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A Course
in Miracles
How It Came, What It Is,
What It Says |
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In
1977 in response to many requests for a brief introduction to A Course
in Miracles, Helen Schucman wrote the following, which appears as
the Preface to the Course in the Text. The first two parts: "How
It Came" and "What It Is," Helen wrote herself. The final
part, "What It Says," she scribed through the process of inner
dictation.
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How
it Came
A
Course in Miracles began with the sudden decision of two people
to join in a common goal. Their names were Helen Schucman and William
Thetford, Professors of Medical Psychology at Columbia University's
College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York City. They were anything
but spiritual. Their relationship with each other was difficult and
often strained, and they were concerned with personal and professional
acceptance and status. In general, they had considerable investment
in the values of the world. Their lives were hardly in accord with anything
that the Course advocates. Helen, the one who received the material,
describes herself:
Psychologist, educator, conservative in theory and atheistic in belief,
I was working in a prestigious and highly academic setting. And then
something happened that triggered a chain of events I could never
have predicted. The head of my department unexpectedly announced that
he was tired of the angry and aggressive feelings our attitudes reflected,
and concluded that, "there must be another way." As if on
cue I agreed to help him find it. Apparently this Course is the other
way.
Although
their intention was serious, they had great difficulty in starting out
on their joint venture. But they had given the Holy Spirit the "little
willingness" that, as the Course itself was to emphasize again
and again, is sufficient to enable Him to use any situation for His
purposes and provide it with His power.
To
continue Helen's first-person account:
Three startling months preceded the actual writing, during which time
Bill suggested that I write down the highly symbolic dreams and descriptions
of the strange images that were coming to me. Although I had grown
more accustomed to the unexpected by that time, I was still very surprised
when I wrote, "This is a course in miracles." That was my
introduction to the Voice. It made no sound, but seemed to be giving
me a kind of rapid, inner dictation which I took down in a shorthand
notebook. The writing was never automatic. It could be interrupted
at any time and later picked up again. It made me very uncomfortable,
but it never seriously occurred to me to stop. It seemed to be a special
assignment I had somehow, somewhere agreed to complete. It represented
a truly collaborative venture between Bill and myself, and much of
its significance, I am sure, lies in that. I would take down what
the Voice "said" and read it to him the next day, and he
typed it from my dictation. I expect he had his special assignment,
too. Without his encouragement and support I would never have been
able to fulfill mine. The whole process took about seven years. The
Text came first, then the Workbook for Students, and finally the Manual
for Teachers. Only a few minor changes have been made. Chapter titles
and subheadings have been inserted in the Text, and some of the more
personal references that occurred at the beginning have been omitted.
Otherwise the material is substantially unchanged.
The
names of the collaborators in the recording of the Course do not appear
on the cover because the Course can and should stand on its own. It
is not intended to become the basis for another cult. Its only purpose
is to provide a way in which some people will be able to find their
own Internal Teacher.
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