| WEAPONS.....................1 | |
| weak indeed. It has no weapons and it has no enemy | T 21 H 4 (599) |
| WEARILY.....................2 | |
| time alone that winds on wearily, and the world is very | M 2 A 4 M(4) |
| of guilt it carries so wearily, and healing is accomplished. The | P 3 E 11 P(11) |
| WEARINESS...................2 | |
| it IS the idea of weariness. Our task is the joyous | T 5 D 9 (106) |
| even a little sigh of weariness, a slight discomfort or the | W 167 L 2 (368) |
| WEARING.....................1 | |
| the black robe he was wearing to his funeral, and hear | T 19 I 2 (537) |
| WEARISOME...................1 | |
| you, you find a burden wearisome and tedious, too heavy to | T 24 G 12 (664) |
| WEARS.......................2 | |
| of the self so proudly wears can tolerate attack in self- | T 31 E 4 (850) |
| illusions of change and death, wears out the world and all | M 2 A 4 M(4) |
| WEARY.......................13 | |
| 1 When you are weary, remember you have hurt yourself | T 10 D 1 (259) |
| you could never have grown weary. Unless you have hurt yourselves | T 10 D 1 (259) |
| water, but has grown too weary to go on alone. | T 18 I 9 (505) |
| a place where all the weary ones can come and find | T 19 D 12 (523) |
| tired eyes of those as weary now as once you were | T 22 E 4 (618) |
| with you to all the weary eyes and tired hearts that | T 25 E 3 (679) |
| worn and tired minds, too weary now to go their way | W 109 L 7 (223) |
| becomes a haven where the weary can remain to rest. For | W 137 L 11 (298) |
| He seems a sorry figure, weary, worn, in threadbare clothing, and | W 166 L 6 (365) |
| heart willing to bring your weary brothers rest? 11. | W 191 L 10 (424) |
| Father, now, for I am weary of the world I see | W 224 L 2 (466) |
| 4 Are you not weary of imprisonment? God did not | S 2 D 4 S(18) |
| you. I would recall My weary Son to Me from dreams | S 3 E 7 S(27) |
| WEARYING....................3 | |
| you are VERY capable of wearying yourselves. The strain of constant | T 3 H 5 (64) |
| 30 E 2 The wearying, dissatisfying gods you made are | T 30 E 2 (820) |
| need for long analyses and wearying discussions and pursuits. The truth | P 3 E 11 P(11) |
| WEATHER.....................2 | |
| and happiness as is the weather, or the time of day | T 27 H 8 (753) |
| not limited by time, by weather or fatigue, by food and | W 136 L 18 (294) |
| WEAVE.......................6 | |
| Heaven you can take and weave into illusions. Nor is there | T 22 C 8 (612) |
| specialness in better style, or weave a frame of loveliness around | T 24 H 4 (666) |
| your condemnation of your own. Weave, rather, then, a frame of | T 24 H 4 (666) |
| your path, or you will weave a crown of thorns from | T 27 A 1 (729) |
| split identity, nor tries to weave opposing factors into unity. It | W 97 L 1 (192) |
| cobwebs which the world would weave around the holy Son of | W 139 L 12 (306) |
| WEAVES......................1 | |
| part of your mind that weaves illusions in its sleep appears | W 68 L 2 (126) |
| WEAVING.....................2 | |
| think. The result is a weaving, changing pattern which never rests | T 14 F 4 (378) |
| tempt you to engage in weaving plans, remind yourself this is | W 135 L 27 (290) |
| WEEK........................7 | |
| us not spend this holy week brooding on the crucifixion of | T 20 A 1 (547) |
| and whole. B. Holy Week T 20 | T 20 B 0 (547) |
| 20 B 1 This week begins with palms and ends | T 20 B 1 (547) |
| truth and its expression. This week we celebrate life, not death | T 20 B 1 (547) |
| Christ along with mine. A week is short, and yet this | T 20 B 2 (547) |
| short, and yet this holy week is the symbol of the | T 20 B 2 (547) |
| determined, particularly for the next week or so, to be willing | W 95 L 9 (186) |
| WEEKEND.....................1 | |
| 10 This is the weekend in which a new year | T 15 K 10 (423) |
| WEEKS.......................1 | |
| take in the next few weeks. Try today to begin to | W 61 L 7 (113) |
| WEEP........................11 | |
| of what would make you weep if you remembered how dear | T 21 B 7 (576) |
| will fail, and you will weep each time an idol falls | T 29 H 1 (799) |
| Do you really want to weep and suffer and die? Forget | W 73 L 6 (142) |
| loving. We can laugh or weep, and greet the day with | W 186 L 8 (407) |
| born but to die, to weep and suffer pain, hear this | W 191 L 9 (424) |
| you, Gods Son will weep no more, and Heaven offers | W 199 L 8 (448) |
| unless I judge I cannot weep. Nor can I suffer pain | W 301 L 1 (551) |
| he used to come to weep. M 11 A 6 | M 11 A 5 M(30) |
| is laughter, who can longer weep? And only complete forgiveness brings | M 15 A 5 M(38) |
| joy, but death can only weep. You see in death escape | M 21 A 5 M(51) |
| of guilt? And who could weep but for his innocence? | P 3 E 1 P(9) |
| WEEPING.....................1 | |
| replace fear, laughter to replace weeping, and abundance to replace loss | W 54 RI 5 (99) |
| WEEPS.......................1 | |
| there need not be. God weeps at the sacrifice of His | T 5 I 11 (127) |
| WEIGHT......................6 | |
| presents of size and thickness, weight, solidity and firmness of foundation | T 22 F 5 (620) |
| not born of size nor weight nor time, nor held to | T 24 H 7 (667) |
| collapse beneath a feathers weight? T 28 H 7 | T 28 H 6 (782) |
| and to avoid giving greater weight to some subjects than to | W 5 L 3 (8) |
| lifting up, a lightening of weight across your chest, a deep | W 134 L 17 (284) |
| new world unburdened by its weight; beheld not in its sightless | W 170 L 11 (379) |
| WEIGHTY.....................1 | |
| crimes or secret sins with weighty consequence. Who but a madman | W 190 L 4 (419) |
| WEIRD.......................8 | |
| you associate them with a weird assortment of ego ideals, which | T 12 A 2 (312) |
| is not IN you. Your weird associations to it have no | T 13 D 4 (342) |
| you. Your wildest misperceptions, your weird imaginings, your blackest nightmares all | T 13 E 5 (347) |
| all its sick ideas and weird imaginings. Here is the final | T 19 J 5 (539) |
| to Gods Will. These weird beliefs He does not share | W 93 L 3 (180) |
| all illusions rest upon the weird belief that we can make | W 186 L 8 (407) |
| the madness which induced this weird, unnatural and ghostly thought which | W 191 L 3 (422) |
| the world forgotten, all its weird beliefs forgotten with it, as | W 197 L 10 (445) |
| WELCOME.....................107 | |
| The Holy Spirit counters this welcome by welcoming peace. Peace and | T 5 E 9 (110) |
| strength to us. Gods welcome waits for us all, and | T 8 F 1 (200) |
| us all, and He will welcome us as I am welcoming | T 8 F 1 (200) |
| fear the Last Judgment, but welcome it and do not wait | T 9 C 9 (227) |
| to enter, you lessen His welcome. He will remain, but YOU | T 10 C 5 (257) |
| Gods altar, waiting to welcome His Son. But come wholly | T 10 E 6 (263) |
| peace and where you are welcome, you will look out in | T 11 D 12 (290) |
| enter where it is not welcome. But hatred can, for it | T 12 C 6 (316) |
| And perceiving it you will welcome it, and it will be | T 12 C 9 (317) |
| the Holy Spirit is not welcome. And you will exempt YOURSELF | T 12 C 10 (317) |
| of fear to mar its welcome. T 12 C 11 | T 12 C 10 (317) |
| of this they are the welcome that you OFFER knowledge. Love | T 12 G 9 (332) |
| OFFER knowledge. Love waits on welcome, NOT on time, and the | T 12 G 9 (332) |
| real world is but your welcome of what always was. Therefore | T 12 G 9 (332) |
| the Atonement. When everyone is welcome to you as you would | T 13 D 5 (342) |
| you would have yourself be welcome to your Father, you will | T 13 D 5 (342) |
| himself upon his Fathers welcome. --- Manuscript | T 14 C 8 (369) |
| is your awakening to grandeur. Welcome me not into a manger | T 15 D 10 (395) |
| all are invited and made welcome. And you understand that your | T 15 H 14 (411) |
| be total to give Him welcome, for the Presence of holiness | T 15 K 2 (420) |
| would be. And by your welcome does He welcome you into | T 15 K 9 (422) |
| by your welcome does He welcome you into Himself, for what | T 15 K 9 (422) |
| is contained in you who welcome Him is RETURNED to Him | T 15 K 9 (422) |
| celebrate His Wholeness as we welcome Him into ourselves. Those who | T 15 K 9 (422) |
| IS with you. Bid Him welcome, and honor His witnesses, who | T 16 C 7 (428) |
| can enter, and indeed is welcome in SOME aspects of the | T 16 E 3 (434) |
| to help you cross, and welcome them. For it is THEY | T 16 E 8 (436) |
| come to you. And welcome it together, for it has | T 17 F 10 (470) |
| of love? Would you not welcome and support the shift from | T 18 G 5 (496) |
| limit lifted FOR you, to welcome you to openness of mind | T 18 G 14 (499) |
| desert was. And everyone you welcome will bring love with him | T 18 I 9 (505) |
| a garden of peace and welcome. T 18 I 11 | T 18 I 10 (505) |
| be able to give love welcome separately. You could no more | T 18 I 12 (506) |
| come to you, and would welcome YOU. He has waited long | T 18 I 13 (506) |
| of God, and you are welcome. Here is your innocence, waiting | T 18 J 10 (509) |
| new relationship am I made welcome. And where I am made | T 19 F 7 (530) |
| And where I am made welcome, there I AM. T | T 19 F 7 (530) |
| 8 I am made welcome in the state of grace | T 19 F 8 (530) |
| made homeless and YOU are welcome. T 20 D 8 | T 20 D 7 (554) |
| of love proclaimed and given welcome. Peace to your holy relationship | T 20 F 2 (560) |
| open-eyed and calm, in smiling welcome and in sincerity so simple | T 20 G 2 (563) |
| for no one else is welcome there. They smile on no | T 20 G 3 (563) |
| quietly transcend it, rising to welcome what you REALLY want. And | T 20 G 9 (565) |
| before unseeing eyes, waiting to welcome you. T 21 B | T 21 B 1 (574) |
| IS up to you to welcome it or not. Faith and | T 21 C 9 (580) |
| T(613) welcome news to hear not one | T 22 C 10 (613) |
| in the house of God. Welcome your brother to the home | T 23 B 10 (630) |
| give each other only partial welcome, or would let you think | T 24 B 7 (646) |
| hiding place where none is welcome but your tiny self. Nothing | T 24 C 13 (651) |
| give thanks that They are welcome made at last. Where stood | T 26 J 8 (725) |
| can be at all. Give welcome to the Power beyond forgiveness | T 27 D 7 (740) |
| allowed his calmer mind to welcome, not to fear, the Voice | T 27 H 12 (754) |
| that His Son accepts gives welcome to eternity and Him, and | T 28 B 9 (764) |
| will make a place of welcome for your Father and your | T 28 D 8 (772) |
| your god, and you should welcome the effects of love. | T 29 C 3 (787) |
| for you did not wholly welcome Him. And yet His gifts | T 29 C 4 (787) |
| gifts, because your Guest will welcome everyone whose feet have touched | T 29 C 4 (788) |
| not birth. They wait for welcome and remembering. The Thought God | T 30 D 8 (818) |
| you in its wake, and welcome the glad contrast offered you | T 31 G 5 (859) |
| H 10 In joyous welcome is my hand outstretched to | T 31 H 10 (865) |
| them, and you need not welcome them. Some of them you | W 1 IN 5 (2) |
| This is rarely a wholly welcome idea at first, since it | W 19 L 2 (32) |
| place where you are truly welcome. We are trying to reach | W 49 L 4 (86) |
| which I see. Let me welcome vision and the happy world | W 59 RI 4 (108) |
| the Voice of truth and welcome it as Friend. Your chosen | W 72 L 7 (138) |
| salvation. We will try to welcome it instead. 8. | W 72 L 7 (138) |
| you see will be so welcome that you will gladly extend | W 75 L 8 (147) |
| of the grievance, and my welcome of the miracle which takes | W 90 RII 2 (173) |
| to lose. Your Self will welcome it, and give it peace | W 96 L 10 (191) |
| He knows they will be welcome. And they will increase in | W 97 L 6 (193) |
| away before it grants the welcome boon of death to victims | W 101 L 3 (203) |
| each waking hour today. Then welcome all the happiness it brings | W 103 L 3 (207) |
| of peace and joy are welcome, and to which we come | W 104 L 4 (208) |
| held out to you in welcome and in love. Hear only | W 106 L 3 (213) |
| and joy and peace. I welcome them into the home I | W 112 RIII 1 (232) |
| open door with warmth and welcome calling from beyond the doorway | W 122 L 5 (244) |
| perceive it open wide in welcome. When you feel that you | W 134 L 9 (282) |
| will choose to practice giving welcome to the truth. 15 | W 136 L 14 (294) |
| the suffering are healed and welcome. No-one will be turned away | W 159 L 7 (345) |
| Yet as they give Him welcome they remember. And He leads | W 160 L 9 (348) |
| which can never fail to welcome in the Christ where fear | W 161 L 1 (350) |
| Savior? Who could fail to welcome you into his heart with | W 162 L 6 (355) |
| lies within it. Til you welcome it as yours uncertainty remains | W 165 L 4 (362) |
| that comes from grace. We welcome the release it offers everyone | W 169 L 14 (376) |
| and greet the day with welcome or with tears. Our very | W 186 L 8 (407) |
| has reached the lawns that welcome you to Heavens gate | W 194 L 1 (432) |
| idea we practice! Give it welcome as you should, for it | W 196 L 12 (440) |
| door which opens easily to welcome you? 4. Come | W 200 L 3 (449) |
| say some simple words of welcome, and expect our Father to | W 220 INII 4 (459) |
| forgive himself must learn to welcome truth exactly as it is | W 220 W1 4 (462) |
| 2. Your Son is welcome, Father. He has come to | W 303 L 2 (553) |
| Salvation asks you give it welcome. And the world awaits your | W 310 W10 4 (561) |
| in where I am truly welcome and at home among the | W 316 L 1 (567) |
| hide, awaiting me in shining welcome, and in readiness to give | W 322 L 1 (574) |
| are concerned only with giving welcome to the truth. 4 | W 350 W14 3 (605) |
| God has held unclosed to welcome us. 6. We | W 361 L 5 (620) |
| arms remain outstretched In holy welcome. Would you look on Him | W 361 L 1 (620) |
| threat. The instant it is welcome it is there. Where healing | M 7 A 2 M(22) |
| and made it fit to welcome peace. And peace descends on | M 12 A 4 M(31) |
| One day each one will welcome it, and on that very | M 16 A 1 M(39) |
| not prepared as yet to welcome them with joy. As long | M 29 A 6 M(67) |
| us come and bid Him welcome Who returns to us to | U 8 A 6 U(14) |
| Christ in you bid him welcome, for that same Christ is | P 4 C 8 P(27) |
| escape makes it difficult to welcome freedom, and to make a | S 1 D 6 S(8) |
| flesh, but as a gentle welcome to release. If there has | S 3 C 4 S(22) |
| and how could it be welcome when it must be feared | S 3 C S(22) |
| home that stands ready to welcome him, and was prepared before | S 3 C 7 S(23) |