Contents
Chapter 4
We Agnostics
In the preceding chapters
you have learned something of alcoholism. we hope we have made
clear the distinction between the alcoholic and the
non-alcoholic. If, when you honestly want to, you find you
cannot quit entirely, or if when drinking, you have little
control over the amount you take, you are probably alcoholic. If
that be the case, you may be suffering from an illness which
only a spiritual experience will conquer.
To one who feels he is an
atheist or agnostic such an experience seems impossible, but to
continue as he is means disaster, especially if he is an
alcoholic of the hopeless variety. To be doomed to an alcoholic
death or to live on a spiritual basis are not always easy
alternatives to face.
But it isn't so
difficult. About half our original fellowship were of exactly
that type. At first some of us tried to avoid the issue, hoping
against hope we were not true alcoholics. But after a while we
had to face the fact that we must find a spiritual basis of life
or else. Perhaps it is going to be that way with you. But cheer
up, something like half of us thought we were atheists or
agnostics. Our experience shows that you need not be
disconcerted.
If a mere code of morals
or a better philosophy of life were sufficient to overcome
alcoholism, many of us would have recovered long ago. But we
found that such codes and philosophies did not save us, no
matter how much we tried. We could wish to be moral, we could
wish to be philosophically comforted, in fact, we could will
these things with all our might, but the needed power wasn't
there. Our human resources, as marshalled by the will, were not
sufficient; they failed utterly.
Lack of power, that was
our dilemma. we had to find a power by which we could live, and
it had to be a Power greater than ourselves. Obviously.
But where and how were we to find this Power?
Well, that's exactly what
this book is about. Its main object is to enable you to find a
Power greater than yourself which will solve your problem. That
means we have written a book which we believe to be spiritual as
well as moral. And it means, of course, that we are going to
talk about God. Here difficulty arises with agnostics. Many
times we talk to a new man and watch his hope rise as we discuss
his alcoholic problems and explain our fellowship. But his face
falls when we speak of spiritual matters, especially when we
mention God, for we have re-opened a subject which our man
thought he had neatly evaded or entirely ignored.
We know how he feels. We
have shared his honest doubt and prejudice. Some of us have been
violently anti-religious. To others, the word "God" brought up a
particular idea of Him with which someone had tried to impress
them during childhood. Perhaps we rejected this particular
conception because it seemed inadequate. With that rejection we
imagined we had abandoned the God idea entirely. We were
bothered with the thought that faith and dependence upon a Power
beyond ourselves was somewhat weak, even cowardly. We looked
upon this world of warring individuals, warring theological
systems, and inexplicable calamity, with deep skepticism. We
looked askance at many individuals who claimed to be godly. How
could a Supreme Being have anything to do with it all? And who
could comprehend a Supreme Being anyhow? Yet, in other moments,
we found ourselves thinking, when enchanted by a starlit night,
"Who, then, make all this?" There was a feeling of awe and
wonder, but it was fleeting and soon lost.
Yes, we of agnostic
temperament have had these thoughts and experiences. Let us make
haste to reassure you. We found that as soon as we were able to
lay aside prejudice and express even a willingness to believe in
a Power greater than ourselves, we commenced to get results,
even though it was impossible for any of us to fully define or
comprehend that Power, which is God.
Much to our relief, we
discovered we did not need to consider another's conception of
God. Our own conception, however inadequate, was sufficient to
make the approach and to effect a contact with Him. As soon as
we admitted the possible existence of a Creative Intelligence, a
Spirit of the Universe underlying the totality of things, we
began to be possessed of a new sense of power and direction,
provided we took other simple steps. We found that God does not
make too hard terms with those who seek Him. To us, the Realm of
Spirit is broad, roomy, all inclusive; never exclusive or
forbidding to those who earnestly seek. It is open, we believe,
to all men.
When, therefore, we speak
to you of God, we mean your own conception of God. This applies,
too, to other spiritual expressions which you find in this book.
Do not let any prejudice you may have against spiritual terms
deter you from honestly asking yourself what they mean to you.
At the start, this was all we needed to commence spiritual
growth, to effect our first conscious relation with God as we
understood Him. Afterward, we found ourselves accepting many
things which then seemed entirely out of reach. That was growth,
but if we wished to grow we had to begin somewhere. So we used
our own conception, however limited it was.
We needed to ask
ourselves but one short question. --"Do I now believe, or am I
even willing to believe, that there is a Power greater than
myself?" As soon as a man can say that he does believe, or is
willing to believe, we emphatically assure him that he is on his
way. It has been repeatedly proven among us that upon this
simple cornerstone a wonderfully effective spiritual structure
can be built.*
That was great news to
us, for we had assumed we could not make use of spiritual
principles unless we accepted many things on faith which seemed
difficult to believe. When people presented us with spiritual
approaches, how frequently did we all say, "I wish I had what
that man has. I'm sure it would work if I could only believe as
he believes. But I cannot accept as surely true the many
articles of faith which are so plain to him." So it was
comforting to learn that we could commence at a simpler level.
Besides a seeming
inability to accept much on faith, we often found ourselves
handicapped by obstinacy, sensitiveness, and unreasoning
prejudice. Many of us have been so touchy that even casual
reference to spiritual things make us bristle with antagonism.
This sort of thinking had to be abandoned. Though some of us
resisted, we found no great difficulty in casting aside such
feelings. Faced with alcoholic destruction, we soon became as
open minded on spiritual matters as we had tried to be on other
questions. In this respect alcohol was a great persuader. It
finally beat us into a state of reasonableness. Sometimes this
was a tedious process; we hope no one else will prejudiced for
as long as some of us were.
The reader may still ask
why he should believe in a Power greater than himself. We think
there are good reasons. Let us have a look at some of them.
The practical individual
of today is a stickler for facts and results. Nevertheless, the
twentieth century readily accepts theories of all kinds,
provided they are firmly grounded in fact. We have numerous
theories, for example, about electricity. Everybody believes
them without a murmur of doubt. Why this ready acceptance?
Simply because it is impossible to explain what we see, feel,
direct, and use, without a reasonable assumption as a starting
point.
Everybody nowadays,
believes in scores of assumptions for which there is good
evidence, but no perfect visual proof. And does not science
demonstrate that visual proof is the weakest proof? It is being
constantly revealed, as mankind studies the material world, that
outward appearances are not inward reality at all. To
illustrate:
The prosaic steel girder
is a mass of electrons whirling around each other at incredible
speed. These tiny bodies are governed by precise laws, and these
laws hold true throughout the material world, Science tells us
so. We have no reason to doubt it. When, however, the perfectly
logical assumption is suggested that underneath the material
world and life as we see it, there is an All Powerful, Guiding,
Creative Intelligence, right there our perverse streak comes to
the surface and we laboriously set out to convince ourselves it
isn't so. We read wordy books and indulge in windy arguments,
thinking we believe this universe needs no God to explain it.
Were our contentions true, it would follow that life originated
out of nothing, means nothing, and proceeds nowhere.
Instead of regarding
ourselves as intelligent agents, spearheads of God's ever
advancing Creation, we agnostics and atheists chose to believe
that our human intelligence was the last word, the alpha and the
omega, the beginning and end of all. Rather vain of us, wasn't
it?
We, who have traveled
this dubious path, beg you to lay aside prejudice, even against
organized religion. We have learned that whatever the human
frailties of various faiths may be, those faiths have given
purpose and direction to millions. People of faith have a
logical idea of what life is all about. Actually, we used to
have no reasonable conception whatever. We used to amuse
ourselves by cynically dissecting spiritual beliefs and
practices when we might have observed that many
spiritually-minded persons of all races, colors, and creeds were
demonstrating a degree of stability, happiness and usefulness
which we should have sought ourselves. Instead, we looked at the
human defects of these people, and sometimes used their
shortcomings as a basis of wholesale condemnation. We talked of
intolerance, while we were intolerant ourselves. We missed the
reality and the beauty of the forest because we were diverted by
the ugliness of some its trees. We never gave the spiritual side
of life a fair hearing.
In our personal stories
you will find a wide variation in the way each teller approaches
and conceives of the Power which is greater than himself.
Whether we agree with a particular approach or conception seems
to make little difference. Experience has taught us that these
are matters about which, for our purpose, we need not be
worried. They are questions for each individual to settle for
himself.
On one proposition,
however, these men and women are strikingly agreed. Every one of
them has gained access to, and believe in, a Power greater than
himself. This Power has in each case accomplished the
miraculous, the humanly impossible. As a celebrated American
statesman put it, "Let's look at the record."
Here are thousands of men
and women, worldly indeed. They flatly declare that since they
have come to believe in a Power greater than themselves, to take
a certain attitude toward that Power, and to do certain simple
things. There has been a revolutionary change in their way of
living and thinking. In the face of collapse and despair, in the
face of the total failure of their human resources, they found
that a new power, peace, happiness, and sense of direction
flowed into them. This happened soon after they wholeheartedly
met a few simple requirements. Once confused and baffled by the
seeming futility of existence, they show the underlying reasons
why they were making heavy going of life. Leaving aside the
drink question, they tell why living was so unsatisfactory. They
show how the change came over them. When many hundreds of people
are able to say that the consciousness of the Presence of God is
today the most important fact of their lives, they present a
powerful reason why one should have faith.
This world of ours has
made more material progress in the last century than in all the
millenniums which went before. Almost everyone knows the reason.
Students of ancient history tell us that the intellect of men in
those days was equal to the best of today. Yet in ancient times,
material progress was painfully slow. The spirit of modern
scientific inquiry, research and invention was almost unknown.
In the realm of the material, men's minds were fettered by
superstition, tradition, and all sort of fixed ideas. Some of
the contemporaries of Columbus thought a round earth
preposterous. Others came near putting Galileo to death for his
astronomical heresies.
We asked ourselves this:
Are not some of us just as biased and unreasonable about the
realm of the spirit as were the ancients about the realm of the
material? Even in the present century, American newspapers were
afraid to print an account of the Wright brothers' first
successful flight at Kittyhawk. Had not all efforts at flight
failed before? Did not Professor Langley's flying machine go to
the bottom of the Potomac River? Was it not true that the best
mathematical minds had proved man could never fly? Had not
people said God had reserved this privilege to the birds? Only
thirty years later the conquest of the air was almost an old
story and airplane travel was in full swing.
But in most fields our
generation has witnessed complete liberation in thinking. Show
any longshoreman a Sunday supplement describing a proposal to
explore the moon by means of a rocket and he will say, "I bet
they do it maybe not so long either." Is not our age
characterized by the ease with which we discard old ideas for
new, by the complete readiness with which we throw away the
theory or gadget which does not work for something new which
does?
We had to ask ourselves
why we shouldn't apply to our human problems this same readiness
to change our point of view. We were having trouble with
personal relationships, we couldn't control our emotional
natures, we were a prey to misery and depression, we couldn't
make a living, we had a feeling of uselessness, we were full of
fear, we were unhappy, we couldn't seem to be of real help to
other people was not a basic solution of these bedevilments more
important than whether we should see newsreels of lunar flight?
Of course it was.
When we saw others solve
their problems by a simple reliance upon the Spirit of the
Universe, we had to stop doubting the power of God. Our ideas
did not work. But the God idea did.
The Wright brothers'
almost childish faith that they could build a machine which
would fly was the mainspring of their accomplishment. Without
that, nothing could have happened. We agnostics and atheists
were sticking to the idea that self- sufficiency would solve our
problems. When others showed us that "God-sufficiency worked
with them, we began to feel like those who had insisted the
Wrights would never fly.
Logic is great stuff. We
like it. We still like it. It is not by chance we were given the
power to reason, to examine the evidence of our sense, and to
draw conclusions. That is one of man's magnificent attributes.
We agnostically inclined would not feel satisfied with a
proposal which does not lend itself to reasonable approach and
interpretation. Hence we are at pains to tell why we think our
present faith is reasonable, why we think it more sane and
logical to believe than not to believe, why we say our former
thinking was soft and mushy when we threw up our hands in doubt
and said, "We don't know."
When we became
alcoholics, crushed by a self-imposed crises we could not
postpone or evade, we had to fearlessly face the proposition
that either God is everything or else He is nothing. God either
is or He isn't. What was our choice to be?
Arrived at this point, we
were squarely confronted with the question of faith. We couldn't
duck the issue. Some of us had already walked far over the
Bridge of Reason toward the desired shore of faith. The outlines
and the promise of the New Land had brought lustre to tired eyes
and fresh courage to flagging spirits. Friendly hands had
stretched out in welcome. We were grateful that Reason had
brought us so far. But somehow, we couldn't quite step ashore.
Perhaps we had been leaning too heavily on reason that last mile
and we did not like to lose our support.
That was natural, but let
us think a little more closely. Without knowing it, had we not
been brought to where we stood by a certain kind of faith? For
did we not believe in our own reasoning? did we not have
confidence in our ability to think? What was that but a sort of
faith? Yes, we had been faithful, abjectly faithful to the God
of Reason. So, in one way or another, we discovered that faith
had been involved all the time!
We found, too, that we
had been worshippers. What a state of mental goose-flesh that
used to bring on! Had we not variously worshipped people,
sentiment, things, money, and ourselves? And then, with a better
motive, had we not worshipfully beheld the sunset, the sea, or a
flower? Who of us had not loved something or somebody? How much
did these feelings, these loves, these worships, have to do with
pure reason? Little or nothing, we saw at last. Were not these
things the tissue out of which our lives were constructed? Did
not these feelings, after all, determine the course of our
existence? It was impossible to say we had no capacity for
faith, or love, or worship. In one form or another we had been
living by faith and little else.
Imagine life without
faith! Were nothing left but pure reason, it wouldn't be life.
But we believed in life of course we did. We could not prove
life in the sense that you can prove a straight line is the
shortest distance between two points, yet, there it was. Could
we still say the whole thing was nothing but a mass of
electrons, created out of nothing, meaning nothing, whirling on
to a destiny of nothingness? Or course we couldn't. The
electrons themselves seemed more intelligent than that. At
least, so the chemist said.
Hence, we saw that reason
isn't everything. Neither is reason, as most of us use it,
entirely dependable, thought it emanate from our best minds.
What about people who proved that man could never fly? Yet we
had been seeing another kind of flight, a spiritual liberation
from this world, people who rose above their problems. They said
God made these things possible, and we only smiled. We had seen
spiritual release, but liked to tell ourselves it wasn't true.
Actually we were fooling
ourselves, for deep down in every man, woman, and child, is the
fundamental idea of God. It may be obscured by calamity, by
pomp, by worship of other things, but in some form or other it
is there. For faith in a Power greater than ourselves, and
miraculous demonstrations of that power in human lives, are
facts as old as man himself.
We finally saw that faith
in some kind of God was a part of our make-up, just as much as
the feeling we have for a friend. Sometimes we had to search
fearlessly, but He was there. He was as much a fact as we were.
We found the Great Reality deep down within us. In the last
analysis it is only there that He may be found. It was so with
us.
We can only clear the
ground a bit. If our testimony helps sweep away prejudice,
enables you to think honestly, encourages you to search
diligently within yourself, then, if you wish, you can join us
on the Broad Highway. With this attitude you cannot fail. the
consciousness of your belief is sure to come to you.
In this book you will
read the experience of a man who thought he was an atheist. His
story is so interesting that some of it should be told now. His
change of heart was dramatic, convincing, and moving. Our friend
was a minister's son. He attended church school, where he became
rebellious at what he thought an overdose of religious
education. For years thereafter he was dogged by trouble and
frustration. Business failure, insanity, fatal illness, suicide
these calamities in his immediate family embittered and
depressed him. Post-war disillusionment, ever more serious
alcoholism, impending mental and physical collapse, brought him
to the point to self-destruction.
One night, when confined
in a hospital, he was approached by an alcoholic who had known a
spiritual experience. Our friend's gorge rose as he bitterly
cried out: "If there is a God, He certainly hasn't done anything
for me!" But later, alone in his room, he asked himself this
question: "Is it possible that all the religious people I have
known are wrong?" While pondering the answer he felt as though
he lived in hell. Then, like a thunderbolt, a great thought
came. It crowded out all else:
"Who are you to say
there is no God?"
This man recounts that he
tumbled out of bed to his knees. In a few seconds he was
overwhelmed by a conviction of the Presence of God. It poured
over and through him with the certainty and majesty of a great
tide at flood. The barriers he had built through the years were
swept away. He stood in the Presence of Infinite Power and Love.
He had stepped from bridge to shore. For the first time, he
lived in conscious companionship with his Creator.
Thus was our friend's
cornerstone fixed in place. No later vicissitude has shaken it.
His alcoholic problem was taken away. That very night, years
ago, it disappeared. Save for a few brief moments of temptation
the though of drink has never returned; and at such times a
great revulsion has risen up in him. Seemingly he could not
drink even if he would. God had restored his sanity.
What is this but a
miracle of healing? Yet its elements are simple. Circumstances
made him willing to believe. He humbly offered himself to his
Maker then he knew.
Even so has God restored
us all to our right minds. To this man, the revelation was
sudden. Some of us grow into it more slowly. But He has come to
all who have honestly sought Him.
When we drew near to Him
He disclosed Himself to us!
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