I want the peace of God.
I want the peace of God.
To say these words is nothing. But to mean these words is
everything. If you could but mean them for just an instant, there would
be no further sorrow possible for you in any form, in any place or time.
Heaven would be completely given back to full awareness, memory of God
entirely restored, the resurrection of all creation fully recognized.
No one can mean these words and not be healed. He cannot
play with dreams nor think he is himself a dream. He cannot make a hell
and think it real. He wants the peace of God, and it is given him. For
that is all he wants, and that is all he will receive. Many have said
these words. But few indeed have meant them. You have but to look upon
the world you see around you to be sure how very few they are. The world
would be completely changed should any two agree these words express the
only thing they want.
Two minds with one intent become so strong that what they
will becomes the Will of God. For minds can only join in truth. In
dreams no two can share the same intent. To each the hero of the dream
is different—the outcome wanted not the same for both. Loser and gainer
merely shift about in changing patterns, as the ratio of gain to loss
and loss to gain takes on a different aspect or another form.
Yet compromise alone a dream can bring. Sometimes it takes
the form of union, but only the form. The meaning must escape the dream,
for compromising is the goal of dreaming. Minds cannot unite in dreams.
They merely bargain. And what bargain can give them the peace of God?
Illusions come to take His place. And what He means is lost to sleeping
minds intent on compromise, each to his gain and to another's loss.
To mean you want the peace of God is to renounce all
dreams. For no one means these words who wants illusions and who
therefore seeks the means which bring illusions. He has looked on them
and found them wanting. Now he seeks to go beyond them, recognizing that
another dream would offer nothing more than all the others. Dreams are
one to him. And he has learned their only difference is one of form, for
one will bring the same despair and misery as do the rest.
The mind which means that all it wants is peace must join
with other minds, for that is how peace is obtained. And when the wish
for peace is genuine, the means for finding it are given in a form each
mind which seeks for it in honesty can understand. Whatever form the
lesson takes is planned for him in such a way that he cannot mistake it
if his asking is sincere. And if he asks without sincerity, there is no
form in which the lesson will meet with acceptance and be truly learned.
Let us today devote our practicing to recognizing that we
really mean the words we say. We want the peace of God. This is no idle
wish. These words do not request another dream be given us. They do not
ask for compromise nor try to make another bargain in the hope that
there may yet be one which can succeed where all the rest have failed.
To mean these words acknowledges illusions are in vain, requesting the
eternal in the place of shifting dreams which seem to change in what
they offer, but are one in nothingness.
Today devote your practice periods to careful searching of
your mind to find the dreams you cherish still. What do you ask for in
your heart? Forget the words you use in making your requests. Consider
but what you believe will comfort you and bring you happiness. But be
you not dismayed by lingering illusions, for their form is not what
matters now. Let not some dreams be more acceptable, reserving shame and
secrecy for others. They are one.
And being one, one question should be asked of all of them:
“Is this what I would have, in place of Heaven and the peace of God?”
This is the choice you make. Be not deceived that it is otherwise. No
compromise is possible in this. You choose God's peace, or you have
asked for dreams. And dreams will come as you requested them. Yet will
God's peace come just as certainly and to remain with you forever. It
will not be gone with every twist and turning of the road to reappear
unrecognized in forms which shift and change with every step you take.
You want the peace of God. And so do all who seem to seek
for dreams. For them as well as for yourself you ask but this when you
make this request with deep sincerity. For thus you reach to what they
really want and join your own intent with what they seek above all
things, perhaps unknown to them, but sure to you. You have been weak at
times, uncertain in your purpose and unsure of what you wanted, where to
look for it, and where to turn for help in the attempt. Help has been
given you. And would you not avail yourself of it by sharing it?
No one who truly seeks the peace of God can fail to find
it. For he merely asks that he deceive himself no longer by denying to
himself what is God's Will. Who can remain unsatisfied who asks for what
he has already? Who could be unanswered who requests an answer which is
his to give? The peace of God is yours.
For you it was created, given you by its Creator and
established as His own eternal gift. How can you fail when you but ask
for what He wills for you? And how could your request be limited to you
alone? No gift of God can be unshared. It is this attribute that sets
the gifts of God apart from every dream that ever seemed to take the
place of truth.
No one can lose and everyone must gain whenever any gift
of God has been requested and received by anyone. God gives but to
unite. To take away is meaningless to Him. And when it is as meaningless
to you, you can be sure you share one will with Him, and He with you.
And you will also know you share one will with all your brothers, whose
intent is yours.
It is this one intent we seek today, uniting our desires
with the need of every heart, the call of every mind, the hope that lies
beyond despair, the love attack would hide, the brotherhood that hate
has sought to sever, but which still remains as God created it. With
help like this beside us, can we fail today as we request the peace of
God be given us?