Today
Easy Does It, along with
One Day at a Time,
First Things First,
Live and Let Live and
Think, Think, Think
adorns the walls of AA meeting rooms and clubs around the globe. Few
realize however, these concepts entered AA’s collective consciousness
courtesy of Emmet Fox. The early members of what would become Alcoholics
Anonymous* residing in New York attended Dr. Fox’s gatherings on
Wednesday evenings. Emmet Fox held his Wednesday meetings and Saturday
services in the largest enclosed public venues available in 1930’s New
York, the ballroom of the Waldorf Astoria, Steinway Hall
even Madison Square Garden as attendance grew. This continued up to the
start of World War II when large gatherings were suspended out of
security concerns. The early AA members** who did not live in New York
studied Dr Fox’s teaching through his two best sellers
The Sermon on the Mount and
Power Through Constructive Thinking (both still in print) and
Sparks of Truth
(out of print) a collection of teachings originally published as a
series of 10 cent pamphlets in the 1930‘s. It is in these pamphlets that
the mottoes later adopted by AA are found. Additionally in early
pamphlets published by the first recognized AA group, King’s School in
Akron,
Sermon on the Mount is suggested reading.
*Though
AA dates its birth from 6/10/35 the first AA meeting (the group broke
from the Oxford Group (Moral Rearmament) and stood in singleness of
purpose in helping those suffering from alcoholism) did not take place
until 5/11/39 in Cleveland Ohio, the secretary Clarence Snyder, a few
months after the Big Book (Alcoholics Anonymous) was published. Source:
Bill and Lois Wilson‘s personal correspondence in archives.
**Bill
Wilson sponsored (helped sober up) Emmet Fox’s secretaries son, Al
Steckman. Al would go on to be the first editor of the AA Grapevine and
has been credited with coining the phrase “I am responsible” at the
first AA convention. Source: Igor Sikorsky Jr. AA’s Godparents 1990
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