
Says:
Danny,
I happen to think AA is a religion, but the argument about whether it is or not — or whether it’s a cult or not — seems to distract from the plain basic fact that AA is doing a lot of harm to a lot of people.
Nonetheless, I’d like to address your comment that “AA does not define God.”
Strictly speaking, the 12 Steps do define God… I mean, for the 12 Steps to work, God has to operate in a very precise way.
It’s not God as you understand God, really, but the god who will accept your will, and will replace it with his own, and will remove character defects — and who recognizes such a thing as character defects.
This isn’t a nebulous god — it’s a very clearly defined one.

__________________________________________
So, who is the A.A. God? Can I or can I not celebrate my God in an A.A. meeting or at an A.A. retreat?
Do I have to go "underground" and/or create my own A.A. to do something like that?
So long as I don't push my God on you, can I put a name or a face to my God... if only for a nanosecond?
And what if this God was different than your God?
Would this not debunk the stinky cat's definition of religion?
Oh no!
Is the fact that some of the most adamanty and stoicly orthodox and tradition obeying A.A. gurus are calling my group something other than a true A.A. group a loophole for me and my group a legal loophole?
Maybe, just maybe what I do and what my group does is NOT A.A.! We're free!
We may be just like you, FTG! On the same team!
What now, FTG?
Nebulous... adj. pertaining to, or like, the faint, cloudlike haze or vapor near the stars; cloudy; hazy; perplexed. -n. nebulosity
I just downloaded a free copy of "Cloud of the Unknowing" to my phone. It's a beautiful place to be when you're in Centering Prayer and in "listen" mode. I just got back from a spiritual retreat with 66 others like me and ... I experienced God and Power and a bunch of nice stuff and I'm feeling spiritual now. I feel like a trappist monk from the 14th Century.
I think I might even being over the ban you gave me for no good reason... for as you say, "So I won't feel left out". Not only do I not feel left out, I feel a part of, and I owe that to you and shark sandwich. Attitude of gratitude.
In fact, whenever I get into an argument about A.A. with my online gurus, I can go to you to get a twisted concept to make my own truthful concept contrast the ineffective A.A. concept.
Nothing like the Colorado Mountains to clear your head. I hope you all are well in Stinky Kitty Land.

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MeMay Says:
March 29, 2010 at 2:00 pm
Danny. To become a member of AA, all you need is a desire to stop drinking. That is what I was taught. What do you think?
Michael T. McComb
Let me take a guess... read Tradition 3 Long Form;
Three; Our membership ought to include all who suffer from alcoholism. Hence we may refuse non who wish to recover. Nor ought A.A. membership ever depend upon money or conformity. Any two or three alcoholics gathered together for sobriety may call themselves an A.A. group, provided that, as a group, they have no other affiliation.
I don't see the word "desire" in there.
And that's the bizarro universe tradition form we use in McGowdog. A., the long-form.