Suggested
Guide for Recovery Groups
For
the past three of four years, and
particularly in 2003, scarcely a
day goes by that someone does not
phone, fax, email, or mail me a
request on how to start a Big Book/Bible
Study Group in AA, How to hold an
old-time, early AA meeting, What
to do with a recovery group started
by a church, a para church, or a
group of AAs who want to focus on
the early AA Christian Fellowship,
reliance on the Creator, Bible Study,
and the “old fashioned prayer meetings”
as they were frequently called.
Each communicant has a different
agenda, a different point of origin,
and a unique recovery group or church
community background.
Hence, I have found it helpful to
have each person supply me directly
with the following:
1. Their name, mail address, phone
number, email, and website, if any.
2. A brief statement of their alcoholism
or addiction story.
3. The length of their continuous
sobriety or freedom from addiction.
4. Their religion, church or group,
and religious beliefs.
5. Whether they believe in the Creator,
have accepted Christ, and are willing
to lead.
6. Their familiarity with the Big
Book, taking the Twelve Steps, and
a fellowship
7. The name, address, religion,
and faith beliefs of their pastor
or priest, if any.
8. The number of people they plan
to reach at the beginning.
9. The immediate financial resources
they have for acquiring start-up
literature.
10. Whether they have read my books,
and, if any, the books they’ve read.
When the foregoing have been answered
by phone, email, or other communication,
I welcome personal calls by phone
to discuss moving forward and initial
guidance.
Specific Suggestions
Suggested Format for Recovery Group
Meetings
Open the Meeting as Follows:
This is the regular meeting of the
(i.e.) God’s Way Recovery Group.
My name is "alias", and
I am your secretary.
We will open the meeting with a
moment of silence to do with as
you wish.
Followed by a prayer; and the secretary
or chosen person prays (i.e.)
“Heavenly Father. We ask in the
name of Jesus Christ for your blessing
on this meeting of those who are
here to overcome their life-controlling
problems such as alcoholism, addictions,
and other dependencies. We ask that
your wisdom and guidance show us
your will for our lives, your way
to victory, and how we may glorify
you in all that we do here.”
This group patterns its work after
that of the first Alcoholics Anonymous
Group, which was formed in Akron,
Ohio; stressed the Bible; was known
as AA Number One, was a Christian
Fellowship, and relied on the Creator
to overcome the problems of the
members. To the same end, we’ll
review several verses from the Bible
that guided them in their work:
God’s love: “For God so loved the
world that he gave his only begotten
son, that whosoever believeth in
him should not perish, but have
everlasting life” (John 3:16)
God’s will: “Who will have all men
to be saved and to come unto the
knowledge of the truth” (1 Tim 2:4)
God’s word of faith: “That if thou
shalt confess with thy mouth the
Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in
thine heart that God raised him
from the dead, thou shalt be saved”
(Rom 10:9)
His Word is truth: “Sanctify them
through thy truth: thy word is truth”
(John 17:17)
Faith in God: “But without faith
it is impossible to please him;
for he that cometh to God must believe
that he is and that he is a rewarder
of them that diligently seek him:
(Heb 11:6)
Obeying God: “Cast not away therefore
your confidence, which hath great
recompense of reward. For ye have
need of patience that, after ye
have done the will of God, ye might
receive the promises” (Heb 10:35-3
6)
God’s Two Great Commandments: “Jesus
said unto him, Thou shalt love the
Lord thy God with all thy heart,
and with all thy soul, and with
all thy mind. This is the first
and great commandment. And the second
is like unto it, Thou shalt love
thy neighbor as thyself. On these
two commandments hang all the law
and the prophets” (Matt 22:37-40)
Forget not all his benefits: “Who
forgiveth all thine iniquities;
who healeth all thy diseases; Who
redeemeth thy life from destruction;
who crowneth thee with lovingkindness
and tender mercies. Who satisfieth
thy mouth with good things; so that
thy youth is renewed like the eagle’s”
(Psalm 103:3-5)
The Gospel: “And he [Jesus] said
unto them, Go ye into all the world,
and preach the gospel to every creature.
He that believeth and is baptized
shall be saved; but he that believeth
not shall be damned. And these signs
shall follow them that believe;
In my name shalt they cast out devils;
they shall speak with new tongues;
They shall take up serpents; and
if they drink any deadly thing,
it shall not hurt them; thy shall
lay hands on the sick, and they
shall recover: (Mark 16:15-18)
Early AAs believed that the solution
to all their problems was in the
Good Book—the Bible. The Book of
James was their favorite. In fact,
A.A. co-founder Dr. Bob declared
that James, the sermon on the mount,
and 1 Corinthians 13 were all considered
“absolutely essential.” The Society
considered it vital that they seek,
find, know, and establish a relationship
and fellowship with God. Also vital
that they study the Book of Acts
to see what Christians could and
should do by reason of the teachings
and accomplishments of Jesus Christ
before he ascended to heaven to
be at the right hand of his Father,
Yahweh, the Creator.
Tonight’s session will be divided
into three parts.
First, I will select someone to
read (i.e.) the first two (or more)
chapters of James. Second, I will
select someone to read the guide
prepared for us by A.A. historian
Dick B. concerning these two chapters
and the A.A. program. Third, I’ll
open the meeting briefly for comments
and discussion on these items.
We will then have a period where
each of us in the group may pray
to God and to seek His guidance
in respect of our own lives.
Then, we ask that newcomers raise
their hands so that we can get to
know you. Please talk to someone
after the meeting, give them your
name and phone number, and get theirs
so that you may call them for prayers,
help, and support. During the period
you are working at recovery God’s
way, keep company with believers
– whether in shopping, recreation,
sports, church, meetings, schools,
meals, and so on. See Acts chapters
1 – 4 for what they did in the First
Century that sustained their believing
and carried the message.
For those who have not yet been
born again of God’s spirit, please
either see your pastor and do so
with that person if you wish, or
see me after the meeting; and we
will have a brief ceremony where
individually you can confess Jesus
as your Lord and confirm in your
heart that God raised him from the
dead. This was called a “surrender”
in early AA.
Literature is available for purchase
or order at the table in the rear.
Be sure to read your Bibles and
pray each day. Our next meeting
will be on _____________.
We will close the meeting by joining
hands in a circle and saying the
Lord’s Prayer, which will be led
by __________. Thank you all for
coming. Please join us again.
Suggestions for Members of the Group
Suggestions for the individual to
follow daily:
Abstain. Under no circumstances,
indulge in your temptation problem
– alcohol, drugs, cigarettes, lust,
over-eating, etc.
Be sure to seek medical help for
withdrawal, sweats, shaking, etc.
Thank God for all the blessings
– name them – blessings that you
already have.
Ask God in the name of Jesus Christ
to heal you of your temptation,
to forgive you for your mistakes,
to guide you and instruct you to
safe habits, friends, places, and
activities.
Determine that you will change your
life by following God’s commandments
as they are set out in the Bible.
Renew your mind in your reading,
thinking, speaking – filling it
with simple ideas such as those
in Philippians 4:8, 1 John 4:8,
and Ephesians 1:19.
Call other believers for prayers,
company, joint reading, activities.
Begin immediately finding someone
you can help even if it is by phoning
them, giving them rides, joining
them for an activity, reading the
Bible with them, or simply keeping
fellowship with that person.
Don’t give up! Don’t give in. Read
James 4:7: “Submit yourselves therefore
to God. Resist the devil, and he
will flee from you
Suggested reading for individuals
or the group:
Read slowly, bit by bit, the Gospels,
Acts, and go on with Romans, etc.
Read Dick B.’s Why Early AAs Succeeded
(a Bible study guide)
Use it, beginning at Chapter 4,
for individual Bible study or Group
Bible study.
Read Psalms such as 23, 31, 56,
91; Proverbs 3:5-6.
Filling your hours:
A job, volunteer work, exercise,
sports, wholesome recreation, school,
reading.
Heed the old AA adage: Don’t get
too Hungry, Angry, Lonely, Tired.
A Sponsor: Ask someone who has a
sound Christian life to be your
contact and “sponsor.” Keep in touch.
Share your problems as long as your
contact provides you with prayers,
Bible segments to read, and positive
solutions – not just sympathetic
listening, or some secular experience
or solution.
Other Meetings Your Group Can Hold
First, consult the Creator for guidance
as to content and leader.
1 meeting a week resembling the
above original AA meeting
1 meeting a week on early AA History
1 meeting a week simply reading
the Bible – using the Bible study
primer
1 meeting a week teaching the Big
Book chapter by chapter
1 meeting a week studying a step
and its origins (using my Twelve
Steps Book)
1 meeting a week on Steps 10, 11,
12, particularly explaining what
is involved in
a real Quiet Time: (1) Born again
of God’s spirit. (2) Reading from
the Word. (3) Prayer to God with
thanksgiving, praise, seeking guidance,
seeking healing, seeking forgiveness,
asking help for others. (4) Asking
for revelation from God for any
message He wishes to give. (5) Using
devotionals like The Upper Room,
The Runner’s Bible, My Utmost for
His Highest.
Read the Big Book instructions on
Steps 10 and 11
As to Step 12, (1) Note that the
original “spiritual experience”
was acceptance of Christ (Romans
10:9), being born again of the Spirit
(John 3:1-8), and receiving t the
gift of the Holy Spirit (Acts 1:1-8).
(2) Note that the “message” that
was to be passed on was: “God has
done for me what I could not do
for myself.” (3) Note that the primary
“principles” to be practiced are
those specified in 1 Corinthians
13, the Ten Commandments (Exodus
20:1-17), the two Great Commandments
– love God and love your neighbor
(Mark 12:28-31); serving (Mark 10:42-45);
and witnessing (Matthew 28:18-20).
Dr. Bob cited all the foregoing
verses. He emphasized that the steps
could be simmered down to their
essence – love and service. He concluded
his personal Story by assuring AAs
that “Your Heavenly Father will
never let you down.” Twenty-five
years later, Rev. Sam Shoemaker
was addressing A.A. conventions
and declaring that a “spiritual
awakening” involves four things:
(1) Conversion. (2) Prayer. (3)
Fellowship, and (4) Witnessing.
Suggested Resources Your Group
Should Acquire
1. As many copies of the Big Book
(4th ed.) as there are members –
Plus at least one reprint of the
1st Edition, and Poe’s Concordance
to the Big Book.
2. As many Bibles (preferably King
James Version) as there are members
– Plus Young’s Concordance to the
Bible.
3. A reference set of the Dick B.
Titles (17) – discounted price.
4. As many of the following Dick
B. titles for each as there are
members (available at a 50% discount
plus s & h)
The Good Book and The Big Book:
A.A.’s Roots in the Bible.
Why Early A.A. Succeeded (Bible
study primer)
When Early AAs Were Cured. And Why.
Good Morning: Quiet Time, Morning
Watch, Meditation
Twelve Steps for You