HERE'S TO YOUR HEALTH: DAVES STORY PART V
Friday, May 18 2012
The week's HTYH is a continuation of Dave's story: I asked an A.A. man to be my sponsor and after we reviewed the first three steps and said the Third Step prayer together, I started on my 4th Step inventory list. He wrote fear at the top of the... Read more...
A HEALTHY DAY: EBB AND FLOW
Friday, May 18 2012
Ancient peoples closely observed and interacted with the rhythms of their immediate environment. The sun rose in the East and set in the West. Day followed night, and approximately 12 hours later night followed day. The seasons progressed through a... Read more...
HERE'S TO YOUR HEALTH: DAVES STORY PART IV
Friday, May 04 2012
This weeks HTYH is a continuation of Dave's story: My counselor asked me, "David where are you right now?" "I'm sitting in a treatment center," I answered, "Because I tried to kill myself." "Where's your mother right now?" she asked. "She's... Read more...
A HEALTTHY DAY: THE NEXT TEN YEARS
Friday, May 04 2012
THE NEXT TEN YEARS What does the future hold in store? None of us can know with certainty, although some predictions are possible. Stock market indexes will rise. Then they'll fall. Then everyone will hope that the indexes will rise again. Hemlines... Read more...
HERE'S TO YOUR HEALTH: DAVES STORY PART III
Friday, April 20 2012
This week's HTYH is a continuation of Dave's story: We lived on a farm outside of Raleigh, North Carolina. We raised pigs and chickens and the feed came in large white cloth bags with strawberries, flowers, and green stems printed on them. My mother... Read more...
A HEALTHY DAY: CAN WORK BE RELAXING?
Friday, April 20 2012
CAN WORK BE RELAXING? Not too many people would agree that "oh, yeah, my work is relaxing". For most of us, work involves plenty of stress. If we're in customer service, there's always a seemingly never-ending stream of customers with an abundance... Read more...
HERE'S TO YOUR HEALTH: DAVES STORY PART II
Friday, April 06 2012
This week's HTYH is a continuation of Dave's story: I suffered from a hundred forms of fear, fear of being less than others, fear of financial insecurity, fear of what my peers thought, fear of the police, fear of the IRS, fear of my wife's lawyer,... Read more...
A HEALTHY DAY: TRIGGER POINTS & PAIN
Friday, April 06 2012
Trigger points are persistent, localized muscle spasms that can cause a great deal of pain.1,2,3 Trigger points alone may be responsible for many cases of neck pain, upper back pain, and lower back pain. This relationship is fairly common knowledge... Read more...
HERE'S TO YOUR HEALTH: DAVES STORY PART I
Friday, March 23 2012
This week's HTYH is the beginning of Dave's story: The age of miracles has not passed, they're happening all around us and if you like happy endings you're in the right place. AA is full of happy endings. There are, of course, a few sad songs about... Read more...
A HEALTHY DAY: MAN & MACHINE
Friday, March 23 2012
Man and Machine Is a computer like a human brain or is a human brain like a computer? When machines allow us to extend our abilities, are we enhancing our humanness or becoming more machine-like? What are the meaningful distinctions between humans... Read more...

The Waynedale News

Serving South & Southwest Fort Wayne


DID YOU KNOW?
Written by The Waynedale News Staff   
Wednesday, June 07 2006

This week's "Did You Know" is excerpted from a South Bend history professor's soon to be released book, Changed by Grace:

 

In 1934, Victor Constant Kitchen (1891-1975), published a book titled, I Was a Pagan, describing his discovery of the Oxford Group and the way it changed his life.

In November 1934, Ebby Thacher came to visit Bill Wilson in his kitchen on the second floor apartment at 182 Clinton Street in Brooklyn, and told him about the Oxford Group and its teachings. As a result Bill visited Calvary Rescue Mission, began learning more about the Oxford Group, and eventually (after his vision of the light in Towns Hospital) began attending the O.G. meetings at Calvary House, where he also got to know Father Samuel Shoemaker.

What is so important for the purpose of this work is the eye-witness account which V. C. Kitchen gives of the O.G. and describes the kind of practices which existed in the New York area at the exact time Bill Wilson first came into contact with the movement.

He and Bill were both members of the same O.G. businessman's group during the period around 1935-1936, and became good friends. The two of them were close to the same age, so they could relate to one another easily.

In 1934---which was the year Ebby visited Bill in his apartment and told him about the O.G, and the year that Kitchen's book, I was a Pagan was published---Bill turned 39 years old and Kitchen was 43. There was also a connection between Kitchen and Dr. Bob Smith, although it was indirect. In 1933, a wealthy rubber baron Harvey Firestone, Sr. (president of the Firestone Rubber and Tire Company) brought sixty O.G. members to Akron, Ohio, paying all their expenses, so that they could get an O.G. group started in that city. Kitchen was one of the members of that team, which meant that he was one of founders of the O.G. fellowship in that city. Dr. Bob Smith's wife Anne was the one who persuaded the doctor to start attending these new O.G. meetings early in 1933, shortly after they were begun.

Now it should be noted that Dr. Bob was not able to get sober just by joining the O.G., but it created a link which allowed him to meet Bill Wilson, two years later, in May, 1935. It also gave him enough knowledge of O.G. principles to allow him and Bill Wilson to start talking together productively from the very start, and begin creating the Alcoholics Anonymous movement by modifying and adapting those O.G. principles.

So, Kitchen had connections of one sort or another with both founders of Alcoholics Anonymous: with Bill Wilson directly, but indirectly with Dr. Bob, too. This is another part of what makes Kitchen's book, "I was a Pagan" so important for understanding early A.A. The O.G. which had arisen during the 1920s was a Protestant evangelical movement led by Frank Buchman who was a Lutheran pastor of German-Swiss background. But they insisted, just as strongly as any Roman Catholic, on the presence of Christ's body and blood in the elements of the communion service, and attacked skeptics like the followers of the radical Swiss Protestant reformer Zwingli who said that the bread and wine were only symbols intended to remind us of the sacrifice which Christ made for us. The correct way of describing the Eucharist, the orthodox Lutherans declared, was to say that the body and blood of Christ were truly present "in, with and under" the bread and wine. If an orthodox Lutheran pastor refused to use those precise words—including the precise prepositions "in, with and under" or allowed any member of his congregation to adopt any other theories, ---that pastor was soon going to be in enormous trouble.

 

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