| SUFFERINGS..................1 | |
| And they attest to different sufferings. Yet to the One Who | T 27 G 6 (749) |
| SUFFERS.....................18 | |
| the illusions from which man suffers is the belief that what | T 3 H 2 (63) |
| learn. His sense of adequacy suffers, and he MUST become depressed | T 8 G 8 (204) |
| projected to the body, which suffers and dies because it is | T 18 G 3 (495) |
| constant sting of guilt he suffers serves to prove that he | T 27 C 9 (735) |
| not choose. And thus he suffers from the wounds a knife | T 27 H 4 (752) |
| although it cannot hear. It suffers not the punishment you give | T 28 G 2 (779) |
| time from which your seeing suffers. Your mind cannot grasp the | W 8 L 1 (13) |
| that hurts itself. The body suffers that the mind will fail | W 76 L 5 (149) |
| up to hide what really suffers. It would not understand it | W 76 L 5 (149) |
| and release from pain. It suffers and abides in misery, peering | W 121 L 2 (241) |
| be his own decision. No-one suffers pain except his choice elects | W 152 L 1 (321) |
| invented opposites to truth, and suffers death to triumph over life | W 152 L 7 (322) |
| blessing lies on everyone who suffers when you choose to see | W 187 L 7 (411) |
| Lesson 248. Whatever suffers is not part of me | W 248 L 0 (492) |
| faithful in disowning falsity. Whatever suffers is not part of me | W 248 L 1 (492) |
| when anything that It created suffers any pain. Forever and forever | W 320 W11 1 (572) |
| weak, and being weak it suffers and it dies. Use it | M 13 A 5 M(33) |
| to calm the mind that suffers from the agony of doubt | S 3 D 3 S(24) |
| SUFFICE.....................7 | |
| but their protection did not suffice, because the separated ones were | T 2 B 21 (26) |
| His own light, they will suffice. T 5 H 7 | T 5 H 6 (121) |
| a bridge an instant will suffice to reach beyond? For God | T 28 B 12 (765) |
| tiny gain of wisdom will suffice to take you further. You | T 30 B 2 (811) |
| the exercise periods. That will suffice at present. | W 13 L 6 (23) |
| as saying one correction will suffice for all correction, or that | W 108 L 5 (219) |
| by them? 11. Suffice it, then, that you have | W 169 L 11 (375) |
| SUFFICES....................11 | |
| Will of God. If that suffices Him, it is enough for | T 13 E 5 (347) |
| sure as God. His certainty suffices. Learn that even the darkest | T 13 E 7 (348) |
| come to you. His help suffices, for His Messenger understands how | T 16 H 10 (450) |
| 8. His certainty suffices. Who he knows to be | W 160 L 8 (348) |
| certainty but this, yet this suffices. He will love His Son | W 168 L 1 (371) |
| a little while. The interval suffices. It is here that miracles | W 169 L 12 (375) |
| thousand names, when only one suffices? For Your Son must bear | W 262 L 1 (508) |
| That I perceive Your grace suffices me. 1 | W 348 L 0 (602) |
| 2. Gods grace suffices us in everything that He | W 348 L 2 (602) |
| teacher, whose learning is complete, suffices. This One, sanctified and redeemed | M 13 A 1 M(32) |
| it be understood. And that suffices. The form adapts itself to | U 4 A 3 U(6) |
| SUFFICIENT..................18 | |
| not abolishing time. If a sufficient number of people become truly | T 2 F 2 (44) |
| imply that willing is not sufficient. Yet no one believes that | T 3 H 11 (66) |
| is a point at which sufficient quantitative changes produce real qualitative | T 5 C 4 (103) |
| PURPOSE is to be separate, sufficient unto itself, and independent of | T 10 F 4 (266) |
| thing, and it will be sufficient: God wills you be in | T 13 E 5 (347) |
| Should not this be a sufficient miracle to teach you that | T 16 C 8 (429) |
| long, has not yet been sufficient to give you confidence in | T 18 D 3 (487) |
| without attack. An instant is sufficient. Miracles wait not on time | T 27 F 2 (744) |
| three or four times is sufficient. You might find it helpful | W 8 L 5 (14) |
| or four practice periods are sufficient, involve looking about you and | W 9 L 3 (15 |
| periods today will probably be sufficient. However, if there is little | W 11 L 4 (19) |
| or even less will be sufficient. --- Manuscript | W 18 L 3 (31) |
| phase of the exercise are sufficient. You might say, for example | W 43 L 4 (72) |
| But it is hardly a sufficient one in giving you the | W 47 L 6 (84) |
| find that this is not sufficient, and that you need to | W 67 L 4 (124) |
| The light within you is sufficient. It alone has power to | W 188 L 6 (414) |
| these ideas alone would be sufficient for salvation, if it were | W 200 RVI 1 (452) |
| We cannot make an offering sufficient for Your Son. But in | W 306 L 2 (556) |
| SUFFICIENTLY................12 | |
| proper use has not been sufficiently understood as yet. They can | T 2 B 7 (24) |
| Sometimes the illness has a sufficiently great hold over a mind | T 2 C 6 (32) |
| of Him. Nothing else is sufficiently worthy to be a gift | T 4 B 15 (75) |
| heal. Yet you are not sufficiently vigilant AGAINST the demands of | T 4 E 7 (87) |
| shared. When they have been sufficiently purified He lets you give | T 5 F 12 (115) |
| God is the ONLY teacher sufficiently worthy to teach another. One | T 7 H 8 (175) |
| that this course is not sufficiently specific for you to understand | T 10 H 9 (276) |
| have already proved their power sufficiently for you to place your | T 16 C 11 (430) |
| not, as yet, been changed sufficiently --- Manuscript | T 17 F 4 (467) |
| the way to alter time sufficiently to rise above its laws | W 157 L 3 (339) |
| and no part of mind sufficiently distinct to feel that it | W 169 L 5 (374) |
| in fact, to stabilize it sufficiently to include within it the | P 3 A 3 P(3) |
| SUGGEST.....................3 | |
| validate the invalid. I would suggest that you voluntarily give up | T 3 D 5 (52) |
| asks. It certainly does not suggest that you set him back | T 4 A 1 (70) |
| prepare your mind as we suggest, for you have let all | W 105 L 8 (211) |
| SUGGESTED...................8 | |
| you. That is why we suggested before that there was help | T 6 G 7 (148) |
| uneasiness. The following form is suggested for this purpose: This thought | W 16 L 6 (29) |
| large number. Two minutes are suggested for each of the mind-searching | W 24 L 3 (40) |
| of practice which has been suggested once before, and which we | W 44 L 3 (75) |
| apply the ideas as was suggested then. We are now emphasizing | W 51 RI 6 (91) |
| form of the application is suggested: My happiness and function are | W 66 L 12 (123) |
| 3. These are some suggested forms for applying this idea | W 86 RII 3 (169) |
| you to undertake what is suggested here as optimal each day | W 111 RIII 1 (228) |
| SUGGESTIONS.................4 | |
| your future hopes, and no suggestions of success at all. To | T 25 C 2 (672) |
| These, however, are merely suggestions. It is not the particular | W 81 RII 5 (163) |
| with me. 3. Suggestions for specific forms for applying | W 82 RII 3 (165) |
| You might use these suggestions for specific applications of this | W 89 RII 3 (172) |
| SUGGESTS....................4 | |
| hence very angry, if anyone suggests that God has NOT left | T 8 J 9 (216) |
| perhaps be argued that death suggests there WAS life, no one | T 12 D 3 (319) |
| to do the little He suggests you do, trusting Him only | T 14 D 6 (371) |
| of invitation that His Voice suggests, then we wait for Him | W 220 INII 5 (460) |
| SUIT........................6 | |
| world, and changing it to suit the ego better. They provide | T 18 C 2 (484) |
| change in its appearances, to suit the purpose given by the | T 31 C 4 (845) |
| must shift and change to suit the need. Jesus has come | M 24 A 7 M(57) |
| the form that best will suit your need. You have but | S 1 A 2 S(1) |
| God through His Voice, will suit your need as you see | S 1 B 2 S(4) |
| 2 Forgiveness-to-destroy will therefore suit the purpose of the world | S 2 B 2 S(12) |
| SUITABILITY.................2 | |
| either acceptance or rejection of suitability for acting out a special | T 18 A 3 (480) |
| you do not question the suitability of anything for the application | W 3 L 1 (5) |
| SUITABLE....................19 | |
| the choice of form most suitable to him; one which will | T 25 H 8 (688) |
| exercises in judgment. Anything is suitable if you see it. Some | W 3 L 1 (5) |
| thing is like another; equally suitable and therefore equally useful. | W 3 L 2 (5) |
| which cross your mind are suitable subjects for todays exercises | W 12 L 3 (20) |
| not real. 5. Suitable subjects for the application of | W 14 L 5 (24) |
| assign to it, is a suitable subject for applying todays | W 16 L 4 (28) |
| during the day is a suitable subject. You will not be | W 26 L 6 (45) |
| as possible. For example, a suitable list might include: | W 29 L 5 (49) |
| 6. A suitable unselected list for applying the | W 35 L 6 (58) |
| thoughts of any kind are suitable subjects for todays exercises | W 36 L 7 (65) |
| to the idea itself is suitable. 5. You may | W 42 L 4 (70) |
| strain in order to find suitable thoughts. 7. There | W 42 L 6 (71) |
| at the most convenient and suitable time which circumstances and readiness | W 43 L 4 (72) |
| to todays idea is suitable. The thoughts need not bear | W 43 L 5 (73) |
| do not like is a suitable subject. Mention each one by | W 46 L 4 (81) |
| for me. 4. Suitable specific forms of this idea | W 82 RII 4 (165) |
| forms of the idea are suitable for more specific application: Let | W 85 RII 6 (168) |
| times today, at times most suitable for silence, give ten minutes | W 125 L 7 (254) |
| kind of treatment that is suitable. But it does mean that | P 4 A 1 P(19) |