church IS recovery
The following is from Frederick Buechner (I think Buecher is the best author and preacher of our time...he was on the Diane Rehm show on NPR this spring and here is the interview with him):
Alcoholics Anonymous or A.A. is the name of a group of men and women who acknowledge that addiction to alcohol is ruining their lives. Their purpose in coming together is to give it up and help others do the same. They realize they can't pull this off by themselves. They believe they need each other, and they believe they need God. The ones who aren't so sure about God speak instead of their Higher Power.
When they first start talking at a meeting, they introduce themselves by saying, "I am John. I am an alcoholic," "I am Mary. I am an alcoholic," to which the rest of the group answers each time in unison, "Hi, John," "Hi, Mary." They are apt to end with the Lord's Prayer or the Serenity Prayer. Apart from that they have no ritual. They have no hierarchy. They have no dues or budget. They do not advertise or proselytize. Having no buildings of their won, they meet wherever they can.
Nobody lectures them, and they do not lecture each other. They simply tell their own stories with the candor that anonymity makes possible. They tell where they went wrong and how day by day they are trying to go right. They tell where they find the strength and understanding and hope to keep trying. Sometimes one of them will take special responsibility for another--to be available at any hour of the day or night if the need arises. There's not much more to it than that, and it seems to be enough. Healing happens. Miracles are made.
You can't help thinking that something like this is what the Church is meant to be and maybe once was before it go to be Big Business. Sinners Anonymous. "I can will what is right but I cannot do it," is the way Saint Paul put it, speaking for all of us. "For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do no want is what I do" (Romans 7:19).
"I am me. I am a sinner."
"Hi, you."
Hi, every Sadie and Al. Hi, every Tom, Dick, and Harry. It is the forgiveness of sins, of course. It is what the Church is all about.
No matter what far place alcoholics end up in, either in this country or virtually anywhere else, the know that there will be an A.A. meeting nearby to go to and that at that meeting they will find strangers who are not strangers to help and to healt, to listen to the truth and to tell it. That is what the Body of Christ is all about.
Would it ever occur to Christians in a far place to turn to a church nearby in hope of finding the same? Would they find it? If not, you wonder, what is so Big about the Church's Business.
1 Comments:
it's o.k. michelle. Much of AA's doctrine comes from Sermon on the Mount, Anne Smith provided much inspiration from her bible readings each day to the formation of the AA, some of it's ideas are drawn from psychology: Bill communicated with Dr. Carl Jung and many of our experiences were shared with and by medical doctors and other professionals. These ideas were incorporated b/c the disease of alcoholism is recognized to be one of the body, mind and spirit. So the BB reflects ideas that adress those 3 dimensions. It's easy to take our AA ideas out of context just as it is easy for those who choose to take Christianity ideologies out of context and make judgements about people whose ideas and experiences are different.
The realm of the spirit is broad roomy and all inclusive, NEVER exclusive or forbidding to those who earnestly seek.
We in AA work on a daily basis to live sober lives and we feel that we have been granted a daily reprieve based upon the maintenance of a spiritual condition whose focus is a god who is central to our existances.
Many of us in sobriety have been able to rejoin the human race as contributing members now that our diseases are arrested a day at a time.
we will continue to grow in sobriety and love for those around us despite what you think of us.
May god bless you, dear one.
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home