What are the Characteristics of God's Teachers?
4\. What are the Characteristics of God's Teachers?
The surface traits of God's teachers are not at all alike. They do not
look alike to the body's eyes, they come from vastly different
backgrounds, their experiences of the world vary greatly, and their
superficial “personalities” are quite distinct. Nor at the beginning
stages of their functioning as teachers of God have they as yet acquired
the deeper characteristics that will establish them as what they are.
God gives special gifts to His teachers because they have a special role
in His plan for Atonement. Their specialness is, of course, only
temporary—set in time as a means of leading out of time. These special
gifts, born in the holy relationship toward which the teaching-learning
situation is geared, become characteristic of all teachers of God who
have advanced in their own learning. In this respect they are all alike.
All differences among the Sons of God are temporary.
Nevertheless, in time it can be said that the advanced teachers of God
have the following characteristics:
### Trust
This is the foundation on which their ability to fulfill
their function rests. Perception is the result of learning. In fact,
perception is learning, because cause and effect are never separated.
The teachers of God have trust in the world, because they have learned
it is not governed by the laws the world made up. It is governed by a
Power Which is in them but not of them. It is this Power that keeps all
things safe. It is through this Power that the teachers of God look on a
forgiven world.
When this Power has once been experienced, it is impossible
to trust one's own petty strength again. Who would attempt to fly with
the tiny wings of a sparrow when the mighty power of an eagle has been
given him? And who would place his faith in the shabby offerings of the
ego when the gifts of God are laid before him? What is it that induces
them to make the shift?
First, they must go through what might be called “a period
of undoing.” This need not be painful, but it usually is so experienced.
It seems as if things are being taken away, and it is rarely understood
initially that their lack of value is merely being recognized. How can
lack of value be perceived unless the perceiver is in a position where
he must see things in a different light? He is not yet at a point at
which he can make the shift entirely internally. And so the plan will
sometimes call for changes in what seem to be external circumstances.
These changes are always helpful. When the teacher of God has learned
that much, he goes on to the second stage.
Next, the teacher of God must go through a “period of
sorting-out.” This is always somewhat difficult, because, having learned
that the changes in his life are always helpful, he must now decide all
things on the basis of whether they increase the helpfulness or hamper
it. He will find that many if not most of the things he valued before
will merely hinder his ability to transfer what he has learned to new
situations as they arise. Because he has valued what is really
valueless, he will not generalize the lesson for fear of loss and
sacrifice. It takes great learning to understand that all things,
events, encounters, and circumstances are helpful. It is only to the
extent to which they are helpful that any degree of reality should be
accorded them in this world of illusion. The word “value” can apply to
nothing else.
The third stage through which the teachers of God must go
can be called a “period of relinquishment.” If this is interpreted as
giving up the desirable, it will engender enormous conflict. Few
teachers of God escape this distress entirely. There is, however, no
point in sorting out the valuable from the valueless unless the next
obvious step is taken. The third step is rarely if ever begun until the
second is complete. Therefore, the period of overlap is apt to be one in
which the teacher of God feels called upon to sacrifice his own best
interests on behalf of truth. He has not realized as yet how wholly
impossible such a demand would be. He can learn this only as he actually
does give up the valueless. Through this he learns that where he
anticipated grief, he finds a happy light-heartedness instead; where he
thought something was asked of him, he finds a gift bestowed on him.
Now comes a “period of settling down.” This is a quiet time
in which the teacher of God rests a while in reasonable peace. Now he
consolidates his learning. Now he begins to see the transfer value of
what he has learned. Its potential is literally staggering, and the
teacher of God is now at the point in his progress at which he sees in
it his whole way out. “Give up what you do not want and keep what you
do.” How simple is the obvious! And how easy to do! The teacher of God
needs this period of respite. He has not yet come as far as he thinks.
Yet when he is ready to go on, he goes with mighty companions beside
him. Now he rests a while and gathers them before going on. He will not
go on from here alone.
The next stage is indeed a “period of unsettling.” Now must
the teacher of God understand that he did not really know what was
valuable and what was valueless. All that he really learned so far was
that he did not want the valueless and that he did want the valuable.
Yet his own sorting-out was meaningless in teaching him the difference.
The idea of sacrifice, so central to his thought system, had made it
impossible for him to judge. He thought he had learned willingness, but
now he sees that he does not know what the willingness is for. And now
he must attain a state that may remain impossible for a long, long time.
He must learn to lay all judgment aside and ask only what he really
wants in every circumstance. Were not each step in this direction so
heavily reinforced, it would be hard indeed!
And finally, there is a “period of achievement.” It is
here that learning is consolidated. Now what was seen as merely shadows
before becomes solid gains, to be counted on in all “emergencies” as
well as tranquil times. Indeed, the tranquility is their result—the
outcome of honest learning, consistency of thought, and full transfer.
This is the stage of real peace, for here is Heaven's state fully
reflected. From here the way to Heaven is open and easy. In fact, it is
here. Who would “go” anywhere if peace of mind is already complete? And
who would seek to change tranquility for something more desirable? What
could be more desirable than this?
### Honesty
All other traits of God's teachers rest on trust. Once
that has been achieved, the others cannot fail to follow. Only the
trusting can afford honesty, for only they can see its value. Honesty
does not apply only to what you say. The term actually means
consistency. There is nothing you say that contradicts what you think or
do; no thought opposes any other thought; no act belies your word; and
no word lacks agreement with another. Such are the truly honest. At no
level are they in conflict with themselves. Therefore it is impossible
for them to be in conflict with anyone or anything.
The peace of mind which the advanced teachers of God
experience is largely due to their perfect honesty. It is only the wish
to deceive that makes for war. No one at one with himself can even
conceive of conflict. Conflict is the inevitable result of
self-deception, and self-deception is dishonesty. There is no challenge
to a teacher of God. Challenge implies doubt, and the trust on which
God's teachers rest secure makes doubt impossible. Therefore they can
only succeed. In this, as in all things, they are honest. They can only
succeed because they never do their will alone. They choose for all
mankind, for all the world and all things in it, for the unchanging and
unchangeable beyond appearances, and for the Son of God and his Creator.
How could they not succeed? They choose in perfect honesty, sure of
their choice themselves.
### Tolerance
God's teachers do not judge. To judge is to be dishonest,
for to judge is to assume a position you do not have. Judgment without
self-deception is impossible. Judgment implies that you have been
deceived in your brothers. How then could you not have been deceived in
yourself? Judgment implies a lack of trust, and trust remains the
bed-rock of the teacher of God's whole thought system. Let this be lost,
and all his learning goes. Without judgment are all things equally
acceptable, for who could judge otherwise? Without judgment are all men
brothers, for who is there who stands apart? Judgment destroys honesty
and shatters trust. No teacher of God can judge and hope to learn.
### Gentleness
Harm is impossible for God's teachers. They can neither
harm nor be harmed. Harm is the outcome of judgment. It is the dishonest
act that follows a dishonest thought. It is a verdict of guilt upon a
brother and therefore on one's self. It is the end of peace and the
denial of learning. It demonstrates the absence of God's curriculum and
its replacement by insanity. No teacher of God but must learn—and fairly
early in his training—that harmfulness completely obliterates his
function from his awareness. It will make him confused, fearful, angry,
and suspicious. It will make the Holy Spirit's lessons impossible to
learn. Nor can God's Teacher be heard at all except by those who realize
that harm can actually achieve nothing. No gain can come of it.
Therefore God's teachers are wholly gentle. They need the
strength of gentleness, for it is in this that the function of salvation
becomes easy. To those who would do harm, it is impossible. To those to
whom harm has no meaning, it is merely natural. What choice but this has
meaning to the sane? Who chooses hell when he perceives a way to Heaven?
And who would choose the weakness that must come from harm in place of
the unfailing, all-encompassing, and limitless strength of gentleness?
The might of God's teachers lies in their gentleness, for they have
understood their evil thoughts came neither from God's Son nor his
Creator. Thus did they join their thoughts with Him Who is their Source.
And so their will, which always was His own, is free to be itself.
### Joy
Joy is the inevitable result of gentleness. Gentleness
means that fear is now impossible, and what could come to interfere with
joy? The open hands of gentleness are always filled. The gentle have no
pain. They cannot suffer. Why would they not be joyous? They are sure
they are beloved and must be safe. Joy goes with gentleness as surely as
grief attends attack. God's teachers trust in Him. And they are sure His
Teacher goes before them, making sure no harm can come to them. They
hold His gifts and follow in His way because God's Voice directs them in
all things. Joy is their song of thanks. And Christ looks down on them
in thanks as well. His need of them is just as great as theirs of Him.
How joyous it is to share the purpose of salvation!
### Defenselessness
God's teachers have learned how to be simple. They have no
dreams that need defense against the truth. They do not try to make
themselves. Their joy comes from their understanding Who created them.
And does what God created need defense? No one can become an advanced
teacher of God until he fully understands that defenses are but the
foolish guardians of mad illusions. The more grotesque the dream, the
fiercer and more powerful its defenses seem to be. Yet when the teacher
of God finally agrees to look past them, he finds nothing was there.
Slowly at first, he lets himself be undeceived. But he learns faster as
his trust increases. It is not danger that comes when defenses are laid
down. It is safety. It is peace. It is joy. And it is God.
### Generosity
The term generosity has special meaning to the teacher of
God. It is not the usual meaning of the word; in fact, it is a meaning
that must be learned and learned very carefully. Like all the other
attributes of God's teachers, this one rests ultimately on trust, for
without trust, no one can be generous in the true sense. To the world,
generosity means “giving away” in the sense of “giving up.” To the
teachers of God, it means “giving away” in order to keep. This has been
emphasized throughout the text and the workbook, but it is perhaps more
alien to the thinking of the world than many other ideas in our
curriculum. Its greater strangeness lies merely in the obviousness of
its reversal of the world's thinking. In the clearest way possible and
at the simplest of levels, the word means the exact opposite to the
teachers of God and to the world.
The teacher of God is generous out of self-interest. This
does not refer, however, to the self the world speaks of. The teacher of
God does not want anything he cannot give away because he realizes it
would be valueless to him by definition. What would he want it for? He
could only lose because of it. He could not gain. Therefore he does not
seek what only he could keep, because that is a guarantee of loss. He
does not want to suffer. Why should he ensure himself pain? But he does
want to keep for himself all things that are of God and therefore for
His Son. These are the things that belong to him. These he can give away
in true generosity, protecting them forever for himself.
### Patience
Those who are certain of the outcome can afford to wait,
and wait without anxiety. Patience is natural to the teacher of God. All
he sees is certain outcome, at a time perhaps unknown as yet, but not in
doubt. The time will be as right as is the answer. And this is true for
everything that happens now or in the future. The past as well held no
mistakes—nothing that did not serve to benefit the world as well as him
to whom it seemed to happen. Perhaps it was not understood at the time.
Even so, the teacher of God is willing to reconsider all his past
decisions if they are causing pain to anyone. Patience is natural to
those who trust. Sure of the ultimate interpretation of all things in
time, no outcome already seen or yet to come can cause them fear.
### Faithfulness
The extent of the teacher of God's faithfulness is the
measure of his advancement in the curriculum. Does he still select some
aspects of his life to bring to his learning while keeping others apart?
If so, his advancement is limited and his trust not yet firmly
established. Faithfulness is the teacher of God's trust in the word of
God to set all things right—not some but all. Generally, his
faithfulness begins by resting on just some problems, remaining
carefully limited for a time. To give up all problems to one Answer is
to reverse the thinking of the world entirely. And that alone is
faithfulness. Nothing but that really deserves the name. Yet each
degree, however small, is worth achieving. Readiness, as the text notes,
is not mastery.
True faithfulness, however, does not deviate. Being
consistent, it is wholly honest. Being unswerving, it is full of trust.
Being based on fearlessness, it is gentle. Being certain, it is joyous,
and being confident, it is tolerant. Defenselessness attends it
naturally, and joy is its condition. Faithfulness, then, combines in
itself the other attributes of God's teachers. It implies acceptance of
the word of God and His definition of His Son. It is to them that
faithfulness in the true sense is always directed. Toward them it looks,
seeking until it finds. And having found, it rests in quiet certainty on
that alone to which all faithfulness is due.
### Open-Mindedness
The centrality of open-mindedness, perhaps the last of the
attributes the teacher of God acquires, is easily understood when its
relation to forgiveness is recognized. Open-mindedness comes with lack
of judgment. As judgment shuts the mind against God's Teacher, so
open-mindedness invites Him to come in. As condemnation judges the Son
of God as evil, so open-mindedness permits him to be judged by the Voice
for God on His behalf. As the projection of guilt upon him would send
him to hell, so open-mindedness lets Christ's image be projected on him.
Only the open-minded can be at peace, for they alone see reason for it.
How do the open-minded forgive? They have let go all
things that would prevent forgiveness. They have in truth abandoned the
world and let it be restored to them in newness and in joy so glorious
they could never have conceived of such a change. Nothing is now as it
was formerly. Nothing but sparkles now which seemed so dull and lifeless
before. And above all are all things welcoming, for threat is gone. No
clouds remain to hide the face of Christ. Now is the goal achieved.
Forgiveness is the final goal of the curriculum. It paves the way for
what goes far beyond all learning. The curriculum makes no effort to
exceed its legitimate goal. Forgiveness is its single aim at which all
learning ultimately converges. It is indeed enough.
You may have noticed that the list of attributes of God's
teachers does not include those things which are the Son of God's
inheritance. Terms like love, sinlessness, perfection, knowledge, and
eternal truth do not appear in this context. They would be most
inappropriate here. What God has given is so far beyond our curriculum
that learning but disappears in its presence. Yet while its presence is
obscured, the focus properly belongs on the curriculum. It is the
function of God's teachers to bring true learning to the world. Properly
speaking it is unlearning that they bring, for that is “true learning”
in the world. It is given to the teachers of God to bring the glad
tidings of complete forgiveness to the world. Blessed indeed are they,
for they are the bringers of salvation.