“Stick With The Winners” Old School A.A.
Resource Number Two—Spiritual Milestones
in Alcoholics Anonymous
Dick B.
International Christian Recovery Coalition Spiritual Milestones in Alcoholics
Anonymous (AA of Akron Pamphlet)
Spiritual Milestones in
Alcoholics Anonymous
I
FEW,
IF ANY, men or women have completely fulfilled the aims of Alcoholics
Anonymous
without
at least some grasp of the spiritual, or to use another term in it's broadest
sense,
religion.
True, there have been some who have managed to keep sober simply by mechanical
action.
But a
preponderance of evidence points out that until one has some spiritual
conviction,
and
the more the better, he takes no joy in his sobriety. Too often we hear an AA
remark, "I think
this
is a wonderful program, but I can't understand the spiritual angle." To
them the religion
otherwise
know as Alcoholics Anonymous is something complex, abstract and awesome. They
seem
to have the impression that religion, the spiritual life, is something to be
enjoyed only by
saints
the clergy, and perhaps an occasional highly privileged layman. They cannot
conceive that
it
can be for the reformed sinner as well. And yet the truth is, the spiritual AA
is there for all of
us to
enjoy.
But,
asks the alcoholic, where can I find a simple, step-by-step religious guide?
The Ten
Commandments
give us a set of Thou Shalts and Thou Shalt Nots; the Twelve Steps of AA give
us a
program of dynamic action; but what about a spiritual guide?
Of
course the answer is that by following the Ten Commandments and Twelve Steps to
the
letter we automatically lead a spiritual life, whether or not we recognize it.
Here,
however, is a set of suggestions, couched in the simplest of language:
1--Elimination
of sin from our lives.
2--Develop
humility.
3--Constantly
pray to God for guidance.
4--Practice
charity.
5--Meditate
frequently on our newly found blessings, giving honest thanks for them.
6--Take
God into our confidence in all our acts.
7--Seek
the companionship of others who are seeking a spiritual life.
These
are practical suggestions, mileposts on the road to a spiritual life. There is
nothing
Mysterious
about them,. Every one of the seven points is found elsewhere in AA literature,
but
here
they are set down in a group for easier guidance. Let's look at each point
briefly:
1--Eliminate
sin from our lives.
We
take a long step toward the spiritual life when we do a bit of personal
housecleaning.
It is
utterly essential, if we are to retain our sobriety, to eliminate the
imperfections of lust, greed,
selfishness,
intolerance, gluttony, sloth, anger, jealousy--to mention but a few. Most of
all we
must
banish the twin devils of an alcoholic, self pity and resentment. A
non-alcoholic may be
able
to indulge occasionally in some of these sins without great harm or a complete
moral
setback
resulting. But for an alcoholic such indulgence can be fatal. For further
development of
this
point read Part IV, "Second Reader for Alcoholics Anonymous," another
Akron publication.
2--Develop
humility.
This
is of a more abstract nature than the other points, harder to pin down. The
simplest
example,
perhaps, is this: When you hear an AA say "I can't understand the
spiritual angle of the
program,"
note that it is almost invariably said wistfully. In other words, he would LIKE
TO
UNDERSTAND
the spiritual program. And that in itself is a humble gesture. For humility is
teachability,
the willingness to learn, keeping an open mind. An inner feeling of
unworthiness is
healthy
in the sight of God. Consider the words of St. Paul, whose memory of
wrongdoings in
the
past led him to write to the Corinthians (1-15:9) "For I am the least of
the apostles, that I am
not
meet to be called an apostle, because I persecuted the church of God." He
then goes on to say
"But
by the grace of God I am what I am; and His grace which was bestowed upon me
was not
in
vain; but I labored more abundantly than they all; yet not I, but the grace of
God which was
with
me." These words of deepest humility from the man who, more than any
other, kept alive
by
his perseverance and faith in the Christian religion!
3--Constantly
pray to God for guidance.
Prayer
is a partnership. A foreman in a great corporation can get an idea that will
benefit
his
company. But before the plan can be accepted it must go before the board of
directors, men
of
wisdom and experience. And after it is accepted it is the foreman and men
working with him
who
must put it into effect. In our personal lives God is the elder statesman. We
ask Him for
guidance,
but we must do the work. It is logical to believe that if all men in the world
prayed
sincerely
for peace, peace would be forthcoming. But every man would have to do his part.
We
cannot
pray for something that is apparently out of our reach, then sit back and
expect God to
dump
it in our laps. But if we pray sincerely, then do our part by taking dynamic
action, even
things
we thought beyond attainment will fall like ripe plums. St. Paul put it this
way: "I can do
all
things through Christ which strengtheneth me." (Philippians 4:13).
4--Practice
charity.
This
is simply another way of saying practice the Twelfth Step. The unselfish
helping of
others
is the practice of love, upon which Christian philosophy is based. Remember at
all times
Our
Lord's two commandments: "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy
heart, and with
all
thy soul and with all thy mind. And ... thou shalt love thy neighbor as
thyself. On these two
commandments
hang all the Law and the Prophets." The great Jewish Rabbi, Hillel, who
lived at
the
time of Christ, said: "What is hateful to thee, do not unto thy fellow
man; this is the whole
Law;
the rest is mere commentary."
5--Meditate
frequently on our newly found blessings, giving honest thanks for them.
This
is self evident, and, if one possesses the least spark of gratitude for his
sobriety, is
spontaneous.
We who have known the very depths of despair are more likely to be grateful for
the
little blessings of life, such as freedom from fear and worries, love of our
families and
friends,
respect from others and self respect, than those nonalcoholics who take such
things for
granted.
We have ample reason for gratitude. Our blessings are proof to us that there is
a God
who
will guide and bless us as long as we do our part.
6--Take
God into our confidence in all our acts.
In
other words, ponder the rightness or wrongness of every thought, word or
action. One
of
the chief blessings of being an adult is to be able to distinguish between
right and wrong.
Regardless
of how profitable an area may seem, if conscience tells us it is unethical,
discard it.
We
did not hesitate when young to talk things over with Dad. That's what Dads are
for, to be
kindly
and helpful, ever ready to give counsel to their children. The Jehovah of the
Old
Testament
was a stern, wrathful God, ever ready to punish. That, however, is not God as
Christ
teaches
us. The God of the New Testament is like Dad, kindly and helpful, full of
compassion
and
ever ready to forgive. We should always strive to make God a companion rather
than
someone
from whom we constantly demand gifts.
7--
Seek the companionship of others who are seeking the spiritual life.
In
the early days, the kitchen was the church of Alcoholics Anonymous. The few
members
met almost every morning to have coffee together, pray together, and give
thought to
their
mutual problems. AA was a shaky structure in those days, with but few members,
no
literature
except the Bible, no rules for guidance except a few inherited from Bachmanism
(Oxford
Group) that have since been pretty largely discarded. The members had to depend
on
fellowship,
even more than we do today. AA has been described by medicine as group therapy.
The
successful AA program of today is an accumulation of knowledge and ideas
arrived at by
trial
and error of not only those early members, but of hundreds and thousands who
have
contributed
even up to this very day. Although, for example, the Twelve Steps may
have
been composed by one man, they are actually the result of mass thinking. The
Author
wrote
them after absorbing and sorting out the various thoughts gained in association
and conversation
with
other alcoholics. There were generations of of ethical thinking behind Moses
when
he inscribed the Ten Commandments. Who can say who first discovered one of the
very
cornerstones
of AA, the 24-Hour Plan? Who can say who first applied the phrase "Easy
Does It"
to
our program? One of your own ideas, publicly spoken, may within a year or two
be accepted
as a
tenet of AA. Alcoholics Anonymous are YOUR people. You are safe in their
company.
Your
mastery of the sober life will grow in proportion to the contact you have with
your AA
friends.
Not only do we attain stature by attending meetings, but by meeting our new
friends for
lunch,
sitting with them on the front porch in summertime, dropping by to see them of
an
evening.
The conversation will turn to our common problems, to the benefit of us all.
Ponder
the words of St. Paul: "Be not decieved; evil companionships corrupt good
morals."
(I Corinthians 15:33.)
II
SOME
OF US find God in unusual and unexpected ways. Some are fortunate to have a
sudden
illuminating experience that changes their lives within a space of minutes.
Others may
have
the experience more slowly, a gradual growth over a number of years.
Here,
then, are the actual stories of three members of AA who gratefully discovered
God.
Only
their names have been disguised.
ARNOLD
HAD been in AA for nearly a year. For a number of reasons he was
particularly
anxious to help a certain alcoholic friend, Fred, who was rather on the
stubborn side.
Fred
finally admitted his need for help, but balked at going into the AA ward of the
local
hospital.
Arnold was persistent, and after several weeks of almost daily calls (Fred
invariably
smelling
of liquor), finally convinced his "baby" that the alcoholic who took
the massive dose of
AA
medicine (meaning conversation) in the hospital ward stood a far greater chance
of
becoming
successfully sober than the one who tried to work out the program at home.
Fred
finally agreed he would go to the hospital on the following day, so Arnold
called to
reserve
a bed. "Yes," said the admitting office clerk, "there will be a
vacant bed tomorrow."
Arnold
told Fred to pack his toilet articles and bathrobe, he'd pick him up at 2
o'clock the
following
afternoon.
Shortly
after noon the following day Arnold thought it would be wise to confirm the
reservation.
He called the admitting office and got another girl on the line. There had been
an
error.
The original girl had forgotten to write down the reservation and the bed was
no longer
available.
But perhaps tomorrow would do, there were two patients leaving then.
Arnold
lost his temper. "By tomorrow my baby will probably be in the gutter
again," he
barked,
slamming down the telephone. Still furious he called a superior officer of the
hospital but
got
the same answer. "A fine thing." he muttered, "after all the
time I spent convincing that guy.
The
Hell with it!"
Then
for no apparent reason, there flashed into his mind a fragment of one of AA's
favorite
prayers--"Grant me, Almighty God, the serenity to accept that which I
cannot change.. .
"
The thought startled Arnold. He bowed his head in meditation and prayer. Then
he picked up
the
telephone and called Fred. "Sorry, old man, but there has been a bit of
confusion. But I can
get
you into the hospital tomorrow." To Arnold's great surprise, Fred agreed
that tomorrow
would
be all right, that once he had given his word he didn't intend to renege.
Barely
two hours later Arnold's phone rang. It was the hospital. The sponsor of an
out-of-town
patient had arrived a day earlier than anticipated and Arnold could have a bed
later
in
the afternoon.
It is
entirely possible that the hospital would have called even though Arnold had
not
resigned
himself to the will of God. But to Arnold it was, and still is, a miracle that
brought him
a
deeper understanding of God.
Ralph
Waldo Emerson put it this way; "A man holding a straw parallel to the Gulf
Stream,
the ocean will flow through it. Conversely, hold it sideways to the stream and
it will be
washed
away. So is man's relation to God."
BEFORE
COMING into AA some years ago, Jerry, like so many of us, tried to find a
method
for controlled drinking. His search naturally was futile. Finally his boss
suggested, and
Jerry
did not reject the idea, that he try Christian Science. So with a chip on his
shoulder and disbelief
in
his heart, Jerry sought out a Practitioner, a kindly, sincere old gentleman
with complete
confidence
in his Faith. Jerry had a dozen sessions with the Practitioner, learning
nothing and
heading
as fast as possible for the nearest tavern after each meeting.
At
what turned out to be their last meeting the Christian Scientist said to Jerry,
"My son,
if
you ever have the urge to drink, even though you have a glass in your hand, if
you will
telephone
me I will guarantee that you will resist temptation. . . At any hour of the day
or
night,"
he added.
Jerry
told his friends in later years, "I thought if I called him he would pray
for me. The
prayer
would probably drift over Lake Erie, or the Pennsylvania mountains, never in
the world
finding
me in my favorite saloon." He promptly forgot the incident.
It
was years later that Jerry found AA. For another year he practiced AA
principles 24
hours
a day. No one had a better record of hospital calls. No one attended more
meetings. No one
paid
more conscientious attention to his babies. But Jerry was one who said "I
don't understand
the
spiritual angle." Sobriety with him was entirely mechanical.
Then
that thing came to Jerry that comes to so many of us in AA. He faced a major
crisis
in
his life. He had been bitterly disappointed in something by which he had placed
great store.
And
reverting to the days when he thought a drink was the solution to all problems,
he found
himself
in a bar with a double bourbon in front of him. He toyed with the glass for a
few
moments.
Then, on swift impulse, he walked across to a telephone booth and called his AA
sponsor,
explaining in a few words what had happened.
"Just
dump that drink in the cuspidor and wait five minutes," said his sponsor.
"I'm on my
way
down."
Half
an hour later they sat over coffee in a nearby lunchroom. As they talked the
words
of
the Christian Scientist came back to Jerry, words that had been forgotten for
two years: "If
you
ever feel the urge to drink, call me. I'll guarantee you won't take it."
This
was the turning point in Jerry's life. Within a few brief minutes he had
learned
THERE
IS A GOD. He had learned the power of prayer. He know of a certainty that his
impulse
to
call his sponsor had been divinely inspired. His telephone call was a form of
prayer, a humble
plea
for help. As this is written, eight years later Jerry is living a contented,
sober life, looked up
to as
a leader in AA and a respected member of his community.
How
can we permit ourselves to believe that prayer is not a powerful force when we
see
instances
like this day in and day out?
A
MORE DRAMATIC experience befell Lowell. We first met him five days after he
had
lost a good job. He had stopped drinking on the day he was fired, but had been
loading up on
barbiturates
in a desperate effort to get some sleep. A member of AA called on him, but it
took
four
days for him to become convinced that he belonged in a hospital. He was
admitted to the
hospital
on a Saturday, but due to a terrific reaction of the sleeping pills, including
a touch of
DT's,
it was Tuesday before his mind was clear enough for him to even realize where
he was.
On
Tuesday and Wednesday a number of AA's called on him, but their stories didn't
make
sense to him. On Wednesday evening, about dusk, he was seated staring out the
window of
his
private room contemplating the future. Needless to say, there seemed no future.
His job was
hopelessly
gone. His reputation for drinking stood in the way of other jobs. His wife had
left
him
several weeks before. His only money was what remained of his severance pay,
barely
enough
too last a week or two. He had sacrificed all his friends in one way or
another. As he
stared
into the darkening skies his future seemed darker than the night that was
closing in.
Suicide
seemed the only course, and he pondered the easiest way out.
At
this moment someone said, "Hello, Lowell." Startled, he looked up to
find standing
beside
him an old drinking companion whom he had not seen in several years.
"Jim," Lowell
exclaimed.
"What are you doing here?"
"I've
been in AA for a couple of years. I Just dropped around to see if there's
anything I
can
do." Jim was the first caller that Lowell had known personally. Jim, a
brilliant editor and
writer,
had sunk to the very gutter, and Lowell had watched the decline. Lowell knew
for a fact
that
Jim had been in a dozen jails, had slept in doorways, had taken on menial jobs
for a few
dimes
to buy whiskey. Here was something Lowell could understand.
For
an hour Jim talked quietly. He spoke not of his drinking experiences, because
Lowell
knew
about them. He spoke of AA friendships, about the love of God, about spiritual
gifts. His
words
were simple but sincere. He did not sermonize, scold, threaten or warn. He
spoke of the
Bible,
of God's sunshine, of the books he loved. And at the end of an hour Jim quietly
put a
carton
of cigarettes on the dressing table -- "Just in case you run out" --
and left.
Lowell
has no memory of the passing of time. He knows that he got into bed and for
many
minutes stared into the dark. His past whirled before his eyes. He recalled how
cruelly he
had
treated his wife's love. He felt an urge to apologize to the man who had been
forced to fire
him.
He closed his eyes.
Miraculously
the room seemed to glow softly, the lumininance gradually increasing until
a
brilliant, rosy light suffused everything. Beads of perspiration broke out on
Lowell's forehead.
Then
came a voice, low but distinct:
"Everything
is going to be all right. Now sleep."
The
light seemed to fade. Lowell jerked to a sitting position. The window shade was
still
drawn.
Only the feeble rays of the night light glowed near the floor. The room was
empty and
quiet.
Lowell was overcome with a great weariness. He sank back on the pillow and that
was
all
he remembered until a nurse awakened him to wash for breakfast.
The
experience of the night before was still vivid. But most miraculous of all, a
deep
peace
had settled on Lowell. A great weight had been lifted from his soul. He felt
free. He knew
the
past was forgiven, the future secure.
Some
minutes later a nurse opened the door and looked in. Then she quietly retired.
Lowell
was on his knees beside the bed, saying his first halting prayers since
childhood.
It
might be added parenthetically that today, as this is written, Lowell has had
that faith
and
peace for 10 years. To complete the story, his wife returned to him in due
time; he found
jobs,
not at his former salary, but enough to keep him; and five years later his
former boss asked
him
to come back to his old job at a much higher salary than he had ever earned.
THUS
THE STORY of three men who found God in their darkest hours.
They
are not unusual. History is full of dramatic conversions. Perhaps the story of
St.
Paul
is the most familiar. We read in the ninth chapter of the Acts of the Apostles,
how Saul, a
persecutor
of the Church, was stricken blind near Damascus and heard the voice of Jesus
gently
chiding
him. Changing his name to Paul, he became the most dynamic force the Church has
ever
known.
Some
three centuries later came another miraculous conversion that made a lasting
and
vital
impression on Christianity. Although Augustine was born of Christian parentage,
he spent
his
life in profligacy, AA veritable "flaming youth" of that early day.
Finally he found his way to
Milan
and came under the influence of Ambrose, a powerful preacher and intellect. One
day
Augustine
stood in a garden, bowed under the weight of contrition, when he heard a voice
say
over
and over, "Take up and read."
Believing
it to be a divine command he turned at random to a page in a volume of
the
Apostles and found himself reading what today we find in Romans 13:13, 14:
"Not in
reveling
and drunkenness, not in chambering and wantonness, not in strife and jealousy.
But put
ye on
the Lord Jesus Christ, and make not provision for the flesh, to fulfill the
lusts thereof." (It
is
strange how many passages in the Bible seemed directly aimed at us alcoholics)
And St.
Augustine,
through reading that passage, found peace, and went on to become one of the
greatest
of
all theologians.
III
IT
WOULD BE NICE if God were a stately old gentleman, benign, with a long gray
beard,
clothed in flowing white gown, seated on a golden thrown surrounded by angels
and
archangles.
But unfortunately, it is not as simple as that.
No
man can describe God completely as He is. God being an intangible spirit,
conceptions
of Him often differ as day from night. It is like the blind men in J. G. Saxe's
poem.
The
six blind men visited an elephant, each one feeling the beast to determine what
he was like.
One
felt the elephant's side and said it was like a wall, another his tusk, saying
it was like a
spear;
the third his leg, likening the beast to a tree; the trunk, a snake; the ear, a
fan; and the tail,
a
rope And as the poet points out, all were partly right and partly wrong.
We
find, as we become older in AA, that it becomes necessary for us to decide for
ourselves
what it is that we worship. What is this higher power in which we put our
faith? What
is
our conception of God? We should try to know God as He is.
This
is a problem that we must solve for ourselves. And it may take long and
searching
thought.
Perhaps you will find a hint somewhere in literature. Perhaps an understanding
clergyman
can
put you on the right track. Perhaps you will gain some knowledge in talks with
other
AA's.
All
that is certain is this: Great thinkers through the ages are agreed there is a
God, and
a
very definite need for Him. Four centuries before the birth of Christ the great
Greek philosopher
Plato
said: "he was a wise man who invented God." And 200 years ago,
Voltaire, perhaps
the
greatest of French philosophers, although still regarded by some as an
agnostic, said, "If
God
did not exist, it would be necessary to invent Him."
Nowhere
under the heavens is there a breed of men (and women, too) in such desperate
need
of God as alcoholics. No single group in all the world is more in need of
divine guidance
and
peace that those who have forsaken the bottle and
are
starting a new life.
Karl
R. Stolz, religious educator and psychologist, in "The Psychology of Religious
Living"
says:
"Sooner
or later every intelligent man discovers that he must worship something or
someone,
a superior existence to which he can give himself wholly, and in which he
looses
himself
only to find himself enriched. Of and by himself man is insufficient."
We of
AA have discovered at staggering cost that of and by ourselves we are
insufficient,
So we
find ourselves groping for a God to whom we can give ourselves wholly and in
which we
will
find ourselves enriched. If we persevere it is almost certain we will find him.
Since
the birth of history man has turned to his deities. He asked the blessing of
his God
on
his crops. He prayed for success in war. he asked that he might be blessed with
a male child.
Nor
have we changed during the ages. In farm districts the pastor still asks that
the crops be
blessed.
During the late war clergymen in virtually all churches prayed God to bring a
"just"
victory
to our side. The young father still asks God to bless him with a son and heir.
But
in the more abstract desires we have changed from the simple savage who prayed
only
for material blessings. As Dr. Stolz puts it, "The votaries (worshipers)
of an ethical religion
seek
release from the attitudes considered contrary to the will of the deity, and
crave fellowship
with
the object of worship, inward peace, and a sense of security."
IV
BUT
IF OUR CONCEPT of God is on the nebulous side, we are offered more concrete
guidance
on the subject of religion and spirituality. It is not awesome, abstract and
complex,
even
though it seems so at first.
Let's
examine what some of the fine minds of history -- philosophers, psychologists,
educators
-- have to say about religion. Note that none of them, with the exception of
St. James,
is a
professional religionist.
"Religion
is the worship of higher powers from a sense of need." --Allan Menzies.
"Religion
shall mean for us the feelings, acts and experiences of individual men in their
solitude,
so far as they apprehend themselves to stand in relation to whatever they may
consider
the
divine."--William James.
"Religion
is the recognition of all our duties as divine commands."--Immanual Kant.
"Religion
is that part of human experience in which man feels himself in relation with
powers
of psychic nature, usually personal powers, and makes use of them."--James
Henry
Leuba.
"Pure
religion and undefiled before our God and Father is this, to visit the
fatherless and
windows
in their affliction and to keep oneself unspotted from the world."--The
General Epistle
of
James, 1:27.
One
cannot but be impressed with the similarity of these definitions to our own
Twelve
Steps.
The
Menzies definition is nothing more than a condensed version of the first three
steps
wherein
we admit we are beaten, come to believe a Power greater than ourselves can
restore us,
and
turn our wills and lives over to that Power.
William
James, stripped of verbiage, says that we should believe in God AS WE
UNDERSTAND
HIM.
Immanuel
Kant also tells us to turn our wills and lives over to God, and then hints at
Steps
Five to Eleven, wherein we are admonished to give our lives a thorough
housecleaning.
For
such confessions and restitutions are without question divine commands.
James
Henry Leuba hints at the Twelfth Step, where we make use of our newly found
powers.
And
all we need to do in the St. James passage is to substitute the word
"Alcoholic" for
"Father
less and Widows" and we have Step Twelve. As a matter of fact, before we
gave up
alcohol
we were very definitely fatherless and widows.
The
spiritual life is by no means a Christian monopoly. There is not an ethical
religion in
the
world today that does not teach to a great extent the principles of Love,
Charity and Good
Will.
The
Jehovah of the Hebrews is a stern God who will have vengeance if his laws are
broken,
yet the great Hebrew prophets taught a message of social justice. Incidentally,
the
modern
Jewish family is one of our finest examples of helping one another. When a
member of
the
family gets into trouble of any kind, the relatives, from parents to cousins,
rally around with
advice,
admonition, and even financial assistance. This, incidentally, may be one
reason there are
not
more Jewish members of AA. The family, in many cases, can handle the alcoholic
problem.
Followers
of Mohammed are taught to help the poor, give shelter to the homeless and the
traveler,
and conduct themselves with personal dignity.
Consider
the eight-part program laid down in Buddhism: Right view, right aim, right
speech,
right action, right living, right effort, right mind- edness and right
contemplation. The
Buddhist
philosophy, as exemplified by these eight points, could be literally adopted by
AA as a
substitute
for or addition to the Twelve Steps. Generosity, universal love and welfare of
others
rather
than considerations of self are basic to Buddhism.
Spiritual Milestones
The
ultimate aim of all men is peace of spirit. Without a spiritual life there can
be no
tranquility
and serenity. St. Augustine says, "Peace is the tranquility of
order." we will find peace
when
our lives are rightly ordered.
There
can be no better safeguard to sobriety than faith and trust in God. It can be
cultivated
through prayer and observing the happiness of those who live a blameless life.
Alcoholics
have more of a task in attaining a state of grace than normal persons.
Spiritual
growth has been slow but progressive in most non-alcoholics. They were
introduced to
religion
in childhood and for the most part have advanced year by year. Alcoholics, too,
were
introduced
to religion early in life, but abandoned it for many years during their
drinking
careers.
Spiritual
laws are as immutable as the laws of mathematics. As certain as two plus two
equals
four, so does evil begat evil and good begat good.
The
ways of God are mysterious, but don't we meet mystery constantly in daily life?
The
worker
in an airplane factory is given a small blueprint that doesn't seem to make
much sense of
itself.
He follows that blueprint because he knows that the man upstairs has the master
plan. So
the
Man Upstairs gives us a small section of the blueprint for life. We follow it
and our lives
become
an orderly segment of the Universe.
The
Power of God has been likened to the electric power line that runs by our
homes. We
can
fill the home with the finest appliances -- kitchen range, washing machine,
vacuum cleaner,
television--but
until we plug into the electric power line they do not run. So are our lives unsatisfactory
until
we plug in on the Power of God.
The
Twelve Steps are a steep, hard climb. But as we make the climb we can make it
easier by remembering there are two handrails -- God and
Fellowship.
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