| The Catholic Contribution to the 12-Step
              Movement By W. Robert Aufill
                
               At first, there were no Catholic members in AA, but their
              participation was made possible by the final separation of AA from
              the Oxford Group.
                
               In New York, the first Catholic member was Morgan R., who acted
              as AA's first unofficial liaison with the Catholic Church. Morgan
              submitted the manuscript of the book Alcoholics Anonymous
              ("the Big Book") to the New York Archdiocesan Committee
              on Publications and received a favorable response. The Committee,
              Morgan reported, "had nothing but the best to say of our
              efforts. From their point of view the book was perfectly all right
              as far as it went." A few editorial suggestions were readily
              and gratefully incorporated, especially in the section treating of
              prayer and meditation.
                
               Only one change was requested. In Wilson's story, he had
              "made a rhetorical flourish to the effect that 'we have found
              Heaven right here on this good old earth.' " It was suggested
              he change "Heaven" to "Utopia." "After
              all, we Catholics are promising folks something much better later
              on!"
                
               A Catholic non-alcoholic who profoundly influenced AA in its
              early days was Fr. Edward Dowling of the Society of Jesus.
              Although his involvement with AA was only one of many apostolic
              and charitable works, his influence on AA was considerable. His
              work is valuable as a pattern for Catholics who wish to relate
              constructively to AA and other recovery groups.
                
               Dowling was a Jesuit from St. Louis and was the editor of a
              Catholic publication called The Queen's Work. Upon reading
              the Big Book, he was favorably impressed and saw parallels between
              the 12 steps and aspects of Ignatian spirituality—perhaps
              especially the Ignatian admonition to pray as if everything
              depends on God and to work as if everything depends on oneself.
                
               Dowling made Wilson's acquaintance on a cold, rainy night in
              1940. Wilson grudgingly admitted the visitor, thinking his
              unexpected guest was yet another drunk demanding help and
              attention. Soon, as they talked, the Jesuit began to share an
              understanding of the spiritual life which was to influence Wilson
              from that day forward.
                
               This is all the more remarkable because Wilson had never known
              any Catholics intimately and felt a lingering prejudice against
              members of the clergy, of whatever denomination.
                
               Wilson viewed his meeting with Dowling as "a second
              conversion experience." The crippled Jesuit, he said,
              "radiated a grace that filled the room with a sense of
              Presence" (interestingly enough, Wilson used the same
              expression, "sense of Presence," to describe his
              impression of Winchester Cathedral in England, which had obvious
              Catholic associations and where he had first experienced a desire
              for God many years before). Wilson was feeling depressed and angry
              at God because, at the moment, he seemed to be a failure:
                
               As Wilson's biographer tells it, "When Bill asked if there
              was never to be any satisfaction, the old man snapped back,
              'Never. Never any.' There was only a kind of divine
              dissatisfaction that would keep him going, reaching out
              always."
                
               The priest went on: Having surrendered to God and received back
              his sobriety, Wilson could not retract his surrender by demanding
              an accounting from God when life did not unfold according to
              preconceived expectations. Even the sense of dissatisfaction could
              be an occasion of spiritual growth.
                
               Dowling then hobbled to the door and declared, as a parting
              shot, "that if ever Bill grew impatient, or angry at God's
              way of doing things, if ever he forgot to be grateful for being
              alive right here and now, he, Father Ed Dowling, would make the
              trip all the way from St. Louis to wallop him over the head with
              his good Irish stick." And so began a twenty-year friendship
              between Wilson and Dowling, who remained Wilson's spiritual
              advisor.
                
               Wilson was deeply attracted to the Catholic Church and even
              received instruction from Fulton Sheen in 1947. Wilson's wife
              Lois, looking back on it all, was sure that he was never really
              close to conversion; but a close friend thought otherwise: "I
              had the impression that at the last minute, he didn't go through
              with his conversion because he felt it would not be right for
              AA."
                
               The simplest explanation is that Wilson remained profoundly
              ambivalent about organized religion and its doctrines. Just as he
              had shied away from the "Absolutes" of the Oxford Group,
              so he could not see his way to accepting Catholicism's own
              absolutism—in particular, papal infallibility and the efficacy
              of sacraments: "Though no disbeliever in all miracles, I
              still can't picture God working like that."
                
               Concerning infallibility, Wilson wrote to Dowling: "It is
              ever so hard to believe that any human beings, no matter who, are
              able to be infallible about anything." In a 1947 letter to
              Dowling he said, "I'm more affected than ever by that sweet
              and powerful aura of the Church; that marvelous spiritual essence
              flowing down by the centuries touches me as no other emanation
              does, but when I look at the authoritative layout, despite all the
              arguments in its favor, I still can't warm up. No affirmative
              conviction comes . . . P. S. Oh, if only the Church had a
              fellow-traveler department, a cozy spot where one could warm his
              hands at the fire and bite off only as much as he could swallow.
              Maybe I'm just one more shopper looking for a bargain on that
              virtue— obedience!"
                
               To Sheen Wilson wrote: "Your sense of humor will, I know,
              rise to the occasion when I tell you that, with each passing day,
              I feel more like a Catholic and reason more like a
              Protestant!"
                
               This is precisely the challenge faced by Catholic apologists in
              witnessing to those in recovery groups: bringing the head and the
              heart together.
                
               Wilson's difficulties with Catholic faith tell us
              that—without dilution—we must make our faith and its graces
              more accessible by connecting faith with experience. This does not
              mean we can neglect reasoned apologetics—far from it. We must
              respect people's intelligence. But, as Sheen noted, in some cases,
              our reasoning "leaves the modern soul cold, not because its
              arguments are unconvincing, but because the modern soul is too
              confused to grasp them."
                
               If we offer a plausible account of the religious implications
              of 12-step recovery, we can perhaps get a receptive hearing for a
              fuller evangelization and catechesis.
                
               At the convention marking AA's twentieth anniversary (the
              society's "coming of age"), Dowling said, "We know
              AA's 12 steps of man toward God. May I suggest God's 12 steps
              toward man as Christianity has taught them to me." He then
              went on to draw out the parallels between AA's steps of recovery
              and God's redemption of the human race in Christ, who is both the
              Incarnate God and the New Adam of redeemed humanity.
                
               Dowling concluded with Francis Thompson's poem The Hound of
              Heaven, suggesting that the poem was "[t]he perfect
              picture of the AA's quest for God, but especially God's loving
              chase for the AA."
                
               Another important, though somewhat later, Catholic influence on
              AA was Fr. John C. Ford, S.J., one of Catholicism's most eminent
              moral theologians. In the early forties, Ford himself recovered
              from alcoholism with AA's help. He became one of the earliest
              Catholic proponents of addressing alcoholism as a problem having
              spiritual, physiological, and psychological, dimensions.
                
               Ford said that alcohol addiction is a pathology which is not
              consciously chosen, but he rejected the deterministic idea that
              alcoholism is solely a disease without any moral component:
              "[I]t obviously has moral dimensions, and that is one reason
              why the clergyman is thought to have a special role to play.
                
               "To answer the question: Is alcoholism a moral problem or
              is it a sickness, I think the answer is that it is both. I don't
              think it is true to say that alcoholism is just a sickness, in the
              sense that cancer or tuberculosis are sicknesses. I think there
              are too many rather obvious differences between the two to
              classify alcoholism as a sickness in that sense. On the other
              hand, I don't think it is true either to say that alcoholism is
              just a moral problem. There are still a good many people who look
              at an alcoholic as a good-for-nothing with a weak will or one who
              doesn't use his willpower . . .
                
               "They keep saying, 'Don't do it again,' over and over. I
              don't believe he does it just because he wants to do it or because
              he is willful. When you look at the agony that the alcoholic
              inflicts upon himself over the course of the years, it seems to me
              to be very difficult to say he wants to be that way or he does it
              on purpose. . . . I think it is fair to speak of alcoholism as a
              triple sickness—a sickness of the body, a sickness of the mind,
              and also a sickness of the soul."
                
               Wilson, impressed by Ford's insight, asked him to edit Twelve
              Steps and Twelve Traditions (with the Big Book, this is the
              basic text of 12-step recovery) and Alcoholics Anonymous Comes
              of Age. In part, Wilson's concern in these books was to
              present the AA program in a way acceptable to Catholic
              sensibilities.
                
               Ford's contribution to AA was therefore twofold: He drew on
              both religion and psychology to show alcoholism as a synthetic
              problem requiring a synthetic remedy, and he took seriously the
              quasicompulsive nature of addiction while rejecting both absolute
              determinism and the attendant pitfalls of a purely therapeutic
              approach. He drew on psychological insights, but ultimately shared
              the sentiments of Dr. Bob, who used to say, "Don't louse it
              up with psychiatry."
                
               In so many ways, Ford's approach to addiction and recovery
              remains a model of spiritual discernment for our own time.  
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