Chap. 3, V. Beyond Perception, VI. Judgment and the Authority Problem,
VII.
Creating versus the Self-Image
Praying to my Creator
November 29, 2009
Tom Baker (tbaker@omega.hrcoxmail.com)
As a priest one of the main things I did was pray. In fact I was surprised
how much I did pray. People were constantly requesting that I pray for them
or their loved ones, all the sacramental rituals such as mass and baptism and
confession had prayers, most often asking for God's mercy, and then there
were my own rather desperate prayers for help, guidance, and courage since
much of the time I did not fully know what I was doing. I also figured out
that the one way to have privacy, outside of going to the toilet, was to kneel
down in the church and pray. Prayer provided a kind of sacred boundary that
allowed me to be alone with myself and, of course, God. As a therapist
people, especially in extremity, ask me to pray for them, I assume because
they know that I used to be a priest. For Catholics and perhaps for others,
once a priest always a priest. In the metaphysical, new age world prayer is
something of a problem. We no longer are begging for God's mercy and
there are no real rituals that need prayer. When new age people talk about
prayer they most often report praying to angels and often for immediate
needs like a parking place or for patience in traffic. Most new age prayer
seems to take place in the motorized temple of the automobile. People are
much more serious about meditation. Yet, A Course In Miracles, in a sense,
reinstates the importance of prayer when both in the 11th principle of
miracles in Chapter One (page 3) and in the section in Chapter 3 entitled
Beyond Perception it states that prayer is the medium of miracles:
"Prayer is
a way of asking for something. It is the medium of miracles. But the only
meaningful prayer is for forgiveness, because those who have been forgiven
have everything. Once forgiveness has been accepted, prayer is the usual
sense becomes utterly meaningless." (Chap. 3, V. p. 45).
One of the people in the group asked who is the forgiveness for. Am I
praying that I be forgiven or am I praying for help in forgiving another or, to
take it one step further, am I praying that another forgive me? He cited the
Lord's Prayer in which we pray that we may be forgiven our debts or
trespasses as we forgive others their debts or trespasses. I think the Course
would say that in essence I am asking for God's forgiveness of myself which
means, of course, that I would accept, feel, recognize, and believe the love
God has for me despite my transgressions which I have come to think have
caused God to withdraw His love. While I might believe consciously that God
holds nothing against me, my largely unconscious egoic thinking is convinced
that God is seriously angered and implacably offended at my transgressions
and will mete out horrible punishments unless He forgives me. In Catholic
theology Jesus' suffering on the cross is the "payment" for my sins and opens
the way for God to forgive me. That is how Jesus "died for our sins." In the
Catholic act of contrition (statement of sorrow for my sins) the penitent says
to God "I am most heartily sorry for offending thee" and hopes by his or her
sincerity and amendment of his or her ways to avoid God's "just
punishments." According to the Course God is not even capable of being
offended, but the horrifying idea that he could be has come to be an
obsession with us and constantly fertilizes the ego notion that we are
separate from God and are our own creations. Thus the process of accepting
once again the love of God must take place on the ego's terms so we ask for
God's forgiveness and, at the same time, practice the "knowing" that God has
and always will love me by affirming, as we do in Lesson 50, the "I am
sustained by the Love of God." We are saying to God, in effect, "I know
intellectually that you have forgiven me but, so often, it doesn't feel like it so
bear with me as I ask you to forgive me." On an interactive level with one
another we can say almost the exact same thing: "In my spiritual head I
know that I love you as a precious soul, but it feels like I hate you right now
so I must forgive you or, rather, ask to see you as the Holy Spirit sees you."
This is the miracle; that I see you with the divine knowing of the Holy Spirit.
In the state of consciousness we are in now, our perception does not match
our knowing. The Holy Spirit helps us cleanse our perception from fear and
guilt so it more closely resembles our divine knowing.
The reward for forgiveness is not in going to heaven when we die but in
being released from fear and tension while we live now: "You have no idea of
the tremendous release and deep peace that comes from meeting yourself
and your brothers [and sisters] totally without judgment." (T. Chap. 3, VI., p.
47.) Yet there is a hidden problem that stands in the way of forgiving others
and feeling forgiven by God. The Course calls it the Authority problem and
explains that it is really a problem of authorship: "When you have an
authority problem, it is always because you believe you are the author of
yourself and project your delusion onto others. You then perceive the
situation as one in which others are literally fighting you for your authorship."
(T. p. 48). This is the cause of the power struggle human beings have with
one another, especially on the level of intimacy. It is rather embarrassing to
admit, but a great deal of what we call love is the attempt to get the beloved
to enhance or confirm the image I have of myself, positive and negative. In
other words, I love you so I can use you to support the image of myself that I
made. The problem is that you do the same thing and, in projecting your
delusion of authorship onto me, become defensive that I rather than you will
make you up. In an ego sense this suspicion is warranted since, by judging
you, I am attempting to remake you in my own image. Now forgiveness takes
on an entirely new light. In forgiving you I am saying, "Be the one that God
created, not the one I would like you to be." In asking forgiveness for myself I
am saying, "Let me be the one God created rather than the self image I made
up." Lesson 94 has us practice self forgiveness with the succinct affirmation
"I am as God created me." If I extend the same courtesy to you I will affirm
that you are as God created you as well.
While it seems simple to just let yourself and others be as God created
them, it isn't simple at all to establish and certainly not easy to accept. It is
neither simple nor easy because in our minds, in the fearful union of mob
rule, we have made ourselves, others and God into something else. While it's
tempting to simply dismiss this as human insanity, the Course reminds us
that "nothing made by a child of God is without power." We all have insane
thoughts about ourselves, some depressive ("I'm no good at anything") and
some grandiose ("I'm smarter than most people") and these notions are very
powerful and not easy for us or those who are impacted by our behavior to
change. Our thoughts about ourselves and others are amazingly fixed, even
when we're presented with overwhelming evidence to the contrary. My wife
has noticed for years that, despite her constant affirmation of what are in her
eyes "my good looks," I insist that I am ugly, even repulsive looking. The
image of myself made by my mind is extremely powerful, yet it is supported
by little or no external evidence. As something of an authority on anxiety
disorders, I am always impressed with how powerful our worries are and how
our fears shape our personalities. We often try to feel better by saying we're
simply being silly, a version of what the Course calls depreciating the power
of our minds. Our minds are not weak but have simply drawn one false
conclusion after another until we have thought ourselves into a very lonely
corner of the universe, a corner which really is entirely imaginary but feels
completely real, just as my worry about being a repulsive looking failure is an
unreal but real feeling thing. The solution is to use our minds to bring us
back to the beginning, the beginning of what and who we are. That is why
the most repeated phrase in A Course In Miracles is I am as God created me.
In Lesson 94, which has us practice this phrase, we are told how important
this idea is:
"Today we continue with the one idea which brings complete
salvation; the one statement which makes all forms of temptation powerless;
the one thought which renders the ego silent and entirely undone. You are as
God created you. The sounds of this world are still, the sights of this world
disappear, and all the thoughts that this world ever held are wiped away
forever by this one idea. Here is salvation accomplished. Here is sanity
restored." (Workbook, Lesson 94, p. 164).
In the text of the Course we begin to understand how we began to think
in terms of self creation and separation from our being one with God and the
universe. Yet understanding the problem is not the solution to solving the
problem, anymore than understanding why you drink alcohol will make you
stop being addicted to alcohol. One stops drunkenness by practicing
sobriety. Understanding the reasons behind alcoholic addiction can motivate
the alcoholic to practice sobriety, but the solution is in the practice, not the
understanding. In a sense we have become addicted to separation thinking
and separation living. In the workbook of the Course we are given the
opportunity to practice oneness thinking and oneness living. We practice not
only forgiveness but also seeing ourselves and one another as holy, a
holiness unchanged since our beginning in God:
"Your starting point is truth,
and you must return to your Beginning. Much has been seen since then, but
nothing has really happened. Your Self is still in peace, even though your
mind is in conflict. You have not yet gone back far enough, and that is why
you become so fearful. As you approach the Beginning, you feel the fear of
the destruction of your thought system upon you as if it were the fear of
death. There is no death, but there is a belief in death." (T. Chap. 3, VII., p.
51).
There is a catch to enlightenment. Since we have made ourselves up,
practicing and sharing a vision of ourselves as non-made up, as created by
Love Itself, will, at least at first and usually periodically, feel like a loss of the
self we know and love. This "loss" is extremely disorienting and can lead to
all kinds of delaying actions: disease, obsessions, delusions about ourselves
and others, and of course, another reincarnation. Yet if we stay the course, it
will lead to joy. This is what Jesus spoke of when he encouraged his disciples
to die to themselves. It is this little death of the image we have made of
ourselves (and others) that brings an awakening in our minds of the Self that
waits for us in peace. In this death to the image we made, the only thing that
dies is fear, and the Self we are is resurrected for all to see.
I am considering starting the Course over again in January. It's been two
years plus since we started again in October of 2007, so I think a go from the
beginning might be in order. Email me at tbaker@omega.hrcoxmail.com and
let me know what you think. We will be meeting next week, Sunday,
December 6th, at the usual time, from 4:30 to 6 pm in the mini auditorium at
the ARE. We will be examining the beginning of Chapter 4 in the text entitled
The Illusions of the Ego.
This talk is reprinted from www.TomBakerOmega.com