| DEATHLESS...................5 | |
| will have looked upon the deathless in YOURSELF, and you will | T 11 H 16 (303) |
| is YOURS. For it is deathless, and within it lies the | T 19 J 7 (540) |
| impossible has happened. Here the deathless come to die, the all-encompassing | T 29 I 6 (803) |
| Are you a Spirit, deathless, and without the promise of | T 31 F 6 (857) |
| and always will remain the deathless sound of loving and of | G 5 A 2 G(13) |
| DEBASED.....................4 | |
| into unreality. Fantasy is a debased form of vision. Vision and | T 1 C 5 (19) |
| you have judged him as debased. When you laugh at yourself | T 3 H 5 (64) |
| the idea of being more debased than they are. All of | T 3 H 5 (64) |
| desirable or undesirable, grandiose or debased. All of them are equally | W 35 L 4 (57) |
| DEBASEMENT..................1 | |
| humility, mistaking it for self- debasement. Humility consists of accepting your | W 61 L 2 (112) |
| DEBATABLE...................1 | |
| worth. This point is NOT debatable except in delusions. Your ego | T 4 B 10 (73) |
| DEBILITATING................1 | |
| any ability which is so debilitating should be so deeply cherished | T 3 H 5 (64) |
| DEBRIS......................1 | |
| has been cleared of the debris which darkens it. 3 | W 9 L 2 (15 |
| DEBT........................7 | |
| you have made, your great debt to each other is something | T 4 G 4 (93) |
| It is exactly the same debt that you owe to me | T 4 G 4 (93) |
| that he can pay his debt by bringing happiness to both | T 18 F 7 (494) |
| you owe each other, the debt of gratitude you offer to | T 19 L 12 (546) |
| to be a pledge of debt to be repaid with more | W 105 L 2 (210) |
| And as we pay the debt we owe to truth ? a | W 323 L 2 (575) |
| we owe to truth ? a debt which merely is the letting | W 323 L 2 (575) |
| DEC.........................3 | |
| W(258) Dec. 8, 1969 Lesson 127 | W 127 L 0 (258) |
| W(263) Dec. 23, 1969 Lesson 129 | W 129 L 0 (263) |
| W(546) Dec. 18, 1970 Lesson 297 | W 297 L 0 (546) |
| DECAY.......................8 | |
| capable of complete corruption and decay. If this is a mistake | T 19 C 6 (518) |
| its orders, proof in his decay that God Himself is powerless | T 19 J 6 (539) |
| it joy to look upon decay and madness, and believe this | T 24 F 4 (659) |
| and you condemn it to decay and death. And if you | T 24 H 4 (666) |
| and give you safety from decay. T 24 H 5 | T 24 H 4 (666) |
| must fail and crumble and decay, because a form of death | T 29 H 5 (800) |
| death, for separate fragments must decay and die, but wholeness is | M 20 A 4 M(49) |
| of shock and terror, merciless decay and sickening contortions, with despair | G 3 A 2 G(6) |
| DECAYED.....................1 | |
| with gorges filled with things decayed and rotted. To them such | T 19 F 4 (529) |
| DECAYS......................1 | |
| lives, to die as it decays and crumbles. For within this | W 260 W5 1 (506) |
| DECEIT......................10 | |
| your Father, in Whom no deceit is possible. T 10 | T 10 H 13 (277) |
| that, as part of God, deceit in YOU is impossible. When | T 10 H 19 (279) |
| When you perceive yourself without deceit, you will accept the real | T 10 H 19 (279) |
| made out of darkness and deceit, for thus are darkness and | T 13 I 5 (361) |
| for thus are darkness and deceit undone. Fail not YOURSELF, but | T 13 I 5 (361) |
| D. Perception without Deceit T 14 | T 14 D 0 (370) |
| the perception must be without deceit, for otherwise it becomes the | T 14 D 1 (370) |
| answer, clear and plain, beyond deceit in its simplicity. 7 | W 122 L 6 (245) |
| another name, nor hidden by deceit of any kind, if it | W 333 L 1 (586) |
| in honesty. There is no deceit in God. His promises are | M 16 A 3 M(40) |
| DECEITS.....................1 | |
| Now I disown self-concepts and deceits and lies about the holy | W 248 L 1 (492) |
| DECEIVE.....................60 | |
| in darkness, but man can deceive himself about it. This illusion | T 1 B 31b (6) |
| means do not let us deceive ourselves into believing that we | T 1 C 3 (18) |
| To do so is to deceive yourself, and this will hurt | T 3 I 2 (67) |
| perceived, NOT known. Knowledge cannot deceive, but perception CAN. Man can | T 3 I 6 (68) |
| to EXCLUDE, and therefore to deceive. The Holy Spirit projects by | T 6 C 13 (137) |
| God does. Your deceptions may deceive YOU, but they CANNOT deceive | T 8 K 7 (220) |
| deceive YOU, but they CANNOT deceive ME. Knowing what you are | T 8 K 7 (220) |
| true. Your grandeur will NEVER deceive you, but your illusions ALWAYS | T 9 G 7 (237) |
| hear, for God does not deceive. He would have you replace | T 9 G 11 (238) |
| Do you believe I would deceive you? The Kingdom of Heaven | T 10 H 12 (277) |
| you. For He will never deceive Gods Son, whom He | T 11 E 4 (291) |
| brothers, for though they may deceive themselves, like you they long | T 12 C 9 (317) |
| you because you chose to deceive yourselves. Those who choose to | T 13 F 7 (350) |
| it is, and can only deceive yourself. T 15 E | T 15 E 4 (398) |
| forms, but it cannot long deceive those who will learn that | T 15 H 10 (409) |
| think you hate your bodies deceive yourselves. You hate your MINDS | T 18 G 2 (495) |
| cannot attack, but it CAN deceive itself. And this is all | T 18 G 4 (495) |
| can be mistaken; he can deceive himself; he can even turn | T 19 C 3 (517) |
| it is INNOCENCE that would deceive. Purity is seen as arrogance | T 19 C 4 (517) |
| received as I had asked. Deceive yourself no longer that you | T 21 C 2 (578) |
| forms, and so they can deceive. You can change form BECAUSE | T 22 D 7 (615) |
| of the attack on him deceive you. You CANNOT seek to | T 23 C 17 (636) |
| of sin from sinners, and deceive with glitter and with guile | T 25 H 1 (686) |
| except a devil dressed to deceive, within an angels cloak | T 25 I 7 (693) |
| be possible in trying to deceive the Son of God. | T 26 H 14 (718) |
| same is different you but deceive yourself. What God calls one | T 26 H 16 (719) |
| Let not their form deceive you. Idols are but substitutes | T 29 I 2 (802) |
| and the bears did not deceive him, broke no rules, nor | T 30 E 2 (820) |
| 30 E 5 Appearances deceive BECAUSE they are appearances, and | T 30 E 5 (821) |
| 6 Appearances can but deceive the mind that WANTS to | T 30 E 6 (821) |
| let not your experiences here deceive in retrospect. They were not | T 30 F 9 (825) |
| 30 I 1 Appearances deceive, but can be changed. Reality | T 30 I 1 (834) |
| is changeless. It does not deceive at all, and if you | T 30 I 1 (834) |
| would choose the better to deceive yourself again. This course attempts | T 31 D 8 (848) |
| the form of the decision deceive you. Complexity of form does | W 64 L 6 (118) |
| wishes can detain us, nor deceive us with an illusion of | W 73 L 8 (142) |
| Their many forms will not deceive you while you remember this | W 80 L 3 (160) |
| is simple honesty. Do not deceive yourself about what the problem | W 80 L 6 (161) |
| asked to give. Do not deceive yourself in this. Unwillingness can | W 111 RIII 2 (228) |
| he try to force delay, deceive himself, and think that it | W 131 L 4 (269) |
| a thin veneer which could deceive but those who are content | W 133 L 9 (278) |
| in an unfounded effort to deceive yourself by making an illusion | W 134 L 3 (281) |
| of all thoughts that would deceive, and let this Thought alone | W 140 RIV 5 (312) |
| while since your senses do deceive. That you believe them to | W 151 L 2 (316) |
| gift is yours. Would God deceive you? Can His promise fail | W 164 L 9 (361) |
| he merely asks that he deceive himself no longer by denying | W 185 L 11 (404) |
| the forms which never can deceive, although they come from Formlessness | W 186 L 14 (409) |
| distort the truth will not deceive you longer. You will not | W 196 L 3 (438) |
| it, the world can but deceive? Yet can he learn to | W 200 L 7 (450) |
| such insane thoughts. But eyes deceive, and ears hear falsely. Now | W 240 W3 2 (484) |
| made in its striving to deceive itself. Its purpose is to | W 250 W4 2 (495) |
| God can will that He deceive Himself. --- | W 277 W6 2 (524) |
| real. The self- deceiving must deceive, for they must teach deception | M 1 A 5 M(2) |
| is only the wish to deceive that makes for war. No | M 5 C 2 M(12) |
| this brother who would so deceive himself as to believe God | M 6 D 3 M(21) |
| accept as real can but deceive him. But he is safe | M 17 A 10 M(43) |
| is genuine is used to deceive. The Holy Spirit is incapable | M 26 A 4 M(61) |
| asks for death. Would God deceive you? He but asks for | S 2 D 1 S(17) |
| Let not the world deceive you. It was made to | G 1 A 3 G(1) |
| A 4 Does God deceive or does the world? For | G 1 A 4 G(1) |