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Post Info TOPIC: As Bill Sees It


Senior Member

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Posts: 132
Date:
As Bill Sees It
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Moral Responsibility


"Some strongly object to the A.A. position that alcoholism is an illness. This
concept, they feel, removes moral responsibility from alcoholics. As any A.A.
knows, this is far from true. We do not use the concept of sickness to absolve
our members from responsibility. On the contrary, we use the fact of fatal
illness to clamp the heaviest kind of moral obligation onto the sufferer, the
obligation to use A.A.'s Twelve Steps to get well.

"In the early days of his drinking, the alcoholic is often guilty of
irresponsibility. But once the time of compulsive drinking has arrived, he can't
very well be held fully accountable for his conduct. He then has an obsession
that condemns him to drink, and a bodily sensitivity to alcohol that guarantees
his final madness and death.

"But when he is made aware of this condition, he is under pressure to accept
A.A.'s program of moral regeneration."

talk, 1960

__________________
still alive.
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