Lesson 63. The light of the world brings peace to every mind through my forgiveness.
Lesson 63. The light of the world brings peace to every mind through myforgiveness.How holy are you who have the power to bring peace to every mind! How blessedare you who can learn to recognize the means for letting this be done throughyou! What purpose could you have that would bring you greater happiness?You are indeed the light of the world with such a function. The Son of God looksto you for his redemption. It is yours to give him, for it belongs to you.Accept no trivial purpose or meaningless desire in its place, or you will forgetyour function and leave the Son of God in hell. This is no idle request that isbeing asked of you. You are being asked to accept salvation that it may be yoursto give.Recognizing the importance of this function, we will be happy to remember itvery often today. We will begin the day by acknowledging it, and close the daywith the thought of it in our awareness. And throughout the day we will repeatthis as often as we can:The light of the world brings peace to every mind through my forgiveness.I am the means God has appointed for the salvation of the world.<If you close your eyes, you will probably find it easier to let the relatedthoughts come to you in the minute or two that you should devote to consideringthis. Do not, however, wait for such an opportunity. No chance should be lostfor reinforcing today's idea. Remember that God's Son looks to you for hissalvation. And Who but your Self must be His Son?~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volumeseries of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles,"which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Lesson 63. The light of the world brings peace to every mind through myforgiveness.*Lesson 63 returns to the theme of oneness. As we have seen in earlier lessons,Jesus takes a central theme and keeps developing it. Here he is teaching us thatwhen we forgive, peace must extend throughout the Sonship, as we all are onemind. It does not mean, however, that every seeming fragment of the Sonship willaccept it immediately. It simply means I now become another symbol or thought inthe mind of God's Son, serving as a reminder to make the right choice that alonewill bring peace.*(1:1) "How holy are you who have the power to bring peace to every mind?"*Please note that Jesus does not say to every <body>. Forgiveness is notsomething we physically do with words, for it is a thought we hold as true inour minds. Recall our previously quoted passage from the manual (M-5.III.2) thathealing is shared simply by our having chosen it, that choice calling others tomake the same one. In this regard we emulate the Holy Spirit, Who merely remindsus of the right choice:"The Holy Spirit calls you both to remember and to forget. You have chosento be in a state of opposition in which opposites are possible. As a result,there are choices you must make. ... Choosing depends on a split mind. The HolySpirit is one way of choosing. ... [His Voice] merely reminds. It is compellingonly because of what it reminds you of. It brings to your mind the other way,remaining quiet even in the midst of the turmoil you may make."(T.5.II.6.1-3,6-7.7.4-6)We thus remind our brothers, as we remind ourselves, that peace is a decision,and one which unites us all as one Son. I might also point out the similarity in<form> and <content> between this lesson's first sentence and the opening of"For They Have Come": in the text:"Think but how holy you must be from whom the Voice for God calls lovinglyunto your brother, that you may awake in him the Voice that answers to yourcall!" (T.26.IX.1.1)The symphonic hand of our composer is every-where present in his masterwork.*(1:2-3) "How blessed are you who can learn to recognize the means for lettingthis be done through you! What purpose could you have that would bring yougreater happiness?"*Again, Jesus is reminding us that forgiveness is the means whereby we shallattain happiness. This is inevitable once we choose to let go of our judgments,which keep us separate: the source of all our misery. Once this obstacle isgone, happiness flows through our minds, umimpeded, and embraces the Sonship asone.*(2:1-2) "You are indeed the light of the world with such a function. The Son ofGod looks to you for his redemption."*As we shall see a little later, the Son of God looking for redemption isourselves; the little Child -- whom Jesus speaks of in Lesson 182 -- Who haswandered away: the Child Who represents the Christ in us that we have concealedand forgotten; the Child Who patiently awaits our forgiveness of others andourselves; the Child Who makes it possible to forgive, at the same time HeHimself is forgiven. His is the light that shines in each of us and all of us;His the light that <is> the Son, who is ourselves.*(2:3-4) "It is yours to give him, for it belongs to you. Accept no trivialpurpose or meaningless desire in its place, or you will forget your function andleave the Son of God in hell."*Implied here is that we make an active choice to choose a "trivial purpose ormeaningless desire" to replace the glorious truth about ourselves. This purposeand desire expresses some aspect of specialness. We have noted before thatspecialness has nothing to do with behavior but with an attitude whereby we useothers -- people and things -- as substitutes for the Love of God or the peaceof Jesus. Thus, Jesus speaks about the decision for Heaven or hell.*(2:5-6) "This is no idle request that is being asked of you. You are being askedto accept salvation that it may be yours to give."*The way we give salvation is to accept it in our minds. This acceptance deniesthe ego thought system and automatically means we give salvation to the world,which is one with us. Thus "the simplicity of salvation" (T-31.1), in contrastwith the complexity of the ego's plan to "save" us from guilt throughspecialness, thereby reinforcing the very problem from which we were told wewould be saved. In other words, the ego reinforces our separation from eachother, while the Holy Spirit undoes it by teaching our inherent unity. This isno trivial matter; again, the choice is between Heaven or hell.*(3) "Recognizing the importance of this function, we will be happy to rememberit very often today. We will begin the day by acknowledging it, and close theday with the thought of it in our awareness. And throughout the day we willrepeat this as often as we can:The light of the world brings peaceto every mind through my forgiveness.I am the means God has appointed for the salvation of the world."*Once again, we see Jesus helping us appreciate the importance <to us> offrequent remembrances of the lesson's central idea. It is what he reminds of atthe text's close: how we keep the gift of Christ's vision that alone ends allsuffering. These wonderful lines will be a frequent reminder to us of theall-inclusive nature of Jesus' vision:"Yet this a vision is which you must share with everyone you see, forotherwise you will behold it not. To give this gift is how to make it yours. AndGod ordained, in loving kindness, that it be for you." (T-31.VIII.8:5-7).Jesus urges us to forgive <all> people, for this is the only way we shall knowwe are forgiven. In this vision of forgiveness of every mind we find oursalvation and the salvation of the world.*(4:1-3) "If you close your eyes, you will probably find it easier to let therelated thoughts come to you in the minute or two that you should devote toconsidering this. Do not, however, wait for such an opportunity. No chanceshould be lost for reinforcing today's idea."*Still one more time, Jesus asks us to waste no opportunity for remembering thatour happiness and function are one.*(4:4-5) "Remember that God's Son looks to you for his salvation. And Who butyour Self must be His Son?"*This Self is the Christ in us, the little Child who has seemingly lost His way.Of course the Child is not lost: <we> are the ones who have lost awareness ofHis Presence. Acceptance of our happy function of forgiveness is what restoresis what restores this happy awareness to us.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 62. Forgiveness is my function as the light of the world.
Lesson 62. Forgiveness is my function as the light of the world.(1) It is your forgiveness that will bring the world of darkness to the light.It is your forgiveness that lets you recognize the light in which you see.Forgiveness is the demonstration that you are the light of the world. Throughyour forgiveness does the truth about yourself return to your memory. Therefore,in your forgiveness lies your salvation.(2) Illusions about yourself and the world are one. That is why all forgivenessis a gift to yourself. Your goal is to find out who you are, having denied yourIdentity by attacking creation and its Creator. Now you are learning how toremember the truth. For this attack must be replaced by forgiveness, so thatthoughts of life may replace thoughts of death.(3) Remember that in every attack you call upon your own weakness, while eachtime you forgive you call upon the strength of Christ in you. Do you not thenbegin to understand what forgiveness will do for you? It will remove all senseof weakness, strain and fatigue from your mind. It will take away all fear andguilt and pain. It will restore the invulnerability and power God gave His Sonto your awareness.(4) Let us be glad to begin and end this day by practicing today's idea, and touse it as frequently as possible throughout the day. It will help to make theday as happy for you as God wants you to be. And it will help those around you,as well as those who seem to be far away in space and time, to share thishappiness with you.(5) As often as you can, closing your eyes if possible, say to yourself today:Forgiveness is my function as the light of the world. I would fulfill my function that I may be happy.<Then devote a minute or two to considering your function and the happiness andrelease it will bring you. Let related thoughts come freely, for your heart willrecognize these words, and in your mind is the awareness they are true. Shouldyour attention wander, repeat the idea and add:I would remember this because I want to be happy.< ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volumeseries of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles,"which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Lesson 62. "Forgiveness is my function as the light of the world."*The theme of replacing the ego's image of ourselves for Jesus' vision continuesin this and the next lesson. He begins to clarify what it means to say that ourfunction is to forgive. As we know from our study of the text, and from what wehave already seen in our discussions of the workbook, forgiveness is a processthat does not occur between two people, but in our <minds>, within the contextof a relationship between ourselves and someone else. It is not really that Iforgive you; but rather that I forgive the projection of my self-concept ofguilt I placed on you. That is indeed all I can forgive, for everything else inmy perceptual world is a projection of this guilt.*(1) "It is your forgiveness that will bring the world of darkness to the light.It is your forgiveness that lets you recognize the light in which you see.Forgiveness is the demonstration that you are the light of the world. Throughyour forgiveness does the truth about yourself return to your memory. Therefore,in your forgiveness lies your salvation."*Here again, Jesus articulates for us the crucial theme of bringing darkness tothe light. We "recognize the light in which we see" because forgiveness removesthe veils of darkness that prevent our vision. It has nothing to do about thelight, but simply removes the interferences to seeing the light. Once done, thelight is what remains in our awareness.As we have seen many, many times, A Course in Miracles is not about the light orthe truth. Its ongoing and consistent focus is on recognizing the darkness, withthe help of Jesus or the Holy Spirit -- the essence of forgiveness. We are thusnot saved <for> the light, but saved <from> the darkness.*(2:1-2) "Illusions about yourself and the world are one. That is why allforgiveness is a gift to yourself."*This rests on the principle we have seen before: <ideas leave not theirsource>. The world is nothing more than an idea we made up, and which weprojected from its source in our minds. Therefore Jesus is telling us thatwhatever illusions we hold against others are the illusions we hold aboutourselves. This is the fact because, again, <ideas leave not their source>. Eventhough the principle is not stated here, it is reflected. Thus forgiveness isnot a gift we give to another person. It is a gift we give to ourselves.*(2:3) "Your goal is to find out who you are, having denied your Identity byattacking creation and its Creator."*That is what we did as one Son in the original instant. We chose to forget Whowe are as Christ, at one with our Source, and chose instead to see ourselves asindividuals, separated from perfect Oneness. That is what gave rise to the ego'swrong-minded thought system, and therefore it is in the mind that we needcorrection. Before we can remember our Identity, we first have to undo theterrible things we taught ourselves about ourselves. To recall an importantstatement about our focus, which we shall use as a recurring motif throughoutthis book:"Your task is not to seek for love, but merely to seek and find all of thebarriers within yourself that you have built against it. It is not necessary toseek for what is true, but it is necessary to seek for what is false."(T.16.IV.6.1-2)Thus we find out who we are by first finding out who we are <not>.*(2:4-5) "Now you are learning how to remember the truth. For this attack must bereplaced by forgiveness, so that thoughts of life may replace thoughts ofdeath."*It cannot be said too often that before we can undo our attack thoughts, wefirst have to recognize and accept that we have them. Forgiveness makes no senseif we are not first aware of what needs to be forgiven and undone. That is whyit is highly important -- I cannot emphasize this enough, either -- that asstudents of A Course in Miracles you do not use its teachings, and especiallythe workbook lessons, as a defense against uncovering what you believe is thetruth about yourself.*(3:1) "Remember that in every attack you call upon your own weakness, while eachtime you forgive you call upon the strength of Christ in you."*This theme, mentioned earlier, is central to A Course in Miracles: we alwayschoose between our weakness and the strength of Christ (T-31.VIII.2:3). Attacktherefore weakens us, while forgiveness truly empowers us and sets us free.*(3:2-4) "Do you not then begin to understand what forgiveness will do for you?It will remove all sense of weakness, strain and fatigue from your mind. It willtake away all fear and guilt and pain."*In other words, forgiveness is the end of all suffering. It should be obviousas you read this carefully that Jesus is not talking about anything external.The source of all weakness, strain, fatigue, fear, guilt, and pain is in ourminds. Therefore, it is in our minds that is must be undone. The world seeksalways to remove these negative experiences by changing what is outside,referred to in the Course as magic. It will truly work; temporarily perhaps, butit cannot undo the real source of pain in the mind: our decision to separate,which we alone can reverse.This idea of forgiveness' gifts makes it first appearance here, but will returnlater. It represents Jesus' appeal to our selfish interests of feeling better,and being without pain and sorrow. Again, the world may offer temporary relief,but only forgiveness brings about true healing.*(3:5) "It will restore the invulnerability and power God gave His Son to yourawareness."*Everything in A Course in Miracles has to do with awareness, a mental state.The awareness of the invulnerability and power (or strength) of Christ that Godgave when He created us in our minds. The problem is that we have ceased to beaware of it, covering this strength with the ego's two-tiered layers of guiltand attack. Thus it is these coverings of weakness that have to be removed,allowing the true power of God's Son to shine forth.*(4) "Let us be glad to begin and end this day by practicing today's idea, and touse it as frequently as possible throughout the day. It will help to make theday as happy for you as God wants you to be. And it will help those around you,as well as those who seem to be far away in space and time, to share thishappiness with you."*The text teaches us how to be a happy learner (T-14.II), which entails ourwillingness to learn the day's lessons of forgiveness, regardless of the pain orresisting such learning. Since this is a process occurring in our minds, thedimension beyond time and space wherein all our brothers are found, our learningreinforces the learning of everyone. Thus we read in the text how bringing ourdarkness to the Holy Spirit's light allows it to shine in us, <for all theSonship>:"Like you, the Holy Spirit did not make truth. Like God, He knows it to betrue. He brings the light of truth into the darkness, and lets it shine on you.And as it shines your brothers see it, and realizing that this light is not whatyou have made, they see in you more than you see. They will be happy learners ofthe lesson this light brings to them, because it teaches them release fromnothing and from all the works of nothing. The heavy chains that seem to bindthem to despair they do not see as nothing, until you bring the light tothem.... And you will see it with them. Because you taught them gladness andrelease, they will become your teachers in release and gladness."(T-14.II.4:3-6,8-9).*(5) "As often as you can, closing your eyes if possible, say to yourself today:Forgiveness is my function as the light of the world. I would fulfill my function that I may be happy.<Then devote a minute or two to considering your function and the happiness andrelease it will bring you. Let related thoughts come freely, for your heart willrecognize these words, and in your mind is the awareness they are true. Shouldyour attention wander, repeat the idea and add:I would remember this because I want to be happy." <*The connection between our function of forgiveness and our happiness is clearlyarticulated here, and will be returned to presently. The motivation for learningis therefore our own happiness. We are slowly and gently being taught that the<only> way we can be happy is by removing our guilt through forgiveness ofothers. I have commented before on the symphonic nature of the workbook. We cansee here the continual introduction of new themes, building up our symphony oflearning as we progress day by day.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 61. I am the light of the world.
Lesson 61. I am the light of the world.(1) Who is the light of the world except God's Son? This, then, is merely astatement of the truth about yourself. It is the opposite of a statement ofpride, of arrogance, or of self-deception. It does not describe the self-conceptyou have made. It does not refer to any of the characteristics with which youhave endowed your idols. It refers to you as you were created by God. It simplystates the truth.(2) To the ego, today's idea is the epitome of self-glorification. But the egodoes not understand humility, mistaking it for self-debasement. Humilityconsists of accepting your role in salvation and in taking no other. It is nothumility to insist you cannot be the light of the world if that is the functionGod assigned to you. It is only arrogance that would assert this function cannotbe for you, and arrogance is always of the ego.(3) True humility requires that you accept today's idea because it is God'sVoice which tells you it is true. This is a beginning step in accepting yourreal function on earth. It is a giant stride toward taking your rightful placein salvation. It is a positive assertion of your right to be saved, and anacknowledgment of the power that is given you to save others.(4)You will want to think about this idea as often as possible today. It is theperfect answer to all illusions, and therefore to all temptation. It brings allthe images you have made about yourself to the truth, and helps you depart inpeace, unburdened and certain of your purpose.(5) As many practice periods as possible should be undertaken today, althougheach one need not exceed a minute or two. They should begin with tellingyourself:I am the light of the world. That is my only function.That is why I am here.<Then think about these statements for a short while, preferably with your eyesclosed if the situation permits. Let a few related thoughts come to you, andrepeat the idea to yourself if your mind wanders away from the central thought.(6) Be sure both to begin and end the day with a practice period. Thus you willawaken with an acknowledgment of the truth about yourself, reinforce itthroughout the day, and turn to sleep as you reaffirm your function and youronly purpose here. These two practice periods may be longer than the rest, ifyou find them helpful and want to extend them.(7) Today's idea goes far beyond the ego's petty views of what you are and whatyour purpose is. As a bringer of salvation, this is obviously necessary. This isthe first of a number of giant steps we will take in the next few weeks. Trytoday to begin to build a firm foundation for these advances. You are the lightof the world. God has built His plan for the salvation of His Son on you.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volumeseries of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles,"which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"I am the light of the world."*The lesson's title is taken from the gospels, specifically where Jesus tellshis disciples: "You are the light of the world" (Matthew 5:14). Here, as in manyother places in A Course in Miracles, we see how Jesus takes an idea fromtraditional Christianity and gives it a totally different interpretation. Thegospel understanding was that the disciples' function was to bring that light tothe world -- literally, to the physical world.It is easy for students of A Course in Miracles who are unaware of itsunderlying teaching to mistake this gospel exhortation for what Jesus means inthis lesson. He is <not> saying we should bring the light into the world,because <there is no world>. By saying we are the light of the world he refersto the light of Christ shining in our minds. Because the mind of God's Son isone (a subsidiary theme in these lessons, yet a continually recurring one), thatlight is shared by the Sonship as a whole. We are not asked to be spirituallyspecial persons who bear the light because Jesus gave it to us, and then chargedus with the function of spreading it to the multitudes. Rather, he is remindingus -- God's one Son who has the illusion of fragmentation -- we <all> are thelight of the world. This, then, corrects the ego's self-concept bequeathed toeach of us: we are the <darkness> of the world. In fact, Lesson 93 begins: "Youthink you are the home of evil, darkness and sin" (W-pI.93,1.1) That is theillusion we bring to the light-filled truth about ourselves.Our arrogance and pride is expressed in holding the thought: "I am the light ofthe world, but you are not. There is something special about me, and in mybeneficent holiness I will bring you that light, giving you something you do nothave." Such arrogance reflects the spiritual specialness that I have somethingyou lack. In <The Song of Prayer> Jesus discusses this dynamic --"healing-to-separate" -- in the context of healers who believe <they> are thehealers, giving healing to one who is sick, and therefore separate from them.The following passage applies as well to what we can call "lightbearing-to-separate.""Someone knows better, has been better trained, or is perhaps more talentedand wise. Therefore, he can give healing to the one who stands beneath him inhis patronage. ... How can that be? True healing cannot come from inequalityassumed and then accepted as the truth, and used to help restore the wounded andto calm the mind that suffers from the agony of doubt. ... You do not makeyourself the bearer of the special gift that brings the healing. You butrecognize your oneness with the one who calls for help. For in this oneness ishis separate sense dispelled, and it is this that made him sick. There is nopoint in giving remedy apart from where the source of sickness is, for neverthus can it be truly healed." (S.3.III.2.4-5;3:3-4;4:5-8).The darkness that needs healing, regardless of its form, resides in the mindthat believes in separation. The light that heals also resides in the mind, andeach of us carries both -- the darkness of guilt and the light of the Atonement.Choosing the light is healing for ourselves <and> the world, for the light ofChrist shines in God's Son as one, there being only <one> light. To believeanything else is the ego's specialness at work. Its deception lies not only inseparation, but also in what specialness covers: the belief I am really thedarkness of the world.Therefore, in the workbook, as well as in the rest of A Course in Miracles, weare taught that our function is to remind ourselves we are the light of theworld, having made the choice against the ego's darkness. Our acceptance of thatfact of the Atonement serves as a reminder for everyone else to make the samechoice we have. Jesus thus begins the lesson by contrasting the light of ourtrue Identity with the ego's darkened self of arrogance and delusion:*(1) "Who is the light of the world except God's Son? This, then, is merely astatement of the truth about yourself. It is the opposite of a statement ofpride, of arrogance, or of self-deception. It does not describe the self-conceptyou have made. It does not refer to any of the characteristics with which youhave endowed your idols. It refers to you as you were created by God. It simplystates the truth."*Later in the workbook, the theme that we are as God created us becomes central,as I mentioned earlier. However, here once again Jesus shows us the other side.He wants us to understand what we believe about ourselves -- "the [sinful andguilty] self-concept you have made" -- at the same time he wants us also toremember that these self-concepts are a defense against our true Self: the lightof Christ.*(2:1-2) "To the ego, today's idea is the epitome of self-glorification. But theego does not understand humility, mistaking it for self-debasement."*To the ego, "I am the light of the world" means, again; I have something youlack." Likewise, to the ego, humility means self-debasement, a meaning held bymany, many people. This traditional Christian version of humility commonly findsexpression in assertions such as: "I am a miserable sinner. But only because ofthe grace of the Lord Jesus Christ am I saved." Perhaps the most famous of allprayers of the Orthodox Church is the "Jesus Prayer": "Lord Jesus Christ, Son ofGod, have mercy on me, a sinner." Appearances to the contrary, this is reallythe height of arrogance, because it says there can be a sinful self that isindependent of, and separate from the glorious Self that God created. Animportant passage from the text reflects the ego's false humility:"A major tenet in the ego's insane religion is that sin is not error buttruth, and it is innocence that would deceive. Purity is seen as arrogance, andthe acceptance of the self as sinful is perceived as holiness. And it is thisdoctrine that replaces the reality of the Son of God as his Father created him,and willed that he be forever. Is this humility? Or is it, rather, an attempt towrest creation away from truth, and keep it separate?" (T-19.II.4)**(2:3-5) "Humility consists of accepting your role in salvation and in taking noother. It is not humility to insist you cannot be the light of the world if thatis the function God assigned to you. It is only arrogance that would assert thisfunction cannot be for you, and arrogance is always of the ego."*Another important theme appearing here is <function>. A Course in Miraclesteaches that our function is to accept the Atonement for ourselves, to acceptthe fact that our seeming sins are forgiven. It is not our function to doanything with anyone else, the reason being, ultimately, <there is no one else>.We are but to ask Jesus' help in healing our minds, for thus we realize that themind of God's Son is one. Once healed, we become a symbol of healing andright-minded choice -- light instead of darkness -- for everyone else.Again, if we take words in A Course in Miracles at face value, withoutunderstanding their content, we could wind up with ideas that are the exactopposite of what Jesus is teaching, making the same mistakes Christianity and somany religions and spiritualities have made throughout history. The statementswe have just considered are prime examples of this mistake, one of the ego'smost effective defenses against the truth of our reality as God's <one> Son.*(3)"True humility requires that you accept today's idea because it is God'sVoice which tells you it is true. This is a beginning step in accepting yourreal function on earth. It is a giant stride toward taking your rightful placein salvation. It is a positive assertion of your right to be saved, and anacknowledgment of the power that is given you to save others."*In the text Jesus explains in several places that our function on earth is toforgive or heal, and our function in Heaven is to create. For example:"Do the Holy Spirit's work, for you share in His function. As your functionin Heaven is creation, so your function on earth is healing. God shares Hisfunction with you in Heaven, and the Holy Spirit shares His with you on earth."(T-12.VII.4:6-8).This lesson refers to our function of accepting our own salvation, that the HolySpirit may extend it through us. It is also evident that Jesus is talking abouta process: "<a beginning step> in accepting your real function of earth ... <agiant stride> toward taking your rightful place in salvation." This is notsomething we do overnight, and he is not expecting his students to do Lesson 61in the morning, be healed in the afternoon, and made whole by evening as theyenter the real world. We are <beginning> to change our minds about what webelieve we are. We shall return again and again to this important theme of<process>.*(4) "You will want to think about this idea as often as possible today. It isthe perfect answer to all illusions, and therefore to all temptation. It bringsall the images you have made about yourself to the truth, and helps you departin peace, unburdened and certain of your purpose."*This is an unmistakable reference to the theme of bringing the darkness to thelight, or the illusion to the truth. As we have discussed previously, Jesus isnot saying we should use these workbook thoughts as affirmations to cover orshout down our misperceptions about ourselves. He is asking us rather to look atmisperceptions, realizing our terrible self-concepts and images. Looking atthese with Jesus constitutes bringing them to his truth, which we cannot do ifwe do not know they are there.Again, nothing in the workbook should ever be taken as analogous to affirmationsthat ask us to drown out the ego thought system. This corrects the predominantNew Age emphasis on affirmations, which is an example of using truth as a coverfor illusion. As he does throughout the workbook, Jesus gives us the other side.In addition to emphasizing our wrong-minded beliefs about ourselves, he alsoemphasizes the truth about ourselves; not that we would cover the illusion withthe truth, but that we would be aware we have a choice. I have pointed out manytimes the importance A Course in Miracles places on the power of our minds tochoose. However, we cannot make a meaningful choice if we do not know what weare choosing <between>. That is why Jesus sets forth for us in no uncertainterms that we have a wrong mind -- the ego's voice that lies -- and a right mind-- the Holy Spirit's Voice that speaks the truth.*(5) "As many practice periods as possible should be undertaken today, althougheach one need not exceed a minute or two. They should begin with tellingyourself:I am the light of the world. That is my only function.That is why I am here.<"Then think about these statements for a short while, preferably with your eyesclosed if the situation permits. Let a few related thoughts come to you, andrepeat the idea to yourself if your mind wanders away from the central thought."*Note Jesus again urging us to recall the thought for the day as often aspossible, reminding us of the truth of our Identity, <to which we bring> theego's shabby substitute of guilt and judgment. Note, too, how Jesus is expectingus to mind wander, and gently encouraging us to overcome our fear and return tothe truth of his teaching.*(6) "Be sure both to begin and end the day with a practice period. Thus you willawaken with an acknowledgment of the truth about yourself, reinforce itthroughout the day, and turn to sleep as you reaffirm your function and youronly purpose here. These two practice periods may be longer than the rest, ifyou find them helpful and want to extend them."*Jesus' methodology should be recognizable by now. He wants us continually toremember the truth about ourselves, so that we have an ongoing standard againstwhich we can evaluate the ego's delusions. He also allows us the freedom to domore than he asks, if we are comfortable.*(7:1-4) "Today's idea goes far beyond the ego's petty views of what you are andwhat your purpose is. As a bringer of salvation, this is obviously necessary.This is the first of a number of giant steps we will take in the next few weeks.Try today to begin to build a firm foundation for these advances."*Jesus lets us know that he knows about our choice for the ego -- "the ego'spetty views of what you are" -- and so there is no need to deny it. Moreover, itis because of this choice against our Self that time is required to feel lessand less confidence in the ego's petty thought system of guilt and fear. Onceagain, Jesus' words reflect the process of choosing against our resistance andfor the truth. These lessons thus become the building blocks on which we willconstruct a totally new concept of ourselves -- one gentle step at a time.*(7:4-6) "Try today to begin to build a firm foundation for these advances. Youare the light of the world. God has built His plan for the salvation of His Sonon you."*Finally, Jesus encourages us to have faith in his process of forgiveness as hereminds us of our purpose, and how important these early lessons are inachieving our goal: remembering the light that is our Identity, brought about byforgetting the darkness of the ego's shabby substitute of the separated andguilt-ridden self.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
|
Lesson 60. These ideas are for today's review.
Lesson 60. These ideas are for today's review.
1. God is the Love in which I forgive.
God does not forgive because He has never condemned. The blameless cannot blame, and those who have accepted their innocence see nothing to forgive. Yet forgiveness is the means by which I will recognize my innocence. It is the reflection of God's Love on earth. It will bring me near enough to Heaven that the Love of God can reach down to me and raise me up to Him.God is the Love in which I forgive.
2. God is the strength in which I trust.
It is not my own strength through which I forgive. It is through the strength of God in me, which I am remembering as I forgive. As I begin to see, I recognize His reflection on earth. I forgive all things because I feel the stirring of His strength in me. And I begin to remember the Love I chose to forget, but Which has not forgotten me.
3. There is nothing to fear.
How safe the world will look to me when I can see it! It will not look anything like what I imagine I see now. Everyone and everything I see will lean toward me to bless me. I will recognize in everyone my dearest Friend. What could there be to fear in a world that I have forgiven, and that has forgiven me?
4. God's Voice speaks to me all through the day.
There is not a moment in which God's Voice ceases to call on my forgiveness to save me. There is not a moment in which His Voice fails to direct my thoughts, guide my actions and lead my feet. I am, walking steadily on toward truth. There is nowhere else I can go, because God's Voice is the only voice and the only guide that has been given to His Son.
5. I am sustained by the Love of God.
As I listen to God's Voice, I am sustained by His Love. As I open my eyes, His Love lights up the world for me to see. As I forgive, His Love reminds me that His Son is sinless. And as I look upon the world with the vision He has given me, I remember that I am His Son.
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The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volume series of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles," which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street
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Lesson 60. "These ideas are for today's review."
*This final lesson returns to forgiveness, the central theme in Jesus' symphony of love and truth.*
(1:1) (46) "God is the Love in which I forgive."
(1:2-3) "God does not forgive because He has never condemned. The blameless cannot blame, and those who have accepted their innocence see nothing to forgive.
*The fact that God does not forgive becomes the basis for our forgiveness in the dream. Forgiveness is necessary only as the correction for condemnation. When judgment of ourselves is withdrawn, our judgment of others is withdrawn as well: the <idea> of judgment can never leave its <source>. We are thus asked by Jesus to accept our past mistakes, thereby accepting the light-filled innocence that rests in peace just beyond the darkness of our belief in sin. With condemnation gone, nothing remains to forgive.*
(1:4-6) "Yet forgiveness is the means by which I will recognize my innocence. It is the reflection of God's Love on earth. It will bring me near enough to Heaven that the Love of God can reach down to me and raise me up to Him.God is the Love in which I forgive."
*That is the problem: We do not want to be lifted up to Heaven, for then our individuality disappears. Recognizing our innocence allows us to realize how sinful and guilty we believed we were, because we wanted to be apart from such a belief, we can make the choice for sanity. No longer afraid of God's <last step>, which ends the process that our decision to forgive our brother began, we allow His Love to lift us back from earth to Heaven.
Another important theme in these five lessons, not to mention throughout A Course in Miracles, is that we do not forgive on our own, as we now see:*
(2:1) (47) "God is the strength in which I trust."
(2.2-3) "It is not my own strength through which I forgive. It is through the strength of God in me, which I am remembering as I forgive."
*I am not the one who forgives you. I can only ask the Holy Spirit for help in looking at you <differently>, because the way I am looking at you now is not making me happy. The bottom line is recognizing there are painful effects of choosing to be right, selfish, and special. I thus lay aside the weakness of my petty strength, choosing instead the strength of Christ that is restored to my awareness through forgiveness.*
(2:4-6)"As I begin to see, I recognize His reflection on earth. I forgive all things because I feel the stirring of His strength in me. And I begin to remember the Love I chose to forget, but Which has not forgotten me."
*The problem again is simply that we have forgotten. Yet forgetting is active. We have chosen to forget because we wanted to remember the weakness of our individuality instead of Christ's strength. However, forgetting our Identity did not destroy it. Our Self merely waited for us to change our minds, effected by our change of perception: from judgment to vision, weakness to strength.
Paragraph 3 returns us the real world: *
(3:1) (48) "There is nothing to fear."
(3.2-4) "How safe the world will look to me when I can see it! It will not look anything like what I imagine I see now. Everyone and everything I see will lean toward me to bless me. I will recognize in everyone my dearest Friend. What could there be to fear in a world that I have forgiven, and that has forgiven me?"
*Once we choose the place of perfect safety in our minds, represented by Jesus, the world we experience outside will be its mirror. It cannot <not> be that way, since <ideas leave not their source.> The beauty of this forgiven world is reflected in this lovely passage from the text:
"Can you imagine how beautiful those you forgive will look to you? In no fantasy have you ever seen anything so lovely. Nothing you see here, sleeping or waking, comes near to such loveliness. And nothing will you value like unto this, nor hold so dear. Nothing that you remember that made your heart sing with joy has ever brought you even a little part of the happiness this sight will bring you. For you will see the Son of God. You will behold the beauty the Holy Spirit loves to look upon, and which He thanks the Father for. He was created to see this for you, until you learned to see it for yourself. And all His teaching leads to seeing it and giving thanks with Him. "This loveliness is not a fantasy. It is the real world, bright and clean and new, with everything sparkling under the open sun. Nothing is hidden here, for everything has been forgiven and there are no fantasies to hide the truth." (T-17.II.1:1-2:3)
Recalling this beauty will help us choose again when we are tempted to make real the ego's ugly world of specialness.
Note the usage of "everyone" and "everything" in 3:4 to describe our vision. If anyone or anything is excluded from the light of safety, all the world is plunged in darkness, the shadow of our mind's darkened thoughts of guilt.*
(3:5-6) "I will recognize in everyone my dearest Friend. What could there be to fear in a world that I have forgiven, and that has forgiven me?"
*This is the vision of Christ, in which the entire Sonship is perceived through the eyes of holiness. Not one aspect of the Son is excluded, and with separation gone, so is all fear, which had been the inevitable result of our belief in sin and guilt. This vision is nicely captured in the opening lines in Helen's very first poem, The Gifts of Christmas" :
"Christ passes no one by. By this you know He is God's Son. You recognize His touch In universal gentleness. His Love Extends to everyone. His eyes behold The Love of God in everything He sees." (The Gifts of God, p.95)
With such love beside and within us, fear is impossible; its place taken by the love forgiveness brings.*
(4:1) (49) "God's Voice speaks to me all through the day."
(4.2-3) "There is not a moment in which God's Voice ceases to call on my forgiveness to save me. There is not a moment in which His Voice fails to direct my thoughts, guide my actions and lead my feet."
*As I mentioned when we did Lesson 49, this does not mean we <hear> His Voice all through the day, it simply means He is calling to us throughout the day. This is the Call we fervently and ferociously try to conceal -- the purpose of the world we have made, the purpose of our specialness thoughts of attack, judgment and desire. These are easily set aside when we decide we no longer wish to hear the ego's raucous shrieking. The stunning yet gentle silence of God's Voice returns in the instant we wish to hear its sound, and <only> its sound. Thus does God's sweet song of love extend all through the dream, guiding our thoughts, words, and deeds.*
(4:4-5) "I am, walking steadily on toward truth. There is nowhere else I can go, because God's Voice is the only voice and the only guide that has been given to His Son."
*There is nothing else. Any other pathway we choose is nothing and leads nowhere, because it comes from a voice that does not exist. The loveliness of this recognition is described in these beautiful closing paragraphs in "The Real Alternative," which reminds us that as a Thought of God we have never left our Source; the road back to Him undoes the road that never existed in reality:
"He has not left His Thoughts! But you forgot His Presence and remembered not His Love. No pathway in the world can lead to Him, nor any worldly goal be one with His. What road in all the world will lead within, when every road was made to separate the journey from the purpose it must have unless it be but futile wandering? All roads that lead away from what you are will lead you to confusion and despair. Yet has He never left His Thoughts to die, without their Source forever in themselves."
"He has not left His Thoughts! He could no more depart from them than they could keep Him out. In unity with Him do they abide, and in their oneness both are kept complete. There is no road that leads away from Him. A journey from yourself does not exist. How foolish and insane it is to think that there could be a road with such an aim! Where could it go? And how could you be made to travel on it, walking there without your own reality at one with you?"
"Forgive yourself your madness, and forget all senseless journeys and all goal-less aims. They have no meaning. You can not escape from what you are. For God is merciful, and did not let His Son abandon Him. For what He is be thankful, for in that is your escape from madness and from death. Nowhere but where He is can you be found. There is no path that does not lead to Him." (T-31.IV.9-11).
And finally, the symphonic movement that is this review ends with a return to its central theme; the cycle of love concluding the love and wisdom with which it began: *
(5:1) (50) "I am sustained by the Love of God."
(5.2-4) "As I listen to God's Voice, I am sustained by His Love. As I open my eyes, His Love lights up the world for me to see. As I forgive, His Love reminds me that His Son is sinless."
*And who is His Son? I am. Since we are all one, when I realize my sinlessness, I realize everyone is sinless, too. It cannot <not> be, if God's Love <is> His Love.*
(5.5) "And as I look upon the world with the vision He has given me, I remember that I am His Son."
*Jesus ends this movement of his symphony with the attainment of our ultimate goal. The way we reach the vision of the real world is by paying careful attention to the external world, so it can teach us that the <outside> mirrors the <inside.> The pain of our experience as bodies, interacting with other bodies, becomes the motivation to cry out for the other way, the other Teacher. Thus we come to change our minds, choose the Holy Spirit's Thought as the source of our seeing, and look out upon the world through Christ's vision. The real world greets our sight, and we finally remember Who we are as God's one Son, gladly exclaiming these words from Part II of the workbook:
"Be glad today! Be glad! There is no room for anything but joy and thanks today. Our Father has redeemed His Son this day. Not one of us but will be saved today. Not one who will remain in fear, and none the Father will not gather to Himself, awake in Heaven in the Heart of Love." (W-pII.340.2).
Thus we end this heavenly movement with a happy thought of Oneness, the thought that ends the nightmare dream of illusion and joyfully awakens us to the remembrance of our Father's Love.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 59. The following ideas are for review today:
Lesson 59. The following ideas are for review today:
1. God goes with me wherever I go.
How can I be alone when God always goes with me? How can I be doubtful and unsure of myself when perfect certainty abides in Him? How can I be disturbed by anything when He rests in me in absolute peace? How can I suffer when love and joy surround me through Him? Let me not cherish illusions about myself. I am perfect because God goes with me wherever I go.
2. God is my strength. Vision is His gift.
Let me not look to my own eyes to see today. Let me be willing to exchange my pitiful illusion of seeing for the vision that is given by God. Christ's vision is His gift, and He has given it to me. Let me call upon this gift today, so that this day may help me to understand eternity.
3. God is my Source. I cannot see apart from Him.
I can see what God wants me to see. I cannot see anything else. Beyond His Will lie only illusions. It is these I choose when I think I can see apart from Him. It is these I choose when I try to see through the body's eyes. Yet the vision of Christ has been given me to replace them. It is through this vision that I choose to see. 4. God is the light in which I see.
I cannot see in darkness. God is the only light. Therefore, if I am to see, it must be through Him. I have tried to define what seeing is, and I have been wrong. Now it is given me to understand that God is the light in which I see. Let me welcome vision and the happy world it will show me.
5. God is the Mind with which I think.
I have no thoughts I do not share with God. I have no thoughts apart from Him, because I have no mind apart from His. As part of His Mind, my thoughts are His and His Thoughts are mine.
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The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volume series of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles," which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street
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*In Lesson 59 we again find the theme of who we are as God's Son, and the wonderful and wondrous effects of coming to understand and accept its truth.*
(1:1) (41) "God goes with me wherever I go."
(1:2-7) "How can I be alone when God always goes with me? How can I be doubtful and unsure of myself when perfect certainty abides in Him? How can I be disturbed by anything when He rests in me in absolute peace? How can I suffer when love and joy surround me through Him? Let me not cherish illusions about myself. I am perfect because God goes with me wherever I go."
*It is not that God literally walks with us. Rather, Jesus teaches that God is with us because His Love is in our minds, which is where we are. It is this Love -- our Self -- that is the basis for undoing the thought of separation: the home of all illusions of suffering and pain.
All that is needed for this Love to return to awareness is calling upon the power of our minds to choose, one of A Course in Miracles' most important themes, to which we now return: *
(2:1-2) (42) "God is my strength. Vision is His gift."
(2:3-6) "Let me not look to my own eyes to see today. Let me be willing to exchange my pitiful illusion of seeing for the vision that is given by God. Christ's vision is His gift, and He has given it to me. Let me call upon this gift today, so that this day may help me to understand eternity."
*We always have a choice about the thought system with which we identify, made possible once we remember that our feelings of dis-ease and disturbance emanate from the mind's mistaken choice, and from nowhere else. Thus do we exchange the ego's misperceptions for the vision of Christ, exclusion for unity, separation for forgiveness, and time for eternity.*
(3:1-2) (43) "God is my Source. I cannot see apart from Him."
(3:3-7)" I can see what God wants me to see. I cannot see anything else. Beyond His Will lie only illusions. It is these I choose when I think I can see apart from Him. It is these I choose when I try to see through the body's eyes."
*Again, all misperceptions stem from the illusory belief we can be apart from God; the Idea of God's Son, which we are, can leave its Source. Thus does our thought of separation give rise to a world of separation, which we believe is there because we believe we see it. The body's eyes have now replaced vision, a substitution that remains in place until we change our minds.*
(3:8-9) "Yet the vision of Christ has been given me to replace them. It is through this vision that I choose to see. It is through this vision that I choose to see."
*A Course in Miracles has as its purpose the change in mind that allows <vision> to replace the ego's seeing. This vision cannot come unless we make a choice that says: I have been thinking and perceiving wrongly. I know there is another way, because there has to be another way of feeling. I am not happy, and want to be at peace. I therefore let go of my investment in being right. Thus does our desire for true peace and happiness become the motivation for choosing vision to replace illusions.*
(4:1) (44) "God is the light in which I see."
(4:2-4) "I cannot see in darkness. God is the only light. Therefore, if I am to see, it must be through Him."
*As the text reminds us: "Vision [or light] or judgment [darkness] is your choice, but never both of these." (T-20.V.4:7). We choose one or the other, and in our right-minded choice is all the world made free.*
(4:5-7)"I have tried to define what seeing is, and I have been wrong. Now it is given me to understand that God is the light in which I see. Let me welcome vision and the happy world it will show me."
*I have to realize I have been wrong about everything I see, and everything I think I understand. How often does Jesus remind us of this happy fact; happy indeed when we are not identified with the ego's stubborn insistence that it is right and God is wrong. This happy acceptance of the truth is the birthplace of our humility, leading to Christ's vision that blesses the world along with me.*
(5:1) (45) "God is the Mind with which I think."
(5:2-4) "I have no thoughts I do not share with God. I have no thoughts apart from Him, because I have no mind apart from His. As part of His Mind, my thoughts are His and His Thoughts are mine."
*Remember, the ego system is born of the idea that our thoughts are our own, God's thoughts, are His, and never the twain shall meet. Not only that, we tell God what His thoughts are. This insane arrogance forms the basis of the second law of chaos (T-23.II.4-6), wherein God becomes as insane as we:
"The arrogance on which the laws of chaos stand could not be more apparent than emerges here. Here is a principle that would define what the Creator of reality must be; what He must think and what He must believe; and how He must respond, believing it. It is not seen as even necessary that He be asked about the truth of what has been established for His belief. His Son can tell Him this, and He has but the choice whether to take his word for it or be mistaken." (T.23.II.6.1-4).
The insanity of such a belief is easily corrected once we recognize its sheer madness. The clouds of separation quickly disperse in this return to sanity, and we rejoice in the Oneness of Love that has never changed, and which remains as the Thought of our Self, at one with the Sonship and the Mind of God.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 58. These ideas are for review today:
Lesson 58. These ideas are for review today:
1. My holiness envelops everything I see.
From my holiness does the perception of the real world come. Having forgiven, I no longer see myself as guilty. I can accept the innocence that is the truth about me. Seen through understanding eyes, the holiness of the world is all I see, for I can picture only the thoughts I hold about myself.
2. My holiness blesses the world.
The perception of my holiness does not bless me alone. Everyone and everything I see in its light shares in the joy it brings to me. There is nothing that is apart from this joy, because there is nothing that does not share my holiness. As I recognize my holiness, so does the holiness of the world shine forth for everyone to see.
3. There is nothing my holiness cannot do.
My holiness is unlimited in its power to heal, because it is unlimited in its power to save. What is there to be saved from except illusions? And what are all illusions except false ideas about myself? My holiness undoes them all by asserting the truth about me. In the presence of my holiness, which I share with God Himself, all idols vanish.
4. My holiness is my salvation.
Since my holiness saves me from all guilt, recognizing my holiness is recognizing my salvation. It is also recognizing the salvation of the world. Once I have accepted my holiness, nothing can make me afraid. And because I am unafraid, everyone must share in my understanding, which is the gift of God to me and to the world.
5. I am blessed as a Son of God.
Herein lies my claim to all good and only good. I am blessed as a Son of God. All good things are mine, because God intended them for me. I cannot suffer any loss or deprivation or pain because of Who I am. My Father supports me, protects me, and directs me in all things. His care for me is infinite, and is with me forever. I am eternally blessed as His Son.
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The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volume series of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles," which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street
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Lesson 58. "These ideas are for review today:"
*This next series of lessons is about our holiness, the other side of our minds that is kept hidden by the ego and the unholiness of its thought system.*
(1:1) (36) "My holiness envelops everything I see."
(1:2) "From my holiness does the perception of the real world come."
*When we make the internal shift and identify with Jesus' love instead of the ego's hate, his love extends through us. We may perceive the exact same world -- the dream in <form> does not necessarily change -- but now it is perceived through the love that is within ourselves. This marks the birth of true compassion. We do not feel sorry for people's bodies, but for the real source of pain: the belief they are orphaned and will never return home. In that compassionate vision are <all> people recognized as sharing the same suffering.*
(1:3-5) "Having forgiven, I no longer see myself as guilty. I can accept the innocence that is the truth about me. Seen through understanding eyes, the holiness of the world is all I see, for I can picture only the thoughts I hold about myself."
*This is a succinct summary of forgiveness. We first shift our perception so that by looking differently at another's sin -- recognizing it is but a projection of a belief about ourselves -- we accept the illusory nature of the ego's thought system of separation and attack. This allows the innocence of the Atonement to return to our awareness and then become the basis of our new perception of the world.
Innocent or true perception is all-inclusive, as we now see:*
(2:1) (37) "My holiness blesses the world."
(2:2-5) "The perception of my holiness does not bless me alone. Everyone and everything I see in its light shares in the joy it brings to me. There is nothing that is apart from this joy, because there is nothing that does not share my holiness. As I recognize my holiness, so does the holiness of the world shine forth for everyone to see."
*We are not only one in the ego thought system, we are also one in the Holy Spirit's. With this recognition, born of our new perception, is the ego's belief in separation undone by the vision of Christ that embraces the Sonship (and thus the world) with its holiness. If our vision is not all-inclusive, it is not vision. By excluding even one part of the Sonship, the Whole is excluded as well, and so we can never remember we are God's Son. That is why Jesus gives us these words as a reminder:
"To your tired eyes I bring a vision of a different world, so new and clean and fresh you will forget the pain and sorrow that you saw before. Yet this a vision is which you must share with everyone you see, for otherwise you will behold it not. To give this gift is how to make it yours. And God ordained, in loving kindness, that it be for you." (T-31.VIII.8:4-7).*
(3:1) (38) "There is nothing my holiness cannot do."
(3:2-3) "My holiness is unlimited in its power to heal, because it is unlimited in its power to save. What is there to be saved from except illusions?"
*We are not saved from the world, nor from some terrible fate, and we do not save the world for other people. We are saved from our misthoughts, the mistakes coming from having chosen the ego instead of the Holy Spirit. That has nothing to do with the world, but everything to do with our illusory thoughts. Again, it is salvation that heals as <one>, because there is only <one> illusion in <one> Son.*
(3:4-6) "And what are all illusions except false ideas about myself? My holiness undoes them all by asserting the truth about me. In the presence of my holiness, which I share with God Himself, all idols vanish."
*Again and again we see Jesus returning to this central point. Our misperceptions are caused by the <one> misperception of ourselves -- we are not as God created us. When this <one> misthought is healed, all the ego's mistaken images -- the idols of specialness -- are undone as well: <one> problem, <one> misperception of unholiness; one solution, one vision of holiness.*
(4:1) (39) "My holiness is my salvation."
(4:2-3) "Since my holiness saves me from all guilt, recognizing my holiness is recognizing my salvation. It is also recognizing the salvation of the world."
*Jesus' symphonic theme continues, in an almost endless <series> of wonderful variations. The <one> problem of guilt disappears in the <one> solution of holiness, which causes all problems to disappear as well. Thus is my perception of myself healed and saved, as well as my perception of the world, which has never left its source in my mind.*
(4:4-5) "Once I have accepted my holiness, nothing can make me afraid. And because I am unafraid, everyone must share in my understanding, which is the gift of God to me and to the world."
*The source of <all> fear is our having chosen the unholiness of our separate individuality instead of the holiness of the oneness of God's Son. Since minds are joined, acceptance of my holiness reminds others to make the same choice. This does not mean that everyone <will> make that choice now. However it does mean that in my holiness I recognize the choice has <already> happened because the separation has been undone. <When> that choice is accepted throughout the Sonship is only a matter of time.*
(5:1) (40) "I am blessed as a Son of God."
(5:2-8) "Herein lies my claim to all good and only good. I am blessed as a Son of God. All good things are mine, because God intended them for me. I cannot suffer any loss or deprivation or pain because of Who I am. My Father supports me, protects me, and directs me in all things. His care for me is infinite, and is with me forever. I am eternally blessed as His Son."
*All loss, deprivation, and pain arise because we have forgotten who we are. That is the problem, without exception, which is why there is no order of difficulty in miracles (T-1.I.1:1). When we drop Jesus' hand and take the ego's instead, we are automatically in pain. Following the ego's strategy to protect our wrong decision, we put a gap between the cause of the pain and our experience of it, and think we understand its source -- the world, our special partner, our bodies, our food, or whatever -- and thus are never able to recognize the real cause in our minds. When we at last come to our senses and realize our mistake, we return to the thought of the Atonement that reflects our true Self, an Identity that is perfectly safe because It is beyond all thoughts of pain and loss. Awakening from the ego's dream of suffering, we are at home with the God we never truly left.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 57. Today let us review these ideas:
Lesson 57. Today let us review these ideas:
1. I am not the victim of the world I see.
How can I be the victim of a world that can be completely undone if I so choose? My chains are loosened. I can drop them off merely by desiring to do so. The prison door is open. I can leave simply by walking out. Nothing holds me in this world. Only my wish to stay keeps me a prisoner. I would give up my insane wishes and walk into the sunlight at last.
2. I have invented the world I see.
I made up the prison in which I see myself. All I need do is recognize this and I am free. I have deluded myself into believing it is possible to imprison the Son of God. I was bitterly mistaken in this belief, which I no longer want. The Son of God must be forever free. He is as God created him, and not what I would make of him. He is where God would have him be, and not where I thought to hold him prisoner.
3. There is another way of looking at the world.
Since the purpose of the world is not the one I ascribed to it, there must be another way of looking at it. I see everything upside down, and my thoughts are the opposite of truth. I see the world as a prison for God's Son. It must be, then, that the world is really a place where he can be set free. I would look upon the world as it is, and see it as a place where the Son of God finds his freedom.
4. I could see peace instead of this.
When I see the world as a place of freedom, I realize that it reflects the laws of God instead of the rules I made up for it to obey. I will understand that peace, not war, abides in it. And I will perceive that peace also abides in the hearts of all who share this place with me.
5. My mind is part of God's.
I am very holy. As I share the peace of the world with my brothers, I begin to understand that this peace comes from deep within myself. The world I look upon has taken on the light of my forgiveness, and shines forgiveness back at me. In this light I begin to see what my illusions about myself kept hidden. I begin to understand the holiness of all living things, including myself, and their oneness with me.
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The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volume series of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles," which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street
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1. (31) "I am not the victim of the world I see."
(1:2-9) "How can I be the victim of a world that can be completely undone if I so choose? My chains are loosened. I can drop them off merely by desiring to do so. The prison door is open. I can leave simply by walking out. Nothing holds me in this world. Only my wish to stay keeps me a prisoner. I would give up my insane wishes and walk into the sunlight at last."
*We find this compelling because we feel we are victims. If this is a world we made, which is what Jesus has been teaching us from the beginning, the world is not the problem. <The fact that we made it is the problem> -- "How can [we] be the victim of a world that can be completely undone if [we] so choose?"
We have to be willing to admit we have been wrong about everything. What makes us believe we are right is our experience of being victimized by everything else. Remember, the "everything else" is not only others' bodies, but our own as well. The body is exclusively outside the mind, the source of our true identity.
The analogy to a prisoner walking into the sunlight refers to Plato's famous Allegory of the Cave in <The Republic>. It is worth summarizing -- albeit briefly -- as Jesus makes more specific references to it in the text. The allegory is set in a cave, where prisoners are chained in such a fashion that they can see only the interior wall of the cave, unknowing of the opening behind them, through which streams the sun's rays, casting shadows onto the wall, of the passers-by along the road that runs past the mouth of the cave. Thus the prisoners believe that the shadows are the reality, since they know of nothing else. One of the prisoners (representing Plato's esteemed teacher Socrates) is freed and, turning around and making his way to the light, begins to understand the difference between appearance and reality. Returning to teach his companions the truth, he frees them, only to meet with murder at the hands of those still fearful of truth's light. Here, then, are the two specific references in the text:
"Prisoners bound with heavy chains for years, starved and emaciated, weak and exhausted, and with eyes so long cast down in darkness they remember not the light, do not leap up in joy the instant they are made free. It takes a while for them to understand what freedom is." (T-20.III.9:1-2).
"Eyes become used to darkness, and the light of brilliant day seems painful to the eyes grown long accustomed to the dim effects perceived at twilight. And they turn away from sunlight and the clarity it brings to what they look upon. Dimness seems better; easier to see, and better recognized. Somehow the vague and more obscure seems easier to look upon; less painful to the eyes than what is wholly clear and unambiguous. Yet this is not what eyes are for, and who can say that he prefers the darkness and maintain he wants to see?" (T-25.VI.2)
Thus we recognize we have been our own jailors, and now can make the only sensible decision available to us: leave the darkness for the light. Our chains of guilt and attack were simply the unwillingness to open our eyes and <see>, and now we choose vision. The next paragraph repeats the lesson:*
(2:1) (32) "I have invented the world I see."
(2:2-3)"I made up the prison in which I see myself. All I need do is recognize this and I am free."
*That is why Jesus keeps saying this is a simple course. All we need do is realize we made this up; that the world is an hallucination (T-20.VIII.7) -- everything we think is hurting us is not true. The key to unlocking this illusory prison of darkness has always been in our minds. Now at last we have teacher and path that help us realize this joyous fact is indeed so.*
(2:4-8) "I have deluded myself into believing it is possible to imprison the Son of God. I was bitterly mistaken in this belief, which I no longer want. The Son of God must be forever free. He is as God created him, and not what I would make of him. He is where God would have him be, and not where I thought to hold him prisoner."
*This is a theme that becomes prominent later in the workbook: Lessons 94,110,162, and Review VI. If we are as God created us, everything the ego and its world have taught us is false. Their "light" deceived us, and once we recognize it was <self>-deceiving we can do something about it by choosing differently, leaving the world of darkness forever and returning the world of light -- "where God would have us be" -- to our awareness.*
(3:1) (33) "There is another way of looking at the world."
(3:2-3) "Since the purpose of the world is not the one I ascribed to it, there must be another way of looking at it. I see everything upside down, and my thoughts are the opposite of truth."
*In order to be able to look at the world "another way: a key statement in A Course in Miracles, we need the humility to admit we are wrong. It is always helpful to be vigilant, to realize how stubbornly we insist we are right, not only in the blatant ways of believing the separation is real, but in the subtle and everyday ways of being so certain our perceptions of others are correct.*
(3:4-6)"I see the world as a prison for God's Son. It must be, then, that the world is really a place where he can be set free. I would look upon the world as it is, and see it as a place where the Son of God finds his freedom."
*Clearly the reference here is not to the world itself, but to our <perceptions> of the world; and even more to the point, the <purpose> we have given it. If we have given the world the purpose of imprisoning us, it will do so. If, on the other hand, we have given it the purpose of forgiveness and release; we are free. We shall return to this important theme presently. For now we can remember that the shift in purpose entails a shift in teachers, therein shifting our perception of the world from a prison of guilt to a classroom of forgiveness.*
(4:1) (34) "I could see peace instead of this."
(4:2-4) "When I see the world as a place of freedom, I realize that it reflects the laws of God instead of the rules I made up for it to obey. I will understand that peace, not war, abides in it. And I will perceive that peace also abides in the hearts of all who share this place with me."
*This refers to the real world, which we shall discuss in much greater depth later. Suffice it to say for now that it reflects the oneness of reality by enabling us to see all members of the Sonship -- <without exception> -- as sharing the common goal of leaving the prison house of war for the place of peace that abides in <all> people. Thus we shift our purpose from guilt to peace, imprisonment to freedom.*
(5:1-2) (35) "My mind is part of God's. I am very holy."
(5:3-5) "As I share the peace of the world with my brothers, I begin to understand that this peace comes from deep within myself. The world I look upon has taken on the light of my forgiveness, and shines forgiveness back at me. In this light I begin to see what my illusions about myself kept hidden."
*This is also another important theme, especially in the manual (e.g., M.-in.1-3). Teaching others is how we learn. The more I let go of my grievances against you, teaching there is another way of thinking, the more I reinforce that idea in myself. In this light of forgiveness I see what my illusions kept hidden. As we have seen, forgiveness consists of joining with Jesus, our together holding the lamp that shines in the darkness of our minds, exposing the ego's illusions to the light of truth (T-11.V.1). Forgiveness lifts the veils of the ego's defensive system, allowing us to see the love that is really there. By withdrawing the projections of guilt's darkness from you, I reflect the willingness to withdraw my investment in the darkness in me. Thus do illusions give way to the light of truth, and peace dawns upon a mind that had heretofore believed in conflict.*
(5:6) "I begin to understand the holiness of all living things, including myself, and their oneness with me."
*This is what lies underneath the ego's belief we are children of separation, specialness, guilt, and fear. It is this constellation of unholiness as children of love; a holiness shared by <all> "living things," including ourselves. We can therefore equate unholiness with separation, and holiness with oneness.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 56. Our review for today covers the following:
Lesson 56. Our review for today covers the following:
1. My attack thoughts are attacking my invulnerability.
How can I know who I am when I see myself as under constant attack? Pain, illness, loss, age and death seem to threaten me. All my hopes and wishes and plans appear to be at the mercy of a world I cannot control. Yet perfect security and complete fulfillment are my inheritance. I have tried to give my inheritance away in exchange for the world I see. But God has kept my inheritance safe for me. My own real thoughts will teach me what it is.
2. Above all else I want to see.
Recognizing that what I see reflects what I think I am, I realize that vision is my greatest need. The world I see attests to the fearful nature of the self-image I have made. If I would remember who I am, it is essential that I let this image of myself go. As it is replaced by truth, vision will surely be given me. And with this vision, I will look upon the world and on myself with charity and love.
3. Above all else I want to see differently.
The world I see holds my fearful self-image in place, and guarantees its continuance. While I see the world as I see it now, truth cannot enter my awareness. I would let the door behind this world be opened for me, that I may look past it to the world that reflects the Love of God.
4. God is in everything I see.
Behind every image I have made, the truth remains unchanged. Behind every veil I have drawn across the face of love, its light remains undimmed. Beyond all my insane wishes is my will, united with the Will of my Father. God is still everywhere and in everything forever. And we who are part of Him will yet look past all appearances, and recognize the truth beyond them all.
5. God is in everything I see because God is in my mind.
In my own mind, behind all my insane thoughts of separation and attack, is the knowledge that all is one forever. I have not lost the knowledge of Who I am because I have forgotten it. It has been kept for me in the Mind of God, Who has not left His Thoughts. And I, who am among them, am one with them and one with Him.
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The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volume series of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles," which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street
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(1:1)(26) "My attack thoughts are attacking my invulnerability."
(1:2) "How can I know who I am when I see myself as under constant attack?"
*I have to see myself as under constant attack because I am attacking everyone else. That is why the lesson is entitled "My attack thoughts are attacking my invulnerability." I am truly invulnerable as God's Son, but in identifying with the ego I see myself as vulnerable, because guilt demands punishment and I feel victimized by God's counterattack. If I believe everyone else is going to attack me, I cannot be as God created me -- innocent and invulnerable. Thus, the ego reasons to me, if it can prove that God's Son <is> truly vulnerable -- the purpose of the body -- then how could I be God's Son? This reasoning is clearly presented in the following passage from "What is the Body?" to which we shall return much, much later in this series:
"For the Son of God's impermanence is "proof" his fences [bodies] work, and do the task his mind assigns to them. For if his oneness still remained untouched, who could attack and who could be attacked? Who could be victor? Who could be his prey? Who could be victim? Who the murderer? And if he did not die, what "proof" is there that God's eternal Son can be destroyed?" (W-pII.5.2:3-9).*
(1:3) "Pain, illness, loss, age and death seem to threaten me."
*Again, it is essential to realize we are living in a world of pain, illness, loss, age, and death; a world deliberately chosen by our egos to prove that its thought system of separation is right and the Holy Spirit's Atonement is wrong.*
(1:4-5) "All my hopes and wishes and plans appear to be at the mercy of a world I cannot control. Yet perfect security and complete fulfillment are my inheritance."
*Jesus once again is showing us we have a split mind, and that we can choose whether we will see ourselves as living in a state of constant terror, fear, and vulnerability, or in a state of constant safety. It is not true that we are, again, "at the mercy of things beyond [us], forces [we] cannot control" (T-19.IV-D.7:4), for the truth is that our "Self is ruler of the universe" (W-pII.253).*
(1:6-8) "I have tried to give my inheritance away in exchange for the world I see. But God has kept my inheritance safe for me. My own real thoughts will teach me what it is."
*It cannot be said often enough that in order for us to access our real thoughts, we first have to let go of our unreal ones, which we cannot do without knowing they are there. We learn this happy fact by understanding that the world we perceive is the one we made, and is therefore unreal: a projection of our unreal thoughts of separation and guilt. Our true inheritance is as a beloved and treasured Child of God, not the ego's child of guilt and fear. As Jesus concludes "The Treasure of God":
"What God has willed for you is yours. He has given His Will to His treasure, whose treasure it is. Your heart lies where your treasure is, as His does. You who are beloved of God are wholly blessed." (T-8.VI.10.:1-4).*
(2:1) (27) "Above all else I want to see."
(2:2-6) " Recognizing that what I see reflects what I think I am, I realize that vision is my greatest need. The world I see attests to the fearful nature of the self-image I have made. If I would remember who I am, it is essential that I let this image of myself go. As it is replaced by truth, vision will surely be given me. And with this vision, I will look upon the world and on myself with charity and love."
*Jesus always comes back to the same central idea: Our perceptions reflect our self-image -- child of God or child of the ego -- and vision corrects the vicious and fearful misperceptions of the ego, reflecting our Identity as spirit. Vision thus <undoes> the ego's thought system. As we are taught in the text: The ego always speaks first (T-5.VI.3:5), and the Holy Spirit is the Answer.
"The ego speaks in judgment, and the Holy Spirit reverses its decision, much as a higher court has the power to reverse a lower court's decisions in this world. The ego's decisions are always wrong, because they are based on the error they were made to uphold." (T-5.VI.4:1-2).
With vision replacing judgment, we look out on a unified world of peace and love regardless of what our physical eyes behold.*
(3:1) (28) "Above all else I want to see differently."
(3:2-3) "The world I see holds my fearful self-image in place, and guarantees its continuance. While I see the world as I see it now, truth cannot enter my awareness."
*The projected world's purpose is to keep my fearful self-image in place. This foreshadows an important statement in Part II of the workbook, speaking of our unforgiving thoughts:
"An unforgiving thought is one which makes a judgment that it will not raise to doubt, although it is not true. The mind is closed, and will not be released. The thought protects projection, tightening its chains, so that distortions are more veiled and more obscure; less easily accessible to doubt, and further kept from reason. What can come between a fixed projection and the aim that it has chosen as its wanted goal?" (W-pII.1.2).
Thus do our projections enable the ego to protect its self-concept of separation and hate, since that concept is now perceived to be external to the mind that is its source. This is the self-concept that says I am an individual, which individuality I purchased at the cost of sin. This sin must be punished, and therefore I deserve to be afraid. Nothing really has changed except that now I believe I am not the source of the fear, which has as its source in something outside of me. Certain of what I see, I never question my perception. Without my perception being questioned, my condition of fear and pain cannot be answered by the Holy Spirit.*
(3:4) "I would let the door behind this world be opened for me, that I may look past it to the world that reflects the Love of God."
*The one who opens the door for us is Jesus, but we must <let> him do it, by asking his help to bring our illusions of attack to his truth of forgiveness. This real world of complete forgiveness reflects God's Love, which waits just beyond the door held open by Jesus:
"Christ is at God's altar, waiting to welcome His Son. ...The door is not barred, and it is impossible that you cannot enter the place where God would have you be. ... You can refuse to enter, but you cannot bar the door that Christ holds open. Come unto me who holds it open for you, for while I live it cannot be shut, and I live forever. God is my life and yours, and nothing is denied by God to His Son." (T-11.IV.6:1,3,5-6).*
(4:1) (29) "God is in everything I see."
(4:2-4) "Behind every image I have made, the truth remains unchanged. Behind every veil I have drawn across the face of love, its light remains undimmed. Beyond all my insane wishes is my will, united with the Will of my Father."
*As in lessons one through fifty, Jesus emphasizes the nature of our right-minds. The wrong-mind is filled with thoughts of attack: disease, suffering, death, murder, and judgment. He helps us realize that these thoughts are covering something else. However, the fact that he tells us this does not mean we need not go through the work of choosing <something else>, but at least now we are aware of what it is we choose between. It is not that I choose <kill or be killed> -- do I kill you or do you kill me? -- I choose miracles or murder (T-23.IV.9.8). This passage tells us there is another thought system in our minds, awaiting our choice. It also implies there is a <purpose> inherent in our having chosen attack over love: the wish to preserve our identity -- chosen in separation and forged in hate -- by proving we are right and God is wrong. Thus we chose to live in darkness, and believed it to be real <because we believed it.>*
(4:5-6) "God is still everywhere and in everything forever. And we who are part of Him will yet look past all appearances, and recognize the truth beyond them all."
*Jesus reassures us that the "outcome is as certain as God" (T-2.III.3:10), for we shall surely make the right choice -- as any good Platonist would -- between appearance and reality. Our fervent attempts to the contrary, we remain as God created us, powerless to change the resplendent truth about ourselves. Thus do we see a world reflecting back to us the radiant reality of God's Love.*
(5:1) (30) "God is in everything I see because God is in my mind."
(5:2-5) "In my own mind, behind all my insane thoughts of separation and attack, is the knowledge that all is one forever. I have not lost the knowledge of Who I am because I have forgotten it. It has been kept for me in the Mind of God, Who has not left His Thoughts. And I, who am among them, am one with them and one with Him."
*Held for us by the Holy Spirit is the memory of the knowledge that we never truly separated ourselves from God. Early in the text Jesus says that "to lose something does not mean that it has gone. It merely means that you do not remember where it is." (T.3.VI.9.3-4) The same is true here: Even though we have lost the knowledge of who we are and have forgotten our Source, it does not mean His Love is not fully present in our minds. Such reassurances are replete in A Course in Miracles. Here are two of them:
"The Father keeps what He created safe. You cannot touch it with the false ideas you made, because it was created not by you. Let not your foolish fancies frighten you. What is immortal cannot be attacked; what is but temporal has no effect." (T-24.VII.5:1-4).
"You can lose sight of oneness, but can not make sacrifice of its reality. Nor can you lose what you would sacrifice, nor keep the Holy Spirit from His task of showing you that it has not been lost." (T-26.I.6:1-2).
What remains is the acceptance of Jesus' certainty, which points to our mind and the memory of the Oneness that created us one with Him.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 55. Today's review includes the following:
Lesson 55. Today's review includes the following:
1. I am determined to see things differently.
What I see now are but signs of disease, disaster and death. This cannot be what God created for His beloved Son. The very fact that I see such things is proof that I do not understand God. Therefore I also do not understand His Son. What I see tells me that I do not know who I am. I am determined to see the witnesses to the truth in me, rather than those which show me an illusion of myself.
2.What I see is a form of vengeance.
The world I see is hardly the representation of loving thoughts. It is a picture of attack on everything by everything. It is anything but a reflection of the Love of God and the love of His Son. It is my own attack thoughts that give rise to this picture. My loving thoughts will save me from this perception of the world, and give me the peace God intended me to have.
3. I can escape from this world by giving up attack thoughts.
Herein lies salvation, and nowhere else. Without attack thoughts I could not see a world of attack. As forgiveness allows love to return to my awareness, I will see a world of peace and safety and joy. And it is this I choose to see, in place of what I look on now.
4. I do not perceive my own best interests.
How could I recognize my own best interests when I do not know who I am? What I think are my best interests would merely bind me closer to the world of illusions. I am willing to follow the Guide God has given me to find out what my own best interests are, recognizing that I cannot perceive them by myself.
5. I do not know what anything is for.
To me, the purpose of everything is to prove that my illusions about myself are real. It is for this purpose that I attempt to use everyone and everything. It is for this that I believe the world is for. Therefore I do not recognize its real purpose. The purpose I have given the world has led to a frightening picture of it. Let me open my mind to the world's real purpose by withdrawing the one I have given it, and learning the truth about it.
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The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volume series of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles," which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street
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(1:1) (21) "I am determined to see things differently."
*Jesus is now appealing directly to the power of our minds to choose.*
(1:2.) "What I see now are but signs of disease, disaster and death."
*In deference to Helen, I like to point out alliteration when it appears. Note the three d's. <disease, disaster and death>. Again, it is important we perceive disease, disaster and death all around us, not love, hope, and joy, for there is none. Indeed, the world was made <not> to be a place of love, hope, or joy. If we do not recognize this, we will have no motivation for changing our mind. We will believe in our arrogance that we have already changed it by virtue of our having perceived light instead of death. We believe what our egos have programmed us to believe, which is why we need to question the value of having chosen the ego as our teacher.*
(1:3-5) "This cannot be what God created for His beloved Son. The very fact that I see such things is proof that I do not understand God. Therefore I also do not understand His Son."
*This at least is a good initial step, because if we think we are looking on a world of light, peace, and joy, we will believe we understand God, Jesus, and, unfortunately, his course. Acknowledging that what we see "are the signs of disease, disaster and death" is the beginning of the humility that reaches to Wisdom. We begin by denying the ego's thought system of denial, and gradually, step by step, we are led by Jesus to understand that spirit and ego are mutually exclusive states, and so are love and hate, life and death, joy and pain. To make one real is to deny the other.*
(1:6-7) "What I see tells me that I do not know who I am. I am determined to see the witnesses to the truth in me, rather than those which show me an illusion of myself."
*Once having learned to tell the difference between <form> and <content>, we call upon our new Teacher to help us see truly, the vision of Christ that reminds us who we are -- along with our brothers -- as God's one Son.*
(2:1) (22) "What I see is a form of vengeance."
(2:2-3) "The world I see is hardly the representation of loving thoughts. It is a picture of attack on everything by everything."
*This is the same point Jesus was making earlier, saying the world we see represents an attack on "everything by everyone." There are no exceptions. If we think we see a loving world, we will believe there are only loving thoughts within and so we will not look at the <unloving> ones. By not looking, the unloving thoughts remain buried in our minds, and whatever is buried has the terrible habit of finding its way out -- the dynamic of projection -- and attacking everyone else. Because we are not aware that the source of our attack is our mind's unloving thoughts, we will not be aware that we are the ones who did this. We will actually think that because we think we have only loving thoughts, our attacks and judgments of others are loving, too. That is why it is important to see the world for what it is and recognize its source. Only when we look with Jesus at the <un>loving thoughts in our minds and forgive them, will we realize that underneath the unloving thoughts and concealed by them are the loving ones we have always had.*
(2:4-6) "It is anything but a reflection of the Love of God and the love of His Son. It is my own attack thoughts that give rise to this picture. My loving thoughts will save me from this perception of the world, and give me the peace God intended me to have."
*The unloving nature of the world is again unmistakably depicted in Jesus' words: "It is anything but a reflection of the Love of God and the love of His Son." The last sentence is carefully phrased: "My loving thoughts will save me from this perception of the world." The problem is the <perception>. It is not the world. Disease, disaster, and death do not exist out there, because <there is no out there.> They exist in a mind that is filled with guilt, hatred, and terror. Therefore it is the <perception> that has to be changed, not the world: "Seek not to change the world, but choose to change your mind about the world" (T-21.in.1:7). Our perception is changed by first bringing it back from its projected form to its source, the <mind>. Only then, as we have already seen, can we exercise the mind's power of decision and choosing the loving thought of the Atonement instead of the unloving thought of separation.*
(3:1) (23) "I can escape from this world by giving up attack thoughts."
(3:2-5) "Herein lies salvation, and nowhere else. Without attack thoughts I could not see a world of attack. As forgiveness allows love to return to my awareness, I will see a world of peace and safety and joy. And it is this I choose to see, in place of what I look on now."
*One could not ask for a more explicit statement of salvation. We are not saved from the world or from some abstract sense of sin, but from our own thoughts. To escape the horrors of the world -- Hamlet's "slings and arrows of outrageous fortune" -- one need only look with Jesus at our horrifying thoughts. Joined with his gentle laughter at the silliness of the ego's thought system of attack, we watch its thoughts slowly dissolve into their own nothingness. Looking out, we perceive only "peace and safety and joy," the world of forgiveness given form.*
(4:1) (24) "I do not perceive my own best interests."
(4:2-3) "How could I recognize my own best interests when I do not know who I am? What I think are my best interests would merely bind me closer to the world of illusions."
*I do not know who I am because I think "<I> am," with the emphasis on the <I>. I actually think there is an "I" here, therefore I do not know who I am. How, then, could I possibly know what is best for me? What we think is best is always some glorification, gratification, or anything that will preserve our illusory identity as an individual "I".*
(4:4) "I am willing to follow the Guide God has given me to find out what my own best interests are, recognizing that I cannot perceive them by myself."
*That we cannot do this without help is an extremely important theme throughout A Course in Miracles. There is no way we can do this without the Holy Spirit's or Jesus' help. Humility says: "I do not know, I do not understand, but thank God there is Someone in me who does, and thank God He is right and I am wrong." That is why Jesus says that he needs us as much as we need him (T-8.V.6:10): he cannot help us <unless> we ask him to. We see this "collaborative venture" (T-4.VI.8:2) expressed in the statement we have already seen in its full context: "Together we have the lamp that will dispel it [the ego's thought system]" (T-11.V.1:3). Jesus cannot accomplish it without us, and we certainly cannot accomplish it without him!
The next set emphasizes the important theme of purpose, which, to state it again, is not emphasized as much here as it is in many other places in A Course in Miracles.*
(5:1) (25) "I do not know what anything is for."
(5:2-3) "To me, the purpose of everything is to prove that my illusions about myself are real. It is for this purpose that I attempt to use everyone and everything."
*Everything we think, and everything we see in the world has the purpose of proving we are right. That is the reason for having made the world in the first place. What God did we can do even better. There are no exceptions in the <either-or> thought system. Just as holiness and love do not make exceptions on the side of love, specialness does not make any exceptions, either. We either love or hate, forgive or attack, but there is no in between: If my self is real, then my Self is not; and, to the ego's dismay, <vice versa.> As a much later lesson puts it: "Let me not forget myself is nothing, but my Self is all." (W-pII.358.1:7).*
(5:4-6) "It is for this that I believe the world is for. Therefore I do not recognize its real purpose. The purpose I have given the world has led to a frightening picture of it."
*I have used the world to fulfill my purpose of proving I am right; i.e., that the illusion about my individuality is the truth. This means I killed God so I could exist. However, in my right mind I understand how I have used the world to fulfill the purpose of making attack real and justified. If I am to exist, everyone has to be sacrificed to my selfish desire. If I am trying to do it to you -- since everyone out there is a part of the dream I made up -- I know you are trying to do the same thing to me. This inevitably produces a world of fear, not safety, for our guilt can only cause a world of perceived punishment and death. But now I gladly choose otherwise.*
(5:7) "Let me open my mind to the world's real purpose by withdrawing the one I have given it, and learning the truth about it."
*Here, too, it is clear that Jesus and A Course in Miracles cannot do it for us, but can only remind us we have to withdraw our beliefs about the world. We need to open our minds by withdrawing the purpose we gave to the world. In other words, again, we have to say (and mean!) that we were wrong. Only then can we recognize the world's true purpose of forgiveness, the pathway that leads us home through the power of our mind to decide <for> God instead of <against> Him.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 54 These are the review ideas for today:
Lesson 54 These are the review ideas for today:
1. I have no neutral thoughts.
Neutral thoughts are impossible because all thoughts have power. They will either make a false world or lead me to the real one. But thoughts cannot be without effects. As the world I see arises from my thinking errors, so will the real world rise before my eyes as I let my errors be corrected. My thoughts cannot be neither true nor false. They must be one or the other. What I see shows me which they are.
2. I see no neutral things.
What I see witnesses to what I think. If I did not think I would not exist, because life is thought. Let me look on the world I see as the representation of my own state of mind. I know that my state of mind can change. And so I also know the world I see can change as well.
3. I am not alone in experiencing the effects of my seeing.
If I have no private thoughts, I cannot see a private world. Even the mad idea of separation had to be shared before it could form the basis of the world I see. Yet that sharing was a sharing of nothing. I can also call upon my real thoughts, which share everything with everyone. As my thoughts of separation call to the separation thoughts of others, so my real thoughts awaken the real thoughts in them. And the world my real thoughts show me will dawn on their sight as well as mine.
4. I am not alone in experiencing the effects of my thoughts.
I am alone in nothing. Everything I think or say or do teaches all the universe. A Son of God cannot think or speak or act in vain. He cannot be alone in anything. It is therefore in my power to change every mind along with mine, for mine is the power of God.
5. I am determined to see.
Recognizing the shared nature of my thoughts, I am determined to see. I would look upon the witnesses that show me the thinking of the world has been changed. I would behold the proof that what has been done through me has enabled love to replace fear, laughter to replace tears, and abundance to replace loss. I would look upon the real world, and let it teach me that my will and the Will of God are one.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volume series of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles," which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street
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(1:1) (16) "I have no neutral thoughts."
*In this lesson Jesus focuses almost exclusively on the power of our thoughts. The reason we have no neutral thoughts is that our thoughts have the power to make up a world such as the one in which we live: a world of pain, suffering, and death; a world in which God appears to be absent. Our thoughts can be just as powerful on the right-minded side, however, in their power to undo the ego. The ego's thoughts have no effect in Heaven, of course, but within the dream they have tremendous power; thus the focus in A Course in Miracles is on the power of our minds; specifically on the power to choose.*
(1:2-4) "Neutral thoughts are impossible because all thoughts have power. They will either make a false world or lead me to the real one. But thoughts cannot be without effects."
*These statements are reinforced by a statement Jesus makes in the text: "All thinking produces form on some level" (T-2.VI.9:14). Our thoughts have extraordinary effects. They can make the world of specialness in which we live, or help us attain the real world by the complete undoing of the ego's world. The problem is that because of our defensive structure, including the power of denial, we almost never experience the effects of our thoughts. Consequently, we are not aware we have thoughts, because we are not aware we have a mind.
(1:5) "As the world I see arises from my thinking errors, so will the real world rise before my eyes as I let my errors be corrected."
*The real world, which is the end product of forgiveness, is the state of mind in which all ego thoughts have been undone. It is not something that is specifically chosen, but rather is the natural state of the guiltless mind when the ego's thought system of guilt has been chosen against.*
(1:6-8) "My thoughts cannot be neither true nor false. They must be one or the other. What I see shows me which they are."
*This is another statement of that important theme, <one or the other>. We do not have Heaven <and> hell, or hell <and> Heaven. They are mutually exclusive states. This is the underlying metaphysical premise of A Course in Miracles, the cornerstone of its thought system: There is God, and there is nothing else. If we believe there is something else, we are believing there is no God. Again, the way we know which thoughts we have chosen in our minds is by vigilantly paying attention, with Jesus beside us, to our perceptions of the outer world. They will reflect to us our decision for Heaven or hell, truth or falsity.
Now Jesus returns to the idea stated previously: *
(2:1) (17) "I see no neutral things."
(2:2-6) "What I see witnesses to what I think. If I did not think I would not exist, because life is thought. Let me look on the world I see as the representation of my own state of mind. I know that my state of mind can change. And so I also know the world I see can change as well."
*We can see how Jesus repeatedly returns to this theme. The beauty of this review is in the succinct manner in which Jesus weaves together the major themes of the first fifty lessons. And this is a crucial one: "Let me look on the world I see as the representation of my own state of mind." We recall these parallel lines from the text:
"[The world is] the outside picture of an inward condition of evil (T-21.in.1:5).
"[Perception] is the outward picture of a wish; an image that you wanted to be true." (T-24.VII.8.10)
We cannot change the world but we can indeed change our minds. Certainly, "the world I see can change as well." This does not mean, however, that the outside world can change, but rather <the way that I see it> will change. Keep in mind that perception is never of facts, it is always an interpretation of what we call facts; an interpretation of either the ego or the Holy Spirit. When Jesus talks about the world I see, "he is not talking about the world outside. <There is no world outside>. The world is nothing but a projection or extension of the thoughts in our minds. It is essential, therefore, that we recognize the direct connection between the world and our thinking, otherwise we will never be able to do anything to change our thoughts.
Before we move on, note the allusion in 2:2 -- "If I did not think I would not exist" -- to Descartes' famous dictum "I think therefore I am (Cogito ergo sum). However, while the great 17th century philosopher used this statement to prove his <real> existence, Jesus ultimately employs it to demonstrate the presence of our <illusory> existence, stemming from our <illusory> thoughts.
In paragraph 3 Jesus introduces the thought of <oneness> -- in Heaven as God's one Son, as well as within the split mind. God's Son is One, whether He is called Christ or the separated Son of God.*
(3:1) (18) "I am not alone in experiencing the effects of my seeing."
(3:2-4)"If I have no private thoughts, I cannot see a private world. Even the mad idea of separation had to be shared before it could form the basis of the world I see. Yet that sharing was a sharing of nothing."
*Even though it "was a sharing of nothing," that does not mean we do not believe it. These statements nicely reflect the idea that despite what the world looks like -- i.e., even if it is a dream of separation -- the Son of God has remained one. That is why forgiveness is the central teaching of A Course in Miracles: In forgiving you, I reflect that you and I have no separate interests, for we share the same need to awaken from the dream of separation, guilt, and hate. That begins the process of reversing the ego's fragmentation. As the text emphasizes: If I forgive you perfectly, behind you stand thousands more, and behind each one stands yet another thousand (T-27.V.10:4). This means that if I forgive you perfectly, I have forgiven the Sonship -- there <is> only one Son.*
(3:5-7) "I can also call upon my real thoughts, which share everything with everyone. As my thoughts of separation call to the separation thoughts of others, so my real thoughts awaken the real thoughts in them. And the world my real thoughts show me will dawn on their sight as well as mine."
*This tells me my function. It is not to heal others, nor to change or teach them in the conventional way. My function is to remind you that the choice I have made in the holy instant is the same one you can make. A passage in the manual for teachers wonderfully summarizes this for us. We have quoted it already, but its relevance certainly deserves additional mentions:
"To them [those who are sick] God's teachers come, to represent another choice which they had forgotten. The simple presence of a teacher of God is a reminder. His thoughts ask for the right to question what the patient has accepted as true. As God's messengers, His teachers are the symbols of salvation. They ask the patient for forgiveness for God's Son in his own Name. They stand for the Alternative. With God's Word in their minds they come in benediction, not to heal the sick but to remind them of the remedy God has already given them. It is not their hands that heal. It is not their voice that speaks the Word of God. They merely give what has been given them. Very gently they call to their brothers to turn away from death: Behold, you Son of God, what life can offer you. Would you choose sickness in place of this?" (M-5.III.2)
However, the process works the other way as well: My separation thoughts call to the separation thoughts in you. The expression of my decision for the ego -- judgment, attack, anxiety, and fear -- tells you that you are right in believing you are separate, because I am demonstrating that you are. My anger confirms you are right, as does my special love and dependency. You want to confirm that you are right, just as I want you to do the same for me. These are the "secret vows" we make with each other to reinforce our insanity, as Jesus explains in the text, again in the context of sickness:
"This is the secret vow that you have made with every brother who would walk apart. This is the secret oath you take again, whenever you perceive yourself attacked. No one can suffer if he does not see himself attacked, and losing by attack. Unstated and unheard in consciousness is every pledge to sickness. Yet it is a promise to another to be hurt by him, and to attack him in return." "Sickness is anger taken out upon the body, so that it will suffer pain. It is the obvious effect of what was made in secret, in agreement with another's secret wish to be apart from you, as you would be apart from him. Unless you both agree that is your wish, it can have no effects." (T-28.VI.4:3--5:3).
Yet, again, Jesus is also telling us we can reinforce right-minded thinking in each other:
"Whoever says, "There is no gap between my mind and yours" has kept God's promise, not his tiny oath to be forever faithful unto death. And by his healing is his brother healed." "Let this be your agreement with each one; that you be one with him and not apart. And he will keep the promise that you make with him, because it is the one that he has made to God, as God has made to him. God keeps His promises; His Son keeps his." (T-28.VI.5:4--6:3).
Thus, when I choose Jesus as my teacher instead of the ego, and I release my grievances through forgiveness, I am teaching there is a right-minded thought in you as well, and in that moment I have become a healing symbol for you. I do not have to say anything, nor preach to you. Indeed, I do nothing. Moreover the <you> may be someone who died twenty years ago. Since minds are joined, forgiveness has nothing to do with bodies. <You> as a thought and <I> as a thought are still united. Whenever I choose to let go of my grievances against you, I am sending a clear message that says: "Awaken from the dream of death." Delivering that message is our only function.*
(4:1) (19) "I am not alone in experiencing the effects of my thoughts."
(4:2-3) "I am alone in nothing. Everything I think or say or do teaches all the universe."
* "All the universe" is the universe of the Sonship in my mind, joined with everyone else's. There is only one mind, and I can think, say, or behave from the Holy Spirit or my ego. Thus Jesus reiterates his teachings on oneness -- spirit <and> ego.*
(4:4-6) "A Son of God cannot think or speak or act in vain. He cannot be alone in anything. It is therefore in my power to change every mind along with mine, for mine is the power of God."
*This does not mean I can literally change your mind for you. I can serve as an example of one who has changed his mind for himself, thereby realizing that that "self" is all of us. Likewise, Jesus cannot do it for us. He can be our teacher and model, showing us there is another choice we can make, but he cannot choose for us. Jesus explained this to Helen early on in the scribing, and therefore to all of us, in the context of her asking him to take her fear away. His answer was a foreshadowing of all he was to teach in A Course in Miracles, for he emphasized the power of Helen's mind to choose fear or against it, and that he could not, and certainly would not remove that power from her mind by making the choice for her:
"You may still complain about fear, but you nevertheless persist in making yourself fearful. I have already indicated that you cannot ask me to release you from fear. I know it does not exist, but you do not. If I intervened between your thoughts and their results, I would be tampering with a basic law of cause and effect; the most fundamental law there is. I would hardly help you if I depreciated the power of your own thinking. This would be in direct opposition to the purpose of this course. It is much more helpful to remind you that you do not guard your thoughts carefully enough." (T-2.VII.1:1-7) *
(5:1) (20) "I am determined to see."
(5:2-3) "Recognizing the shared nature of my thoughts, I am determined to see. I would look upon the witnesses that show me the thinking of the world has been changed."
*The witnesses we look upon are the witnesses we send out. This is an implied reference to "The Attraction of Guilt" in the "Obstacles to Peace" (T-19.IV-A.i). We send out messengers of love or fear, and what we send out we see outside us, which become the witnesses that show what we have chosen. If we are angry or upset, stubborn or having a temper tantrum, that tells us we have sent out messengers of guilt, fear, hatred, and certainly separation. It is these external witnesses we make real in our perception, seeing them outside rather than in our selves. Another passage in the text illustrates the important role our perceptions play in healing. By observing the witnesses in the world I perceive, I am taught to see them as reflecting a decision I made in my mind. Only then can I exercise the mind's power to change the decision:
"Damnation is your judgment on yourself, and this you will project upon the world. See it as damned, and all you see is what you did to hurt the Son of God. If you behold disaster and catastrophe, you tried to crucify him. If you see holiness and hope, you joined the Will of God to set him free. There is no choice that lies between these two decisions. And you will see the witness to the choice you made, and learn from this to recognize which one you chose." (T-21.in.1:1-6)*
(5:4-5) "I would behold the proof that what has been done through me has enabled love to replace fear, laughter to replace tears, and abundance to replace loss. I would look upon the real world, and let it teach me that my will and the Will of God are one."
*Thus will we know which choice we made by paying careful attention to what we perceive around us. We cannot be reminded too often that perception is not an objective fact, but always an interpretation. When A Course in Miracles teaches us to look at what we perceive, Jesus is not speaking of looking out and seeing a desk or a book, a tree or a person. Rather, we are being instructed to look at the <way> we perceive objects, people, and situations. In other words, do we perceive proof of the Atonement principle, or proof of separation? Again, what we perceive will reveal to us what our minds have chosen. Perceptions of love or calls for love reflect the decision to accept the Atonement, and this unequivocal choice ushers in the real world and the happy remembrance of the unity of God and His Son.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 53. Today we will review the following:
Lesson 53. Today we will review the following:
1. My meaningless thoughts are showing me a meaningless world.
Since the thoughts of which I am aware do not mean anything, the world that pictures them can have no meaning. What is producing this world is insane, and so is what it produces. Reality is not insane, and I have real thoughts as well as insane ones. I can therefore see a real world, if I look to my real thoughts as my guide for seeing.
2. I am upset because I see a meaningless world.
Insane thoughts are upsetting. They produce a world in which there is no order anywhere. Only chaos rules a world that represents chaotic thinking, and chaos has no laws. I cannot live in peace in such a world. I am grateful that this world is not real, and that I need not see it at all unless I choose to value it. And I do not choose to value what is totally insane and has no meaning.
3. A meaningless world engenders fear.
The totally insane engenders fear because it is completely undependable, and offers no grounds for trust. Nothing in madness is dependable. It holds out no safety and no hope. But such a world is not real. I have given it the illusion of reality, and have suffered from my belief in it. Now I choose to withdraw this belief, and place my trust in reality. In choosing this, I will escape all the effects of the world of fear, because I am acknowledging that it does not exist.
4. God did not create a meaningless world.
How can a meaningless world exist if God did not create it? He is the Source of all meaning, and everything that is real is in His Mind. It is in my mind too, because He created it with me. Why should I continue to suffer from the effects of my own insane thoughts, when the perfection of creation is my home? Let me remember the power of my decision, and recognize where I really abide.
5. My thoughts are images that I have made.
Whatever I see reflects my thoughts. It is my thoughts that tell me where I am and what I am. The fact that I see a world in which there is suffering and loss and death shows me that I am seeing only the representation of my insane thoughts, and am not allowing my real thoughts to cast their beneficent light on what I see. Yet God's way is sure. The images I have made cannot prevail against Him because it is not my will that they do so. My will is His, and I will place no other gods before Him.
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The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volume series of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles," which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street
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Lesson 53. "Today we will review the following:"
*We see here a direct connection pointed out to us between our thoughts and the world, even though Jesus has made this connection before:*
(1:1) (11) "My meaningless thoughts are showing me a meaningless world."
(1:2-4) "Since the thoughts of which I am aware do not mean anything, the world that pictures them can have no meaning. What is producing this world is insane, and so is what it produces. Reality is not insane, and I have real thoughts as well as insane ones."
*Our thoughts of individuality, sinfulness, specialness, etc., have produced this world. Therefore, since the cause of the world is my insane thoughts, then the world, as the effect, must be equally insane. <Cause> and <effect> are never separated, for they are one. Reality, however, is not insane, despite the ego's protestations to the contrary. It tells us God is insane, vengeful, and angry, yet "[He] thinks otherwise" (T-23.1.2:7). As he did in the first fifty lessons, Jesus explains that we have a split mind, containing unreal thoughts of hate, and real thoughts of love. It remains for us to choose which ones we shall make real for ourselves. He tries to help us realize how miserable and unhappy we become when we choose the unreal thoughts of attack, judgment, and specialness. It is that misery that will ultimately impel us to choose again:
"Tolerance for pain may be high, but it is not without limit. Eventually everyone begins to recognize, however dimly, that there must be a better way. As this recognition becomes more firmly established, it becomes a turning point." (T-2.III.3:5-7).*
(1:5) "I can therefore see a real world, if I look to my real thoughts as my guide for seeing."
*This is the world of vision, the <inner> world in which there are no thoughts of separation or judgment; the world of thought that is beyond the dream of hate, wherein we are able at last to see the dream for what it is. From there it is only an instant longer until God reaches down and lifts us to himself, the <last step> in our journey, as we see depicted in this lovely statement:
"And then your Father will lean down to you and take the last step for you, by raising you unto Himself." (T-11.VIII.15:5).
We shall return to a discussion of the real world later.*
(2:1)(12) "I am upset because I see a meaningless world."
(2:2-7) "Insane thoughts are upsetting. They produce a world in which there is no order anywhere. Only chaos rules a world that represents chaotic thinking, and chaos has no laws. I cannot live in peace in such a world. I am grateful that this world is not real, and that I need not see it at all unless I choose to value it. And I do not choose to value what is totally insane and has no meaning."
*In "The Laws of Chaos" Jesus puts the word "laws" in quotation marks, signifying they are not really laws because they make no sense: the only <true> laws are the laws of God. Jesus does not do so here, but the meaning is the same: "chaos has no laws."
Before we can elect <not> to value what is "totally insane," we first have to accept that the world <is> insane. What helps us realize this is that the world makes us totally unhappy. Our specialness desires -- even when they are fulfilled and gratified -- do not make us happy and do not bring us the peace of God. The ultimate reason our insane thoughts are so upsetting is that they remind us of our original insane thought, which we believe will lead to punishment. In the ominous words of the ego, depicted in this powerful passage from the manual, we read (and tremble!) about the effect of our insane thought of separation, placed in the context of magic thoughts, recognized in another and/or in ourselves:
"They [ magic thoughts ] can but re-awaken sleeping guilt, which you have hidden but have not let go. Each one says clearly to your frightened mind, "You have usurped the place of God. Think not He has forgotten". Here we have the fear of God most starkly represented. For in that thought has guilt already raised madness to the throne of God Himself. And now there is no hope. Except to kill. Here is salvation now. An angry father pursues his guilty son. Kill or be killed, for here alone is choice. Beyond this there is none, for what was done cannot be done without. The stain of blood can never be removed, and anyone who bears this stain on him must meet with death." (M-17.7.2-13).
Forgiveness allows us to examine the destructive insanity of such a thought system, helping us accept it for what it is; a recognition for which we can only be deeply grateful, as its miracle leads beyond insane magic to the pure sanity of eternal life.*
(3:1)(13) "A meaningless world engenders fear."
(3:2-5) "The totally insane engenders fear because it is completely undependable, and offers no grounds for trust. Nothing in madness is dependable. It holds out no safety and no hope. But such a world is not real."
*The only reality is Heaven, which is totally dependable because it is certain: There is only God. This world, as we have all experienced it, is not dependable. It was made to be so. That is what lets us know that the world and our experience of it are not real. Once again, it is our guilt, born of the belief in sin, that leads us to expect certain punishment and to trust no one. The best we can do is protect ourselves from certain attack by utilizing various defenses, which serve only to maintain the separation that established the need for defenses in the first place. Thus the vicious cycles of guilt and attack, and attack and defense, continue and continue and continue. They will always continue, until their fundamental premises are exposed to the truth.*
(3:6-8) "I have given it the illusion of reality, and have suffered from my belief in it. Now I choose to withdraw this belief, and place my trust in reality. In choosing this, I will escape all the effects of the world of fear, because I am acknowledging that it does not exist."
*Again, it is essential that we make the connection between our suffering (the effect) and our thoughts of judgment, attack, and specialness (the cause). We do not escape the world of fear by use of our armaments -- attempts to control, manipulate, and seduce. We control the world only by realizing there is no world to control. What does need to be controlled, however, are our thoughts, as Jesus gently admonished Helen, to repeat an earlier quote: "You are much too tolerant of mind wandering" (T-2.VI.4:6). Most of the time there is nothing we can do about certain things in the world, but we certainly can do something about our uncertain thoughts. And we must, for they serve a vitally important purpose. They keep us here, holding intact our individuality, self-concepts, and very existence. Recognizing the purpose of our thoughts enables us to exert the power of decision to change the ego's goal of separation to the Holy Spirit's goal of Atonement. By changing the ego's underlying purpose we are able to escape its effects of pain, anxiety, and fear.*
(4:1)(14) "God did not create a meaningless world."
(4:2-6) "How can a meaningless world exist if God did not create it? He is the Source of all meaning, and everything that is real is in His Mind. It is in my mind too, because He created it with me. Why should I continue to suffer from the effects of my own insane thoughts, when the perfection of creation is my home? Let me remember the power of my decision, and recognize where I really abide."
*You can see how Jesus returns over and over to the core symphonic themes of these lessons: reality, illusion, and the power of our minds to choose between them. The point here is extremely important, because the problem is that we have forgotten that we have such power to choose. The ego set up its series of defenses so we would never remember that we have a mind, let alone a mind that can choose. Thus were the body and brain made to keep our minds hidden from us, replaced by the mindless state of living in a body that is governed by a brain that thinks it thinks, but in reality only carries out the thoughts of the unconscious mind. These thoughts are but two: the ego belief that the meaningless has triumphed over the meaningful; and the Holy Spirit's Atonement that the ego thought is unreal because it is outside the Mind of God. Thus it has no effects. Despite my feverish dreams to the contrary, I remain at home in God, held in memory in my right mind by the Holy Spirit. Now I can remember to choose again.*
(5:1)(15) "My thoughts are images that I have made."
(5:2-4) "Whatever I see reflects my thoughts. It is my thoughts that tell me where I am and what I am. The fact that I see a world in which there is suffering and loss and death shows me that I am seeing only the representation of my insane thoughts, and am not allowing my real thoughts to cast their beneficent light on what I see."
*This points out a crucial dimension of anyone's work with A Course in Miracles. Many of its students tend to deny they see a world of suffering, loss, and death. Instead they proclaim the world is really wonderful -- part of God's or Jesus' plan: moreover, the new millennium will bring healing everywhere it is needed, bathing us all in light. The problem with looking through rose colored glasses is that if we do not recognize the insanity, pain, and suffering of the world, we will never recognize their source in our minds. The <only way we can return to the insanity in our minds is by recognizing the insanity we perceive.> If we stubbornly, arrogantly, and self-righteously insist that everything is wonderful -- e.g., this is a wonderful world, replete with wonderful happenings; this is a wonderful course Jesus gave us -- we will never realize that what we are seeing outside is a defense. ... Once more, the only way we can get to our thoughts and change our minds about them is to see their effects, which, again, is the cruel and vicious world in which we live.*
(5:5-7) "Yet God's way is sure. The images I have made cannot prevail against Him because it is not my will that they do so. My will is His, and I will place no other gods before Him."
*Jesus again appeals to the power of our minds to choose: between illusions and the truth. The final sentence is taken from the first commandment in the Book of Exodus (20:3), the basis for part of the discussion in Chapter 10 in the text (see especially T-10.III.-V).The point there, as well as here, is that the ego's gods of separation, sickness, suffering, and death have no power over the Son of God, who remains as God created him. God remains God, and no wild imaginings can erect another to take His place, except in dreams. Thus our will has never ceased to be one with His, and we remain at home, where God "would have us be" (T-31.VIII.12:8).*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 52. Today's review covers these ideas:
Lesson 52. Today's review covers these ideas:
1. I am upset because I see what is not there.
Reality is never frightening. It is impossible that it could upset me. Reality brings only perfect peace. When I am upset, it is always because I have replaced reality with illusions I made up. The illusions are upsetting because I have given them reality, and thus regard reality as an illusion. Nothing in God's creation is affected in any way by this confusion of mine. I am always upset by nothing.
2. I see only the past.
As I look about, I condemn the world I look upon. I call this seeing. I hold the past against everyone and everything, making them my enemies. When I have forgiven myself and remembered Who I am, I will bless everyone and everything I see. There will be no past, and therefore no enemies. And I will look with love on all that I failed to see before.
3. My mind is preoccupied with past thoughts.
I see only my own thoughts, and my mind is preoccupied with the past. What, then, can I see as it is? Let me remember that I look on the past to prevent the present from dawning on my mind. Let me understand that I am trying to use time against God. Let me learn to give the past away, realizing that in so doing I am giving up nothing.
4. I see nothing as it is now.
If I see nothing as it is now, it can truly be said that I see nothing. I can see only what is now. The choice is not whether to see the past or the present; the choice is merely whether to see or not. What I have chosen to see has cost me vision. Now I would choose again, that I may see.
5. My thoughts do not mean anything.
I have no private thoughts. Yet it is only private thoughts of which I am aware. What can these thoughts mean? They do not exist, and so they mean nothing. Yet my mind is part of creation and part of its Creator. Would I not rather join the thinking of the universe than to obscure all that is really mine with my pitiful and meaningless "private" thoughts?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volume series of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles," which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lesson 52. "Today's review covers these ideas:"
*As discussed above, we find here the continual weaving of themes from the early lessons. In this set Jesus introduces forgiveness.*
(1:1)(6) "I am upset because I see what is not there."
(1:2-8) "Reality is never frightening. It is impossible that it could upset me. Reality brings only perfect peace. When I am upset, it is always because I have replaced reality with illusions I made up. The illusions are upsetting because I have given them reality, and thus regard reality as an illusion. Nothing in God's creation is affected in any way by this confusion of mine. I am always upset by nothing."
*This is an example of why we cannot study this course, let alone practice it, without understanding the underlying metaphysics. That is not necessarily a requirement for those just starting out with A Course in Miracles, but as we go along we see how its underlying metaphysics is present all the way through. Thus, if the world out there comes from our thoughts, which do not exist, the world must not exist either. It therefore makes no sense to be upset by it.
The truth is that we fear reality because it represents the end of our delusional thought system of separation, which includes the insane idea we can and do exist apart from God. It is thus our egos that fear the decision for reality. That is why Jesus teaches in the text that we "are not really afraid of crucifixion. [Our] real terror is of redemption" (T-13.III.1:10-11). However, the ego teaches that reality is to be feared because of what we did to it; namely, separated from its love, thereby destroying it. Thus we deserve to be punished for our sin. However, the Holy Spirit's Atonement principle is that we <never> separated from God, and therefore there is nothing to fear. Nothing happened -- "Not one note in Heaven's song was missed" (T-26.V.5:4) -- and without the belief in sin, there can be no fear of punishment. The ego's thought system of sin, guilt, and fear is made up. Nothing, therefore, can only lead to nothing, to paraphrase King Lear's outburst.*
(2:1) (7) "I see only the past."
(2:2-4) "As I look about, I condemn the world I look upon. I call this seeing. I hold the past against everyone and everything, making them my enemies."
*Once again we see that if we understand the Course's metaphysics, we would quickly realize why these lines are true. We began our existence as individuals by making God our enemy, and then, as one Son, projected that thought, making up a world of billions and billions of fragments. But the ontological thought came with us, and exists in each individual fragment. Thus the prevalence of <one or the other> in our thinking and our experience: If I am to exist, everyone else must be killed. We people our world with many special love partners, however, so that our ultimate goal is not apparent. Nevertheless we hold the past against everyone and everything, making them our enemies. And what is the past? Sin. We sinned in the past, projected it out, and now see it in everyone else. What we think we see, therefore -- a world of separation and sin -- is not really there at all, and thus is not <seeing.> Our arrogance in all this lies in that we really believe we think, see, hear, and especially that <we> understand.*
(2:5-7) "When I have forgiven myself and remembered Who I am, I will bless everyone and everything I see. There will be no past, and therefore no enemies. And I will look with love on all that I failed to see before."
*It is not only that I <will> bless everyone, I <must> bless everyone, because there is only God's blessing within my mind, that is all I can ever see. Again, if I realize I am a child of God, I am not separate from Him. Thus, there is no sin, and without sin there is no past. Obviously, then, there is nothing to project. What remains is the blessing of love on all things, for we have blessed ourselves with the thought of forgiveness.*
(3:1) (8) "My mind is preoccupied with past thoughts."
(3:2-3) "I see only my own thoughts, and my mind is preoccupied with the past. What, then, can I see as it is?"
*Vision is impossible as long as I believe I am separated and special, as long as I think that I count, am important, am wonderful, and on and on and on -- the <me, myself and I> syndrome. These are but ways of asserting that I exist and, moreover, that I demand to be treated with the dignity I deserve. Needless to say, hidden in back of this is that I want you <not> to treat me this way, because then my ego is home free. I have become the eternal victim, and you the eternal victimizer. I get to keep my ego's cake of separation, eat, and enjoy every guilty morsel, too.*
(3:4) "Let me remember that I look on the past to prevent the present from dawning on my mind."
*If we read this carefully we can recognize a clear statement of purpose: "Let me remember that I look on the past <to> prevent the present from dawning on my mind." There is a purpose for our holding on to the past and our attack thoughts. That is what keeps the present, the holy instant, and Jesus' love from "dawning on my mind." In the presence of his love we can no longer exist as special and hate-filled individuals. That is the fear: losing our special identity.*
(3:5-6) "Let me understand that I am trying to use time against God. Let me learn to give the past away, realizing that in so doing I am giving up nothing."
*Again, we see the purpose behind our world of time and space. The ego uses its linear time -- <past, present, and future> -- as the way of reinforcing its underlying thought system of <sin, guilt, and fear>. In this way, the Everything of God is prevented by the nothingness of the ego from being remembered.*
(4:1) (9) "I see nothing as it is now."
(4:2-4) "If I see nothing as it is now, it can truly be said that I see nothing. I can see only what is now. The choice is not whether to see the past or the present; the choice is merely whether to see or not."
*We cannot see the past, because there is no past, no sin, no separation. Thus what we think we see -- which includes what I remember happening in the past and whatever I am seeing now -- is a projection of our sinful past on to the others. Consequently, what we are seeing is not there at all, and that characterizes our insanity.*
(4:5) "What I have chosen to see has cost me vision."
*That is precisely why I have chosen to see it! The vision of Christ sees the Sonship as one, in which there are not special, important people. We are all the same. This <sameness> of purpose reflects the <Sameness> of God's Son. Perception originated in the need to defend against knowledge, which is remembered through Christ's vision.*
(4:6) "Now I would choose again, that I may see."
*Note the recurring emphasis on the power of our minds to choose. Even if we are not yet ready to make this choice -- vision still being too frightening -- we can at least recognize the possibility of choice, and forgive ourselves for not yet being able to make it.*
(5:1) (10) "My thoughts do not mean anything."
(5:2-5) "I have no private thoughts. Yet it is only private thoughts of which I am aware. What can these thoughts mean? They do not exist, and so they mean nothing."
*My thoughts mean nothing because they are "my" thoughts. They are based on separation and exclusivity, and so are based on the exact opposite of Heaven's Oneness, our <non-specific>, and thus <non-private> reality.*
(5:6-7) "Yet my mind is part of creation and part of its Creator. Would I not rather join the thinking of the universe than to obscure all that is really mine with my pitiful and meaningless "private" thoughts?"
*Importantly, Jesus says "all that is really mine," not what I <think> is mine, which are but a few gifts scraps of specialness. What is <really> mine are the gifts of Heaven: love, eternal life, real freedom, and perfect oneness.
Obviously Jesus does not think very much of our individuality, and he implores us not to think very much of it, either. The problem is that we value it much more than we ever thought we did. As we work seriously with A Course in Miracles, it becomes clearer and clearer how much we do value our individuality, how much we do have serious authority problems, and how we do not want anyone to tell us anything other than what we believe is true. We need to be aware of this arrogance without judging ourselves; to realize that, yes, this is where my thoughts are coming from, and they are just a silly mistake.
It is apparent as one reads through A Course in Miracles, not just these lessons, that Jesus is persistently consistent in presenting the truth to us, and does not judge us for our illusions. He makes fun of us occasionally, but his attitude is certainly not punitive. He simply says: "Will you please recognize that you are wrong and I am right. As long as you continue to think otherwise, you will not be happy. I am not the one who will punish you; <you> will punish you. I wait patiently for you, but why delay your happiness?" As he asks us twice later in the workbook: "Why wait for Heaven?" (W-pI.131.6:1;W-pI.188.1:1)*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 51. The review for today covers the following ideas:
Lesson 51. The review for today covers the following ideas:
1. Nothing I see means anything.
The reason this is so is that I see nothing, and nothing has no meaning. It is necessary that I recognize this, that I may learn to see. What I think I see now is taking the place of vision. I must let it go by realizing it has no meaning, so that vision may take its place.
2. I have given what I see all the meaning it has for me.
I have judged everything I look upon, and it is this and only this I see. This is not vision. It is merely an illusion of reality, because my judgments have been made quite apart from reality. I am willing to recognize the lack of validity in my judgments, because I want to see. My judgments have hurt me, and I do not want to see according to them.
3. I do not understand anything I see.
How could I understand what I see when I have judged it amiss? What I see is the projection of my own errors of thought. I do not understand what I see because it is not understandable. There is no sense in trying to understand it. But there is every reason to let it go, and make room for what can be seen and understood and loved. I can exchange what I see now for this merely by being willing to do so. Is not this a better choice than the one I made before?
4. These thoughts do not mean anything.
The thoughts of which I am aware do not mean anything because I am trying to think without God. What I call "my" thoughts are not my real thoughts. My real thoughts are the thoughts I think with God. I am not aware of them because I have made my thoughts to take their place. I am willing to recognize that my thoughts do not mean anything, and to let them go. I choose to have them be replaced by what they were intended to replace. My thoughts are meaningless, but all creation lies in the thoughts I think with God.
5. I am never upset for the reason I think.
I am never upset for the reason I think because I am constantly trying to justify my thoughts. I am constantly trying to make them true. I make all things my enemies, so that my anger is justified and my attacks are warranted. I have not realized how much I have misused everything I see by assigning this role to it. I have done this to defend a thought system that has hurt me, and that I no longer want. I am willing to let it go.
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The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volume series of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles," which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street
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Lesson 51. "The review for today covers the following ideas:"
*Before beginning, let me mention something that probably has eluded almost all students of A Course in Miracles, certainly the non-obsessive ones. Helen had <insisted> to Jesus that each of the one-sentence introduction to the day's review be different. And you will surely be impressed to discover how many different ways Jesus can say that "the review for today covers the following ideas:" *
(1) (1) "Nothing I see means anything."
*In these early lessons Jesus emphasizes that what we see does not mean anything because what we see comes from <mis>thoughts of judgment and attack.*
(1:2-5) "The reason this is so is that I see nothing, and nothing has no meaning. It is necessary that I recognize this, that I may learn to see. What I think I see now is taking the place of vision. I must let it go by realizing it has no meaning, so that vision may take its place."
*While Jesus does not use the term here, he points out to us that we have a split mind. We have the capacity of seeing through the vision of the Holy Spirit, but to ensure that that does not happen we cover those loving thoughts with thoughts of attack and separation. Indeed, we cannot achieve the goal of vision if we do not recognize and understand the inherent illusory and meaningless nature of our perceptions. It is these misperceptions that we have deliberately chosen to take the place of vision, fulfilling the ego's purpose of protecting itself -- really, our separated self protecting its separate identity -- that prevents us from discovering the only meaning for being in this world: forgiveness.*
(2) (2) "I have given what I see all the meaning it has for me."
(2:2-4) "I have judged everything I look upon, and it is this and only this I see. This is not vision. It is merely an illusion of reality, because my judgments have been made quite apart from reality."
*This restates the teaching that the world we see is not there simply because it comes from our judgmental thoughts, which also are not there. Remember, every thought in the ego thought system is a defense against the truth of the Atonement principle, which is that we never left God. Everything we perceive is a shadowy fragment of the original judgment that we separated from our Source and reality, the fundamental illusion from which all others come.*
(2:5-6) "I am willing to recognize the lack of validity in my judgments, because I want to see. My judgments have hurt me, and I do not want to see according to them."
*Jesus is appealing to our sane, rational minds to understand that what we are doing with our thoughts, and therefore with the perceived world, hurts us: "My judgments have hurt me." The ego has set up its defensive system as a huge gap between our attack thoughts and the pain that is their effect. This gap is represented by the world of time and space, its purpose being to enable us to feel justified in attributing our pain to "things beyond [us], forces [we] cannot control" (T-19.IV.-D.7:4). That, of course, is the wonder of projection from the ego's point of view. We wind up feeling assured that we are not responsible for the pain that results from our choosing against God and His Love: others, our bodies, or the world are the cause of our distress --anyone or anything <but> ourselves.
Thus the idea of these lessons is to bring the <effect> to the <cause>, so we can realize it is our judgments alone that have us hurt us. In so doing we restore to awareness the power of our minds to decide our own destiny: happiness or misery, peace or conflict.*
(3) (3) "I do not understand anything I see."
(3:2-4) "How could I understand what I see when I have judged it amiss? What I see is the projection of my own errors of thought. I do not understand what I see because it is not understandable."
*This is the beginning of humility. We are always so sure we are right: what I see is what I see, what I hear is what I hear, and my understanding of a situation is what <I> say it is. If we are skillful enough, we get a multitude of people to agree with us. That is not sanity, but collective <insanity>! In French this is known as <folie a deux>: a delusion shared by two people. But it could just as easily be ten, hundreds, thousands, millions, if not billions, for we all share the same insanity. We therefore cannot truly understand anything, nor go to anyone else for true understanding. If at any point we feel specialness, judgment, or separation, we should not trust anything we conclude based on those feelings; we will inevitably be wrong.*
(4) (4) "These thoughts do not mean anything."
(4:2) "The thoughts of which I am aware do not mean anything because I am trying to think without God."
*This is the bottom line. Representing God is the Holy Spirit, Jesus, or the thoughts of these lessons. If we are not thinking in harmony with these thoughts -- i.e., if we are holding on to grievances, attack thoughts, or specialness needs in any way, shape, or form -- we are <not> thinking, and anything that results from not thinking must be non-existent. Remember, cause and effect are never separate. Illusions can merely breed further illusions.*
(5) (5) "I am never upset for the reason I think."
(5:2) "I am never upset for the reason I think because I am constantly trying to justify my thoughts."
*Once we make the decision to be an individual and a first person possessive singular, we constantly try to justify that existence. This is the role of the face of innocence: It is not my fault, and I gather together as many people as possible to justify the perception of myself as a victim. This is never difficult to do, by the way, because the vastness of the world supplies an almost endless number of potential objects for our projections. Moreover, what makes it interesting is that we <all> seek to justify our face of innocence, thereby ensuring that we continue to exist as separated individuals <but that others will be responsible for the sin.> Therefore, it is they who will be punished for the sin that is no longer found in us.*
(5:3-7) "I am constantly trying to make them true. I make all things my enemies, so that my anger is justified and my attacks are warranted. I have not realized how much I have misused everything I see by assigning this role to it. I have done this to defend a thought system that has hurt me, and that I no longer want. I am willing to let it go."
*Students doing the workbook for the first time usually do not pay careful attention to what they are reading. However, if they continue studying A Course in Miracles over many years and read the workbook much more carefully, which I strongly recommend, they will be astounded at what Jesus is actually saying; statements such as we have just read being prime examples.
Jesus here is putting words in our mouths, hoping we shall keep them there: We are now deciding we are glad we were wrong, and even happier to realize there is someone else within us who is right. This involves letting go of our anger, judgments, and arrogance; our devotion to specialness, and ultimately our individuality. We need to withdraw our investment in using others as reinforcement for our defense of projection, putting them either in the category of special love or special hate -- objects with whom we seem to join, or from whom we seem to separate. Either way, our ego's need to demonstrate its innocence is fulfilled through attack and judgment, making others guilty of the sins we have projected onto them, magically hoping we can escape punishment through this insane and magical dynamic. Now we can happily say we choose
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
|
Review 1. Introduction
(1) Beginning with today we will have a series of review periods. Each of them will cover five of the ideas already presented, starting with the first and ending with the fiftieth. There will be a few short comments after each of the ideas, which you should consider in your review. In the practice periods, the exercises should be done as follows:
(2) Begin the day by reading the five ideas, with the comments included. Thereafter, it is not necessary to follow any particular order in considering them, though each one should be practiced at least once. Devote two minutes or more to each practice period, thinking about the idea and the related comments after reading them over. Do this as often as possible during the day. If any one of the five ideas appeals to you more than the others, concentrate on that one. At the end of the day, however, be sure to review all of them once more.
(3) It is not necessary to cover the comments that follow each idea either literally or thoroughly in the practice periods. Try, rather, to emphasize the central point, and think about it as part of your review of the idea to which it relates. After you have read the idea and the related comments, the exercises should be done with your eyes closed and when you are alone in a quiet place, if possible.
(4) This is emphasized for practice periods at your stage of learning. It will be necessary, however, that you learn to require no special settings in which to apply what you have learned. You will need your learning most in situations that appear to be upsetting, rather than in those that already seem to be calm and quiet. The purpose of your learning is to enable you to bring the quiet with you, and to heal distress and turmoil. This is not done by avoiding them and seeking a haven of isolation for yourself.
(5) You will yet learn that peace is part of you, and requires only that you be there to embrace any situation in which you are. And finally you will learn that there is no limit to where you are, so that your peace is everywhere, as you are.
(6) You will note that, for review purposes, some of the ideas are not given in quite their original form. Use them as they are given here. It is not necessary to return to the original statements, nor to apply the ideas as was suggested then. We are now emphasizing the relationships among the first fifty of the ideas we have covered, and the cohesiveness of the thought system to which they are leading you.
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This is from Kenneth Wapnick's commentaries from his book set called "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles." which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street
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Review 1. Introduction
*I have often spoken of the symphonic structure of A Course in Miracles, and usually refer to the text when I do so, but the same holds true for the workbook as well. One of the characteristics of a symphonic work, especially those written in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, is that the opening movement has an <exposition> that presents the different themes, a <development> section that elaborates on them, and a <recapitulation> where the composer brings back the themes, but in a new way. This is what we find in the workbook.
Lessons 1 through 60, especially, demonstrate the masterfully symphonic way Jesus has organized his material. The first fifty lesson consist of the exposition and development of the various themes, and here in the first review they return, but presented differently. He explains this at the end of the introduction, as we shall see presently. My discussion will focus on the major themes of these early workbook lessons -- and the ways in which Jesus integrates them in the review.
In general, we can summarize this movement of our symphony thusly: Just as the text begins with its central theme -- the first principle of miracles: "There is no order of difficulty in miracles." (T.1.I.1.1) -- so do we find the workbook's central theme in these early lessons -- "There is no order of difficulty in <perception.>"
In the first three paragraphs Jesus instructs us how to proceed with the lessons, asking us to think about the ideas in the review "as often as possible" throughout the day:*
(1:1 -- 3:2) "Beginning with today we will have a series of review periods. Each of them will cover five of the ideas already presented, starting with the first and ending with the fiftieth. There will be a few short comments after each of the ideas, which you should consider in your review. In the practice periods, the exercises should be done as follows:
Begin the day by reading the five ideas, with the comments included. Thereafter, it is not necessary to follow any particular order in considering them, though each one should be practiced at least once. Devote two minutes or more to each practice period, thinking about the idea and the related comments after reading them over. Do this as often as possible during the day. If any one of the five ideas appeals to you more than the others, concentrate on that one. At the end of the day, however, be sure to review all of them once more."
"It is not necessary to cover the comments that follow each idea either literally or thoroughly in the practice periods. Try, rather, to emphasize the central point, and think about it as part of your review of the idea to which it relates."
*We thus see Jesus' ongoing emphasis on thinking about, and applying these ideas throughout the day. Moreover, we note his insistence on the lesson's <content> -- its "central point" -- rather than its <form.> He is not seeking our literalness (i.e.,compulsivity) in practicing, but our learning to generalize the lesson's message to whatever specific aspect of our day is meaningful.*
(3:3 -- 4:1) "After you have read the idea and the related comments, the exercises should be done with your eyes closed and when you are alone in a quiet place, if possible." ... "This is emphasized for practice periods at your stage of learning."
*These are two important sentences, wherein we see Jesus providing us with structured periods of meditation. In "I Need Do Nothing," on the other hand, he tells us this is not a course in contemplation or meditation (T-18.VII.4). He is certainly not against meditation, but that is not integral to the process of forgiveness. In this Introduction, Jesus indirectly cautions us about something he is more direct about in the teacher's manual ("How should a teacher of God Spend His Day?" [M-16]) which we have already discussed. The point, once again, is that when you have structured periods of learning or meditation, they easily become rituals and gods in their own right. In that sense they counteract Jesus' teachings on specialness. I emphasized in my lectures of the first fifty lessons that one of the principle goals of A Course in Miracles, well articulated in the workbook, is to have us learn to generalize. Therefore, if you can be with God, think of Jesus, or remember the lesson <only> during the structured practice periods, you are defeating their purpose. That is why Jesus specifically says "at your stage of learning." He is assuming that everyone is starting at the bottom of the ladder, and so he is essentially re-training our minds from the beginning. He is asking us to set aside everything we think we know about meditation, contemplation, prayer, and spirituality and let him teach us anew. Our teacher starts us off with structured and oftentimes simple exercises, but he does not want them to become special objects of attachment. Even though this is early in the workbook, Jesus is already issuing a word of caution about the potential misuse of these exercises.*
(4:2-3) "It will be necessary, however, that you learn to require no special settings in which to apply what you have learned. You will need your learning most in situations that appear to be upsetting, rather than in those that already seem to be calm and quiet."
*Jesus is not saying there is anything wrong with arranging things externally in order to be comfortable when you meditate, but he does not want you to form a special relationship with your posture or breathing, the scent of your candle, the music, A Course in Miracles, or anything else. The emphasis should not be on modifying the external situation so you are happy, but on trying to change your thoughts so you would be <truly> happy, regardless of where you are or its conditions. Again, he is not against your doing anything that will help you relax, as long as you are vigilant for the ritualistic specialness which would act <against> your learning.*
(4:4-5) "The purpose of your learning is to enable you to bring the quiet with you, and to heal distress and turmoil. This is not done by avoiding them and seeking a haven of isolation for yourself."
*To make this important point still again, Jesus is not saying we should not meditate and have structured periods of practice. In fact, that is precisely what this workbook has been all about. He is simply letting us know we are in the early stages of learning, and that he is going to take us far, far beyond where we are now. We get a glimpse of this "far, far beyond" in the lovely passage from the manual for teachers, given in the context of learning to practice the justice of the Holy Spirit:
"There is no inherent conflict between justice and truth; one is but the first small step in the direction of the other. The path becomes quite different as one goes along. Nor could all the magnificence, the grandeur of the scene and the enormous opening vistas that rise to meet one as the journey continues, be foretold from the outset. Yet even these, whose splendor reaches indescribable heights as one proceeds, fall short indeed of all that wait when the pathway ceases and time ends with it. But somewhere one must start. Justice is the beginning." (M-19.2:4-9)
Structured periods of practice and meditation are thus the beginning.*
(5:1) "You will yet learn that peace is part of you, and requires only that you be there to embrace any situation in which you are."
*The idea is that we would feel peaceful not only when all is quiet around us, but also, <and especially,> when everything seems to be falling apart: when we or our families are ravaged by sickness; when anger and accusations are rampant; and when we are in the midst of guilt, anxiety, terror, and any of the feelings that are an inherent part of our lives. These are the times when we especially need to think of Jesus and what he is teaching. It would obviously make no sense from a learning point of view if we could only turn to him and find peace when we were physically quiet. Our quiet times are simply part of the training program of learning to go <inside,> so that once comfortable with this process, we can call upon peace <whenever> we find ourselves turning to the ego for help, immediately recognizing the need to change our teacher.*
(5:2) "And finally you will learn that there is no limit to where you are, so that your peace is everywhere, as you are."
*This is the ultimate goal of learning to <generalize> the specific lessons and situations in which we are being taught so they apply to all relationships, all situations, at all times, and in all circumstances -- without exception. If there is no world out there, which is the key metaphysical premise of A Course in Miracles, then the world is <inside> you. That is where peace is found. Further, if there is no world outside you, how can it affect you? That is what we need to learn, which we do through careful study and practice.*
(6:1-3) "You will note that, for review purposes, some of the ideas are not given in quite their original form. Use them as they are given here. It is not necessary to return to the original statements, nor to apply the ideas as was suggested then."
*Note Jesus' flexibility, a model for us <not> to obsess about the <form> of these lessons, focusing instead on their underlying <content>.
The final sentence of the Introduction helps introduce what we shall be talking about as we proceed through this review:*
(6:4) "We are now emphasizing the relationships among the first fifty of the ideas we have covered, and the cohesiveness of the thought system to which they are leading you."
*Restated, Jesus is saying that in these ten review lessons he will bring together these themes and show us how they are integrated: "the cohesiveness of the thought system." Understanding any one theme or concept in A Course in Miracles will automatically lead you to the others, reflecting its internal consistency. As I mentioned, the predominant theme of these first fifty lessons is the correction of our misperceptions. We have seen again and again how much emphasis Jesus places on our learning that our thoughts determine the world we see, elaborating on the principle he gives us twice in the text: <projection makes perception> (T-13.V.3:5; T. in.1:1). We first look within and recognize with horror our thoughts of sin, guilt, and fear -- specifically in this context, thoughts of attack and judgment -- which we then project. These projections become the <cause> of the world we perceive outside us, which in our distorted experience appears as the <effect>. Thus Jesus teaches us this is a course in cause and not effect, as we have already seen (T-21.VII.7:8). In other words, this is not a course in changing the world or our behavior, but in changing our thoughts, laden with judgment and attack.
When Jesus tells us that what we call thinking is not thinking at all, it is because we are thinking in opposition to him and God. What opposes God and His loving Oneness does not exist. Therefore, our thoughts of attack, anxiety, and judgment do not exist. Within our delusional minds, however, we most certainly think they do. We project these illusory thoughts of separation and hate, and see a world that does not exist because it comes from thoughts that are not really there. It is therefore our thinking that is the problem, from which we have to be saved. Salvation thus teaches us to correct our misthoughts, choosing the consequence of peace instead of conflict. This familiar statement near the end of the text is worth another look, to which we add an additional sentence:
"Salvation can be seen as nothing more than the escape from concepts. It does not concern itself with content of the mind, but with the simple statement that it thinks. And what can think has choice, and can be shown that different thoughts have different consequence." (T-31.V.14.:3-5).
Another major theme is decision, or changing our minds, and so a major thrust of these lessons is helping us realize what we are doing so that we can change our minds from thoughts of anger and judgment to forgiveness and peace. When we choose those thoughts they automatically extend, and we make the transition to what Jesus refers to as "vision." The external world does not necessarily change; indeed, many times it does not change at all. What changes is the way we perceive the world, which means the way we interpret it. Continuing with the process of forgiveness is what ultimately leads to Christ's vision, or the perception of the Holy Spirit that sees and knows the inherent sameness of God's one Son.
To summarize: The central themes -- there are several subsidiary ones which we shall look at as well -- are realizing the connection between our attack thoughts and the world we see; and recognizing Jesus' appeal that we change our minds and allow him to be the source of what we see, thus attaining true vision. Of the many themes of these ten review lessons, vision is by far the most important, as we shall see now.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 50. I am sustained by the Love of God.
Lesson 50. I am sustained by the Love of God.
Here is the answer to every problem that will confront you, today and tomorrow and throughout time. In this world, you believe you are sustained by everything but God. Your faith is placed in the most trivial and insane symbols; pills, money, "protective" clothing, influence, prestige, being liked, knowing the "right" people, and an endless list of forms of nothingness that you endow with magical powers.
All these things are your replacements for the Love of God. All these things are cherished to ensure a body identification. They are songs of praise to the ego. Do not put your faith in the worthless. It will not sustain you.
Only the Love of God will protect you in all circumstances. It will lift you out of every trial, and raise you high above all the perceived dangers of this world into a climate of perfect peace and safety. It will transport you into a state of mind that nothing can threaten, nothing can disturb, and where nothing can intrude upon the eternal calm of the Son of God.
Put not your faith in illusions. They will fail you. Put all your faith in the Love of God within you; eternal, changeless and forever unfailing. This is the answer to whatever confronts you today. Through the Love of God within you, you can resolve all seeming difficulties without effort and in sure confidence. Tell yourself this often today. It is a declaration of release from the belief in idols. It is your acknowledgment of the truth about yourself.
For ten minutes, twice today, morning and evening, let the idea for today sink deep into your consciousness. Repeat it, think about it, let related thoughts come to help you recognize its truth, and allow peace to flow over you like a blanket of protection and surety. Let no idle and foolish thoughts enter to disturb the holy mind of the Son of God. Such is the Kingdom of Heaven. Such is the resting place where your Father has placed you forever.
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The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volume series of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles," which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street
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Lesson 50. "I am sustained by the Love of God."
*Lesson 50 differs from the preceding ones, and we shall be reintroduced to themes that will return later. Specifically, this lesson makes another statement, much clearer than the previous one, about the nature of the special relationship. The terms <special relationships> and <specialness> do not appear in the workbook at all; however, it is clear in passages like these that this is Jesus' referent.*
(1) "Here is the answer to every problem that will confront you, today and tomorrow and throughout time. In this world, you believe you are sustained by everything but God. Your faith is placed in the most trivial and insane symbols; pills, money, "protective" clothing, influence, prestige, being liked, knowing the "right" people, and an endless list of forms of nothingness that you endow with magical powers."
*If these statements are read in the context of A Course in Miracles as a whole, it is obvious that Jesus is not saying we should feel guilty because we take a pill, wear warm clothing in the winter, or have friends with whom we spend time. This passage is similar to Lesson 76 "I am under no laws but God's," which we shall discuss in due course and where we shall issue the same caveat. Moreover, Jesus is not saying we should let go of our bodily concerns. That would be confusing levels -- mind and body -- which he warns us about in the text (see, e.g.T-2.IV.3:8-11). We <can> overlook our bodies -- physical and psychological -- if we are in the real world, because at that point we <know> they are not our identity. But Jesus knows his students, and knows us well, and he wants us to be aware of the thought system on which dependencies (or special relationships) are based, and to understand the source of our trust in the things of the world. Only then can we make the meaningful choice against them. He continues with the source of these special attachments:*
(2) "All these things are your replacements for the Love of God. All these things are cherished to ensure a body identification. They are songs of praise to the ego. Do not put your faith in the worthless. It will not sustain you."
*Again, Jesus is not saying we must give up anything that makes us feel better physically or mentally. However, he is saying we should be aware of our <dependence> on it, what in the text he refers to as <idols.> Such dependency is a statement that says God's Love is not enough, we want more:
"The world believes in idols. No one comes unless he worshipped them, and still attempts to seek for one that yet might offer him a gift reality does not contain. Each worshipper of idols harbors hope his special deities will give him more than other men possess. It must be more. It does not really matter more of what; more beauty, more intelligence, more wealth, or even more affliction and more pain. But more of something is an idol for. And when one fails another takes its place, with hope of finding more of something else. Be not deceived by forms the "something" takes. An idol is a means for getting more. And it is this that is against God's Will." (T.29.VIII.8.4-13).
But we knew all this anyway, otherwise we would not be in the world, for no one comes here, as we have just read, unless he seeks more than the love God has offered. Be careful not to use Jesus' teaching as reason to club yourself or others over the head. However, <do> use it as a way of reminding yourself that the journey takes you through your specialness; a journey you cannot make until you first recognize your heavy involvement in it. Lessons like this, as well as much of the text, make that abundantly clear. We shall return to this theme over and over again, for the same reason Jesus does: The journey to Heaven through hell <is> the path Jesus leads us on, and understanding the journey's contours will enable us to be led gently home.*
(3) "Only the Love of God will protect you in all circumstances. It will lift you out of every trial, and raise you high above all the perceived dangers of this world into a climate of perfect peace and safety. It will transport you into a state of mind that nothing can threaten, nothing can disturb, and where nothing can intrude upon the eternal calm of the Son of God."
*Jesus is reminding us our goal is to walk through this dream without fear. When we can do so, we shall realize we are not in the dream at all: the dream figure we call ourselves but reflects a thought of love with which we are now identified. Remember this is a process, and in this lesson we are presented with the journey in its entirety; where we begin, the nature of the journey -- going through our specialness -- and then at last the journey's end.*
(4:1-4) "Put not your faith in illusions. They will fail you. Put all your faith in the Love of God within you; eternal, changeless and forever unfailing. This is the answer to whatever confronts you today."
*There are many lovely sections and passages in the text about not putting our faith in illusions. We read, for example, this one on <faithlessness>, putting our faith in nothing:
"It is impossible that the Son of God lack faith, but he can choose where he would have it be. Faithlessness is not a lack of faith, but faith in nothing. Faith given to illusions does not lack power, for by it does the Son of God believe that he is powerless. Thus is he faithless to himself, but strong in faith in his illusions about himself." (T-21.III.5:1-4).
The opening to "Seek Not Outside Yourself" summarizes the entire section:
"Seek not outside yourself. For it will fail, and you will weep each time an idol falls. Heaven cannot be found where it is not, and there can be no peace excepting there. Each idol that you worship when God calls will never answer in His place. There is no other answer you can substitute, and find the happiness His answer brings. Seek not outside yourself. For all your pain comes simply from a futile search for what you want, insisting where it must be found." (T-29.VII.1:1-7).
Whenever we are troubled, it is because we do not believe we are sustained by the Love of God. Still closer to the truth, we do not want to be sustained by everything else, as long as it is outside our minds. Looking at that horrid thought without judgment or guilt is the way to move beyond it to the state of true sinlessness, the innocence that is our natural Identity as God's Son.*
(4:5-8) "Through the Love of God within you, you can resolve all seeming difficulties without effort and in sure confidence. Tell yourself this often today. It is a declaration of release from the belief in idols. It is your acknowledgment of the truth about yourself."
*The Love of God is the <content> that automatically heals all "seeming difficulties," which deal only with <form>. The ego, as we have already seen, literally made up the world of <form> -- both collectively and individually -- to keep us from choosing the <content> of the Atonement that ends the ego's reign in our minds. When the external problem is kept from the internal answer, the problem will never be solved, for it can but shift from one form to another. However, when brought to the truth within, it cannot help disappearing. As a later lesson on forgiveness puts it: "I will forgive, and this will disappear" (W-pI.193.13:3); italics omitted).
The reference to the idols, from which we are released, is special relationships. We invoke these substitutes for God's Love as replacements for what threatens our ego's existence, and which provide the illusion that our needs are met:
"Let not their form deceive you. Idols are but substitutes for your reality. In some way, you believe they will complete your little self, for safety in a world perceived as dangerous, with forces massed against your confidence and peace of mind. They have the power to supply your lacks, and add the value that you do not have." (T-29.VIII.2:1-4).
We can therefore see that Jesus' purpose for us in these lessons is to help us realize the idol of specialness for what it is, so we can choose against it.
Jesus asks now to sink into consciousness, which means going deeply into our minds, an instruction we have already seen, and which our chart (see p.135) helps us envision:*
(5:1-3) "For ten minutes, twice today, morning and evening, let the idea for today sink deep into your consciousness. Repeat it, think about it, let related thoughts come to help you recognize its truth, and allow peace to flow over you like a blanket of protection and surety. Let no idle and foolish thoughts enter to disturb the holy mind of the Son of God."
*The way to prevent these thoughts from disturbing your holy mind is through your recognition of them. Without such acknowledgment, they simply remain. The idea, again, is to see the "idle and foolish thoughts" of specialness in all its forms asking Jesus for help in understanding what they are <for>.*
(5:4-5) "Such is the Kingdom of Heaven. Such is the resting place where your Father has placed you forever."
*A lovely way to end this first major section of the workbook: the reminder of our ultimate goal.*
*This concludes the first 50 lessons, leading to the first review. We have seen how Jesus has given us an understanding of the journey, emphasizing the importance of taking seriously our study and practice of his course. This means, as we have discussed repeatedly, looking at our ego thoughts and asking Jesus' help. This process clearly implies the existence of our separated minds, split between the wrong-minded thought system of separation, guilt, and hate (the ego), and the right-minded correction of Atonement, forgiveness, and peace (the Holy Spirit). Thus are we trained by Jesus to recognize these two thought systems, asking for help to exercise our mind's power to choose the Teacher Who alone will bring us peace.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 49. God's Voice speaks to me all through the day.
Lesson 49. God's Voice speaks to me all through the day.
It is quite possible to listen to God's Voice all through the day without interrupting your regular activities in any way. The part of your mind in which truth abides is in constant communication with God, whether you are aware of it or not. It is the other part of your mind that functions in the world and obeys the world's laws. It is this part that is constantly distracted, disorganized and highly uncertain.
The part that is listening to the Voice for God is calm, always at rest and wholly certain. It is really the only part there is. The other part is a wild illusion, frantic and distraught, but without reality of any kind. Try today not to listen to it. Try to identify with the part of your mind where stillness and peace reign forever. Try to hear God's Voice call to you lovingly, reminding you that your Creator has not forgotten His Son.
We will need at least four five-minute practice periods today, and more if possible. We will try actually to hear God's Voice reminding you of Him and of your Self. We will approach this happiest and holiest of thoughts with confidence, knowing that in doing so we are joining our will with the Will of God. He wants you to hear His Voice. He gave It to you to be heard.
Listen in deep silence. Be very still and open your mind. Go past all the raucous shrieks and sick imaginings that cover your real thoughts and obscure your eternal link with God. Sink deep into the peace that waits for you beyond the frantic, riotous thoughts and sights and sounds of this insane world. You do not live here. We are trying to reach your real home. We are trying to reach the place where you are truly welcome. We are trying to reach God.
Do not forget to repeat today's idea very frequently. Do so with your eyes open when necessary, but closed when possible. And be sure to sit quietly and repeat the idea for today whenever you can, closing your eyes on the world, and realizing that you are inviting God's Voice to speak to you.
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The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volume series of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles," which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street
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Lesson 49. "God's Voice speaks to me all through the day."
*This is a lesson from which many students of A Course in Miracles have derived a great deal of mileage, unfortunately going the wrong way: to hell rather than Heaven. They often take this lesson to mean they hear the Holy Spirit tell them wonderful things -- <all the time>. If we follow the thinking in these lessons, however, it is obvious that we cannot <hear> God's Voice all through the day because of our mind's constant clutter. Jesus already has explained the clutter's presence: our resistance to losing our individual and special identity. This resistance is reflected in cherishing the ego's voice of specialness in order to prevent our hearing the Voice of the Holy Spirit, as we see in this pointed passage from the text:
"You are not special. If you think you are, and would defend your specialness against the truth of what you really are, how can you know the truth? What answer that the Holy Spirit gives can reach you, when it is your specialness to which you listen, and which asks and answers? Its tiny answer, soundless in the melody that pours from God to you eternally in loving praise of what you are, is all you listen to. And that vast song of honor and of love for what you are seems silent and unheard before its "mightiness". You strain your ears to hear its soundless voice, and yet the Call of God Himself is soundless to you." "You can defend your specialness, but never will you hear the Voice for God beside it." (T.24.II.4:1--5.1)
While it is therefore true that God's Voice speaks to us all through the day -- because the Holy Spirit is in our minds -- this does not mean that we <hear> it. Pay careful attention to the lesson's words: Jesus does not say we <hear> God's Voice all through the day, but that God's Voice <speaks> to us all through the day. We are not going to listen because, again, of our resistance to losing our identity, expressed through the investment in perpetuating our specialness. That is why it is so important to read this (and all passages in A Course in Miracles) very carefully.
Another important point that speaks to the heart of Course students becoming confused is that we are <always> listening to an inner voice. We cannot listen to anything else! Our bodies are the vehicles (or: channels) through which either the voices of the ego or the Holy Spirit "speak." Students often think that just because they hear an inner voice it must be the Holy Spirit. They unfortunately have totally forgotten about the <other> voice, which was specifically and intentionally made to drown out the still, small voice of the Holy Spirit, as we saw in the above passage. This is why Jesus emphasizes helping remove our investment in the ego, so that we could inevitably and naturally "hear" the Voice that speaks for truth. My wife Gloria has made a similar point when she would remind students that hearing an inner voice they believe belongs to an entity "on the other side" does not necessarily mean that entity is more advanced or ego-free than they. In the end, discernment is a prime prerequisite for any spiritual seeker, no less so for students of A Course in Miracles who need to discern the difference between the two voices.*
(1) "It is quite possible to listen to God's Voice all through the day without interrupting your regular activities in any way. The part of your mind [ the right mind ] in which truth abides is in constant communication with God, whether you are aware of it or not. It is the other part of your mind that functions in the world and obeys the world's laws. It is this part that is constantly distracted, disorganized and highly uncertain."
*This does not mean that if you are in your right mind you are not to obey the world's laws, as some students would unfortunately misconstrue this. Jesus is talking about obeying the world's laws because you <believe> they are real laws. To repeat, he is not saying, for example, that you should become an anarchist or libertarian. We read, for example, this instruction to teachers of God, his students who wish to grow beyond their ego selves:
"There is a way of living in the world that is not here, although it seems to be. You do not change appearance, though you smile more frequently. Your forehead is serene; your eyes are quiet." (W-pI.155.1:1-3).
In other words, we are not asked to look different or behave differently from anyone else. What <changes> is our attitude, or which inner teacher we have chosen to follow. When we listen to the Holy Spirit, the world becomes a classroom in which its symbols become the language through which we express His teachings. Lesson 184 discusses this in greater detail, so we will defer further discussion until then.
The issue is to obey the world's laws of illusion, not because we believe them to be true, but, again, because they are the <form> through which we express the mind's <content> of truth in a way that people can respond to without fear. An early passage in the text makes this essential point of meeting people where they are -- the illusion of <form> -- yet expressing the truth of the <content> of the correction, known as the miracle:
"The value of the Atonement does not lie in the manner in which it is expressed. In fact, if it is used truly, it will inevitably be expressed in whatever way is most helpful to the receiver. This means that a miracle, to attain its full efficacy, must be expressed in a language that the recipient can understand without fear. This does not necessarily mean that this is the highest level of communication of which he is capable. It does mean, however, that it is the highest level of communication of which he is capable now. The whole aim of the miracle is to raise the level of communication, not to lower it by increasing fear." (T-2.IV.5).
It is the content of love that should be our inspiration and guidance, not any preconceived notions about the <form> in which that love is to be expressed. This ensures our response will be kind and non-judgmental, accepting people where they are, not where we want them to be.*
(2:1-3) "The part that is listening to the Voice for God is calm, always at rest and wholly certain. It is really the only part there is. The other part is a wild illusion, frantic and distraught, but without reality of any kind."
*This brings to mind Plato's famous analogy from the Phaedrus of the charioteer and his two horses, and offers a poetic description of the right and wrong minds:
"Let it [ the soul ] be likened to the union of powers in a team of winged steeds and their winged charioteer ... With us men. ... it is a pair of steeds that the charioteer controls; moreover one of them is noble and good, and of good stock, while the other has the opposite character, and his stock is the opposite. Hence the task of our charioteer is difficult and troublesome. ... He that is on the more honorable side is upright and clean-limbed, carrying his neck high, with something of a hooked nose; in color he is white, with black eyes; a lover of glory, but with temperance and modesty; one that consorts with genuine renown, and needs no whip, being driven by the word of command alone. The other is crooked of frame, a massive jumble of a creature, with thick short neck, snub nose, black skin, and grey eyes; hot-blooded, consorting with wantonness and vainglory; shaggy of ear, deaf, and hard to control with whip and goad (Phaedrus 246a; 253d-e).
This was an analogy that influenced Freud's view of the psyche, whereby Plato's depiction formed the basis for Freud's understanding of the <Id>, or the unconscious. That, of course, is the nature of the ego thought system: a reservoir of hatred, murder, and viciousness.*
(2:4-6) "Try today not to listen to it. Try to identify with the part of your mind where stillness and peace reign forever. Try to hear God's Voice call to you lovingly, reminding you that your Creator has not forgotten His Son."
*Again, we can observe the implication of Jesus' urging: He asks us to recognize our call to the ego, and then choose against it in favor of our right minds, wherein dwell stillness and peace. We are encouraged to choose again, despite Jesus' awareness that our resistance is great. Yet it is early in our training, and there is still much to learn and practice.*
(3) "We will need at least four five-minute practice periods today, and more if possible. We will try actually to hear God's Voice reminding you of Him and of your Self. We will approach this happiest and holiest of thoughts with confidence, knowing that in doing so we are joining our will with the Will of God. He wants you to hear His Voice. He gave It to you to be heard."
*Another pep talk: God's Voice <is> within us, and patiently awaits our choice.*
(4) "Listen in deep silence. Be very still and open your mind. Go past all the raucous shrieks and sick imaginings that cover your real thoughts and obscure your eternal link with God. Sink deep into the peace that waits for you beyond the frantic, riotous thoughts and sights and sounds of this insane world. You do not live here. We are trying to reach your real home. We are trying to reach the place where you are truly welcome. We are trying to reach God."
*Jesus wants us to be <really> clear about our purpose. However, we cannot reach God without going past the "raucous shrieks and sick imaginings" of the ego; and we cannot go past those shrieks and fantasies without looking at them. Thus, opening our minds means the decision maker chooses the Holy Spirit's forgiveness instead of the ego's attack. We have already seen that in order to reach God we have to set aside our identification with the ego's voice of specialness, and it is the workbook's aim to help us reach God through this process.*
(5) "Do not forget to repeat today's idea very frequently. Do so with your eyes open when necessary, but closed when possible. And be sure to sit quietly and repeat the idea for today whenever you can, closing your eyes on the world, and realizing that you are inviting God's Voice to speak to you."
*Jesus returns to his emphasis on doing the lessons with eyes open or closed, although his current preference in our training is our eyes shut, maximizing the experience that it is our <thoughts> that need correction. As we have repeatedly seen in the recent lessons, we are urged to apply the idea for the day as often as we can remember: "very frequently," "whenever you can." In this way, we reinforce our learning that it is the Holy Spirit's wisdom and love we truly want -- found in our <minds,> not in the world.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 48. There is nothing to fear.
Lesson 48. There is nothing to fear.
The idea for today simply states a fact. It is not a fact to those who believe in illusions, but illusions are not facts. In truth there is nothing to fear. It is very easy to recognize this. But it is very difficult to recognize it for those who want illusions to be true.
Today's practice periods will be very short, very simple and very frequent. Merely repeat the idea as often as possible. You can use it with your eyes open at any time and in any situation. It is strongly recommended, however, that you take a minute or so whenever possible to close your eyes and repeat the idea slowly to yourself several times. It is particularly important that you use the idea immediately, should anything disturb your peace of mind.
The presence of fear is a sure sign that you are trusting in your own strength. The awareness that there is nothing to fear shows that somewhere in your mind, though not necessarily in a place you recognize as yet, you have remembered God, and let His strength take the place of your weakness. The instant you are willing to do this there is indeed nothing to fear.
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The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volume series of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles," which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street
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Lesson 48. "There is nothing to fear."
*Lesson 48 is nice, short, and sweet: "There is nothing to fear." If God is the strength in which we trust, nothing in this world could ever make us afraid. The basis of fear is the principle that guilt demands punishment. If I am afraid, it is because I first see myself as guilty and weak. If I choose Jesus as the source of my strength, I am not weak or separated, and therefore not guilty. If I am not guilty, there can be no projected belief that I will be punished. Without such belief, there can be no fear. Again, it is the same process, all the time. If I want to live without fear, I must live without guilt. If I want to live without guilt, I need Jesus to help me look at it.*
(1) "The idea for today simply states a fact. It is not a fact to those who believe in illusions, but illusions are not facts. In truth there is nothing to fear. It is very easy to recognize this. But it is very difficult to recognize it for those who want illusions to be true."
*As the text says, the only fact is God: "God is not symbolic; He is Fact" (T-3.1.8:2). The "fact" -- "There is nothing to fear" -- is really a reflection of God's reality. The state of fear's absence corrects the ego's fundamental thought that fear is punishment for our sin. It is this illusory fear you have to look at. You want illusions to be true because <you> are an illusion, and you want <you> -- your individual identity -- to be true. What makes it difficult to have an anxiety-free day is your not wanting today's lesson to be true. If it were, <you> are not true.*
(2) "Today's practice periods will be very short, very simple and very frequent. Merely repeat the idea as often as possible. You can use it with your eyes open at any time and in any situation. It is strongly recommended, however, that you take a minute or so whenever possible to close your eyes and repeat the idea slowly to yourself several times. It is particularly important that you use the idea immediately, should anything disturb your peace of mind."
*We can see over and over again, in just about every lesson, that Jesus is telling us to practice this thought in our everyday lives, and to bring him our concerns. In this day's exercise he is asking us to apply the thought throughout the day, <as often as possible>. Moreover, he once again urges us -- "It is particularly important" -- to think of the idea whenever we are disturbed; in other words, to bring the darkness of our upset to the light of his thought of love, a thought that by its presence dispels the darkness of fear.*
(3) "The presence of fear is a sure sign that you are trusting in your own strength. The awareness that there is nothing to fear shows that somewhere in your mind, though not necessarily in a place you recognize as yet, you have remembered God, and let His strength take the place of your weakness. The instant you are willing to do this there is indeed nothing to fear."
*When we find ourselves becoming fearful in any of the forms that fear takes -- and sometimes it may not even be fear; it could be anger, depression, or sadness -- it is because we chose the ego once again; in effect, telling Jesus or the Holy Spirit to get lost. The wrong-minded decision is the problem, and accepting the Correction is the solution. This simplicity of A Course in Miracles -- one problem, one solution (W-pI.79-80) --is what makes it such a powerful and effective spiritual tool.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 47. God is the strength in which I trust.
Lesson 47. God is the strength in which I trust.If you are trusting in your own strength, you have every reason to beapprehensive, anxious and fearful. What can you predict or control? What isthere in you that can be counted on? What would give you the ability to be awareof all the facets of any problem, and to resolve them in such a way that onlygood can come of it? What is there in you that gives you the recognition of theright solution, and the guarantee that it will be accomplished?Of yourself you can do none of these things. To believe that you can is to putyour trust where trust is unwarranted, and to justify fear, anxiety, depression,anger and sorrow. Who can put his faith in weakness and feel safe? Yet who canput his faith in strength and feel weak?God is your safety in every circumstance. His Voice speaks for Him in allsituations and in every aspect of all situations, telling you exactly what to doto call upon His strength and His protection. There are no exceptions becauseGod has no exceptions. And the Voice which speaks for Him thinks as He does.Today we will try to reach past your own weakness to the Source of realstrength. Four five-minute practice periods are necessary today, and longer andmore frequent ones are urged. Close your eyes and begin, as usual, by repeatingthe idea for the day. Then spend a minute or two in searching for situations inyour life which you have invested with fear, dismissing each one by tellingyourself:God is the strength in which I trust.< Now try to slip past all concerns related to your own sense of inadequacy. It isobvious that any situation that causes you concern is associated with feelingsof inadequacy, for otherwise you would believe that you could deal with thesituation successfully. It is not by trusting yourself that you will gainconfidence. But the strength of God in you is successful in all things.The recognition of your own frailty is a necessary step in the correction ofyour errors, but it is hardly a sufficient one in giving you the confidencewhich you need, and to which you are entitled. You must also gain an awarenessthat confidence in your real strength is fully justified in every respect and inall circumstances.In the latter phase of the practice period, try to reach down into your mind toa place of real safety. You will recognize that you have reached it if you feela sense of deep peace, however briefly. Let go all the trivial things that churnand bubble on the surface of your mind, and reach down and below them to theKingdom of Heaven. There is a place in you where there is perfect peace. Thereis a place in you where nothing is impossible. There is a place in you where thestrength of God abides.During the day, repeat the idea often. Use it as your answer to any disturbance.Remember that peace is your right, because you are giving your trust to thestrength of God.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volumeseries of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles,"which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Lesson 47. "God is the strength in which I trust."*This introduces another important teaching that is central in the text: thecontrast between our weakness and the strength of Christ in us, or between theego's illusory power and the Holy Spirit's true power. As we read near thetext's end:"You always choose between your weakness and the strength of Christ in you.And what you choose is what you think is real. Simply by never using weakness todirect your actions, you have given it no power. And the light of Christ in youis given charge of everything you do. For you have brought your weakness untoHim, and He has given you His strength instead." (T.31.VIII.2.3-7)This lesson subtly introduces the theme of special relationships, which entailplacing trust in someone or something outside us to alleviate our anxiety, orsimply to make us feel good. That means we are substituting some object,substance, or relationship for the Love of God, giving power (or strength) tothese special objects to bring us pleasure or alleviate pain. This choice forspecialness is the substitution of weakness for strength.*(1:1) "If you are trusting in your own strength, you have every reason to beapprehensive, anxious and fearful."*Trusting in our own strength means that we have made the ego thought systemreal. Having done so, we will feel guilty. Guilt will be projected and we willinevitably fear the punishment we believe is forthcoming as a natural expression(really an <un>natural expression) of the guilt we feel in our minds. You cansee, incidentally, how often in these lessons the dynamic or projection isdiscussed.*(1:2) "What can you predict or control?"*Everyone in this world has control issues. We always try to predict what mighthappen so we can be in control, thinking ahead: If I do such and such, what willthe outcome be? This is mandatory if we are to survive as an ego. We have to bein control. If not, Jesus is, which means our special identity is gone. Our needto exclude him finds its expression in the need to control what is going onaround us, like the Dutch boy who kept his finger in the dike to prevent acatastrophic flood that would destroy his village. That is our fear: if ourfinger slips, the waters of God's Love would rush through our defensivestructure and flood our egos into non-existence. Thus we keep our fingers ofspecialness and hate firmly planted in the walls of our minds, ensuring that noright-minded water of forgiveness ever gets through and washes away our self.*(1:3) "What is there in you that can be counted on?"*We figure a hell of a lot! We are sure that if we do not save ourselves, we aredoomed. I mentioned earlier that we have constructed our lives in such a waythat were convinced from the outset that no one could be trusted; no one isdependable, and therefore the only one who could save us is ourselves. Again, weare absolutely certain we are right. However, we are not aware of the underlyingthought that supports this defense: I have written my life's script so that itwill prove I am all alone in the universe, and therefore I had better take careof me because no one else will! Recall that all-important line from the text:"The secret of salvation is but this: That you are doing this untoyourself." (T-27.VIII.10:1).We <want> to be alone, since that justifies our living all alone -- trusting noone -- and thus we reinforce our origin of being all alone, totally apart fromour Creator and Source.*(1:4) "What would give you the ability to be aware of all the facets of anyproblem, and to resolve them in such a way that only good can come of it?"*This idea is expressed more fully in the text and manual: the Holy Spirit, notourselves, is the only One Who can judge correctly. We read, for example:"It is necessary for the teacher of God to realize, not that he should notjudge, but that he cannot ... The aim of our curriculum, unlike the goal of theworld's learning, is the recognition that judgment in the usual sense isimpossible... In order to judge anything rightly, one would have to be fullyaware of an inconceivably wide range of things; past, present and to come. Onewould have to recognize in advance all the effects of his judgments on everyoneand everything involved in them in any way. And one would have to be certainthere is no distortion in his perception, so that his judgment would be whollyfair to everyone on whom it rests now and in the future. Who is in a position todo this? Who except in grandiose fantasies would claim this for himself? ...Make then but one more judgment. It is this: There is Someone with you Whosejudgment is perfect. He does know all the facts; past, present and to come. Hedoes know all the effects of His judgment on everyone and everything involved inany way. And He is wholly fair to everyone, for there is no distortion in Hisperception." (M-10.2:1;3:1,3-7;4:6-10).It is simply our arrogance as egos that lead us to believe we could possiblyunderstand the true nature of any problem, not to mention its solution. Thisarrogance has ensured throughout the millennia that no problem -- individual orcollective -- has ever truly been resolved. Thus we go from day to day, year toyear, century to century, reliving the same painful experiences over and overagain, with no respite from the terror of being wrong and being separated:"Each day, and every minute in each day, and every instant that each minuteholds, you but relive the single instant when the time of terror took the placeof love." (T-26.V.13:1).*(1:5) "What is there in you that gives you the recognition of the rightsolution, and the guarantee that it will be accomplished?"*It certainly is not us, our wrong-minded self, but our right-minded self whenwe choose to identify with Jesus or the Holy Spirit.*(2) "Of yourself you can do none of these things. To believe that you can is toput your trust where trust is unwarranted, and to justify fear, anxiety,depression, anger and sorrow. Who can put his faith in weakness and feel safe?Yet who can put his faith in strength and feel weak?"*This is what everyone's life is all about. We are frightened, anxious,depressed, angry, and sad. If not, we are not paying attention to our life'ssituation, which proves we are right in believing the world is hostile,threatening, and lonely place, replete with those we cannot trust. We feeljustified in thinking this is why we feel as terrible as we do, unaware that thesource of these thoughts and feelings is our decision to trust the teacher ofweakness, rather than the One of strength.*(3) "God is your safety in every circumstance. His Voice speaks for Him in allsituations and in every aspect of all situations, telling you exactly what to doto call upon His strength and His protection. There are no exceptions becauseGod has no exceptions. And the Voice which speaks for Him thinks as He does."*Passages like these, and there are many of them in the workbook, make it soundas if the Holy Spirit is with you to tell you exactly what to do. In one sensethis is true, but the focus is never really on what you do, because that isunimportant. Rather, Jesus is emphasizing how you <think> about what you do.This is where the Holy Spirit enters the picture. If you would join with HisLove -- meaning you have let go of the barriers that would keep you separatefrom Him -- everything you do and say will come from love. That is what it meansto be guided by the Holy Spirit. Not that he tells you specifically what to door not to do. When your mind is aligned with His, everything coming from thatmind must be His since our bodies are nothing more than a projection orextension of what is in our minds. When these are joined with the Holy Spirit,again, everything we do will be an expression of love. Our experience might bethat Jesus told us this or the Holy Spirit told us that. In reality, we havesimply joined with abstract love in our minds, and that love becomes the sourceof our specific thoughts and behavior."The Song of Prayer" specifically addresses the issue of moving beyond our needfor specifics, our going so far as to ask God or the Holy Spirit for thefulfillment of our special requests. Indeed, one of the major emphases of thisall-important writing is to have students of A Course in Miracles ask <only> forhelp in removing the obstacles to hearing the non-specific Voice of love. Onceour egos are out of the way, we automatically <know> what to do or say. ThusJesus teaches in the pamphlet's opening pages:"The secret of true prayer is to forget the things you think you need. Toask for the specific is much the same as to look on sin and then forgive it.Also in the same way, in prayer you overlook your specific needs as you seethem, and let them go into God's Hands. There they become your gifts to Him, forthey tell Him that you would have no gods before Him; no Love but His. Whatcould His answer be but your remembrance of Him? Can this be traded for a bit oftrifling advice about a problem of an instant's duration? God answers only foreternity. But still all little answers are contained in this." (S-1.I.4.)This important teaching was underscored in a personal message to Helen,correcting her tendency to ask for <specific> words to say to a person introuble. Here is what Jesus told his scribe:"Remember you need nothing, but you have an endless store of loving gifts togive. But teach this lesson only to yourself. Your brother will not learn iffrom your words or from the judgments you have laid on him. You need not evenspeak a word to him. You cannot ask, "What shall I say to him?" and hear God'sanswer. Rather ask instead, "Help me to see this brother through the eyes oftruth and not of judgment," and the help of God and all His angels willrespond." (Absence from Felicity: The story of Helen Schucman and Her Scribingof A Course in Miracles, p.381).We shall return again and again to this vital point, for it points the waybeyond the ego's <spiritual specialness>, one of its greatest defenses againstthe spiritual truths found in A Course in Miracles and many otherspiritualities.*(4:1) "Today we will try to reach past your own weakness to the Source of realstrength."*This is reminiscent of Lesson 44, where Jesus helped us sink down into ourminds, passing by the ego's illusions to reach the Holy Spirit's truth.*(4:2-5) "Four five-minute practice periods are necessary today, and longer andmore frequent ones are urged. Close your eyes and begin, as usual, by repeatingthe idea for the day. Then spend a minute or two in searching for situations inyour life which you have invested with fear, dismissing each one by tellingyourself:"God is the strength in which I trust."*Again, this is the process. The way to reach your real strength is to move pastyour weakness by becoming aware of your ego's thoughts. That is why there issuch heavy emphasis on mind searching in these lessons. You cannot move past thedarkness until you first realize there <is> darkness. You must look at yourinvestment in having your ego be alive and well, and then bring that investmentin weakness to the strength of God within.*(5) "Now try to slip past all concerns related to your own sense of inadequacy.It is obvious that any situation that causes you concern is associated withfeelings of inadequacy, for otherwise you would believe that you could deal withthe situation successfully. It is not by trusting yourself that you will gainconfidence. But the strength of God in you is successful in all things."*Still again, we are asked by Jesus to turn away from the weakness andinadequacy of the ego's thought system to the strength of God he holds out forus. That is why he exhorts us in the text:"Resign now as your own teacher.... for you were badly taught."(T-12.V.8:3;T-28.1.7:1).*(6) "The recognition of your own frailty is a necessary step in the correctionof your errors, but it is hardly a sufficient one in giving you the confidencewhich you need, and to which you are entitled. You must also gain an awarenessthat confidence in your real strength is fully justified in every respect and inall circumstances."*The structure here is typical of most of the sections in the text: first youget the ego's side; then the Holy Spirit's answer. Throughout A Course inMiracles Jesus tells us in no uncertain terms how important it is that we lookat our ego. Here he is saying we must look at our weakness, which comes fromidentifying with the ego. However, Jesus also teaches there is a presence oflove, strength, and truth inside us, which is the basis of our looking. Webecome aware that the way we identify with truth and find real happiness andpeace is by looking at our darkness with the expression of that truth -- Jesusor the Holy Spirit -- beside us. Recall that wonderful passage from the text,quoted here more fully than previously:"No one can escape from illusions unless he looks at them, for not lookingis the way they are protected. There is no need to shrink from illusions, forthey cannot be dangerous. We are ready to look more closely at the ego's thoughtsystem because together we have the lamp that will dispel it, and since yourealize you do not want it, you must be ready. Let us be very calm in doingthis, for we are merely looking honestly for truth. The "dynamics" of the egowill be our lesson for a while, for we must look first at this to see beyond it,since you have made it real. We will undo this error quietly together, and thenlook beyond it to truth.""What is healing but the removal of all that stands in the way ofknowledge? And how else can one dispel illusions except by looking at themdirectly, without protecting them? Be not afraid, therefore, for what you willbe looking at is the source of fear, and you are beginning to learn that fear isnot real.... Do not be afraid ... to look upon fear, for it cannot be seen.Clarity undoes confusion by definition, and to look upon darkness through lightmust dispel it." (T-11.V.1:1--2:3,8-9).Thus we are given both sides of the split mind: the truth within, as well asinstruction for the journey to that truth, which entails looking at the ego'sweakness.One more point: Looking at the ego is not enough if you do not move beyond it tothe strength of Christ. Half the lesson is not the whole. This thought issimilar to the passage in the text on healing being of the <mind>, not the<body>; the removal of physical symptoms is not the issue:"Yet half the lesson will not teach the whole. The miracle is useless if youlearn but that the body can be healed, for this is not the lesson it was sent toteach. The lesson is the mind was sick that thought the body could be sick;projecting out its guilt caused nothing, and had no effects." (T-28.II.11:5-7).Thus, "letting go of the ego" means nothing. Moreover, it is not <really>letting go if one does not identify at the same time with the gentle,defenseless, and loving strength of Christ, inherent in which is the remembranceof the Oneness of God's Son.*(7) "In the latter phase of the practice period, try to reach down into yourmind to a place of real safety. You will recognize that you have reached it ifyou feel a sense of deep peace, however briefly. Let go all the trivial thingsthat churn and bubble on the surface of your mind, and reach down and below themto the Kingdom of Heaven. There is a place in you where there is perfect peace.There is a place in you where nothing is impossible. There is a place in youwhere the strength of God abides."*Again, we let go of "all the trivial things that churn and bubble" in our minds-- our thoughts of specialness -- by bringing them to Jesus or the Holy Spirit;no longer holding on to them for safety and defense. In other words, we nolonger want the purpose they serve: preserving and protecting our separatedself.*(8) "During the day, repeat the idea often. Use it as your answer to anydisturbance. Remember that peace is your right, because you are giving yourtrust to the strength of God."*And so we return to this central theme of the early lessons: the need topractice continually by bringing our disturbances to Jesus' specific answer,trusting in its strength rather than the weakness of the ego's shabby substitutefor God.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 46. God is the Love in which I forgive.
Lesson 46. God is the Love in which I forgive.God does not forgive because He has never condemned. And there must becondemnation before forgiveness is necessary. Forgiveness is the great need ofthis world, but that is because it is a world of illusions. Those who forgiveare thus releasing themselves from illusions, while those who withholdforgiveness are binding themselves to them. As you condemn only yourself, so doyou forgive only yourself.Yet although God does not forgive, His Love is nevertheless the basis offorgiveness. Fear condemns and love forgives. Forgiveness thus undoes what fearhas produced, returning the mind to the awareness of God. For this reason,forgiveness can truly be called salvation. It is the means by which illusionsdisappear.Today's exercises require at least three full five-minute practice periods, andas many shorter ones as possible. Begin the longer practice periods by repeatingtoday's idea to yourself, as usual. Close your eyes as you do so, and spend aminute or two in searching your mind for those whom you have not forgiven. Itdoes not matter "how much" you have not forgiven them. You have forgiven thementirely or not at all.If you are doing the exercises well you should have no difficulty in finding anumber of people you have not forgiven. It is a safe rule that anyone you do notlike is a suitable subject. Mention each one by name, and say:God is the Love in which I forgive you, [name].< The purpose of the first phase of today's practice periods is to put you in aposition to forgive yourself. After you have applied the idea to all those whohave come to mind, tell yourself:God is the Love in which I forgive myself.< Then devote the remainder of the practice period to adding related ideas suchas:God is the Love with which I love myself. God is the Love in which I am blessed.<The form of the application may vary considerably, but the central idea shouldnot be lost sight of. You might say, for example:I cannot be guilty because I am a Son of God. I have already been forgiven.No fear is possible in a mind beloved of God.There is no need to attack because love has forgiven me.<The practice period should end, however, with a repetition of today's idea asoriginally stated.The shorter practice periods may consist either of a repetition of the idea fortoday in the original or in a related form, as you prefer. Be sure, however, tomake more specific applications if they are needed. They will be needed at anytime during the day when you become aware of any kind of negative reaction toanyone, present or not. In that event, tell him silently:God is the Love in which I forgive you.< ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volumeseries of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles,"which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Lesson 46. "God is the Love in which I forgive."*This lesson is the first time we find a serious discussion of forgiveness.*(1:1-3) "God does not forgive because He has never condemned. And there must becondemnation before forgiveness is necessary. Forgiveness is the great need ofthis world, but that is because it is a world of illusions."*As we shall see later, Jesus "likes" this first sentence so much that herepeats it verbatim in the review lesson. Forgiveness has no place in Heaven,but only in the dream that began with the condemnation thought of sin and willend with sin's undoing through forgiveness, love's reflection. "There must becondemnation before forgiveness is necessary," which makes forgiveness anillusion since it corrects what never happened. Since God does not (because He<cannot>) recognize the illusion, He cannot correct it. There is no need for itin Heaven.*(1:4-5) "Those who forgive are thus releasing themselves from illusions, whilethose who withhold forgiveness are binding themselves to them. As you condemnonly yourself, so do you forgive only yourself."*Jesus is making it very clear that forgiveness has nothing to do with anyone wethink is outside us. It occurs in the context of a relationship we have madereal, but must recognize that what we are forgiving is a projection of the guiltwe do not want, not to mention the responsibility for our distressing situation.Lesson 196 - 198, which we shall discuss much later in this series, elaborate onthis essential point, as their titles suggest:"It can be but myself I crucify.""It can be but my gratitude I earn.""Only my condemnation injures me." *(2:1) "Yet although God does not forgive, His Love is nevertheless the basis offorgiveness."*We are reminded here that forgiveness is a real and right-minded thought thatreflects the real thought of love in our Christ Mind.*(2:2-3) "Fear condemns and love forgives. Forgiveness thus undoes what fear hasproduced, returning the mind to the awareness of God."*The right mind, or forgiveness, undoes the wrong mind of fear and hate. Whenthe right mind undoes the wrong mind, both disappear and all that remains is theawareness of God. Once again, we need to recall that A Course in Miracles doesnot teach the truth, but the <undoing> of the illusory barriers to truth; aprocess that allows the memory of God to dawn upon our sleeping minds, awakeningus at last from the ego's nightmare world of guilt and fear.*(2:4-5) "For this reason, forgiveness can truly be called salvation. It is themeans by which illusions disappear."*Salvation thus has a different meaning in A Course in Miracles. Rather thanbeing the plan of God to save us from our very real sinfulness, it now becomesthe Holy Spirit's correction of forgiveness for our <belief> in sinfulness. Itis the simple change of mind from the illusion of separation to the truth ofAtonement.*(3) "Today's exercises require at least three full five-minute practice periods,and as many shorter ones as possible. Begin the longer practice periods byrepeating today's idea to yourself, as usual. Close your eyes as you do so, andspend a minute or two in searching your mind for those whom you have notforgiven. It does not matter "how much" you have not forgiven them. You haveforgiven them entirely or not at all."*This is an expression within the dream of the <all or none> idea, what weearlier described as Level One. In our experience we do not forgive totally; weforgive a little bit here and a little bit there; we forgive this person but notanother. This passage is telling us, however, that if that is our practice offorgiveness, we are not finished yet. Forgiveness has to be total, otherwise itis not real. This <all or none> idea finds a similar expression in the followingstatement about A Course in Miracles itself: "This course will be believedentirely or not at all" (T-22.II.7:4).*(4) "If you are doing the exercises well you should have no difficulty infinding a number of people you have not forgiven. It is a safe rule that anyoneyou do not like is a suitable subject. Mention each one by name, and say:God is the Love in which I forgive you, [name]."*This is the first of several exercises in which Jesus asks us to identify thosepeople we have chosen not to forgive. He assures us we shall have no trouble inidentifying these special hate objects. Later on we shall be gently instructedto expand this category to include those we believe we love. An importantteaching of the text is that special love and special hate are the same, beingbut different <forms> of the same basic <content> of separation. Thus we need toforgive <everyone>, since everyone -- friend or foe -- is perceived to beseparate from us.*(5:1) "The purpose of the first phase of today's practice periods is to put youin a position to forgive yourself."*"Forgiving yourself" is what this course is all about. I think I am forgivingsomeone outside of me, but I am really forgiving myself. Again, needless to say,this thought is the central theme of A Course in Miracles. It reflects thedynamic of projection, wherein we seek to place in others the guilt we cannotaccept within ourselves. Once having projected the guilt, we have no furtherawareness of its ongoing presence in our minds, which for all intents andpurposes have been forgotten beneath the <double shield of oblivion>(W-pI.136.6:2) -- the belief in guilt in ourselves (mind) and in others (body).Only by recognizing our unforgiveness of another can we be led to theunforgiveness of ourselves, and beyond that to the Atonement that links us backto Love we never truly left.The next few lines present various statements as suggestive of our practice forthe day. These, incidentally, should not be taken as <affirmations> as is thepractice of many New Age students. By this I mean that statements such as theseshould <not> be used to cover the ego's thought system of negativity and hate,but rather understood as symbols of the right-minded presence of correction, <towhich> we bring the ego's thoughts:*(5:2--6:7) "After you have applied the idea to all those who have come to mind,tell yourself:God is the Love in which I forgive myself.Then devote the remainder of the practice period to adding related ideas suchas:God is the Love with which I love myself.God is the Love in which I am blessed.The form of the application may vary considerably, but the central idea shouldnot be lost sight of. You might say, for example:I cannot be guilty because I am a Son of God.I have already been forgiven.No fear is possible in a mind beloved of God.There is no need to attack because love has forgiven me.The practice period should end, however, with a repetition of today's idea asoriginally stated."*If we do these exercises properly, we will become increasingly able to note ourego thoughts of separation and specialness and bring them quickly to the lovethat embraces the Sonship as one, at the same time it undoes our thoughts ofguilt, fear, and attack. This is reiterated in the lesson's final paragraph,where Jesus returns to his central emphasis of using the idea for the day, aswell as its variations, whenever we are tempted to choose the ego instead of theHoly Spirit:*(7) "The shorter practice periods may consist either of a repetition of the ideafor today in the original or in a related form, as you prefer. Be sure, however,to make more specific applications if they are needed. They will be needed atany time during the day when you become aware of any kind of negative reactionto anyone, present or not. In that event, tell him silently:God is the Love in which I forgive you."*Jesus is asking us, once again, to be aware of any kind of negative reaction,major or minor, and then to bring these reactions <to> the suggested thoughts ofthe day. In this way his light can shine away the darkness in which we hadsought to hide. This process requires great vigilance and diligence as we seekcontinually to <practice> the holy instant (T-15.IV). I am reminded of thefamous joke: A lost New Yorker asks someone how to get to Carnegie Hall, thelegendary concert auditorium. The response is: <Practice, practice, practice>!*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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Lesson 45. God is the Mind with which I think.
Lesson 45. God is the Mind with which I think.Today's idea holds the key to what your real thoughts are. They are nothing thatyou think you think, just as nothing that you think you see is related to visionin any way. There is no relationship between what is real and what you think isreal. Nothing that you think are your real thoughts resembles your real thoughtsin any respect. Nothing that you think you see bears any resemblance to whatvision will show you.You think with the Mind of God. Therefore you share your thoughts with Him, asHe shares His with you. They are the same thoughts, because they are thought bythe same Mind. To share is to make alike, or to make one. Nor do the thoughtsyou think with the Mind of God leave your mind, because thoughts do not leavetheir source. Therefore, your thoughts are in the Mind of God, as you are. Theyare in your mind as well, where He is. As you are part of His Mind, so are yourthoughts part of His Mind.Where, then, are your real thoughts? Today we will attempt to reach them. Wewill have to look for them in your mind, because that is where they are. Theymust still be there, because they cannot have left their source. What is thoughtby the Mind of God is eternal, being part of creation.Our three five-minute practice periods for today will take the same general formthat we used in applying yesterday's idea. We will attempt to leave the unrealand seek for the real. We will deny the world in favor of truth. We will not letthe thoughts of the world hold us back. We will not let the beliefs of the worldtell us that what God would have us do is impossible. Instead, we will try torecognize that only what God would have us do is possible.We will also try to understand that only what God would have us do is what wewant to do. And we will also try to remember that we cannot fail in doing whatHe would have us do. There is every reason to feel confident that we willsucceed today. It is the Will of God.Begin the exercises for today by repeating the idea to yourself, closing youreyes as you do so. Then spend a fairly short period in thinking a few relevantthoughts of your own, keeping the idea in mind. After you have added some fouror five thoughts of your own to the idea, repeat it again and tell yourselfgently:My real thoughts are in my mind. I would like to find them.< Then try to go past all the unreal thoughts that cover the truth in your mind,and reach to the eternal.Under all the senseless thoughts and mad ideas with which you have cluttered upyour mind are the thoughts that you thought with God in the beginning. They arethere in your mind now, completely unchanged. They will always be in your mind,exactly as they always were. Everything you have thought since then will change,but the Foundation on which it rests is wholly changeless.It is this Foundation toward which the exercises for today are directed. Here isyour mind joined with the Mind of God. Here are your thoughts one with His. Forthis kind of practice only one thing is necessary; approach it as you would analtar dedicated in Heaven to God the Father and to God the Son. For such is theplace you are trying to reach. You will probably be unable as yet to realize howhigh you are trying to go. Yet even with the little understanding you havealready gained, you should be able to remind yourself that this is no idle game,but an exercise in holiness and an attempt to reach the Kingdom of Heaven.In the shorter exercise periods for today, try to remember how important it isto you to understand the holiness of the mind that thinks with God. Take aminute or two, as you repeat the idea throughout the day, to appreciate yourmind's holiness. Stand aside, however briefly, from all thoughts that areunworthy of Him whose host you are. And thank Him for the Thoughts He isthinking with you.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~The commentary on this lesson (below) is from Kenneth Wapnick's eight volumeseries of books, called: "Journey Through the Workbook of A Course in Miracles,"which can be purchased at the following site:??~ M. Street~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Lesson 45. "God is the Mind with which I think."(1:1) "Today's idea holds the key to what your real thoughts are."*That is because our real thoughts are with God. Note in the followingdiscussion that Jesus identifies our real thoughts with the Christ Mind.*(1:2) "They are nothing that you think you think, just as nothing that you thinkyou see is related to vision in any way."*Jesus is always giving us a little jibe, telling us that we but think we think,we but think we see. In fact, we are not thinking or seeing at all.*(1:3) "There is no relationship between what is real and what you think isreal."*Other words could be substituted for these. We could say, for example, there isno relationship between what God is and what the world thinks God is -- so muchfor theologies of the world! Returning to the workbook lesson, we see a LevelOne statement -- there is absolutely nothing, no middle ground, between thetruth and illusion. Any time we think we understand something, suchunderstanding cannot be real because we are involved only with our own thoughts,and <our> thoughts are never real. The purpose of A Course in Miracles is not tolead us to an <understanding> of God, but to an experience of His Love, forwhich we must escape the darkness of our guilt and hatred. The followingstatement from the Introduction to the clarification of terms expresses thisgoal of experience rather than understanding:"A universal theology is impossible, but a universal experience is not onlypossible but necessary. It is this experience toward which the course isdirected. Here alone consistency becomes possible because here alone uncertaintyends." (C-in.2:5-7).We can also recall this wonderful line from the text:"You are still convinced that your understanding is a powerful contributionto the truth, and makes it what it is. Yet we have emphasized that you needunderstand nothing." (T-18.IV.7:5-6).*(1:4 -- 2:5) "Nothing that you think are your real thoughts resemble your realthoughts in any respect. Nothing that you think you see bears any resemblance towhat vision will show you.""You think with the Mind of God. Therefore you share your thoughts with Him,as He shares His with you. They are the same thoughts, because they are thoughtby the same Mind. To share is to make alike, or to make one. Nor do the thoughtsyou think with the Mind of God leave your mind, because thoughts do not leavetheir source."*The extremely important principle <ideas leave not their source> makes itsfirst appearance here in the workbook, although we have already discussed itmany times. Jesus mentions it again later in the lessons, and it is at thecenter of his teaching throughout the three books. To state it differently: Thisprinciple is the Atonement, which reflects the unchanging truth we are an ideaor thought in the Mind of God, and have never left our Source. This means theseparation never happened. We are thus saying that all thoughts, if they arereal, have never left their Source. Even though we believe we have left God andare asleep in the dream, we can still have reflections of these thoughts. Onceagain, in these passages Jesus is not making a distinction between real thoughtsand the reflection of real thoughts.*(2:6-8) "Therefore, your thoughts are in the Mind of God, as you are. They arein your mind as well, where He is. As you are part of His Mind, so are yourthoughts part of His Mind."*All is one, since <ideas leave not their source>. The mind we think we are isunreal, in contrast to the Mind of Christ, Jesus' referent here.This is yet another example of how the language of the workbook is not, strictlyspeaking, theologically correct. Since forgiveness is impossible in God, as weshall see in just a moment, our forgiveness thoughts, in reality, have nothingto do with God either. More properly, forgiveness is the <reflection> of God'sThought. Read this material, therefore, as you would a wonderful poem, not atechnical treatise to be analytically dissected.*(3) "Where, then, are your real thoughts? Today we will attempt to reach them.We will have to look for them in your mind, because that is where they are. Theymust still be there, because they cannot have left their source. What is thoughtby the Mind of God is eternal, being part of creation."*The function of the Holy Spirit is to hold those thoughts in our minds, which,despite our mind wandering, remain in their source. Projection is a powerful andpersuasive defense, yet it cannot defy the basic principle: <ideas leave nottheir source.> It is our learning this salvific fact that the ego continuallytries to prevent.*(4:1-2) "Our three five-minute practice periods for today will take the samegeneral form that we used in applying yesterday's idea. We will attempt to leavethe unreal and seek for the real."*Sentence 2 seems to say the exact opposite of the passage in Chapter 16 that Iquoted earlier -- "Your task is not to seek for love, but merely to seek andfind all the barriers that you have built against it" (T-16.IV.6:1) -- for herethe words say you should seek for truth. This is yet another indication of hisinconsistent use of words. However, it is equally true that the principles heteaches never vary and are consistent, as the remainder of the paragraph makesclear. In other words, we find the truth (the real) by first finding theillusion (the unreal) and then leaving it and deciding against it. Incidentally,4:2 is taken from the famous Hindu statement about leaving the unreal for thereal. Here now is the rest of the paragraph:*(4:3-6) "We will deny the world in favor of truth. We will not let the thoughtsof the world hold us back. We will not let the beliefs of the world tell us thatwhat God would have us do is impossible. Instead, we will try to recognize thatonly what God would have us do is possible."*The way we seek for truth and what is real is by denying the unreal, which wedeny by looking at our unreal thoughts with Jesus. Again, when we look with himat our judgments, hatred, and guilt they will disappear, leaving only the truth.Indeed, the very process of <looking> is what heals. As I discussed in thePrelude, it is not looking at our guilt that preserves its illusory existence.That is the function of the world and body: to keep us from looking within.Therefore, looking without guilt or judgment at our decision to be guilty undoesit, transferring its substance from a solid wall of granite -- <heavy, opaque,and impenetrable> -- to a <fragile veil> that has no power to keep away thelight (T-18.IX.5:2-4). We shall return to this important theme repeatedly beforeour journey through the workbook is completed.*(5) "We will also try to understand that only what God would have us do is whatwe want to do. And we will also try to remember that we cannot fail in doingwhat He would have us do. There is every reason to feel confident that we willsucceed today. It is the Will of God."*Jesus is reminding us here of our purpose in doing the workbook and studyinghis course: what we really want to do is be an expression of God's Will, eventhough strictly speaking God does not have us do anything. Once again, andhardly for the last time, we see Jesus appealing to our right-minded motivation:We want to learn his lessons because they will make us feel better.*(6) "Begin the exercises for today by repeating the idea to yourself, closingyour eyes as you do so. Then spend a fairly short period in thinking a fewrelevant thoughts of your own, keeping the idea in mind. After you have addedsome four or five thoughts of your own to the idea, repeat it again and tellyourself gently:My real thoughts are in my mind. I would like to find them.Then try to go past all the unreal thoughts that cover the truth in your mind,and reach to the eternal."*The way you go to the eternal is through your unreal thoughts, which you bringto the real ones of the Holy Spirit. Our chart (in Lesson 43) illustrates this.You find God by going through the ego system, which begins with your experienceof yourself as a body. You next realize your body is a projection of the mind'sunreal thoughts of separation, specialness, and guilt, which you bring to thereal thoughts of the Holy Spirit. And then they are gone, leaving only thetruth. This process of going through the <unreal> to the <real> -- the essenceof forgiveness -- is powerfully described in the following passage from the textthat tells of our journey through the "circle of fear" to God, with the HolySpirit as our companion and guide:"Yet God can bring you there [beyond all fear], if you are willing to followthe Holy Spirit through seeming terror, trusting Him not to abandon you andleave you there. For it is not His purpose to frighten you, but only yours. Youare severely tempted to abandon Him at the outside ring of fear, but He wouldlead you safely through and far beyond." (T-18.IX.3:7-9).*(7:1) "Under all the senseless thoughts and mad ideas with which you havecluttered up your mind are the thoughts that you thought with God in thebeginning."*These are not thoughts we normally think of as thoughts, for Jesus speaks of anexpression of God's Will -- Oneness, truth and love. Even though we are unawareof them, these thoughts remain nonetheless, "held in safekeeping" in our rightminds against the time we choose them, <and only them.> Jesus makes the samepoint in this moving passage early in the text. I quote it in its entirety."How can you who are so holy suffer? All your past except its beauty isgone, and nothing is left but a blessing. I have saved all your kindnesses andevery loving thought you ever had. I have purified them of the errors that hidtheir light, and kept them for you in their own perfect radiance. They arebeyond destruction and beyond guilt. They came from the Holy Spirit within you,and we know what God creates is eternal. You can indeed depart in peace becauseI have loved you as I loved myself. You go with my blessing and for my blessing.Hold it and share it, that it may always be ours. I place the peace of God inyour heart and in your hands, to hold and share. The heart is pure to hold it,and the hands are strong to give it. We cannot lose. My judgment is as strong asthe wisdom of God, in Whose Heart and Hands we have our being. His quietchildren are His blessed Sons. The Thoughts of God are with you." (T-5.IV.8)*(7:2-4) "They are there in your mind now, completely unchanged. They will alwaysbe in your mind, exactly as they always were. Everything you have thought sincethen will change, but the Foundation on which it rests is wholly changeless."*These thoughts, reflecting the Love of God are always with us -- totallyunchanged. We have covered them over with senseless and cluttered thoughts, andJesus is helping us uncover the truth that is in us. In the end we shall come torecognize that these insane thoughts are made up. Their seeming power had no<effect> on the truth, and of such truth <is> the Kingdom of Heaven rememberedon earth.*(8:1-4) "It is this Foundation toward which the exercises for today aredirected. Here is your mind joined with the Mind of God. Here are your thoughtsone with His. For this kind of practice only one thing is necessary; approach itas you would an altar dedicated in Heaven to God the Father and to God the Son."*Jesus again is urging us to take these lessons seriously and remember why weare doing them. However, we are not taking them seriously if we do not applythem, which is why our vigilance becomes so important. In the text, Jesusexplains that altars are devotions:"Both Heaven and earth are in you, because the call of both is in your mind.The Voice for God comes from your own altars to Him. These altars are notthings; they are devotions. Yet you have other devotions now. Your divideddevotion has given you the two voices, and you must choose at which altar youwant to serve. The call you answer now is an evaluation because it is adecision. The decision is very simple. It is made on the basis of which call isworth more to you." (T.5.II.8.5-12).And so we are instructed to recognize <which call is worth more to us>. It isour practice and vigilance that will reinforce what we <truly> want.*(8:5-7) "For such is the place you are trying to reach. You will probably beunable as yet to realize how high you are trying to go. Yet even with the littleunderstanding you have already gained, you should be able to remind yourselfthat this is no idle game, but an exercise in holiness and an attempt to reachthe Kingdom of Heaven."*We are once more asked to remember the importance of these lessons to us, beingthe practical and specific application of the principles of the text. Thesincerity in our desire to return home will be reflected in our commitment tothis ongoing practice. Thus Jesus says in the first sentence in paragraph 9:*(9:1) "In the shorter exercise periods for today, try to remember how importantit is to you to understand the holiness of the mind that thinks with God."*It should be apparent by now, through his continual emphasis, how importantJesus believes these lessons to be, and how important they should be to us. Weshall discuss presently how this importance will be measured by our willingnessto relinquish our investment in specialness.The lesson closes with this final plea from Jesus to choose against ("standaside") our ego's thoughts, and <for> his reminders of the Thoughts we sharewith God:*(9:2-4) "Take a minute or two, as you repeat the idea throughout the day, toappreciate your mind's holiness. Stand aside, however briefly, from all thoughtsthat are unworthy of Him Whose host you are. And thank Him for the Thoughts Heis thinking with you."*Gratitude is an important theme in A Course in Miracles, and one to which weshall often return. The core of this gratitude is that God has never ceased tobe Who He is, despite all our insane attempts to make Him be otherwise.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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