A Perspective on ACIM Sequels
By Monte M. Page, PhD
As seen in Miracles Magazine, May/June,
2009
All of my life I have been a
spiritual seeker. I spent my youth going to the altar trying to
get “sanctified” to
no avail. As a young man, I rebelled against my background and became
a Unitarian. As a mature adult, I was into Zen practice and the philosophy
of J. Krishnamurti. When, in 1990, a friend induced me to try A Course
In Miracles (ACIM), the result was a profound change in my perspective
and a physical healing from chronic prostate issues. For the past
19 years I’ve been a Teacher of God, or one who is learning
by teaching the Course.
By profession I am a Social-Personality Psychologist
who, over the years has evolved into a teacher of Transpersonal
Psychology. To
me, ACIM is an exquisite psychotherapist and one of the best Transpersonal
Psychology tests I have seen. It’s sole purpose is to prepare
the mind and heart for spiritual awakenings.
Before ACIM, I was too much in my head, seeking higher consciousness
but genuine spirituality is more about changing your deep feelings;
about opening both heart and mind to love. Doing the lessons of ACIM
helped me with that more than anything I’d tried.
ACIM does not claim to be the only path or the final path. It says
there are many paths, all leading to the same goal. Still, until
recently, I thought ACIM was a unique and one time event. But now
I have discovered a couple of sequels to ACIM which seem to me to
constitute more advanced teachings. At least for me, several years
of ACIM lessons were necessary before I was ready for these other
teachings. Apparently Jesus is sending messages through multiple
channels. These books apparently come from the same source and subscribe
to the same thought system. They have different emphases and are
designed for different stages of spiritual maturity.
About four years ago I saw a book review
in Miracles Magazine of a channeled book called A Course Of Love
(ACOL). I was surprised
by it’s depth and appeal. I was very excited because it appeared
to start where ACIM left off. I now see ACIM as being geared for
reluctant learners like Helen and Bill and all of us at some point
in our journey. ACIM is designed to help us get rid of ego, find
inner peace and become Teachers of God. ACIM gently begins by asking
only “a little willingness”, ACOL presumes we have almost
finished with the ego and have “great willingness”. It
then strongly encourages us to completely release the ego and to
begin to manifest our true enlightened Self called – Christ
Self.
ACOL specifically instructs us to go beyond
learning where we struggle and seek, to a mode of receptivity and
acceptance. ACIM says it can’t
teach the meaning of love which is beyond what can be taught. ACOL
helps us embrace and accept the love that we already are. Actually,
both teachings overlap a great deal. Most of what is in ACOL can
be found in or be inferred from ACIM but ACOL seems clearer or more
direct on certain themes.
ACOL makes a clear statement that we are in the midst of a sweeping
change of human consciousness. We are right now transitioning to
a new era. For 2000 years since Bible times, we have been in the
time of the Holy Spirit but now we are changing to the time of Christ.
People will literally, and in large numbers, begin to walk the earth
in Christ Consciousness. This is part of what is meant by the second
coming of Christ.
ACOL aims at a shift from dominance of the
intellect (or mind and thought) to dominance of the heart. Heart
is defined as the center
of our being, that place from which all feeling arises. All true
feeling is love. God’s only thought is love. Because of the
extension of God’s thoughts of love, we exist. Enlightenment
is the acceptance that we are only love and thus in union with God.
Christ Consciousness is centered in the heart and the mind is the
servant. We are to no longer identify with our thoughts. The ego
is just a bunch of thoughts about our selves as separate. When we
give up separation thoughts for being love and unity, the ego is
dispelled and Christ Consciousness comes to the fore. This is called
wholeheartedness.
There are actually three books in the series.
ACOL, which was published in 2001, then came The Treatises of ACOL,
numbering four: 1) On the
Art Of Thought (how to use thought as a servant of heart), 2) On
The Nature Of Unity And It’s Recognition, 3) On The Personal
Self (even when the ego is gone you still need a personal self which
you present to others) and 4) A Treatise On Then New (the new world
is at hand and we are called to create it). These Treatises are some
of the most profound material I have ever read.
The third book is The Dialogues: Coming To Voice. The dialogues
release us to our own wisdom and our own power. They speak of a new
you, an elevated self of form. One who is capable of living in the
new world which is coming.
ACOL was channeled by Mari Perron of Minneapolis,
Minnesota. Much like Helen Schucman she had a series of spiritual
experiences which
culminated in her hearing an inner voice which asked her to take
down “a new Course In Miracles”. Unlike Helen, who was “anything
but spiritual:” and had to be coaxed, Mari was an experienced
spiritual practitioner with a strong desire to be useful to God.
I suspect that some of the difference between the two teachings is
due to the difference between the two scribes. There was less drama
in Mari's case. She simply sat at her computer and typed what she
heard. She said that the receiving became a full-time job, working
for God. Mari’s web site is www.acourseoflove.com.
About three years ago I read an ad in Miracles Magazine for a new
channeled book entitled The Way Of Mastery (TWOM) that had been published
in book form in 2004. Having had a good experience with ACOL, I ordered
it right away. TWOM turned out to be very intense and helpful to
me. If ACIM requires only a little more willingness to start and
ACOL asks for great willingness, then TWOM is more confronting with
a request for total willingness. It seems a bit easier to read than
the other two sets of teachings but it is more blunt and straight-forward.
Thus, it is potentially more off-putting to the fearful than either
ACIM or ACOL. It says up front that your true nature is Christ, so
you might as well get on with it and begin manifesting as a Master
now!
The Way Of Mastery has three sections: 1)
The Way Of The Heart, 2) The Way Of Transformation and 3) The Way
Of Knowing. Each section
takes you deeper into a new way of being called Mastery. It takes
you from birthing the mind of Christ to the last chapter – living
as a Sovereign Master.
The book is only a fraction of the channeled
material available on CD’s from www.shantichristo.com. The original channeling
took place as spoken words before a live audience and it is inspiring
to listen on CD’s to the spoken words while following along
in the book. Also, on the CD version, there are very informative
question and answer sessions not published in the book.
TWOM was channeled by Jon Marc Hammer. The voice he heard claimed
to be Jeshua Ben Joseph (Jesus). Jon Marc was a long-time mediator
and a student of Eastern Philosophy. He was also a practiced channel,
having channeled The Jeshua Letters which were published in 1991.
This was the story of his own first contact with the inner voice
of Jeshua and his own personal awakening. He had also channeled a
beautiful and profound little book entitled The Way Of The Servant
which was published in 1994.
Not everyone will be ready for TWOM. It struck
me as a very important and sophisticated spiritual teaching, but
some may find it too threatening.
The threat comes from the ego’s fear of our true greatness.
I recommend finishing the lessons in ACIM before moving on to either
ACOL or TWOM. I certainly would not have been ready for these sequels,
especially TWOM, without first doing my ACIM lessons.
TWOM discusses ACIM at several points and
Jeshua claims to be the author of both. He says ACIM was given
because of Helen’s and
Bill’s request for “inner peace”. It is not a complete
teaching. The other messages he is sending are intended to round
out the picture. Helen was a reluctant scribe, particularly at first
and therefore it had to be toned down so she wouldn’t quit.
So, students who are still reluctant (i.e., most of us starting out)
would probably be better advised to start with ACIM. For example,
Helen was threatened by reincarnation so it was handled in a vague
way. TWOM is more forceful, clear and direct on controversial topics.
TWOM has a few exercises and lessons but, in general, the chapters
themselves are a progressive series of lessons. They were originally
given once a month as spoken to an audience.
I believe in synchronicity. I don’t
believe these two sequels to ACIM appeared in my life by accident.
They have precipitated another
revolution in my perspective similar to that which I experienced
when I first encountered ACIM. The Course was not the end of my spiritual
journey but only an important step along the way. The same mysterious
energy that orchestrated the advent of ACIM is still at work in the
world.
I wouldn’t be surprised to learn that
there are other ACIM related materials of which I am unaware. I
have recently noticed
the teachings presented by Tom Carpenter and Brent Haskell but have
not studied them. Certainly we can expect that subsequent teachings
may be forthcoming. I also expect that at some point channeled teachings
may no longer be necessary, as people come to manifest their Christ
Self to the world.
I still see ACIM as the foundation of my spiritual practice but
now it is part of a new group of teachings that is emerging and not
my only test. ACIM is what I first introduce to students as it is
most suited to reluctant learners. The lessons of ACIM are essential
and unsurpassed but for the person who has completed the lessons
perhaps more than once and is very familiar with the Text and the
Manual For Teachers, these sequels can take you deeper. Alternatively,
a person who is deeply into another authentic spiritual path should
be able to get a lot out of both these sequels.
Dr. Monte M. Page is Professor of Psychology Emeritus at the University
of Nebraska-Lincoln. He teaches one course per semester in Transpersonal
Psychology and leads a ACIM group weekly in addition to a group that
studies other books such as the sequels mentioned in this article.
He and his wife, Joyce, live on an acreage near Lincoln, NE.
|