Alcoholics Anonymous, Fourth Edition

CHAPTER 4 - WE AGNOSTICS

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 frustra-
tion. 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 physi-
cal collapse, brought him to the point of self-destruc-
tion.

One night, when confined in a hospital, he was ap-
proached 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 com-
panionship 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 dis-