Because of A Course in Miracles, Master Teacher, and the Bible,
I am awakening from the dream. I walk through
the world knowing full that I am “in” the world, and not “of” the world; I am
in form, yet formless, and I ask for help to wear the garment of the world,
loosely.
I often wish that I had a succinct explanation to give to
people who ask me questions about the Course.
The other day, my friend, Dan Maynard, called me up all
excited and said, “I just read the Preface to the Course, and it is so good,
particularly, the last section, What It Says."
I went straight to the Text, read it, and said to myself, "This is what I have been looking for, and it was right under my nose."
So, here it is, easily accessible—pass it on.
This preface was written in 1977, in response to many
requests for a brief introduction to A Course in Miracles. The first two
parts How It Came; What It Is Helen Schucman wrote herself; the final
part What It Says was written by the process of inner dictation
described in the Preface.
How It Came
A
Course in Miracles
began with the sudden decision of two people to join in a common goal. Their
names were Helen Schucman and William Thetford, Professors of Medical
Psychology at Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons in New
York City. It does not matter who they were, except that the story shows that
with God all things are possible. They were anything but spiritual. Their
relationship with each other was difficult and often strained, and they were
concerned with personal and professional acceptance and status. In general,
they had considerable investment in the values of the world. Their lives were
hardly in accord with anything that the Course advocates. Helen, the one who
received the material, describes herself:
Psychologist,
educator, conservative in theory and atheistic in belief. I was working in a
prestigious and highly academic setting. And then something happened that
triggered a chain of events I could never have predicted. The head of my
department unexpectedly announced that he was tired of the angry and aggressive
feelings our attitudes reflected, and concluded that there must be another
way. As if on cue, I agreed to help him find it. Apparently this Course is
the other way.
Although
their intention was serious, they had great difficulty in starting out on their
joint venture. But they had given the Holy Spirit the little willingness
that, as the Course itself was to emphasise again and again, is sufficient to
enable Him to use any situation for His purposes and provide it with His power.
To
continue Helen's first-person account:
Three
startling months preceded the actual writing, during which time Bill suggested
that I write down the highly symbolic dreams and descriptions of the strange
images that were coming to me. Although I had grown more accustomed to the
unexpected by that time, I was still very surprised when I wrote, This is a
course in miracles. That was my introduction to the Voice. It made no sound,
but seemed to be giving me a kind of rapid, inner dictation which I took down
in a shorthand notebook. The writing was never automatic. It could be
interrupted at any time and later picked up again. It made me very
uncomfortable, but it never seriously occurred to me to stop. It seemed to be a
special assignment I had somehow, somewhere agreed to complete. It represented
a truly collaborative venture between Bill and myself, and much of its significance,
I am sure, lies in that. I would take down what the Voice said and read it to
him the next day, and he typed it from my dictation. I expect he had his
special assignment, too. Without his encouragement and support I would never
have been able to fulfil mine. The whole process took about seven years. The
Text came first, then the Workbook for Students, and finally the Manual for
Teachers. Only a few minor changes have been made. Chapter titles and
subheadings have been inserted in the Text, and some of the more personal
references that occurred at the beginning have been omitted. Otherwise the
material is substantially unchanged.
The
names of the collaborators in the recording of the Course do not appear on the
cover because the Course can and should stand on its own. It is not intended to
become the basis for another cult. Its only purpose is to provide a way in
which some people will be able to find their own Internal Teacher.
What It Is
As
its title implies, the Course is arranged throughout as a teaching device. It
consists of three books: a 669-page Text, a 488-page Workbook for Students, and
a 92-page Manual for Teachers. The order in which students choose to use the
books, and the ways in which they study them, depend on their particular needs
and preferences.
The
curriculum the Course proposes is carefully conceived and is explained, step by
step, at both the theoretical and practical levels. It emphasises application
rather than theory, and experience rather than theology. It specifically states
that a universal theology is impossible, but a universal experience is not
only possible but necessary (Manual, p. 77). Although Christian in
statement, the Course deals with universal spiritual themes. It emphasises it
is but one version of the universal curriculum. There are many others, this one
differing from them only in form. They all lead to God in the end.
The
Text is largely theoretical, and sets forth the concepts on which the Course's
thought system is based. Its ideas contain the foundation for the Workbook's
lessons. Without the practical application the Workbook provides, the Text
would remain largely a series of abstractions which would hardly suffice to
bring about the thought reversal at which the Course aims.
The
Workbook includes 365 lessons, one for each day of the year. It is not
necessary, however, to do the lessons at that tempo, and one might want to
remain with a particularly appealing lesson for more than one day. The
instructions urge only that not more than one lesson a day should be attempted.
The practical nature of the Workbook is underscored by the introduction to its
lessons, which emphasises experience through application rather than a prior
commitment to a spiritual goal:
Some of the ideas the
workbook presents you will find hard to believe, and others may seem to be
quite startling. This does not matter. You are merely asked to apply the ideas
as you are directed to do. You are not asked to judge them at all. You are
asked only to use them. It is their use that will give them meaning to you, and
will show you that they are true.
Remember only this; you need
not believe the ideas, you need not accept them, and you need not even welcome
them. Some of them you may actively resist. None of this will matter, or
decrease their efficacy. But do not allow yourself to make exceptions in
applying the ideas the workbook contains, and whatever your reactions to the
ideas may be, use them. Nothing more than that is required (Workbook, p. 2).
Finally,
the Manual for Teachers, which is written in question and answer form, provides
answers to some of the more likely questions a student might ask. It also
includes a clarification of a number of the terms the Course uses, explaining
them within the theoretical framework of the Text.
The
Course makes no claim to finality, nor are the Workbook lessons intended to
bring the student's learning to completion. At the end, the reader is left in
the hands of his or her own Internal Teacher, Who will direct all subsequent
learning as He sees fit. While the Course is comprehensive in scope, truth
cannot be limited to any finite form, as is clearly recognised in the statement
at the end of the Workbook:
This Course is a beginning,
not an end No more specific lessons are assigned, for there is no more need
of them. Henceforth, hear but the Voice for God He will direct your
efforts, telling you exactly what to do; how to direct your mind, and when to
come to Him in silence, asking for His sure direction and His certain Word
(Workbook, p. 487).
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 unrecognised, 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 defence 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 recognises 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 reference the 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 mistakes our anger, our impulses to attack,
our lack of love in whatever form it may take we 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 defences, and
are therefore seeing what is not there. As we learn to recognise 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 earth... the 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. Defences are laid down because where there is no
attack there is no need for them. Our bothers' 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 recognise 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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