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A Course in Miracles
How It Came, What It
Is, What It Says
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What
It Says
Nothing
real can be threatened.
Nothing unreal exists.
Herein lies the peace of God.
This is how A
Course in Miracles begins. It makes a fundamental distinction between
the real and the unreal; between knowledge and perception. Knowledge
is truth, under one law, the law of love or God. Truth is unalterable,
eternal, and unambiguous. It can be unrecognized, but it cannot be changed.
It applies to everything that God created, and only what He created
is real. It is beyond learning because it is beyond time and process.
It has no opposite; no beginning and no end. It merely is.
The world of perception,
on the other hand, is the world of time, of change, of beginnings and
endings. It is based on interpretation, not on facts. It is the world
of birth and death, founded on the belief in scarcity, loss, separation,
and death. It is learned rather than given, selective in its perceptual
emphases, unstable in its functioning, and inaccurate in its interpretations.
From knowledge
and perception respectively, two distinct thought systems arise which
are opposite in every respect. In the realm of knowledge no thoughts
exist apart from God, because God and His Creation share one Will. The
world of perception, however, is made by the belief in opposites and
separate wills, in perpetual conflict with each other and with God.
What perception sees and hears appears to be real because it permits
into awareness only what conforms to the wishes of the perceiver. This
leads to a world of illusions, a world which needs constant defense
precisely because it is not real.
When you have
been caught in the world of perception you are caught in a dream. You
cannot escape without help, because everything your senses show merely
witnesses to the reality of the dream. God has provided the Answer,
the only Way out, the true Helper. It is the function of His Voice,
His Holy Spirit, to mediate between the two worlds. He can do this because,
while on the one hand He knows the truth, on the other He also recognizes
our illusions, but without believing in them. It is the Holy Spirit's
goal to help us escape from the dream world by teaching us how to reverse
our thinking and unlearn our mistakes. Forgiveness is the Holy Spirit's
great learning aid in bringing this thought reversal about. However,
the Course has its own definition of what forgiveness really is just
as it defines the world in its own way.
The world we see
merely reflects our own internal frame of referencethe dominant
ideas, wishes and emotions in our minds. "Projection makes perception"
(Text, p. 445). We look inside first, decide the kind of world we want
to see and then project that world outside, making it the truth as
we see it. We make it true by our interpretations of what it is
we are seeing. If we are using perception to justify our own mistakesour
anger, our impulses to attack, our lack of love in whatever form it
may takewe will see a world of evil, destruction, malice, envy
and despair. All this we must learn to forgive, not because we are being
"good" and "charitable," but because what we are
seeing is not true. We have distorted the world by our twisted defenses,
and are therefore seeing what is not there. As we learn to recognize
our perceptual errors, we also learn to look past them or "forgive."
At the same time we are forgiving ourselves, looking past our distorted
self-concepts to the Self That God created in us and as us.
Sin is defined
as "lack of love" (Text, p. 11). Since love is all there is,
sin in the sight of the Holy Spirit is a mistake to be corrected, rather
than an evil to be punished. Our sense of inadequacy, weakness, and
incompletion comes from the strong investment in the "scarcity
principle" that governs the whole world of illusions. From that
point of view, we seek in others what we feel is wanting in ourselves.
We "love" another in order to get something ourselves. That,
in fact, is what passes for love in the dream world. There can be no
greater mistake than that, for love is incapable of asking for anything.
Only minds can
really join, and whom God has joined no man can put asunder (Text, p.
356). It is, however, only at the level of Christ Mind that true union
is possible, and has, in fact, never been lost. The "little I"
seeks to enhance itself by external approval, external possessions,
and external "love." The Self That God created needs nothing.
It is forever complete, safe, loved, and loving. It seeks to share rather
than to get; to extend rather than project. It has no needs and wants
to join with others out of their mutual awareness of abundance.
The special relationships
of the world are destructive, selfish, and childishly egocentric. Yet,
if given to the Holy Spirit, these relationships can become the holiest
things on earththe miracles that point the way to the return to
Heaven. The world uses its special relationships as a final weapon of
exclusion and a demonstration of separateness. The Holy Spirit transforms
them into perfect lessons in forgiveness and in awakening from the dream.
Each one is an opportunity to let perceptions be healed and errors corrected.
Each one is another chance to forgive oneself by forgiving the other.
And each one becomes still another invitation to the Holy Spirit and
to the remembrance of God.
Perception is
a function of the body, and therefore represents a limit on awareness.
Perception sees through the body's eyes and hears through the body's
ears. It evokes the limited responses which the body makes. The body
appears to be largely self-motivated and independent, yet it actually
responds only to the intentions of the mind. If the mind wants to use
it for attack in any form, it becomes prey to sickness, age, and decay.
If the mind accepts the Holy Spirit's purpose for it instead, it becomes
a useful way of communicating with others, invulnerable as long as it
is needed, and to be gently laid by when its use is over. Of itself
it is neutral, as is everything in the world of perception. Whether
it is used for the goals of the ego or the Holy Spirit depends entirely
on what the mind wants.
The opposite of
seeing through the body's eyes is the vision of Christ, which reflects
strength rather than weakness, unity rather than separation, and love
rather than fear. The opposite of hearing through the body's ears is
communication through the Voice for God, the Holy Spirit, which abides
in each of us. His Voice seems distant and difficult to hear because
the ego, which speaks for the little, separated self, seems to be much
louder. This is actually reversed. The Holy Spirit speaks with unmistakable
clarity and overwhelming appeal. No one who does not choose to identify
with the body could possibly be deaf to His messages of release and
hope, nor could he fail to accept joyously the vision of Christ in glad
exchange for his miserable picture of himself.
Christ's vision
is the Holy Spirit's gift, God's alternative to the illusion of separation
and to the belief in the reality of sin, guilt, and death. It is the
one correction for all errors of perception; the reconciliation of the
seeming opposites on which this world is based. Its kindly light shows
all things from another point of view, reflecting the thought system
that arises from knowledge and making return to God not only possible
but inevitable. What was regarded as injustices done to one by someone
else, now becomes a call for help and for union. Sin, sickness, and
attack are seen as misperceptions calling for remedy through gentleness
and love. Defenses are laid down because where there is no attack there
is no need for them. Our brothers' needs become our own, because they
are taking the journey with us as we go to God. Without us they would
lose their way. Without them we could never find our own.
Forgiveness is
unknown in Heaven, where the need for it would be inconceivable. However,
in this world, forgiveness is a necessary correction for all the mistakes
that we have made. To offer forgiveness is the only way for us to have
it, for it reflects the law of Heaven that giving and receiving are
the same. Heaven is the natural state of all the Sons of God as He created
them. Such is their reality forever. It has not changed because it has
been forgotten.
Forgiveness is
the means by which we will remember. Through forgiveness the thinking
of the world is reversed. The forgiven world becomes the gate of Heaven,
because by its mercy we can at last forgive ourselves. Holding no one
prisoner to guilt, we become free. Acknowledging Christ in all our brothers,
we recognize His Presence in ourselves. Forgetting all our misperceptions,
and with nothing from the past to hold us back, we can remember God.
Beyond this, learning cannot go. When we are ready, God Himself will
take the final step in our return to Him.
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