Alcoholics Anonymous and the Bible - 3 books for you
A.A. and the Bible
Three Excellent Books for Your Holiday
Season
All three are now available in print on demand and electronic form
www.dickb.com/titles.shtml
Dick B.
Copyright 2012
Anonymous. All rights reserved
At long last, AAs and Christians in recovery are recognizing
the importance in recovery of what Dr. Bob said in his last major talk about
the major importance of the Bible in A.A. recovery.
In The Co-Founders of
Alcoholics Anonymous: Biographical Sketches Their Last Major Talks, A.A.
cofounder Dr. Bob is quoted as follows on page 13:
In early A.A. days. . . our stories
didn’t amount to anything to speak of. When we started in on Bill D. [A.A.
Number Three], we had no Twelve Steps either; we had no Traditions.
But we were
convinced that the answer to our problems was in the Good Book.
To some of us older ones, the parts
that we found absolutely essential were the Sermon on the Mount, the thirteenth
chapter of First Corinthians, and the Book of
James.
Page 14 underlines the continuity of the Bible’s importance.
It quotes Dr. Bob as follows:
It wasn’t until 1938 that the
teachings and efforts and studies that had been going on were crystallized in
the form of the Twelve Steps. I didn’t write the Twelve Steps. I had nothing to
do with the writing of them.
We already had the basic ideas,
though not in terse and tangible form. We got them, as I said, as a result of
our study of the Good Book.
The “Good Book,” of course, was the Bible that both Dr. Bob
and Bill Wilson had studied during their Christian upbringing in Vermont, in
church, Sunday school, in their homes, in the daily chapel at their academies,
in the Young Men’s Christian Association, and – in Bill’s case – in the
four-year Bible study course he took while a student at Burr and Burton
Seminary in Manchester, Vermont.
These facts first propelled me into a study of A.A.’s Bible
roots. They caused me to research what Dr. Bob and Bill and Bob’s wife and
Henrietta Seiberling and T. Henry and Clarace Williams—as well as many pioneers
in their First Edition Big Book Stories—said about how and when they read and
stressed the Bible and about which portions were of top priority for recovery.
As a result, I published three books which have become
landmark guides for AAs, for Christians in recovery, for Christian recovery
leaders and pastors, for historians and for meetings.
These are they, and they can help you this year (2012) and
hereafter as you look for and strengthen your recovery, sobriety, healing, and relationship
with God from this point on:
Dick B., The Good Book
and The Big Book: A.A.’s Roots in the Bible, Bridge Builders Edition, 1993,
ISBN 1-885803-16- 8. www.dickb.com/goodbook.shtml.
Dick B., The Good
Book-Big Book Guidebook, 2006, 1-885803-91-5, http://dickb.com/guidebook.shtml
Dick B., The James
Club and The Original A.A. Program’s Absolute Essentials, 2005, ISBN
1-885803-99-0, http://dickb.com/JamesClub.shtml
All three of these
important A.A. and the Bible studies
and guides are now available in print on demand and in electronic form. They
can be purchased through Amazon.com. If you would like to purchase them at
wholesale in bulk, please contact Ken B. at kcb00799@gmail.com.
Gloria Deo