|
The Four Absolutes of the Oxford Movement |
As Applied to the AA Program
| Honesty | Unselfishness | Love | Purity |
Foreword
Spelled out as such, the Four Absolutes are not a formal part of our AA
philosophy. Since this is true, some may claim the Absolutes should be ignored.
This premise is approximately as sound as it would be to suggest that the Holy
Bible should be scuttled.
The Absolutes were borrowed from the Oxford Movement back in the days when our
society was in its humble beginning. In those days our founders and their early
colleagues were earnestly seeking for any and all sources of help to define and
formulate suggestions that might guide us in the pursuit of a useful, happy and
significant sober life.
Because the Absolutes are not specifically repeated in our Steps and Traditions,
some of us are inclined to forget them. Yet in May old time groups where the
solid spirit of our fellowship is so strongly exemplified, the Absolutes receive
frequent mention. Indeed, you often find a set of old placards, carefully
preserved, which are trotted out for prominent display each meeting night.
There could be unanimity on the proposition that living our way of live must
include not only an awareness, but constant striving toward greater achievement
in the qualities which the Absolutes represent. Many who have lost the precious
gift of sobriety would ascribe to carelessness in seeking these objectives. If
you revisit the Twelve Steps with care, you will find the Four Absolutes form a
thread, which is discernible in a sober life of quality every step of the
glorious journey.
THE ABSOLUTES
We walked into this larger group of which we had heard of so much, but had never
attended. From the Vestibule we saw a placard on the comer of the far wall,
which said "Easy Does It." We turned left to park our coat. We turned back and
there on the other comer of the same wall was a twin placard, which said, "First
Things First." Then facing to the front of the room, high above the platform
we saw in the largest letters of all, "But For the Grace of God." Then as our
eyes descended, there directly on the front of the Podium was another four
words, "Honesty, Unselfishness, Purity, and Love."
In the next ten minutes as we sat unnoticed in the last row waiting for the
meeting to start, many thoughts tumbled through a mind that was really startled
by this first face to face meeting with the four Absolutes for a very long time.
We started to grade ourselves fearlessly on our own progress toward these
absolutes, through long years of sobriety. The score was a pitiful, lonely
little score. We thought of a find lead recently heard in which a patient humble
brother had told his story, and had mentioned his overwhelming sense of
gratitude as an important part of his fifteen years of sobriety.
And in listing things for which he was so grateful, he mentioned how comfortable
it was to be completely honest. Certainly he meant nothing prideful. He simply
means that he told his wife and friends the truth as best he could, had no fishy
stories to reconcile, was honest with money and material things, etc.
This was a truly grateful, humble fellow. Certainly he did not resemble the man
pictured in the Cartoon, speaking to a larger audience, pounding on the table
and with a jutting chin proclaiming that he had more humility than anyone there
and could prove it.
But think of "complete honesty". It is not the eternal
search for truth, which is endless, and in which none achieve perfection.
What do the four Absolutes mean to most of us? Words are tools. Like any other
tools they get rusty and corroded when not used. More importantly we must
familiarize ourselves with the tools, understand them and ever improve our skill
in their use. Else the end product, if any, is pathetically poor.
We thought of a dear friend in the fellowship prone like other alcoholics to
move quickly from one hobby or interest to another, without really doing much of
any of them. (Does that sound like someone you know?) Once this friend decided
that working with his hands would solve some problems, quiet his nerves and
perhaps help him to achieve serenity and balance.
So he reviewed an impressive collection of tool catalogues working with friends
already addicted to the woodworking hobby.
He bought a large expensive collection of tools, and a lot of equipment. He
hired a carpenter to build a shop in his basement, install the equipment, and
make custom-built racks to house the tools. But in the end not one shaving and
not one tiny bit of sawdust graced its floor. The idle tools serve just as well
to keep our friend occupied when he doesn't go to meetings, do Twelfth Step work
or engage in other happy AA activity.
How many of you will be completely hones and admit that you have put the four
Absolutes in the attic, a little rusty from non-use perhaps, but non of the
worse for wear?.? Give or take a little, how many of us who still maintain the
workshop for the Absolutes, will admit that not too many of our shavings or much
sawdust from our activity have ever graces its floor. Or even assuming that the
activity has persisted, how many will admit that the end product did not win a
prize for its quality.
Such a lack of quality can only mean lack of objectives or lack of all-out
effort toward such objectives. We must recognize the Absolutes are guideposts to
the finest and highest objectives to mortal man. But recognition is not enough.
We must use the tools.
HONESTY
Over and over we must ask ourselves: "Is it true or is it False?" For honesty is
the eternal search for truth. It is by far the most difficult of the four
Absolutes, for anyone, but especially for us in this fellowship. The problem
drinker develops genuine artistry inv deceit. Too many (and we plead guilty)
simply turn over a new leaf and relax. That is wrong. The real virtue in honesty
lies in the persistent dedicated striving for it. There is no relaxed twilight
zone, its either full speed ahead constantly or it's not honesty we seek. And
the unrelenting pursuit of truth will set you free, even if you don't quite
catch up to it. We need not choose or pursue falsity. All we need is to relax
our pursuit of truth and falsity will find us.
The search for truth is the noblest expression of the soul. Let a human throw
the engines of his soul into the doing or making of something good, and the
instinct of workmanship alone will take care of his honesty. The noblest
pleasure we can have is to find a great new truth and discard an old prejudice.
When not actively sought, truth seldom comes to light, but falsehood does. Truth
is life and falsity is spiritual death. It's an everlasting, unrelenting
instinct for truth that counts. Honesty is not a policy. It has to be a constant
state of mind.
Accuracy is close to being a twin brother to honesty, but inaccuracy and
exaggeration are at least "kissing cousins" of dishonesty. We may bring
ourselves to believe almost anything by rationalizing, (another of our fine
ads), and so it's well to begin and end our inquiry with the question, "Is it
true?" Any Man who loves to search for truth is precious to any fellowship or
society. Any intended violation of honesty stabs the health of not only the doer
but also the whole fellowship. On the other hand if we are honest to the limit
of our ability, the basic appetite for truth in others, which may be dormant but
not dead, will rise
majestically to join us. Like sobriety, it's the power of example that does the
job.
It is much simpler to appear honest, than to be honest. We must strive to be in
reality what we appear to be. It is easier to be honest with others than with
ourselves. Our searching self-inventories help because the man who knows himself
is at least on the doorstep of honesty. When we try to enhance our stature in
the eyes of others, dishonesty is there in the shadows. When falsehood even
creeps in, we are getting back on the merry-go-round because falsehoods not only
disagree with the truth, they
quarrel with each other. Remember?.?
It is one thing to devoutly wish that the truth may be on your side, and it
quite another to wish sincerely to be on the other side of the truth. Honesty
would seem to be the toughest of our four Absolutes, and at the same time, the
most exciting challenge. Our Sobriety is a gift, but honesty is a grace that we
must earn and constantly fight to protect and enlarge. "Is it true or false?"
Let us make that a ceaseless question that we try to answer with all the sober
intelligence we have.
UNSELFISHNESS
At first blush, unselfishness would seem to be the simplest of all to
understand, define and accomplish. But we have a long road to travel because
ours was a real mastery of the exact opposite during our drinking days.
A little careful thought will show that unselfishness in its finest sense, the
kind for which we must strive in our way of live, is not easy to reach or
describe in detail. In the final analysis, it must gain for us the selfishness,
which is our spiritual cornerstone, the real significance of our anonymity.
Proceeding with the question method of digesting the absolute, we suggest your
ask yourself over and over again in judging what you are about to do, say,
think, or decide. "How will this affect the other fellow?"
Our unselfishness must include not merely that which we do for others, but that
which we do for ourselves. I once heard an old-timer say that this was a 100%
selfish program in one respect, namely that we had to maintain our own sobriety
and its quality before we could possibly help other in a maximum degree. Yet we
know that we must give of ourselves to others in order to maintain our own
sobriety, in a spirit of complete selflessness with no thought of reward. How do
we put these two things together?.
Well for one thing, it points up that we shall gain in
direct proportion to the real help we give others. How many of us make hospital
calls simply because we think we need to do it to stay sober?. Those who think
only of their own need and who reflect little on the question- of doing the
fellow at the hospital some genuine good- are missing the boat. We know for we
used to make hospital calls in much the same way that we took vitamin pills.
Then one day in our early sobriety, we were asked to call on a female patient.
There weren't enough gals to go around in those days and the men were called in
to help. Never will we forget the anxiety on the way to that nursing home. And
after nearly two hours of earnest talk we left one of the noblest women we will
ever meet, worded about whether we had helped, or hurt, or perhaps had
accomplished nothing at all. Some of her questions stayed with us. We thought of
better answers later on, and
returned to see her several times.
We are helped on our long journey to unselfishness by
our great mission of understanding, which sometimes seems as precious as the
gift of sobriety itself. But the quality cannot be confined alone to that which
we do for others. We must be unselfish even in our pursuits of self-
preservation. Not the least of our aid to others comes from the examples of our
own lives.
Is there any protection against that first drink which equals our thought of
what it may do to others, those whose unselfish love guided us in the beginning,
and those whom we in turn guided later on? We are again reminded of the lat
verse of an anonymous poem. "1 must remember as I go Though sober days, both
high and low, What I must always seem to be For him who always follows me.
LOVE
We often learn more by questions, than by answers. Did you ever hear a question
that caused you to think for days or even weeks? The questions which have no
easy answer are often the key to the truth. However, in this series on the four
Absolutes, we are concerned with the questions we should be asking ourselves
over and over again in life.
The integrity of our answers to these questions will determine the quality of
our life, may even determine the continuance of our sobriety.
A good question to ask ourselves on love might be, "Is it ugly or is it
beautiful?" We are experts on ugliness. We have really been there. We are not
experts on beauty but we have tasted a little, and we are hungry for more. Love
is beauty. Coming from the depths of fear, physical agony, mental torture and
spiritual starvation, we feel completely unloved, impregnated with self-pity,
poisoned by resentment, and devoured by a prideful ego which with alcohol has
brought complete blindness. We receive understanding and love from strangers and
we make progress as we in turn give it to new strangers. It's as simple
as that. Fortunately for us love is inspiring from the very beginning, even in
kindergarten, which is where many of us still are.
The old song tells us that love is a many-splendored thing. In giving it we
receive it. But the joy of receiving can never match the real thrill of giving.
Consider that this great mission of love, which is ours, is seldom experienced
by the non-alcoholic, and you have a new reason for gratitude. Few are
privileged to save lives. Fewer have the rich experience of being God's helper
in the gift of a second life. Love is a poor man's beginning toward God. We
reach our twelfth step when we give love to the new man who is poor today, as we
were poor yesterday. A man too proud to know he is poor, has turned away from
God with or without alcohol. We have been there too. But if he has a drinking
problem, we can show him the way through love, understanding and our own
experience.
When we live for our own sobriety, we again become beggars in spiritual rags,
blind once again with the dust of pride and self. Soon we shall be starving with
the hunger of devouring ourselves, perhaps even lose sobriety, Love is "giving
of yourself" and unless we do, our progress will be lost. Each one owes the gift
of this second life of sobriety to every other human being he meets in the
ceaseless presence of God, and especially to other alcoholics who still suffer.
Not to give of himself brings the desolation of a new poverty to the sober
alcoholic.
When we offer love, we offer our life; are we prepared to give it? When another
offers us love, he offers his life; have we the grace to receive it? When love
is offered, God is there; have we received Him. The will to love is God's will;
have we taken the Third Step? Ask yourself, "Is this ugly or is it beautiful?"
If it's truly beautiful then it is the way of love, it is the way of A.A., and
it is the will of God as we understand Him.
PURITY
Purity is simple to understand. Purity is flawless quality. Gerard Groot in his
famous fourteenth century book of meditation, has an essay entitled, "Of Pure
Mind and Simple Intention", in which he says, "By two wings a man is lifted up
from things earthly, namely by Simplicity and Purity. Simplicity doth tend
towards God; Purity doth apprehend and taste Him."
Purity is a quality of both the mind and the head, or perhaps we should say the
soul of a man. As far as the mind is concerned, it is a simple case of answering
the question, "Is right, or is it wrong?" That should be easy for us. There is
no twilight zone between right and wrong. Even in our drinking days we knew the
difference. With most of us, knowing the difference was the cause or part of the
cause of our drinking. We did not want to face the reality of doing wrong. It
isn't in the realm of the mental aspects of purity that our problem lies. We can
all answer the question quoted above to the best of our ability and get the
correct answer.
It's in the realm of the heart and spirit that we face difficulty. We know which
is right, but do we have the dedicated will to do it? Just as a real desire to
stop drinking must exist to make our way of life effective for us, so we must
have a determined desire to do that which we know is right, if we are to achieve
any measurable degree of purity. It has been well said that intelligence is
discipline. In other words knowledge means little until it goes into action. We
knew we should not take the first drink, remember?. Until we translate our
knowledge into the action of our own lives, the value of it is non-existent. We
are not intelligent under such circumstances. So it is with the decency of our
lives. We know what is right, but unless we do it, the knowledge is a haunting
vacuum.
In discussing unselfishness we mentioned that it includes more than just doing
for others. We repeat that it includes all that we do, since much of our help to
others comes through our own example. Nowhere is this more true than in the
decency and rightness of our life. Were we to contemplate the peace and
contentment that a pure conscience would bring to us, and the joy and help that
it would bring to others, we would be more determined about our spiritual
progress. If our surrender under the Third Step has not been absolute, perhaps
we should give the Eleventh Step more attention. If you have turned your will
and your life over to God as you understand Him, purity will come to you in due
course because God is Good. Let us not just tend toward God, let us taste of
him.
In Purity as in Honesty the virtue lies in our striving. And like seeking the
truth, giving our all in its constant pursuit, will make us free even though we
may never quite catch up to it. Such pursuit is a thrilling and challenging
journey. The journey is just as important as the destination, however slow it
may seem. As Goethe says: 'in living as in knowing be intent upon the purest
way."
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