| CREATOR'S...................4 | |
| He is sure of His Creator's love. He knows this mad | T 22 G 2 T(813)632 |
| reconcile its goal with His Creator's Purpose. T 25 D | T 25 D 4 T(874)693 |
| wrote salvation's script in His Creator's Name, and in the Name | W 169 L 9 W(374) |
| in the Name of His Creator's Son. --- | W 169 L 9 W(374) |
| CREATORS....................4 | |
| because they were created as creators. Their influence on EACH OTHER | T 6 B 20 T(277)C 104 |
| your creation established you AS CREATORS. What you have made is | T 9 J 7 T(413)- 240 |
| create them. You cannot make creators who are unlike your Creator | T 9 K 5 T(416)- 243 |
| and trued believes in two creators; or in one, himself alone | W 166 L 2 W(364) |
| CREATURE....................2 | |
| slave to death, a LITTLE creature with a LITTLE life. Your | T 30 C 3 T(1021)835 |
| gain thereby, and every living creature not respond with healed perception | W 194 L 8 W(433) |
| CREATURES...................1 | |
| world, where starved and thirsty creatures came to die. Now they | W 340 W13 5 W(594) |
| CREDENTIALS.................1 | |
| every right to examine MY credentials in fact, I urge you | T 1 B 22q T(8)-8- |
| CREDIBILITY.................1 | |
| he sees carrying affect their credibility in his perception? His mind | M 9 A 5 M(26) |
| CREDIT......................3 | |
| and you should at least credit with me with some dependability | T 4 B 39 T(197)C 24 |
| disaster's form is difficult to credit in advance. Nor is there | T 26 I 6 T(926)752 |
| to make it hard to credit is not this. No-one can | W 187 L 1 W(410) |
| CREDITED....................1 | |
| on chaos. We have already credited the ego with considerable ingenuity | T 4 C 27 T(207)C 34 |
| CREDULOUS...................1 | |
| believe is not to be credulous, but to accept and APPRECIATE | T 8 K 10 T(384)211 |
| CREED.......................1 | |
| sake is the ego's fundamental creed, a basic cornerstone in the | T 12 G 9 T(507)334 |
| CREEP.......................1 | |
| believe they are trying to creep back INTO them. This is | T 7 I 6 T(336)C 163 |
| CREEPS......................2 | |
| ego sees it. For guilt creeps in where happiness has been | T 19 F 10 T(714)538 |
| that walks and breathes, or creeps or crawls, or even lives | T 24 D 4 T(847)666 |
| CREPT.......................1 | |
| where all is one, there crept a tiny, mad idea, at | T 27 I 6 T(963)789 |
| CRIES.......................5 | |
| or not to hear the cries of pain that rise to | T 12 G 3 T(505)332 |
| deeply, so unceasingly, His Voice cries unto you to let Him | W 183 L 5 W(395) |
| is here. There are no cries of pain and sorrow heard | W 290 W8 2 W(539) |
| need for vengeance and the cries of pain, the fear of | U 3 A 8 U(5) |
| never failed to hear your cries of pain and grief, and | G 1 A 9 G(3) |
| CRIME.......................4 | |
| feel guilty for this imagined crime, which no-one in this world | T 13 H 14 T(534)361 |
| blacken it with still another crime. YOU cannot give yourself your | T 31 G 2 T(1063)877 |
| of fierce retaliation for a crime that could not be committed | W 190 L 2 W(419) |
| will overlook no sin, no crime, no guilt that it can | S 2 B 2 S(12) |
| CRIMES......................3 | |
| belief, 1) leads to sex crimes, and 2) to stealing. The | T 1 C 11 T(58)58 |
| condemns a sinner for the crimes he did not do, but | T 25 I 5 T(892)711 |
| think of them as savage crimes or secret sins with weighty | W 190 L 4 W(419) |
| CRIMINAL....................1 | |
| believes that you are a criminal, as deserving of death as | T 11 H 14 T(476)- 303 |
| CRIPPLED....................1 | |
| guilt. For this insists your crippled picture is a lasting sign | T 27 B 10 T(937)763 |
| CRITERIA....................5 | |
| very important dimension. Internal consistency criteria disregard time, because the focus | T 1 B 37w T(33)33 |
| your actions as the true criteria for behavior, I will have | T 2 B 38 T(78)78 |
| an increasing awareness that HIS criteria are equally applicable to YOU | T 11 B 7 T(452)279 |
| Today we list the real criteria by which to test all | W 133 L 3 W(277) |
| time. Nor can any consistent criteria for determining what these categories | M 11 A 1 M(28) |
| CRITERION...................7 | |
| vengeance. The absence of a criterion for outcome, SET IN ADVANCE | T 17 G 3 T(651)478 |
| inevitable. Its attainment is the criterion by which the wholeness of | T 19 A 1 T(694)518 |
| or an apple. The sole criterion for applying the idea to | W 2 L 2 W(4) |
| so we come to the criterion for choice which is the | W 133 L 11 W(279) |
| on one's judgment as the criterion for maturity and strength. Our | M 10 A 2 M(28) |
| by no means the ultimate criterion, but at the outset it | M 17 A 3 M(41) |
| honored. This is the sole criterion this course requires. No more | M 25 A 6 M(59) |
| CRITIC......................1 | |
| Let me not be Your critic, Lord, today, and judge against | W 514 L 1 W(514) |
| CRITICAL....................4 | |
| own salvation you MUST be critical, because YOUR salvation IS critical | T 6 H 1 T(298)C 125 |
| critical, because YOUR salvation IS critical to the whole Sonship. We | T 6 H 1 T(298)C 125 |
| teach your mind to be critical of other minds, because He | T 6 H 3 T(298)C 125 |
| have you maintain. Egos are critical in terms of the kind | T 9 A 1 T(386)213 |
| CRITICISM...................1 | |
| be pleased with Bill F's criticism of Rose, and should not | T 3 A 28 T(127)126 |
| CROSS.......................31 | |
| 30m. Take up thy cross and follow me should be | T 1 B 30m T(19)19 |
| excellent here, and please do cross it out. You are STILL | T 3 A 22 T(125)124 |
| Foundation. The journey to the cross should be the LAST foolish | T 4 A 10 T(187)?23 |
| clinging to the old rugged cross. The only message of the | T 4 A 10 T(187)?23 |
| man's ability to OVERCOME the cross. Unless he does so, he | T 4 A 10 T(187)?23 |
| be TRANSFERRED to knowledge, or CROSS OVER into it. It might | T 5 C 2 T(236)C 63 |
| have nailed YOURSELF to a cross and placed a crown of | T 10 G 8 T(442)269 |
| true about the thoughts that cross the mind of those who | T 14 F 4 T(555)- 382 |
| so the one who would cross over, is literally transported there | T 16 D 8 T(610)437 |
| too near, and you WILL cross the bridge in perfect safety | T 16 E 2 T(611)438 |
| their hands to help you cross, and welcome them. T | T 16 E 7 T(613)440 |
| 9. Fear not to cross to the abode of peace | T 16 E 9 T(614)441 |
| the ONLY one. You will cross the bridge into reality, simply | T 16 F 16 T(621)448 |
| the bridge. But, as you cross to JOIN it, IT will | T 16 G 10 T(624)- 451 |
| little and SO easy to cross that you could not believe | T 17 C 2 T(632)- 459 |
| follow him, NOT to the cross, but to the Resurrection and | T 19 J 9 T(724)548 |
| to live again, until you cross the gap between the past | T 26 F 11 T(916)742 |
| at last. Where stood a cross stands now the risen Christ | T 26 J 7 T(930)756 |
| unsatisfying one. All terms which cross your mind are suitable subjects | W 12 L 3 W(20) |
| horrors in the world that cross your mind. Name each one | W 14 L 4 W(24) |
| world, merely let whatever thoughts cross your mind come into your | W 31 L 3 W(52) |
| self-inflating descriptive terms may well cross your mind. Try to recognize | W 35 L 5 W(57) |
| events in which you figure cross your mind. Pick up any | W 35 L 7 W(58) |
| carefully to catch whatever thoughts cross it. At first, make no | W 65 L 5 W(120) |
| any conflict thoughts that may cross your mind. Tell yourself immediately | W 74 L 3 W(144) |
| as one by one they cross your mind. Be certain not | W 134 L 16 W(284) |
| those around you, or who cross your mind, or whom you | W 137 L 10 W(298) |
| of a dream happened to cross our minds, and we mistook | W 153 L 8 W(325) |
| has nailed you to the cross. Perhaps it seemed to be | W 196 L 5 W(439) |
| the bridge which everyone will cross to leave this world behind | W 200 L 8 W(450) |
| and took him from the cross. Arise and let My thanks | S 3 E 9 S(27) |
| CROSS-EXAMINED..............1 | |
| because YOU have not seriously cross-examined him. --- | T 8 H 4 T(370)C 197 |
| CROSSED.....................5 | |
| about the Holy Family which crossed your mind last night: Where | T 2 B 7 T(74)74 |
| The three things that crossed your mind, which was comparatively | T 2 B 10 T(75)75 |
| to littleness. Once you have crossed the bridge, the VALUE of | T 16 G 5 T(623)- 450 |
| or of good that ever crossed your mind of anyone. Now | T 31 A 12 T(1046)860 |
| to choose; his name has crossed your mind already. He will | W 78 L 5 W(154) |
| CROSSES.....................5 | |
| there is anything unlovable that crosses one's mind (re sex, possession | T 3 E 1 T(147)146 |
| to you. As each one crosses your mind, say: This thought | W 10 L 4 W(17) |
| and then as each one crosses your mind, hold it in | W 16 L 5 W(29) |
| to you. As each one crosses your mind, say: I can | W 23 L 6 W(39) |
| for each unresolved situation that crosses your mind, say to yourself | W 24 L 6 W(41) |