|
The
Catholicity of 12-Step Programs |
By W. Robert Aufill
ALCOHOLICS Anonymous, as well as the dozens of 12-step
self-help programs modeled on it, owes its origins to a twentieth-century
Evangelical movement known as the Oxford Group (not to be confused with the
Oxford Movement of a century earlier).
Founded on a belief in the necessity of personal conversion, a transforming
spiritual experience, confession, and restitution, the Oxford Group flourished
in the 1920s and 1930s.
The alcoholics who later became AA first achieved sobriety though this movement,
which sought to practice "original Christianity." After only a few years, AA
broke away to become a more narrowly focused organization whose primary purpose
is to help alcoholics recover.
Those earliest AA's, including co-founders Bill Wilson and Dr. Bob Smith ("Bill
W." and "Dr. Bob" to AA members), retained much of the initial vision gained in
the Oxford Group, and, as we shall see, were also deeply influenced by Catholic
theology. AA's emphasis remained on personal conversion, a "spiritual
experience" sought through working the 12 steps of recovery-the first of which
is to admit that one is powerless to save oneself from alcoholism.
Writing in 1962, looking at the disorder and fear among nations, Wilson
commented: "I am sure we AAs will comprehend this scene. In microcosm, we have
experienced this identical state of terrifying uncertainty, each in his own
life."[1] Smith also noted that the alcoholic who "hits bottom" is simply
experiencing in a more intense way the spiritual crisis all around him: "AA is
simply a way of capitalizing on this inherent situation. In the world around us,
however, the bottom is being hit all right, but this is always someone else's
fault."[2] New Age therapist Tav Sparks is on target when he writes in the
neo-gnostic journal Revision: "Chemical dependency, as an acute,
life-threatening form of physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual emergency,
is in fact a vivid microcosmic archetype of the universal human dilemma."[3]
The task for a Catholic apologist is to connect the AA's microcosmic experience
with the true religious macrocosm of Catholicism. We need to show that 12-step
recovery makes most sense-historically, logically, and spiritually-within a
Catholic understanding of the Fall and the Redemption.
Alcoholism and original sin
There are three principal points of contact between AA
and Catholic doctrine which make this rapport clear: (1) the analogy between
AA's understanding of alcoholism and the Catholic doctrine of original sin; (2)
the emphasis in both AA and Catholicism on understanding man as a unity of body,
mind, and soul; (3) the consequent need for a redemption or remedy embracing
both body and soul and effected by God himself since only he can do it.
The book Alcoholics Anonymous (known as the "Big Book") defines alcoholism as
"an illness which only a spiritual experience will conquer." AAs maintain that
their addiction is not consciously chosen and therefore should not be termed
"sin" in the proper sense. They make a distinction similar to that Catholics
make between original and actual sin. The new Catechism of the Catholic Church
explains this as follows: "By yielding to the tempter, Adam and Eve committed a
personal sin, but this also affected the human nature that they would transmit
to their offspring in a fallen state. That is why original sin is called 'sin'
only in an analogical sense: it is a sin 'contracted' and not 'committed'-a
state and not an act" (CCC 404)
Although it is proper to each individual, original sin does not have the
character of a personal fault in any of Adam's descendants. It is a deprivation
of original holiness and justice, but human nature has not been totally
corrupted. It is wounded in the natural powers proper to it, subject to
ignorance, suffering, and the dominion of death, and inclined to sin-an
inclination to evil that is called "concupiscence" (CCC 405).
The common opinion that there is-or may be-a genetic predisposition to
alcoholism is therefore no problem for Catholics, who already believe human
beings inherit a flawed human nature. Social and psychological factors in the
development of alcoholism also can be acknowledged by us because original sin
has influenced both human society and the human psyche. If God made all things
good in the beginning, then the chain reaction of sin and infirmity must have
had a start-an original "fall" at some point. The doctrine of original sin
therefore locates the origin of evil in the abuse of freedom by created beings
rather than in God himself. The doctrine acknowledges that men and women,
whether alcoholic or not, are in a state of bondage they did not personally
choose and from which only God can save them.
At this point, it is necessary to recall that, according to Fr. John C. Ford,
alcoholism is more than simply the concupiscence and self-will which afflict all
the descendants of Adam and Eve. According to Ford, alcoholism is the
pathological concentration of this self-will in a physico-spiritual bondage to
alcohol-with the consequent loss of control and the inability to stop without
outside help.
The Catholic apologist should therefore remember that he is upholding an
analogy-not an identity-between alcoholism and original sin. Ford's approach is
useful because he identifies alcoholism as a distinct problem existing also
within a larger human and spiritual context. Ford agreed that the therapeutic
and medical approach to alcoholism treatment is sometimes exaggerated.[4]
He summed up his ideas and experience as follows: "I do not believe in telling
an alcoholic, 'You are a sick man-you're not guilty of anything' because he is
guilty of many things . . . But from a common-sense point of view we are often
able to point out to an alcoholic . . . that his moral responsibility was
considerably diminished. I believe in telling an alcoholic, 'Yes, you are a
sinner, but your sins can be forgiven by the grace of Christ.'"[5]
Unchosen Bondage
It is therefore possible to use the Genesis account of
original sin as the backdrop for a Christian interpretation of 12-step recovery.
Ernest Kurtz perceptively writes: "The admission of the first step marked
acceptance that 'bottom' had been hit. It also echoed a deeper admission, the
irony of 'original sin' as described by the Book of Genesis.
"In the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve had sinned by reaching for more than had
been given. They ate of the forbidden fruit because the serpent promised that
eating it would make them 'as gods.' Their punishment was loss of the garden
they had been given. The alcoholic, in drinking, had sought inappropriate
control over reality more than was granted to human finitude.
"The promise of alcohol was likewise one of Godlike control: Alcoholic drinking
sought to control how outside reality impinged upon the alcoholic as well as his
own moods, feelings, and emotions . . .
"The penalty for such abuse was the loss of any ability to use properly,
reaching for more than had been given resulted in a loss of even that which had
been given. To this understanding, the alcoholic surrendered by the very
admission I am an alcoholic'"[6]
Thus the alcoholic finds himself in a state of unchosen bondage from which he
cannot free himself. His situation is a living parable of the human condition
itself, apart from and without Christ.
The original unity of Adam and Eve was meant to be a source of blessing for
their descendants. After the Fall, this mysterious human solidarity became also
the means of transmitting a flawed human nature. This seems, at first glance,
unjust-but not implausible, given the contemporary genetic and social factors
which many believe contribute, for example, to the development of alcoholism.
The same human solidarity which made it possible for us to fall representatively
in our first parents also makes it possible for us to be redeemed
representatively in Christ, the Second Adam (Rom. 5). So we should not complain
about our lot. Unlike the angels who are pure spirits and whose decision for or
against God is irrevocable, our fallen nature is redeemable. That is why the
Church sings at the Easter Vigil, that Adam's fall was a felix culpa, a happy
fault, which brought us a Savior we had no right to expect or demand. The
Catholic apologist should again reason by analogy with what the sober alcoholic
already accepts.
The whole man: body, mind, and soul
An important convergence between AA and Catholic faith
is the understanding of man as a unity of body, mind, and soul. Writing to Dr.
Albert L. in 1959, Wilson wondered: "How long will it be before the world
becomes willing to look at the whole man? In the world today we seem to be
confronted by myriads of specialists who would relate all learning and human
experience into their several fields. Never, it appears, was there such a
tremendous need for a sane synthesis out of which new and better values could
arise."[7]
The Catholic apologist should put forward Catholicism as this synthesis, at
least in its essentials. The "embodiedness" of the Catholic ethos-sacraments,
sacramentals, icons, statues, rosaries, incense-join spirituality with material
creation. As man is fallen in both body and soul, so must the remedy encompass
both body and soul.
Thomas Howard puts it this way: "In the harmony of Eden, everything that we did
constituted an unceasing oblation of praise to the Most High . . . This was all
torn apart at the Fall. We wrecked Creation by making a grab and saying, 'This
much of it shall be our own.' The fabric ripped. Now, instead of the sacred
seamlessness in which every fiber of Creation was knit together in a pattern
that blazoned the glory of God, we had a torn garment . . .
"In this sense, we may be said to have introduced hell into our world at the
Fall. For here we introduced the lie that we may have something of our own.
Whatever the fruit that we snatched at may have been, it was not for us. We
decided, however, that it should be ours nonetheless. This was a lie, and the
result was division . . .
"The Incarnation reverses all this. Our salvation from that abyss and division
comes to us in the figure of God-made-man. Spirit and flesh are knit once more
into perfect integrity. The heresies have tried to make the Incarnation an
illusion-God's merely 'coming upon' the man or tenanting there briefly. False
religions perpetuate the great divide between flesh and spirit, rather than
between good and evil where Christianity says it lies."[8]
Far from being an obstacle to faith and conversion, the "embodiedness" of
Catholicism is a source of credibility. It "fits" human nature the way the right
key fits a lock.
So far, we have established a certain analogy between alcoholism and original
sin and consequently the need for a remedy which heals and restores both body
and soul. To complete the analogy, we must now draw out the correlation between
recovery and the Catholic vision of redemption.
The word "redemption" originally meant the buying back or ransoming of a slave.
It is used in the New Testament to express what God in Christ has done for his
people. Having entered the human story through the Incarnation, at the cross he
has delivered us from slavery to sin and death by effecting the expiation and
reconciliation with the Father which the human will-even with the knowledge of
God's law-cannot bring about by its own strength. That is why we need a savior
and not just another teacher, philosopher, or lawgiver. The world's religions
and civilizations have never lacked moralists, and most of Christ's moral
injunctions have close parallels in earlier Judaism as well as in other
religions, though he did express these truths with singular sublimity and
boldness. But hearing and knowing these truths is not the same as living them.
AA's Big Book puts it this way: "Many of us had moral and philosophical
convictions galore, but we could not live up to them even though we would have
liked to. Neither could we reduce our self-centeredness much by wishing or
trying on our own power. We had to have God's help."[9] Paul said the same
thing. "I can will what is right, but I cannot do it. For I do not do the good I
want, but the evil I do not want is what I do" (Rom. 7:18-19). Deliverance from
this state must come from outside the self and not from within. The central
Christian belief is that Christ in his own Person is the Deliverer. The Church,
as his body, is that part of mankind that, by self-surrendering faith, has
entered into the redemption and manifests and applies it in the world until the
coming of God's Kingdom in glory.
It is therefore evident that 12-step spirituality fits in much more easily with
Christianity than with other religions and belief systems. I will briefly
examine two of these non-Christian alternatives: atheism (agnostic humanism) and
the New Age.
12-step recovery and the non-believer
Though tolerant toward the non-believer, AA itself is
fundamentally theistic. The atheist or agnostic humanist who has attained
sobriety by placing provisional faith in the AA group as his "Higher Power"
usually comes to acknowledge that no merely finite human strength can achieve
sobriety. But AA is evidently human and finite, both in its individual members
and as a group; therefore, AA itself cannot really be the ultimate Higher Power
operative in recovery from alcoholism.[10] For now-sober alcoholics who still
have difficulties with traditional theism, it may suffice for the Catholic
apologist to point to the alcoholic's own experience as proof that no merely
naturalistic or materialist explanation is plausible.
With most 12-step people, this is as philosophical as they want to get. Their
own experience is that their best thinking only got them drunk again. All the
same, the Catholic apologist should refer those who want intellectual arguments
to C. S. Lewis and to Thomas Aquinas's five proofs of God's existence, as well
as to John Henry Newman and Blaise Pascal on the "reasons of the heart" which
lead us to God.
If the sticking point is the sins of the "institutional Church" or of organized
religion in general, one need not defend everything the objector dislikes. The
apologist may simply remind the objector of the Big Book's chapter "We
Agnostics" and of its warning that self-righteous hostility to religion is
simply a blind prejudice. Note that the faults and human limitations of AA
members do not preclude God or a Higher Power working through them to help
others. Might not the same be true of the Church? We Catholics are well aware of
our sins; that is why we pray at every Mass, "Look not on our sins but on the
faith of your Church." The humanist objector might as well complain about sick
people in hospitals or alcoholics at AA meetings (see Jesus' words in Matthew
9:12).
Twelve-step recovery and the New Age
New Age beliefs likewise do not logically cohere with AA
spirituality because New Age religion hinges on the self-liberation of the "god
within" through one's own efforts and esoteric knowledge. For New Agers, the
basic human problem is not sin (whether original or actual) but ignorance of
one's true divinity. Salvation comes from the self. Swami Vivekananda once
declared, "The Hindu refuses to call you sinners. Ye are the children of God,
the sharers of immortal bliss, holy and perfect beings. Ye divinities on earth,
sinners? It is a sin to call a man a sinner. It is a standing libel on human
nature."[11]
Certainly, this is flattering to human nature, but is it realistic, given what
the sober alcoholic knows about his own human finitude? AA's Big Book states
frankly that the alcoholic had to "quit playing God" because "it didn't
work."[12] Despite his strong belief in AA's religious pluralism, Wilson himself
wrote that "it seems absolutely necessary for most of us to get over the idea
that man is God." [13]
With regard to spiritual growth, Wilson always spoke in biblical terms of
"growing in the image and likeness of God."[14] He never spoke of becoming God.
On this crucial point, there is a profound divergence between AA and the New
Age.
The incongruity is even more manifest when we examine the New Age belief in
salvation through the working out of one's own karma over many lifetimes. Madame
Helena Blavatsky expressed this belief rather well: "It is owing to this law of
spiritual development that mankind will become freed from its false gods and
find itself finally SELF-REDEEMED."[15] For Blavatsky, reincarnation "is the
destiny of every Ego, which thus becomes its own Savior in each world and
incarnation."[16] This does not tally with AA's first step. For a finite being
estranged from God, self-salvation is impossible, no matter how many
opportunities are given. Further, reincarnation does not explain the origin of
evil. If there was no origin, evil is an eternal, fatalistic necessity built
into the very nature of things and even into the nature of God, if "God" is an
impersonal All.[17]
Swami Vivekananda draws the logical conclusion from such philosophical monism.
"Who can say that God does not manifest himself as Evil as well as Good? But
only the
Hindu dares to worship him in the evil. . . How few have dared to worship death,
or Kali! Let us worship death!"[18]
Beyond good and evil
The New Age rejects the God of the Bible, thinking an impersonal deity is more
plausible and less morally problematic. But is it really? Such a God would be
beyond good and evil altogether. AA speaks of a loving God, but love is
necessarily a personal attribute. An impersonal deity could no more "love" than
could a gas or a calculator. Only the doctrine of the Trinity-one God in three
Persons-forgives a basis for saying of him, "God is love" (1 John 4:8).[19]
C. S. Lewis noted that good and evil increase at compound interest.[20] Even
Madame Blavatsky agreed. "Hurt a man by doing him bodily harm; you think that
his pain and suffering cannot spread by any means to his neighbors, least of all
to other nations. We affirm that it will, in good time."[21] There is no reason
to assume that good karma increases faster than bad karma. A finite being,
estranged from God and powerless to save himself, would run up an
ever-increasing debt of bad karma, unless the debt of justice could be satisfied
by another. That is Christ did on Calvary.
In Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions, Wilson acknowledged that "in some cases
we cannot make restitution at all."[22] Certainly, we must make amends, for our
own sake and for that of others, but it remains true that no mere human amends
can wholly right the wrong done. Only God in human form can make perfect amends
and reconcile in his own body both justice and merciful love.
A final drawback to the New Age worldview is that it sees the human body as a
mere garment to be cast off for successive bodies, until the cycle of death and
rebirth is ended through union with the impersonal Absolute. This contradicts
AA's emphasis on conceiving of man as composed of body and soul. Belief in the
resurrection more nearly corresponds to a genuinely "holistic" understanding of
human nature than does the doctrine of reincarnation. Here also the New Age is
not logically compatible with the implications of 12-step spirituality. Only
Catholic Christianity properly acknowledges God's love and holiness as well as
man's fallen but still redeemable nature.
Eastern religions not sufficient
Other religions fall short in this regard. Eastern
religions do not clearly distinguish between the creature and the Creator and
hence cannot logically accommodate any idea of salvation "from outside." Popular
Hinduism and Buddhism have a doctrine of salvation by the grace of the
bodhisattvas and avatars, who are worshiped and invoked as successive divine
manifestations, but, in the absence of a distinction between man and God, these
are seen to be merely reincarnated men who have saved themselves by their own
efforts and teach others to do the same.[23]
Dominican Edmond Robillard cites the following incident as an illustration of
the difference between Eastern and Christian worldviews: "I know a young French
Canadian girl who accompanied the famous Maharishi Mahesh Yogi on a trip in the
Himalayas. She witnessed a scene where a mother approached the great seer and
pleaded with him to employ his powers to cure her sick child. Maharishi told her
that he neither could nor would do anything for her child, since these
sufferings resulted from the child's karma, and Maharishi did not want to take
this karma upon himself. It is hardly necessary to add how such a doctrine
affects our idea of charity and mutual help among men."[24]
In any case, the cult of the avatars and bodhisattvas is regarded by the Eastern
sages as a concession to popular mythology. In the East, mythology and
philosophy coexist on two different levels. For the Christian, on the contrary,
"Myth has become Fact; in Christ, the wall of partition has come down," as C. S.
Lewis wrote.[25] With great insight, the Hindu scholar Ananda K. Coomaraswamy
explained as follows why he could not become a Catholic: "A fundamental reason
why I could not possibly do so is the Catholic claim to exclusive possession of
the truth. Other religions, or rather metaphysical traditions, claim to teach
the truth but do not claim exclusive possession of it.
"Christianity has other weaknesses, notably the reliance upon the historicity of
Christ. I could say, I know that my Redeemer liveth,' but could not say, I know
that he was actually born in Bethlehem.' It is only Christ's 'eternal birth'
that really interests me."[26]
This complaint against Christian exclusivity is quite common in both AA and in
the larger society. Three observations must be made in reply. First,
Coomaraswamy's purported inclusivity is not as all-embracing as it seems. It
implicitly excludes those who believe in a definitive revelation of God in
history.
Second, Christian "exclusivity" is not an expression of cultural arrogance but
of the recognition of what kind of salvation the human condition calls for.
Eastern religions are religions of cosmic law and of self-salvation through
asceticism and knowledge. Considered in themselves, they are blind alleys
because self-redemption is impossible. As religions, they bear the imprint of
what AA's Big Book calls "self-will" and of the desire to "play God." They
cannot be ways of salvation in their own right for the same reason that mere
willpower cannot give sobriety to the alcoholic. This is not intolerance but
realism: "Half measures availed us nothing," the Big Book says.[27]
Third, Christianity, too, is universal, but on God's terms, not on ours. "For as
many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ. There is neither
Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor
female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus" (Gal. 3.27-28).
AA's fulfillment in Catholicism
Many AA members would be surprised to learn that in the
very earliest days of AA, the 12 steps had not yet been written down. Bob Smith
described the situation in 1935 in this way: "We already had the basic ideas,
though not in terse and tangible form. We got them . . . as a result of our
study of the Good Book."[28] One early AA member recalls that Smith used to
stand up at the meeting with the Bible under his arm, saying that "the answers
were there if you looked for them because people back in the Old Testament were
just like people of this century and had the same problems."[29]
The Bible served as AA's earliest meditation book.[30] Smith and his wife Anne
were especially fond of the Epistle of James, with its emphasis on faith that
works through charity: "For faith without works is dead," as Anne would often
conclude the morning devotion.[31] Early AA was so impressed with the necessity
of following James in putting their faith to work that they often thought of
calling their new fellowship the James Club.[32] They also often meditated on
the meaning of the Sermon on the Mount and on Paul's words about true charity in
I Corinthians 13.[33] The Bible was the only reading material allowed to
hospitalized alcoholics, and Smith regularly described AA as a Christian
fellowship when inquirers came to him.[34] At meetings, he cited his favorite
Scriptures and used stories in much the same way that parables are used in the
Bible.[35]
In memory of his contribution to AA, Smith' Bible is still displayed to this day
on the podium of the King School Group in Akron, Ohio, with the following
dedication inscribed by Smith himself: "It is the hope of the King School
group-whose recovery this is-that this Book may never cease to be a source of
wisdom, gratitude, humility and guidance, as when fulfilled in the life of the
Master."[36]
AA's Christian and Biblical derivation is here made obvious. No less striking is
the almost Catholic emphasis that true saving faith is faith which works through
charity (i.e., surrenders unreservedly to God and cooperates with his grace by
persevering in charity and in working the steps of recovery). God's grace does
not negate human freedom, but restores and empowers it. On the experiential
level, AA members come very close to Catholic doctrine, often without realizing
it.
Catholic apologists must know how make clear this spiritual kinship, especially
to alienated and unevangelized Catholics who may have encountered God's grace in
a recovery group. Evangelization is not arrogance on our part, but a practical
recognition that we all need an external revelation to guide us-experience alone
cannot provide spiritual discernment. Without revealed religion, focusing on
oneself can become self-worship or a self-preoccupation bordering on it, and
that would be the opposite of recovery and of Catholic faith alike.
W. Robert Aufill graduated from Princeton with a degree in comparative
literature (his senior thesis was on Georges Bernanos and Miguel de Unamuno). He
lives in Stillwater, Oklahoma.
ENDNOTES
1. As Bill Sees It© (New York: Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, 1992
[1967]), 166.
2. Ernest Kurtz, Not-God:© A History of Alcoholics Anonymous (Center City,
Minnesota: Hazelden Educational Materials, 1991 [1979]), 381.
3. Tav Sparks, "Transpersonal Treatment of Alcoholics: Radical Return to the
Roots,"© Revision: the Journal of Consciousness and Change, Fall 1987,63.
7. Ibid., 381.
8. Thomas Howard, Evangelical Is Not Enough: Worship of God in Liturgy and
Sacrament© (San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 1984), 30-31.
9. Alcoholics Anonymous,© 3rd rev. ed. (New York: Alcoholics Anonymous World
Services, 1992 [1976]), 62.
10. Kurtz, 206.
11. John R. W. Stott, The Cross of Christ ©(Downers Grove, Illinois:
InterVarsity Press, 1986), 162.
12. A.A.,62.
13. Kurtz, 153.
14. As Bill Sees It, 51, 55, 159, 306.
15. Mark Albrecht, Reincarnation: A Christian Appraisal© (Downers Grove,
Illinois: InterVarsity Press, 1982), 212.
16. Albrecht, 112.
17. Ibid., 88-89.
18. Douglas R. Groothuis, Unmasking the New Age© (Downers Grove, Illinois:
InterVarsity Press, 1986), 144.
19. G. K. Chesterton, The Everlasting Man© (Garden City, New York: Image Books),
232.
20. C. S. Lewis, Mere Christianity©, (1943; New York: Macmillan Publishing Co.,
Inc., 1960), 117.
21. Albrecht, 94.
22. Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions© (New York: Alcoholics Anonymous World
Services, 1992), 79.
23. Edmond Robillard, Reincarnation: Illusion or Reality©, trans. K. D.
Whitehead (New York: Alba House, 1982), 128.
24. Robillard, 40.
25. C. S, Lewis, Miracles: A Preliminary Study© (London: Collins Fontana Books,
1963 [1947]), 138.
26. Roger Lipsey, Coomaraswamy©, 3 vols. (Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1977), 3:174.
27. A.A., 59.
28. Dr. Bob and the Good Old-timers© (New York: Alcoholics Anonymous World
Services, 1991 [1980]), 97.
29. Ibid., 228.
30. Ibid., 111.
31. Ibid., 71.
32. Ibid.
33. Ibid., 96.
34. Ibid., 111, 118.
35. Ibid., 228.
36. Ibid.
Return to the Magazines, Newspapers, etc. Page
Return to the A.A. History Page
Return to the West Baltimore Group Home Page