A Course in Miracles Topic - Misperception
You may be surprised to hear how very different is reality from what you see. T-18.I.5:1
A Course in Miracles uses three terms to describe how we think we understand Truth: misperception, accurate perception and knowledge. Only knowledge is is congruent with Truth, which is outside the access of dreaming minds. Misperception keeps us stuck within the dream because we see a reason for attack where there is none. Accurate perception brings our vision into alignment with Truth, which allows awakening to be the next step.
… perception
must be straightened out before you can know anything. To know is to
be certain. ... certainty is strength. Perception is
temporary. As an attribute of the belief in space and time, it is
subject to either fear or love. Misperceptions
produce fear and true perceptions foster love, but neither brings
certainty because all perception varies. That is why it is not
knowledge. True perception is the basis for knowledge, but knowing
is the affirmation of truth and beyond all perceptions. T-3.III.1:2-10.
I
[Jesus] cannot unite your will with God's
for you, but I can erase all misperceptions from your mind if you
will bring it under my guidance. Only
your misperceptions stand in your way. Without them your choice is
certain. Sane perception induces sane choosing. I cannot
choose for you, but I can help you make your own right choice. T-3.IV.77-11.
[From
Workbook for Students lesson #72:]
“Holding grievances is an attack on God's plan for
salvation.”
Holding
grievances is an attempt to prove that God's plan for salvation will
not work. Yet only His plan will work. By holding grievances, I am
therefore excluding my only hope of salvation from my awareness. ...
I
am choosing between misperception and salvation as I look on this.
If
I see grounds for grievances in this, I will not see the grounds for
my salvation.
This
calls for salvation, not attack.
It
cannot be emphasized too often that correcting perception is merely a
temporary expedient. It is necessary only because misperception
is a block to knowledge, while accurate perception is a steppingstone
towards it. The whole value of right perception lies in the
inevitable realization that all perception is unnecessary. T-4.II.11:1-3. [You
may ask how this is possible as long as you appear to be living in
this world. That is a reasonable question. You must be careful,
however, that you really understand it. Who is the "you"
who are living in this world? T-4.II.11:5-8.]
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