| CRUCIFY.....................20 | |
| so, he is free to crucify himself as often as he | T 4 A 10 T(187)?23 |
| the crucifixion demands that he crucify, and his worshippers obey. In | T 10 G 5 T(441)268 |
| obey. In his name they crucify THEMSELVES, believing that the power | T 10 G 5 T(441)268 |
| own head. Yet you CANNOT crucify God's Son, for the Will | T 10 G 8 T(442)269 |
| you believe that YOU can crucify him you are only having | T 10 G 8 T(442)269 |
| because you still wish to crucify him, IF YOU COULD FIND | T 12 B 3 T(486) 313 |
| perceive as guilty, you would crucify. But you RESTORE guiltlessness to | T 14 B 11 T(543)- 370 |
| of God and therefore cannot crucify, nor suffer crucifixion. The temple | T 14 B 11 T(543)- 370 |
| You who made it to crucify yourselves, must learn of Him | T 14 C 5 T(545)- 372 |
| no thorns nor nails to crucify the Son of God, and | T 20 C 7 T(737)561 |
| and catastrophe, you tried to crucify him. If you see holiness | T 21 A 2 T(763)585 |
| will NOT escape. You CANNOT crucify yourself alone. And if you | T 27 A 1 T(934)760 |
| that it was made to crucify God's Son. For even though | T 29 G 5 T(1005)819 |
| obscure, and take apart and crucify. --- Manuscript | W 135 L 18 W(288) |
| can be but myself I crucify. W 196 | W 196 L 0 W(438) |
| can but be you you crucify, you did not hurt the | W 196 L 9 W(440) |
| your mind can try to crucify. Yet your redemption, too, will | W 196 L 12 W(440) |
| can be but myself I crucify. All that I do I | W 216 L 1 W(457) |
| hold dear the things that crucify Gods Son. And it | M 14 A 6 M(36) |
| all he sought before to crucify are resurrected with him, by | M 29 A 6 M(67) |
| CRUCIFYING..................1 | |
| martyr believes that God is crucifying him. Both really fear both | T 8 J 8 T(379)C 206 |
| CRUDE.......................2 | |
| or iron, is heavy but crude, and stands for the body | T 1 B 22f T(7)-7- |
| the body, which is a crude creation. The cobweb concept is | T 1 B 22f T(7)-7- |
| CRUEL.......................24 | |
| has thought that God is cruel. T 11 J 3 | T 11 J 2 T(480)307 |
| real world, God WOULD be cruel. For no father could subject | T 11 J 3 T(480)307 |
| journey will seem long and cruel and senseless, for so it | T 11 J 7 T(482)309 |
| joy. The Father is not cruel, and His Son CANNOT hurt | T 11 J 8 T(482)309 |
| conflict, and ravaged by a cruel war, unless he believes that | T 13 D 15 T(520)- 347 |
| unholy relationship. For time IS cruel in the ego's hands, as | T 17 D 5 T(636)- 463 |
| darkness has been long and cruel, and you have gone deep | T 18 D 3 T(668)495 |
| life seem to be ugly, cruel, and tyrannical. You are no | T 19 K 4 T(727)551 |
| as yours. And let your cruel concept of yourself be changed | T 31 G 5 T(1064)878 |
| death, and meted out in cruel form to match the vicious | W 101 L 4 W(203) |
| see is merciless indeed, unstable, cruel, unconcerned with you, quick to | W 129 L 2 W(263) |
| you mean that to be cruel is protection; you are safe | W 170 L 1 W(377) |
| Today we look upon this cruel god dispassionately. And we note | W 170 L 7 W(378) |
| is terrible above all else, cruel beyond conception, striking down all | W 170 L 10 W(379) |
| you have chosen that this cruel god remain with you in | W 170 L 11 W(379) |
| aright. For pain proclaims God cruel. How could it be real | W 190 L 1 W(419) |
| And the world becomes a cruel and a bitter place, where | W 190 L 8 W(420) |
| with you. Lay down the cruel sword of judgment that you | W 190 L 9 W(421) |
| help accordingly. God would be cruel if He let your words | M 30 A 6 M(70) |
| the ego -- all the cruel hate, the need for vengeance | U 3 A 8 U(5) |
| was meant to bless, a cruel mockery of grace, a parody | S 2 B 1 S(12) |
| the world, for death is cruel in its frightened eyes and | S 3 C S(22) |
| again until it brings a cruel death in seeming victory. It | S 3 C 7 S(22) |
| can you change these little, cruel offerings for those that Heaven | G 2 A 1 G(4) |
| CRUELLY.....................3 | |
| kingdom the ego rules, and cruelly. And, to defend this little | T 18 I 2 T(685) 509 |
| perceive a fearful world, held cruelly in death's sharp-pointed, bony fingers | W 189 L 5 W(417) |
| no need to use it cruelly and then perceive this savage | W 191 L 6 W(423) |
| CRUELTY.....................14 | |
| has been used for great cruelty, because, being uncertain of their | T 3 H 10 T(177)C 4 |
| Nothing attests to death and cruelty; to separation and to differences | T 25 H 6 T(887)706 |
| Lesson 170. There is no cruelty in God and none in | W 170 L 0 W(377) |
| you are safe because of cruelty. You mean that you believe | W 170 L 1 W(377) |
| With love as enemy must cruelty become a god, and gods | W 170 L 6 W(378) |
| it? For the god of cruelty takes many forms. Another can | W 170 L 8 W(378) |
| to be invested now with cruelty. W 170 L 10 | W 170 L 9 W(379) |
| confusion in fear's enemy; its cruelty as now a part of | W 170 L 10 W(379) |
| love, as God Himself replaces cruelty. --- Manuscript | W 170 L 12 W(379) |
| we are like You. No cruelty abides in us for there | W 170 L 13 W(380) |
| 170) There is no cruelty in God and none in | W 180 L 2 W(386) |
| a world of pain and cruelty. How could I think that | W 331 L 1 W(584) |
| part. Do not believe in cruelty, nor let attack conceal the | M 28 A 7 M(65) |
| and as charity instead of cruelty. Is it not kind to | S 2 C 4 S(16) |
| CRUMB.......................1 | |
| every meager scrap and tiny crumb of happiness that you allot | T 26 B 4 T(902)721A |
| CRUMBLE.....................3 | |
| Yet each must fail and crumble and decay, because a form | T 29 H 5 T(1007)821 |
| And your arms indeed would crumble into dust. For such they | W 170 L 5 W(378) |
| not know, sensing its basis crumble. Let it go. Salvation of | W 186 L 7 W(407) |
| CRUMBLED....................1 | |
| endure forever, when yours has crumbled into dust. But think you | T 25 C 6 T(869)688 |
| CRUMBLES....................2 | |
| die as it decays and crumbles. For within this fence he | W 260 W5 1 W(506) |
| space that lasts until it crumbles into dust? F. The | S 1 E 4 S(10) |
| CRUMBLING...................4 | |
| you built has withstood the crumbling assault of time. Nothing you | T 12 G 2 T(505)332 |
| specialness which lasts an instant, crumbling into dust. T 24 | T 24 E 5 T(851)670 |
| and madness, and believe this crumbling thing, with flesh already loosened | T 24 F 5 T(853)672 |
| thief of time, corruptible and crumbling, so unsafe it must be | W 135 L 6 W(286) |
| CRUMBS......................1 | |
| escapes reality, and seeks for crumbs to keep itself alive. Here | T 20 G 5 T(752)575 |
| CRUSADE.....................2 | |
| and MUST join the GREAT CRUSADE to correct it. The slogan | T 1 B 23h T(12)12 |
| it. The slogan for this Crusade is Listen, Learn, and DO | T 1 B 23h T(12)12 |
| CRUSH.......................1 | |
| because you think it would crush you into nothingness. You are | T 12 C 5 T(489)316 |
| CRY.........................2 | |
| beyond the weak and miserable cry of death and guilt. The | T 27 C 6 T(939)765 |
| for healing, and a plaintive cry for help within a world | T 27 G 6 T(956)782 |
| CRYSTAL.....................1 | |
| Him in giving. In the crystal cleanness of the release you | T 15 B 12 T(566)393 |
| CUES........................1 | |
| You do NOT see. Your cues for inference are wrong, and | T 21 B 1 T(764)586 |
| CULTIVATE...................1 | |
| be worth cultivating you will cultivate in yourself. Your judgment of | T 5 H 8 T(261)C 88 |
| CULTIVATING.................1 | |
| you believe to be worth cultivating you will cultivate in yourself | T 5 H 8 T(261)C 88 |
| CULTURE.....................1 | |
| can be interpreted, in this culture, as a lack of sophistication | T 1 C 10 T(57)57 |
| CUMBERSOME..................1 | |
| our brothers lay aside their cumbersome defenses which availed them nothing | W 135 L 21 W(289) |
| CUNNING.....................1 | |
| from this most treacherous and cunning enemy? It must be what | T 23 C 11 T(828)647 |
| CUP.........................9 | |
| at first. Look at a cup, for example. W 7 | W 7 L 2 W(11) |
| Do you see a cup, or are you merely reviewing | W 7 L 3 W(11) |
| experiences of picking up a cup, being thirsty, drinking from a | W 7 L 3 W(11) |
| being thirsty, drinking from a cup, feeling the rim of a | W 7 L 3 W(11) |
| feeling the rim of a cup against your lips, having breakfast | W 7 L 3 W(11) |
| your aesthetic reactions to the cup, too, based on past experiences | W 7 L 3 W(11) |
| or not this kind of cup will break if you drop | W 7 L 3 W(11) |
| do you know about this cup except what you learned in | W 7 L 3 W(11) |
| have no idea what this cup is except for your past | W 7 L 3 W(11) |