Saturday, June 23, 2012

Preview: Bill W.-The Man You Thought You Knew- 8 Video Series


Bill W.: The Man You Thought You Knew



Dick B.

© 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved



My son Ken and I are now preparing a series of eight videos—titled “Bill W.: The Man You Thought You Knew”--which will present key details about Bill W. as they should be told. These videos will include the latest findings in our research, visits, and reviews.



You’ll hear about Bill’s paternal grandfather, William C. (“Willie”) Wilson, and his conversion experience on Mt. Aeolus before Bill was born--a story Bill was told many times by his mother--including the part about Willie’s salvation and deliverance from alcoholism.



You’ll hear about the little East Dorset Congregational Church--located between the Wilson House and the Griffith House in East Dorset, Vermont--where Bill W. was born and raised; where his paternal and maternal grandparents attended; where his parents attended and were married; and where Bill himself went to Sunday school and received much of his Christian upbringing.



You’ll hear about Bill’s studies of the Bible with his maternal grandfather, Fayette Griffith, with his friend Mark Whalon, and as part of the required, four-year Bible study course he took at Burr and Burton Academy.



You’ll hear about Bill’s attendance at required daily chapel at the Academy and his presidency of the Young Men’s Christian Association during his senior year there.



You’ll hear about Bill W.’s memories of his parents’ singing religious songs; his recollections of the sermons and music at the family church; and his participation in conversion meetings, revivals, and Temperance meetings.



You’ll hear about Dr. Silkworth’s telling Bill he could be cured of his alcoholism by the Great Physician, Jesus Christ.



You’ll hear how Rowland Hazard reacted to Dr. Carl Jung’s advice by making a decision for Jesus Christ. You’ll hear how he helped to get Ebby Thacher into Calvary Mission where Ebby accepted Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. 



You’ll hear what Ebby Thacher really told Bill about the Calvary Mission and other events; how Bill checked out Ebby’s story by listening to his testimony from the Calvary Church pulpit the night before Bill went to Calvary Mission; and how Bill decided that perhaps the Mission could help him too.



You’ll learn that Bill went to the Calvary Mission, then went to the altar, and then—as his wife Lois put it—in all sincerity went up and “handed his life over to Christ.”



You’ll find out that Bill wrote twice that he had been “born again”; that his wife Lois was overjoyed with his “rebirth”; and that Bill wrote his brother-in-law that he had “found religion”—just as Ebby Thacher had said  (“I’ve got religion) and done.



You’ll see how Bill again descended into darkness and depression, but felt he should call on the Great Physician for help. How Bill told Dr. Silkworth at the hospital that he had “found something.” How Bill cried out to God for help in his hospital room, how his room suddenly blazed with an “indescribably white light,” and how he sensed the presence of God in his room. And that he really thought (and later wrote) “Bill, you are a free man. This is the God of the Scriptures.”



You’ll learn how Dr. Silkworth told Bill he had had a “conversion experience”; how Bill read William James’ book, The Varieties of Religious Experience, which contained many accounts of cure of alcoholism by such experiences; and how Bill never again doubted the existence of God and never had another drink.



You’ll see that Bill W. bounded out of Towns Hospital on December 18, 1934, with a Bible under his arm, and rushed around telling drunks wherever he could find them that they must give their lives to God. You’ll find that Bill even had some temporary success with people like the little chemistry professor, but that he failed for six months to enable any to “stay” sober.’



You’ll see in later editions of the Big Book further Wilson remarks.  For example, in the second through fourth editions, one of Bill’s comments was that “the Lord” had cured him of his terrible disease and that he just wanted to keep talking about it and telling people. You’ll learn that he told this to the wife of Bill D., A.A. Number Three. Bill D. then repeated Bill W.’s statement, and declared how important it had been for the A.A. program and for him personally.



You’ll see that, in the third edition of the Big Book, Bill told a newcomer that what had accomplished the miracles was right in front of him. Bill pointed to a painting of Jesus praying at the Garden of Gethsemane; and Bill said: “There it is.”



You’ll learn that one of the required actions for early AAs was that each one had to declare his belief in God—not “a” god, God! Then every early newcomer was required to confirm his relationship with God by accepting Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior in what was called a “real surrender” (if he was not already a child of God).



You will wonder why the several films about Bill, why the many recorded talks, why the multiple biographies and the “official” A.A. literature and other historians have failed to detail these stories that help make the real Bill W. known and better understood.



You will now be able to watch the videos in this new series, read The Conversion of Bill W. book, and find out the facts. In the past, they have been scattered and sometimes inadequately presented. Now you will see that they are laid out in Bill’s own autobiography, in many biographies of Bill and Lois and Dr. Silkworth, in extensive writing about Rowland Hazard and Ebby Thacher, in some histories, and in many interviews over a 20-year period. These videos, together with The Conversion of Bill W. book, will make a much-fuller Bill W. story known.

A Site for Sore Eyes: Tammy's New Cause and Website

http://www.indiegogo.com/addictionrecovery

AA Meeting Formats: Old School, Early A. A. Meetings Today


Where can I find helpful suggestions for an old school AA Christian recovery meeting content?



A question tendered to us with more and more frequency as the Christian Recovery Movement Roars Forward



Dick B.

Copyright 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved



Though many of those contacting us more and more are interested in old school A.A., are devoted Christians, and are enthusiastic about A.A., they have often felt that they are not  qualified, not well enough versed, or are not able to lead such an effort. In fact, they will very often opt for existing A.A. language than endeavor to grasp the new objectives (report how old school A.A. was actually conducted with great success as a Christian Fellowship; review how much our present-day conference-approved literature actually supports an old school approach by those who want God’s help; and show how old school A.A. can be conducted in harmony with present-day Traditions, language, and manner of presentation and allow Christians and those wanting God’s help the freedom to do what early A.A. Christians did, and get what they got—long-term sobriety plus a new life in Christ assuring them the choice of God’s love, power, forgiveness, healing, deliverance, redemption, and guidance enabling them to walk by the spirit and receive the fruit of the spirit)



Here, then, is the road we suggest be traveled



1. Stick with the Winners! How to Conduct More Effective 12-Step Recovery Meetings Using Conference-Approved Literature. The first part of chapter one (including the footnotes), and especially chapter seven, cover meeting formats. See especially the free articles available online and the books listed on page 81--such as By the Power of God: A Guide to Early A.A. Groups & Forming Similar Groups Today (especially Chapter 12: "Guides for Groups Direct from A.A.'s Pioneers")



2. The "Stick with the Winners!" video class. See especially these videos:



18 Organizing and Conducting a “Conference-Approved Literature” Group

 19 Resources for Your Group and Its Meetings

 20 Topics for Your Group and Its Meetings

 21 A Sample Meeting Format

 22 Using the Sample Meeting Format with Other Topics

 23 Putting It All Together: Some Suggested Basic Approaches



3. The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide, 3rd ed. See especially these chapters:



Chapter 8:  The Highly-Successful, Original Akron A.A. Program, as Summarized by Frank Amos and Quoted in DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers.

Chapter 9:  14 Specific Practices Associated with the Original Akron A.A

            "Christian Fellowship" Program Bill W. and Dr. Bob Developed



 Chapter 13: Helping the Newcomer with a Full Set of Spiritual Tools



 Chapter 14: Some Suggested Tools with Which to Arm the Nestling about to Be

 Flung out of the Nest



 Chapter 15: Helping a Christian to Begin Recovery Today


Friday, June 22, 2012

The Agape Circle - Here's Where You Can Help






The Agape Circle



By Dick B.



© 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved



An event of great significance occurred recently with regard to our work of unearthing, collating, reporting, and disseminating the history of Alcoholics Anonymous and the Christian Recovery Movement.



We devoted 20-plus years to travel, interviews, examination of books and records, visits to archives, acquisition of massive historical documents and books, and then analyzing them and reporting them—one by one—as the truth appeared.

The cost was quite large. It would have been far beyond my reach, resources, and retirement income financially. It involved the cost of printing, shipping, and storing more than 40 titles, a number of which have gone through several editions and/or reprintings. It involved the large cost of traveling with attendant air fare, transportation, meals, lodging, and incidentals. It involved the expenditure of an immense amount of time and effort by my son Ken B. and many others. And, of course, it involved acquisition, maintenance, and replacement of office equipment, supplies, and incidentals. Finally, one of the most expensive—yet productive—aspects was traveling to meetings with scores of AAs, NAs, treatment people, significant people in A.A.’s history, historians, curators, clergy, physicians, and large numbers of Christian recovery leaders, workers, newcomers, and the concerned public—travel which in some cases involved staying a week or more in a given area.



For the past six months, we have worked hard to scale back all the typical past expenses of books, travel, printing, computers, storage, Internet presentations, conferences, and meetings.

In doing so, we have made known to a growing body of churches, clergy, recovery pastors, care pastors, and Christian recovery leaders our plan to continue our work of making the application of time-honored Christian recovery tools available to a host of people and institutions in the recovery arena, including those who want God’s help, and may be receptive to Christian fellowship of the kind manifested in First Century Christianity, the early Akron A.A. Christian fellowship, and in the hearts and minds of hungry recovered, recovering, and new alcoholics and addicts and those with life-controlling problems.



The need exists because of the secularization of our society and our recovery fellowships, programs, and movements. It exists because of the dearth of information today about the effectiveness of Christian recovery organizations, leaders, and societies long before and at the founding of the modern-day Twelve Step and Anonymous groups. And it exists because of the incredible lack of knowledge among those who treat alcoholics and addicts and their families, those who counsel them, those who speak about them, those who lead them, those who sponsor them, and those who serve them. Not to mention the lack of knowledge among those who are new to recovery from the ravages of alcoholism and addiction.



The Plan for the Agape Circle



Several churches have already recognized the modest need and are contributing $50.00 per month each to Dick B. to support the continued research, writing, expansion, counsel, and growth of the application of “old-school” A.A. and its Christian principles and practices in Alcoholics Anonymous, other 12-Step programs, and other recovery work today.

For large cost items, we still invite and do receive tax deductible donations that enable the remaining work. And we still define the needs and invite the gifts.



But for the day-in-day-out work right here on Maui, our dream is to have a circle—an “Agape Circle”—of at least 20 Christian churches or recovery groups and leaders who will graciously provide a monthly stipend payable to Dick B. in amount of $50.00 each month to further work in the Christian Recovery arena.



As stated, several are doing, or are about to do, just that. We believe the amount is reasonable. We have specific plans to live within the Agape Circle contributions. And we will deeply appreciate your becoming part of the Agape Circle with your church or recovery program, or Christian fellowship.



The answer desired?



Yes, Dick. Our group will help your work by sending to Dick B., PO Box 837, Kihei, HI 96753 a donation of $50.00 per month as our contribution to the Agape Circle.



Name: _______________________________________________________________________

Address:  _____________________________________________________________________

Phone and email:  _______________________________________________________________

Amount we will send each month: $  ________________________________________________



For more information, please contact me:

Dick B.

PO Box 837

Kihei, HI 96753-0837

Email: DickB@DickB.com

Main Web site: www.DickB.com

H/O tel.: (808) 874-4876

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Dick B. Radio Interview of Director of Christian Recovery Doug Nunes

Another Terrific Radio Interview of a Vibrant Christian Recovery Leader
Doug Nunes of Los Gatos California Calvary Church
Dick B.
Copyright 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved
We urge other Christian Recovery leaders, participants in International Christian Recovery Coalition, and those who want God’s Help in recovery from alcoholism and addiction to begin listening to Dick B.’s archived radio interview shows on www.ChristianRecoveryCoalition.com.

You may hear "Dick B. interviews Christian Recovery leader Doug Nunes" on the June 14, 2012, episode of the "Christian Recovery Radio with DickB" show here:
http://goo.gl/CoHFG
or
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/christian-recovery-radio-with-dickb/2012/06/14/dick-b-interviews-christian-recovery-leader-doug-nunes
"The Christian Recovery Radio with DickB" radio show episodes are archived at www.ChristianRecoveryRadio.com.
dickb@dickb.com
Gloria Deo

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

The June 2012 Wish List for Those Supporting Dick B.'s Work

June 2012 Project Wish List of Dick B. for Christian Recovery Progress

Those Who Have Participated in, Helped with, and Supported Our Work
May Want to See What Can Now and Will Be Done

• To begin and complete video reviews—in brief spurts—of each of Dick’s 30 reference books. We want to take each book, briefly discuss it, and include a picture of the cover. Then Ken and I will summarize the subject, review the book contents, and present an updated, documented video statement of what we have since found and established. The first example will be “Bill W.” We will
build on www.dickb.com/conversion.shtml. Many of the download items will be free.

• To begin presenting all our books, videos, audios, and historical articles for downloading by our followers and those who want accurate, inexpensive, articulation of the entire A.A. History and Christian Recovery Movement as we have seen and reported them. We will expand what has already begun on www.ChristianRecoveryRadio.com. We plan a new series of videos on books and downloading the books as mentioned above.

• To raise the funds from one or more benefactors to place before the suffering folks and the recovery community much more of the large body of historical materials like the Printer’s Manuscript of DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers, as well as the great body of St. Johnsbury Dr. Bob history now located in part at the Dr. Bob Core Library in North Congregational Church of St. Johnsbury.

• To make all of our books, videos, and classes very affordable and, in some cases, free by several major changes: (1) Putting my entire 30 volume Reference Set in ebook, Kindle, Nook, I-Pod, print-on-demand, and download form. (2) Doing the same with three groups of videos, (a) the 27 Video film class already completed, (b) the free 15 A.A. history and roots videos already complete but yet to be placed on our web. (c) the new series of video teachings that will accompany each of my 30 or so books.

• To continue to produce and present dozens and dozens of our A.A. history and Christian recovery materials on: (a) ChristianRecoveryRadio.com www.ChristianRecoveryRadio.com, (b) Our many blogs such as http://MauiHistorian.Blogspot.com, (c) Our several websites such as www.dickb.com, http://drbob.info, www.dickb-blog.com, http://FreedomRanchMaui.org. and www.ChristianRecoveryCoalition.com. (d) Our articles on Word Press, Digg, forums, In The Rooms, Go Articles, Hub, Stumble, recovery social posts, Facebook, Twitter, and other media that are rapidly becoming more available.

• To attend several regional workshop-meetings like those held this last year. But only when and if the trip costs are funded as to travel, meals, and lodging; and the facilities themselves are free. These visits, meetings, and workshops have proved invaluable in expanding the number of Christian recovery resource centers; participants in International Christian Recovery Coalition; interviews, radio programs, videos, audios, study groups, fellowships, outreach, and treatment work, plus similar presentations and programs of  Christian Recovery leaders, programs, counselors, chaplains, churches, and fellowships.

• Possible regional conference-workshops could be planned, funded, and held in Miami, East Dorset-St. Johnsbury Vermont, Tennessee, Chicago, Toronto, Texas, Washington DC, and Arizona.

Please contact Dick B. and/or Ken B. at 808 874 4876, dickb@dickb.com, or by mail if you believe you can help and support these wish list objectives.
 

Listening to Dick B.'s Tuesday Christian Recovery Leader/Author Interview

Listening to Today’s Dick B. Radio Interview of Christian Recovery Author and Leader Carl “Tuchy” Palmieri of Bridgeport, Connecticut
Dick B.
Copyright 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved
You may listen to Dick B.'s interview of Carl "Tuchy" Palmieri here:
Dick B. interviews Christian Recovery leader Carl “Tuchy” Palmieri, June 12, 2012
http://goo.gl/5djyT
or here:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/christian-recovery-radio-with-dickb/2012/06/12/dick-b-interviews-christian-recovery-leader-tuchy-palmieri

Listening to past and forthcoming Dick B. Interviews on Christian Recovery Radio
By going to www.ChristianRecoveryRadio.com. And all of these interviews are
archived at and can be accessed and heard at your leisure on www.ChristianRecoveryRadio.com – interviews page
dickb@dickb.com
Gloria Deo

Monday, June 11, 2012

Funding Our Projected, Scaled-down, Continued Projects

The Agape Circle
By Dick B.
© 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved

An event of great significance occurred recently with regard to our work of unearthing, collating, reporting, and disseminating the history of Alcoholics Anonymous and the Christian Recovery Movement.
We devoted 20-plus years to travel, interviews, examination of books and records, visits to archives, acquisition of massive historical documents and books, and then analyzing them and reporting them—one by one—as the truth appeared.
The cost was quite large. It would have been far beyond my reach, resources, and retirement income financially. It involved the cost of printing, shipping, and storing more than 40 titles, a number of which have gone through several editions and/or reprintings. It involved the large cost of traveling with attendant air fare, transportation, meals, lodging, and incidentals. It involved the expenditure of an immense amount of time and effort by my son Ken B. and many others. And, of course, it involved acquisition, maintenance, and replacement of office equipment, supplies, and incidentals. Finally, one of the most expensive—yet productive—aspects was traveling to meetings with scores of AAs, NAs, treatment people, significant people in A.A.’s history, historians, curators, clergy, physicians, and large numbers of Christian recovery leaders, workers, newcomers, and the concerned public—travel which in some cases involved staying a week or more in a given area.
For the past six months, we have worked hard to scale back all the typical past expenses of books, travel, printing, computers, storage, Internet presentations, conferences, and meetings.
In doing so, we have made known to a growing body of churches, clergy, recovery pastors, care pastors, and Christian recovery leaders our plan to continue our work of making the application of time-honored Christian recovery tools available to a host of people and institutions in the recovery arena, including those who want God’s help, and may be receptive to Christian fellowship of the kind manifested in First Century Christianity, the early Akron A.A. Christian fellowship, and in the hearts and minds of hungry recovered, recovering, and new alcoholics and addicts and those with life-controlling problems.
The need exists because of the secularization of our society and our recovery fellowships, programs, and movements. It exists because of the dearth of information today about the effectiveness of Christian recovery organizations, leaders, and societies long before and at the founding of the modern-day Twelve Step and Anonymous groups. And it exists because of the incredible lack of knowledge among those who treat alcoholics and addicts and their families, those who counsel them, those who speak about them, those who lead them, those who sponsor them, and those who serve them. Not to mention the lack of knowledge among those who are new to recovery from the ravages of alcoholism and addiction.
The Plan for the Agape Circle
Several churches have already recognized the modest need and are contributing $50.00 per month each to Dick B. to support the continued research, writing, expansion, counsel, and growth of the application of “old-school” A.A. and its Christian principles and practices in Alcoholics Anonymous, other 12-Step programs, and other recovery work today.
For large cost items, we still invite and do receive tax deductible donations that enable the remaining work. And we still define the needs and invite the gifts.
But for the day-in-day-out work right here on Maui, our dream is to have a circle—an “Agape Circle”—of at least 20 Christian churches or recovery groups and leaders who will graciously provide a monthly stipend payable to Dick B. in amount of $50.00 each month to further work in the Christian Recovery arena.
As stated, several are doing, or are about to do, just that. We believe the amount is reasonable. We have specific plans to live within the Agape Circle contributions. And we will deeply appreciate your becoming part of the Agape Circle with your church or recovery program, or Christian fellowship.
The answer desired?
Yes, Dick. Our group will help your work by sending to Dick B., PO Box 837, Kihei, HI 96753 a donation of $50.00 per month as our contribution to the Agape Circle.
Name: _______________________________________________________________________
Address:  _____________________________________________________________________
Phone and email:  _______________________________________________________________
Amount we will send each month: $  ________________________________________________

For more information, please contact me:
Dick B.
PO Box 837
Kihei, HI 96753-0837
Email: DickB@DickB.com
Main Web site: www.DickB.com
H/O tel.: (808) 874-4876

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Three Alcoholism/Addiction Christian Recovery Tools Right Now!

Three Christian Recovery Tools You Can Use Right Now!
By Dick B.
© 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved
Are you a Participant in the International Christian Recovery Coalition? (No charge! Free! www.ChristianRecoveryCoalition.com). Are you a Christian leader or worker in the recovery arena involved in carrying a message of hope to alcoholics, addicts, and others suffering with life-controlling problems? We may have just what you need to enhance the effectiveness of your Christian Recovery effort!
We are excited to announce the availability of three Christian Recovery tools that may be used together or separately to help you carry the message about the roles played by God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible in early A.A.’s astonishing successes and that they can play in today’s recovery scene. Our three years of conferences and meetings throughout California—beginning with the Mariners Church conference in Irvine in May 2009—have produced a package of three spiritual tools that are much-needed today and should be a part of any Christian Recovery outreach effort. The three tools are:

1. The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide, 3rd ed., by Dick B. and Ken B. This Guide provides comprehensive information about the roles played by God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible in early A.A.’s astonishing successes and how that information may be applied today. The Table of Contents, and details about how to acquire this Guide for $30.00 plus Shipping, are here: http://www.dickb.com/index.html#Resource3.
2. Stick with the Winners! How to Conduct More Effective 12-Step Recovery Meetings Using Conference-Approved Literature: A Dick B. Guide for Christian Leaders and Workers in the Recovery Arena by Dick B. and Ken B. This book may be used for individual study, as a group leadership tool, as a tool for use in a study group or fellowship, as a class, or as a seminar or conference presentation guide. The Table of Contents, and details about how to acquire this Guide for $9.95, are here: http://www.dickb.com/index.html#Stick_with_the_Winners!
3. The 27-video “Stick with the Winners” class by Dick B. and Ken B. This just-released class (May 2012) comprised of 27 videos complements the other tools. The videos may be played individually or as a group to enhance your Christian Recovery outreach. The list of video titles, and details about how to acquire this class for $29.95, are here: http://christianrecoveryradio.com/#Stick_with_the_Winners
Facts to Ponder as You Decide
Let’s start with two different points. Points we urge you to consider now:
1. Free: It costs nothing to become a participant in International Christian Recovery Coalition. And already there are participants in almost every one of the United States as well as in a number of other countries. We want the Christian Recovery Movement to continue growing worldwide. We believe there is a real need and calling for its mission. We welcome as participants and urge any and all people, institutions, fellowships, and ministries to view www.ChristianRecoveryCoalition.com.
2. Active: Many of our participants, as well as many Christian alcoholics and addicts are Christian recovery leaders, workers, newcomers, and members of the public who, and organizations which, are already offering Christian recovery in their areas of interest and expertise.
But there are many others who want to become active now and in the future. They don’t know where to start. They don’t know how to proceed. They have often been wrongly dissuaded from such work. Yet they hunger for the means to serve and glorify God by getting active with friends, churches, and fellowships. These include those who:
a) Now have, or want to establish, a Christian recovery fellowship.
b) Now belong to a Christian church or religious organization, and want to establish a Christian recovery group or fellowship or
program in that facility.
c) Want to begin studying, learning, discussing, and furthering in the recovery community today: (1) the principles and practices of the First Century Christians as described in the Book of Acts, (2) the principles and practices of the early (old school) Akron A.A. Christian Fellowship – which was often called “First Century Christianity at work,” (3) the daily focus and effectiveness of this old-school, Bible-based A.A.,  and the application of that program to recovery from alcoholism, addiction, and life-controlling problems in today’s recovery arena, and (4) the tremendous value today of utilizing the 24/7 (we call it “daily”) fellowship, contact, learning, reading, studying, meeting, praying, love, service, tolerance, and witnessing—all as to the power, love, healing, forgiveness, wholeness, guidance, and walking by the spirit of God with other like-minded believers.
d) Want to act as purposeful, successful, serving, truly loving examples among those who have become children of the living God, new creatures in Christ, and ambassadors for Christ.

e) Recognize they can’t practice, give to others, and serve God in the way that A.A. and similar fellowships urge if they don’t know or understand or have not themselves attained and mastered.
f) Want to collaborate, network, strengthen—with and through the knowledge and experience of others--an informed body—the body of Christ--consisting of individuals, groups, fellowships, programs, facilities, and institutions that know, believe in, and endeavor to apply old school A.A., First Century Christian principles and practices, and the best in 12 Step Fellowships and Step principles that exist today.
g) See our International Christian Recovery Coalition, its mission, its participants, and its projects, as a new and essential and vibrant part of a growing, world-wide, effective answer to the ravages of alcoholism, addiction, and their societal effects. An ever-present answer where there is an absence of what was called “Divine Aid” by those who believed neither individuals nor any human power could solve the problem. And, of course, that God could and would if He were sought.
Again, here are the three tools and information on how to obtain them:
1. The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide, 3rd ed., by Dick B. and Ken B. This Guide provides comprehensive information about the roles played by God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible in early A.A.’s astonishing successes and how that information may be applied today. The Table of Contents, and details about how to acquire this Guide for $30.00 plus Shipping, are here: http://www.dickb.com/index.html#Resource3.
2. Stick with the Winners! How to Conduct More Effective 12-Step Recovery Meetings Using Conference-Approved Literature: A Dick B. Guide for Christian Leaders and Workers in the Recovery Arena by Dick B. and Ken B. This book may be used for individual study, as a group leadership tool, as a tool for use in a study group or fellowship, as a class, or as a seminar or conference presentation guide. The Table of Contents, and details about how to acquire this Guide for $9.95, are here: http://www.dickb.com/index.html#Stick_with_the_Winners!
3. The 27-video “Stick with the Winners” class by Dick B. and Ken B. This just-released class (May 2012) comprised of 27 videos complements the other tools. The videos may be played individually or as a group to enhance your Christian Recovery outreach. The list of video titles, and details about how to acquire this class for $29.95, are here: http://christianrecoveryradio.com/#Stick_with_the_Winners
For more information about these and other Christian Recovery resources available from Dick B. and Ken B., please contact me by email at DickB@DickB.com or by phone at 1-808-874-4876, or Ken B. by email at kcb00799@gmail.com or by phone at 1-808-276-4945. Additional details are available on some of my Web sites:
www.DickB.com
www.ChristianRecoveryCoalition.com
www.ChristianRecoveryRadio.com.
Gloria Deo

Three Spiritual Tools for Recovery - Available Now!

Three Christian Recovery Tools You Can Use Right Now!
By Dick B.
© 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved
Are you a Participant in the International Christian Recovery Coalition? (No charge! Free! www.ChristianRecoveryCoalition.com). Are you a Christian leader or worker in the recovery arena involved in carrying a message of hope to alcoholics, addicts, and others suffering with life-controlling problems? We may have just what you need to enhance the effectiveness of your Christian Recovery effort!
We are excited to announce the availability of three Christian Recovery tools that may be used together or separately to help you carry the message about the roles played by God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible in early A.A.’s astonishing successes and that they can play in today’s recovery scene. Our three years of conferences and meetings throughout California—beginning with the Mariners Church conference in Irvine in May 2009—have produced a package of three spiritual tools that are much-needed today and should be a part of any Christian Recovery outreach effort. The three tools are:

1. The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide, 3rd ed., by Dick B. and Ken B. This Guide provides comprehensive information about the roles played by God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible in early A.A.’s astonishing successes and how that information may be applied today. The Table of Contents, and details about how to acquire this Guide for $30.00 plus Shipping, are here: http://www.dickb.com/index.html#Resource3.
2. Stick with the Winners! How to Conduct More Effective 12-Step Recovery Meetings Using Conference-Approved Literature: A Dick B. Guide for Christian Leaders and Workers in the Recovery Arena by Dick B. and Ken B. This book may be used for individual study, as a group leadership tool, as a tool for use in a study group or fellowship, as a class, or as a seminar or conference presentation guide. The Table of Contents, and details about how to acquire this Guide for $9.95, are here: http://www.dickb.com/index.html#Stick_with_the_Winners!
3. The 27-video “Stick with the Winners” class by Dick B. and Ken B. This just-released class (May 2012) comprised of 27 videos complements the other tools. The videos may be played individually or as a group to enhance your Christian Recovery outreach. The list of video titles, and details about how to acquire this class for $29.95, are here: http://christianrecoveryradio.com/#Stick_with_the_Winners
Facts to Ponder as You Decide
Let’s start with two different points. Points we urge you to consider now:
1. Free: It costs nothing to become a participant in International Christian Recovery Coalition. And already there are participants in almost every one of the United States as well as in a number of other countries. We want the Christian Recovery Movement to continue growing worldwide. We believe there is a real need and calling for its mission. We welcome as participants and urge any and all people, institutions, fellowships, and ministries to view www.ChristianRecoveryCoalition.com.
2. Active: Many of our participants, as well as many Christian alcoholics and addicts are Christian recovery leaders, workers, newcomers, and members of the public who, and organizations which, are already offering Christian recovery in their areas of interest and expertise.
But there are many others who want to become active now and in the future. They don’t know where to start. They don’t know how to proceed. They have often been wrongly dissuaded from such work. Yet they hunger for the means to serve and glorify God by getting active with friends, churches, and fellowships. These include those who:
a) Now have, or want to establish, a Christian recovery fellowship.
b) Now belong to a Christian church or religious organization, and want to establish a Christian recovery group or fellowship or
program in that facility.
c) Want to begin studying, learning, discussing, and furthering in the recovery community today: (1) the principles and practices of the First Century Christians as described in the Book of Acts, (2) the principles and practices of the early (old school) Akron A.A. Christian Fellowship – which was often called “First Century Christianity at work,” (3) the daily focus and effectiveness of this old-school, Bible-based A.A.,  and the application of that program to recovery from alcoholism, addiction, and life-controlling problems in today’s recovery arena, and (4) the tremendous value today of utilizing the 24/7 (we call it “daily”) fellowship, contact, learning, reading, studying, meeting, praying, love, service, tolerance, and witnessing—all as to the power, love, healing, forgiveness, wholeness, guidance, and walking by the spirit of God with other like-minded believers.
d) Want to act as purposeful, successful, serving, truly loving examples among those who have become children of the living God, new creatures in Christ, and ambassadors for Christ.

e) Recognize they can’t practice, give to others, and serve God in the way that A.A. and similar fellowships urge if they don’t know or understand or have not themselves attained and mastered.
f) Want to collaborate, network, strengthen—with and through the knowledge and experience of others--an informed body—the body of Christ--consisting of individuals, groups, fellowships, programs, facilities, and institutions that know, believe in, and endeavor to apply old school A.A., First Century Christian principles and practices, and the best in 12 Step Fellowships and Step principles that exist today.
g) See our International Christian Recovery Coalition, its mission, its participants, and its projects, as a new and essential and vibrant part of a growing, world-wide, effective answer to the ravages of alcoholism, addiction, and their societal effects. An ever-present answer where there is an absence of what was called “Divine Aid” by those who believed neither individuals nor any human power could solve the problem. And, of course, that God could and would if He were sought.
Again, here are the three tools and information on how to obtain them:
1. The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide, 3rd ed., by Dick B. and Ken B. This Guide provides comprehensive information about the roles played by God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible in early A.A.’s astonishing successes and how that information may be applied today. The Table of Contents, and details about how to acquire this Guide for $30.00 plus Shipping, are here: http://www.dickb.com/index.html#Resource3.
2. Stick with the Winners! How to Conduct More Effective 12-Step Recovery Meetings Using Conference-Approved Literature: A Dick B. Guide for Christian Leaders and Workers in the Recovery Arena by Dick B. and Ken B. This book may be used for individual study, as a group leadership tool, as a tool for use in a study group or fellowship, as a class, or as a seminar or conference presentation guide. The Table of Contents, and details about how to acquire this Guide for $9.95, are here: http://www.dickb.com/index.html#Stick_with_the_Winners!
3. The 27-video “Stick with the Winners” class by Dick B. and Ken B. This just-released class (May 2012) comprised of 27 videos complements the other tools. The videos may be played individually or as a group to enhance your Christian Recovery outreach. The list of video titles, and details about how to acquire this class for $29.95, are here: http://christianrecoveryradio.com/#Stick_with_the_Winners
For more information about these and other Christian Recovery resources available from Dick B. and Ken B., please contact me by email at DickB@DickB.com or by phone at 1-808-874-4876, or Ken B. by email at kcb00799@gmail.com or by phone at 1-808-276-4945. Additional details are available on some of my Web sites:
www.DickB.com
www.ChristianRecoveryCoalition.com
www.ChristianRecoveryRadio.com.
Gloria Deo

Saturday, June 2, 2012

The Story of Dr. Bob's Home in Akron - Revisited AA History

Revisiting the Plans to Enhance Memorialization of Dr. Bob’s Akron Home
By Dick B.
Copyright 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved
[I’d like to think that, as I began my historical research of A.A.’s origins, history, founding, original Christian Fellowship, and successes, I was among those most thrilled at making my early trips to Akron, Ohio.
On those trips, I: (a) attended Founders Day events. (b) attended a meeting of Akron Number One--the King School Group, and in the company of  Dr. Bob’s daughter Sue Smith Windows. (c) saw Dr. Bob’s Bible at that meeting–inscribed by Bill W., Dr. Bob, and Bill Doston—brought to the podium at the beginning of the meeting. (d)  visited Dr. Bob’s Home. (e) attended, as a guest of Dr. Bob’s daughter, a board meeting of the founders foundation. (f) visited St. Thomas Hospital. (g) interviewed Dr. Bob’s daughter in her Akron home. (h) interviewed Congressman John Seiberling at the Akron University Peace Center where he was teaching. (g) visited the Bierce Library at the University of Akron where Akron newspapers and other memorabilia were housed. (h) visited the grounds of  Stan Hywet Hall & Gardens (70 acres) is a notable country estate, with gardens, located at 714 North Portage Path in Akron,  Ohio, where the Seiberling Gate Lodge was located and where Henrietta Seiberling lived and introduced Bob and Bill to each other. (i) visited the King School itself where the early A.A. meetings were held. (j) drove by the home of T. Henry and Clarace Williams where the “regular’ A.A. meetings were held on Wednesday  nights. (k) visited the Summit County Library in Akron to do further research. (l) visited the Akron Beacon Journal offices to be interviewed and to find further records. (k) met with the gracious Chairman of the trustees for Dr. Bob’s Home. (l) stayed in the home of Ray and Ginny Grumney in Newton Falls, interviewed Ray who was the archivist of and a member of the managing directors of Dr. Bob’s Home. (m) went to an A.A. meeting with Ray. (n) had lunch with Sue Smith Windows, Ray and Ginny Grumney, and Gail LaCroix—then the Founders Day archivist. (o) visited the home of Gail La Croix to gather further historical facts. (p) was given leave to copy and did copy some of Gail’s archives containing a note to Lois Wilson by Bob E. about the First Century Christian Fellowship, and the use of The Runner’s Bible by the old-timers. (q) was apparently the first to see a portion of the books which were in “Dr. Bob’s Library” and then located in the attic of Sue Smith Windows’ Home. (r) believe I met with John R. who knew Sue and knew of Anne Smith’s morning quiet times. (s) interviewed A.A. historian Dennis Cassidy and learned that John R. had both written and stated to him that Dr. Bob’s wife had shared from her journal with early AAs and their families each morning at the Smith Home. (t) learned from Sue Smith Windows that her mother had kept and shared from her journal from 1933-1939 and that Sue had typed portions of it for her mother. (u) learned from Sue Smith Windows that it was “Mother G.” who brought copies of The Upper Room to Anne’s morning meetings where they were used for Quiet Time discussions. (v) learned from Sue Smith Windows that, even though some of the pages were missing, the original “Anne Smith’s Journal” manuscripts were located at A.A. General Service Archives in New York, and that she would help me obtain a copy—which she did. (w) went to the Akron Intergroup Office and found the four AA of Akron Pamphlets commissioned by Dr. Bob for use by early AAs. (x) visited the Akron Intergroup Office, saw some of the missing pages from the Anne Smith Journal. (y) at the Akron Intergroup Office, saw some of the early A.A. books. (z) saw the entire Founders’ Day archive collection at the Founders Day events on the University of Akron campus. (aa) visited St. Paul’s Protestant Episcopal Church in Akron where Dr. Bob became a communicant shortly before his death. (bb) interviewed the Rector Dr. Mc Candless who showed me the church record of Dr. Bob’s “membership.” (cc) with Dr. Mc Candless’s help contacted the West Side Presbyterian Church and found that Dr. Bob and his wife had been charter members of that church from 1936 to 1942, and had joined by letter of transfer from the earlier Presbyterian Church in Akron. (dd) visited the St. Paul’s Church archives and was able to see extensive newspaper articles and church records of the 1933 Akron Oxford Group events celebrating the continued sobriety of Russell Firestone as an Oxford Group member, Christian, and student of the Bible. (ee) found records of the role that Russell’s friend, James Draper Newton, played in the design and erection of the new Episcopal church. (ff) established a library of AA historical books at St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in its own library.
My Former Article Revisited and Expanded Here
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
Let's See the Real Akron A.A. Story Come Alive.
It is very important to highlight not only the significance of Dr. Bob's Home, but also the entire Akron history. My contribution to that began with The Akron Genesis of Alcoholics Anonymous www.dickb.com/Akron.shtml. It was and is supplemented with my titles Dr. Bob and His Library, 3rd ed., www.dickb.com/drbob.shtml and Anne Smith's Journal 1933-1939, 3rd ed. www.dickb.com/annesm.shtml.
Further progress was made when I persuaded Dr. Bob's son Robert Smith (“Smitty”) to donate his approximately one-half of Dr. Bob's actual library to Dr. Bob's Home, and it is now there and can at least be seen. I also was later asked to speak at the dedication of the Gate Lodge on the Seiberling Estate and then published Henrietta B. Seiberling: Ohio's Lady with a Cause. I addressed some in attendance, was recorded, and turned over some A.A. history materials to the Gate Lodge curator. These are just a few of the A.A. History treasures that are related to the Akron story and are now being featured on the Akron scene after all these years.
My point is this: Several of us have honed in on the importance of the Akron story; and a good example of the still existing lacuna is the new movie Bill W. which eulogizes Wilson, dotes on his adulterous relationship with Helen, but just plain ignores almost all the facts at Akron.
I would hope as part of the new Akron memorialization project and presentation that its promoters would point out that the Akron story is enciente. Thus, it needs the contribution of Mary Darrah on Ignatia, Mitchell Klein on Clarence Snyder, The Our Legacy book by the three oldtimer Clarence Snyder Sponsees, Children of the Healer by Dr. Bob’s two children, The Good Book and The Big Book, and several of my books that are mentioned above, along with New Light on Alcoholism: God, Sam Shoemaker, and A.A., The Oxford Group & Alcoholics Anonymous, The James Club and the Original A.A. Program’s Absolute Essentials, and Good Morning!: Quiet Time, Morning Watch, Meditation, and Early A.A.; When Early AAs Were Cured and Why;  and The Golden Text of A.A.. See www.dickb.com/titles.
You may not know it but some of these books were rejected and then banned from Dr., Bob's Home for about ten years. This by action of the Board of Trustees; and, but for the efforts of the archivist Ray Grumney (who was finally and abruptly “retired” after years and of service—all as a volunteer), they never would have been seen.
It has always been important to present the whole Akron story because the whole truth shows how and why the Akron Fellowship founded in June of 1935 established the simple program set forth on page 131 of DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers. Especially because, as the last twenty years have passed, more and more people have added pieces to the picture.
The same situation is true with reference to Dr. Bob's birthplace and boyhood Vermont house and the whole St. Johnsbury Story where we have there established the Dr. Bob Core Library at North Congregational Church of St. Johnsbury (the Smith family church) and written the book: Dr. Bob of Alcoholics Anonymous.  www.dickb.com/drbobofaa.shtml.
Today’s Akronite activists have my best wishes for whatever historical facts their memorial project brings to light. They also have my suggestion that it is a time long overdue for a coordinated historical emphasis on each aspect of the Dr. Bob--Anne Smith--Bill Wilson--Henrietta Seiberling--Clarence Snyder--Sister Ignatia picture. And I hope their efforts will point up history and not just an historical monument.
Such a broadened effort would bless the thousands of drunks who come to Akron each year hoping for a real understanding of the depth and variety of A.A.'s beginning principles, practices, and successes in Akron.
Sincerely, Richard G. Burns, J.D., Writer, Historian, Retired attorney, Bible student, long-recovered and active fellowship member, author of 44 titles and over  1000 articles on A.A. History
dickb@dickb.com