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A
Course in Miracles
How It Came, What It Is, What It Says |
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What
It Is
As its
title implies, the Course is arranged throughout as a teaching
device. It consists of three books: a 622-page Text, a 478-page
Workbook for Students, and an 88-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 emphasizes
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
emphasizes that 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 emphasizes
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 recognized 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).
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