For approximately 2,000 years,
the Bible has had an incredible hold on Western civilization, and has clearly
dominated all other forms of religious thought. Moreover, it has exerted
the most powerful influence over the course of Western political, economic,
social, moral, and artistic history. The reason for such a hold, when one
examines the Bible from the perspective of A Course in Miracles,
is the clear expression its theology gives to the ego thought system, justifying
for its believers their own needs to be special. (By the same token, biblical
believers would draw similar conclusions about the Course's current popularity.)
Incidentally, for the purposes of this dialogue, the focus was more on
the New Testament, although as the discussion will show, the Old and New
Testaments together reflect a common theological orientation.
Many students of A Course in Miracles
have been tempted to call the Course the "Third Testament," expressing
their belief that it represents the same basic theology of the Bible, although
in a more "purified" (i.e., less ego-dominated) or more spiritually evolved
form. As will be clear from the dialogue between Fr. Clarke and me, this
grossly distorts what A Course in Miracles teaches, and is a real
disservice to both the Course and the Bible. In fact, the Course and the
Bible reflect entirely different and mutually exclusive theologies that
can never be integrated into one coherent spirituality.
This crucial difference can be summarized
in the statement that for Christians the Bible is the Word of God (Christians
differing only to the degree of literalness the various Churches ascribe
to it), while from the perspective of A Course in Miracles, the
Bible would be seen as just one among many religious documents that reflect
the consciousness of the time and culture in which they were written. Based
upon the important distinction the Course draws between form and content,
the Bible would be understood as merely the form in which a people expressed
its view of the world and of God, no different therefore from the works
of the great Western poets such as Homer, the Greek tragedians, Dante,
Shakespeare, and Goethe, among countless other poets and artists.
The shared content of all inspired works
is the desire to express what is true for their authors, regardless of
the form of artistic expression in which it comes. Understood from this
point of view, Christianity's mistake has been to elevate the Bible's historical
and theological statements into absolute truths, no different from a lover
of Shakespeare asserting that his great history plays render an accurate
account of English history.
Therefore, to attempt such a reconciliation
between these two spiritual paths -- A Course in Miracles and traditional
Christianity -- must inevitably lead to frustration at best, and severe
distortion at worst. Indeed, Fr. Clarke has commented, as I mention at
the end of the dialogue, that to speak of the Course as a "correction"
for Christianity (as I myself had occasionally spoken of it in the past)
is misleading. To correct something implies that you are still retaining
the basic frame-work of what you are correcting. A Course in Miracles,
on the other hand, directly refutes the very basis of the Christian faith,
leaving nothing on which Christians can base their beliefs. Succinctly
stated, here are some of the major differences between the two:
1) A Course in Miracles teaches
that God did not create the physical universe, which includes all matter,
form, and the body; the Bible states that He did.
2) The God of A Course in Miracles
does not even know about the sin of separation (since to know about it
would make it real), let alone react to it; the God of the Bible perceives
sin directly, as is portrayed in the Garden of Eden story discussed later
in the dialogue, and His responses to it are vigorous, dramatic, and at
times punitive, to say the very least.
3) A Course in Miracles' Jesus
is equal to everyone else, a part of God's one Son or Christ; the Bible's
Jesus is seen as special, apart, and therefore ontologically different
from everyone else, being God's only begotten Son, the second person of
the Trinity.
4) The Jesus of A Course in Miracles
is not sent by God to suffer and die on the cross in a sacrificial act
of atonement for sin, but rather teaches that there is no sin by demonstrating
that nothing happened to him in reality, for sin has no effect on the Love
of God; the Jesus of the Bible agonizes, suffers, and dies for the sins
of the world in an act that brings vicarious salvation to humanity, thereby
establishing sin and death as real, and moreover clearly reflecting that
God has been affected by Adam's sin and must respond to its actual presence
in the world by sacrificing His beloved Son.
Thus, from the perspective of A Course
in Miracles, the God of the Bible, Creator of the world and author
of the atonement plan of suffering, sacrifice, and death, is an ego God.
He is one Who clearly represents the thought system of the ego's specialness
that the Course sets forth. Jesus himself makes these parallels in the
text, as seen in the opening sections in Chapters 3 and 6, the Introduction
to Chapter 13, the important section in Chapter 23, "The Laws of Chaos,"
as well as in many, many other places in the Course.
In summary, therefore, we can conclude
that there is no way one can reconcile the God or theology of the Bible
with the theology found in A Course in Miracles. Moreover, the figure
of Jesus in the Bible is totally incompatible with the Jesus who authored
A
Course in Miracles. In fact, Jesus himself states in the Course, in
obvious reference to the historical images that were drawn from the biblical
ones, that bitter idols were made of him "who would be only brother to
the world" (manual, p. 86; C-5.5:7). It is a continual source of amazement
-- given the clear distinctions between the biblical and Course figures
-- for one to observe how frequently this reconciliation is attempted.
In fact, Fr. Clarke makes this observation in the course of the dialogue.
I have frequently made the public comment
that one of the most important lessons a student of A Course in Miracles
can learn is how to disagree with someone (whether that person be on another
spiritual path, or a student of the Course) without it being an attack.
In our world of multiplicity, where personal projections and perceptions
rule, it is almost impossible for people to agree when it comes to systems
of thought, or on almost anything else for that matter. My father in fact
used to say about people holding differences of opinion: "That's what makes
horse races." It is also what makes the ego's universe, reflecting the
original ego thought that the Son is separate and different in kind from
his Creator. Jesus himself comments in A Course in Miracles, as
I quote below in the dialogue: "A universal theology is impossible, but
a universal experience is not only possible but necessary" (manual, p.
73; C-in.2:5). The universal experience is love, and the dialogue with
Fr. Clarke was held in the loving spirit of respecting differences, agreeing
to disagree as it were, thus offering an example of differing without judgment
or attack.
Therefore, it is our hope that this
book will contribute to a better understanding of the thought systems of
A
Course in Miracles and biblical Christianity. It was neither Fr. Clarke's
nor my purpose to debate the clear differences which I identified briefly
above, and will be discussed more fully in the dialogue. Rather, our purpose
was to state them simply, defining the differences (and similarities where
they occur) as clearly as possible.
A Course in Miracles, in fact, itself
teaches through the use of contrasts, as it frequently states (e.g., text,
pp. 249, 252; T-13.XI.6:1-3; T-14.11.1:2-3), even though such differences
are absent in Heaven, the state of perfect oneness and undifferentiated
unity. At our level of learning, however, where we believe we exist within
the ego thought system of time and space, of separation and specialness,
we are still in need of contrast to learn the Holy Spirit's lessons of
forgiveness instead of the ego's lessons of attack. Indeed, one of the
principal contrasts Jesus uses in the Course to present his thought system
is with traditional Christianity, with an occasional specific reference
to Roman Catholicism. Thus in A Course in Miracles' presentation
itself, Jesus shows us that differences can be acknowledged in a loving
way, in a spirit of non-opposition and without confrontation, and lovingly
serving a pedagogical purpose.
Therefore, the spirit in which this
dialogue has been entered is also meant to reflect the Course's view of
itself: that it is only one among many thousands of spiritual paths (manual,
p. 3; M-1.4:1-2). For in the end, it is the non-judgmental experience of
our oneness with God and His creation, rather than the mere acceptance
of A Course in Miracles' theology as opposed to that of another
spiritual system, that constitutes the aim of the Course's curriculum.
The dialogue has been divided into an
Introduction, and five chapters: The origin of the World, Jesus, The Eucharist,
Living in the World, and Summary and Conclusions.
One final point: A Course in Miracles
has its own rules of
capitalization
which have been followed in my part of the dialogue -- e.g., all nouns
and pronouns related to God, Christ, and the Holy Spirit are capitalized;
the "Son of God," a term which includes all children of God, is also capitalized.
Fr. Clarke's preferred system of capitalization has been followed in his.
PART
3, SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS =>
<=PART
1, PREFACE TO THE DIALOGUE
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