TINY MAD IDEA

Note: Published in Miracles magazine, September – October, 2022 (Jon Mundy, publisher; Glenn Hovemann, editor)

“Into eternity, where all is one, there crept a tiny, mad idea at which the Son of God remembered not to laugh.”  (A Course in Miracles, COA ed., T-27.X.6:1)

“To access true knowledge of yourself and thus end all madness, you must go to knowledge in the right way, which is through love.”  (Choose Only Love, “Wisdom,” bk 4, 5.II)

We can’t remember any of this, but when we failed to laugh at the idea that we might attack God, making an illusion we would like better than the reality He provided, separating from our brothers and sisters, we chose madness.  And in madness is how we will stay until we discover truly how to love.  Love rights everything.  Unfortunately, we have become so accustomed to hearing that love is the Answer, that we don’t fully comprehend the import.

Perhaps if we try to discover how to love, we will make some progress.  We first forgive our brothers and sisters for what they have not done to us.  We have been living in a dream, because that is the only way that we could experience the madness that we chose.  We must drop judgment of our brothers and sisters, and we do this by recognizing the illusion.  A Course in Miracles says that fear is judgment. (T-29.X.9:3) Fear is the opposite of love, and when we drop the judgment that fuels fear, we are left with love.  Then, in love, we are safe in God’s arms once again.

We all want true knowledge of who we are.  And this true knowledge of self and others arises when we love, ourselves and others.  A tiny amount of love can be “milked” for all that it is worth.  And when we do so, we are enhancing that which is our heritage, and that heritage is love.  God’s Love.

When the fear dissipates, we are no longer afraid of what others will do to us. Because now we don’t fear or judge our brothers and sisters, we are free to love them—possibly for the first time.  

When overwhelmed with love, thank God for this blessing.

Interview with Sebastian Blaksley, Receiver of Choose Only Love

Jon Mundy, publisher of Miracles magazine, will interview Sebastian at 12 noon Eastern Standard Time (time on the East coast of the United States). This will be a blessing to all who listen in. Sebastian has received messages from the celestial, now in the process of being published under the title, Choose Only Love.

This blog, Miracles Each Day, has considered these new revelations. The revelations are a call to meditative consideration, not a “course” as such.

To register for the interview, visit the following web site: www.miraclesmagazine.org.

Glenn Hovemann, publisher of both A Course of Love and Choose Only Love, has penned some insights into Sebastian that may be helpful to you in making a decision to listen:

“Have you become acquainted with Choose Only Love? Unlike both Helen Schucman and Mari Perron, Sebastian received each of the 144 parts of COL in a “nanosecond,” and in symbolic form. With Archangel Raphael by his side, he immediately put the symbols into words, first in his native Spanish, and then immediately following, again putting the symbols into English.

“I edit and publish Choose Only Love. Altogether it will amount to almost the same number of words as A Course of Love. It is truly remarkable stuff. At age five Sebastian had a near-fatal accident—the car was run into by a train and he, along with his younger brother, were thrown underneath the moving train; the brother was instantly killed but Sebastian heard a voice telling him not to move and not to be afraid. The voice eventually revealed itself as Jesus. Sebastian has been in touch with that voice virtually every day since, about 45 years ago. 

“Some people consider the Choose Only Love books (only 4 (7 available so far) to be, in a sense, the next step beyond ACOL, for Choose Only Love is most definitely not a “teaching” but is more like being wrapped in angels’ wings and having an intimate conversation.” — Glenn Hovemann

 I invite your prayerful consideration of this opportunity.

Reading ACIM, ACOL, WOM

Note:  This is a response I penned yesterday to a new reader of my blog.  The idea of listening to one’s heart about this matter came sometime ago from Glenn Hovemann, Take Heart Publications, publisher of A Course of Love.

Thank you for writing to me.  I appreciate that you enjoy the posts on my miracles blog.

I think you must listen to your heart in trying to discern which book to read first, and then the order of all the reading.   

If you recognize that the Holy Spirit gives you guidance (as described in ACIM), then listen to what you have come to recognize as His promptings.  If you recognize the inner Christ-Self (as described in ACOL), then listen to this deepest essence of yourself.  If you simply realize that you have intuitive feelings, then listen to those.  You will know.  Prayer helps.

ACIM seeks to dislodge the ego, and ACOL is said within its pages to be a “continuation” of ACIM, meant to establish a new identity.  But ACOL can stand on its own, separately, if that is your prompting.  WOM may be the most approachable.  You can read the Manual of ACIM first, if the Text or Workbook seem too daunting.  All seek to bring us to Awakening, Christ-consciousness, enlightenment, the next step in our spiritual evolution.  ACIM is my happiness book, ACOL warms my heart, and WOM gives me hope and comfort on my journey.  That is my personal take on them.

You have a treat ahead of you!  We are meant to enjoy our delving into spiritual matters, and I encourage you to read in an easy, reflective, meditative manner, whatever book first that you are the most drawn to.  Whatever you choose will then be right for you.  It would be wrong for anybody else to try to choose for you.  I have just tried to give you something to think about as you mull over your options.

Thank you again for writing to me.

Love to you, Celia

A Bridge – New Publication from Take Heart Publications

This is a message from Glenn Hovemann, publisher, Take Heart Publications, about a new booklet that will describe the connection between A Course in Miracles and A Course of Love. The booklet is called A Bridge, and can be purchased from amazon in both print and e-book format. It is excellent, my recommendation (from Celia):

Here are straight answers to questions from students of A Course in Miracles about A Course of Love.

• What’s different about the message of ACOL?
• Do both ACIM and ACOL see the world as an illusion?
• How can ACOL help me in my life?
• What could ACOL offer that I haven’t already gotten from ACIM?

Many long-time students of ACIM have wholeheartedly embraced ACOL without diminishing in the slightest their love for ACIM. Others have been hesitant about “another Course.” This little book was written by students of both Courses. It’s offered as a bridge of love.

This booklet is NOT couched as a “debate” or intended to foster that kind of energy. It is for people who are interested in these questions and who are open to listening. As it says in the Introduction:

This work is presented as a series of questions and answers, and the author of each response to each question has been indicated. Our intent is to avoid the suggestion there is any one form of answering these questions that is exclusively correct, and to avoid the solidification of answers into dogmas or ideals. Some of our contributors are more verbose than others. Some have different vantages. We view this as all of a piece, as we are each unique expressions of the fullness of God. Words remain but symbols. The truth is what lives and breathes and dances in our own hearts. It is the living reality of Love we would remember, and to which we would each return.

UNDERSTANDING AND MISUNDERSTANDING A COURSE OF LOVE, by Glenn Hovemann

Note: Republished by author’s permission from Miracles magazine (Jon Mundy, publisher; Fran Cosentino, editor).

Miracles has featured articles on A Course in Miracles for over 30 years, more recently featuring articles on A Course of Love as well. Miracles is published every two months for a 1-year cost of $34 plus $3.50 shipping/handling ($29 subscription rate for students/fixed income, higher s/h for countries outside USA). For a subscription paid for by a credit card (credit card required outside USA), you may call 845-496-9089 or use Paypal online. Further complete information, including postal mailing address,

http://www.miraclesmagazine.org/#!ordering-mm/ct3a

The publisher is interested in the reception of A Course of Love, and so please say if you are interested in ACOL.

By Glenn Hovemann

Several Miracles teachers recently have circulated and re-circulated material that compares A Course in Miracles (ACIM) with A Course of Love (ACOL) and claims the latter to be a “regression” and an “attempt to preserve some value for the individual self and body.” I was surprised, yet I welcome a conversation that leads to better understanding. It’s an opportunity for sharing love and dialogue.

Fifty years ago Jesus dictated 1,250 magnificent pages to Helen Schucman. When ACIM came into my life in 1978 I knew in my bones that it was true. Over the years it ignited a spiritual revolution. Why dictate another 700 pages to Mari Perron? Why did he give it such a similar title as “A Course of Love”? Why did he call it a “continuation”? And because ACOL is obviously not merely a restatement of ACIM, what’s going on?

Before attempting to answer these questions, it may be helpful to review a few of the ways in which the two courses are closely related. In both Courses, Jesus presents himself as the Source. Both scribes, Helen Schucman and Mari Perron, describe extraordinary events surrounding their transmission. Neither woman could possibly have authored such a work on her own. Ultimately the authenticity of channeled material—or any spiritual teaching— is a matter of inner knowing. Based on my experience, I accept both ACIM and ACOL as being of equal authenticity. Increasing thousands of others do too.

Both Courses are of the same tradition. Both use identical, specialized terminology to convey key themes. Both refer to the ego “making” its world through “projection,” as contrasted with Spirit “creating” by “extending” itself. Similarly, ACIM’s solution to sin is to “forgive the Son of God for what he did not do.” As ACOL puts it, True forgiveness simply looks past illusion to the truth where there are no sins to be forgiven, no wrongs to be pardoned. C:16.12.(For ease of reading all direct quotes from ACOL are in italics.)

Both Courses assert that we are ideas of God, including the notion that God the Father is an idea. ACIM: “What you find difficult to accept is the fact that, like your Father, you are an idea.” (T-15.VI.5) ACOL: God created you with a thought or idea [and] you created the ego with a thought or an idea. T3:7.2 As we know, ideas leave not their source.

Both Courses speak of Christ as the identity we share. ACIM: “Christ is God’s Son as He created Him. He is the Self we share, uniting us with one another, and with God as well.” (W-pII.6:1) ACOL: The Christ in you is your shared identity. C:P.39

Both speak of the great diversity of creation. ACIM: “Creation is the sum of all God’s Thoughts, in number infinite, and everywhere without limit.” (W-pII.11:1) ACOL: Expressions of love are as innumerable as the stars in the universe, as bountiful as beauty, as many-faceted as the gems of the earth. I say again that sameness is not a sentence to mediocrity or uniformity. You are a unique expression of the selfsame love that exists in all creation. C:20.30

These meanings are identical, and core to both Courses.

The original Course did not present itself as the final word. In the Epilogue of the Workbook it says, “This course is a beginning, not an end.” And referring to the Holy Spirit, it adds, “And now I place you in His hands, to be his faithful follower… Let Him prepare you further.” (W-Epilogue.1,4)

Fifty years ago ego-consciousness was deeply entrenched. ACIM arrived and did the heavy lifting. According to ACOL the original Course opened a door by threatening the ego. C:P.5 The work is not complete, however, simply because we have yet to fully accept our identity as Christ. We have yet to fully accept—and thus experience—our completion. In other words, we have yet to go “beyond learning.” Going beyond learning was the accomplishment intended by ACIM. As Lesson 169 says, “The final step must go beyond all learning.” What goes beyond learning, it says, is grace, the knowing that comes through the acceptance of the love of God. ACOL says, While you continue to put effort into learning what cannot be learned, as you continue to see yourself as a student seeking to acquire what you do not yet have, you cannot recognize the unity in which you exist and be freed from learning forever. A.4 Adherence to a pattern of learning that once served us, and our failure to recognize unity, it says, is the only reason for this continuation of the coursework provided in A Course in Miracles. A.4 (emphasis added)

How many people apply themselves studiously to the Course? I have long been one of them. And I have to admit that despite decades of study, prayer, some stillness of mind, and much greater peace, I still felt “something missing.” We are trained since kindergarten to be students, to be learners. Education sits atop a very high pedestal in our society. Alas, knowledge does not bring us Home. Knowing does. Experience does.

Jesus’ new Course is designed not for the mind, which we so often equate with learning, but for the heart, which already knows. It is not a way of thought and effort but a way of feeling, of ease, and of direct relationship. A.4 This kind of effortless learning and feeling is different from that to which we are accustomed.

ACOL is a spiritual transmission in the form of a book. Be prepared to read it with a different style, a different attitude. If approached like a textbook, with the head leading the way—don’t bother! If ACOL is approached mentally, with eyes on the rearview mirror to compare it with ACIM, it may confuse you. Numerous times in ACOL, Jesus pleads, as in this passage: As you read, be aware of your heart, for this is where this learning enters and will stay. Your heart is now your eyes and ears… The only change in thinking you are asked to make is to realize that you do not need it. C:3.14

ACOL does not speak to the ego-mind. That would be futile. Nor does it speak to the spirit, which needs no instruction. Rather it is addressed to “the Christ in you” to awaken the forgotten Christ-consciousness. The Christ in you is that which is capable of learning in human form what it means to be a child of God. C:P.7 But it takes considerable willingness to delve deeply into another lengthy Course with an innocent mind that can, at least for a while, suspend judgment and say, “I do not know.”

With that understanding, for those who wish to compare and contrast, let’s address more specifically the questions raised. At one level, the key question is whether or not ACOL is an attempt to preserve value for the ego. At a deeper level, the question is whether or not ACIM and ACOL agree on what is offered to us eternally, beyond all learning.

The joining of heaven and earth has always been Jesus’ goal, as in his Lord’s Prayer—“Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.” ACIM says, “‘Heaven and earth shall pass away’ means that they will not continue to exist as separate states.” (T-1.III.2) It does not elaborate exactly how heaven and earth will “continue to exist” inseparably, however. ACIM is often interpreted to mean that all form is illusion, which implies that earth shall simply pass away and not join with heaven. ACOL, on the other hand, clearly states that form has an important, continuing role in the Atonement, and that to consider all form as illusory is an erroneous interpretation—that form itself is neutral, and what is illusory is the erroneous perception of form.
• [T]he mind…has stood between you and your own inner knowing, caught in a dream of perception. A.19
• [Y]our perception created an unreal reality of the separate and unloved, often referred to as hell or hell on earth. D:Day16.15
• Christ-consciousness replaces perception with knowing. D:Day12.7
• True vision sees life-everlasting where perception but saw finite life and mortal bodies. T4:4.14

As Miracles students well know, ACIM repeatedly uses comparison as a teaching technique. Again and again it compares the real to the unreal, the false to the true, and fear to love, to point out the insanity of the ego’s perception. In ACOL Jesus reflects on his own prior teaching style, and says: For some of you the repetition of the properties of the false that aided your learning [in ACIM] may now work as a detriment to your acceptance as you cling to ideas concerning false representation rather than let them go in order to embrace true representation. In the time of learning, you were so entrenched in your false beliefs that their insanity needed to be stated and stated again. But as we enter this new time of elevated form, these same ideas—ideas that many of you attached to form rather than to your perception of form—must be rejected. D:6.2 (emphasis added)

ACOL teaches that form—being neutral in and of itself—is either a false representation (ego) or a true representation (Christ-consciousness). Either way, form is simply a representation of the meaning given it. The false representation of the ego as the self is what has led to the world you see. A true representation of the Self…will lead to true vision and to a new world. T3:1.3 The body is not what we are (“I am not a body”), but it can represent—reveal—the Christ on earth. This miracle will usher in a new state in which only God’s laws of love exist even within the realm of physicality. T3:12.7

These ideas are not foreign to the original Course, which says:
• “It is His Holiness that lights up Heaven, and that brings to earth the pure reflection of the light above, wherein are earth and Heaven joined as one.” (W-182.4)
• “You are the holy Son of God Himself. Remember this, and all the world is free. Remember this, and earth and Heaven are one.” (W-191.11)

Certainly there are points of potential confusion between the Courses. For example, ACIM says, “The ‘reality’ of death is firmly rooted in the belief that God’s Son is a body. And if God created bodies, death would indeed be real. But God would not be loving.” To the ego’s perception, death is very real but is actually illusory. Yet the Christ, as Jesus bodily demonstrated, is not subject to death and is not illusory. It is this Christ Self that ACOL variously refers to as “spirit resurrected in form,” “the ascension of the body,” or, most commonly, as “the elevated Self of form.”

In my opinion, ACOL does not contradict ACIM, but provides additional perspectives which can give rise to a deeper understanding. One of those perspectives concerns the body and physicality: It invites an experience of truth—freedom, joy, light—that can only be had by knowing we are NOT bodies—even while we have them! The body has become a helpmate.

As I write I am keenly aware of the poverty of words. I have sought to resolve an apparent contradiction by using the tools of the “old mind,” the habitual mind that slices and dices, that perpetually compares and interprets, the mind that is always seeking something. A better way can only be hinted at, what Jesus explains in detail as the art of thought. The art of thought is a gift arising from within. It encompasses both wholeness and relationship. It IS the miracle of seeing differently.

Jesus is very keen for us to choose Christ-consciousness—the experience of unity—now, in this lifetime. From the beginning of my immersion in ACOL, and with every reading, I have the palpable sense of Jesus’ delight that his mission is reaching a crescendo, a point of no return. We are on the cusp of something genuinely new, something earth has never before seen. In ACOL he presents a portal to love, which cannot be taught but can be experienced as our true identity, and shared. Thus his Courses evolve in strength and beauty.

A Course of Love does not preserve a domain for the ego. Rather, it calls us to our inheritance that lies beyond ego. Am I suggesting that ACOL is a necessary “next step” for all Miracles students? No—only that truth seekers decide for themselves, led by the heart rather than the mind.

—–

Glenn Hovemann, a Miracles student since 1978, is editor of Take Heart Publications, publisher of A Course of Love. He wishes to acknowledge the encouragement and generous assistance of Laurel Elstrom, Celia Hales, Heather Holmes, Michael Mark, Mari Perron, and Christina Strutt with this article. A version of this article that includes citations to the excerpts from ACOL is available at http://www.acourseoflove.com.

The Prodigal’s Return, by Ivor Sowton

A Course of Love (ACOL) is a transmission from Jesus to Mari Perron, the “first receiver” of this new course, scribed in three years around the turn of this century. She published the work in three volumes during the years since. It is now in one combined volume in a beautiful, newly released edition by Take Heart Publications, available on their website and in all the major bookstores, including Amazon/Kindle.

Mari will have a table at the upcoming A Course in Miracles (ACIM) Conference, A Present Love, April 17th-20th in New York City. Also at the table will be her Take Heart publishers, Glenn and Muffy Hovemann. I know some of you will be there; please come to their table!

Mari and Take Heart Publications have also set up a wonderful Facebook Group called “A Course of Love USA,” centered on her new audio recordings of ACOL. Currently the group is listening to and commenting on chapter 9 of ACOL, The Prodigal’s Return.

Here’s a quote from that wonderful chapter that jumped out at me:

“It is the relationship inherent in meeting another’s need that makes the meeting of the need a thing of lasting value. It is your willingness to say, “Brother, you are not alone” that is the benefit of such situations, not only to your brother but also to you. It is in saying, Sister, you are not alone” that spiritual hunger and thirst is met with the fullness of unity. It is in realizing that you are not alone that you realize your unity with me and begin to turn from fear toward love.” (9.27)

To speak honestly now about my own experience of life right now, I do indeed feel like the prodigal son in this chapter. That is, in my deepest feelings I am aware of a tremendous loneliness and isolation, which I no longer want. I feel that Jesus is personally offering me a way out.

That way out is to realize, first in my mind–since I seem so trapped there so much of the time!–that actually all other people ALSO tend to feel deeply alone and isolated, at least in their ego natures.

Then I can be willing to reach out to them; and then my heart starts to open to them, and the artificial barriers between us begin to dissolve at last.

The nitty gritty of this joining with my brothers and sisters seems to involve overlooking outward differences. For instance, my brother might be thinking he needs “X”, and I might be thinking I need “Y,” but if I can risk taking Jesus at his word here, I may be able to realize that what my brother and I both ACTUALLY need is to feel the Love of God–the embrace spoken of so beautifully in chapter 20. In realizing that we are one in that need, my brother and I have joined in Christ.

This, then, is the return of the Prodigal Son/Daughter, who is us.