalled that she had never known her husband to complain
seriously about anything, or to criticize anyone bitterly. Though he
appeared to be perfectly well, the doctor had slowed down in his last
five years. When Mary prodded him to go out evenings, or tried to get
him to the office on time, he always came up with a plausible and
good-natured excuse. Not until his sudden last illness did she know
what all this while he had carried about a heart condition that could
have done him in at any moment. Except for a single doctor on his own
staff, no one had an inkling. When she reproached him about this, he
simply said, "Well, I could see no good in causing people to
worry about me - especially you, my dear."
This
was the story of a man of great spiritual worth. The hallmarks were
plain to be seen: humor and patience, gentleness and courage,
humility and dedication, unselfishness and love - a demonstration I
might never come near to making myself. This was the man I had chided
and patronized. This was the "unbeliever" I had presumed to
instruct!
Mary
told us this story more than twenty years ago. Then, for the first
time, it burst in upon me how very dead faith can be - when minus
responsibility. The doctor had an unwavering belief in his ideals.
But he also practiced humility, wisdom and responsibility. Hence his
superb demonstration.
My
own spiritual awakening had given me a built-in faith in God - a gift
indeed. But I had been neither humble nor wise. Boasting of my faith,
I had forgotten my ideals. Pride and irresponsibility had taken their
place. By so cutting off my own light, I had little to offer my
fellow alcoholics. At last I saw why many had gone away - some of
them forever.
Therefore,
faith is more than our greatest gift; its sharing with others is our
greatest responsibility. So may we of AA continually seek the wisdom
and the willingness by which we may well fulfill that immense trust
which the Giver of all perfect gifts has placed in our hands.
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