A COURSE IN MIRACLES AND A COURSE OF LOVE

by Celia Hales

Mari Perron’s A Course of Love, in three volumes (A Course of Love, the Treatises, and the Dialogues, acronym ACOL), is a beautifully rendered narrative that I view as a sequel to A Course in Miracles.  She heard internally, as she related to me in an interview when I met her in St. Paul, that ACOL was presented to her by Jesus as “another Course in Miracles.”  She said that she had about a week before she consented to tackle such a large project, a project that eventually led her to resign from her position at the University of Minnesota in the Twin Cities to devote herself full time to the channeling.  The channeling was done in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.

In my reading, I find in ACOL no contradictions of any kind with ACIM.  My summary evaluation is that ACOL is to the heart what ACIM is to the mind.  Jesus says that he is combining mind and heart in A Course of Love to lead to a state that he terms “wholeheartedness.”  There are many consoling passages, notably a beautifully rendered invitation to join Jesus in an embrace that comforts and sustains us, and that we return in a mutual embrace.  He invites us to weep, yet we know that he will not leave us weeping, but instead lifted up to his view of life and love as they are meant to be lived.

There is much in ACOL about the fact that our fiction of a separated self is to be replaced by a union that can be understood only in relationship one to another.  As in ACIM, this is meant to be a holy relationship, not a special one.  Jesus bids us serve one another, and asserts that this describes the circular nature of the universe–to serve and to be served

Jesus is much concerned in this whole series of three volumes that we not keep seeking for our answers; we are to rest in the view that we know enough to live in love.  He talks about the fact that we seem to be continually seeking, but we are weary, and he knows that we wonder when this seeking will finally end.  In ACOL, all three volumes, the seeking is finally to come to an end.  The two volumes that follow the first, the Treatises and the Dialogues, particularly bid us leave our intellectualism behind and to listen, wholeheartedly, to our mind and heart in conjunction with each other.  In these later volumes, particularly the last, he resigns as our teacher and speaks to us as one of us..

When I first began reading the second of the three volumes, the Treatises, I became convinced that Jesus was the author; it was an intellectual decision based in part on the newness of the material and the complexity of it.  In addition, the fact that there were no contradictions to ACIM played heavily in my decision.  The Treatises are four in number, and they provide an intellectual framework in ways that the other two volumes do not.  They are harder to understand, but the same beautiful language is there, along with the forthrightness that I have learned to associate with Jesus.  In the early pages, he asks us to choose a miracle, and explains that this will help us to understand what he is saying.  Later on, he asserts, in line with Eastern thought, that mindfulness will provide the complement to wholeheartedness.

As  the volumes go on, there is much that is new in them–ideas that pick up where ACIM left off, with the time of the Holy Spirit, and assertions that we are now in the time of Christ-consciousness.  There have always been individuals who embodied Christ-consciousness, but none (except Jesus, we might add) that have sustained it.  Jesus does not make promises about a physical Second Coming, as he did not in ACIM, but he does indicate that now is the time for the sustaining of Christ-consciousness among more and more people, and he asserts that children born now will inhabit a very different world than that of their forebears.

Jesus directly states that ACIM and A Course of Love work hand-in-hand.  ACIM was meant to dislodge the ego, and ACOL builds upon this success, giving us the tools with which to work.  He asserts in the final volume, the Dialogues, that we are now the accomplished, and he presents a primer that is meant to be read and understood over forty days and nights.  We are working in a forty-day ascension to elevate the Self of form on our earth.

So much is devoted to the false thinking that we have about continuing to seek in a never-ending pathway.  When is it enough?  When does the seeking end?  Jesus ultimately says that we are ready now, once we have walked the whole pathway (which he outlines in the latter part of the third volume, the Dialogues), and that continual seeking is not what he means for us.  We will let the rough aspects of our personalities fall away, knowing that we are beloved and that we have achieved the Christhood that he holds out to us as his promise.  In what appears to be a departure from ACIM, Jesus asserts that no feelings are bad.  In ACIM, he had asserted that anger was never justified.  In A Course of Love he notes different aspects of personality that do not hinder us from full acceptance to Christ-consciousness.  Some of these aspects are negative, but he holds out to us the view that we can have these undesirable traits, undesirable to us, fall away if we do not care for them.  Otherwise, it appears that we are simply to be tolerant of aspects of ourselves that will be subject to change as we grow in Christ-consciousness.  In ACIM, perfection is seen to be a prerequisite, and Jesus was said to stand at the end of time to undo those errors in us that we otherwise could not undo.  The differences between these two thoughts may not be as great as we might imagine, as we remember from the New Testament that the man Jesus, the example-life of Christ-consciousness, got very angry in the last week of his life with the moneychangers in the temple.

To believe that we can retain some negative traits and yet ascend to Christ-consciousness is a remarkable statement that sounds almost too good to be true.  Yet I believe that it is true, and that it is only our own ego that would assert that the new understanding is arrogance.  This is the suggestion, discussed above, from A Course of Love that we do not have to be perfect to be an ascended Self of form in this world.  This is reassuring in the extreme, because how many of us try and try, only to fall up short repeatedly?  This is discouraging for those of us on the spiritual pathway, and Jesus’ statements deny the reality of perfection as a criterion on acceptance by him as being Christ-conscious.  This statement is one of the more startling in the volumes, and perhaps one of the more controversial.

Relationships are seen in the much the same vein as in ACIM, and special relationships must change to the holy.  This is itself will change everything.  We will exist in union with our brothers and sisters, in relationship, and this will fuel the new Christ form that we occupy.

We live within the house of truth, according to the Treatises, though within that house of truth is a house of illusion, in which many of us still live.  In a significant image, the words describe that there have been “explosions” within the house of illusion, but that it is has not fallen yet.  Nevertheless, still this house of illusion is within the house of truth, and so all of us are one together.  Those in the house of illusion are still, like ACIM says of us, ruled by the ego; those outside the house of illusion but inside the house of truth are now ruled by the Christ spirit, or Christ-consciousness, as the time of the Holy Spirit is drawing to a close and the time of Christ-consciousness is at hand.  This latter point is an expansion from ACIM, a next step.

We are not to evangelize our brothers and sisters, though, who still live in the house of illusion.  Instead, we seek just by service one to another to draw everyone to us in the house of truth.  Another way of stating this same phenomenon, new to our world but explained above, is that we must individually and collectively sustain Christ-consciousness.  This then is the new Self that we are to be.

The third volume, the Dialogues, seeks to lead us to a sustained place of Christ-consciousness in form, i.e., the elevated Self of form.  Christ-consciousness replaces perception (as discussed in ACIM) with knowing.  This elevated Self of form, to my reading, means the physical form that we occupy on earth, but it is does not mean that death will cease to be (a somewhat common misconception that sometimes is made with ACIM).

The volume concludes with an injunction to remain in the world, but to follow Jesus to the mountaintop for forty days and nights of final observation (not “learning“).  The content of the chapters devoted to these forty days and nights is beautiful indeed.  As mentioned, Jesus resigns as our teacher and becomes akin to an equal, but just as surely must we too resign as our own teacher (an ACIM thought as well).  We learn directly from observance, from within our own selves, of the real world that only appears to be outside of ourselves (an ACIM concept also).  But we cannot observe only from within ourselves; we must join in union and relationship with our brothers and sisters.  To unite is to be one in being; to join in relationship is to join with our brothers and sisters as beings; both union and relationship are necessary, and this injunction for unity and relationship is repeatedly emphasized.

In observing and living these forty days and nights, we are to remain in our daily world, carrying out our normal activities.  Jesus assures us that this is the best way to learn, for, after all, we are creatures of the earth as well as heaven, and we do not need to remove ourselves from our daily lives to learn his truths.

There is a very interesting insertion in the Dialogues of Mary, the mother of Jesus.  Jesus is seen to be the “example life,” the one of “doing“; and Mary’s way is seen to be that of “being,” in relationship, the way of the future.  There are consistencies between doing and being, though, and the two are not mutually exclusive now nor in the future.

The ultimate revelation of A Course of Love is the fact that we can indeed expect heaven on earth; this Jesus declares.  He ends the final volume, the Dialogues, by saying that we will know expressions of love as our service on earth.  This is very traditional thinking, but after studying all three volumes, it is a restful conclusion.  We are not encouraged to spend ourselves in endless effort, as the end that we seek is peaceful and effortless.  It is the way that life is meant to be, and has always been meant to be, lived.

A Course of Love, as I have reiterated, is a beautiful work of art.  Though not in blank verse, as is ACIM, the language that Mari Perron channeled is stunningly beautiful.  You have a magnificent opportunity in studying these volumes to learn what Jesus wants to say to us by way of sequel to ACIM.

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7 Comments

  1. Hi Celia,

    I’m so glad that your blog came to my attention with this entry on A Course of Love. I remember well our meeting at the coffee shop I had at the time. If I recall, you’ve moved from Minnesota.

    I’ve recently started two blogs myself. Not knowing what I was doing turned out to be a minor blessing. One of the blogs was meant to be a Twitter account. Somehow it ended up a blogspot blog. Don’t ask me how! It’s at http://pubjournal.blogspot.com. I was taking advice from my web designer who suggested I do posts on the process of having my new book (The Given Self) published. Once that one got going, I followed more advice (the only thing to do if you don’t know what you’re doing), and the advice I followed the second time (which might have come from Twitter) was that you weren’t supposed to be promoting your work, but basically answering the question, “What did I do today?” From that I started a blog called http://spit-and-vinegar.blogspot.com. I simply awoke with the idea to base it on an old phrase of my dad’s that means having a little spunk (basically). These have felt liberating and fun even while allowing me to say a good deal about the rumblings of spirit. But…I was just thinking the other day, of starting another one specifically geared toward the 40 Days and Nights of The Dialogues. Of all the comments that I receive, the most are on the 40 Days, and it is definitely, by far, the most returned-to portion of the Course of Love series.

    You do a fine summary here that shows how much you’ve received from your experience of this course. I particularly appreciate your comments on this course’s beauty. Probably second among comments I get are on that chapter you mention on the embrace. And then there are the treatises. There was an excellent review in “Miracles” magazine last summer. Dr. Monte Page, who wrote it, said the Treatises were among the most profound spiritual material he’d ever read. I hac my own experience about a year ago of returning to A Treatise on the New for the first time in a while, and reading it as if it was brand new, and feeling very differently than before it message and effects. “The Given Self” is taken from phrases used within The Dialogues as well.

    What a stunning ride we are all on. I’ve been amazed in recent years that “A Course of Love,” begun back in Dec 1998 and completed in ’01, was so ahead of its time. Everything I read now, including non-spiritual books, speak of the need to rely on more than the intellect and to be aware that “thinking our way through” is insufficient to the needs of the times. In a recent re-reading of The Dialogues, the language of death and rebirth jumped out and reverberated within me. There is a such a sense of the collapse that is making way for the new. Creation of the new is mentioned throughout the course, and is the title of what I refer to as a visionary or mystical piece of writing that came to me in 2006. It is slated to go up on my website soon. After letting it sit three years, it seems as if the time is now.

    I’ll let you know if I start a 40 Day blog!

    It is wonderful reconnecting~

    Mari

    Reply
  2. celiaelaine

     /  October 26, 2009

    Dear Mari,

    A blessing to hear from you as the scribe for “A Course of Love.” Thanks so much!

    I will follow your blogs now that I know of them.

    Most fondly, Celia

    Reply
  3. I just found your blog and am enjoying the archived posts. I have been a dedicated student of the Course for a few years and have found it to be truly life-changing. When I was reading the Course I had such a profound understanding of the Voice being that of Jesus. Having been a seeker of truth for many decades, I just felt like what I was reading in the text and experiencing through the workbook was the culmination of all I had been looking for. And, I continue to go to greater depths of freedom and peace as I study the Course and Kenneth Wapnick and Brent Haskell’s teaching materials. Love it!!! Now, I have stumbled onto The Course of Love with your wonderful review. HHHmmmm… I have never heard of these books anywhere in ACIM websites, from other ACIM students, etc. After reading your review with such wonderful raves and your posts concerning the contents of the books, I am curious as to why so little is known about these books in the ACIM community. I just ordered the first book as I am fascinated with how you have described your thoughts about the contents in the books. So, thank you. Would appreciate any thoughts you might have on this subject. And, thank you for sharing on the blog.

    Reply
    • Celia Hales

       /  December 21, 2011

      I do subscribe to the idea that A Course of Love is a sequel to A Course in Miracles. There are others who have written in the same vein, and I have read some of this. But nothing has spoken to me as the material channeled by Mari Perron. I used to live in the same city (St. Paul, Minnesota), and I found out, when I called her wanting to write a review for Miracles magazine (published by Jon Mundy) that she had been praying for someone to come forth. I later met her over coffee. Jon Mundy published two reviews by me on A Course of Love (neither yet posted on this blog), and he also published a feature by Mari.

      She has her own web sites, and they are listed in my blogroll.

      I will be returning to postings on A Course of Love in the spring, featuring the first three of the treatises (the second volume in the series). It is the treatises that led me to conclude that the channeling was genuine and by Jesus.

      Thank you for viewing my blog postings. I would welcome hearing from you again.

      Most cordially, Celia

      Reply
  4. Thank you for your reply. I am planning to have read the 2nd volume by then and will look forward to your postings on the content of this book. I will also see if I can find your reviews written for the Miracles magazine. Merry Christmas!!

    Reply
    • Celia Hales

       /  December 21, 2011

      Dear Suzanne,

      I will shortly be posting those two reviews for A Course of Love on this blog. It has been awhile since they were published in Miracles magazine.

      Thank you very much for your responses! I have gained a great deal from A Course of Love, and I wish the same for you.

      Most cordially, Celia

      Reply
  5. Thank you, Celia. I will forward to reading A Course of Love and your reviews.

    Blessings to you. Suzanne

    Reply

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