The Religious Roots of Alcoholics Anonymous
and the Twelve Steps
by A. Orange
Chapter 3:
The Religious Tenets and Doctrines of Buchmanism
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"Early AA got its ideas of
self-examination, acknowledgement of character defects,
restitution for harm done, and working with others straight from
the Oxford Groups and directly from Sam Shoemaker, their
former leader in America, and nowhere else."
Bill Wilson, Alcoholics Anonymous Comes Of Age, page 39.
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Dr. Frank Buchman believed that the age of miracles had returned,
that people could have direct, personal access to God, that people
could be "changed", and that confession was necessary for
"change".
Henry P. Van Dusen, writing for The Atlantic Monthly magazine in 1934,
described Buchmanism, a.k.a. "The Oxford Group Movement", this way:
The fundamental premise which determines every aspect of its emphasis
and work is this conviction -- that
in the modern world the over-whelming
majority of folk have sadly missed the way.
Many of them consciously
unhappy, inwardly defeated, and insulated from their fellows by secret
barriers of sham, impurity, or fear. Others are pitiably superficial,
selfish, and futile. A very few are sincere, but palpably inadequate.
For all alike, the need is for a radical and revolutionary
experience of personal religion. For all alike, there is possible
a new life of hitherto unknown power and unbelievable satisfaction.
But there is only one avenue of access to that higher life.
It is through a radical purging of inner unreality and
the full and final surrender of one's whole self,
all that one is and all that one possesses, to the imperious command of
the Living God.
From that surrender, when complete and unreserved, will follow release from
defeat or ennui and the gift of utterly new joy and strength.
The old life will be cast away; the old harrowing problems will dissolve;
one will stand
free from the shackles of temptation, self-consciousness, selfishness;
for the first time in one's life, one will know the meaning of spiritual
freedom. All that one has heard with the hearing of the ears about the life
of religion, all that one has dismissed as the familiar exaggeration of
religious propagandists or naïve faith no longer possible for
intelligent moderns -- all this will come vividly alive within one's own
soul. One now knows, with a certainty for which there is no
parallel, the truth of religion's claims -- the absolutely unique
character of the dedicated life, the vivid and continuous awareness of
God's presence, the priceless worth of complete fellowship with Him,
the service which is perfect freedom.
Together with these results,
surrender will also bring two quite
definite gifts -- direct and specific instructions from God Himself
for every detail of daily speech and life (what the Groups term
'guidance'); and the ability to bring others into the same transforming
experience.
Indeed, just as
the only way of entrance into the new life
is through complete surrender, so there is
one way and one way only
by which that new life may be maintained vivid and growing.
It is through revealing one's own discoveries in intimate disclosure
to others and thus winning them to similar surrender and rebirth.
Finally, the matrix within which this whole process of life transformation
in its three phases -- surrender of self, continuance in complete
commitment, the winning of others -- can best take place is an intimate
comradeship of completely like-minded and like-dedicated persons.
"The Oxford Groups Movement",
Henry P. Van Dusen,
The Atlantic Monthly, August 1934, vol 154, issue 2, pages 243-244.
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Notice the repeated phrases "the only way",
and "one way and one way only".
That is one of the first and most obvious characteristics of any cult.
They almost always claim that
they have the only way
-- the only way to Heaven, or to salvation, or spirituality, or eternal
bliss, or higher knowledge, or sanity, or mental powers, or recovery,
or
whatever it is that
the cult promises to deliver...
A corollary to cults' claims of having The Only Way is the assertion that
"the other people" do
not have The Way. "They" are
all misguided and missing the boat, and "they" won't be going to Heaven (or
whatever the declared goal of the cult happens to be). Thus the cult encourages an
isolationist "us versus them" mindset, which naturally seques into
an attitude that
the cult members are
special -- that they are
superior to the common rabble who haven't been "saved" and who don't have
The Big Answer....
Another common cult characteristic shown there is the demand for
Surrender to the Cult.
You can't just join the group; you have to surrender to the cult and give
it everything -- your life, your mind, your heart, your loyalty,
your obedience, and even your soul.

The first and most obvious characteristic of Buchmanism was
meetings, meetings, meetings. The
Buchmanites were always forming groups and having lots of
meetings, just like Alcoholics Anonymous would do
decades later. A slang term that some others used for Buchmanism was
"Groupism" -- the religion of those people who believe in
groups and meetings.
The early house-parties attracted varying numbers, from twenty to 150.
Sometimes they were week-end affairs; sometimes they were prolonged for ten days.
Young people in the twenties predominated. It was the practice, I believe,
for them to contribute 5s. a head as "registration fee."
The purpose of house-parties, it was stated, was to "relate modern
individuals to Jesus Christ in terms which they understand and in an environment
which they find congenial."
There were "informal talks on sin," and a feature of those
days, apparently, was separate groups for men and women for the discussion
of sex problems "in a more intimate vein than is possible in a
mixed gathering."
Inside Buchmanism; an independent inquiry into the
Oxford Group Movement and Moral Re-Armament,
Geoffrey Williamson, Philosophical Library, New York, c1954, page 202.
Frank Buchman always maintained that converts should remain in their
own church. New people may be converted to believing in Buchmanism,
but they were supposed to continue as members of their original
church while simultaneously attending numerous Group meetings.
Buchman declared that his sect was not a new religion, but rather something
that would supplement and revitalize the existing Christian churches --
"The Oxford Group is not a new religion; it is religion anew."
That seemingly generous attitude had the side effect of
making everyone, no matter what their religion, fair game for
conversion to Buchmanism, and their former church couldn't even
complain about losing a member.
But one contemporary noticed that, while the Oxford Group claimed to not
be in competition with other churches, many Oxford Group meetings were
scheduled for
Sunday morning, at an hour which prevented O.G. members from attending
the services of other churches, even if they wanted to...

An important part of the Buchmanite meetings was
confession and "sharing."
There were two distinctly different kinds of sharing:
1) sharing as confession, and
2) sharing for witness.
Sharing as confession was supposed to unburden one of the sins which Buchmanites
declared kept people separated from God,
while sharing for witness was intended to convince new prospects to join the Group
and "surrender to God". That is, sharing for witness was just a lot of testimonials
that were intended to convince newcomers that Buchmanism is the answer.
The Buchmanites were really big on public confession, and were always
openly confessing everything they had ever done to meeting rooms full
of strangers. They entertained their
audiences with wild, humorous, and sometimes licentious
stories of their sins, misadventures and escapades before they got
changed into moral people by Frank Buchman and his followers.
And converts would "share" the message
that their lives had been much improved
by following Frank's "Guidance" and "principles".
Rev. Geoffrey Allen was a leader and a true believer in the Oxford Group
Movement who attempted to explain and rationalize all of the practices of the Oxford
Groups, like receiving Guidance from God in séances
and "sharing" sins with others
who are not ordained priests or ministers.
As first created by God, the infant has a transparent purity of soul.
In early childhood, how early who can say, the devil passes by.
Fear and pride and self-will enter in.
The child becomes ashamed and fears to confess its shame.
The evil by the great illusion is buried deep within the personality.
The poison of repressed fear or shame festers in the depths of
the soul.
Then there must come the healing work of God. Man must be converted,
not with an empty change of opinions, but with the turning inside out of
his life. Sins must be confessed openly on the lips, that they may be
purified in God's fair air, and that so there may be room for His gift
of love and peace within the newly cleansed heart.
He That Cometh; A Sequel to 'Tell John,' being further essays on
the Message of Jesus and Present Day Religion, Geoffrey Allen,
Fellow and Chaplain of Lincoln College, Oxford, 1933, pages 121-122.
Sooner or later, when we are ready to receive it, the Spirit will lead us
to a deeper sharing of all that has been weighing on us from the past.
It is a healthy practice for everyone, when they are led by God to do so,
to share to the depths whatever in the past has most burdened their memory
with thoughts of guilt. Such deep sharing may often be of things of which
it is a shame to speak in public, and it will be right to accept the guidance
of the Spirit, and to share with some one older individual. Such an individual
will then stand to us as ambassador of the forgiveness of Christ. In a Church
which was fully Christian the natural person to whom to take such confession
would be the priest.
Whether in the actual Church the priest is always the
right person is questionable. He might be shocked; and that might be good
neither for him nor for us.
The person who receives such confession
must be someone who has learnt from his own
experience, both under the Cross and
in the Christian fellowship, that the forgiveness of Christ outreaches the
furthest sin of man.
He will therefore never be shocked; before the utmost
evil he will say without blame, as Christ would say: 'Thy sins are forgiven;
go and sin no more.'
He That Cometh; A Sequel to 'Tell John,' being further essays on
the Message of Jesus and Present Day Religion, Geoffrey Allen,
Fellow and Chaplain of Lincoln College, Oxford, 1933, pages 131-132.
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Notice how Rev. Geoffrey Allen implied that non-clergy (i.e., Oxford
Group members) were more qualified, or at least better equipped, than
ordained clergy to hear confessions, because they wouldn't be shocked
by what they heard.
Rev. Allen declared that the poor innocent cloistered feeble-minded old
priests might be harmed by shocking confessions, but some worldly,
experienced old degenerates from the back alleys could handle the job
with ease.
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Rev. Allen also claimed that the people who heard the confessions must be experienced
sinners who have learned about the sin from their own experience.
So let's see... Logically,
Catholic priests can't hear confessions about wild sexual affairs unless they have
had a few dozen themselves... And murderers can only confess their sins
to another experienced murderer... Right?
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Rev. Allen also claimed that unordained non-clergy (like Oxford Group members)
had the power to forgive and absolve sins in the name of Jesus Christ
-- that they could
"stand to us as ambassador of the forgiveness of Christ" --
"Thy sins are forgiven; go and sin no more." --
which is a new religious doctrine that will certainly
start some interesting theological debates:
"Who needs seminaries or trained clergy? Who needs ordained
ministers and priests? Some college dropouts with
a couple of months of indoctrination in cult religion should be good
enough..."
That shows typical cultish arrogance. Cult members like to claim that
they are special,
and somehow more qualified than ordinary people --
even more qualified than the experts or the professionals.
Like an A.A. member declared, after
reading the "Big Book" Alcoholics Anonymous:
Here was a book that said that I could do something that all
these doctors and priests and ministers and psychiatrists that I'd
been going to for years couldn't do!
The Big Book, 3rd Edition, page 473.
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And of course Allen would have us believe that all of the Groupers were constantly
receiving Guidance from God, Who was even telling them whether they should confess
something and to whom they should confess it. Rev. Geoffrey Allen's theology
was a radical departure from mainstream Christianity.
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The mention of using laymen, rather than ordained clergy, to hear confessions
brings up another problem with the Oxford Groups. The Group members who hear
confessions are supposed to keep such confessions confidential,
but what about the people who leave the groups? How long will they remain
silent?87
And what about the Group members who are less than Absolutely Pure, and
tend to be gossips and blabber-mouths?
The Oxford Groups had just that problem -- gossips who could not keep secrets.
More on that here.
And of course Alcoholics Anonymous has the same problem today. Anything you say in
an A.A. meeting
can become common knowledge all over town
as the local gossips
have a hey-day. And your "sharing" can even be
used against you in a court of law.
- Rev. Jeffrey Allen simply assumed that everyone was burdened with feelings of guilt over things
that they had done in the past. That was one of the fundamental Buchmanite beliefs -- that
everyone is separated from God by a long list of things that they haven't gotten around to
confessing. That is also
Standard Cult Characteristic Number Two: You Are Always Wrong.
Rev. John A. Richardson wrote a critical analysis of the Oxford Groups where
he stated:
It was customary in the early days of the Church to give literal obedience
to the injunction of St. James, "Confess your faults to one another,"
the only passage in the New Testament, I think, that can properly be
quoted in this connection.
We know, however, that the practice of public
confession, or, as the Groups would put it, confession in the fellowship,
was deliberately abandoned in the fifth century, because it became a cause
of moral mischief. The minds of the young were contaminated by the practice,
and the sensibilities of older persons needlessly offended.
It is freely affirmed upon what seems to be unimpeachable evidence that the
revival of this ancient custom by Dr. Buchman has not been altogether
unaccompanied by moral evils similar to those that occasioned its abandonment.
Members of the Groups assure me that in their own experience they have
seen nothing of the sort, but I cannot help feeling that they have been
singularly fortunate in that regard; for there is not lacking evidence
that sometimes, at least, things have happened in this connection
to cause grave concern. Thus one, whom Dr. Hensley Henson [the Bishop of Durham]
certifies to be
"a very thoughtful and devout Churchwoman, who was present at the
Oxford House Party," in 1933, I fancy, states that "some of
the confessions were terrible. One in particular should never have been
made in public to an audience mixed in every sense of the word."
...
Within my own hearing, further, it was said by one prominent among
Canadian Church leaders that at a meeting of the Groups in
British Columbia -- at Vancouver, if I am not mistaken -- that he and
his wife were forced to leave the hall in protest against the character
of some of the sharings.
The Groups Movement, The Most Rev. John A. Richardson, pages 60-61.
Morehouse Publishing Co., Milwaukee, Wis., 1935.
As Rev. Richardson pointed out, the practice of public confessions in
the very early Christian church caused grave problems:
- The minds of the children were contaminated by the practice. The children will hear
adults confessing what they have done, and the children will think that they might like to
try that too...
- Plus, the children will start to think that
"Everybody does it, so why shouldn't I? It's no big deal;
everybody does it."
- The sensibilities of older persons were needlessly offended.
- People took pride in their sins.
(As in, "My sins and infidelities and binges were lots bigger
and longer and more outrageous than yours... Why, you're just a wimp
when compared to a big hardened old reprobate like me.")
- And then people become desensitized to the sins confessed. Something
about which people talk every day, and admit every day, becomes commonplace
and loses its power to shock or shame. The unthinkable becomes thinkable.
The tone of the confessions at Buchman's meetings was often anything but repentant.
Converts would tell grand tales of their "extremely sinful ways"
before being "changed" into a Buchmanite in a manner that bordered on
bragging. The confessional stories were often told in a jocular manner that
kept the audiences laughing.
As Marjorie Harrison, a contemporary critic, said in her book,
When Dr. Buchman invited converts to stand up and confess at
one meeting that I attended, he said: "Remember these three
points when you speak: BREVITY, SINCERITY, and HILARITY."
Members of his group are taught to be funny and jocular about
their sins. I should like to know how that can be reconciled
with the teaching of any religion.
Saints Run Mad; A Criticism of the "Oxford" Group Movement,
Marjorie Harrison (1934), page 145.
The Salvation Army has deliberately adopted a method that it
considers suitable and successful in attracting corner men
and women. The [Buchmanism] Group uses measures equally
undignified as a means of appeal to gilded youth.
In place of tambourines it has a slangy jargon:
instead of sanguinary hymns, modern catch-phrases:
its emotional appeal is subtle and insidious instead
of blatant. Above all, and in this it differs from
every other form of revivalism, the "penitents' bench"
with its genuine, if hysterical manifestations of sorrow,
is superseded by the slap-stick confessional.
But apart from superficial methods, there is no other likeness
between the Salvation Army and the Group Movement.
Saints Run Mad; A Criticism of the "Oxford" Group Movement,
Marjorie Harrison (1934), page 26.
Then Harrison described a ten day meeting in January, 1934, in London:
The Church Times sent a special representative whose report is
obviously written with care and a sense of responsibility. His
description is extraordinarily reminiscent of many meetings that I
have attended. ...
He ... calls attention to the fact that "very many sins were
confessed amusingly and greeted with laughter."
... I have heard Dr. Buchman himself enjoin new converts to make
their testimonies with hilarity!
Saints Run Mad; A Criticism of the "Oxford" Group Movement,
Marjorie Harrison (1934), page 31.
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Alcoholics Anonymous still has the same problem today. At speaker meetings,
the featured speaker will often entertain the audience and keep them laughing
by telling hilarious stories of his wild and crazy besotted adventures before
his conversion to sobriety. Later, when members of the audience "share"
their stories of alcoholic ruin,
they will confess their "moral shortcomings" and "defects of
character" with remorse and repentance. But the featured speaker
does a stand-up comedy routine that makes alcoholism and sin sound like
a whole lot of fun.
Sometimes it's enough to make you wish to return to drinking, longing for
the good old days when we
were young and wild and crazy and didn't give a damn...
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Marjorie Harrison attended many Oxford Group meetings, and noticed that
the confessions changed as members gained experience in making public confessions:
You will seen an instance of how "changing" can be
for the worse, if you go to a Group meeting when new converts
are asked to testify.
These people are very touching in their complete sincerity,
humility and deep reverence.
Then hear the various members of the "Teams" -- the
same type of people after they have had an intensive training
in Group methods and have recounted their sins at many public
confessions. There is no longer any ring of sincerity; they are
glib.
There is no humility; they are smug, complacent, and insufferably
priggish. And the reverence is gone completely.
Saints Run Mad; A Criticism of the "Oxford" Group Movement,
Marjorie Harrison (1934), page 91.
Contemporary clergy criticized Buchmanite sharing by saying,
There is subtle temptation to spiritual vanity which assaults the public
speaker, especially if he posses the orator's gift and knows it;
and against that temptation, even the most humiliating self-accusations
provide no sufficient protection. ...
The penitent may feel a strange pride in the sins which he publicly
proclaims as once his own.
The Oxford Groups; The Charge Delivered At The Third Quadrennial Visitation
Of His Diocese Together With An Introduction, Herbert Hensley Henson, D.D.
(the Bishop of Durham),
1933, page 54.
Again, we see the warning about people taking pride in their sins.
The practice "emphasizes past occurrences unwholesomely,"
says Dr. Douglas J. Wilson, Prof. in the University of Western Ontario,
to whose article in The Christian Century of August 23, 1933,
allusion has already been made, "becomes artificial and partially
insincere, and
breeds a perilous spiritual pride."
...
The spirit of pride is never likely to be far away from one who makes
repeated and habitual recital of sins before a public gathering; and
herein, one cannot but think, lies a danger which even the leaders of
the Groups cannot wisely disregard. "What you talk about without
embarrassment," says the Bishop of Durham wisely, "you do
not feel deeply. The gravity of the wrong-doing dwindles as it is discussed"
(The Group Movement, 2nd Ed., Part II, p. 55). ...
The sincerity of those adherents of the Groups who spend weeks and months,
and in some cases, even years, in traveling from place to place
in the interests of the Movement will not be called in question.
No thoughtful person can doubt, however, that their repeated sharing
for witness before large public gatherings must strain that sincerity
severely.
A mechanical element enters into the telling of the same story over
and over again, and it becomes stale in its recital. Instead of a
spontaneous witness to victory won, it tends insensibly to become
a routine performance, and the sincerity of the confession diminishes.
"It would be less than human," as it has been said,
"if, in such circumstances, the story should not become exaggerated
and embroidered."
Hilarity, moreover, has been almost exalted as a virtue by the Groups,
and, if the press reports of the meetings are to be believed, a
jocular element enters not seldom into the sharings, bringing with it
a danger of which many public speakers with a gift of humour are well
aware -- the danger of making the real end of the story the laughter
that it provokes, instead of the truth that it is intended to tell.
A typical case in point was brought to my attention some little time
ago by one whose statement no one who knows him would dream of questioning.
In the course of her sharing at a large meeting in Montreal, a youthful
member of an international team sketched briefly the background of her
life. She was a clergyman's daughter, she said. On Sunday morning, of course,
they all went to church, and then came home to a good, hot dinner, during
which, "while father carved the joint, mother always carved the
congregation." The flippant statement was rewarded with the applause
and laughter which it was obviously intended to provoke.
Not long after, the same team was operating in another city, where my
informant happened to be, and once more he attended a large gathering,
at which sharings were being given. The same lady gave the same sharing
in substantially the same words, and again her story found its climax
in the same pitiful joke at the expense of her mother, "While father
carved the joint, mother always carved the congregation," and
once more her mot was rewarded with laughter and applause.
I do not suggest that such instances of bad taste are common.
The story shows sufficiently, however, one danger to which those who
are called upon to tell habitually the story of sins forgiven are
inevitably subject.
The Groups Movement, The Most Rev. John A. Richardson, pages 68-71.
Morehouse Publishing Co., Milwaukee, Wis., 1935.
One critic of the Oxford Groups noted how superficial the confessions
at the house parties really were.
People routinely confessed to having thought ill
of someone, or having been jealous, or having had a selfish urge,
or having worn make-up or drunk a cocktail or smoked a cigarette,
but rarely did anyone ever confess to having committed a real crime or to
anything serious (other than sex).
At one house party, when it came Frank Buchman's turn to confess something,
he admitted that he had cheated the Post Office out of small change
by putting insufficient postage on some letters. The whole group
then ceremonially trouped down to the Post Office where Buchman
"made amends" by paying the postage due.
Some of Frank Buchman's followers then marveled at what a wonderfully
honest and spiritual man Frank was, to have confessed to such
a trivial thing.
We confess our little faults to persuade people that we have no large ones.
== Francois de La Rochefoucauld
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Punch Magazine parodied the Oxford Group confession sessions at
Oxford University by making them into an intercollegiate sporting event:
Organized match play has not yet begun, but teams of eight from
two different colleges will meet informally in a neutral room, and
confess against each other, sin for sin. Balliol, I hear, has a second
team. Indeed, there were great tales of a sensational match between
Wadham and Balliol II. After seven heats the scores were level, but in
the final heat the Balliol captain defeated his opposite number by
a narrow margin. The Wadham captain made a generous speech, in which
he freely admitted that the worst side had won.
"THE GROUPS IN OXFORD" by G. F. Allen, pages 18-19, writing in
Oxford and the Groups; The Influence of the Groups
considered by Rev. G. F. Allen, John Maud, Miss B. E. Gwyer,
C. R. Morris, W. H. Auden, R. H. S. Crossman, Dr. L. P. Jacks, Rev. E. R. Micklem,
Rev. J. W. C. Wand, Rev. M. C. D'Arcy, S.J., Professor L. W. Grensted,
Edited by R. H. S. Crossman; Basil Blackwell, Oxford, 1934.
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One of the peculiar features of Buchmanism was "Guidance
sessions."
People would sit quietly with a notebook in hand, and listen for God's messages
during "The Quiet Hour", and God would
speak to them, they believed.
Buchman liked to describe it as Group members receiving "powerful
spiritual radiograms".
So the members of Buchman's groups
were forever claiming that God had guided them, and told them
to do this or that...
An Oxford Group pamphlet gave these instructions:
6. In the attitude of "Speak Lord for Thy servant heareth"
wait patiently and quietly, listening for what He has to say,
what he has to reveal to us concerning ourselves, what He wants us
to do in His service, what message He wants us to bear,
what piece of work He wants us to do, or what new truth He
wants us to learn about Himself.(John
16:13-14)127
7. You may find it real help to write down the ideas and
thoughts which the Holy Spirit has caused to arise in the mind.
The advantage of this is two-fold; It is an aid to concentration
and acts as a reminder of duties to be performed, and is of value
in checking at the close of the day thoughts received each
morning and through the day. (Jer.
10:2)128
from THE QUIET TIME By Howard J. Rose
And Frank Buchman declared,
Our destiny is to obey the guidance of God.
Frank Buchman, speaking at the opening of the Moral Re-Armament Training Center,
Mackinac Island, Michigan, July 1943, quoted in
Remaking the World, the speeches of Frank Buchman, Frank N. D. Buchman,
page 201.

The whole Buchmanite family partipates in the Quiet Time.
They sit quietly with notebooks in hand, ready to write
down the messages that they receive from God.
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The London newspaper reporter Arthur James "A. J." Russell,
who intended to write an exposé of Buchman, but
who was 'changed' into a devoted Buchmanite and became the first Oxford Group archivist,
described his introduction to Frank Buchman's Guidance this way:
And then, of course, Frank suggested the inevitable Quiet Time.
Taking two sheets of notepaper, he handed one to me. We sat down
and listened in prayerful silence. I tried to pick up another
of those luminous thoughts. Nothing exceptional came: quit a lot
of ordinary human thoughts, but no luminous ones. I had no wish to
confess my sins to the person Frank had named, but I wished to see
the thing through as an honest test. Yet my thoughts in that Quiet Time
agreed with what Frank urged, though my wishes did not. I wrote
down my thoughts; then read them aloud to Frank, who confidently
and surprisingly pronounced them to be God-given thoughts.
"Oh, come," I said to myself. "That's much too strong
an interpretation." How on earth could a few wandering thoughts,
unattended by mystical feeling or luminosity, scribbled on a sheet
of notepaper, be catalogued as God's thoughts by anyone in his right
senses? Still, I was determined to see the thing through, being a
believer in the pragmatic method of learning by doing.
For Sinners Only, A. J. Russell, page 95.
In spite of his initial skepticism, Russell was soon converted into
a true believer who went on to write two whole books of praise for
Frank Buchman (For Sinners Only and One Thing I Know).
Eventually, A. J. Russell became the historian and chief publicist for
Frank Buchman's organization.
Notice how Frank Buchman claimed that he had the ability to tell whether
a thought had come from God or not. We never got any explanation of just how,
when, or where Dr. Frank N. D. Buchman acquired that great magical power,
but Frank still felt entitled to routinely
censor or re-interpret other peoples' Guidance,
because he allegedly saw God's will and
knew God's mind
far more clearly than they could.
Rev. Geoffrey Allen, a minister at Oxford University who became a true believer
and a leader in Buchman's cult, described Guidance this way:
It is a custom to be recommended, that those who seek to receive instruction
from God in quiet should take pencil and paper, and write down the thoughts
to which His Spirit leads. If any feel superior to the use of such material
aids, they may well question whether God also is convinced that they do
not need them. The custom of writing slows the rapid pace of wandering
thoughts, that the voice of the Spirit may be heard; it enables us the
more surely to remember His lessons, and to see that His requests are
performed.
He That Cometh, Geoffrey Allen, pages 99-100.
That sounds very similar to the common occult practice called
Automatic Writing, which is another favorite trick,
like the Ouija board, of would-be psychics.
What you do is, you just relax and let your hand write anything
that comes into your mind. Then you imagine that you are
"channelling"
someone else's thoughts -- usually the thoughts of a dead person, ghost, or spirit.
Well, Buchmanites went so far as to imagine that they were channelling God.
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"Seeking Guidance" is a lot like using the I Ching to make every decision.
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B. W. Smith, who investigated the Oxford Group in 1936, described
Frank Buchman's "guided" behavior as:
Always, he says, he follows his "guidance." Sometimes he
is guided as to how much to spend for postage. Once, in Canada, when
they quoted him a rate of $12 a day for rooms, he said that God had
told him to pay only $3.50. Once, just at the beginning of an important
Group meeting in Aberdeen, Scotland, he suddenly said that he had
been "guided" to take ship to South America. It turned
out that the ship he was guided to go and return on also carried
the Prince of Wales. It is not recorded what progress Dr. Buchman
made with the Prince, but I believe he "changed" the
ship's doctor.
Buchman -- Surgeon of Souls, B.W. Smith, Jr.,
American Magazine, 122:26-7+, November 1936, page 151.
Frank Buchman would walk into a room full of followers and brightly announce,
"I knew someone here needed me. I received Guidance to
come." That kind of ego game is easy to play; in any group of
a dozen or more people, it is easy to find someone who was supposedly
in need of a few words of divine wisdom.
|
God on the Hudson
In Briarcliff Manor, not far from Nyack where lives Oom the Omnipotent, onetime "love cultist," The Groups had an international house party. Glib, bright-eyed Dr. Frank Nathan Daniel Buchman, "soul surgeon," arrived on the S. S. Aquitania with a party of 22 "experienced" members of The Groups, many of whom had met with him at a house party in Geneva last January (TIME, Jan. 18).
The Press gave much notice to their doings. Soul Surgeon Buchman, who looks to the camera much like his good friend John D. Rockefeller Jr.'s cousin Percy (see p. 55), handed out envelopes full of clippings from British newspapers, said he appreciated the publicity he had gotten from "the Bishops" and the Press in England. He explained that "this is a peripatetic group, just as the disciples of Jesus. It goes wherever God guides it." He smiled amiably, as did his entourage, 17 of whom had prepared typewritten statements for the reporters, describing themselves and the manner of their conversions to The Groups. Typical was the account of Jonkheer Eric van Lennep, Knight of St. John of Holland, who said of himself: "He used to live behind masks; a mask for the office; a mask for his friends, a mask at home and another for his social activities; but he has found freedom from all that, and more, in a God-guided and unified life. And having found a good thing, who would not pass it on to his friends?"
Proprietor Chauncey Depew Steele of Briarcliff Lodge is sympathetic to The Groups. Two years ago all the bellhops, chambermaids, desk clerks attended a Group meeting. Last week the 425 members of the house party, each paying $4 per day during the ten-day stay, had the place much to themselves. They met first at a dinner, with much grinning and chuckling and calling of first names. Then Rev. Samuel Moor ("Sam") Shoemaker Jr. opened the first "experience meeting" with the story about the unemployed broker who hired out to a zoo to pose in a lion's skin, was scared by another lion who turned out to be another unemployed broker. The Groups laughed. "That's right, Sam!" cried Founder Buchman. "That's the way we're meeting unexpected friends here tonight." Then the meeting grew chummy, with much talk of "sharing" (mutual confession), "surrender" (conversion) and spiritual fellowship. There were preachers, athletes, college professors, brokers, an elderly gentleman described as a retired 'legger. socialites from Manhattan, Louisville, Holland, South Africa, England -- all pleasant, engaging folk, none of them shabby or pasty or odd-looking.
Next day, first thing after breakfast, came "quiet time." Reporters watched The Group members assemble in the sunny ballroom, get out pencil & paper "to take down what God says." Some waited with poised pencils, others took down copious messages. After 15 minutes D. Scoville Wishard said: "Some will want to share what God said." There were many who did, all beginning "it came to me. . . ." Said Jonkheer van Lennep: "God has told me he is blessing this house party." Said Evershed Thompson of the Edinburgh Stock Exchange: "Jesus is here."
TIME magazine, May 02, 1932
|
Vic Kitchen,
another long-time true believer in the Oxford Group, wrote
a book where he listed some of the benefits of living a surrendered and "Guided" life:
... Even with no change in the curriculum or staff, a surrendered and God-conscious
student can gain much more from the present modes of education than any of his
pagan friends.
There is first of all the matter of choosing schools and of finding the means
to go there. I have seen youngsters in the Oxford Group, for instance, select
their schools or colleges, not according to parental preference, not according to
ideas of their own, but according to the direct and often amazing guidance of God.
This guidance sometimes leads to most unexpected institutions that neither the
student nor parent had considered. At other times God shows the opportunity for
attending leading universities that the student had considered beyond hope.
In one case, due to depression, a young man had given up all idea of going to
college. Then God told him that he ought to go -- told him where to
go -- and told him where to find the money. This is not an unusual
occurrence. It is only one case in many.
Once in his school or college, moreover, the guided student find the right
selection of studies and he finds a greater ability to study -- a certain sharpening
of the mind such as I have tried to describe in my own experience. He finds himself
able to attack the most intricate studies and to master subjects that have always
been a bugbear. He finds, moreover, that God does not let his studies suffer when,
as sometimes happens, He diverts him temporarily to other details of His work.
I Was A Pagan, V. C. "Vic" Kitchen, pages 96-97.
Obviously, that just reeks of the common cult characteristics,
"We Have The Panacea",
and
"Magical, Mystical, Unexplainable Workings".
And then there is the name-calling and
"Devaluing the Outsider"
-- non-members are all "pagans".
There's more:
Guided living also eliminates the frictions which are bound to arise when two self-centered
people revolving on different axes are brought into close proximity.
There is little friction between my wife and myself because, when we see a difference
of opinion in the offing, we have a quiet time and refer the matter to God.
He settles it, without argument or dispute, in the way He knows is best for both
of us.
...
[Ah, but who gets to decide what God said?]
These, of course, are only a few -- a very few -- of the many blessings which occur
when an ordinary marriage is turned into holy wedlock through surrender of self-will
and the sharing of one's sins.
I Was A Pagan, V. C. "Vic" Kitchen, pages 112-113.
So Vic Kitchen considered
surrender to the cult
and
confession of one's sins
to be a panacea.
Peter Howard, the fascist disciple of Buchman
who took over the leadership of Buchman's organization
after Buchman's death, wrote a book that defended the Oxford Group
Movement and Moral Re-Armament. In 1940 to 1941, during World War II,
Peter Howard wrote:
Some people in the Group have received the most remarkable and dramatic
pieces of guidance from God. I have heard a naval officer describe, with
obvious sincerity, how in the middle of a naval action he received precise
guidance from God which told him which decisions to take and which helped
him and his ship through.
Others record how they suddenly received guidance to go to a certain
street and there met people who needed their help. ...
When the air raids began, I was frightened, but foolhardy. Thus,
although I felt alarmed, I goaded myself to stand out in Ludgate Circus
and watch the bombardment when the first mass daylight raid on
the London docks came our way.
Soon after promising Garth Lean to listen to God, I received a message
that if I trusted myself to God there was no need to fear. But that
to go about in the streets unnecessarily when a raid was on was wrong.
Explain it as you like, I have not from that moment felt over-alarmed
in air raids.
Innocent Men, Peter Howard, page 33.
|
Peter Howard was obviously just
cherry-picking
a few choice stories there, and attempting a
Proof By Anecdote.
Howard said nothing about the many thousands of other naval officers
who got killed. Didn't they pray too?
Didn't God like their prayers?
What happened to their 'Guidance'?
Why did God choose to help just one begging believer and let all of the others die?
And the fact that Peter Howard managed to overcome his fear of air raids
proves nothing. It's irrelevant. It says nothing about Oxford Groupers
receiving Guidance from God.
(It's the propaganda trick of
Proof by Introducing
Irrelevant Evidence.)
The voice that told him that it was wrong to "go about in the streets
unnecessarily when a raid was on" was probably just his common sense,
or his gut-level survival instinct, telling him to stop behaving so foolishly
before he got himself killed.
|
Similarly, another faithful Buchmanite wrote a book about his war experiences,
and credited his survival to practicing Frank's style of Guidance.
Edward Howell wrote in Escape to Live that God spoke to him
and told him how to escape from a prisoner of war camp in Greece. Then God told him
which way to run, "the author seeking guidance whenever he feels at a
loss."72
I decided that the situation was out of my control if indeed it had ever
been in it. God must decide and tell me what to do.
From Escape to Live, quoted in
Inside Buchmanism; an independent inquiry into the
Oxford Group Movement and Moral Re-Armament,
Geoffrey Williamson, Philosophical Library, New York, c1954, page 51.
Edward Howell went on to say that, by following God's Guidance, he eventually
met up with a group of escaped Australian soldiers,
and together they made their way to Turkey and safety.
Arthur Strong quoted Howell at greater length:
In the Spring of 1942 Wing Commander Edward Howell began to recover from wounds he sustained
in the Battle of Crete, May 1941. While commanding a Hurricane Fighter Squadron he
was shot down, and was seriously wounded in ground fighting. He was left for dead.
Eventually, picked up by German paratroopers, he was flown to prison-camp hospitals
in Greece, where he had an experience which changed the course of his life. In his book
"Escape to Live" he tells an amazing story.

Captain Edward Howell
|
"Having long been an atheist, I decided to stop trying to run my life and to let God,
if he was there, tell me what to do. The result was immediate and fascinating. I found
myself able to communicate with Him and receive constant instruction.
Still in very poor health, I was half my normal weight and had both arms crippled
with open wounds, so that everything had to be done for me by others. I had lost most
of what we normally value, yet I suddenly found myself happier than I had ever been, and
that I cared about the people around me with an inner peace and purpose I had never known
before. I had escaped from self-concern and self-interest into a new way of living.
I had escaped to live.
"Then God showed me how to escape from prison. In my condition it seemed quite impossible
but I chose to trust and obey Him and miracles resulted. There was no one about where there
should have been; a locked door had been left unlocked; a sentry had his mind somewhere else.
I managed to scale a high wall without using my helpless arms and fell, literally, on my
feet instead of my head. A star became my guide. My wounds healed overnight. Shepherds
and villagers in the Greek mountains became my friends and helpers despite language
barriers. Finally, a smuggler's boat took me by night from Mount Athos, the Holy Mountain,
to safety in Turkey and so back home again.
"Home was the end of that journey and the beginning of many others, also fascinating
and rewarding. I took part in the planning for D Day and was also on the Air Staff at the
Pentagon in Washington. Since the war I have worked with MRA in many countries, and have
also been in business in the United States and Greece.
"The worst experience of my life had been transformed into the best. I became aware
of the immense network of God's people, those who respond to Him, giving the continuing
hope and promise of a new world. The star had led me into wholly new ways -- and still does."
Preview Of A New World; How Frank Buchman Helped his country Move from isolation
To world responsibility; USA 1939-1946, Arthur Strong,
page 112.
|
The one really big, important dangling loose end that both
Edward Howell and Peter Howard failed to
explain in their stories is how and why "God" neglected to give such
life-saving Guidance to about 30 or 40 million other good people in that war.
Why didn't God bother to give such help to the Germans who opposed Hitler,
or to the Russians, or even to the Jews
in Auschwitz, Buchenwald, Mauthausen, Dachau, and Treblinka? Didn't God love them?
Didn't they pray enough?
Not even the leading Christian ministers like Pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer and
Pastor Martin Niemoeller who opposed the Nazis?
(And then, were murdered by the
Nazis...)118
Not even the German members of the Oxford Group? Didn't any of them
rate God's Guidance and help?
(And what about the German Oxford Group members who prayed for help
while fighting against the British soldiers?
If God helped them, wouldn't that be God helping to kill British
Oxford Group members?)
I am reminded of the words of one of the ministers who criticized
Frank Buchman's heretical teachings -- He said that he considered it blasphemy for
Frank Buchman to speak about how God was helping Frank Buchman, and doing great things for
Frank Buchman, while the rest of humanity was dying. I have to agree.
"I count it blasphemy for Dr. Buchman, or anybody else, to pretend to
testify to what God has done for him while humanity is at this moment perishing."
Rev. John Haynes Holmes, quoted in The New York Times, July 16, 1934, page 9.
|

The Buchmanites believed in a God who micro-manages the world.
According to Buchmanism, God has a grand plan for everything, right
down to the germs.
Everything that happens is caused by God. There are no coincidences
or accidents, they say.
This quote from the "Big Book", Alcoholics Anonymous,
is typical of Buchmanite beliefs:
And acceptance is the answer to all my problems today.
When I am disturbed, it is because I find some person, place, thing,
or situation -- some fact of my life -- unacceptable to me,
and I can find no serenity until I accept that person, place, thing,
or situation as being exactly the way it is supposed to be at this
moment. Nothing, absolutely nothing happens in God's world by mistake.
The A.A. Big Book, Alcoholics Anonymous,
3rd Edition, the story Doctor, Alcoholic, Addict, page 449.
According to Buchmanism, everything is subject to the will of God.
God is concerned with even the tiniest of details in this world.
God even cares whether you choose to drink coffee, tea, Coke, Pepsi, or
water with lunch today.
A follower who has properly
"Surrendered to Guidance", and who lives a life that is
"under God-control", will intuitively make
the choice that pleases God. And God, in turn, will make things turn out
right for those followers who please Him. To hear the Buchmanites
tell it, God is constantly kept busy pulling millions of puppet
strings, to make things happen just the way He wants them to.
And God allegedly does not hesitate to let His wishes be known by
broadcasting messages -- "powerful spiritual radiograms" as Frank Buchman
called them -- to those people who will listen.
P.R.A.Y. = Powerful Radiograms Always Yours
|
This is an eye-witness account of one of the Oxford Group's Quiet Times,
given by a former member of the Group:
The team is sitting in a semi-circle around Sam [Shoemaker?].
"Well," Sam asks, "what's the plan for to-nights meeting?
Let's listen."...
"Guidance-books" appear, pencils fly swiftly over blank
sheets.
Some peer glassily at the ceiling. Others close their eyes momentarily,
and are invariably rewarded with two or three lines of guidance.
"Amen. What comes?", Sam asks, as the scrape of pencils
and pens perceptibly diminishes in volume, thereby indicating to
him that the details of God's plan have been fully communicated.
Sharing begins. "Any guidance about the motif?"
"It comes to me that J. ought to give a good wad on Sin.
My guidance is that we shall get the pious crowd to-night,"
says B.
"That checks with my guidance," says another.
"Check," "check," "check,"
echoes from many of the team.
"That's it, Sin -- that's what
I got too. Sin is the drive for to-night."
(It should be noted that guidance is regarded as being practically
infallible when a majority is in agreement.)
The door opens. Frank [Buchman] walks in, and sits next to Sam.
"How far have you got with to-night's meeting?", he asks.
"It seems clear that sin is the motif to-night," Sam tells him.
Frank interrupts quickly: "Now wait a minute. I'm not so sure.
I've got a feeling that it may be too early for sin. 'Intrigue'
is what came to me in my early quiet time.
You've got to get hold of that important pagan bunch.
Play with 'em -- show 'em what they're missing. Give 'em the
feeling that religion's more fun than cocktail parties.
Suppose we have further Quiet, and check up on it."
More Quiet. More writing. Frank was always a tonic. Every one writes
more busily. Guidance comes more easily. The words
"intrigue" and "hilarity" appear on many notebooks.
"Amen, what comes!", asks Frank.
"I got 'intrigue' this time," says B.
Sam seemed to have got different guidance too this time.
(The phrases "right guidance" and "bad guidance" were in
common use.)
"I check with you, Frank," he says. "It came to me that I
must be more flexible, and have no preconceptions."
"Check," "check," "check," again echoes
round the room.
Frank resumes. "Well now, I'll share my guidance -- A battery
of witness from young Oxford. They want to hear Oxford,
so we'll let 'em. Crisp nuggets of witness. Intrigue the young
pagan elements. Sweep 'em along. That's my guidance.
Now I don't want to dictate. I may be wrong. I want you to
check me."
But we knew better. Frank's guidance was always right.
==A former member, quoted by Dr. H. Hensley Henson,
the Bishop of Durham, and reprinted in
The Mystery of Moral Re-Armament, by Tom Driberg,
New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1965, pages 197-198.
|
The group had ostensibly clearly heard God's Will during
their first "Quiet Time", and such Guidance was supposed to be
nearly infallible,
but when Frank Buchman came in and contradicted them, the whole group
changed its opinion of "God's Will" in two minutes flat.
So much for getting infallible guidance from God during one's Quiet Time.
Also notice how Buchman called those who had
not joined his group "pagans".
That is common cultish behavior -- name-calling,
devaluing the outsider, and
encouraging an us-versus-them mindset.
So is the attitude that
the leader is always right.
Geoffrey Williamson, a journalist who investigated the Oxford Group and Moral Re-Armament,
said of such "received Guidance":
It is idle to speculate whether these promptings emanate from a living God,
from the depths of the subconscious, from an individual's own conscience,
from a latent "better self", or from a form of wishful thinking.
Inside Buchmanism; an independent inquiry into the
Oxford Group Movement and Moral Re-Armament,
Geoffrey Williamson, Philosophical Library, New York, c1954, page 168.
And Marjorie Harrison, another contemporary investigator, stated:
As The Times [of London] put it in a leading article,
"It would be incredible if the bulk of the 'guidance'
received in 'quiet times' would not consist of submerged thoughts
and desires. Most of what is put forward as guidance received in
these periods of relaxed attention is so trivial that it would
be impious to ascribe it to the promptings of God."
The Group itself does not deny this. Dr. Buchman himself admits
that "thoughts might come from the sub-conscious self or from
the evil one".
The author of What is the Oxford Group? says:
"The human mind ... takes up a train of thought it finds
hard to discard, invents or remembers a thought of its own.
But to those closely in touch with God, it becomes easy after
a short while to differentiate between spiritual and human
messages."
Was there ever a more thoughtless, dangerous and careless
pronouncement on a subject of gravest importance to the lives
of so many people?
Saints Run Mad; A Criticism of the "Oxford" Group Movement,
Marjorie Harrison (1934), page 64.
And, I would add, "Such arrogance, such conceit."
That Buchmanite just assumed that he was "closely in
touch with God"
because he had practiced Buchmanism for "a short while".
For a short while?
In the history of the world's great religions, we often find stories
of saints who spent most of their lives in prayer and meditation --
just to finally get a mere few paragraphs of enlightened wisdom -- and those
saints felt that it was worth the wait.
And those saints did not claim to be "closely in touch with God"
because they had prayed and meditated "for a short while".
The Bishop of London wrote to A. J. Russell,
I think I explained at St. Ermin's Hotel that I believe absolutely
in Guidance by the Holy Spirit, without which belief I could not be for
five minutes Bishop of London.
But instances have been brought before me of mistaken views of Guidance
on the part of the Group, which lead me to suppose
that many of them leave out the light of reason (also a lamp given
us for our Guidance) and what might be called sanctified common-sense.
One Thing I Know, A. J. Russell (1933), page 285.
The Bishop later explained:
"...I would say now that of course we Christians rely on Guidance.
'As many as are led by the Spirit of God, these are the Sons of God.' We take one day at
a time, and we trust the Holy Spirit to see us through, and so He does. That has been my
slogan for years. ...
"Yet frankly I have seen dangers and foresee dangers. For instance, in the matter of Guidance,
we must remember that the Lamp of Reason was given us by God to guide us. Therefore,
we must do nothing against reason. This will save us from mistaking a mere whim or
desire as Guidance by the Holy Spirit.
I illustrated that point when giving a farewell charge to thirty-three Groupers who left
England in 1932, as a team to visit Canada and the United States. I told them of a very
unhappy story of misguidance, which I knew to be true, for it was given to me by the father
of the girl who was the victim of it. Because of the behaviour of a young man in the Group
towards my informant's daughter, the father was completely put off by the movement.
His attitude was understandable, if not quite logical.
"The young man had written a love-letter to his daughter on the Friday, but
on the Monday he had been 'guided' to propose to another girl.
'The father said he wanted a horse-whipping, for his sense of decency should have come in
to check such ungentlemanly conduct. The Group should insist upon such safeguards as the
Lamp of Reason, and the observance of good taste and decency when interpreting Guidance.
When I told my story at the Group meeting, it raised a laugh; but it is a serious
objection, none the less, for the story is true."
One Thing I Know, A. J. Russell (1933), pages 291-292.
What was so darned funny? The Bishop told the very sad story of a
girl who was hurt by a Grouper's goofy 'Guidance', and the team of Oxford Group recruiters
laughed when they heard it.
Did their laughter indicate that they just couldn't bear to hear the truth?
(That was also a subtle form of resistance to criticism -- just laugh
at anything that might be a valid criticism of the Oxford Groups or of
Frank Buchman's teachings. Don't take it seriously; don't really consider
it or think about it. Just frivolously laugh it off and pretend that it
is all very funny.)
Marjorie Harrison wrote:
The Bishop of London, speaking on the Group some time ago, said:
"God has given us intelligence and reason to be the lamps to
guide us."
The Group by its interpretation of Divine Guidance advocates the
dowsing of these lamps.
To return to the simile of a father and his children. The Group
teaches the child to regard his father not as a guide and
defence generally and a ready help in time of trouble, but
someone to whom the child turns for actual direction in everything
he does. Father, shall I play with my train or my bricks?
Father, shall I build a house or a bridge?
Father, shall I use red bricks or blue?
Father, shall I knock it down?
Father, shall I build it up?
Father this and father that, until a father might well wonder
whether his child is a half-wit, instead of a reasonable being.
Why should we storm the courts of Heaven to know whether we shall
buy cigarettes or take the 10.45 or the 11 o'clock train to town,
or as a critic has said: "render God responsible for our
neckties or whether we choose to eat beef or mutton at luncheon."
Believe me, these instances are no exaggeration. Dr. Buchman acknowledges
that he asks for guidance for the expenditure on postage.
Saints Run Mad; A Criticism of the "Oxford" Group Movement,
Marjorie Harrison (1934), page 55.
Another Bishop declared:
Groupists actually speak of 'listening-in' to the Holy Ghost:
whenever they run up against a difficulty they stop for guidance.
Such an idea of God is crudely anthropomorphic, derogatory to God's honor,
and contrary to natural morality.... Guidance as understood by the Groups
encourages all kinds of illusions; it undermines the sense of personal
moral responsibility, it leads to fanaticism.
The Rt. Revd. M. J. Browne, Bishop of Galway, in his Catholic Truth Society
Pamphlet, quoted in
The Mystery of Moral Re-Armament, by Tom Driberg,
New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1965, pages 195-196.
And Dr. Herbert Hensley Henson, the Bishop of Durham, said in his
criticism of the Oxford Groups:
Groupism discloses in its conception of 'Guidance' precisely the same error
as that which infects its conception of 'witness'.
It 'seeks a sign'.
It insists on something precise, concrete, calculable.
Its temper of mind is
rather Pharisaic than Christian.
It seeks proofs of Divine action in what is abnormal, amazing, even miraculous.
Its view of inspiration is mechanical, and its treatment of Scripture
literalist. Thus it comes about that, even in the process of exalting
the genuinely Christian conception of the 'guided life', it perverts
and lowers it.
The Oxford Groups; The Charge Delivered At The Third Quadrennial Visitation
Of His Diocese Together With An Introduction, Herbert Hensley Henson, D.D.,
1933, page 70.
|
Belief in Guidance is the same kind of "faith" as believing that someone gets
sick because it is the will of God.
It is also an
appeal to ignorance --
"Can you prove that such thoughts don't come from God?"
|
Marjorie Harrison interviewed Frank Buchman, and asked him about "Guidance".
I asked him to justify "Guidance" as he teaches it.
He asked me if I had read the Book of Ezekiel lately.
I replied that I had not. But I have since done so: I fail
to see the slightest connection between the vision of Ezekiel, prophet
and priest, a man set apart by God and chosen by Him, not when
Ezekiel desired it but when God willed -- to be the recipient of
direct Divine Guidance, and the little circular clumps of converts,
heads together, notebooks in hand, seated in the lounge of a
fashionable hotel. Their heads are bent; eyes screwed up.
Then in a moment or two they start scribbling in the little books.
They read out the result in turn. They laugh and chatter and
seem to enjoy themselves hugely. They appear to be playing
"consequences", they believe they are having an
audience with God.
No, Dr. Buchman, there does not appear to be any connection
between this and the burning vision of Ezekiel "among
the captives by the river Chebar" when the heavens
opened and he saw "visions of God".
Saints Run Mad; A Criticism of the "Oxford" Group Movement,
Marjorie Harrison (1934), pages 115-116.

|
When people seriously believe that their own random thoughts and
internal mental noise are the actual Words of God, then they can become
convinced of anything they wish.
This can lead to just about any kind of insane behavior you
could imagine, of course.
Bill Wilson admitted that A.A. members often got into trouble when
receiving Guidance while practicing A.A. Step Eleven:
On awakening, let us think about the twenty-four hours ahead.
We consider our plans for the day.
Before we begin, we ask God to direct our thinking...
...
Here we ask God for inspiration...
...
What used to be the hunch or the occasional inspiration becomes a working
part of the mind.
Being still inexperienced and having just made conscious contact
with God, it is not probable
that we are going to be inspired at all times.
We might pay for this presumption in all sorts
of absurd actions and ideas.
Nevertheless, we find that our thinking will,
as time passes, be more and more on the plane of inspiration.
We come to rely on it.
The Big Book, pages 86 to 87.
Notice how Bill Wilson tried to shrug off the crazy behavior of
some "God-inspired" A.A. members as just being the actions
of beginners who were still inexperienced in making
conscious contact with God.
|
And many Oxford Group members did behave irrationally as a result of
their "Guidance". There were numerous stories of students getting
"Guidance" to neglect or abandon their studies and skip their final exams,
to abandon their careers and just devote their entire lives to the Oxford Group:
The Group boasts of the reunion of parents and children thanks
to its influence. It does not count the homes sundered through
the same cause. Parents, who have made sacrifices to send their
sons and daughters to the University, are exasperated and distressed
to find time wasted, work neglected and careers ruined. I was
told recently of a man who, at considerable financial inconvenience,
had undertaken the education of a young nephew. In the midst of
his University career the boy insisted on throwing up his work
and attaching himself to the Buchmanites. No sense or reason
can be used as an influence. To every argument they blandly
reply that they know that they are right because God told them so.
Saints Run Mad; A Criticism of the "Oxford" Group Movement,
Marjorie Harrison (1934), page 57.
Here is another instance of the shallowness of thought and extremes
of teaching of which the Group must be held guilty.
In a booklet issued by the Group entitled The Guidance of God,
there is a story of a three-year-old child taught to be quiet and
listen to God's Voice. He looks up and remarks: "God says
that you must eat more porridge this morning." Although
the child is obviously reiterating an injunction of his mother's,
this is put forward as a direct instance of Divine Guidance.
In the same booklet there is the dangerous injunction: "Look
for the coincidences" as sign-posts of Guidance.
...
... If every passing thought is to be followed as Guidance,
and every coincidence regarded as a Divine intervention,
where are we to stop this side madness?
Dr. Buchman has no authority whatever for his doctrine
of direct guidance available at any moment.
The result of such a teaching, made "with an infallibility the
Pope would envy", is to rob men and women of their God-given
intelligence, and to weaken their sense of reason and their capacity
for judgement until they become almost non-existent. ...
It is a pitiable fact that many young children are now being brought
up this way. I believe that there are no words too strong to
condemn such a teaching, and that its consequences can be so terrible
that no warning is too grave.
The "Quiet Time" encourages introspection: the pseudo-guidance
is its result. Minds deranged, homes made tragic, careers broken, bitter
disappointment following the unhappy or negative outcome of this
so-called guidance -- these are the consequences.
I would sum up in the words of The [London] Times:
"It must be the most serious charge against the Groups that they
encourage their members to shirk the discipline of thought in
favour of impulses received from they know not where."
The teaching on Guidance is as great a superstition as any purged
from the Church at the Reformation.
Saints Run Mad; A Criticism of the "Oxford" Group Movement,
Marjorie Harrison (1934), pages 67-68.
It is not easy to get a direct answer to a direct question.
People who have followed this pseudo-guidance for long lose
the ability to think to the point. They are, even in conversation,
under guidance and following the ideas that come into their heads
at the moment.
Groupers become extraordinarily evasive people.
Saints Run Mad; A Criticism of the "Oxford" Group Movement,
Marjorie Harrison (1934), page 62.
|
Here is a good example of such evasiveness: Peter Howard,
the fascist disciple of Frank Buchman who
took over the leadership of the organization after Buchman's death, wrote
in his first book of praise of the Oxford Groups:
"Now the question will be put to me: 'Hey -- Peter Howard -- are you a member
of the Oxford Group?'
"My answer is that I find the standards aimed at by the Oxford
Group difficult of achievement by me. But I should like to achieve them.
I shall try to achieve them.
"Two of them are absolute honesty and absolute unselfishness.
"I cannot believe these goals deserve the flouts and gibes of
anyone. Certainly they do not get mine."
Innocent Men, Peter Howard, pages 38-39.
Peter Howard dodged and tap-danced around the question like a politician, and never
answered it.
While Howard was supposedly being so "absolutely honest", a
simple "Yes" would have
answered the question of
membership.70
|
Rev. John A. Richardson also wrote about 'Guidance':
A young man writes a love-letter to one girl on Friday, and is "guided"
to propose to another girl on the following Monday. (Related to Mr.
Reginald Lennard, Fellow and Tutor of Wadham College, Oxford, as authenticated
by the Bishop of London, "Morals and the Group Movement,"
The Nineteenth Century and After, Nov., 1933, pp. 600-601.)
...
No less a person than Canon Grensted says, "I was once worrying as to
which I should do: go a long journey by car or by train. After a long time
wasted in weighing the pros and cons, guidance came suddenly through
with the message: 'Don't be a fool, go by car.'"
(For Sinners Only, A. J. Russell, Eng. Ed., Hodder & Stoughton, Ltd.,
p. 288).
It is hardly in such language that we may expect the Holy Spirit to speak
to us, but we may let that point pass.
The significant thing about Prof. Grensted's testimony is that he regards
it as wasted time to consider for a few moments the advantages and disadvantages
of two contrasted courses of action in the experiences of ordinary life.
He would have us believe, it seems, that the exercise of common sense by
a Christian is superseded by dependence upon supernatural intimations.
... Prof. Douglas J. Wilson [Prof. in the University of Western Ontario]
... informs us that within his own experience
"Group leaders were 'guided' to break important engagements
while
large gatherings of people sat waiting in confused ignorance"
("A Critique of Buchmanism," The Christian Century,
August 23, 1933).
I have it on excellent authority, moreover, that similar breaches of
courtesy and common sense were observed in Toronto during one of the
great gatherings of the Movement.
Sunday pulpit engagements are said
to have been actually broken without a word of warning even at the last
moment, leaving embarrassed ministers to improvise a sermon. Called to account
later on for their inconsiderate behavior, the defaulting persons are
said to have replied with apparent unconcern that they had been
"guided" to go elsewhere. ...
With such incidents in view, few rationally-minded persons are likely
to disagree with the Bishop of Durham, when he says with his customary
directness that such a conception of guidance cannot be reconciled "either
with piety or with good sense. It appears to be equally inconsistent
with the character of God and the self-respect of man"
(The Group Movement, 2nd Ed., Part II, p. 66).
Nor will they find it difficult to make their own conclusion arrived at
in the matter by Mr. Reginald Lennard.
"The practical dangers of 'guidance,' however," he affirms,
"great as they are, do not seem to me to be the most serious objection
which can be urged against it on ethical grounds. It is all-important
to notice the fundamental implications of the doctrine -- its ethical
implications, I mean;...
Guidance is only to be sought in those matters which are usually matters
for reason and common sense or for principles and conscience.
No suggestion is ever made that we should substitute 'guidance' for our
eyesight and walk across a busy street under 'guidance' with our eyes
blindfolded.
In other words, that in man which he shares with other
animals is honored and trusted to do its work.
The reason, which most obviously distinguishes him from other animals,
is dethroned.
(The italics are my own. [--Richardson])
It is difficult to conceive anything more degrading.
The theory and practice of 'guidance' is not merely foolish and likely to lead
in practice to moral pitfalls. It is in itself fundamentally immoral....
Imagine a world in which everyone lived wholly by 'guidance,'
making each day simply the execution of commands received in the morning
'Quiet Time' and noted in the guidance book! All planning and thought,
everything permanent in human relationships and human purposes,
everything which makes life really human and worth living, would be
brushed aside as an irrelevant waste of time if this theory were worked
out to its logical conclusion and acted upon to the full"
("Morals and the Group Movement," The Nineteenth Century and
After, Nov., 1933, p. 602).
I leave the subject by merely recording the opinion of the Rev. E. R.
Micklem, of Mansfield College, Oxford, one of the contributors to
Oxford and the Groups. "To look for daily intimations,"
he says, "-- subtle promptings -- which indicate the tasks God
has in mind for us, rather than to look for illumination on the way
of grasping the multifarious and obvious opportunities of service which
our ordinary daily life presents, is to attempt to live in a world
of mechanical responses rather than of personal relationships" (p. 144).
The Groups Movement, The Most Rev. John A. Richardson, pages 75-79.
Morehouse Publishing Co., Milwaukee, Wis., 1935.
Rev. Richardson made a couple of great points there. Nobody walked across
a busy highway while wearing a blindfold, trusting Guidance to safely
guide his feet. The reason that they didn't is because, deep down in their hearts,
they knew that Guidance didn't really work.
And Rev. Richardson was quite correct when he called the practice of 'Guidance'
degrading.
It would reduce humanity to being just so many remote-controlled toys of God.
Children like to play with radio-controlled toy cars or airplanes, but
Frank Buchman would have us believe that God prefers radio-controlled
hairless monkees that mindlessly, unquestioningly, obey the orders that they receive
through "spiritual radiograms".
The practice of Guidance would reduce people to being just so many brainless robots.
|
Back in the 1920s, Dr. Frank Buchman was originally warmly received at
Cambridge University by the Cambridge Inter-Collegiate Christian Union
(CICCU). But they gradually cooled to his doctrine of "Guidance".
Dr. Oliver Barclay, a former CICCU president, wrote:
Buchman was at first received warmly by CICCU.... As time went on, however,
disturbing features emerged. He spoke of the Quiet Time, but it was less and less
a time of Bible study and prayer and increasingly a time of "listening to God."
This members did with their minds blank and with pencil and paper in hand,
writing down the thoughts that came to them.
In this way men received entirely irrational guidance.... regarded as authoritative....
They tended to lose their concern for doctrine and to end up less definite about
the gospel....
Whatever Happened to the Jesus Lane Lot?, Oliver R. Barclay,
InterVarsity Press, 1977, pages 98-100.
Also see:
Occult Invasion, Dave Hunt, Howard House Publishers, Eugene,
Oregon, page 301.
|
Rev. Geoffrey Allen of Oxford University, who became a true believer
and a leader in Buchman's cult, even taught followers to be ready to
break appointments whenever they received Guidance to do so:
As we surrender our prejudices to God, so also we must surrender our engagements,
so that we allow Him to direct in perfect freedom how He would have us spend
our day. We shall not start our time of quiet before Him, blocking in the
day that lies ahead with all that we have planned to do, and then asking Him
how He would have us spend what is left of our time.
God is Lord of the whole of our time.
If He wills that we should go to apparently fixed engagements, He will send us
to them.
If He wills that we should break free from them to be used for other
work of His, He is able to guide us how without damage to others of His
children we may be set free.
Of course, under His guidance, we may be at liberty to fill our diaries with
engagements for days and weeks and months ahead. We must, however, then each
new day allow God to redirect us as His purposes demand.
It is men and not God who are fickle; but where men in revolt live their days
by their own changing, selfish wills, God must be also free to adjust His
plans to their changing situations, so as best to use those who obey Him,
for calling the world back to His service.
He That Cometh, Geoffrey Allen, pages 99-100.
Rev. Geoffrey Allen claimed that God would teach the Oxford Groupists
how to break appointments without pain to others --
"He is able to guide us how without damage to others" --
but his young followers seem to have failed to learn that part of their lessons.
(Note that Rev. Geoffrey Allen changed his mind about the Oxford Groups
in a few years' time, and broke away from the
Groups.82)
Dr. H. H. Henson, the Bishop of Durham, strongly disagreed with Rev. Allen
about his doctrine of breaking appointments:
I have read this passage several times, and considered it carefully, but I
have not been able to reconcile it either with piety or with good sense.
It appears to be equally inconsistent with the character of God and the
self-respect of man. If generally acted upon, it would make social life
almost impossible. It suggests that the Almighty may first 'guide' His
children to frame engagements, which, when they fall due, He may 'guide'
them to break. Instead of directing his course by reason and conscience,
illumined no doubt by the Spirit of God, but indestructably free and
responsible, the Christian is reduced to dependence on specific directions
which he cannot foresee, may not understand or approve, and must not
disobey.
Dr. H. Hensley Henson, the Bishop of Durham, quoted in
The Mystery of Moral Re-Armament, by Tom Driberg,
New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1965, pages 195-196.
|
The Alcoholics Anonymous headquarters tells us that the A.A. members are also busy
receiving and mindlessly obeying orders from some unidentified
dictatorial "Higher Power", every day:
"I will center my thoughts on a Higher Power. I will surrender all to
his power within me. I will become a soldier for this power, feeling the
might of the spiritual army as it exists in my life today. I will allow
a wave of spiritual union to connect me through my gratitude, obedience,
and discipline to this Higher Power. Let me allow this power to lead me
through the orders of the day."
Daily Reflections; A Book of Reflections by A.A. members for A.A. members,
Alcoholics Anonymous World Services, Inc., 1990, August 27, page 248.
|

...when the Grouper says that the voice of God has spoken to him that
morning, Oxford may reply, platitudinously enough, that truth and error
are each often accompanied by the same feeling of certainty.
John Maud, page 48, writing in
Oxford and the Groups; The Influence of the Groups considered by
Rev. Geoffrey F. Allen, John Maud, Miss B. E. Gwyer,
C. R. Morris, W. H. Auden, R. H. S. Crossman, Dr. L. P. Jacks, Rev. E. R. Micklem,
Rev. J. W. C. Wand, Rev. M. C. D'Arcy, S.J., Professor L. W. Grensted.
Edited by R. H. S. Crossman;
Basil Blackwell, Oxford, 1934.
|
Curiously, few of the Oxford Group believers ever got any "Guidance" that
conflicted with any of Frank Buchman's "Guidance".
You would think that some conflicts
or collisions would be inevitable, because anybody could think, or imagine that
he heard, anything
he wanted to, but apparently, "God" managed to keep His followers from
making any mistakes. How convenient.
Actually, Buchman implemented a system of checks for the regular followers:
they had to submit their received Guidances to the other group members,
or, preferably, the group elders, for approval.
That was called "Checking Guidance".
The other members or elders would interpret and approve of the Guidance,
or not approve of it. If it conflicted with the guidance handed down
from Frank Buchman and his lieutenants, then such erroneous Guidance
must have come from The Evil One, not God.
In that way, no follower could get a message from God like,
"Frank Buchman is crazy. Quit this stupid cult right now."
Collective guidance is the test of individual guidance. The Group demands
total loyalty to the inner group.
Some have had to leave the movement because
of the Groups' demands which conflict with truth or duty.
The Oxford Groups; The Charge Delivered At The Third Quadrennial Visitation
Of His Diocese Together With An Introduction, Herbert Hensley Henson, D.D.,
1933, pages 73-74.
(The demand for
total loyalty to the group
is another standard cult characteristic.)
|
Dr. Herbert Hensley Henson, the Bishop of Durham, pointed out that Buchman's
doctrine of Checking Guidance created a great contradiction:
In the Groupist system, although the individual is encouraged to attach
Divine authority to the 'luminous thoughts' which visit the mind during the
'Quiet Time', and may be written down in his 'Guidance Book', and although
he is urged to govern his daily course, even in the pettiest details and
in spite of the dislocation of carefully-prearranged engagements which may
be entailed by his obedience to their direction, external authority is not
lacking. Above the Groupist there is the Group to which he is attached, and
beyond the Group there is an 'Inner Group' over which Dr. Buchman himself
presides, and whose decisions are final. Groupism is thus a closed system,
as close-knit and dominating as that of the Jesuits, which leaves to the
individual Groupist little liberty and no ultimate responsibility.
In a recently published letter, expressed with gravity and restraint,
twelve Evangelical clergymen resident in Oxford have instanced this aspect
of the Movement as one of the objections which may be fairly urged against
it:
'They [sc. the Groups] insist that individual guidance must be "checked"
(i.e. tested and approved) by the collective guidance of the Group, with
ultimate reference to the "Inner Group" of which Dr. Buchman is the head.
Loyalty to the Group -- as being directly controlled by the Holy Spirit --
is the dominating factor in determining the actions and choices of its
members.'
We seem to be contemplating a paradox.
A religious movement which begins
by ignoring all existing systems, and claims to have none of its own,
ends by becoming a system more despotic than any!
In order to 'check'
the marching orders from on high which the Groupist has been taught to
count upon, and which in fact he claims to have received, the movement
has found itself forced to create a 'checking' machinery which robs the
Groupist of his private judgement, and binds him to an unquestioning
obedience to the verdicts of another authority than that of the 'luminous
thought' which he was originally required to look on as Divine!
The Oxford Groups; The Charge Delivered At The Third Quadrennial Visitation
Of His Diocese Together With An Introduction, Herbert Hensley Henson, D.D.,
1933, pages 72-73.
Indeed. It would seem that Frank Buchman got to over-ride "the Word of God"
whenever he felt like it. No matter what "God" seemed to have said
to a Group member during his Quiet Time,
it was Frank Buchman and his lieutenants who got to decide what God really said.
That is a classic example of a bait and switch trick -- you start off
being told to listen to God, but you end up being told to listen to the
cult leader -- and
Alcoholics Anonymous
still uses the same trick today.
The individual ... is merged into the group, the 'Cell', the state, and
as such is bound into a system more analogous to the polity of bees
or ants than anything properly human.
The Buchmanite group reminds us irresistably of the Russian soviet, and
"Frank's" sovereignty in the one system is not wholly unlike that of Lenin
or Stalin in the other.
The Oxford Groups; The Charge Delivered At The Third Quadrennial Visitation
Of His Diocese Together With An Introduction, Herbert Hensley Henson, D.D.,
1933, page 48.
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Bill Wilson implemented the same "checking of Guidance"
in Alcoholics Anonymous with this patronizing put-down of A.A. members:
If all our lives we had more or less fooled ourselves, how could we
now be so sure that we weren't still self-deceived?
... what comes to us alone may be garbled by our
own rationalization and wishful thinking.
The benefit of talking to another person is that we can get
his direct comment and counsel on our situation, and there can
be no doubt in our minds what that advice is.
Going it alone in spiritual matters is dangerous.
How many times have we heard well-intentioned people claim the
guidance of God when it was all too plain that they were sorely
mistaken. Lacking both practice and humility, they had deluded
themselves and were able to justify the most arrant [sic.]
nonsense on the ground that this was what God had told them.
It is worth noting that people of very high spiritual development
almost
always insist on checking with friends or spiritual advisors
the guidance they feel they have received from God.
Surely then, a novice ought not lay himself open to the chance
of making foolish, perhaps tragic, blunders in this fashion.
While the comment or advice of others may be by no means infallible,
it is likely to be far more specific than any direct guidance
we may receive
while we are still so inexperienced in establishing
contact with a Power greater than ourselves.
Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions,
William G. Wilson, pages 59-60.
So, Bill says, you shouldn't trust your own mind -- you shouldn't
trust yourself to correctly receive Guidance directly from God while
practicing A.A. Step Eleven. You should let your sponsor and the
other group old-timers interpret your guidance, and tell you
what God really said, and what God really wants you to do.
So they, not God, become your real bosses. It is their voices that
you will end up hearing.
Bait and Switch.
In addition, Bill Wilson was also using the propaganda technique of
Making
Groundless Claims -- just making sweeping declarations that
had no basis in fact. Wilson wrote that:
"It is worth noting that people of very high spiritual development
almost always insist on checking with friends or spiritual advisors
the guidance they feel they have received from God."
Oh yeh? Who? What people? Bill Wilson didn't name one.
How about Jesus, Buddha, and Mohammed? Did they go around asking their
friends and neighbors for approval and agreement before they dared to
do something? Was going it alone in spiritual matters dangerous for them?
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|

It was obvious to contemporary theologians that Frank Buchman went off on an occult tangent
in developing his theology.
Buchman and his followers were allegedly
channelling God while
receiving Guidance,
not much different, really, from some spiritist or medium who claims to be
channelling the spirits of dead people.
There were even stories of Buchmanites getting together for
Quiet Time "spook sessions",
where they attempted to contact spirits other than God.
In his historical novel Wide is the Gate (1943),
Upton Sinclair described
Oxford Groupers holding séances in London
with a self-proclaimed medium who claimed to channel the spirits of the
Indian chief Tecumseh and a long-dead Ceylonese Buddhist monk.
Bill Wilson also pretended to be
a medium, and, while he was the leader of Alcoholics Anonymous,
he routinely conducted séances where he
claimed that he was channeling a long-dead Catholic priest named
"Boniface", along with numerous other entities whom Bill
said were both good and evil spirits:
"There were malign and mischievous ones of all descriptions,
telling of vices quite beyond my ken, even as former
alcoholics."146
(Notice how Bill Wilson was spreading
yet another stereotype of
"the alcoholic" there,
implying that alcoholics are very knowledgeable about all kinds of
demonic vices just because they drank too much alcohol.)
|
|
In fact, A. J. Russell's third book was nothing but two Buchmanite women claiming to
be channelling Jesus Christ. After Frank Buchman "changed" him,
the London newspaper reporter Arthur James Russell
wrote "For Sinners Only" (1932),
a book of praise of Frank Buchman that became
the standard textbook for the Oxford Groups.
Then "One Thing I Know" (1933)
was more praise of Frank Buchman, his organization, and his religious doctrines.
But Russell's third book, "God Calling", was a very different
piece of work. Two of Frank Buchman's women followers allegedly began
to receive very specific messages from Jesus Christ during their
"Quiet Times", and they made a habit of writing down the messages.
Russell then assembled those messages into a book and published them as some new
scriptures from God:
|
The Two Listeners
I did not write this book. I wish that I had done so. ...
Not one woman but two have written this book; and they seek no praise.
They have elected to remain anonymous and to be called "Two
Listeners." ... But the claim which they
make is an astonishing one, that their message has been given to them,
to-day, here in England, by The Living Christ Himself. ...
I have found these messages a spiritual stimulus. ...
None could have written this book unless he or she was a Christian
and in touch with the Living Founder of Christianity.
Two poor, brave women were courageously fighting against sickness and
penury. They were facing a hopeless future and one of them even longed
to be quit of this hard world for good. And then He spoke. And spoke again!
Day after day He comes and cheers them....
God Calling, A. J. Russell, pages 3-4.
|
And the guidance which Jesus Christ allegedly gave to those women was
like this:
Feel Plenty October 15
Live in My Secret Place and there the feeling is one of full satisfaction.
You are to feel plenty. The storehouses of God are full to
overflowing, but you must see this in your mind.
Be sure of this before you can realize it in material form.
Think thoughts of plenty. See yourselves as Daughters of a King.
I have told you this. Wish plenty for yourselves, and all you
care for and long to help.
God Calling, A. J. Russell, page 198.
|
The contemporary clergy were certainly aware of the occult aspects of Buchmanism -- they
lumped Buchmanism in with other psychic phenomena like communicating with the dead:
LIBERAL CLERGY CONVENE
Episcopal Conference in Philadelphia
Is Told of Psychic Phenomena.
Special to The New York Times.
PHILADELPHIA, Feb 15. -- Spiritualistic phenomena, Buchmanism,
Biblical Miracles and conversion were discussed by speakers today
at the opening session of the two-day conference of liberal
clergymen of the Episcopal Church, who attended from all parts of
the country.
The Rev. Dr. Walter F. Prince of New York, Secretary of the Psychic
Research Society, told how the Rev. William H. Morgan, a Methodist
minister of New York, experienced a complete change in his views
on theology as result of an all-night communication with the spirit
of his dead wife.
The Rev. W. T. Snead of Beverly, N. J., then declared that "castor
oil and calomel would clear up most of the cases of psychic
experiences" and asked about "premonitions that did not
come true."
The Rev. Samuel Shoemaker Jr., rector of Trinity Church, New York,
in a paper on Buchmanism, likened its founder, Frank Buchman, to
John Wesley and George Fox in that "he had the courage to go
into our highest social circles and tell people what they are."
The New York Times, February 16, 1927, page 3.
|
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"Sam Shoemaker"
Rev. Samuel Moor Shoemaker Jr.
|
|
The sycophant Sam Shoemaker's hero-worshipping remarks were simply untrue.
Frank Buchman did not tell the rich, the famous, and the titled nobility
"what they are".
Frank Buchman did that to the poor. Towards the rich,
Frank's behavior would be better described by the word
"grovelling".

Another important concept in Buchmanism is the idea that
everyone has been "defeated by
sin", and is "insane".
Buchman redefined the word "sanity" to mean "living according to
the Will of God" and "insanity" was living a life not "Guided"
by God.
Thus, only Frank Buchman and his
arrogant followers were sane; everyone else in
the world was "insane" and in need of Frank's
"Guidance". Thus Buchman taught that people were
incapable of running their own lives, and needed to surrender to
"God-control" (i.e.: to Frank-control). A Buchmanite text teaches:
What we want to do is get in touch with Him and turn our lives
over to Him. Where should we go to do it?
At once the lad replied:
"There is only one place -- on our knees."
The lad prayed -- one of those powerful, simple prayers which
are so quickly heard by Him who made the eye and the ear: "Oh
Lord, manage me, for I cannot manage myself."
For Sinners Only, A. J. Russell,
(Harper & Brothers, New York and London, 1932), p. 62.
That theology is a Gnostic heresy. One aspect of Gnostic theology was the idea that this world and
all of the people in it were irredeemably corrupt:
The earth and life on it are irredeemably evil, and separation from earthly life is precisely
salvation.
... The Gnostic view is that this world was the creation of an evil spirit. Matter itself is chaos;
it is the baser half of their dualistic universe.
Gosticism's pretense to exclusive divine knowledge is also implicitly millenarian, for prophetic
knowledge is often exactly of this kind; suitable only for the awareness of a select few who can
comprehend it.
A Doomsday Reader: Prophets, Predictors, and Hucksters of Salvation,
edited by Ted Daniels, page 42.
Buchmanism declared that you were inherently so corrupt and evil that you were incapable of
managing your own life or of doing good things with your own free will,
and that salvation was only
possible through surrendering control of your life and your mind to "God"
(i.e., to Frank Buchman and his minions who were supposedly in closer contact with God than you were).
That is a heresy, in direct conflict with the Christian
idea that you can repent your sins, change your ways, and choose to live a good life.
Christianity generally believes in free will; Buchmanism teaches that you are
the powerless slave of evil impulses, hopelessly "defeated by sin".
|
Alcoholics Anonymous teaches exactly the same heresy. (Of course -- it pushes
the same very package of theology. Alcoholics Anonymous is Buchmanism.)
A.A. teaches that you are a helpless insane slave of evil impulses -- that you are
"powerless over alcohol".
A.A. Step One says:
1. We admitted we were powerless over alcohol --
that our lives had become unmanageable.
So you are powerless over evil -- alcohol, Demon Rum, in this case -- and you cannot
control your own actions and manage your own life.
The only answer for you is A.A. Steps Two and Three, where you
achieve "sanity" by surrendering your mind and your life to
the control and direction of some "Higher Power" or "God":
- 2. Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could
restore us to sanity.
- 3. Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the
care
[and direction]
of God as we understood Him.
The original version of Step Three included the words
"and direction",
which made the doctrine of obeying Guidance much more obvious.
So Bill deleted those words from the second edition of the Big Book.
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Peter Howard
|
Peter Howard, who took over the leadership of Frank Buchman's groups
after Buchman's death, wrote:
Man is born to believe and obey. If he turns his back on God,
he turns his face to man and man's dominion. He will believe and obey
Hitler or Stalin as long as they hold the whip. Then he will serve their
successors.
Britain and the Beast, Peter Howard, 1963, page 97.
Man is born to believe and obey?
All men must be the unthinking slaves of some dictator or other, God or Stalin or Hitler?
That is a very twisted view of human life. It's downright fascist.
Peter Howard really was a fascist. He held a leadership position in
Sir Oswald Mosley's
New Party,
which morphed into the British Union of Fascists -- the B.U.F. --
during the nineteen-thirties, and
Peter Howard was the leader of the New Youth Movement, Mosley's copy of
the Nazi Hitlerjugend.
See the web page on Nazi Partying
for more of the story.
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Frank Buchman was also in love with the word "obey".
Oxford Group slogans declared:
-
"When man listens, God speaks. When man obeys, God acts.
When men change, nations change."
-
Our destiny is to obey the guidance of God.
Frank Buchman, speaking at the opening of the Moral Re-Armament Training Center,
Mackinac Island, Michigan, July 1943, quoted in
Remaking the World, the speeches of Frank Buchman, Frank N. D. Buchman,
page 201.
-
"God spoke to the prophets of old. He may speak to you. God speaks to
those who listen. God acts through those who
obey."73
And Buchman went on to say,
"The future lies with the men and nations who listen to God and obey."
The New York Times, August 28, 1939, page 9.
God has an inspired plan for peace and the means to carry it out through men
and women who are willing to obey.
Frank N. D. Buchman, Remaking the World, page 104, quoted in
Experiment With God; Frank Buchman Reconsidered, Gösta Ekman, 1971,
page 84.
"The secret lies in that great forgotten truth that when man listens,
God speaks; when man obeys, God acts; when men change, nations change."
Frank Buchman, quoted in
Britain and the Beast, Peter Howard, 1963,
pages 107-109.
But note that somehow Frank Buchman always managed to twist things around
so that "obeying God" ended up meaning that everybody had to
agree with Frank and do what Frank said. Everybody had to
check their guidance
with Frank or his lieutenants, and then Frank decided what God was
really saying and what God was really ordering them to do.
Again and again, Buchman declared that people could not manage their own lives,
that they must obey God and follow God's orders (as interpreted by Frank Buchman or his
lieutenants):
God alone can change human nature. ...
God made the world, and man has been trying to run it ever since.
That must stop... Many have been waiting for a great leader to emerge.
The Oxford Group believes that it must be done not through one person,
but through groups of people who have learned to work together under
the guidance of God.
Frank Buchman, quoted in
Experiment With God; Frank Buchman Reconsidered, Gösta Ekman, page 44.
In other words, people are so bad that the Oxford Groups should run the world.
Vic Kitchen, another one of Buchman's dedicated followers, agreed:
My own political thought therefore no longer looks to political expedients for a real answer.
It is given to the possibilities of theocracy under the Oxford Group and other
working Christians in all sections of the world.
Our old system of democracy, like our old system of economics, is gone -- never to return.
No intermediate stage of man-made adjustment is likely to linger with us for
very long. Therefore, on whether you and I accept this new awakening of the Holy Spirit,
depends the outcome of present political experiments. They will not escape disaster
unless the tide turns to God. There, and there only, lies the Nation's Real Advantage
-- a "new deal" of the kind that enables everyone to hold a winning hand, and the
only programme which enables everyone to play a vital part.
I Was A Pagan, V. C. "Vic" Kitchen, 1 |