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General Service Conference |
Closing Comments
Bill W.
For the fourteenth time, I have seen the closing of these successive conferences
and I cannot think of one, among all those many, which has left me with such a
great sense of security and joy and love.
As we heard the speakers this morning, my mind passed over the gamut of our
affairs. When I heard Roy talk about Dr. Bob and Anne, and his good mate, and
about those early days, my mind went back to them and to those people in immense
gratitude. I don’t know if I am accurate when I say that it may be that Roy and
I are the only ones in this room, perhaps Dave, perhaps another, who can
remember so far back.
When I contrast the state of affairs in which we then found ourselves with the
state of affairs in which we now are it is unbelievable. Roy told us about the
friction of the upper and lower millstones, the conservatives and the radicals
who were already being groomed to grind out what is today the Tradition of
Alcoholics Anonymous. It reminded me of how little we knew of how functioning
and carrying the message could ultimately come to. We had a little light, but
not a lot, but praise God it was enough.
In between the lines of his talk, Roy also seemed to be saying to us "Is it not
a miracle indeed that such a perfect thing as A.A. in its principles has emerged
by the grace of God through so many fallible people, who still lacked maturity.
I think we have been animated by several great forces.
Let us take the lowest common denominator. The first is the threat of death
itself by alcoholism. We are propelled toward this society and most of us arrive
on an either or basis — its do or die. We Must! But when a little grace has
oozed into us and this mist has passed from our eyes we find ourselves in a new
world but we find that we are faced with immense responsibilities,
responsibilities for our own growth and development as well as our societies,
for the welfare of our group and for the welfare of A.A. as a whole, for better
homes and for better relations with the world around us. We are met by these
vast responsibilities and of course we recoil and of course we rebel. But,
little by little, prodded from behind by John Barleycorn and drawn by the love
we feel here and finally by the love of God, we pick up the tab for a little
more responsibility. This is not maturity, this is just a step toward that
distant goal. So, we pick up these tabs, sometimes rather willingly, but we pick
them up because it now seems the right thing to do and then finally we come out
on another plateau where some of us can stay for a while, I know I find myself
there briefly and then I slip of f but finally we conform to these principles
and their practice in all our affairs because this is what we really want for
ourselves. Not at all because John Barleycorn is going to kill us off if we
don’t conform, not just because this A.A. community says they are right but
because we want them for ourselves, a place of quiet, a place beyond good and
evil.
So, my mind went back to those early times and I thought of how valuable to us
is a sense of history. But like all things of value it can be misused. As Allen
said "Let's not be deceived by nostalgia." Let us not suppose that we have all
the truths or else the past can lay a dead hand on us. I am sure that in all
these years in the main, we have been drawing inspiration and a measure of
wisdom from the lessons of the past and this has finally brought us out to where
we are now.
I think it would pay, in closing just to have a look at the Warranties, upon
which the functioning of this Conference stands.
These are really in broad brush strokes, the measure of our several and
selective responsibilities. Responsibilities which I feel this Conference has
magnificently met. Responsibilities which do not entitle us to call ourselves
mature but do entitle us to say that we are now arrived at the age of full
responsibility.
Let us remind ourselves of these Warranties to A.A. of today and to A.A. of
tomorrow respecting our responsibilities and conduct here:
In all its proceedings the General Service Conference shall observe the spirit
of the A.A. Tradition, taking great care that the Conference never
becomes the seat of perilous wealth or power; that sufficient funds, plus an
ample reserve be its prudent financial principle; that none of the Conference
Members shall ever be placed in a position of unqualified authority one over
another; that all important decisions be reached by discussion and vote and
whenever possible, by substantial unanimity; that no Conference action ever be
personally punitive or an incitement to public controversy; that though the
conference may act for the service of Alcoholics Anonymous, it shall never
perform any acts of government; and that, like the society of Alcoholics
Anonymous which it serves, the Conference itself will always remain democratic
in thought and action.
That is the statement as to what our responsibility is to A.A. of today and A.A.
of tomorrow. May each and all of us continue to be worthy of this great and
unique trust which God has reposed in us and may he keep the General Service
Conference of Alcoholics Anonymous to do His work in this world for as long as
we are needed.
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