How is Healing Accomplished?
5\. How is Healing Accomplished?
Healing involves an understanding of what the illusion of sickness is
for. Healing is impossible without this.
### The Perceived Purpose of Sickness
Healing is accomplished the instant the sufferer no longer
sees any value in pain. Who would choose suffering unless he thought it
brought him something, and something of value to him? He must think it
is a small price to pay for something of greater worth. For sickness is
an election, a decision. It is the choice of weakness in the mistaken
conviction that it is strength. When this occurs, real strength is seen
as threat and health as danger. Sickness is a method, conceived in
madness, for placing God's Son on his Father's throne. God is seen as
outside, fierce and powerful, eager to keep all power for Himself. Only
by His death can He be conquered by His Son.
And what, in this insane conviction, does healing stand
for? It symbolizes the defeat of God's Son and the triumph of his Father
over him. It represents the ultimate defiance in a direct form which the
Son of God is forced to recognize. It stands for all that he would hide
from himself to protect his life. If he is healed, he is responsible for
his thoughts. And if he is responsible for his thoughts, he will be
killed to prove to him how weak and pitiful he is. But if he chooses
death himself, his weakness is his strength. Now has he given himself
what God would give to him and thus entirely usurped the throne of his
Creator.
### The Shift in Perception
Healing must occur in exact proportion in which the
valuelessness of sickness is recognized. One need but say, “There is no
gain to me at all in this,” and he is healed. But to say this one must
first recognize certain facts. First, it is obvious that decisions are
of the mind, not of the body. If sickness is but a faulty
problem-solving approach, it is a decision. And if it is a decision, it
is the mind and not the body that makes it. The resistance to
recognizing this is enormous, because the existence of the world as we
perceive it depends on the body being the decision-maker. Terms like
“instincts,” “reflexes” and the like represent attempts to endow the
body with non-mental motivators. Actually, such terms merely state or
describe the problem. They do not answer it.
The acceptance of sickness as a decision of the mind for a
purpose for which it would use the body is the basis of healing. And
this is so for healing in all forms. A patient decides that this is so,
and he recovers. If he decides against recovery, he will not be healed.
Who is the physician? Only the mind of the patient himself. The outcome
is what he decides that it is. Special agents seem to be ministering to
him, yet they but give form to his own choice. He chooses them to bring
tangible form to his desires. And it is this they do, and nothing else.
They are not actually needed at all. The patient could merely rise up
without their aid and say, “I have no use for this.” There is no form of
sickness that would not be cured at once.
What is the single requisite for this shift in perception?
It is simply this: the recognition that sickness is of the mind and has
nothing to do with the body. What does this recognition “cost”? It costs
the whole world we see, for the world will never again appear to rule
the mind. For with this recognition is responsibility placed where it
belongs—not with the world but on him who looks on the world and sees it
as it is not. He looks on what he chooses to see. No more and no less.
The world does nothing to him. He only thought it did. Nor does he do
anything to the world because he was mistaken about what it was. Herein
is the release from guilt and sickness both, for they are one. Yet to
accept this release, the insignificance of the body must be an
acceptable idea.
With this idea is pain forever gone. But with this idea
goes also all confusion about creation. Does not this follow of
necessity? Place cause and effect in their true sequence in one respect,
and the learning will generalize and transform the world. The transfer
value of one true idea has no end nor limit. The final outcome of this
lesson is the remembrance of God. What do guilt and sickness, pain,
disaster, and all suffering mean now? Having no purpose, they are gone.
And with them also go all the effects they seemed to cause. Cause and
effect but replicate creation. Seen in their proper perspective, without
distortion and without fear, they re-establish Heaven.
### The Function of the Teacher of God
If the patient must change his mind in order to be healed,
what does the teacher of God do? Can he change the patient's mind for
him? Certainly not. For those already willing to change their mind he
has no function except to rejoice with them, for they have become
teachers of God with him. He has, however, a more specific function for
those who do not understand what healing is. These patients do not
realize they have chosen sickness. On the contrary, they believe that
sickness has chosen them. Nor are they open-minded on this point. The
body tells them what to do, and they obey. They have no idea how insane
this concept is. If they even suspected it, they would be healed. Yet
they suspect nothing. To them the separation is quite real.
To them God's teachers come to represent another choice
which they had forgotten. The simple presence of a teacher of God is a
reminder. His thoughts ask for the right to question what the patient
has accepted is true. As God's messengers, His teachers are the symbols
of salvation. They ask the patient for forgiveness for God's Son in his
own name. They stand for the alternative. With God's Word in their minds
they come in benediction, not to heal the sick but to remind them of the
remedy God has already given them. It is not their hands that heal. It
is not their voice that speaks the Word of God. They merely give what
has been given them. Very gently they call to their brothers to turn
away from death. Behold, you Son of God, what life can offer you. Would
you choose sickness in place of this?
Not once do the advanced teachers of God consider the
forms of sickness in which their brother believes. To do this is to
forget that all of them have the same purpose and therefore are not
really different. They seek for God's Voice in this brother who would so
deceive himself as to believe God's Son can suffer. And they remind him
that he has not made himself and must remain as God created him. They
recognize illusions can have no effect. The truth in their minds reaches
out to the truth in the minds of their brothers, so that illusions are
not reinforced. They are thus brought to truth, and truth is not brought
to them. So are they dispelled, not by the will of another but by the
union of the One will with itself. And this is the function of God's
teachers—to see no will as separate from their own, nor theirs as
separate from God's.