Tuesday, April 22, 2014
The Message of the Crucifixion
For learning purposes, let us consider
the crucifixion again. I did not dwell on it before because of the fearful
connotations you may associate with it. The only emphasis laid upon it so far
has been that it was not a form of punishment. Nothing, however, can be
explained in negative terms only. There is a positive interpretation of the
crucifixion that is wholly devoid of fear, and therefore wholly benign in what
it teaches, if it is properly understood.
The crucifixion is nothing more than an
extreme example. Its value, like the value of any teaching device, lies solely
in the kind of learning it facilitates. It can be, and has been, misunderstood.
This is only because the fearful are apt to perceive fearfully. I have already
told you that you can always call on me to share my decision, and thus make it
stronger. I have also told you that the crucifixion was the last useless journey
the Sonship need take, and that it represents release from fear to anyone who
understands it. While I emphasized only the resurrection before, the purpose of
the crucifixion and how it actually led to the resurrection was not clarified
then. Nevertheless, it has a definite contribution to make to your own life,
and if you will consider it without fear, it will help you understand your own
role as a teacher.
You have probably reacted for years as if
you were being crucified. This is a marked tendency of the separated, who
always refuse to consider what they have done to themselves. Projection means
anger, anger fosters assault, and assault promotes fear. The real meaning of
the crucifixion lies in the apparent
intensity of
the assault of some of the Sons of God upon another. This, of course, is
impossible, and must be fully understood as impossible. Otherwise, I cannot serve as a model for learning.
Assault can ultimately be made only on
the body. There is little doubt that one body can assault another, and can even
destroy it. Yet if destruction itself is impossible, anything that is
destructible cannot be real. Its destruction, therefore, does not justify
anger. To the extent to which you believe that it does, you are accepting false
premises and teaching them to others. The message the crucifixion was intended
to teach was that it is not necessary to perceive any form of assault in
persecution, because you cannot be persecuted. If you respond with anger, you must be equating
yourself with the destructible, and are therefore regarding yourself insanely.
I
have made it perfectly clear that I am like you and you are like me, but our
fundamental equality can be demonstrated only through joint decision. You are
free to perceive yourself as persecuted if you choose. When you do choose to
react that way, however, you might remember that I was persecuted as the world
judges, and did not share this evaluation for myself. And because I did not
share it, I did not strengthen it. I therefore offered a different interpretation
of attack, and one which I want to share with you. If you will believe it, you
will help me teach it.
As
I have said before, "As you teach so
shall you learn." If you react as if you are persecuted, you are
teaching persecution. This is not a lesson a Son of God should want to teach if
he is to realize his own salvation. Rather, teach your own perfect immunity,
which is the truth in you, and realize that it cannot be assailed. Do not try to protect it yourself, or you are
believing that it is assailable. You are not asked to be crucified, which was
part of my own teaching contribution. You are merely asked to follow my example
in the face of much less extreme temptations to misperceive, and not to accept
them as false justifications for anger. There can be no justification for the
unjustifiable. Do not believe there is, and do not teach that there is.
Remember always that what you believe you will teach. Believe with me, and we
will become equal as teachers. (ACIM, Text, CH6, I, 1-6)
Learn to know that your body is not you at all. It is
something that belongs to you; a possession of yours, something by which you
express what you are. Practical Healing for Mind and Body byJane
W. Yarnall1891
I am
sorry when my brothers do not share my decision to hear only one Voice, because
it weakens them as teachers and as learners.(T,CH6,I,8.1)
As
the world judges these things, but not as God knows them, I was betrayed,
abandoned, beaten, torn, and finally killed. It was clear that this was only
because of the projection of others onto me, since I had not harmed anyone and
had healed many.(T,CH6,I,9.2-3)
The
message of the crucifixion is perfectly clear:
Teach only love, for that is what you are.
If
you interpret the crucifixion in any other way, you are using it as a weapon
for assault rather than as the call for peace for which it was intended. The
Apostles often misunderstood it, and for the same reason that anyone
misunderstands it.(T,CH6,I,13:14.2)
I do
not call for martyrs but for teachers. No one is punished for sins, and the
Sons of God are not sinners. Any concept of punishment involves the projection
of blame, and reinforces the idea that blame is justified. The result is a
lesson in blame, for all behavior teaches the beliefs that motivate it. The
crucifixion was the result of clearly opposed thought systems; the perfect
symbol of the "conflict" between the ego and the Son of God. This
conflict seems just as real now, and its lessons must be learned now as well as
then.(T,CH6,I,16.3-8)
Remember
that the Holy Spirit is the Communication Link between God the Father and His
separated Sons. If you will listen to His Voice you will know that you cannot
either hurt or be hurt, and that many need your blessing to help them hear this
for themselves. When you perceive only this need in them, and do not respond to
any other, you will have learned of me and will be as eager to share your
learning as I am.(T,CH6,I,19.1-3)
The
full awareness of the Atonement, then, is the recognition that the
separation never occurred.(T,CH6,II,10.7)
Remember: Expect Miracles!
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