How
can A.A. best assure its continued existence?
Answer
Since
the beginning of recorded time, many societies and nations
of civilizations have passed in review. In those great
ones that have left their mark for good, in contrast
with those who have left their mark for evil, there
has always been a sense of history, a true and high
constant purpose, and there has always been a sense
of destiny.
In the societies which failed to leave a bright mark
in the annals of the world, there was always a false
or boastful sense of history, always a mistaken or inadequate
purpose and always the presumption of an infinite, a
glorious and an exclusive destiny.
In the societies that left their mark of goodness on
time, the sense of history was not a matter for pride
or for glory; it was the substance of the learning of
the experience of the past. In the purpose of such a
society there was always truth and constancy, but never
a supposition that the society had apprehended all of
the truth - or the superior truth. And in the sense
of destiny there was no conceit, no supposition that
a society or nation or culture would last forever and
go on to greater glories. But there was always a sense
of duty to be fulfilled, whatever destiny the society
might be assigned by providence for the betterment of
the world.
This is the crossroads at which we in A.A. stand. This
is a good time to re-examine how well we have looked
upon our A.A. history and how much we have profited
by it, what false insights or false glories we may have
been extracting from history - to our future detriment.
It is a moment to examine the purpose of this Society.
Indeed, we are very lucky to be able to state as the
nucleus of that purpose a single word: sobriety.
Quite early we saw, however, that sobriety in abstinence
from alcohol could never be attained unless there was
sobriety and more quietude in the false motivation that
underlay our drinking.
When the Twelve Steps were cast up - without any real
experience and therefore under some Guidance, surely
- we were given keys to sobriety in its wider implications.
We have been blessed with a concrete definition of purpose
but, for all its concreteness, we could still abuse
it and misuse it in a very natural way.
Some times we begin to think that perhaps, according
to Scriptural promise, the first shall be last and the
last - meaning us - shall really be first. That would
indeed be a very dangerous presumption and never should
we indulge it. If we do, we shall compete in history
with other societies who have been ill-advised enough
to suppose that they had a monopoly on truth or were
in some way superior to other attempts of men to think
and to associate in love and in harmony.
We may look out upon our destiny with no violation of
our principle that we are to live one day at a time.
We mean that, emotionally, each in his personal life
is never to repine upon the past glory too much, in
the present, or presume upon the future. We shall attend
to the day's business but we shall try to apprehend
ever more truth from the lessons of our history, not
the lessons of our successes but the lessons of our
defections, failures and the awful emotions that can
set us loose upon us. For these, indeed, are the raw
materials that God has used to forge this still rather
little instrument called Alcoholics Anonymous. So we
may look at destiny and we may ask ourselves about it
and speculate upon it a little - if we do not presume
to play God. (G.S.C., 1961)