Transcendent Consciousness is Not God, Part 3
Two weeks ago, I began a discussion about why it is important that students of A Course in Miracles, or any other form of nonduality, do not confuse transcendent (pure) consciousness with God. I shared Suzanne Segal’s (Collision With the Infinite) story the first week, and last week explained consciousness and the difference between oneness experiences of pure consciousness and the Oneness of God. Now I will explain why it is crucial to not confuse them.
The Course calls the
fundamental issue blocking one’s awareness of God the authority problem,
or the belief that you are what you have made of yourself. This “you” refers to
the Son of God in its split-mind, the maker of consciousness, and shows up in
your individual mind as your identification with a person in a body in a world.
(This identification is ego.) Oh, certainly you do not consciously think
you made yourself. You may profess belief in a creator (author), but if you are
not in touch with Christ in you, you are not in touch with God. You are not in
touch with your Reality.
Remember, consciousness is
not God’s Creation. Christ is God’s Creation, or Extension, and It is never apart
from God, any more than sunlight can be apart from the sun. Consciousness is
the expression of the idea of not-God. Its seeming reality is denial of God.
So, if you believe consciousness is real, you believe God is not real. And to
believe that pure consciousness is God is the ultimate expression of the
authority problem. So, to pursue pure consciousness as anything other than what
it is—simply pure consciousness—but instead as God, Truth, or Ultimate
Reality, is to pursue an idol.
The effect of the authority
problem is the belief in sin (separation from God) and resultant guilt, the
fundamental core of the ego experience, which serves to both “prove” its
existence and defend its perpetuation in your mind. (For a detailed explanation
of this, see my book, Releasing Guilt for Inner Peace. Learn more here.) So, if you attain pure consciousness, even with an awareness
of the Divine (Spirit) in consciousness, and confuse It with God, you do not
find God beyond consciousness, you do not undo illusion, and you do not undo
the authority problem which holds it in place. The belief in guilt, and
therefore conflict, remains in your mind.
Clearly, those leaders
infighting in the Transcendental Meditation organization that Suzanne found
dismaying were still manifesting the authority problem. They were defensive, a
clear sign of the belief in guilt. And Suzanne’s own fears manifested a belief
in guilt. She also came to see that she used her awareness of the vastness to
deny her personal feelings and memories of trauma, meaning she still had at
least traces of a personal identity. (Interestingly, as a therapist she was
somewhat puzzled that her patients were negative and self-loathing. She did not
seem to understand guilt as ego’s fundamental expression and defense.)
I contend the reason
Bernadette Roberts did not find much written about God beyond consciousness is
because many who attain pure consciousness are still in the authority problem. Just
as she did, they confuse an experience in consciousness with God. They may have
released identification with a person, but they did not undo its source, the
authority problem. If ego’s source is not undone, is it wholly undone?
It always confused me that in
the Clarification of Terms in the Course, the opposite of ego is not
Spirit, but is the miracle. Now I understand it was saying that, just
like a miracle, the ego, too, is an effect. A miracle is Spirit’s effect; ego
is an effect of the authority problem.
I do think, however, that it
is easy for experiences of pure consciousness and Spirit to blur, and perhaps
many have “slipped” into an awareness of God beyond consciousness without
recognizing it or recording it if they did recognize it. (Bernadette Roberts
considered these possibilities, too.)
Recently, I have had
experiences that have shown me that only Christ can undo ego. I do not mean the
idea of Christ or even an awareness of Christ. I mean Christ Itself. As my God-given
Identity, It is the only thing that could possibly undo the authority problem.
So, it turns out, the
authority problem blocks God, but not pure consciousness. A mind remains split when
ego has been repressed or transcended (same thing?) but the authority problem
has not been wholly undone. Forgiveness—as the Course teaches forgiveness—has
not occurred. Only Christ forgives from outside of consciousness, as
Christ bridges consciousness and God.
I wrote these articles because I’ve seen in the Course community in the last years many students moving toward teachings and practices that emphasize manifesting a certain type of consciousness rather than growing their awareness of Spirit and letting It lead the way. In some cases, they do not see the difference. In others, they are seeking relief from a recalcitrant ego. But if you want true forgiveness and liberation, you have only to let in Spirit. It is that simple. And frankly, there is no other way.
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