The Religious Roots of Alcoholics Anonymous
and the Twelve Steps
by A. Orange
Chapter 19:
After the War, and Trouble with the Catholic Church
After the war, Frank Buchman and his Moral Re-Armament were not very
popular, to put it mildly. Both
the American and the British people had long memories, and
Buchman's admiration of Hitler, and
the group's attempts at draft-dodging, didn't sit well.
And then there was the total failure of Buchman's appeasement-oriented
"God's Plan" to save the world from war.
Buchman had lost his credibility β how could he claim to be receiving
messages and Guidance directly from God when he was so terribly wrong
about so many things?
And MRA had lost its biggest pre-war draw: fear of the coming war.
In 1944, when travel bans were still in place, some British Buchmanites
wished to travel to Mackinac Island to attend an assembly. Lord Salisbury submitted
a special request for them. Foreign Office Secretary Anthony Eden
was strongly opposed to such a special favor...
Eden had written across Salisbury's letter in red ink,
'Surely these are deplorable people? and it is staggering that
Lord S should wish them well.'
Garth Lean, On the Tail of a Comet: The Life of Frank Buchman, page 331.
Tom Driberg, the London newspaper reporter who got himself elected
to Parliament, didn't want to even let the Buchmanites back into
Britain after the war. On May 3, 1946, he protested against the Home Secretary
James Chuter Ede granting entrance visas to a group of 100 Buchmanites,
including Frank Buchman. Driberg denounced Buchman as a "soapy
racketeer".46
Driberg raised the issue again in the House of Commons on July fifth:
Things just went from bad to worse for Frank Buchman.
The Catholic Church got fed up with him, too.
In 1952, the Archbishop of Milan denounced Moral Re-Armament:
Then, in 1955 and 1957, the Vatican banned MRA:
The following document gave much further information about the Catholic Church's banning of
Frank Buchman's religion:
-
Moral Re-Armament; A Study of Its Technical and Religious Nature in the Light of
Catholic Teaching, by Rev. Clair M. Dinger, S.T.L.
(The Catholic University of America Press, Inc., 1961. Printed by the Abbey Press,
St. Meinrad, Indiana, U.S.A. Dewey: 248.25 D613)
This is a dissertation submitted to the faculty of the School of Sacred Theology of the
Catholic University of America in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree
of Doctor of Sacred Theology.
The Appendix says:
The most comprehensive criticism was the one by
the Rev. John Ford, S.J., and the Rev. Gerald Kelly, S.J., who included
"quietism" β
reliance on "Guidance" β basing one's actions on the whisperings that
he imagines he hears coming from the Holy Spirit, and then a sort of existentialism
where everyone follows the morality that they hear in their own heads.
That is indeed dangerous. People can do all kinds of crazy things, and sincerely
insist that God told them to do it.
Notice that no one mentioned
the Nazi social philosophy
of Frank Buchman's religion as a reason for banning the Oxford Group and MRA.
And no one mentioned the idea of instant perfection, where people expected to get
changed into spiritual people in just one confession session.
Speaking of which, no one mentioned public confessions, which the Church also forbids.
One of the best criticisms of Buchman's church is still the one that was written by Tom Driberg:
For β to sum up the main criticisms β MRA is irrational in its mystique
and authoritarian in its methods; it rejects free discussion; it practises
with insufficient discrimination
the dangerous, and often deadly,
doctrine that the end justifies the means; and, by seeming to proclaim
the possibility of instant perfection, it raises hopes that cannot be
fulfilled. In short, it is essentially non-Christian and anti-democratic.
The Mystery of Moral Re-Armament; A Study of Frank Buchman and His
Movement, Tom Driberg, 1965, pages 304-305.

And still, in spite of all of that, the true-believer sycophants continued
to fawn over Frank Buchman. In 1955, on his 77th birthday, his followers
sent him the following "report" from Mackinac Island:
The Buchmanite true believers were as much in denial as any alcoholic
who insists that he doesn't have a drinking problem. They stubbornly overlooked
Frank Buchman's failure to morally reform the Nazis and save the world from war.
They refused to even look at the total inadequacy of Frank's
"infallible Guidance" and "God's Plan to save the world from war".
They simply continued to proclaim that civilization was tottering on the brink
of destruction, and that only Frank Buchman and MRA could save the world.
The British Buchmanite R. C. Mowat, formerly of Hertford College, Oxford,
wrote in 1951 that:
People everywhere will turn to spiritual reality on a mass scale as it is correctly
presented to them through Moral Re-Armament. But it is a race against time,
because the forces of destruction are also moving ahead swiftly.
"Good and Evil are pitted against each other in the history of man. It takes
more than diplomacy to cure evil. It takes more than lip-service to fight for God.
... An extreme of evil must be met by an extreme of good; a fanatical following
of evil by a passionate pursuit of good.... Only a passion can cure a passion.
And only a superior world-arching ideology can cure a world divided by warring
ideologies."
This message must be brought to the millions before it is too late.
History is moving at tremendous speed to a high point of colossal catastrophe
or a high point of colossal change. We can either be the last survivors of
a declining age, or the pioneers of an entirely new order of society, which will
bring a flowering of the human spirit such as the world has never seen.
This is the promise of Moral Re-Armament. It is making possible the dawn of
a new age. Through it "we are reaching the end of the era of crisis
and pioneering the era of the cure."
The Message of Frank Buchman, R. C. Mowat, pages 51-52. (The contained
quotes were from Frank Buchman.)
Talk about fear-mongering β
Mowat tried to use fear to stampede people into joining MRA:
- "the forces of destruction are ... moving ahead swiftly..."
- "History is moving at tremendous speed to a high point of
colossal catastrophe..."
- "We can either be the last survivors of a declining age or
..."
Likewise, the French Buchmanite Gabriel Marcel described the
world situation in 1960 as:
A relentless flood threatens to engulf many nations.
Men try here and there to raise a frail barrier, but their timid efforts
only win them a little time before they are suddenly submerged.
In some countries the masses are taken over by a system of ideas.
Suddenly there arises a revolutionary wind which with a single blast
topples great structures, though men fancied that they were standing fast.
An idea invades a nation without the formality of a declaration of war. It
takes prisoners without firing a shot and conquers whole countries, while
parliaments continue with their debates.
Is there a road that the nations of the world could walk together?
While the succession of international conferences and the disappointments
that follow them seem to say that the answer is 'no', yet the work of
Frank Buchman and the men committed with him proves beyond question that
this road does exist. Not only does it exist, but already men and nations
have decided to take it.
Fresh Hope for the World: Moral Re-Armament in Action,
edited and introduced by Gabriel Marcel, 1960,
translated from the French by Helen Hardinge, pages 177-178.
Those Buchmanites used everything except "the sky is falling".
Thirty years later, another die-hard old Buchmanite declared that the world was
still tottering on the brink of chaos, and that only Moral Re-Armament
could save the world:
"I know for sure: all men everywhere must be different. Otherwise what will
happen to the world of my grandchildren and great grandchildren, sinking into
unbelievable chaos. Can people change? I have experienced that I can change and
that people around me can also become different... I have travelled through all the
continents and saw how many people changed completely when they met the ideology
of Moral Re-Armament... It is an incomparable, an historic revolution.
Whatever a person is, Christian, atheist or materialist, black or white, rich or
poor, he changes. If he passionately accepts an unconditional commitment under
God's guidance, his thinking and his whole being changes. This change in men
is essential. There is no substitute for it. We miss the meaning of our
life if we want to remain as we are. Without this men do not change. Only
in this way can the world once again be brought under God's dominion and be saved
from chaos."
Paul Kurowski, 1989 (aged 89).
(Underlining in the original.)
Preview Of A New World; How Frank Buchman Helped his country Move from isolation
To world responsibility; USA 1939-1946, Arthur Strong, page 315.
By the way, when was the first Golden Age?
That old guy talked about bringing
the world "once again under God's dominion"....
Well, when was it ever that way? When was the first time?
That obviously conflicts with the Buchmanites' repeated claims that the
Oxford Groups and Moral Re-Armament were
something brand new and original.
It can't be something brand new and original β "an historic revolution" β
if we are supposed to return to what existed way back in "the good old days"....
And Alcoholics Anonymous still uses the same contradictory language today.
They alternate between calling 12-Step treatment of alcoholism β also called TSF, Twelve-Step Facilitation β
"traditional treatment of alcoholism",
and also declaring that TSF is something brand new β
"a new sub-culture β
and "just being discovered" and
"increasingly recognized as important".
It can't be both an old tradition and a new discovery.

Next:
Frank Buchman, Anti-Communist, Union-Buster, Spiritual Strike-Breaker
Previous: Henry Ford and Anti-Semitism


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Last updated 20 October 2014.
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