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The Rev. Samuel Moor Shoemaker Jr. |
"Co-founder" of A.A.
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Bill Wilson heaped accolades on the
Reverend Samuel Moor Shoemaker, Jr., who was rector of Calvary
Protestant Episcopal Church in New York during A.A.'s formative years.
Bill was in close touch with Sam from the beginning. He received a
letter from Sam when he [Bill] was less than 60 days sober, commending
Bill for his work with a drunken chemistry professor. Bill attended
Oxford Group meetings at Shoemaker's Calvary House. He exchanged
correspondence with Sam. He closeted himself in Sam's book-lined office
in Calvary House to discuss spiritual principles. |
Bill worked closely with many in
Shoemaker's circle-people such as Rowland Hazard, F. Shepard Cornell, Hanford
Twitchell, Garrett Stearly, Irving and Julia Harris, Hanford Twitchell, and
others. All are mentioned in company with Bill's name in Shoemaker's personal
journals for the 1930's. Bill worked with drunks in Shoemaker's church, in
Shoemaker's Calvary Rescue Mission. And Bill actually asked Sam to write the
Twelve Steps. Sam declined, but Bill did send Sam a copy of the multi-lith
manuscript of the Big Book before the Big Book was published in 1939.
Later, Bill asked Sam to write
articles for the Grapevine. And he asked Sam to speak at the A.A. Conventions in
St. Louis and in Long Beach. In many places, Bill attributed the ideas for the
Twelve Steps to Sam; and he called Sam a "co-founder" of A.A. Sam was inclined
to quote Professor William James of Harvard. Dr. Bob and Bill studied James's
Varieties of Religious Experience and specifically mentioned it in the Big Book.
Though James was long dead, Bill also called William James a "co-founder" of
A.A.
Here are some excerpts from
Shoemaker writings you probably have never seen:
In a pamphlet which published the
substance of a paper delivered before The Club in New York, December 10, 1928,
titled "A First-Century Christian Fellowship," Shoemaker wrote about the Oxford
Group as follows: "While outsiders are listening to rumors and criticisms, some
of us have seen the steady results of the movement called "A First Century
Christian Fellowship" in rekindled hopes, strengthened wills and altogether
remade personalities…." Let me enumerate some of these rediscoveries.
FIRST, the importance of the
individual in religious work. . . . This movement believes the individual
intensely matters; that more is likely to happen between two people guidedly
talking together than as a result of the average sermon, provided one of those
people has had a genuine experience.
SECOND, the belief that sin
is the key to human problems . . . . Therefore you will find this fellowship
tackling personal sin in all of its forms with that confidence which belongs to
all those who have found Christ the Cure.
THIRD, the adequacy of Jesus
Christ to solve our personal needs. . . . Conversion seems very remote to most
people. Surrender is a handle by which to take hold of it. By talking out fully
a person's sins with them, negative or positive, by sharing your own when it
will help, you can pack the idea of surrender full of meaning. . Surrender is
our part in conversion; and God will do His part in His time if We fulfill ours.
. . .
FOURTH, guidance as the
continuing relationship with our Lord. . . . Divine guidance is perhaps the
most important rediscovery of the movement. FIFTH, the possibility and necessity
for every Christian to be a personal witness for Christ. . . . Sixth, the
rediscovery of Christian fellowship upon a deep level. . . ."
In his well-known article in the
October, 1954 issue of the Christian Herald and reprinted in Reader's Digest,
titled "Act As If"-The First Step Toward Faith, Shoemaker wrote as follows:
"Want to try an experiment?" I asked. He answered, "I don't even believe in God,
you know." . . . I suggested that we kneel down out of reverence toward the
Unknown, and then that he say exactly what he felt- not pretending anything he
didn't believe but exposing himself to whatever creative force runs through
existence. . . . He got down on his knees . . .and said "O God, if there be a
God, send me help now, because I need it. . . . I suggested he read a chapter in
the Bible that night before he went to bed-perhaps the third chapter of St.
John; and another when he woke up next day-maybe the 12th chapter of St. Luke. I
suggested that he come to church Sunday and see whether he could catch anything
from the faith of other people. Also that he keep praying. "Keep saying whatever
is honest about yourself and your situation to whatever is the Truth behind all
creation. I think you'll feel you are being answered." He tried it
intermittently at first, fighting almost every step of the way. But he kept on
with the experiment-his need prodded him. . . . And at last he had to admit that
something was helping him, for he began sleeping without barbiturates, and his
business slowly began to come back. The skeptic was baptized and confirmed, and
later became a vestryman of my church. How did this man "get religion?" By
acting as if he had faith-until, indeed, there was an opening for God to come
through."
© Dick B. on Sam Shoemaker
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