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THE LIGHTHOUSE

Newsletter of the Foundation for A COURSE IN MIRACLES

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Volume 21 Number 3 September 2010
A HEROIC FRAME OF MIND: APPRECIATING A COURSE IN MIRACLES
A Tale of Two Heroes
Introduction: A Heroic Frame of Mind
Eric Blom, prominent English musicologist, wrote of
the third movement of Beethovens Hammerklavier
Piano Sonata (#29), among the greatest of all sonatas:
The slow movement is one of the longest and most ele-
vated in all music. The truth is that patience to follow
the present adagio is a listeners virtue which has to be
cultivated and that no one should approach such music
lightly; but it is equally true that a better return for
patience than the full appreciation of this movement is
difficult to imagine and that music on an epic scale is
the apt reward of those who come to it in a heroic frame
of mind (all italics mine except for the first).
1
How apt these words are to those making their
acquaintance with A Course in Miracles. Indeed, one
should not approach its epic majesty cavalierly. It requires
patience, as with any great work of art, if its inspired
genius is to be genuinely recognized and understood.
Speed reading, or a quick examination of its poetic prose is
certainly contra-indicated, as is presuming to understand,
with only a number of readings, the vastness of its teach-
ings and the grandeur of its symphonic structure. Could
anyone hope to experience the all-encompassing essence
of artistic masterpieces such as Goethes Faust, the late
Beethoven Quartets, or Michelangelos David with only
cursory encounters with the artists genius?
A brief excerpt from an 1870 letter of Franz Liszt is
relevant to the point I am making. In a reference I unfortu-
nately have never been able specifically to locate, the
renowned pianist-composer wrote the following regarding
Richard Wagners beautiful and lengthy music-drama, Die
Walkre:
Great works should be embraced entire, body and soul,
form and thought, spirit and life. One ought not to carp
at Wagner for his lengthsit is better to expand ones
scale to his (italics mine).
2
Liszts comment relates to the fact that attempting to
change or edit the great composers work is not only disre-
spectful of Wagners art, but it also deprives the listener of
a powerful if not profound musical experience. In other
words, echoing Bloms sentiments that came half a century
later, Liszt was saying that one should not approach such
music lightly, and that one needs to be in a heroic frame of
mind to be able to appreciate fully Wagners masterpiece.
Applying this to A Course in Miracles, we need
always be aware of the need for us, its students, to grow
into the Courses magnitude, as opposed to bringing it
down to our littleness. We need to adopt a heroic frame of
mind to achieve this magnitude. Understanding this phrase
depends of course on ones definition of heroic or hero,
and herein lies our tale of two heroes. Our first section,
therefore, compares and contrasts the egos hero of the
dream with the Holy Spirits hero of awakening, invoking
a simple word play, hole and whole.
The Two Heroes:
Littleness (the hole: where love has left) and
Magnitude (the Whole: where sin has left)
The egos hero is the body, the projection of the
wrong-minded thought system of separation (sin, guilt, and
fear). Its origin, therefore, lies in the inherent scarcity prin-
ciple of the ego, in which there is an innate lack or defi-
ciency (an evocative Valentinian Gnostic term to denote
the state of being outside the pleroma, or fullness, of
Heaven). From its inception, the false self we have adopted
as our own has lacked Gods Love and Christs innocence,
leaving a gaping hole where the Self we banished from our
1. Included in the Angel LP set recorded by Artur Schnabel of the thirty-
two Beethoven Sonatas (GRM 4005).
2. It is quoted in Martin Bernheimers article, Die Walkre: The Chro-
nology of a Music Drama, which accompanies the RCA Victor LP re-
cording of that work (LD 6706).
Kenneth Wapnick, Ph.D.
A Heroic Frame of Mind: Appreciating A Course in Miracles (continued)
2
kingdom should be. This little, insignificant self is what we
blow up in our experience, an expression of ego inflation,
to use a Jungian term, investing it with power we believe
we stole from Heaven. This is the consummate glorifica-
tion of the egos principle of salvation: one or the other,
one must die so another can live, to wit:
You think it safer to endow the little self you made with
power you wrested from truth, triumphing over it and
leaving it helpless. See how exactly is this ritual enacted
in the special relationship (T-16.V.11:3-4).
Thus do all our special relationships give glory to the ego,
hiding its littleness of lack behind the arrogant illusion of
magnitude:
Within this kingdom [the separated world where
God can enter not2:6] the ego rules, and cruelly.
And to defend this little speck of dust it bids you fight
against the universe (T-18.VIII.3:1-2).
From their beginnings as fragmented ego thoughts,
our lives are dedicated to one thing, and one thing only: to
preserve the littleness of our self that lacks love by filling
the hole of this self. We take from outside and, to invoke
Freuds concept of introjection, we incorporate what we
have takenthe power we wrested from truthinto our-
selves. This is where our special love and hate partners
come into play, completing the charade of filling the hole,
the minds empty space where love has left. The game of
specialness has as its goal the triumph over another, taking
the special something that is needed to supply the lack
(T-1.I.8:1), filling the hole established by our perceived sin
of separating from love, establishing the illusion of
wholeness.
Consider the body, as we have done many times in
these pages, the embodiment of the egos thought system
of scarcity. Being nothing but the shadowy fragment of the
minds ontological thought of lack, it cannot help but be a
veritable need machine, perpetually fighting to survive by
fulfilling, on the gross physical level, its needs for oxygen,
material sustenance, and water. No sooner do we satisfy
these basic needs than the need returns, our lungs, stomach,
and the bodys cells demanding to be filled once again.
And when we bring into play the psychological needs for
pleasure and the amelioration of pain, the egos self-por-
trait is complete. We are always needing love, attention,
approval from others, not to mention the psychological
need for food, alcohol, drugs, and sex to fill the hole left
vacant where love has left.
This heros life flows with the egos dreams of special-
ness: the triumph that fills the hole and fosters the illusion
of greatness, when all that has really occurred is the deci-
sion to deny the magnitude of the Self. The dream of
bodily satisfaction and victory over love has become the
heros reality, which is why Jesus asks us:
If you perceived the special relationship as a tri-
umph over God, would you want it? The central
theme in its litany to sacrifice is that God must die so
you can live (T-16.V.10:1,4).
Our ego response to the question, needless to say, is a
resounding Yes! We do want the triumph, for otherwise
our littleness could never survive in the place where love
has left.
In juxtaposition to this sorry excuse for a hero, Jesus
presents us with the genuine article, one whose life is dedi-
cated to recapturing the magnitude that had seemingly
been thrown away; not a hero of the dream of littleness and
lack, but the hero of the dream of awakening to our magni-
tude and true wholeness, the place where sin has left. Since
our identification with the ego and its thought system of
separation and specialness is so profound, we are not asked
to recognize our wholeness as Christ, but only to have the
little willingness and dedication to doing whatever it
takeswith everyone and in every situationto remember
our lifes purpose of moving through the clouds of dark-
ness to the light, shifting from the place where love has left
to the holiest of all the spots on earth (T-26.IX.6:1),
where sin has left. Forgiveness is the pathway that leads us
to this right-minded goal: from sin to holiness, sleep to
awakening, hell to Heaven. It is the means whereby we see
the face of Christ in our brothers and remember God, shift-
ing from the guilt of scarcitys hole to the oneness of our
inherent wholeness as Gods true Son:
The holy place on which you stand is but the space
that sin has left. And here you see the face of Christ,
arising in its place. Who could behold the face of Christ
and not recall His Father as He really is? Who could
fear love, and stand upon the ground where sin has left a
place for Heavens altar to rise and tower far above the
world, and reach beyond the universe to touch the Heart
of all creation? What is Heaven but a song of gratitude
and love and praise by everything created to the Source
of its creation? The holiest of altars is set where once
sin was believed to be (T-26.IV.3:1-6).
It is the lovely music of the Atonement that leads us to
this sacred space wherein we hear the forgotten song.
Choosing to learn from a different Teacher and reflecting
our desire to hear only the Atonements soft notes, we
rejoin the endless flow of Heavens sweet tones (that vast
song of honor and of love for what you are [T-24.II.4:5])
that we had shunned for the egos dissonant discords of
specialness. But to hear this endless melody, listening only
to the Voice that will take us home by our attaining a heroic
frame of mind, we need do the ongoing work of looking at
our egos and joyfully admitting we were wrong.
A Heroic Frame of Mind: Appreciating A Course in Miracles (continued)
3
Attaining a Heroic Frame of Mind:
The Humility of Being Wrong
The shift from the egos hero to the Holy Spirits is the
shift from form to content, body to mind. The ego counsels
us to focus only on the form, which is the substance of the
egos mindless world of bodies, ignoring the minds con-
tent of having chosen guilt over innocence:
love is content, and not form of any kind. The special
relationship is a ritual of form, aimed at raising the form
to take the place of God at the expense of content. There
is no meaning in the form, and there will never be
(T-16.V.12:1-3).
And yet, though we will always be wrong when we
judge the meaning or value of a situation or relationship,
given our persistent emphasis on form (what our eyes see
and our brains interpret), we stubbornly insist we are right.
This arrogance not only permeates our everyday lives, but
also, unfortunately, our work with A Course in Miracles.
We believe we have understood its teachings because we
have understand its words. Yet without having attained a
heroic frame of mind and learning what it means to accept
the Atonement, it would be impossible to grasp its monu-
mental content.
Therefore, as students of A Course in Miracles we
need to be aware of the almost inevitable temptation to
arrogantly believe we have attained its magnitude, when
we have not yet done the workday in and day outthat
would allow us humbly to reflect in our lives the love that
is the essence of the Course, being its source. Speaking of
God, Jesus urges us to Be humble before Him, and yet
great in Him (T-15.IV.3:1), meaning that we are great
because of our Identity as Gods Son, and yet humble
because He is our Creator and Source of the love that we
are. Moreover, we need His help (through the Holy Spirit)
to awaken to this reality as His one Son. Likewise, we
should feel humility as we stand before the Course, recog-
nizing the undoing of guilt we need accomplish before we
can remember our Identity as Christ. Thinking we have
mastered A Course in Miracles, when in fact we are barely
ready for it, is the height of our spiritual arrogance. Rele-
vant here is a favorite story of mine, involving Bruno
Walter, to my mind the greatest Mozart conductor of the
twentieth century. In an interview near the end of his long
and celebrated life, the Maestro stated:
It needs some maturity to understand the depth of emo-
tion which speaks in Mozarts seeming tranquillity and
measure. I wasfifty when for the first time I was
audacious enough to perform the G Minor [Symphony
#40]. Ihad such a feeling of responsibility and of the
difficulty to perform it. And I wondered at all the
young conductors who, without any qualms, just went
ahead and conducted all these works which asked for
such depth of feeling and such maturity of technique.
3
Apropos of this, I recall my younger days wherein I
spent many an afternoon and evening (sometimes morn-
ings as well!) as a standee at the old Metropolitan Opera
House in New York City. Standing long hours outside,
even in inclement weather, waiting to be granted entry into
the majestic edifice (now given way to a gigantic office
complex) made fast friends of us operaphiles. One fellow
standee was a music student who pridefully announced to
me one day that he would soon be giving a piano recital
and playing, among other things, a late Beethoven sonata. I
wondered out loud, as Dr. Walter did years before me, how
he could possibly perform such a musically and spiritually
mature work in public, being so young. His answer, brim-
ming with the confidence of youth, surprised me. This
way, he stated, I could better learn how to play it. I
thought to myself that this was the perfect way not to learn
it, for while performing it publicly might help him master
the technical challenges of playing Beethoven, not having
attained an inner maturity would seriously hinder his grow-
ing into the profound world of the Masters final period. To
be sure, before we can run, we must first learn to walk, if
not crawl.
In other words, we need to do the daily work so that we
can grow up and attain a truly heroic state of mind. In my
workshops and classes I frequently read Helens lovely
poem A Jesus Prayer, in which we pray that we can grow
up and become like our elder brother, passing through the
normal steps of spiritual development: a child, a man and
then a spirit. Or, in Nietzsches famous parable from Thus
Spoke Zarathustra, the subject of one of my earlier work-
shops, CD, and later a book
4
, we progress through the
stages of being a camel, lion, and then a childdifferent
terms, used differently, but with the same meaning of mov-
ing beyond the guilt and fear of spiritual childhood, using
the world as a classroom in which we grow and mature,
finally achieving the innocence of the Child or spirit.
The essence of such growth into a truly heroic frame of
mind is accepting what we can think of as the humility of
being wrong, as enunciated by this line from the text,
familiar to almost all students of A Course in Miracles:
Do you prefer that you be right or happy? (T-29.VII.1:9).
Before we can remember the magnitude of our Identity as
Christ, we must first recognize our littleness, and the tre-
mendous pull toward surrounding ourselves with the little
3. From a recorded conversation with Arnold Michaelis, included in the
Columbia LP recording (ML 5756) of Dr. Walter conducting various
Mozart works.
4. These titles were, respectively: On the Three Metamorphoses; On the
Three Metamorphoses: Nietzsche, A COURSE IN MIRACLES, and the Stages
of Spirituality; and The Stages of Our Spiritual Journey.
A Heroic Frame of Mind: Appreciating A Course in Miracles (continued)
4
interferers [that] pull us to littleness (T-23.in.4:1). We
need to experience how unhappy this makes us, and how
we cling with a passion to our certainty of being right
about the world, our bodies, and what gives us pleasure
and pain.
And so we need to learn from our everyday experi-
ences. The most challenging aspect of Jesus role as
teacher is to motivate us to see the immensity of our learn-
ing opportunities, even in the seeming minuscule. In the
famous words of William Blakes Auguries of Innocence:
To see a world in a grain of sand,
And a heaven in a wild flower,
Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
And eternity in an hour.
This idea cannot be emphasized enough. Salvation and
the complete healing of the mind is available to us at any
time, anywhere, with anyone. The size of the encounter is
irrelevant, which is why there is no order of difficulty in
miracles (T-1.I.1). As we read from the manual for teach-
ers about the seeming levels of learning:
The simplest level of teaching appears to be quite
superficial. It consists of what seem to be very casual
encountersEach of them has the potential for becom-
ing a teaching-learning situationEven at the level of
the most casual encounter, it is possible for two people
to lose sight of separate interests, if only for a moment.
That moment will be enough. Salvation has come
(M-3.2:1-2,4,6-8).
Since time is illusory and everything happens simulta-
neously, everything we experience emanates from the
decision-making minds choice between two simple alter-
natives, regardless of the circumstances: truth and illusion,
God and the ego, vision or judgment. Because our fear of
reality (perfect love and oneness) is too great, as it threat-
ens our very self (special and separated), we need to learn
gently and slowly, the indirect learning Jesus discusses in
the section on The Happy Learner:
Indirect proof of truth is needed in a world made of
denial [The Holy Spirits] message is not indirect, but
He must introduce the simple truth into a thought sys-
tem which has become so twisted and so complex you
cannot see that it means nothing (T-14.I.2:1; 5:2).
We must learn to see a little, that we learn a lot (W-pI.
161.4:8), taking the little steps of salvation (W-pI.
193.13:7) before we can accept our magnitude. And what
are these little steps that will exponentially metamorphose
into the journeys end?
Very simply, these steps coalesce into one: no longer
seeing anothers interests as apart from our own (M-1.1:2).
When we are with someone, we do not make the relation-
ship about ourselves, but about them. By looking at the sit-
uation through the eyes of kindness and not specialness, we
do not put our needs above anothers, but look beyond the
surface purposes to the underlying content we all share as
children separated from their Father. For example, when
involved with service people in a restaurant or department
store, our natural tendency is to see them as existing solely
to wait on us, serving our needs; after all, that is why they
are being paid. Yet, imagine the gains to us when we can
transcend these superficial perceptions and recognize that
our going into the place of business was for our joint salva-
tion. That is the meaning of some of the early workbook
lessons, for instance, I do not perceive my own best inter-
ests and I do not know what anything is for (W-pI.
24,25).
What helps drive this point home is to remember that
the sole cause of all distress is our belief in separation, and
therefore the experience of shared purposeregardless of
its form or magnitudegently reflects the Atonement
principle that we are not separate, but remain as God
created us: a Oneness joined as One (T-25.I.7:1). This is
why Jesus reminds us:
Alone we are all lowly, but together we shine with
brightness so intense that none of us alone can even
think of it (T-13.X.14:2).
The intense brightness is the spark of the Great Ray that is
our reality as Christ. It is the shift from the littleness of the
separated state to the magnitude of our shared Self.
And yet we all experience the pull to littleness, for that
preserves our individual and special state, the core of our
existence. Each of us walks this earth desperately trying to
gain allies to reinforce our little identity. This is why Jesus
exhorts us to be vigilant, as we just sawLet not the little
interferers pull you to littlenessand why he unveils the
secret vows, oaths, pledges, and promises we make to each
other to keep the Sonship in a perpetual and mindless state
of physical life in the world (T-28.VI.4). Asking us to be
heroes of his dream, to live in a heroic frame of mind and
not be tempted by the heroes of the egos petty nightmares
of guilt and hate, Jesus pleads with us:
Be not content with littlenessLittleness is the
offering you give yourself. You offer this in place of
magnitude, and you accept itYou do not have to
strive for it [magnitude], because you have it. All your
striving must be directed against littleness, for it does
require vigilance to protect your magnitude in this
world. To hold your magnitude in perfect awareness in
a world of littleness is a task the little cannot undertake
(T-15.III.1:1,3-4; 4:3-5; my italics).
The italicized sentence above is crucial. It requires tre-
mendous discipline and constant vigilance to maintain
awareness that littleness is a defense against recognizing
A Heroic Frame of Mind: Appreciating A Course in Miracles (continued)
5
our magnitude, that our fear of who we truly areheroes of
the Holy Spirits dream instead of the egosimpels us
continually to give away our decision-making power to the
powers of littleness that seem to determine what we think,
feel, and do. Our purpose, therefore, is to hold our
magnitude in awareness throughout the day. And that we
do, to restate this crucial thought, whenever we do not look
at the world through the eyes of our special needs and self-
centered weakness, but rather through the eyes of magni-
tude, Christs strength:
You always choose between your weakness and the
strength of Christ in youSimply by never using
weakness to direct your actions, you have given it no
power. And the light of Christ in you is given charge of
everything you do (T-31.VIII.2:3,5-6).
By so doing, we can understand that our attitude
toward A Course in Miracles reflects our attitude toward
ourself. Will we be the hero of littleness or magnitude?
Will we approach the Courses magnitude in a heroic
frame of mind or with the arrogance of the spiritually
immature? If we think we are separated physical entities,
we must, perforce, treat Jesus teachings that way, using
them to reinforce our littleness and body identification.
How could it not be?
Can you who see yourself within a body know yourself
as an idea? Everything you recognize you identify with
externals, something outside itself. You cannot even
think of God without a body, or in some form you think
you recognize (T-18.VIII.1:5-7).
Projection makes perception (T-13.V.3:5; T-21.in.1:1).
We first look inside and choose the hero of our dreams, and
that choice determines how we perceive the world, includ-
ing A Course in Miracles. Two choices alone are available
to us:
Each has its outcome in a different world. And each
world follows surely from its source. The certain out-
come of the lesson that Gods Son is guilty is the world
you see. It is a world of terror and despairThe out-
come of the lesson that Gods Son is guiltless is a world
in which there is no fear, and everything is lit with hope
and sparkles with a gentle friendliness (T-31.I.7:2-5;
8:1).
The choice is ours, and we need to be very clear that
when we experience the hopeless and despairing life of the
egos hero we have no cause to point to but ourselves.
Therefore no one is entitledto [his] bitterness (W-pI.
195.9:3), for nothing but our own fear stands between us
and the heroic frame of mind that will enable us to grow
into magnitude, and truly live the heros life that Jesus
holds out for us in his course.
Living the Heroic Frame of Mind
We begin our concluding section with this brief pas-
sage from the beginning of Lesson 155:
There is a way of living in the world that is not here,
although it seems to be. You do not change appearance,
though you smile more frequently. Your forehead is
serene; your eyes are quiet. And the ones who walk the
world as you do recognize their own (W-pI.155.1:1-4).
These are the happy effects of choosing to grow into
the Courses epic scale, rather than diminishing it as a way
of diminishing ourselves. And when these awakening
right-minded heroes approach A Course in Miracles, they
do so by first recognizing the epic scale of the self within,
recognizing in Jesus words an extension of their inner love
and wisdom. The perception and experience of these
mighty words go far beyond what is on the printed page.
Eric Blom, whom I quoted at the beginning of this article,
wrote an essay On the Playing of Beethoven
5
in which he
reflected on this need for a heroic frame of mind in the pia-
nist setting out to play Beethoven. Let us listen and gener-
alize from his exhortation to the performer, hearing the call
that we be all that we are in order to hear the lofty music
behind the Courses simple notes. Here are some brief
excerpts from Bloms essay:
The pianist who hands Beethoven to his public cut and
dried, without daring for a moment to let the music
sway him by its own power is as lifeless as the actor
who simply follows the producers instructions like an
automaton.
It is what lies behindthe notes we listen for.
[The pianist needs] to yield to momentary promptings
of his imagination during the performance.
For it is a matter of musical response that comes from
within and cannot be instilled.
In other words, mere repetition of the words or principles
of A Course in Miracles without being infused by the stu-
dents (or teachers) experience of their truth leaves one a
lifeless spiritual automaton. To shift to a famous analogy,
such an unimaginative and loveless recitation of the
Course would be, in the words of St. Paul, like a noisy
gong or clanging cymbal (1 Corinthians 13:1). Students in
a heroic frame of mind do not speak, teach, or live the
Course from withouttheir words or actionsbut having
5. This is also included in the LP set recorded by Artur Schnabel of the
thirty-two Beethoven Sonatas.
A Heroic Frame of Mind: Appreciating A Course in Miracles (continued)
6
identified with its loving wisdom, they let it speak, teach,
and live through them in momentary promptings of [their]
imagination. In words familiar to readers of our newslet-
ter, they exemplify Jesus teachings on resurrection (awak-
ening from the egos dream of death) by demonstrating
that he lives in them (T-11.VI.7:3). Such demonstration
cannot be faked, but it is recognized, as we saw just above,
by those who walk the world as these genuine heroes do, to
which we can add those who sincerely wish to walk the
world as they do.
By their hearing the Holy Spirits forgotten song in
their heart, His vision permeates every person, object, and
situation in their day, and they look upon the world
through the Heavenly judgment that sees either expres-
sions of love or calls for it (T-14.X.7:1). Their focus is not
on the world, learning to respond differently to different
situations, but rather it is only on remaining in touch with
the music within, what Wagner termed the melos of
musicthe inner melody that unifies a composition and
supplies its creative life, which lies behindthe notes.
By so doing, every relationship and outer event is
approached in the same way: with love. In the spirit of the
first principle of miracles, All expressions of love are
maximal (T-1.I.1:4). As observed earlier, it does not mat-
ter how superficial or significant an encounter is, the con-
tent of love remains the same, gently adapting to the form
appropriate to the circumstance.
This consistency of love is the hallmark of true heroes,
and is what distinguishes them from those whose fear still
blocks the free flow of love to all things of the world, ani-
mate or inanimate, large or small, significant or insignifi-
cant. No order of difficulty in miracles means no order,
range, or differing criteria for evaluating the relative
importance of events. Everyone and everything call forth
but one loving response, for that is the message of
A Course in Miracles: forgiveness is for all, or for no one.
Coming to the Course with a heroic frame of mind enables
the student to comprehend fully this profound teaching,
thereby learning how to live it every moment of every day,
giving power to no one and nothing to interfere with the
extension of Jesus love in joyous embrace of the seem-
ingly fragmented Sonship, without exception and regard-
less of its myriad and disparate forms.
When I was in a monastery in Israel, very shortly
before I saw A Course in Miracles for the first time, I
attended a community meeting where the angry abbot, an
otherwise gentle and patient soul, rebuked his monks for
being lax in their monastic vocation. He closed his talk
with a rousing peroration in which he called for them to
live as real monks. I did not remain in the monastery long
enough to witness if this holy mans efforts bore fruit, but
his words have remained emblazoned in my heart for close
to four decades. In his course, I hear Jesus similarly calling
for real monks, true heroes who would hear the music of
his message, take it into their hearts, there to be nurtured
and nourished by the daily practice of forgiveness and
kindness for all people, during all times, and in all circum-
stances. Only then could their song rise up and into the
world to call, as did their teacher before them, for real stu-
dents, genuine heroes with a heroic frame of mind who
would unite their forgiven voices in harmony with the
hymn to Heaven. Their united voices would call every last
separated Son to the place where sin has left, there to com-
plete the journey begun in that ancient instant, long forgot-
ten, returning as one Son, one voice, one chorus, singing in
joyous gratitude to the one God, the Creator and Source of
all that is:
Where sin once was perceived will rise a world that
will become an altar to the truth, and you will join the
lights of Heaven there, and sing their song of gratitude
and praise. And as they come to you to be complete, so
will you go with them. For no one hears the song of
Heaven and remains without a voice that adds its power
to the song, and makes it sweeter still. And each one
joins the singing at the altar that was raised within the
tiny spot that sin proclaimed to be its own. And what
was tiny then has soared into a magnitude of song in
which the universe has joined with but a single
voicehow great will be the joy in Heaven when you
join the mighty chorus to the Love of God! (T-26.IV.5;
6:3) Q
We gratefully appreciate any donations, which are tax-deductible, to offset the costs
of printing and mailing this newsletter.
* * * * * * *
THE LIGHTHOUSE (ISSN 1060-4987) is the newsletter of the Foundation for A COURSE IN MIRACLES

. The Foundation is a not-for-profit organization


founded in 1983 to help students of A Course in Miracles through educational programs and publications.
THE LIGHTHOUSE is published and sent out four times a year (March, June, September, December) by the Foundation for A COURSE IN MIRACLES

, 41397
Buecking Drive, Temecula, CA 92590-5668. Periodicals Postage Paid at Temecula, California and additional mailing offices.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE LIGHTHOUSE, Foundation for A COURSE IN MIRACLES

, 41397 Buecking Drive, Temecula, CA 92590.


Articles published in THE LIGHTHOUSE are copyrighted by the Foundation for A COURSE IN MIRACLES

.
7
* * * * N E W M U L T I M E D I A R E L E A S E S * * * *
by Kenneth Wapnick, Ph.D.
LATEST TITLES
AUDIO-CD
CD164 And God Thinks Otherwise $12.00 plus shipping
AUDIO-MP3 CD
3m164 And God Thinks Otherwise $10.00 plus shipping
LATEST MEDIA TYPES OF CURRENT TITLES
AUDIO-MP3 CD
3m5 The Ego and Forgiveness (2:47) $13.00 plus shipping
3m89 Deciding for God (2:26) $12.00 plus shipping
3m91 Jesus: Light in the Dream (2:18) $11.00 plus shipping
3m94 Jesus: The Ancient Love (4:23) $21.00 plus shipping
3m96 Walking with Jesus (2:45) $13.00 plus shipping
3m98 Who Is Jesus? (2:54) $14.00 plus shipping
3m103 Jesus: Fantasy or Truth? (1:52) $9.00 plus shipping
VIDEO-DVD
DV102 The Ghost of Caesar: Guilts Shadow (3:57) $20.00 plus shipping
FORTHCOMING DOWNLOADABLE MP3S OF CURRENT TITLES (MID OCTOBER)
3m42dl Forgiving Jesus: Stranger on the Road $8.00
3m51dl The Importance of Jesus (2:22) $9.00
3m66dl Jesus: Symbol and Reality (3:44) $13.00
3m91dl Jesus: Light in the Dream (2:18) $8.00
3m94dl Jesus: The Ancient Love (4:23) $16.00
3m96dl Walking with Jesus (2:45) $10.00
3m97dl Jesus: Bright Stranger (3:39) $13.00
3m98dl Who Is Jesus? (2:54) $10.00
3m99dl Jesus: Companion on Our Journey (3:43) $13.00
3m100-1dl Jesus: Songs of Gratitude and LoveVolume 1 (10:35) $30.00
(includes Introduction, Jesus: Fantasy or Truth?; Forgiving Jesus: Stranger on the
Road; The Importance of Jesus; and Who Is Jesus?)
3m100-2dl Jesus: Songs of Gratitude and LoveVolume 2 (11:06) $30.00
(includes Jesus: Companion on Our Journey; Jesus: Symbol and Reality; and
Jesus: Bright Stranger)
3m100-3dl Jesus: Songs of Gratitude and LoveVolume 3 (10:18) $30.00
(includes Jesus: The Ancient Love; Jesus versus Jesus-to-Destroy;
Jesus: Light in the Dream; and Walking with Jesus)
3m103dl Jesus: Fantasy or Truth? (1:52) $7.00
All of our publications can be ordered from our Web site: www.facim.org.
Publications, other than downloadable MP3s, are also available by phone: 951.296.6261, ext. 30.
ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS
8
WEB SITEwww.facim.org
Browse our Web site, including our automated online bookstore where you are able to purchase Foundation for
A COURSE IN MIRACLES

publications as well as A Course in Miracles and the pamphlets; register for the Temecula Center
programs; add your name to our e-newsletter mailing list; read past articles from The Lighthouse, as well as the most
recent newsletters in their entirety; find program schedules for both the Temecula Center and the La Jolla branch; and
consult our teaching aids, including our online excerpts series.
CATALOG OF PUBLICATIONS
The Foundations Catalog of Publications is available in a .pdf format, which is downloadable from our Web site at:
http://www.facim.org/announce.htm.
YOUTUBE CHANNEL
YouTube is a free video-sharing Web site where users can upload, view, and share video clips. The Foundation now
has its own channel at: http://www.youtube.com/user/FndtnACIM. You can view Foundation video clips of Kenneth and
Gloria presenting workshops and classes at the Foundation, as well as never-before-seen mini-talks by Kenneth on
selected Course themes.
INTERNATIONAL SPANISH DISTRIBUTORS
Non-US distributors for our Spanish titles are: 1) Asclepius LLC, working as a partner company for the main office
based in Mexico as Tarots del Mundo, Av. Oaxaca 71, Col. Roma Norte, Mexico City (06700). Contact Orlando Asman
or Patricia Chagoyan Phone (52-55) 1998-3301 Cell 52-1-55 2273-1277. Email: tarotsdelmundo@ymail.com; and
2) Ediciones El Grano de Mostaza, C/ Balmes 394 pral.1 08022 Barcelona, Spain. Contact Jordi del Rey Phone
+34 93 417 38 48 Email: info@elgranodemostaza.com. For Mexico, our exclusive distributor is Asclepius LLC.
EXCERPTS SERIES
The upcoming title in this series is Special Relationships: The Home of Guilt, from the workshop of October 2001.
The discussion focuses on how special relationships originate in, and are sustained by our need to defend against the
pain of our guilt coming from the belief that we exist apart from God. The insidious and painful dynamics of specialness
are explored as they develop on interpersonal and international levels. The undoing of our guilt through forgiveness is
explained in the context of our moving from separate to shared interests.
TRANSLATION OF BOOKS
Most of the Foundation books and a number of CDs have been translated into German. For information, please con-
tact: Greuthof Verlag und Vertrieb GmbH Kybfelsenstrae 41 D-79100 Freiburg Germany Tel. 761-388 45 996
FAX 761-388 45 997. Many of the Foundation books have also been translated into Spanish including Ending Our
Resistance to Love, The Healing Power of KindnessVol. 1: Releasing Judgment, and The Healing Power of Kindness
Vol. 2: Forgiving Our Limitations. Spanish translations can be ordered from our Web site (www.facim.org/bookstore) or
by phoning our order department at 951.296.6261, ext. 30.
Dutch: The Talk and The Most Commonly Asked Questions. Order from Ankh-Hermes bv Postbus 125 7400 AC
Deventer The Netherlands; Ending Our Resistance to Love. Order from Miracles in Contact Postbus 3086
3760 DB Soest The Netherlands.
Italian: The Talk and The Most Commonly Asked Questions. Order from www.ucim.it.
Danish: The Talk, The Most Commonly Asked Questions, and Absence from Felicity. Order from SphinX Publishers
Lvstrde 8 1152 Kbenhavn K Denmark.
Slovene: The Talk. Order from Zalozba Quatro Zabnica 31 1357 Notranje Gorice Slovenia.
French: The Talk. Call our order department at 951.296.6261, ext. 30.
Afrikaans: The Talk. Order from Henri Theron 302 Monterey Bay Road Mouille Point, Cape Town 8005 South
Africa.
Finnish: The Talk. Order from Pelquin Kustannus Merivirta 19 E 35 02320 Espoo Finland.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
9
LODGING ACCOMMODATIONS IN TEMECULA
Best Western Country Inn (1mile / 951.676.7378) offers students attending classes at the
Foundation discounted rates: Sun-Thurs $69.00, Friday $99.00, and Saturday $109.00.
RESERVE EARLY!!!
Marriott Fairfield Inn & Suites Motel 6
951.587.9800 (.5 mile) 951.676.7199 (2.6 miles)
Embassy Suites Hotel Extended Stay-Kitchenettes
951.676.5656 (2.8 miles) 951.587.8881 (.9 mile)

Holiday Inn Express
951.699.2444 (1.2 mile)
Receive a 10% discount when you
identify yourself as a student attend-
ing class at the Foundation.
Quality Inn
(formerly Comfort Inn)
951.296.3788 (.4 mile)
For a list of additional lodging accommodations in the surrounding area
(10-45 minutes from Temecula), please call our office at 951.296.6261
between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. PT, Monday through Friday.
Many food establishments
are nearby in Temecula.
OASIS OF PEACE BOOKSTORE
Our bookstore, Oasis of Peace, is open 9:00 a.m.5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. Please note that the book-
store will also be open weekend days when programs are being held at the Foundation.
POLICIES AND GENERAL INFORMATION
FOR THE TEMECULA CENTER
REGISTRATION
Pre-registration is encouraged for all programs, and
REQUIRED for the week-long Academy class taught
by Kenneth Wapnick, as well as the Seminar preceding
it.
We accept registrations by mail, FAX, telephone, and on
our Web site at www.facim.org. If you register online,
please submit your registration at least 3 days prior to
the event you plan to attend.
If you register by mail or FAX, please allow enough time
for your registration form to reach us and the confirma-
tion form to reach you in return.
If you register by phone, please have your credit card
ready when you call.
Payment for programs must be made in full at the time of
registrationby check, money order, credit card, or
PayPal (payments@facim.org). International students
may also use wire transfer, which will incur a $15.00
fee (call our office for information). Your check or
money order should be made payable to ITIP-ACIM
(in US funds only, drawn on a US bank). There will
be a $20 fee for any check returned to us for insuffi-
cient funds.
CONFIRMATIONS
Confirmation information will be given over the phone if
your registration form does not reach us in time for a letter
to be sent to you. In this instance, you may call the office
MondayFriday, 9:00 a.m.5:00 p.m. Pacific time to ver-
ify your acceptance into a program.
It is important that you double-check the registration
information sent with your confirmation letter to
ensure the accuracy of the information. In the event the
program you register for is filled, your registration form
and fee will be returned to you, unless you have requested
that your name be placed on a waiting list. Thus, you may
be confirmed either as a participant or as being on the
waiting list.
We charge a $20.00 fee for all registration changes, includ-
ing cancellations, so please review the program schedule
carefully.
Five-Day Academy Class: To avoid a $50.00 cancellation
fee, your cancellation must be received no later than 7
days before the start of a five-day Academy class.
WALK-INS
While walk-in registrations are accepted, pre-registration is
encouraged, as auditorium seating cannot be guaranteed.
Payment by cash or US check only at the door.
REGISTRATION CHANGES & CANCELLATIONS
La Quinta Inn & Suites
951.296.1003 (.4 mile)
$75 weekday rate and
$99 weekend rate
10
FALLWINTER 2010-2011 SCHEDULE
INSTITUTE FOR TEACHING INNER PEACE
THROUGH A COURSE IN MIRACLES
Temecula Center Faculty: Dr. Kenneth Wapnick
Pre-registration is encouraged for all programs, and REQUIRED for the week-
long Academy class taught by Kenneth, as well as the Seminar preceding it.
S-1 THE TRANSFORMED WORLD
Saturday, January 8
S-2 ON BECOMING THE TOUCHES OF SWEET
HARMONY: THE HOLY RELATIONSHIP IN
FORM
Saturday, February 12
S-3 PEACE TO SUCH FOOLISHNESS!
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Sunday, March 13
MORNING AND EVENING GROUPS ON A COURSE IN MIRACLES
The Foundation conducts weekly ninety-minute discussion and study groups on the Course (except on
November 24, December 29, and days when an Academy class is in progress). These Wednesday sessions
(11:00 a.m.12:30 p.m. and 7:00 p.m.8:30 p.m.) are facilitated by the Foundation Staff. There is a $5.00
fee per session.
S-10 THE GOLDEN THREAD OF HOPE
Saturday, October 9
S-11 THE DARK POWER OF SECRECY:
OUR SECRET SINS
AND HIDDEN HATES
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
Sunday, November 7
S-12 THE GLORY OF THE INFINITE
Saturday, December 4
An introductory lecture for those interested in learning more
about A Course in Miracles and what it says. The program format
will include a question-and-answer period.
DATE: Saturday, March 5
No Registration Required
INTRODUCTORY LECTURE
Time: 12:30 p.m. 2:00 p.m. Free
2010 2011
SEMINARS
Time: 2:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m. Fee: $30.00
11
A-10 A TRANSITION IN PERSPECTIVE
Dates: Oct. 10 12 Fee: $100.00 for entire program; $40.00 for each individual day.
A-11 WORDS AND THOUGHTS
REGISTRATION ENDS OCTOBER 31, OR WHEN CLASS FILLS.
Dates: Nov. 8 12 Fee: $175.00 for entire program; $40.00 for each individual day.
A-11D1 Nov. 8 Fee: $40.00 A-11D2 Nov. 9 Fee: $40.00 A-11D3 Nov. 10 Fee: $40.00
A-11D4 Nov. 11 Fee: $40.00 A-11D5 Nov. 12 Fee: $40.00
We are all well aware that our words about how we love A Course in Miracles and wish to learn its lessons often belie the under-
lying ego thoughts that are so resistant to meaningful change. It is the familiar issue of form and content, wherein we so often use
the forms of our special relationships, including those with the Course, to conceal the content of the minds special relationship with
the ego. The class, using lecture, discussion, and readings, will highlight the process of forgiveness that enables us to harmonize our
words and thoughts, ending the guilt-reinforcing conflict that keeps us imprisoned in the thought system of separation, specialness,
and attack.
2011
A-1 THE EGOS WORLD: THE THUNDER OF THE MEANINGLESS
Dates: January 9 11 Fee: $100.00 for entire program; $40.00 for each individual day.
A-1D1 January 9 Fee: $40.00 A-1D2 January 10 Fee: $40.00 A-1D3 January 11 Fee: $40.00
As opposed to the Holy Spirits meaningful world of forgiveness, ultimately transformed into the real world, the egos world of
separation (sin, guilt, and fear) is a meaningless thought system that, to quote Macbeths famous line, is full of sound and fury, sig-
nifying nothing. It is as ludicrous as a little child raising a match to the sky, believing he holds the fate of the sun in his hands
(W-pI.92), or a tiny mouse roaring at the universe (T-22.V). Indeed, the egos world is the thunder of the meaningless; its dark
clouds easily dispersed by the gentle smile of the Atonement: nothing happened but an errant thought that had no effect upon reality.
A-2 THE FACE OF CHRIST: A MANY-FACETED JEWEL
Dates: February 13 15 Fee: $100.00 for entire program; $40.00 for each individual day.
A-2D1 February 13 Fee: $40.00 A-2D2 February 14 Fee: $40.00 A-2D3 February 15 Fee: $40.00
While the face of Christ, the picture of the innocence of Gods Son, is one, it appears in as many forms as there are fragments. In
this classusing lecture, discussion, and readingswe will explore the important theme of form and content, learning how to pen-
etrate the egos veil of complexity to the simple truth that is Gods Son. In practice, this means that we recognize and learn to
acknowledge the universal sameness of Gods seemingly separated Sonsmany forms, one Content; many loves, one Love; many
sons, one Son.
A-3 ON DEATH AND DYING: ENDING, CONTINUING, OR AWAKENING?
Dates: March 14 18 Fee: $175.00 for entire program; $40.00 for each individual day.
A-3D1 March 14 Fee: $40.00 A-3D2 March 15 Fee: $40.00 A-3D3 March 16 Fee: $40.00
A-3D4 March 17 Fee: $40.00 A-3D5 March 18 Fee: $40.00
As bodies, we probably have no greater concern than dying and what follows, especially when we reach the golden years
wherein ones mortality looms larger and larger. Moreover, death is among the more misunderstood concepts in A Course in Mira-
cles, as it involves the perennial confusion of mind and body; the mind being the source of everything physical, existing outside
time and space, body and world. Through lecture, discussion, and readings, the question of deaththe central dream from which
all illusions stem (M-27.1:1)will be explored in depth.
ACADEMY CLASSES
Faculty: Kenneth Wapnick, Rosemarie LoSasso, Loral Reeves, and Jeffrey Seibert
Times: 10:00 a.m. 12:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m.
ALL Academy 3 classes will be taught by Kenneth Wapnick
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
ALL Academy 11 classes will be taught by Kenneth Wapnick
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
12
OCTOBER
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
Disc. Group
Study Group
1 2
3 4 5 6
Disc. Group
Study Group
7 8 9
S-10
10
A-10
11
A-10
12
A-10
13
Disc. Group
Study Group
14 15 16
17 18 19 20
Disc. Group
Study Group
21 22 23
24 25 26 27
Disc. Group
28 29 30
31 Study Group
MARCH
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2
Disc. Group
Study Group
3 4 5
Intro-1
6 7 8 9
Disc. Group
Study Group
10 11 12
13
S-3
14
A-3
15
A-3
16
A-3
17
A-3
18
A-3
19
20 21 22 23
Disc. Group
Study Group
24 25 26
27 28 29 30
Disc. Group
Study Group
31
JANUARY
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1
2 3 4 5
Disc. Group
Study Group
6 7 8
S-1
9
A-1
10
A-1
11
A-1
12
Disc. Group
Study Group
13 14 15
16 17 18 19
Disc. Group
Study Group
20 21 22
23 24 25 26
Disc. Group
27 28 29
30 31 Study Group
FEBRUARY
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2
Disc. Group
Study Group
3 4 5
6 7 8 9
Disc. Group
Study Group
10 11 12
S-2
13
A-2
14
A-2
15
A-2
16
Disc. Group
Study Group
17 18 19
20 21 22 23
Disc. Group
Study Group
24 25 26
27 28
DECEMBER
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1
Disc. Group
Study Group
2 3 4
S-12
5 6 7 8
Disc. Group
Study Group
9 10 11
12 13 14 15
Disc. Group
Study Group
16 17 18
19 20 21 22
Disc. Group
Study Group
23 24 25
26 27 28 29
Disc. Group
Study Group
30 31
NOVEMBER
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3
Disc. Group
Study Group
4 5 6
7
S-11
8
A-11
9
A-11
10
A-11
11
A-11
12
A-11
13
14 15 16 17
Disc. Group
Study Group
18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25
Thanks-
giving
26 27
28 29 30
Disc. Group
Study Group
CALENDAR OF EVENTS FOR TEMECULA CENTER
13
Make check or money order payable to the Institute for Teaching Inner Peace through A Course in Miracles, or ITIP-ACIM (US funds only,
drawn on a US bank), or provide credit card information to secure a place for the programs listed on pages 10-11.
REGISTRATION FORM FOR THE TEMECULA CENTER
You may use the same form if you are attending with another student.
Registrations without the correct amount of money accompanying them will be returned.
PERSON 1: (Please print)
Name ________________________________________
Address_______________________________________
City/State/Zip __________________________________
Phone: Day ( ) Eve. ( )____________
E-mail (optional): _______________________________
PERSON 2: (Please print)
Name ________________________________________
Address ______________________________________
City/State/Zip__________________________________
Phone: Day ( ) Eve. ( ) ___________
E-mail (optional): ______________________________
* * * * R E L E A S E F O R M * * * *
I hereby grant the Foundation for A COURSE IN MIRACLES

per-
mission to videotape me. I understand that the finished video
may be sold to the public, as well as shown on the internet, and
that I will receive no compensation for said videotape.
___________________________________________________
Signature
__________________________
Date
* * * * R E L E A S E F O R M * * * *
I hereby grant the Foundation for A COURSE IN MIRACLES

per-
mission to videotape me. I understand that the finished video
may be sold to the public, as well as shown on the internet, and
that I will receive no compensation for said videotape.
__________________________________________________
Signature
__________________________
Date
Some of our Workshops, Classes, & Discussions are videotaped.
Please sign and date the Release Form below. If you do not want
to be videotaped, you will be seated in the rear of the auditorium.
Some of our Workshops, Classes, & Discussions are videotaped.
Please sign and date the Release Form below. If you do not want
to be videotaped, you will be seated in the rear of the auditorium.
PLEASE ENTER PROGRAM CHOICE(S) ON PAGE 14
Note: If you are also ordering publications, please send separate payment.
U Check or money order enclosed for $
U Credit card information: U American Express U Discover U MasterCard U VISA
Person 1: Exp Date: _____________ No. CVV2/CID Number: ____________
Person 2: Exp Date: _____________ No. CVV2/CID Number: ____________
Important Credit card billing address if different from above:
Person 1: ______________________________________________________________________________________________________
Person 2: ______________________________________________________________________________________________________
Signature(s) required: Mail to: Institute
Foundation for A COURSE IN MIRACLES

41397 Buecking Drive


Temecula, CA 92590
FAX: 951.296.9117
14
SCHEDULE OF RATES
Program
Number
Program
Date
Fee
ACADEMY CLASSES
Please use program numbers listed on page 11
when registering for portions of, rather than
a complete, Academy class.
A-10 October 10 12 $100.00
A-11 $175.00
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
November 8 12
2011
A-1 January 9 11 $100.00
A-2 February 13 15 $100.00
A-3 $175.00
PRE-REGISTRATION REQUIRED
March 14 18
SEMINARS
(2:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m.) Fee $30.00
S-10 October 9
S-11 November 7 (Pre-registration required)
S-12 December 4
S-1 January 8 S-2 February 12
S-3 March 13 (Pre-registration required)
REGISTRATION FORM (continued)
CALCULATE YOUR PAYMENT
AMOUNT HERE:
Program
Number
Fee
Person 1
$
Person 2
$
Person 1
$
Person 2
$
Person 1
$
Person 2
$
Person 1
$
Person 2
$
Person 1
$
Person 2
$
Person 1
$
Person 2
$
Person 1
$
Person 2
$
Person 1
$
Person 2
$
Person 1
$
Person 2
$
Person 1
$
Person 2
$
Person 1
$
Person 2
$
Person 1
$
Person 2
$
TOTAL $
Pre-registration is encouraged for all pro-
grams, and REQUIRED for the week-long
Academy classes taught by Kenneth Wapnick,
as well as the Seminar preceding it.
15
MARCH
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3
Lecture
4 5
6 7 CD
Study
8 CD
Study
9 10
Lecture
11 12
13 14 CD
Study
15 CD
Study
16 17
Lecture
18 19
20 21 CD
Study
22 CD
Study
23 24
Lecture
25 26
27 28 CD
Study
29 CD
Study
30 31
Lecture

FEBRUARY
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 CD
Study
2 3
Lecture
4 5
6 7 CD
Study
8 CD
Study
9 10
Lecture
11 12
13 14 CD
Study
15 CD
Study
16 17
Lecture
18 19
20 21 CD
Study
22 CD
Study
23 24
Lecture
25 26
27
FW-2
28 CD
Study
CD
Study

Lecture

JANUARY
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1
2

3 CD
Study
4 CD
Study
5 6
Lecture
7 8
9 10 CD
Study
11 CD
Study
12 13
Lecture
14 15
16 17 18 19 20
Lecture
21 22
23
FW-1
24 CD
Study
25 CD
Study
26 2 7
Lecture
28 29
30 31 CD
Study
OCTOBER
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat

Lecture
1 2
3 4 CD
Study
5 CD
Study
6 7
Lecture
8 9
10 11 CD
Study
12 CD
Study
13 14
Lecture
15 16
17
FW-7
18 CD
Study
19 CD
Study
20 21
Lecture
22 23
24 25 CD 26 CD 27 2 8 29 30
31 Study Study Lecture
DECEMBER
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2
Lecture
3 4
5 6 CD
Study
7 CD
Study
8 9
Lecture
10 11
12 13 CD
Study
14 CD
Study
15 16
Lecture
17 18
19 20 CD
Study
21 CD
Study
22 23
Lecture
24 25
26 27 CD
Study
28 CD
Study
29 30
Lecture
31
NOVEMBER
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 CD
Study
2 CD
Study
3 4
Lecture
5 6
7 8 CD
Study
9 CD
Study
10 11
Lecture
12 13
14
FW-8
15 CD
Study
16 CD
Study
17 18
Lecture
19 20
21 22 CD
Study
23 CD
Study
24 25
Thanks-
giving
26 27
28

29 30 CD
Study

Lecture


ROLLING BACK THE CARPET OF TIME
Dates: Jan. 3 Jan. 10 (Mon.)
Jan. 4 Jan. 11 (Tue.)
Fee: $10.00 plus CD set
Registration ends: December 23
THE SEVEN AGES OF MAN
Dates: Jan. 24 Feb. 14 (Mon.)
Jan. 25 Feb. 15 (Tue.)
Fee: $20.00 plus CD set
Registration ends: January 13
FALLWINTER 2010-2011 SCHEDULE
INSTITUTE FOR TEACHING INNER PEACE
THROUGH A COURSE IN MIRACLES
La Jolla Branch
7843 Girard Avenue, Suite E
)
La Jolla, CA 92037
)
858.551.1227
FACULTY: ROBERT AND KATHLEEN DRAPER
LECTURES
Classes are held each Thursday (except Thanksgiving) from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
The fee for these lectures is $5, payable at the door.
THE UNCONSCIOUS MIND
Dates: Oct. 4 Oct. 25 (Mon.)
Oct. 5 Oct. 26 (Tue.)
Fee: $20.00 plus CD set
Registration ends: September 23
A QUALIFIED ENTENTE
Dates: Nov. 8 Nov. 15 (Mon.)
Nov. 9 Nov. 16 (Tue.)
Fee: $10.00 plus CD set
Registration ends: October 28
CD STUDY
Monday: 6 p.m. 7:30 p.m. or Tuesday: 10 a.m. 11:30 a.m.
Pre-registration is required at the La Jolla Branch. Call: 858.551.1227.
SUNDAY WORKSHOPS
10 a.m. 1 p.m. $15 fee
No registration required.
FW-7 THE LAWS OF HEALING
Date: October 17
FW-8 THE HOLY INSTANT AND THE
LAWS OF GOD
Date: November 14
FW-1 LOOKING WITHIN
Date: January 23
FW-2 THE VISION OF SINLESSNESS
Date: February 27
2010 2011
2010
2011
TRAVEL INSTRUCTIONS
The Foundation is located just off I-15.
From the north: Take the CA-79 N/Winchester Road
exit and stay in the far right lane. Turn right onto Winches-
ter Road/CA-79, again staying in the far right-hand lane.
Turn right onto Jefferson Avenue, which is the first stop
light. Continue straight on Jefferson (heading north) for
two long blocks until you reach Buecking Drive. Turn
right onto Buecking Drive. The Foundation is the second
building on the left.
From the south: Take the CA-79N/Winchester Road
exit, turning left onto Winchester Road. Get into the far
right lane and turn right onto Jefferson Avenue, which is
the second stop light. Continue straight on Jefferson (head-
ing north) for two long blocks until you reach Buecking
Drive. Turn right onto Buecking Drive. The Foundation is
the second building on the left.
THE LIGHTHOUSE (09/10)
Foundation for A COURSE IN MIRACLES

41397 Buecking Drive


Temecula, CA 92590-5668

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