A
Course in Miracles
Chapter
2 - The Illusion of Separation
Healing
as Release From Fear
The emphasis will now be on healing. The miracle is the means,
the Atonement is the principle, and healing is the result.
Those who speak of “a miracle of healing” are combining
two orders of reality inappropriately. Healing is not a miracle.
The Atonement, or the final miracle, is a remedy, while
any type of healing is a result.
The
kind of error to which Atonement is applied is irrelevant. Essentially,
all healing is the release from fear. To
undertake this, you cannot be fearful yourself. You do not understand
healing because of your own fear.
A major step in the Atonement plan is to undo error at all levels.
Illness, which is really “not-right-mindedness,” is
the result of level confusion in the sense that it always entails
the belief that what is amiss in one level can adversely affect
another.
We have constantly referred to miracles as the means of correcting
level confusion, and all mistakes must be corrected at the level
on which they occur.
Only
the mind is capable of error.
The
body can act erroneously, but this is only because
it is responding to mis-thought.
The
body cannot create, and the belief that it can, a fundamental error,
produces all physical symptoms. All physical illness represents
a belief in magic. The whole distortion which created magic rests
on the belief that there is a creative ability in matter which the
mind cannot control.
This
error can take two forms;
(1)
it can be believed that the mind can miscreate in the body, or
(2)
that the body can miscreate in the mind.
If
it is understood that the mind, which is the only level of creation,
cannot create beyond itself, neither type of confusion need occur.
The
reason only the mind can create is more obvious than may
be immediately apparent.
The
Soul has been created.
The
body is a learning device for the mind. Learning devices are not
lessons in themselves. Their purpose is merely to facilitate the
thinking of the learner.
The
most that a faulty use of a learning device can do is to fail to
facilitate learning. It has no power in itself to introduce actual
learning errors.
The body, if properly understood, shares the invulnerability of
the Atonement to two-edged application. This is not because the
body is a miracle, but because it is not inherently open to misinterpretation.
The
body is merely a fact in human experience. Its abilities can be,
and frequently are, overevaluated. However, it is almost impossible
to deny its existence. Those who do so are engaging in a particularly
unworthy form of denial. The term “unworthy” here implies
simply that it is not necessary to protect the mind by denying the
unmindful. If one denies this unfortunate aspect of the mind’s
power, one is also denying the power itself.
All material means which man accepts as remedies for bodily ills
are merely restatements of magic principles.
It
was the first level of the error to believe that the
body created its own illness.
It
is a second misstep to attempt to heal it through noncreative
agents. It does not follow, however, that the use of these very
weak corrective devices are evil.
Sometimes
the illness has a sufficiently great hold over a mind to render
a person inaccessible to Atonement. In this case it may be wise
to utilize a compromise approach to mind and body, in which something
from the outside is temporarily given healing belief.
This is because the last thing that can help the non-right-minded,
or the sick, is an increase in fear. They are already in
a fear-weakened state. If they are inappropriately exposed to an
“undiluted” miracle, they may be precipitated into panic.
This is particularly likely to occur when upside-down perception
has induced the belief that miracles are frightening.
Fear
of Release
The
value of the Atonement does not lie in the manner in which it is
expressed. In fact, if it is truly used, it will inevitably be expressed
in whatever way is most helpful to the receiver.
This
means that a miracle, to attain its full efficacy, must be expressed
in a language which the recipient can understand without
fear. It does not follow, by any means, that this is the highest
level of communication of which he is capable. It does mean, however,
that it is the highest level of communication of which he is capable
NOW.
The
whole aim of the miracle is to raise the level of communication,
not to impose regression in the improper sense upon it.
Before miracle workers are ready to undertake their function in
this world, it is essential that they fully understand the fear
of release. Otherwise, they may unwittingly foster the belief
that release is imprisonment, a belief that is very prevalent.
This
misperception arose from the underlying misbelief that harm can
be limited to the body. This was because of the much greater fear
that the mind can hurt itself. Neither error is really meaningful,
because the miscreations of the mind do not really exist.
This recognition is a far better protective device than any form
of level confusion, because it introduces correction at the level
of the error.
It is essential to remember that only the mind can create.
Implicit
in this is the corollary that correction belongs at the thought
level.
To
repeat an earlier statement and to extend it somewhat, the Soul
is already perfect, and therefore does not require correction. The
body does not really exist except as a learning device for the mind.
This learning device is not subject to errors of its own, because
it was created, but is not creating. It should be obvious, then,
that correcting the creator, or inducing it to give up its miscreations,
is the only application of creative ability which is truly meaningful.
Magic is essentially mindless, or the miscreative use of the mind.
Physical medications are forms of “spells.” Those who
are afraid to use the mind to heal should not attempt to do so.
The
very fact that they are afraid has made them vulnerable to miscreation.
They are therefore likely to misunderstand any healing they might
induce, and, because egocentricity and fear usually occur together,
may be unable to accept the real Source of the healing.
Under
these conditions, it is safer for them to rely temporarily on physical
healing devices, because they cannot misperceive them as their own
creations. As long as their sense of vulnerability persists, they
should be preserved from even attempting miracles.
We have already said that the miracle is an expression of miracle-mindedness.
Miracle-mindedness merely means rightmindedness in the sense that
we are now using it.
The
right-minded neither exalt nor depreciate the mind of the miracle
worker or the miracle receiver. However, as a creative
act, the miracle need not await the right-mindedness of the receiver.
In fact, its purpose is to restore him to his right mind.
It is essential, however, that the miracle worker be in his right
mind, or he will be unable to reestablish right-mindedness in someone
else.
The
healer who relies on his own readiness is endangering his understanding.
He is perfectly safe as long as he is completely unconcerned about
his readiness, but maintains a consistent trust in mine.
If
your miracle working propensities are not functioning properly,
it is always because fear has intruded on your right-mindedness,
and has literally upset it (or turned it upside-down).
All
forms of not-right-mindedness are the result of refusal to accept
the Atonement for yourself. If the miracle worker does accept it,
he places himself in a position to recognize that those who need
to be healed are simply those who have not realized that right-mindedness
is healing.
The sole responsibility of the miracle worker is to accept
the Atonement for himself.
This
means that he recognizes that mind is the only creative level,
and that its errors are healed by the Atonement.
Once
he accepts this, his mind can only heal. By
denying his mind any destructive potential, and reinstating its
purely constructive powers, he has placed himself in a position
where he can undo the level confusion of others. The message he
then gives to others is the truth that their minds are similarly
constructive, and that their miscreations cannot hurt them. By affirming
this, the miracle worker releases the mind from overevaluating its
own learning device (the body), and restores the mind to its true
position as the learner.
It should be emphasized again that the body does not learn, any
more than it creates. As a learning device it merely follows the
learner, but if it is falsely endowed with self-initiative, it becomes
a serious obstruction to the very learning it should
facilitate.
Only
the mind is capable of llumination. The Soul is already illuminated,
and the body in itself is too dense.
The
mind, however, can bring its illumination to the body by
recognizing that density is the opposite of intelligence, and therefore
unamenable to independent learning. It is, however, easily brought
into alignment with a mind which has learned to look beyond
density toward light. |