-an article
published in the Light Magazine “Healing Pioneers” Series
By Rev. Dr.
Ed & Janice Hird
From 1917 until 1919, Sam Shoemaker served as a YMCA
missionary in China. In January 1918, Sam met a fellow missionary to China, Frank
Buchman, founder of the Oxford
Group where he experienced a profound spiritual renewal
through the "Four Absolutes" of honesty, purity, unselfishness, and
love. Absolute Purity means to find some all-consuming and high faith and
purpose which takes up and uses one’s energies. Sam always said that ‘we should
believe the incredible and tackle the impossible.” He memorably noted that“…everyone has a
problem, is a problem, or lives with a problem.”
Billy Graham called Sam “a giant among men… I doubt
that any man in our generation had a greater impact on the Christian world than
did Sam Shoemaker.” Billy Graham saw Sam as the single, most dynamic preacher of
his day
Ordained as an
Anglican/Episcopal pastor in 1921, he served as Rector of Calvary Church, New
York, from 1925 to 1952.
As Bill W tells it in AA Comes of
Age, he went in December 1934 with his friend Ebby to Dr.
Sam’s Calvary Church Mission:
There were
some hymns and prayers. Then Tex, the
leader, exhorted us. Only Jesus could
save, he said. Somehow this statement
did not jar me. Certain men got up and
gave testimonials. Numb as I was, I felt
interest and excitement rising. Then
came the call. Some men were starting
forward to the rail. Unaccountably
impelled, I started too…I knelt among the shaking penitents. Maybe then and
there, for the first time, I was penitent too.
Something touched me. I guess it
was more than that. I was hit. I felt a wild impulse to talk. Jumping to my
feet, I began…Ebby, who at first had been embarrassed to death, told me with
relief that I had done all right and had ‘given my life to God.’
Bill and his wife Lois started attending Oxford Group
meetings at Calvary House with Sam Shoemaker. Sam became one of Bill’s closest
personal friends, even hosting the first AA meetings in his Calvary Church
Hall. Both Sam and Bill had a wonderful sense of self-deprecating humour that
drew the non-religious to God. Sam often
said: “I never feel quite as much at home as I feel at an AA meeting.” A woman
said to him: “Sam, you may not be an
alcoholic but you certainly do talk like one of them.” AA now has over two
million members worldwide, with more than 123,000 groups in about 180 countries. So many have gotten their lives back.
Where did AA’s amazing 12 Steps come from? They were written by Bill W. Thinking of the twelve apostles, he decided
that the society should have twelve steps. Dr. Sam, as he was known affectionately
in AA circles, had a profound impact on Bill W’s spiritual awakening. The divorce of Bill’s parents when Bill was
aged 10 was a shock that he never forgot.
He says he remained depressed for almost a year following his parents’
divorce. He ended up staying with his
grandparents after his mom left for Boston to attend Osteopathic School. Bill’s
pain was heightened by the fact that he did not see his father again for nine
years.
Bill W said that ‘It was from Sam that co-founder Dr.
Bob and I in the beginning absorbed most of the principles that were afterwards
embodied in the Twelve Steps of Alcoholics Anonymous, Steps that express the
heart of AA’s way of life.’ Bill W went
on to say that Dr. Sam ‘gave us the concrete knowledge of about what we could
do about (alcoholism)’ and that Dr. Sam ‘passed on the spiritual keys by which
we were liberated’. Dr Sam, according to
Bill W, ‘has been the connecting link.’
Before AA, they would just put people in sanitariums because they didn’t know
what to do with them. AA showed how
alcoholism is a disease with a spiritual solution. Even though Dr. Sam was not an alcoholic, he
had unusual insights into the human condition that drew alcoholics to him. Reminiscing about the first time that he met
Dr. Sam, Bill W said: ‘I can still see him standing there before the
lectern. His utter honesty, his
tremendous forthrightness, struck me deep.
I shall never forget it.’ Dr. Sam
according to Bill W,
always called
a spade a spade, and his blazing eagerness, earnestness, and crystal clarity
drove home his message point by point…Here was a man quite as willing to talk
about his own sins as about anybody else’s.
The author of twenty-eight books, Dr. Sam was named as one of the ten greatest preachers in North America. Sam founded several movements, including Faith at Work in 1926 and the Pittsburgh Experiment in 1955, which integrated business and faith. His wife Helen, who wrote Sam’s biography I Stand at the Door, birthed the Anglican Fellowship of Prayer in 1958. He challenged all of the failings of humanity with fierceness, wit and relevancy. But Dr. Sam was never pessimistic or despairing. Like Bill W, Sam never gave up on people.
There are now dozens of recovery groups who apply the
12 Steps to all kinds of addictions and challenges, including overeating, narcotics, sexual brokenness, emotional dysfunctions,
and gambling
dependencies. Lois,
Bill Wilson’ wife, birthed Alanon,
which focuses on the families and spouses of alcoholics. There is even a
specifically Christ-centered expression based on the beatitudes called ‘Celebrate Recovery’
that over five million people have already participated in over 35,000 host
churches.
Since 1982, I (Ed) have done hundreds of Fifth
Steps where people have come into great freedom from
alcoholism and drugs. Many have
encountered the Holy Spirit as their higher power. When we admit that we have
wronged others and then make restitution, miracles can happen. Families are often restored after years of
rejection.
Many 12 Step groups around the world pray both the Serenity
Prayer and the Lord’s prayer. Both prayers are about ‘letting Go and
letting God’. According to Bill W,
breakthroughs happen when “…we can surrender and truly feel, ‘Thy will, not mine,
be done’”. It is so hard to let go. Yet as we work the twelve steps, as we admit
our powerlessness, as we turn our lives and will over to the care of God, as we
seek only for the knowledge of God’s will, then miracles can happen.
As Dr. Sam said to the 20th Anniversary AA Convention,
Prayer is not
trying to get God to change His will. It is trying to find out what His will
is, to align ourselves or realign ourselves with His purpose for the world and
for us. When we let willfulness cool out
of us, God can get His will across to us as far as we need to see ahead of
us. Dante said, ‘In His will is our
peace’.
Dr. Sam concluded his address to the 20th Anniversary
AA Convention by saying:
I thank God
that the church has so widely associated itself with AA, because I think AA
people need the church for personal stabilization and growth, but also because
I think that the church needs AA as a continuous spur to greater aliveness and
expectation and power.
“Perhaps the
time has come”, said Dr. Sam, “for the church to be reawakened and revitalized
by the insights and practices found in AA.”
Our prayer for those reading this article is that as
with Bill Wilson and Sam Shoemaker, God may make each of us a channel of his
peace, his serenity and his sobriety.
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