Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Second "Shout Out" for New Year's Round Up in Roseville, California: Dick B. and Ken B. will be Participating


Second “Shout Out”

 

New Year’s Round Up

 

12 noon-12 midnight, December 31, 2013; 10 am-10 pm, January 1, 2014

 

Adventure Christian Church

6401 Stanford Ranch Rd., Roseville, CA 95678


[Contact: Greg Bagley, Recovery Pastor; gbagley@adventurechurch.org; (916) 771-5683]

 

If you would like to learn more about the roles played by God, His Son Jesus Christ, and the Bible in early A.A.’s astonishing successes, and about how that knowledge may be used today to “carry the message” more effectively to “those who still suffer,” please join Dick B. and Ken B. at the “New Year’s Round Up,” December 31, 2013-January 1, 2014, at Adventure Christian Church in Roseville, California.

 

Dick B.’s Presentations at the “New Year’s Round Up”

 

Tuesday, December 31:

 

7:00 pm to 8:30 pm: Plenary Session:

 

                        Dick B., “The Good Book and the Big Book”

 

Wednesday, January 1

 

11:15 am to 12:15 pm: Third Break Out Sessions

 

                        Dick B., “What the Early AAs Did”

 

            3:30 pm to 4:30 pm: Fourth Break Out Sessions

 

                        Dick B., “The Neglected Factors: Conferences, Speakers, and Sponsors”

 

Dick B. and Ken B. will be staying at the Courtyard by Marriott Roseville during the “New Year’s Round Up,” located at 1920 Taylor Rd, Roseville, CA 95678 from (late) Monday, December 30, until (early) Thursday, January 2. We would be glad to meet by appointment with conference participants in our hotel room, at meals, or in the hotel lobby on Tuesday or Wednesday. Please contact Dick B.’s son Ken on his cell phone at 1-808-276-4945 or by email at kcb00799@gmail.com to schedule a personal or small group meeting.

 

Gloria Deo

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

Dick B.-Ken B. Shout-out for Adventure Christian Church New Year's Roundup, Roseville, CA Dec 31-Jan 1


Dick B. – Ken B. Shout-out

Our Roles in Adventure Christian Church’s New Year’s Roundup – December 31, 2013-January 1, 2014

6401 Stanford Ranch Road, Roseville, CA 05678

 

We have two roles in this huge New Year’s Recovery-oriented Celebration in Roseville, California: (1) Dick B. will be speaking on his most sought-after book The Good Book and The Big Book: A.A.’s Roots in the Bible. (2) Dick and Ken will be leading discussions on “The Most Neglected Factor”—the Content and Presentations by Recovery Conferences, Speakers, Sponsors, and Leaders

 

We are pleased and privileged to join with Adventure Christian Church and Pastor Greg Bagley in this stellar celebration with its break-outs sessions and workshops

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http://adventurechurch.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/ACC_logo_hires.png

Service Times

Saturdays at 5pm | Sundays at 9am & 11am
6401 Stanford Ranch Rd, Roseville, CA 95678

 Roundup

http://adventurechurch.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/ACC_CRroudup600x180.jpg

What’s the New Year’s Roundup?

·         A sober & safe place to ring in the New Year!

·         An opportunity to celebrate the New Year and attend gender specific recovery meetings.

·         An opportunity to attend breakout sessions on topics related to addiction & recovery.

·         A huge gathering of people who are on the road to recovery whether their first day or many years.

·         A place to enjoy good music.

·         A place where Large Group Meetings will be held each day. They will be led by Celebrate Recovery Groups from area churches.

 

What Kind of Meetings Can I Expect?

A partial list of gender specific group meetings includes:

·         Substance abuse for those suffering/recovering from alcohol abuse, narcotics, cocaine

·         Sexual integrity

·         Codependency

·         Food addiction

·         Anger management

 

What Sort of Breakout Sessions Are You Offering?

1.       What the Early AA’s Did – Dick B (author of the Big Book and the Good Book)

2.       The Neglected Factor

3.       The Bond of Sex – Barbara Wilson

4.       40 Shades of Gray & Women’s Addiction to Porn

5.       Anger Management in Recovery – Dave Pearson

6.       Nutrition in Recovery – Jeffrey Pogue

7.       The Cycle of Addiction in Recovery – Barbara Fields

8.       The Brain & Addiction – Michael Dye

9.       Porn & The Male Brain – Greg Bagley


Click here for a complete schedule of events

What’s the Price?

The RoundUp Early Bird discount price of $25 has been extended until December 21st and will be $45 thereafter.     Eventbrite - New Year's Round Up

roundup schedule

December 31-New Year,s Eve

Noon

Welcome and 1st Large Group Meeting (hosted by ACC’s CR Praise Team)

1:15

1st Open Share Small Group Meetings

2:30

1st Break Out Sessions

3:30-4:00

Break

4:00

2nd Large Group Meeting (hosted by Bayside’s CR Praise Team)

5:00-7

Dinner Break

7:00

Plenary Session, Dick. B., “The Good Book and the Big Book”

8:30

2nd Open Share Small Group Meetings

9:45

2nd Break Out Sessions

11:00

New Year’s Eve Candlelight 12 Step Meeting

January 1-New Year,s Day

10am

3rd Large Group Meeting (hosted by YTBD)

11:15

3rd Break Out Sessions

12:15

Lunch

2:00

3rd Open Share Small Group Session

3:00-3:30

Break

3:30

4th Break Out Sessions

4:30

Dinner Break

7:00

Worship Concert led by Adventure’s Celebrate Recovery Praise Team

7:45

Recovery Message given by Greg Bagley, “The Gospel of Do Over”

9:00

4th Open Share Small Group Session

10:00

Roundup concludes

Monday, December 9, 2013

In Today's A.A., Reading the Bible, Trusting in God, and Utilizing the Twelve Steps

Many of us have awakened to the fact that Alcoholics Anonymous and its basic ideas came from the Bible. A.A.'s Conference-approved pamphlet P-53 quotes the last major talk of Dr. Bob. And several things are made clear by him. First, in the early days of A.A., they  had and needed no Steps, no Traditions, no Big Book, no war stories, and no meetings like those today.

They believed the answers to their problems were in the Bible; and they said that Jesus's Sermon on the Mount, the Book of James, and 1 Corinthians were absolutely essential to their program. See www.dickb.com/JamesClub.shtml. Dr. Bob went on to say that the basic ideas for the Twelve Steps came from the teachings, study, and effort that had been going on in the Christian Fellowship from 1935 to 1938 when Bill's work on the "new version" began with his Steps.
Today, A.A. is not monolithic. It welcomes Protestants, Roman Catholics, Jews, Buddhists, Hindus, atheists, agnostics, humanists, and people who prefer not to believe in anything at all. That's just the way it is. And that is the A.A. to which I belong and in which I have been continuously active and sober for more than 27 years. Those who are Christians, like myself, and those who want God's help can readily apply the old school program as summarized on page 131 of DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers in A.A. today. And they certainly can do so without dumping A.A. and running to some other fellowship--Christian or otherwise. Recent books by Dick B. and Ken B. show the viewpoints of the pioneers in their stories in the First Edition of the Big Book.The first is Pioneer Stories in Alcoholics Anonymous.http://mcaf.ee/gj7iw
The source material can be found in the new Dover Publications reprint of the First Edition of the Big Book with a 27  page introduction by Dick B. http://mcaf.ee/j4hq5.

Telling how to harmonize this pioneer A.A. with the A.A. most of us know today--as replicated in the latest edition of the Big Book--is our book Stick with the Winners! http://mcaf.ee/50mq. They key to cure in A.A. today is learning what the pioneers did with their original Christian Fellowship, how thoroughly the Big Book "Solution" on page 25 squares with that action, and how to glorify and serve God and others while pursuing your own religious viewpoints and relying on God in A.A. today.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Avoid holiday door busting and cyber searching: Two books that will bless those who receive them


I would suggest the following two books as gifts for the holiday season. Both are widely popular and widely read. They will bless those to whom you give them:

Dick B. The Good Book and The Big Book: A.A.'s Roots in the Bible  www.dickb.com/goodbook.shtml - available in electronic form and as print on demand trade paper

Bill Pittman and Dick B., Courage to Change: The Christian Roots of the Twelve Step Miracle.
Published by Hazelden. Available inexpensively only as an electronic book.

Happy holidays!

Dick B. dickb@dickb.com

Tuesday, December 3, 2013

Who is "a responsible member of Alcoholics Anonymous?" An old-timer with 50 years of sobrioety gives his views

So this little article is addressed to those who are or want to be “a responsible member of the program.” Who is a responsible member?
 
Let’s take a cue from the three old timers I just quoted.
 
A responsible member is one who does not seek, or want, to take God out of the program. A responsible member is one who makes it clear that the Creator, his Father, is “conference approved”—certainly not “conference dis-approved.” A responsible member includes any one who gets well by turning to “the Lord”—as Bill Wilson and Bill Dotson (A.A. Number Three) said they did (Big Book, p. 191). A responsible member is one who would rather focus on what God has done for him once he sought God, rather than sparking a conflict over definitions--who is sick from what, what a “higher power” is or isn’t, and who satisfied the requirements for “membership” and who doesn’t.
 
One of the reasons I enjoyed and still enjoy the Fellowship of Alcoholics Anonymous is that I never tried to substitute a “higher power” for Almighty God. Another is that I never got thrown out when I mentioned God. Another is that I used the same terms for describing God that were used by Dr. Bob, Bill Wilson, and the other pioneers—Creator, Maker, Father, God, Father of lights, Heavenly Father, Father of Lights, Spirit. Another is that I soon gave up thinking I could demand that others stop using the phrase “higher power” to describe their “Something,” or “Somebody,” or “not-god” philosophy. And I am, like Gene, “a responsible member of the program.” At least I think so, and that is what counts for me.
 

Monday, December 2, 2013

Early A.A. Meetings: A Challenging Radio Interview


Dick B. interviews Christian Recovery leader John S. on the December 2, 2013, episode of the "Christian Recovery Radio with Dick B." show found at:

 


Copyright 2013 Anonymous. All rights reserved

 

You may hear this broadcast right now!

______________________________________________________________________________

 

You may listen to Dick B. interview Christian Recovery leader John S. on the December 2, 2013, episode of the "Christian Recovery Radio with Dick B." show here:

 

http://mcaf.ee/52o67

 

or here:

 

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/christian-recovery-radio-with-dickb/2013/12/02/dick-b-interviews-christian-recovery-leader-john-s

 

Episodes of the "Christian Recovery Radio with Dick B." show are archived at:

 


 

______________________________________________________________________________

 

Introduction

 

This morning's guest is John S. of Norco, California. John is a long-recovered Christian recovery fellowship leader. And he has been the most successful organizer and perpetuator of James Clubs in the International Christian Recovery Coalition. John attended our May 2009 conference of leaders at Mariners Church Community Center in Irvine, California. And he was among those who had met with a not-unusual barrier from a local 12 Step office trying to block the work of the James Clubs. But John plunged ahead with this effort. He held a large Christian recovery conference at his church in Norco. I have spoken there, and my son Ken has also spoken in Norco. John wrote a manual for James Clubs. And he rested his efforts on the very clear language of A.A. cofounders Bill W. and Dr. Bob that the early AAs believed the answers to their problems were in the Good Book and that they considered Jesus's Sermon on the Mount, the Book of James, and 1 Corinthians 13 to be absolutely essential to their program--a program that was succeeding long before there were any Twelve Steps, Twelve Traditions, Big Books, War Stories, or meetings like those we know today. Bill and Bob had both said that James was their favorite. They both said that the Sermon on the Mount contained the underlying spiritual philosophy of A.A. And the early members wanted to call their Society "The James Club." In Norco, John saw local people growing in number with this concept and also expanding the number of clubs in their churches and in Norco. Today, John will tell you a little about his family, education, airplane activities, recovery efforts, Christian affiliations, and the progress of the James Club movement. John will tell you how they began, grew, expanded, and blessed those who followed the path. Take it away, John.

 

Synopsis

 

The thrust of John’s remarks was detailing how his James Club groups in Norco have used the Big  Book, the Twelve Steps, the Bible, prayers, laying on of hands, and leading drunks to Jesus Christ—just as was done in early A.A.  The interesting thing is that local clubs and A.A. leaders went to any lengths to prevent meetings where the Bible was even in the room. They barred the meetings from the directory. They attended meetings and proclaimed that the James Clubs could not do what the early AAs did and what the highly successful Cleveland Groups did. When Cleveland A.A. was organized in May, 1939, the members brought with them the Twelve Steps, the Big Book, the Oxford Group Four Absolutes, the Bible, and “most of the old program” (meaning the Akron practices of qualification, hospitalization, prayers, quoting of Scripture, and growing growing growing) – the fastest growing group in A.A. and one which surveyed and documented a 93% success rate.

 

When the Norco groups asked local leaders what authority they had for barring the Bible from meetings, they said they didn’t know. And they were emphatic that you couldn’t have Christian meetings.

 

The fact is that Dr. Bob’s Bible, for many years, was brought from the back of the room to the podium and rested there throughout the meeting. At the end, the Bible was retired to the back of  the room to await the next meeting. That Bible contained inscriptions to the Akron meeting signed by Bill Wilson, Dr. Robert Smith, and A.A. Number Three (Bill D.). This fact is noted in A.A.’s own conference-approved book – DR. BOB and the Good Oldtimers.

 

The Norco James Clubs have now grown to four in number, and the clubs themselves have consistently grown in attendance. One of the concepts followed is learning to be open-minded about those who are close-minded. And this call for unity sets an example for other groups which serve and glorify God and Jesus Christ and have Bible studies. It stands as a challenge to the ever-increasing number of “agnostica” meetings, atheist meetings, “spiritual meetings,” and higher powered meetings.

Sunday, December 1, 2013

A.A. Atheists and Agnostics on the March; And the Puzzle Palace Facing Believers


The New Believers' Puzzle Palace That Faces AAs Who Continue Serving, Believe God, and Reject Unbelief.  By Dick B., Copyright 2013 Anonymous. All rights reserved

For quite some time, it has been apparent to any observer that a major change has already taken place in the recovery arena. There is no need to identify "the usual suspects." There is, however, some merit in calling to believers' attention the diversities that have been created in the recovery puzzle palace that has achieved prominence today.

Who are the present players? I wouldn't presume to label them, nor to characterizing them as standing for this or that mode of recovery. I would point out that lots seem grounded on the idea that a "new" recovery program is needed. But the nature of the need is obscured by the zeal of the promoters--however  passionately they cherish their plans and programs. Many just can't see a place for God!

There has been a flight from A.A. ever since the First Edition of the Big Book was published in 1939.

For a time, it revolved around admiration for Father Ralph Pfau, Father Ed Dowling, Father John C. Ford, Sister Ignatia, and those who wanted to be sure to deal with Protestant Christianity, its Bible, its Lord's Prayer, its "open confessions," its Four Absolutes, and other ideas emanating from A First Century Christian Fellowship founded by Dr. Frank N. D. Buchman and espoused by his chief American lieutenant, Rev. Samuel M. Shoemaker, Jr. And many of those proponents still have strong views on these matters--views that sometimes are translated into reliance on "Traditions," "Steps," "Conference-approved," and authoritative sounding tools. But A.A. just grew and grew and grew anyway. Some of the growth could be attributed to insurance companies. Some to millionaires who funded large treatment programs. Some to eager former alcoholics who saw their future in becoming alcohol or drug counselors. And some, of course, could be laid at the feet of friendly judges and friendly probation and parole officers who saw A.A. as a barrier against revolving door prisons and prisoners who somehow had a way of repeating their "relapses" no matter where they went or were sent.

Then came the shibboleth that A.A. was not "religious." It was "spiritual." This allowed some advocates and judges to feel comfortable assigning wrongdoers to a spiritual program that was not religious and hence allegedly not violative of the First Amendment. But Supreme Court rulings that made the Bill of Rights in the Federal Constitution applicable to the several states were not gathering real steam until about 1950 and thereafter. When courts began looking at the true nature of A.A. and its Twelve suggested Steps declaring "God could and would if He were sought" were not blind to the religious nature of the program. And the outright sentences of people to A.A. were either ended, circumvented, or cast in new clothing--sometimes using the word "faith."

But that did not stem the A.A. tide because, for a time, treatment programs, counselors, physicians, clergy, and therapists were still dropping their patients off at A.A. meetings with a nod of approbation from their funders and from the insurance companies.

What next? An attempt to make A.A. "inclusive" but not "exclusive" became a popular idea. And it was backed up by some post-1939 A.A. literature. You could believe in the Creator, Buddha, humanism, atheism, agnosticism, or nothing at all. And that march toward nihilism progressed. And finally A.A. literature began declaring plainly that you didn't have to believe in anything at all to belong to A.A. To a degree, this seemed palatable to a few religions. They could tell their parishioners to come to church for "religion," but go to A.A. for "spirituality." And with that, "spirituality," "spiritual but not religious," higher powers," and self-made religion became the new flame that was touted in the name of "unity."

But scientists, researchers, "scholars," academics, writers, and others seemed to have managed to talk successfully about "spirituality," "not-god-ness," nonsense gods, and psychological solutions and persuade many garden variety drunks and addicts to avoid using the early A.A. words like God, Bible, Creator, Maker, Father of Lights, Father, and Heavenly Father and to strip away the Lord's Prayer for closing meetings. Coming from a different perspective, they were joined by a handful of New Thought proponents who much favored abolition of "salvation," and "Jesus Christ" in favor of a personality change sufficient to overcome the "disease" of alcoholism.

The last major march on A.A. was conducted by Celebrate Recovery. Thousands of churches, pastors, and recovery pastors were persuaded to substitute the "Beatitudes" for the Steps, call Jesus their Higher Power, and somehow nod to the Twelve Steps while banning A.A. literature from their meetings. And the many much smaller Christian groups of Alcoholics Victorious, Overcomers, Overcomers Outreach, Inc., Neighborhood Alcoholics for Christ, and Footprints were pretty much left in the dust by Celebrate Recovery even though the other groups spoke favorably of A.A.

We have no dog in the fight when it comes to predicting the outcome of all this for Smart Recovery, Celebrate Recovery, Overcomers Outreach, Inc., the new Agnostica crowd, the new model programs crowd, the many atheist groups that have now sprung up, and some formidable Christian groups like Teen Challenge. A.A. has a slang expression: "If it works, don't fix it." The AAs conclude most meetings with: "Keep coming back. It Works." And the foregoing picture may spell "unity" for A.A. advocates like myself. But it's more likely to spawn a puzzle palace for believers who want to believe, to study, to pray, to rely on their Creator, to serve others, and to learn about the early Akron A.A. Christian Fellowship program. Tolerance and love and the power of God can certainly be a strong pillar for believers who want to believe and serve in A.A. But the more structured, organized, prohibitive, and rigid results all of the foregoing forces produce, the more likely that "science," or "medicine," or "experts," or "treatment," or religious creeds will find a way to survive whether they use A.A. Steps, Big Books, literature, and meeting formats or not. Or whether they simply produce more of the so-called "models" for recovery that have produced little since their popularity has risen and their existence has, to some extent, been codified in law.