The
Shape of Things to Come
by
Bill W.
Copyright
© The A.A.
Grapevine, Inc., February 1961
AA's
first quarter century is now history. our next twenty-five
years lie in prospect before us. How, the, can we make
most of this new grant of time?
Perhaps
our first realization should be that we can't stand still.
Now that our basic principles seem established, now that
our functioning is fairly effective and widespread, it
would be temptingly easy to settle down as merely one
more useful agency on the world scene. We could conclude
that "AA is fine, just the way it is."
Yet,
how many of us, for example, would presume to declare,
"Well, I'm sober and I'm happy. What more can I want,
or do? I'm fine the way I am." We know that the price
of such self-satisfaction is an inevitable backslide,
punctuated at some point by a very rude awakening. We
have to grow or else deteriorate. For us, the "status
quo" can only be for today, never for tomorrow. Change
we must; we cannot stand still.
Just
how, then, can AA go on changing for the better? Does
this mean that we are to tinker with our basic principles?
Should we try to amend our Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions?
Here the answer would seem to be "no." Those
twenty-four principles have first liberated us, have then
held us in unity, and have enabled us to function and
to grow as AA members and as a whole. Of course, prefect
truth is surely something better understood by God than
by any of us. Nevertheless we have come to believe that
AA's recovery Steps and Traditions do represent the approximate
truths which we need for our particular purpose. The more
we practice them, the more we like them. So there is little
doubt that AA principles continue to be advocated in the
form they stand now.
So
then, if our basics are so firmly fixed as all this, what
is there left to change or to improve? The answer will
immediately occur to us. While we need not alter our truths,
we can surely improve their application to ourselves,
to AA as a whole, and to our relation with the world around
us. We can constantly step up "the practice of these
principles in all our affairs."
As
we now enter upon the next great phase of AA's life, let
us therefore rededicate ourselves to an ever greater responsibility
for our general welfare. Let us continue to take our inventory
as a Fellowship, searching out our flaws and confessing
them freely. Let us devote ourselves to the repair of
all faulty relations that may exist, whether within or
without.
And
above all, let us remember that great legion who still
suffer from alcoholism and who are still without hope.
Let us, at any cost or sacrifice, so improve our communication
with all these that they may find what we have found --
a new life of freedom under God.
Copyright
© The A.A.
Grapevine, Inc., February 1961
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