Lesson 37. My holiness blesses the world.This idea contains the first glimmerings of your true function in the world, orwhy you are here. Your purpose is to see the world through your own holiness.Thus are you and the world blessed together. No one loses; nothing is taken awayfrom anyone; everyone gains through your holy vision. It signifies the end ofsacrifice because it offers everyone his full due. And he is entitled toeverything because it is his birthright as a Son of God.There is no other way in which the idea of sacrifice can be removed from theworld's thinking. Any other way of seeing will inevitably demand payment ofsomeone or something. As a result, the perceiver will lose. Nor will he have anyidea why he is losing. Yet is his wholeness restored to his awareness throughyour vision. Your holiness blesses him by asking nothing of him. Those who seethemselves as whole make no demands.Your holiness is the salvation of the world. It lets you teach the world that itis one with you, not by preaching to it, not by telling it anything, but merelyby your quiet recognition that in your holiness are all things blessed alongwith you.Today's four longer exercise periods, each to involve three to five minutes ofpractice, begin with the repetition of the idea for today, followed by a minuteor so of looking about you as you apply the idea to whatever you see:My holiness blesses this chair. My holiness blesses that window.My holiness blesses this body.>Then close your eyes and apply the idea to any person who occurs to you, usinghis name and saying:My holiness blesses you, [name]."> You may continue the practice period with your eyes closed; you may open youreyes again and apply the idea for today to your outer world if you so desire;you may alternate between applying the idea to what you see around you and tothose who are in your thoughts; or you may use any combination of these twophases of application that you prefer. The practice period should conclude witha repetition of the idea with your eyes closed, and another, followingimmediately, with your eyes open.The shorter exercises consist of repeating the idea as often as you can. It isparticularly helpful to apply it silently to anyone you meet, using his name asyou do so. It is essential to use the idea if anyone seems to cause an adversereaction in you. Offer him the blessing of your holiness immediately, that youmay learn to keep it in your own awareness.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~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 37. "My holiness blesses the world."*This is another lesson that is extremely important in terms of what Jesus isteaching us, as well as correcting common mistakes made by students of A Coursein Miracles. Jesus obviously is not telling us that we should bless the worldthat is outside us. This would directly contradict everything he has beenteaching us so far. Remember, Jesus is teaching us the world is nothing morethan a mirror of our thoughts. Therefore, the lessons <content> is not that weshould bless a chair, stick, clock, or another person. Rather, he is saying thatif we choose his blessing -- within our minds -- and see ourselves as holybecause we have joined with him, that blessing will automatically extend throughus and envelop everything we see. The principle <projection makes perception>must never be too far away from our thinking. This will become increasinglymanifest as we look at this lesson.*(1:1-2) "This idea contains the first glimmerings of your true function in theworld, or why you are here. Your purpose is to see the world through your ownholiness."*This is another way of saying our purpose or function is forgiveness.<Forgiveness> has not really made an appearance yet in these lessons, but theprocess of seeing the world through your own holiness is a wonderfully succinctdescription of it. The problem is that we see the world through our own<un>holiness, as separated egos and bodies whose mission in life is to protectand preserve our specialness. Thus, a lesson such as this presents theright-minded thought that undoes the ego's dictum that "my unholiness envelopesand condemns the world I see." The focus on this lesson, therefore, is notreally on the world at all; it is on our <thoughts.> If our thoughts are rootedin the holiness of Christ that we are, everything that we perceive mustautomatically be its extension. The importance of this idea cannot beoveremphasized.*(1:3) "Thus are you and the world blessed together."*The world is only a reflection of my thought, which is one of holiness andblessing because I am a child of blessing. The world "out there" must share inthat holiness, because it comes from that holiness. In other words, the world Iperceive is rooted in who I am. Another principle that should not be far fromour thoughts is <ideas leave not their source.> In this instance, if my holinessis the source, the idea of the world must be perceived as holy as well. Indeed,these two principle -- <projection makes perception> and <ideas leave not theirsource> -- are essentially the same; Projection (or its right-minded form ofextension) is the reason ideas leave not their source. The <ideas> that compriseour <perceptual> world are merely the <projected> self image that has its<source> in our minds, and what is projected out always remains within. Thus<source> and <idea> remain one.*(1:4-6) "No one loses; nothing is taken away from anyone; everyone gains throughyour holy vision. It signifies the end of sacrifice because it offers everyonehis full due. And he is entitled to everything because it is his birthright as aSon of God."*This is the first time in the lessons that Jesus discusses sacrifice, anotherof the key themes in the text, for it is at the heart of the ego's thoughtsystem. The root of sacrifice lies in the principle of <one or the other>, moregraphically stated in the manual, as we have already seen, <kill or be killed>(M-17.7:11). The ego -- the thought of individuality -- begins with the ideathat it is God or my self. If God is to exist, I cannot exist as a separatebeing because there is no separation, individuality, or differentiation inHeaven. Therefore, if I am to exist as an individual -- the foundation ofeveryone's thought system -- God can no longer exist, at least as He truly is.He would be have to be changed, but if God ceases to be perfect Oneness Heceases to be. Perfect oneness and individuality cannot coexist. That is theorigin of the thought of sacrifice: someone must lose if another is to win.Since the sacrifice of God is the foundation of the split mind, when that mindfurther splits into billions and billions of fragments, the thought of sacrificeremains, in accord with the principle <ideas leave not their source>. The <idea>of a separated, individual world filled with bodies has never left its <source>,which is the mind's thought that I exist on my own -- at God's expense.A direct corollary of the thought that I have killed God so I could exist is theego's teaching that God is somehow going to rise from the dead and come afterme. Therefore, in order to appease His wrath I have to call again upon theprinciple that gave me my existence: <one or the other>, the idea of sacrifice.This is the same principle, by the way, that has led most world religions toentertain the strange notion that God demands sacrifice: If I am to exist, Ihave to pay God back for what I stole from Him. That concept becomes thefoundation stone of special relationships: If I am to get what I want from you,I must pay you for it. Thus does the principle of <one or the other>, beginningwith the ontological premise if I am to exist God must die, filters through thefragmentation process and ends up being the foundation of <everyone's> thoughtsystem.What we find in the early workbook lesson, then, is the first attempt tocounteract that fundamental line of thinking. If I see a world as nothing morethan a part of me, everything that happens to me happens to the world. If I amblessed, the world and everyone in it must be blessed, too. In "The Rock ofSalvation," Jesus states that the rock on which salvation rests is that no oneloses and everyone wins (T-25.VII.12), which is the same idea he is presentinghere. Hence I no longer presume that my happiness depends on beating you up,putting you down, cannibalizing, or stealing from you. I can learn to generalizethis lesson, recognizing that you are part of me; not my individual physical orpsychological self, but the part of me who is the Son of God. If I seek toexclude you by seeing you as separate from me -- an enemy or object of myspecial love -- I am saying the Son of God is fragmented. In truth he cannot be,so by attacking you I am really attacking my own Identity. However, if I beginwith the premise that my mind is part of God's and I am holy (Lesson 35), Ishall see that <you> must share in that holiness, if indeed holiness is true.This step marks the end of sacrifice -- the principle of <one or the other>.There is a series of statements in the text that reflect this correction:"Salvation is a collaborative venture" (T-4.VI.8:2)."Together of not at all" (T-19.IV-D.12:8)."The ark of peace is entered two by two" (T-20.IV.6:5)."No one can enter Heaven by himself" (W-p1.134.17:7).None of this means that you literally have to be in a relationship with someoneon a physical level. It does mean, however, that in your <mind> you do not seethat your peace, salvation, or happiness comes at someone else's expense.The key point of this lesson, therefore, is that "my holiness blesses the world"because the world is an extension of me. As long as I believe there is someone"out there," I must believe there is something "in here" who perceives someone"out there," which means I am into separation, specialness, and individuality, Ithen automatically believe in sacrifice; some expression of <one or the other>.*(2:1) "There is no other way in which the idea of sacrifice can be removed fromthe world's thinking."*In other words, the only way sacrifice can be removed from the world's thinkingis to shift from the ego's thought system of separation, judgment, and hate tothe Holy Spirit's thought system of unity, forgiveness, and healing. This does<not> mean denying our bodies or other people's bodies, but rather denying theseeming truth of the <one or the other> principle. That is what this lesson isall about, reflecting the central teaching of A Course in Miracles.Again, we do not deny there are bodies, or that there is a body we identifywith. Rather, we look at the <one or the other> principle operating in our mindsand choose to deny its seeming validity. That is the only way the idea ofsacrifice can be undone. I realize you and I are making the same journey home.It began as a path of insanity away from home, and in my mind I realize that theway back -- the way of sanity -- is to take your hand. It does not matterwhether you even know who I am or whether you died thirty years ago. We are nottalking about something that happens externally in the world, because allrelationships exist <only> in the mind. We are talking about a relationship I amstill holding onto in my thoughts. If my ego is in charge, the relationship willreflect <one or the other>, and that is sacrifice. If I put Jesus in charge asmy teacher, however, I shall see my special relationship as an opportunity tolook at my <one or the other> thinking and then ask his help to change it.*(2:2-3) "Any other way of seeing will inevitably demand payment of someone orsomething. As a result, the perceiver will lose."*I must believe I will lose, because in my mind my existence comes from havingstolen from God, not to mention murdering Him. I will therefore believe, throughthe dynamic of projection, that He, along with everyone in my dream are going todo to me what I believe I did to them, and am still doing. In the end, my guilttells me you are going to steal back from me what I stole from you. The"reasoning" in the ego thought system is once again as follows: Individualexistence is identified with sin, which means I reached where I am by stealingfrom you and killing you off, the horrifying <final solution> brought about by<one or the other> principle. Thus, if everything I see outside mirrors what isinside, I must believe everyone out there, whom literally I put there, would doexactly what I believe I have done; i.e., steal and kill. Remember that we arespeaking of the <content> of killing, not its <form>, as reflected in thestatement from Lesson 21 that "a slight twinge of annoyance is nothing but aveil drawn over intense fury (2:5). The <thought> of murder is the same as the<thought> of mild annoyance. That is also what is behind the seeminglyoutrageous statement in the text, which I cited earlier: "What is not love ismurder" (T-23.IV.1.10). Guilt ultimately rests on our belief that we separatedfrom God, and so any thought of separation -- be it "a slight twinge ofannoyance" or murder -- recalls to mind this sin of betraying the love that is<only> perfect oneness.In light of this, we can understand why death is the central phenomenon in thephysical universe. Death to the ego is God's punishment. That is why, on onelevel, the entire Bible rests on the third chapter of Genesis, which tells thestory of Adam and Eve's sin and the punishment from God, Who created death, andlater, the plan of the atonement through suffering and sacrifice. Death, then,is the final proof that in the end my sin will be punished. Thus it is thatevery seemingly separated fragment of the Sonship <must> die, as justifiedpunishment for <being> separate, which life in the body clearly embodies. Thisis the foundation of the statement: "As a result, the perceiver will lose." *(2:4) "Nor will he have any idea why he is losing."*I will think I am losing because of what you did to me, or are planning to doto me. I will not realize that the real reason I am losing is that I am thedreamer or my own dream; a dream of loss, <one or the other>, and winners andlosers. We see again the efficacy of the ego's strategy of keeping us in a stateof mindlessness. As long as we perceive ourselves to be in a body (and thereforenot in our minds), we <must> believe other bodies are doing to us what is, infact, the shadow of what our mind's guilt is bringing about. Thus the followingpassage from the text, which cogently describes this dynamic of projection;"Of one thing you were sure: Of all the many causes you perceived asbringing pain and suffering to you, your guilt was not among them. Nor did youin any way request them for yourself. This is how all illusions came about. Theone who makes them does not see himself as making them, and their reality doesnot depend on him. Whatever cause they have is something quite apart from him,and what he sees is separate from his mind. He cannot doubt his dreams' reality,because he does not see the part he plays in making them and making them seemreal." (T-27.VII.7:4-9).*(2:5) "Yet is his wholeness restored to his awareness through your vision."*I not only heal my own mind when I ask Jesus for help and identify with hisholiness, but I serve as a reminder to you. Thus, if we are in a relationshipand I can change my mind, no longer holding <one or the other> as my reigningprinciple but rather seeing the relationship as a classroom in which I canlearn the exact opposite, I give you the same message. In other words, verballyor non-verbally, I tell you that the lesson I have learned, the teacher I havechosen, is also available inside of you. That is what is meant at the end of thetext when Jesus says that Christ is within us, saying "my brother choose again"(T-31.VIII.3:2). When we are able to choose again, we become that sameexpression of Christ's vision of forgiveness, reflecting His words to ourbrother. The manual for teachers offers a wonderful description of how ourbrother's "wholeness is restored to [the] awareness" of those who are sick:"To them God's teachers come, to represent another choice which they hadforgotten. The simple presence of a teacher of God is a reminder. His thoughtsask for the right to question what the patient has accepted as true. As God'smessengers, His teachers are the symbols of salvation. They ask the patient forforgiveness for God's Son in his own Name. They stand for the Alternative. WithGod's Word in their minds they come in benediction, not to heal the sick but toremind them of the remedy God has already given them. It is not their hands thatheal. It is not their voice that speaks the Word of God. They merely give whathas been given them. Very gently they call to their brothers to turn away fromdeath: Behold, you Son of God, what life can offer you. Would you choosesickness in place of this?" (M-5.III.2).*(2:6-7) "Your holiness blesses him by asking nothing of him. Those who seethemselves as whole make no demands."*If you look honestly at your relationships, even as you go through this veryday, you will realize how you are demanding something from everyone. Sometimesquite obvious, other times it is subtle. This dynamic must be there, though, aslong as you believe you are an individual, which we all clearly do. If youbelieve you are an individual, you also believe in the concept of lack, whichcan be traced to our very origin: I had to steal from God at the beginningbecause something was missing in me. How could it not? As long as the underlyingbelief in scarcity (another word for <lack>) remains uncorrected, this innerperception will generate the continual need to fill up what is missing -- to"supply a lack" -- in the words of the early miracle principle (T-1.1.8:1).Consequently, a major aspect of specialness is that I always have to take fromsomeone else to fill the lack that I perceive in myself.That is what Jesus is talking about in these passages. When you identify withholiness, you ask nothing of anyone because you <are> everything and <have>everything. You are everything, because <having> and <being> are the same (e.g.,T-6.B.3:4;V-C.5). Vigilance is essential to the process of your learning so thatyou become aware that you are making a demand of someone. If you are makingdemands and believe in the reality of the attack, that tells you that you do notbelieve you are whole. You are unhappy, therefore, not because you did notreceive what you believe you should have gotten from someone, but <solely>because you have chosen the wrong teacher.*(3:1) "Your holiness is the salvation of the world."*Here again, Jesus is not talking about the external world. As discussedearlier, Jesus uses the language of Christianity, especially in the Easterseason, there is great emphasis on the thought of Jesus saving the world. Yet hewould have us realize in the Course that there is no world out there to besaved. Saving the world really means saving ourselves from the <belief> there isa world. Since all minds are joined in the holiness of Christ, if my mind ishealed in any given instant, the Sonship's mind is healed as well.None of this is understandable from the world's perspective, as I have said.None of this will make sense within our experience here, and can be understoodonly when we lift ourselves above the battleground and be with Jesus in what hecalls the holy instant. From there we look back on the world and see itdifferently, realizing what has to be saved are our <thoughts> about the world.These thoughts, again, result from our thoughts about ourselves. The outer andthe inner are one and the same: <Ideas leave not their source>.*(3:2) "It lets you teach the world that it is one with you, not by preaching toit, not by telling it anything, but merely by your quiet recognition that inyour holiness are all things blessed along with you."*These lines are significant. We change and save the world not by preaching ACourse in Miracles, not by teaching A Course in Miracles (i.e., in form), not bydoing anything with A Course in Miracles except learning it ourselves. In orderfor my world to be saved, there is nothing that I have to do or say but toaccept what the lessons are teaching me, which is the meaning of accepting theAtonement for oneself. These are hardly insignificant lines, for they go to theheart of the Course's metaphysics, which is the foundation for understandingJesus' teachings and their application. If there is no world how can it besaved? Again, what needs saving, or correcting, is our <minds> that believethere is a world. Once our minds are healed, we remember that the separationnever happened, and thus a world that arose from that thought of separationcould not have happened either. Moreover, if there were no separation, God's Sonremains perfectly united as <one> Son. Our minds reflect the blessing of ourCreator, and following the oft-repeated principle <ideas leave not theirsource>, it must be the case that "all things [are] blessed along with [us]." Itis from this inner blessing that our holiness inevitably extends through us, aswe see in these three parallel passages from the text. All of them highlight theprocess of our doing nothing except <un>do the belief in the ego, reflecting thelittle willingness that does indeed save the world -- <from our belief in it>:"You may still think that holiness is impossible to understand, becauseyou cannot see how it can be extended to include everyone. And you have beentold that it must include everyone to be holy. Concern yourself not with theextension of holiness, for the nature of miracles you do not understand. Nor doyou do them. It is their extension, far beyond the limits you perceive, thatdemonstrates you do not do them. Why should you worry how the miracle extends toall the Sonship when you do not understand the miracle itself?" (T-16:II.1:3-6)"Extension of forgiveness is the Holy Spirit's function. Leave this to Him.Let your concern be only that you give to Him that which can be extended. Saveno dark secrets that He cannot use, but offer Him the tiny gifts He can extendforever. He will take each one and make of it a potent force for peace."(T-22.VI.9:2-6)"The miracle extends without your help, but you are needed that it canbegin. Accept the miracle of healing, and it will go forth because of what itis. It is its nature to extend itself the instant it is born. And it is born theinstant it is offered and received. ... Leave, then, the transfer of yourlearning to the One Who really understands its laws ... Your part is merely toapply what He has taught you to yourself, and He will do the rest."(T-27.V.1:2-5;10:1-2).What makes all this possible of course is our having chosen the right teacher.Thus, the crucial point to which we constantly return: "Do I have a relationshipwith Jesus or do I not?" If not, it is because I have excluded him by excluding<myself>, and do not want to acknowledge my "sin." That is always the bottomline.The next two paragraphs emphasize the lack of difference between our perceptionsand our thoughts, being one and the same:*(4) "Today's four longer exercise periods, each to involve three to five minutesof practice, begin with the repetition of the idea for today, followed by aminute or so of looking about you as you apply the idea to whatever you see:My holiness blesses this chair.My holiness blesses that window.My holiness blesses this body.Then close your eyes and apply the idea to any person who occurs to you, usinghis name and saying:My holiness blesses you, [name]."*Note how Jesus has us begin with the "unimportant" -- a chair, window, and therelatively neutral body -- and then asks us to apply our blessing to a specificperson. Thus he gently eases us into A Course in Miracles' central focus;forgiveness of our special relationships -- those from whom we would seek towithhold our blessing.Jesus' instructions continue, inviting us to practice with eyes open and eyesclosed, as we see fit:*(5) "You may continue the practice period with your eyes closed; you may openyour eyes again and apply the idea for today to your outer world if you sodesire; you may alternate between applying the idea to what you see around youand to those who are in your thoughts; or you may use any combination of thesetwo phases of application that you prefer. The practice period should concludewith a repetition of the idea with your eyes closed, and another, followingimmediately, with your eyes open."*Even though this practice of eyes open and closed has been an importantemphasis in Jesus' training, he always remains gentle in his approach, as seenin his use of words such as "you may," "if you so desire, and "that you prefer."Good teachers never coerce their students, and Jesus wants us to <want> to learnhis lessons; otherwise our learning will be weak.*(6:1-2) "The shorter exercises consist of repeating the idea as often as youcan. It is particularly helpful to apply it silently to anyone you meet, usinghis name as you do so."*In other words, Jesus is asking us to be vigilant in watching our ego's inaction, especially in relationship to others. He fully expects us to make thewrong choices, as we shall see in the lessons that follow. A lesson like this,therefore, is the correction for the mistakes we shall inevitably make. Again,Jesus is <expecting> us to misperceive and have attack thoughts, and once awarewe have done so, to ask him for help as we try to remember the lesson for theday.*(6:3-4) "It is essential to use the idea if anyone seems to cause an adversereaction in you. Offer him the blessing of your holiness immediately, that youmay learn to keep it in your own awareness."*I think 99.9 percent of students who do lessons like this do so almost by rote.They think all they need do is say to someone with whom they are angry, "I blessyou," and all is healed. That is not what Jesus is talking about: he is talkingabout recognizing that our perception of another is coming from our<mis>perception of ourselves. Simply saying words like "My holiness blesses you"is going to accomplish nothing. Actually, that is not entirely true; sayingthose words will accomplish a great deal: <It will push your ego thoughts downeven further!> The idea is to bring the ego thought to the truth, the darknessto the light. When you do a lesson like this, therefore, you should do exactlywhat Jesus says, but realize also <what he is saying>. Pay attention to yourneed to keep this other person separate from you. Above all, be aware of theneed to keep guilt secure in your mind. Only then can Jesus and these exerciseshelp you to let it go.*
Love and Blessings,
Lyn Johnson 719-369-1822
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