Dick B interviews Jim H about the Sept
2012 Vermont trip
by Christian Recovery Radio with DickB
Thu, September 20, 2012
Dick B.
Copyright
2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved
You can hear this show right now!
You may hear Dick B. interview Jim H. about the September
2012 Vermont trip on the September 20, 2012, episode of the "Christian
Recovery Radio with Dick B." show here:
http://goo.gl/Ild70
or here:
http://www.blogtalkradio.com/christian-recovery-radio-with-dickb/2012/09/20/dick-b-interviews-jim-h-about-the-sept-2012-vermont-trip
Episodes of the "Christian Recovery Radio with Dick
B." show are archived at:
www.ChristianRecoveryRadio.com
Synopsis of the Christian Recovery Radio Interview of Jim H. by Dick B.
Some Dick B. Preliminary Comments About Believing, and Then Seeing
A major part of learning, studying, and applying Alcoholics
Anonymous History and the role of God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible is
believing and then knowing.
It is fair to say that there are at least three approaches
to passing on and applying in recovery from alcoholism and addiction A.A.
History and the facts about its Christian origins.
a)
Seeing and then believing
b)
Sam Shoemaker’s formula for coming to believe by doing.
c)
Believing. And then seeing.
One who wants to learn and apply A.A. History and its
Christian beginnings in enlisting God’s help in overcoming alcoholism and
addiction in 12-Step programs today needs to put on the shelf the manifold
opinions, wisdom of the rooms, and slanted utterances about what A.A. was and
is.
The best guide to the believing approach is that in the Big
Book quote on page 568:
There is a principle which is a bar
against all information, which is proof against all arguments and which cannot
fail to keep a man in everlasting ignorance—that principle is contempt prior to
investigation.
Another help is a statement often attributed to A.A.’s
second archivist Frank Mauser, now deceased:
Whenever a civilization or society
perishes, there is always one condition present. They forgot where they came
from.
And then the language that Bill Wilson borrowed from his
mentor Rev. Samuel M. Shoemaker:
God either is, or He isn’t. What our choice to be.
Finally, the Bible from which A.A. cofounder Dr. Bob said
A.A.’s basic ideas came. Hebrews 11:6 states:
But without faith [believing], it
is impossible to please him [God]: for he that cometh to God must believe that
he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him.
Hence our Vermont A.A. History and Christian Recovery
Movement workshops in Vermont were designed to investigate. To travel. To learn
about the unknown and unreported facts. To go to the major arena of A.A.
History—the State of Vermont. To study. And to show all those who really want
to believe in God and receive His help the exact places where early AAs, their
cofounders, and their mentors got their Christian upbringing. This meant the
family locations, the churches, the Sunday schools, the Christian academies,
the Young Men’s Christian Association outreach locations, the places where the
Great Evangelists like Dwight L. Moody and Ira Sankey held forth and healed,
the churches where Christian Endeavor sparkled. And the daily chapels attended
by Bill Wilson, Bill’s girl-friend Bertha Bamford, Ebby Thacher, and Dr. Bob
prayed, heard sermons, sang hymns, and heard Scripture read each and every day
of their academy attendance.
That material can be learned from those who went to Vermont
to research. More than a dozen of them. It can be learned from seeing the
photograhs they took (more than 800 of them). Pictures that were taken of key
people, books, institutions, churches, libraries, newspapers, and even
cemeteries virtually unknown either to historians, writers, history buffs,
counselors, and garden variety 12-Step fellowship members.
Believe. Investigate. Then see. And then pass it on. And our
guest today came all the way from the State of Washington to drive us all over
the State of Vermont, to photograph everything we saw, and to enable you to
believe. His name is Jim H.
The Interview of Jim H.
Our guest today was Jim H. from the State of Washington.
Jim played a major role in the September 2-9, 2012, A.A.
history and Christian Recovery workshops held in Vermont. These workshops
enabled a cadre of recovery leaders with long-term sobriety to gather in
Vermont and (1) learn about the origins of Alcoholics Anonymous and its
Christian roots in St. Johnsbury, East Dorset, Rutland, Manchester, and
Northfield, Vermont; (2) help dedicate the “Dr. Bob Core Library” at North
Congregational Church, St. Johnsbury; and (3) record in digital pictures and on
videotape the key locations and activities that were part of our workshops.
Jim came all the way from Auburn, Washington, to Vermont. He
drove my son Ken and me to the many locations we visited. He was with us every
step of the way. He took some 800 pictures to be placed on the Web and
elsewhere. The signs, campuses, libraries, buildings, and people. Also,
pictures of photos and text in many books, newspapers, and articles.
In A.A., Jim has served as an Archivist and service person,
led many meetings, and sponsored many newcomers. He is also a retired Air Force
Master Sergeant.
Jim and others researched the East Dorset part in depth. He
visited and took pictures of the Wilson House, Griffith House Library, East
Dorset Congregational Church, and the cemetery where Bill, Lois, and many
Wilson relatives are buried
Jim H. is an International Christian Recovery Coalition
participant and one of the sponsors of our trip. He'll now work with several
workshop participants helping us publish all the photos on the Web and
elsewhere.
In the interview, he told us of his Christian upbringing. He
told us of his shift from the spiritual to the material—alcohol and girls. He
enlisted in the United States Air Force as a young man. He traveled the world.
He racked up a list of DUI’s around the globe. Nonetheless, he attained the
rank of Master Sergeant, became a Flight Engineer—flying out of Okinawa. He
went from drink to drink, from military location to military location—Texas,
New Zealand, Vietnam, California, North Carolina, Germany, Okinawa, and Europe.
Finally, after endless flirtations with what he called the Uniform Code of
Military Justice, Article 15, he came to Alcoholics Anonymous almost 30 years
ago “in order to stay in the military.” He quit drinking for good.
Jim’s activities in Alcoholics Anonymous have been stellar.
He ceased crediting the fellowship of A.A. with his new life and began giving
credit to God and to the Bible which he began studying to enable spiritual
growth. He stopped referring to a “Higher Power” and talked about God. He
became, at first, what he called an “A.A. Service Junkie.” He became involved
in Public Information, Corrections, A.A. literature, and the Joe and Charlie
Big Book Seminars. He became a GSR for his group. For him, the Big Book came
alive. He retired from the Air Force as a Master Sergeant in 1988
Jim fell away from A.A. for a time. He certainly didn’t
drink. But he returned to sponsor many a
newcomer, work on A.A. literature, read Dick B. books, and become an archivist—for
his district and for six years as a member of the Area 72 Archives Steering
Committee. He became a literature and Grapevine Representative.
I’ll let you listen to Jim’s talk to find out how much he
appreciated and learned from the International Christian Recovery Coalition
workshops in Vermont. Suffice it to say that he is hard at work coordinating with
others on the trip who took photographs of important books, wall placques,
newspapers, buildings, churches, academies, and so on. Jim was an enormous help
in furthering the mission of the International Christian Recovery Coalition in
which he is a participant. And his story and photographs are sure to bring many
a suffering alcoholic—and those who want to help them—to a new understanding
and believing. Believing that a new era of A.A. history of A.A.’s Christian
beginnings and successes can help others today. And believing that God is and
can and will help if sought.
Gloria Deo
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