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Why We Were Chosen |
Address by Judge John T. on the 4th
Anniversary of the Chicago Group October 5, 1943
©
Tonight marks the fourth anniversary of the
founding of the Chicago Group. In some respects the word "anniversary" ' is not
a satisfactory term to describe this occasion for it carries the implication
that a goal, a congratulatory period, a resting point on a journey has been
reached The program which we have entered upon really has no terminus, for it
involves a continuous striving for improvement. Congratulatory periods tend to
smugness, resting periods to retrogression. This program is not to be measured
in years. It is timeless in every sense except day to day, or even more
precisely, now!
The history of alcoholic addiction is marked by an unwillingness or inability
to live in the present. For it the morbid past has an unholy attraction and the
uncertain future is filled with vague forebodings. The hope of the Alcoholic,
the real tangible hope of the Alcoholic is in the present, now is the acceptable
time, the past is beyond recall -- the future is as uncertain as life itself.
Only the now is ours.
As I look about me tonight I see many new faces. Some are here present for the
first time, some who have been here before, and having failed in their quest of
sobriety have returned. To such of you the knowledge that some of us have been
dry since the beginning of this group four years ago may incline to feelings of
strangeness or timidity, and you should feel neither strange nor timid with us
who share a common infirmity. To you bit a few
days or a few weeks removed from the misery and remorse of a recent spree, four
years of sobriety may seem an eternity bit there is no such thing as seniority
in a timeless program. We, who thru the Grace of God have stayed dry, are at the
most, but twenty-four hours in the vanguard.
True, we have the advantage of a better understanding of our problem. Day upon
day, day after day, our sobriety has resulted in the formation of new habits
which makes the matter of staying so a less fearsome ordeal than it was in the
beginning. We have had the advantage of association with other Alcoholics which
has taken us from our old haunts and tended to remove, in a measure, the
occasions of alcoholic suggestion. We older ones in our daily attempts to live
according to the twelve steps of our program have made start, at least, toward
eradicating disconcerting personality defects. But, important as all these
considerations are, the great step, toward our regeneration was accomplished in
that moment when we admitted we were powerless over alcohol and made a decision
to turn our will, and lives over to God, as we understood Him. That act of
resignation was an act of the then present moment, and that Source is as
available to you now as it was to us then.
The days pass quickly by and time seems unimportant. A little while ago there
was Earl, then there were two and now there are hundreds. This group is not a
result of mass production, this pro-gram cannot be sold. It can be lived a
practiced and it is in the power of example that its first attraction lies.
Each of us presents the unselfish act, or series of acts, of some other one or
ones. We were reached individually by other men like ourselves, who maybe for
the first time in their lives had performed an unselfish act.
Into our regeneration went no thought of individual profit on the part of our
sponsors, or greed or gain. We are the products of the most refined charity that
men can bestow upon one another. The recognition on the part of
others of our true dignity as men and their willingness to do unto us as they
would have themselves done unto.
The thing that has happened in the short life of this group is difficult of
comprehension. Jack Alexander, the brilliant author of the Saturday Evening Post
article, says that only through the medium of fiction can it be
adequately depicted. Let us try to appraise it by an imaginary meeting. Let us
assume that four years ago tonight a group of the most learned medical men in
the city of Chicago were gathered together to discuss each of our
alcoholic case histories. As they reviewed them carefully, one by one, all
followed an identical pattern. There were those who for years drank as much as
two quarts of whiskey a day. There were others who drank daily for years to the
point of intoxication, and others who would go months without so much as a glass
of beer. There were those who had voluntarily subjected themselves repeatedly to
numerous so-called "cures"; some who voluntarily had themselves committed to
psychopathic institutions and insane asylums; others who had experienced no more
severe distress than an agonizing case of jitters. But all were the same in this
respect: that, having started to drink, we had no self-control that would
indicate a stopping point.
The records before this imaginary group of eminent scientists proved we were
alcoholics, many chronic, some acute! They showed long and unsuccessful
hospitalizations, psychopathic commitments and psychiatric investigations all
without a single successful result. The pronouncement of that august Tribunal of
physicians was that most of the cases were beyond the reach of science, and that
the remainder soon would be. After they had made this solemn pronouncement, let
us assume that a shadowy figure appeared and in an unearthly voice said:
"Notwithstanding the findings of this distinguished group, in four short years
these hundreds of cases that you have pronounced incurable shall, with the help
of God, be made whole." Around that room would be exchanged scornful and
doubtful glances and these unbelieving medical men would say as did Thomas of
old: "When we see we shall believe." Yet each of us here present tonight is
living proof that the prophecy of the
imaginary voice has been fulfilled; without the drama of the miracle but just as
certainly and just as attributable to the God of whom the imaginary voice spoke.
The thing which has happened in the Chicago group, which is happening all over
the country, has come about so gradually and through such material mediums as to
pass unrecognized; even by us, for the moral miracle it really is. Instead of
suspending the natural law by direct intervention, God in His wisdom has
selected a group of men to be the purveyors of His goodness. In selecting them
through whom to bring about this phenomenon He went not to the proud, the
mighty, the famous or the brilliant. He went to the humble, to the sick, to the
unfortunate - he went to the drunkard, the so-called weakling of the world. Well
might He have said to us: Into your weak and feeble hands I have entrusted a
Power beyond estimate. To you has been given that which has been denied the most
learned of your fellows. Not to scientists or statesmen, not to wives or
mothers, not even to my priests and ministers have I given this gift of healing
other alcoholics, which I entrust to you. It must be used unselfishly. It
carries with it grave responsibility. No day can be too long, no demands upon
your time can be too urgent, no case too pitiable, no task too hard, no effort
too great. It must be used with Tolerance for I have restricted its application
to no race, no creed and no denomination. Personal criticism you must expect,
lack of appreciation will be common, ridicule will be your lot, your motives
will be misjudged. Success will not always attend your efforts in your work with
other alcoholics. You must be prepared for adversity, for what men call
adversity is the ladder you must use to ascend the rungs toward Spiritual
perfection, and remember in the exercise of this power I shall not exact of you
beyond your capabilities.
You are not selected because of exceptional talents and be careful always if
success attends your efforts, not to ascribe to personal superiority, that to
which you can lay claim only by virtue of My gift. If I had wanted
learned men to accomplish this mission the power would have been entrusted to
the physician and scientist. If I had wanted eloquent men there would have been
many anxious for the assignment, for talk is the easiest used of
all talents with which I have endowed mankind. If I had wanted scholarly men the
world is filled with better qualified than you who would have been available.
You were selected because you have been the outcasts of the world and your long
experience as a drunkard has made, or should make you humbly alert to the cries
of distress that comes from the lonely hearts of alcoholics everywhere. Keep
ever in mind the admission that you made on the day of your profession into
A.A., namely that you are powerless and that it was only with your willingness
to turn your life and will into My keeping, that relief came to you.
Think not, that because that you have been dry for one year or two years, or ten
years, that it is the result of your unaided efforts. The help which has kept
you normal will keep you so just as long as you live this program,
which I have mapped out for you. Beware of the pride which comes from growth,
the power of numbers and of invidious comparisons between yourselves; or of your
organization with other organizations whose success depends upon members power,
money and position. These material things are no part of your creed. The success
of material organizations arises out of the strength of their individual
members; the success of yours from a common helplessness. The power of material
organizations comes from the pooling of joint assets; yours from the union of
mutual liabilities. Appeal for membership in material organizations is based
upon a boastful recital of their accomplishments; yours upon the humble
admission of weakness; the motto of the successful commercial enterprise is: "He
profits most who serves best"; yours: "He serves best who seeks no profit." The
wealth of material organizations when they take their inventory is measured by
what they have left; yours when you take moral inventory by what you have given.
If these things had been said to us there are those upon whom the injunctions
might lie heavy. They might seem austere and difficult commands but this would
only be because we have not realized or have forgotten the critical nature of
our infirmities. Physical disease requires drastic measures for its cure, in
many cases delicate and dangerous surgery. Our conditions when we came into this
group was even more serious than that of one who goes to a hospital with a
gangrenous limb. For, after all, the limit of his risk is his life while we
risked life and in addition things more precious, sanity, honor, self-respect.
We cannot expect to reach a problem so deep-seated, that science deemed it
unsolvable, with as little effort as is required for the removal of a decayed
tooth. It requires the doing of difficult things including self-discipline and
above all unswerving obedience to a conscience. It is part of God's therapy that
man cooperate; a cooperation requiring high moral courage in the performance of
difficult tasks.
The aphorism "Man does not live by bread alone", is more than poetry. It is the
utterance of a great philosophical truth. There is a part of man that is animal.
That part requires that he have bread, and that in quest thereof he be fitted to
take his place in a highly competitive society. He must work, he must play and
he must laugh. But there is another part of man which is Spiritual and that part
can only be properly developed by the exercises and restraints which conscience
dictates. Unless man's Spiritual yearnings are developed as well as his physical
and mental abilities, he is unbalanced and incomplete and a prey to those
capital enemies of all alcoholics: fear, loneliness, discouragement and
futility.
And so as I draw to the end of these remarks, you must think I have forgotten
Earl and his anniversary. These things I have said to you have been discussed
many times with Earl. Often have I heard him emphasize that no individual is
responsible for this group. Earl was the leaven selected by wise and benevolent
Providence to germinate this group into being. He used the material entrusted to
him with patience, tolerance and understanding but never for one moment has he
felt that this group is his personal accomplishment, or that he was more
important to its well-being than the most recently arrived alcoholic. The most
that he would care to hear me say about him is that he has tried to be a worthy
instrumentality to carry out a Divine mandate.
The wise, kindly man may steer us clear of many mistakes but even he makes some.
But in spite of mistakes, in spite of errors, even in the absence of leadership
such as that with which we have been blessed, this work will continue as long as
the alcoholic recognizes his helplessness and decides to confide his destiny to
God. In conclusion I would like to read a letter which I received this evening
from one of the early members of this group who says about the group and about
Earl that which I think, deep in our hearts, all of us feel:
"Dear John:
As I told you the other day before I left,
the discussion I listened to briefly in Staley's last Friday infused me with the
desire to add my two cents' worth (in this case sixteen cents, air mail, special
delivery) to the meeting at which the fourth anniversary of the Chicago group
will be observed.
There is a strong temptation in all of us, I think , to rhapsodize over the
individual net gains in our lives, which we attribute to the blessings that flow
from the application of A.A. principles. These individual net gains, measured in
the recovery of jobs, in the restoration of happy family life, in the
rediscovery of self-respect, are fine in themselves, including as they do some
literal miracles, but I rather think that the Chicago group, of
which it was my happy privilege to be an early member, represents more than the
sum total of all these individual net gains.
As the focal point of the innumerable and necessarily unknown processes of
individual spiritual development by the members, the group itself has been the
graceful means for many to catch a fleeting but convincing glimpse of
the Infinite. That in itself makes the group a profound thing.
This, I'm afraid, is a little vague. But the fact that the group has been what
it is not attributable to Providence divorced from the individual, but to sound,
tolerant, and loving minds taking care of the details for Providence. I think
the application to Earl is too obvious to need further elaboration. If, to save
Earl embarrassment, not a word should be uttered about him Tuesday night, the
feeling that I have at a Chicago meeting, a feeling I know is widely shared,
that Christ is in approving attendance there, - that feeling is eulogy enough."
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