Wednesday, February 22, 2012

A.A., Religion, "Your Faith" 1939 Interview of Dr. Bob

Icon23 A.A., Religion, "Your Faith" 1939 Interview of Dr. Bob


[This is the "Faith" article which A.A. literature had said was lost. AAs speculated that Dr. Bob wrote the article. He didn't. He was interviewed by Defoe in September 1939 for "Your Faith" Magazine. And the interview disappeared from view for years and years as far as AAs were concerned. Yet in the interview, Dr. Bob told how he read the Bible with patients. He told how they came to trust God. He told how he had been cured by prayer. He spoke about the healings of Jesus Christ. And he was talking about the many drunkards whom he had been able to help once he himself prayed, turned to God for help, and was cured--a priceless article free of the editing and revision of others who might have doubted!]

I Saw Religion Remake A Drunkard
by D.J. Defoe
September 1939 "Your Faith" Magazine, page 84

Through Liquor, this physician had lost his practice, his reputation and his self-respect. Then one night in a gathering in a private home, he found the way of escape.


WHEN a doctor starts drinking, he's usually on the skids for keeps. His profession gives him so much privacy, so great exposure to temptation both from liquor and from drugs, and his need of a stimulant to lift him from depression becomes so extreme, that many a good doctor has dropped into oblivion for no cause other than his own thirst for drink.

I could tell you about more than one doctor who came to no good end through liquor. Their stories are alike in their early furtiveness, then a brazen attitude of liquor - might -do-things-to some-men - but - I'm-different, then a broken desperation to try to keep up appearances and pretend nothing has happened, and finally exposure—and failure—and disgrace. One brilliant ex-surgeon a suicide; another exile from home; two others forgotten by their friends; so runs the history.
But Dr. X handled his liquor problem differently. He came close enough to degradation to see how the jaws of hell reaching out for him. But then something interfered and saved him.
Today Dr. X—and I dare not give his name, or even the name of the city, for reasons you will soon discover—is alive and happy and is probably a better and more popular doctor than ever before. What saved his life and reputation? What force made him into a new man?
It was simply religion, brought home to him in a way he could use it. Simply the new habit of living his religion, and the discovery that he could utilize the power of prayer.
We used to see Dr. X around a lot. He was cheery, straightforward, friendly, and successful. His field was a particularly intricate form of surgery and he did well at it.
Then for quite a while we missed him. I saw his wife now and then, and noticed—even a man can things like that—that she seemed a little shabby and not especially happy.
We began to hear ugly rumors. That's bad for any doctor. We heard he was losing his practice. When a doctor begins drinking, not many people are willing to trust their own lives to his skill with a knife.
Last year I met Dr. X for the first time in several years. He was a new Dr. X. Straight as an Indian. Clean eyes. An honest I-can-lick-the-world look in his face. He gripped my hand in a vise and said hello in a way that gave you something to tie to.
We were at a party. Someone offered Dr. X a drink. Then I remembered what had happened to him and wondered what he would do.
"I don't drink," he said evenly. "Some men can take a drink, or two drinks, and stop. I can't. I had that ability once, but not now. If I'd take as much as a swallow of alcohol now, I'd disappear—and you wouldn't see me for three weeks."
From him and from others I got his whole story, a bit here, a bit there. Here it is.
He had been drinking for longer than anyone but his wife suspected. For a while he was able to keep the matter a secret. But he missed a couple of appointments and got into some trouble. First his competitors knew it. Then his friends around the hospital got wise. Finally even his oldest patients began to leave him.
He had always been dignified and aloof, and when he was straight you hesitated to go up to him and tell him he was drinking too much. Usually he drank alone, silently, hungrily, in a sodden fashion of one who wants to forget. Just a deadly, steady sopping up of the poison. It was ghastly. In his saner moments he must have known the way he was headed. But a stubborn pride—and pride of that sort in a wayward person is a terrible thing—held him from seeking help.
Finally a friend he trusted got him to attend a little meeting in a living room one evening. It was a simple affair. Not dress-up at all. Here was a factory foreman who looked happier than almost anybody in town. When the time came to talk he told how he had been cured of drunkenness by prayer. His wife told how unbelievably happy their life was now. They didn't have much money—you could see that—but they had something that money alone had never brought them. They had love, and self-respect, and they had each other.
Dr. X was surprised to find that everyone in this little group had some sort of a fight to make, and had won. He began to look at these people in a new way. They had been weak and now they were strong. Unconsciously he began to envy them.
He surprised himself by starting to say something. He admitted he had a tremendous hunger for liquor, and sometimes it got him down. He found that just merely talking about his trouble seemed to bring relief. As long as you conceal your difficulties, no one can help you. But once you bring your trouble out in the open, you can invite help and encouragement from friends. And you can benefit by the strengthening power of prayer.
Merely getting on his knees and asking for help wasn't the whole story of Dr. X's reformation. Many a drunk knows there's a wide difference between promising to go straight and sticking to it!
What enabled him to hold fast to his resolution was the discovery that he, who had just started to climb back to sobriety and respectability, had the ability to help other desperate and disheartened drunks to live decent lives too.
In fact, that's a big part of the cure. When Dr. X gets an inebriate started on a new life of decency, he sees to it that the man gets on his feet now and then and talks to other people in the same predicament. Telling yourself and the world that you're going to go straight helps you to remind your subconscious mind that you are going straight.
There have been a lot of ex-drunks that have come within Dr. X's influence since that fateful night he was turned back from a drunkard's grave. Forty-three of them, no less, owe their new lives to him. He'll leave a party or a dinner, almost leave an operation, to go and sit up all night with some drunk he probably never saw before but who he knows needs help.
He has worked out a little system. Usually he puts the drunk to bed in a hospital, where he can sleep off his liquor quietly but can't get any more. There the sick man—for a drunk really is a sick man—receives regular care, and hot meals, and also some measure of discipline and restraint. There he has privacy, and time to think.
"But you can't do much for a man until he hits bottom and bounces back up, can you?" I asked.
"A man doesn't necessarily have to hit bottom, but he has to come close enough to it to see where he's going if he doesn't stop drinking," replied Dr. X quietly. "And he's got to want to be helped before we can do much with him or for him"
When a drunk in the hospital starts to sober up, Dr. X closes the door and starts to talk to him.
"I know where you hide your bottles," he'll say. "I know every sneaky little thing you do to get liquor
when you're not supposed to have any. I've been there myself. And I want to tell you, my fine young friend, it's getting you nowhere. You're rotten. You're ashamed of yourself. Now let's do something about it."
So there in that white, silent hospital room they read the Bible together. Then they pray. Very simply. First the Doctor, then, falteringly, the man himself. He finds his voice gains in confidence. He finds it is easy to talk to God, and talk out loud. He finds a huge load is lifted off his chest. He begins to feel he could hold his head up again. He gets a fresh look at the man he might be. The whole idea becomes real and feasible to him. He becomes enthusiastic and eager about going straight. He promises to read the Bible, and Dr. X leaves him.

Then, like as not, the sick man slips up, and badly. Success is not that easy. Those nerves that have been accustomed to bossing the mind and the body can't be straightened out without a last tough fight. The patient begs for just one more last little drink, and when the nurse refuses, he is angry at Dr. X and may storm about and threaten to go home. Fortunately, the foresighted Dr. X had carefully removed the patient's pants and shoes and locked them up in his own locker in the surgeons' room of the hospital.
And then, because he knows the fight the sick man is going through, Dr. X comes back in time to bring new comfort and new cheer and to again call forth the searching and ever-available help of prayer. And in a couple of weeks the man, rested and refreshed and with the eyes alight as a result of decent living, goes home to his friends and his family that had almost given him up for dead.
"No, I don't dare let you tell about this," Dr. X said to me when I asked him for a signed interview.
"We can't publicize these cures. These men are outside the realm of every day medicine. They have tried everything and been given up as hopeless. We don't succeed every time ourselves. We can't brag. Every case is a new battle."
"But if word got out that we can do anything at all for a drunk, then derelicts would come into this town by the TRAINLOAD. We couldn't handle them. We couldn't handle a dozen. Two is a lot. One at a time is plenty. I can't talk to one of these fellows for more than an hour or two without feeling spent and tired, unless I talk like a parrot, and talking like a parrot wouldn't do them any good".
"Do you remember when Christ turned around in the crowd and asked, 'Who touched me?' and some woman confessed she had touched his robe because she wanted to be cured? Christ felt some of his power pass out from him at that touch. It's the same way with helping people. You're giving something. It tires you.
"We fellows who are doing this sort of thing feel we have hold of something, but we don't dare use our names in connection with it. Look up the new book, Alcoholics, Anonymous which we helped write. We studied around for a long while to find how we could tell our story without using our names. That book was the answer. It tells some actual stories—my own among them—but no names are given. Even the publisher doesn't know our names."
"But Dr. X," I insisted, "Why not let these drunks pay you something for what you do for them? After all, they have been a burden to their friends. You put them back where they can earn a living again and live a decent life. You deserve any kind of fee you want to charge."
"No, we can't commercialize the idea," the doctor said firmly but kindly. "That would spoil everything. We've got to keep our work as a gift to anyone we are able to help.
"Moreover, I'm not sure we could set up a sanitarium and cure people effectively in any wholesale manner. I'm convinced this idea has to grow, one cure at a time."
I tried to argue still further. "But Christ was willing to let folks invite him in for supper and the night," I suggested. "You and your wife have food to buy, and rent to pay, and overhead expenses in the way of taxes and insurance and shoes for your daughter. It's your own fault if you don't let these reformed drunks help pay their own way."
"I'm satisfied," he said with a quiet smile that permitted no debate. "My wife and I are happier than we have ever been in our lives. We can keep going very nicely as long as I get a few operations from time to time, as I am doing. I'm doing a good job of living, and am happy," he ended.
Then he handed me this final thought. "I have found that no one can be permanently happy unless he lives in harmony with the rules set down in the Good Book," he said. "Try it some time! You don't need to wait till you're down and out before you ask for help. There's help waiting for you right now, if you just ask God to help you."
† † †
The gifts of friendship have only the value that
friendship gives them.—The Advance.
YOUR FAITH

Old School A.A. Recovery Meetings Moving Ahead Now



Our work on How To Conduct Old School A.A. Recovery Meetings Today--founded on conference-approved literature--is under way.
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Tuesday, February 21, 2012

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Monday, February 20, 2012

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Sunday, February 19, 2012

Special Pre-publication $9.95 Old School A.A. Guidebook Offer


Announcing!





How to Conduct

“Old-School” 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.

© 2012 Anonymous. All rights reserved





Are you tired of being told in recovery meetings:



“You cannot talk about Jesus Christ or the Bible—even God—here!”



Are you tired of hearing when you bring a Bible—or even the “non-Conference-approved” first edition of the Big Book!—into recovery meetings:



 “That’s not Conference-approved!”



“That’s against the Traditions!”



Dick B. and Ken B.’s newest title, How to Conduct “Old-School” 12-Step Recovery Meetings Using Conference-Approved Literature may be just what you need! This book addresses both how to launch A.A. Central Office / Directory-listed meetings and other Christian Recovery-oriented meetings, and how to “fine-tune” either kind of meeting if you already have or participate in one.



How to Conduct “Old-School” 12-Step Recovery Meetings Using Conference-Approved Literature by Dick B. and Ken B. also provides many direct quotations from A.A. General Service Conference-approved literature—including Alcoholics Anonymous, 4th ed. (the “Big Book”), The Co-Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous pamphlet (Item P-53), and DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers—which highlight the roles played by God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible in the 75% success rate early A.A. claimed overall and the documented 93% success rate in Cleveland among “seemingly-hopeless,” “medically-incurable,” “last-gasp-case,” “real” alcoholics who thoroughly followed the seven-point program and related practices of the original Akron A.A. “Christian fellowship”



Why suffer another minute? Why try to “reinvent the wheel?” Benefit from obtaining Dick B. and Ken B.’s new book, How to Conduct “Old-School” 12-Step Recovery Meetings Using Conference-Approved Literature, today through this pre-publication, digital download offer, for only $9.95. (NOTE: This special offer is subject to change or removal at any time, as we will be making this title available through Print-On-Demand and in eBook formats very shortly.) The book’s contents are complete! We are working on final cover design for the perfect bound format and on uploading this title as an eBook right now (February 19, 2012).



Get a leg up on this powerful new approach. How to Conduct “Old-School” 12-Step Recovery Meetings Using Conference-Approved Literature—together with videos we will be producing shortly, and a substantially-revised, fourth edition of The Dick B. Christian Recovery Guide (2012)—will be a major feature of



The First 2012 North American Conference

of the International Christian Recovery Conference

May 18-19, 2012

At the new His Place Church location in Westminster, California



Be there!



These new tools with be featured in Conference workshops, personal meetings, training meetings, and groups already beginning to implement this important “old-school,” “First Century Christianity”-oriented recovery approach founded upon the very language of “Conference-approved” literature, and applicable in fellowships, programs, counseling, and 12 Step work today.



Here is the Table of Contents from How to Conduct “Old-School” 12-Step Recovery Meetings Using Conference-Approved Literature:





Contents



             Introduction: “Old-School” Christian Recovery                               9



Ch. 1: Resources for “Old-School” 12 Step Recovery Meetings                  15



Conference-approved Resources                                                        17

Other Resources                                                                                  18



Ch. 2: Conference-Approved Literature Foundations                                  23



Alcoholics Anonymous                                                                        23

The Co-Founders of Alcoholics Anonymous                                       28

DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers                                                     29



Ch. 3: The Real Akron A.A. Program                                                           33



Ch. 4: 16 Key Practices of the Real Akron A.A. Program                            35



Ch. 5: “Old-School” A.A. and First Century Christianity                            47



Many Compared Early A.A. to First Century Christianity                48

John D. Rockefeller, Jr., and his representatives                    49

John D. Rockefeller, Jr., himself                                 49

Frank Amos                                                                50

Albert Scott                                                                50

“First Century Christianity” in the Book of Acts                   51

A.A.’s Christian Predecessors                                                                        55

The Vermont of Dr. Bob and Bill W.’s youth                        55

Christian Recovery before A.A.                                             57

The Young Men’s Christian Association.                   57

The Great Evangelists                                                 58

The Rescue Missions                                                   63

The Salvation Army                                                    64

The Young People’s Society of Christian Endeavor  64

“A First Century Christian Fellowship”

(The Oxford Group).                                      65

Dr. Bob and Bill W.’s Christian Upbringings                                     68

Dr. Bob’s Christian Upbringing                                              68

Bill W.’s Christian Upbringing                                               68

The Conversion Factor in Bill W.’s Life                                             69

Many Early AAs Claimed They Were “Cured”                                 71



Ch. 6: “Old-School” Elements That Can Be Used Today                              75



Where to Begin with a Newcomer                                                     75

Have Newcomers Give Their Lives to God                                       78

Eliminating Sinful Conduct and Obeying God’s Will                       78

“We Are Willing to Grow along Spiritual Lines.”                              79

Carrying the Message to Those Who Still Suffer                               80

“Religious and Social” Comradeship Is Important!                           81

“Be Quick to See Where Religious People Are Right.

Make Use of What They Offer.”                                            82



Ch. 7: How to Conduct “Old-School” Recovery Meetings                           85



How to Start a “Conference-approved Literature” Group                 85

Initial Decisions and Actions—Including Literature Selection          86

Only Conference-approved material on the lit. table              87

Lit. tables with Conference-approved & other materials        87

General Guides to Establishing Study Meetings                                89

Topics for Study Meetings                                                                 90



            Conclusion                                                                                          93



To take advantage of this pre-publication special offer for How to Conduct “Old-School” 12-Step Recovery Meetings Using Conference-Approved Literature: A Dick B. Guide for Leaders and Workers in the Recovery Arena by Dick B. and Ken B. for only $9.95 for a digital download version of this new book, please:



1.      Go to the center column of the www.DickB.com Web site front page;



2.      Scroll down to the “Help Support Our Work” section (which looks like this):




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If you have questions, please contact Ken B. by email at kcb00799@gmail.com or on his cell phone at (808) 276-4945. Please remember Hawaii time is two (2) hours earlier than California time, and five (5) hours earlier than Florida time, at this time of year. (i.e., 8:00 am in Hawaii is 10:00 am in California and 1:00 pm in Florida.



Gloria Deo








Friday, February 17, 2012

The Dick B. Shoemaker/A.A. Collection


The Dick B. Shoemaker/A.A. Collection

And

The Archival Notes of Dr. Jared Lobdell



[A major portion of the Dick B. Shoemaker Collection was gathered together as described in the Dick B. comments below. Then, with the help of benefactors, it was given into the temporary custody of Ray Grumney, Archivist at Dr. Bob’s Home in Akron. Then it was turned over to Dr. Karen A. Plavan, Professor in Pittsburgh, who arranged for its deposit and present location in the “Shoemaker Room” at Calvary Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh. Placed there, with the permission of The Rev. Dr. Harold Lewis, Rector of Calvary Episcopal Church in Pittsburgh]



Except for the comments of Dick B. and the correction of errata, this paper was written by Dr. Jared Lobdell as an Archival Note – the following:



Archival Note I: The Dick B. Shoemaker/A.A. Collection

Our next contribution provides a brief look at an archival collection (not well known and recently relocated) which can supplement materials at Brown. We hope in subsequent issues to note other collections useful or adjunct to A.A. history, especially church-related collections.



[Comment by Dick B. in February, 2012:



Over many years of travels, investigations, interviews, visits, acquisitions, and research, my son Ken and I gathered the Shoemaker books, articles, pamphlets, Evangel issues, sermons, correspondence, news articles, pictures, tapes, and other paper from all over the United States.



Examples and their sources are materials from (1) Hartford Seminary, (2) Calvary Episcopal Church in New York, (3) St George’s Parish in New York, (4) Princeton Alumni Archives, (5) interviews of the leaders of The Pittsburgh Experiment, (6) interviews of the “golf club crowd” in Pittsburgh, (7) Calvary Episcopal Church archives in Pittsburgh, (8) interviews of friends of Sam Shoemaker in Pittsburgh, and the church archivist in Pittsburgh, (9) the Vicar of Calvary Church in New York, (10) the Rector of Calvary/St/ George’s Parish in New York, (11) Mrs. W. Irving Harris who turned over her entire Shoemaker collection to me, (12) Shoemaker’s older daughter Sally Shoemaker Robinson, (13) Shoemaker’s younger daughter  Nickie Shoemaker Haggart, (14) L. Parks Shipley, Sr., (14) Rev. Harry Almond, (15) the personal journals of Sam Shoemaker, (16) comparative personal journal entries in the journal of James Draper Newton, (17) Episcopal Church Archives in Austin, Texas, (18) the library of James D. and Eleanor Forde Newton, (19) the library of George Vondermuhll, Jr., (20) the library of  T. Willard Hunter, (21) Richard Ruffin, Executive Director of MRA, (22) the national headquarters of Moral Re-Armament in Washington, D.C., (23) interviews of Rev. Paul Everett, son in law of Norman Vincent Peale, and a former director of The Pittsburgh Experiment, (24) interview of Dr. Norman Vincent Peale, (25) Shoemaker books and papers owned by Dennis Cassidy of  Connecticut, (26) Shoemaker books and papers owned by Danny Whitmore of California, (27) interview and books from Dr. Morris Martin of the Oxford Group, who was personal secretary to Dr. Frank Buchman, (28) articles by Shoemaker in the A.A. Grapevine, (29) Faith at Work, (30) Shoemaker correspondence and papers located at Stepping Stones Archives, (31) Interviews, calls, and communications with British Oxford Group authors and activists—(a) Garth Lean, (b) Kenneth Belden, (c) Kenneth Belden’s son, (d) Michael Hutchinson, and (e) Several other British Oxford Group authors, (32) Shoemaker books, articles, pamphlets, photos and papers purchased by me or given to me by others, (33) listening to Shoemaker tapes, (4) Writings and exchanges between Shoemaker and Wilson, (34) the work of a doctoral candidate at St. Louis University, (35) the work of a doctoral candidate at Princeton University, (36) a large number of Oxford Group and other writings about Shoemaker.]  



[Dr. Lobdell’s archival note continues: This note is based on a communication

from Dick B. as edited.



1. New Light on Alcoholism: God, Sam Shoemaker,

and A.A. 2d ed Dick B.

This is Dick B.’s book on Shoemaker, his writings,

and his relationship with Bill Wilson and

Alcoholics Anonymous. There are useful appendices

and an extensive bibliography.



2. Other Titles by Dick B. pertaining to Rev.

Sam Shoemaker and A.A.

Dr. Bob and His Library, 3rd ed.

Anne Smith’s Journal, 1933-1939

The Books Early A.A.s Read for Spiritual

Growth, 7th ed.

Good Morning: Quiet Time, Morning Watch,

Meditation and Early A.A.

The Oxford Group and Alcoholics

Anonymous

The Akron Genesis of Alcoholics Anonymous

Making Known the Biblical History and

Roots of A.A.



3. Books written by Sam Shoemaker with date

published – fuller bibliographical description

in New Light on Alcoholism

A Young Man’s View of the Ministry, 1923

Beginning Your Ministry, 1963 (with jacket)

By the Power of God, 1954 (inscribed by

SHS, with jacket)

Calvary Church Yesterday and Today, 1936

Children of the Second Birth, 1927

Christ and This Crisis, 1943

Christ’s Words from the Cross, 1933

Confident Faith, 1932

Extraordinary Living for Ordinary Men,

1965 (with jacket)

Freedom and Faith, 1949

God’s Control, 1939 (with jacket)

How to Become a Christian, 1953

(with jacket)

How You Can Find Happiness, 1947

(with jacket)

How You Can Help Other People, 1946

(with jacket)

If I Be Lifted Up, 1931 (with jacket)

Living Your Life Today, 1947 (with jacket)

National Awakening, 1936 (with jacket)

One Boy’s Influence, 1925

Realizing Religion, 1921

Religion That Works, 1928

Revive Thy Church, 1948 (inscribed by SHS)

Sam Shoemaker at His Best, 1964

Steps of a Modern Disciple, 1972

The Church Alive, 1950 (with jacket)

The Church Can Save the World, 1938

The Conversion of the Church, 1932

(inscribed by SHS)

The Experiment of Faith, 1957 (with jacket)

The Gospel According to You, 1934

They’re on the Way, 1951 (with jacket)

Twice-Born Ministers, 1929

Under New Management, 1966

With the Holy Spirit and with Fire, 1960

(with jacket)



4. Important articles and pamphlets by

Shoemaker

Act As If, October, 1954

A First Century Christian Fellowship:

A Defense of So-called Buchmanism by

One of Its Leaders, 1928

God and America, Gramercy Park, n.d.

How to Find God, 1957

Lord, Teach Us to Pray, 1977

Morning Radio Talk No. 1, 1945

My Life Work and My Will, circa 1930

Power to Become, 1944

The Breadth and Narrowness of the Gospel,

1929 (fragment)

The Way to Find God, 1935

Creative Relationships, 1946

Calvary Mission, n.d.

What the Church Has to Learn From

Alcoholics Anonymous, 1956



5. Symposia edited by, and with chapters or

material by Shoemaker

Faith at Work. NY: Hawthorne Books, 1958

Together. NY: Abingdon-Cokesbury, 1956

The Centennial History of Calvary Episcopal

Church Pittsburgh, 1955

The Guideposts Trilogy. NY: Guideposts

Associates, 1962

Steps to a New Beginning. TN: Thomas

Nelson Publishers, 1993

Get Going Through Small Groups. NY:

Guideposts, n.d.

Marriage is for Living. MI: Zondervan, 1968



6. Shoemaker articles on the A.A. Program

And so from my heart I say, Sept. 1948

The Spiritual Angle, October, 1955

The Spiritual Path of A.A., n.d.

The Twelve Steps of A.A., 1953

Those Twelve Steps as I Understand Them,

1986

12 Steps to Power, 1983



7. Sam Shoemaker papers specifically

collected and copied by Dick B.



(a) Selected pages from the personal diary of

Rev. Sam Shoemaker for 1931, which discuss

the Firestone/Oxford Group/A.A. events

– 18 pages

(b) Selected pages from the personal diary of

Rev. Sam Shoemaker for 1935, which specifically

mention Bill Wilson and otherCalvary Church and Oxford Group leaders of

the period – 16 pages

(c) Morning Radio Talk by the Rev. Samuel

M. Shoemaker (Transcript): “Gems for

Thought,” a presentation of the American

Broadcasting Company Thursday, October 4,

1945 from 8:55 to 9:00 A.M., Eastern Standard

Time. Located by Dick B. in the

Princeton University Alumni Archives and

copied with permission

(d) A list of books and pamphlets by Oxford

Group writers and by Rev. Sam Shoemaker

and in the Calvary Evangel



8. Biographies of and biographical titles about

Sam Shoemaker

I Stand By the Door, by Helen Smith

Shoemaker, Wordbooks, 1967

The Breeze of the Spirit, by W. Irving Harris,

Seabury Press, 1978

And Thy Neighbor. . . , by Cecile Cox Offill,

Wordbooks, 1967



9 Calvary Church in Action, by John Potter

Cuyler, Jr. Fleming Revell, 1934

Kairos: Moments Remembered, by Griffin C.

Callahan, WV: 1999

Taking the Gospel to the Point: Evangelicals

in Pittsburgh and the Origins of the

Pittsburgh Leadership Foundation, by

Michael J. Sider, n.d.

Sam Shoemaker’s Theological Influence,

Ph.D. dissertation by Charles Knippel

No Outside Enterprises. Ph.D. dissertation

by Randolph G. Aitkins



9. Titles by Helen Smith Shoemaker (wife of

Rev. Sam Shoemaker)

The Secret of Effective Prayer

Prayer and Evangelism

Power Through Prayer Groups

Prayer and You



10. Bankers Box containing relevant magazines,

news articles, correspondence, interview

notes, personal journal copies, and

manuscripts pertaining to Sam Shoemaker

and A.A.

(1) Shoemaker’s grandson, Ben Rea – 2

pages

(2) Shoemaker’s older daughter, Sally

Robinson – 1 page

(3) Shoemaker’s wife, Helen Smith Shoemaker

– 3 pages

(4) Mrs. W. Irving (Julia) Harris, who lived

in Calvary House, helped her husband,

Shoemaker, and Bill Wilson – resource – 19

pages

(5) Episcopal Church Archives in Austin,

Texas: 230 items selected from 52 boxes of

Shoemaker correspondence, booklets, “materials

examined and copied with approval.”

(6) Calvary Evangel – recommended books

and articles - 8 pages

(7) Pittsburgh Experiment literature and

news articles – 20 pages

(8) Calvary Mission, first anniversary pamphlet

– 8 pages

(9) Calvary Evangel Articles by Rev. W.

Irving Harris – 5 issues

(10) Writings of Rev. W. Irving Harris,

Shoemaker’s assistant minister, Evangel

editor, and resident of Calvary House during

the 1930s. Wrote Shoemaker biography – 53

pages

(11) Pittsburgh Leadership Foundation

literature and news

(12) Calvary Evangel articles by Shoemaker

– 8 issues, plus 16 page article on Calvary

Mission

(13) “Act as If” article by Shoemaker

(14) Four often-reprinted sermons delivered

by Shoemaker at Calvary Church, Pittsburgh

– 15 pages

(15) Princeton University Alumni Archives

on Shoemaker

(16) Article – “What the Church has to Learn

from Alcoholics Anonymous” by Shoemaker

(17) Six important articles and papers by

Shoemaker: (a) “The Way to Find God;” (b)

“Calvary Mission;” (c) Transcript of Bill

Wilson’s talk at A.A.’s 20th Anniversary

dinner as transcribed by Shoemaker; (d) “A

First Century Christian Fellowship;” (e) “My

Life’s Work and Will;” (f) “Lord, Teach us to

Pray.” - 60 pages in all.

(18) Transcript of Sam Shoemaker’s address

to A.A.’s International Convention at Long

Beach, California – original and edited 12

pages in all.

(19) Shoemaker’s 6 articles on Alcoholics

Anonymous and its Twelve Steps: (a)

“Twelve Steps to Power;” (b) “Those Twelve

Steps as I understand them;” (c) “And so

from my heart I say;” (d) “The Twelve Steps

of A.A.;” (e) “Power to Become;” (f) “The

Spiritual Angle.” – 19 pages in all

(20) Several special Oxford Group materials

from Episcopal Church Archives, copied

with permission – (a) Loudon Hamilton’s

article on Some Basic Principles of Christian

Work; (b) Wilfrid Holmes-Walker’s article

on “The New Enlistment;” (c) Bishop

Carey’s article on “The Group System and

the Catholic Church;” (d) Henry B. Wright’s

article on “Secret Prayer;” (e) Loudon

Hamilton’s description of A First Century

Christian Fellowship – the Oxford Group; (f)

Victor C. Kitchen’s Evangel article, “Points

West.” – 37 pages in all.

(21) Personal Notes of Dick B. from his

interviews at Ft. Myers Beach, Florida with

James D. Newton alone and also with Newton

and Shoemaker’s younger daughter

Nickie Haggart specifically reviewing parallel

diary entries in Newton’s and

Shoemaker’s diaries of Shoemaker/Firestone

events of 1931 and of the Akron/Firestone/

Oxford Group events of 1933 – 6 pages

(22) The History of Faith at Work, by Karl A.

Olsson, M.D. A five part historical series

detailing the various aspects of Shoemaker’s

work and accomplishments: (1) “Rooted in

the 19th Century, FAW Grew From a Series of

Births and Rebirths;” (2) “Frank Buchman,

the Oxford Group and the Four Absolutes:

Honesty, Purity, Unselfishness and Love;”

(3) “Sam Shoemaker and Faith at Work;” (4)

“An Organization Emerges;” (5) “The Later

Years – Changes to Challenges.” 11 pages in

all

(23) Sam Shoemaker’s letter to Bill Wilson,

dated January 22, 1935 little more than a

month after Bill got sober in Towns Hospital,

congratulating and thanking Bill for helping

the Chemistry Professor (Breithut) and

having been guided to help Oxford Group

worker Jim Williams. Signed by Sam, original

at Stepping Stones, “copied with approval”

(24) Printed letter, dated November 1, 1941,

signed by Sam Shoemaker and his Associate

Rector J. Herbert Smith, explaining to the

Parishioners of Calvary Church the termination

of the use of Calvary House as “national

headquarters for Moral Re-Armament.

Original at Hartford Seminary Archives,

“copied with permission”

(25) Typed letter from Calvary Rectory,

dated November 4, 1941, signed by Sam

Shoemaker, addressed “Dear Friends,”

confirming belief “as firmly as ever in the

principles of the Oxford Group,” and reminding

them that they and any of their friends

“are always welcome at Calvary Church and

Calvary House.”