| SEVERED.....................1 | |
| in chains which have been severed for release, when God is | W 279 W6 1 (526) |
| SEVERELY....................7 | |
| and their transfer value is severely limited BY his confusion. A | T 7 I 4 (178) |
| and its reality testing, though severely impaired, is completely consistent. | T 11 E 1 (290) |
| are strict, and breaches are severely punished. Therefore give no obedience | T 13 C 1 (338) |
| of the other, already a severely limited perception of him, is | T 17 C 4 (458) |
| the relationship seems to be severely strained. T 17 F | T 17 F 4 (468) |
| but only YOURS. You are severely tempted to abandon Him at | T 18 J 4 (508) |
| of love, for nothing so severely threatens them as loves | T 20 G 7 (564) |
| SEVERITY....................1 | |
| WITHOUT then follows because the severity of the guilt is so | T 5 G 4 (118) |
| SEX.........................1 | |
| The confusion of sex with aggression, and the resulting | T 4 F 11 (92) |
| SHABBY......................7 | |
| The ego has built a shabby and unsheltering home for you | T 4 B 14 (74) |
| and do not permit this shabby belief to pull you back | T 4 E 8 (87) |
| together we can replace the shabby littleness that binds the host | T 15 D 10 (395) |
| love relationship is but a shabby substitute for what makes you | T 16 E 8 (436) |
| place his faith in the shabby offerings of the ego when | M 5 B 2 M(9) |
| his own, coming from the shabby self-perception that he would leave | M 22 A 5 M(53) |
| hoped to find among the shabby toys of earth. I take | G 2 A 2 G(4) |
| SHADES......................1 | |
| is experienced in the present. Shades of the past envelop it | T 16 H 2 (448) |
| SHADINGS....................1 | |
| ever change; no shifts nor shadings, no differences, no variations which | T 17 C 4 (455) |
| SHADOW......................46 | |
| curtain, his monster into a shadow and his dragon into a | T 10 H 17 (278) |
| they saw in them a shadow figure in their OWN private | T 12 E 3 (322) |
| the past can cast no shadow to darken the present UNLESS | T 12 F 2 (326) |
| C. The Shadow of Guilt | T 13 C 0 (338) |
| from the past, without its shadow reaching out into the future | T 15 B 7 (388) |
| on YOUR selection. For the shadow figures you would make immortal | T 17 C 1 (457) |
| he did NOT do. The shadow figures are the witnesses you | T 17 C 1 (457) |
| its power. It is these shadow figures which would make the | T 17 C 2 (457) |
| 17 D 3 The shadow figures ALWAYS speak for vengeance | T 17 C 3 (457) |
| further fragmentation and unreality. The shadow figures enter more and more | T 17 C 4 (458) |
| and keep it hidden. Its shadow rises to the surface, enough | T 18 J 5 (508) |
| is seen anew, without the shadow of guilt upon it. Here | T 18 J 10 (509) |
| OVER it. How can a shadow keep you from the sun | T 19 E 6 (526) |
| by the ego, its dark shadow falls across all living things | T 19 I 1 (536) |
| 2 And yet a shadow cannot kill. What is a | T 19 I 2 (537) |
| cannot kill. What is a shadow to the living? They but | T 19 I 2 (537) |
| a little yet; perhaps a shadow of the fear of God | T 20 G 13 (566) |
| that, and now an elusive shadow attached to nothing, he DOES | T 21 H 12 (601) |
| recognize as a mistake; a shadow through which you walk completely | T 22 G 7 (623) |
| Will. Can you believe a shadow can hold back the Will | T 24 A 1 (644) |
| past and present. Here the shadow of the past remains, but | T 26 F 11 (712) |
| 26 F 12 The shadow voices do not change the | T 26 F 12 (712) |
| God. Would you allow one shadow to usurp the throne that | T 26 G 3 (714) |
| still? Forget not that a shadow held between your brother and | T 26 J 2 (724) |
| make it like itself. The shadow of an ancient hate has | T 26 J 3 (724) |
| he is but a dancing shadow, leaping up and down according | T 27 H 8 (753) |
| safe which rests upon a shadow? Would you build your home | T 28 H 6 (782) |
| what they are FOR. A shadow figure who attacks becomes a | T 29 E 5 (793) |
| the world, born in its shadow, growing in its ways, and | T 31 E 7 (851) |
| little more than just a shadow circling round the good. And | T 31 G 3 (858) |
| At most, you glimpse a shadow of what lies beyond. At | T 31 G 7 (860) |
| does not mean anything. That shadow does not mean anything. | W 1 L 2 (3) |
| not see the egos shadow on the world today. We | W 75 L 4 (146) |
| shine through this appearance. This shadow will vanish before the light | W 81 RII 3 (164) |
| truth. Deny you are a shadow briefly laid upon a dying | W 132 L 13 (275) |
| different names is but a shadow we have tried to cast | W 184 L 15 (401) |
| that is not but the shadow of the seen through inward | W 188 L 2 (413) |
| Let no-one hour cast its shadow on the one that follows | W 193 L 12 (430) |
| to go, and leave no shadow on the holy mind my | W 316 L 1 (567) |
| base more solid than the shadow world we see. Help us | W 359 L 1 (614) |
| decision, and how can its shadow be unchanged? Illness can be | P 3 E 2 P(9) |
| can be but guilts shadow, grotesque and ugly since it | P 3 E 2 P(9) |
| as real, what could its shadow be except deformed? P | P 3 E 2 P(9) |
| and only an effect or shadow of a change of mind | S 3 A 1 S(20) |
| It is a sign, a shadow of an evil thought that | S 3 B 1 S(20) |
| gain thereby, and not a shadow of a thought of loss | G 4 A 4 G(11) |
| SHADOWS.....................42 | |
| man now possesses are only shadows of his real strengths. All | T 3 F 1 (57) |
| which man possesses are only shadows of his real strengths, and | T 3 G 1 (60) |
| 457) D. Shadows of the Past | T 17 C 7 (457) |
| at all beneath the heavy shadows of its enormous and disproportionate | T 17 E 12 (465) |
| and be not disturbed that shadows surround it. That is why | T 18 E 2 (490) |
| light whereon they cast no shadows. Their shadows lie upon the | T 18 J 9 (509) |
| they cast no shadows. Their shadows lie upon the world beyond | T 18 J 9 (509) |
| them TO the light their shadows cannot fall. T 18 | T 18 J 9 (509) |
| uprooted from the world of shadows, and its unholy purpose has | T 18 K 3 (510) |
| only the UNTRUE, lifting the shadows --- Manuscript | T 18 K 4 (510) |
| upon the little wall of shadows. The sun has risen OVER | T 19 E 6 (526) |
| can you be kept by shadows from the light in which | T 19 E 6 (526) |
| yet in dreams, where only shadows play the major roles, it | T 23 C 16 (636) |
| until it is but distant shadows, far away, not long to | T 25 E 3 (679) |
| the world, which is but shadows of all that is REALLY | T 25 I 13 (694) |
| 3 Who dwells with shadows is alone indeed, and loneliness | T 26 G 3 (714) |
| but in the world of shadows and illusions built on sin | T 26 H 2 (715) |
| fear no evil and no shadows in the night. But place | T 27 A 1 (729) |
| the body disappears, as heavy shadows must give way to light | T 29 D 3 (790) |
| and steps aside from heavy shadows that have hidden him, and | T 29 D 5 (791) |
| that suits a world of shadows and illusions. Here it walks | T 31 E 1 (850) |
| you are aware are but shadows of what lies beyond, and | W 4 L 2 (6) |
| of what lies beyond, and shadows make sight difficult. The bad | W 4 L 2 (6) |
| beginning of the new. No shadows from the past remain to | W 75 L 2 (146) |
| about in darkness, fearful of shadows and afraid of things unseen | W 87 RII 2 (170) |
| do not dwell on idle shadows which the bodys eyes | W 92 L 8 (179) |
| All that is veiled in shadows must be raised to understanding | W 138 L 9 (302) |
| the world of doubt and shadows made with the intangible. Here | W 158 L 6 (342) |
| quite solid here are merely shadows there, transparent, faintly seen, at | W 159 L 5 (345) |
| made visible, while all the shadows which appeared to hide it | W 164 L 5 (360) |
| are, instead of fantasies and shadows. They remind you that you | W 188 L 7 (414) |
| vicious and afraid, fearful of shadows, punitive and wild, lacking all | W 191 L 1 (422) |
| Past mistakes can cast no shadows on it, so that fear | W 314 L 1 (565) |
| what was seen as merely shadows before becomes solid gains, to | M 5 B 8 M(11) |
| changes. They are but deeper shadows, or perhaps different cloud patterns | P 3 B 2 P(4) |
| all external things are only shadows of a decision already made | P 3 E 2 P(9) |
| like Him. Mistakes are tiny shadows, quickly gone, which for an | S 2 B 6 S(13) |
| He does not know of shadows. His the eyes that look | S 2 B 6 S(14) |
| that it must overlook all shadows on the holy face of | S 3 B 3 S(20) |
| greet its advent. See the shadows fade away in gentleness; the | S 3 E 9 S(27) |
| can you get within its shadows? Who can save you now | G 3 A 3 G(6) |
| not fall away into the shadows, and a deeper sleep in | G 3 A 5 G(7) |