“ Each
man is good in the sight of the Great Spirit."
Sitting
Bull Teton Sioux
Another
crowd of A.A.'s says: "We were plumb disgusted with religion and all its
works. The Bible, we said, was full of nonsense; we could cite it chapter and
verse, and we couldn't see the Beatitudes for the 'begats.' In spots its
morality was impossibly good; in others it seemed impossibly bad. But it was
the morality of the religionists themselves that really got us down. We gloated
over the hypocrisy, bigotry, and crushing self-righteousness that clung to so
many 'believers' even in their Sunday best. How we loved to shout the damaging
fact that millions of the 'good men of religion' were still killing one another
off in the name of God. This all meant, of course, that we had substituted
negative for positive thinking. After we came to A.A., we had to recognize that
trait had been an ego-feeding proposition. In belaboring the sins of some
religious people, we could feel superior to all of them. Moreover, we could
avoid looking at some of our own shortcomings. Self-righteousness, the very
thing that we had contemptuously condemned in others, was our own besetting
evil. This phony form of respectability was our undoing, so far as faith was
concerned. But finally driven to A.A., we learned better.”
Twelve
Steps & Twelve Traditions pg. 30
"You
are an A.A. member if you
say so. You can declare yourself in; nobody can keep you out. No matter who you
are, no matter how low you've gone, no matter how grave your emotional
complications--even your crimes--we still can't deny you A.A. We don't want to keep you out. We
aren't a bit afraid you'll harm us, never mind how twisted or violent you may
be. We just want to be sure that you get the same great chance for sobriety
that we've had, So you're an A.A. member the minute you declare yourself."
Twelve
Steps & Twelve Traditions pg. 139
Great
Spirit help me honor all my relations.