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Tradition
Six
Copyright
© The A.A.
Grapevine, Inc., May 1948
The
sixth of our Twelve Points of AA Tradition is deemed so
important that it states at length the relation of the
AA movement to money and property.
This
Tradition declares in substance that the accumulation
of money, property, and the unwanted personal authority
so often generated by material wealth comprise a cluster
of serious hazards against which an AA group must ever
be on guard.
Tradition
Six also enjoins the group never to go into business nor
ever to lend the AA name or money credit to any "outside"
enterprise, no matter how good. Strongly expressed is
the opinion that even clubs should not bear the AA name;
that they ought to be separately incorporated and managed
by those individual AAs who need or want clubs enough
to financially support them.
We
would thus divide the spiritual from the material, confine
the AA movement to its sole aim, and ensure (however wealthy
as individuals we may become) that AA itself shall always
remain poor. We dare not risk the distractions of corporate
wealth. They have become certainties, absolute verities
for us.
Thank
God, we AAs have never yet been caught in the kind of
religious or political disputes which embroil the world
of today. But we ought to face the fact that we have often
quarreled violently about money, property, and the administration
thereof. Money, in quantity, has always been a baleful
influence in group life. Let a well-meaning donor present
an AA group with a sizable sum and we break loose. Nor
does trouble abate until that group, as such, somehow
disposes of its bankroll. This experience is practically
universal. "But," say our friends, "isn't
this a confession of weakness? Other organizations do
a lot of good with money. Why not AA?"
Of
course, we of AA would be the first to say that many a
fine enterprise does a lot of good with a lot of money.
To these efforts money is usually primary; it is their
lifeblood. But money is not the lifeblood of AA. With
us, it is very secondary. Even in small quantities, it
is scarcely more than a necessary nuisance, something
we wish we could do without entirely. Why is that so?
We
explain that easily enough; we don't need money. The core
of AA procedure is one alcoholic talking to another, whether
that be sitting on a curbstone, in a home, or at a meeting.
It's the message, not the place; it's the talk, not the
alms. That does our work. Just places to meet and talk,
that's about all AA needs. Beyond these, a few small offices,
a few secretaries at their desks, a few dollars apiece
a year, easily met by voluntary contributions. Trivial
indeed, our expenses!
Nowadays,
the AA group answers its well-wishers saying: "Our
expenses are trifling. As good earners, we can easily
pay them. As we neither need nor want money, why risk
its hazards? We'd rather stay poor. Thanks just the same!
Copyright
© The A.A.
Grapevine, Inc., May 1948
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