LESSON 208
July 27
"I am not a body. I am free. For I am still as God created me."
"The peace of God is shining in me now."
"I am not a body. I am free. For I am still as God created me."
PRACTICE SUMMARY
Review VI
Purpose: To carefully review the last 20 lessons, each of which contains the whole curriculum and is therefore sufficient for salvation, if understood, practiced, accepted and applied without exception.
Morning/Evening Quiet Time: 15 minutes - at least
Repeat: "I am not a body. I am free. For I am still as God created me."
Close eyes and relinquish all that clutters the mind; forget all you thought you knew. Give the time to the Holy Spirit, your Teacher. If you notice an idle thought, immediately deny its hold, assuring your mind that you do not want it. Then let it be given up and replaced with today's idea. Say: "This thought I do not want. I choose instead (today's idea)."
Remarks: We are attempting to go beyond special forms of practice because we are attempting a quicker pace and shorter path to our goal.
Hourly Remembrance: Repeat: "I am not a body. I am free. For I am still as God created me."
Frequent Reminder: as often as possible, as often as you can. Repeat: "I am not a body. I am free. For I am still as God created me."
Response To Temptation: permit no idle thought to go unchallenged.
If you are tempted by an idle thought, immediately deny its hold, assuring your mind that you do not want it. Then let it be given up and replaced with today's idea. Say: "This thought I do not want. I choose instead (today's idea)."
COMMENTARY
Over and over again, the Course urges us to "be still." It is remarkable how much benefit can be derived from simply pausing, even just for ten seconds, closing the eyes, and remembering the peace of God that is within me. Just the word "peace," repeated silently, can have a soothing, healing effect on the mind. This is not something that will come to us without conscious cooperation. Practice is necessary. "I will be still;" it is an act of the will, a choice, a decision. The frantic onflow of thoughts and concerns has to be interrupted, and the mind turned towards that "stillness" (1:3) that "is within my heart" (1:4).
Most of our waking hours (and probably most of our sleeping hours as well, although we aren't aware of it) are spent in various concerns that, when stripped down to their basics, are concerns about our bodies, in one way or another. The daily care-taking of bathing, grooming, dressing, feeding, and resting our bodies goes on and on. The time we spend "earning a living" is necessitated by the need for money to purchase food, clothing and shelter, and to entertain ourselves. But we are not bodies. We need frequent reminders of that fact. We need to pause and say, "Peace, be still" to ourselves. It seems easier not to make the effort, to just let the current of bodily concerns carry us onward from one moment to the next. Yet when we make the effort, when we step out of the flow for a minute to simply be still and find the peace of God, everything begins to go more smoothly. We find ourselves happier than we were before. As an old Christian hymn put it, "Things that once were wild alarms cannot now disturb my rest."
We have a wellspring of peace within our hearts. It waits for us to simply dip into it and drink from its refreshing pool. It is there now, shining within us. Right now, and often today, "I will be still." I will draw on that inner wealth, "which witnesses to God Himself" (1:4).
Copyright © 1996, The Circle of Atonement, Sedona,
Arizona, USA.
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