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SUIT........................6
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| world, and CHANGING it TO SUIT THE EGO BETTER. They provide | T 18 C 2 T(664)491 |
| change in its appearances, to suit the purpose given by the | T 31 C 4 T(1051)865 |
| 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) |
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SUITABILITY.................2
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| either acceptance or rejection of suitability for acting out a special | T 18 A 3 T(659)486 |
| you do not question the suitability of anything for the application | W 3 L 1 W(5) |
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SUITABLE....................19
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| the choice of form most suitable to him; one which will | T 25 H 9 T(888)707 |
| exercises in judgment. Anything is suitable if you see it. Some | W 3 L 1 W(5) |
| thing is like another; equally suitable and therefore equally useful. | W 3 L 2 W(5) |
| which cross your mind are suitable subjects for today's exercises. Their | W 12 L 3 W(20) |
| W 14 L 5. Suitable subjects for the application of | W 14 L 5 W(24) |
| assign to it, is a suitable subject for applying today's idea | W 16 L 4 W(28) |
| during the day is a suitable subject. You will not be | W 26 L 6 W(45) |
| as possible. For example, a suitable list might include: | W 29 L 5 W(49) |
| 35 L 6. A suitable unselected list for applying the | W 35 L 6 W(58) |
| thoughts of any kind are suitable subjects for today's exercises. It | W 39 L 7 W(65) |
| to the idea itself is suitable. W 42 L 5 | W 42 L 4 W(70) |
| strain in order to find suitable thoughts. W 42 L | W 42 L 6 W(71) |
| at the most convenient and suitable time which circumstances and readiness | W 43 L 4 W(72) |
| directly to today's idea is suitable. The thoughts need not bear | W 43 L 5 W(73) |
| do not like is a suitable subject. Mention each one by | W 46 L 4 W(81) |
| W 82 L 4. Suitable specific forms of this idea | W 82 L 4 W(165) |
| forms of the idea are suitable for more specific applications: Let | W 85 L 6 W(168) |
| times today, at times most suitable for silence, give ten minutes | W 125 L 7 W(254) |
| kind of treatment that is suitable. But it does mean that | P 4 A 1 P(19) |
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SUITED......................8
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| precisely BECAUSE they were NOT suited to gratify your fantasies. This | T 1 B 41av T(52)52 |
| You, Bill, are particularly well suited to perceive this difference, and | T 4 B 37 T(196)C 23 |
| seen in UNADJUSTED form, and suited perfectly to meet it. Destructiveness | T 20 I 6 T(759)582 |
| the same. The FORM is suited to your special needs, and | T 25 H 8 T(888)707 |
| a world was built that suited you. And every lesson that | T 31 A 4 T(1043)857 |
| distinguish situations which are poorly suited to your practicing from those | W 110 R3 3 W(228) |
| there was another home more suited to his tastes. W | W 160 L 3 W(347) |
| to do. Our minds are suited perfectly to take the part | W 186 L 2 W(406) |
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SUITS.......................3
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| one PART of one aspect suits its purposes, while it prefers | T 15 F 7 T(578)405 |
| not like, a circumstance that suits you not, or an event | T 24 D 3 T(847)666 |
| this an image is that suits a world of shadows and | T 31 E 1 T(1055)869 |
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SUM.........................7
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| of God is only the sum of the souls he created | T 1 B 22k T(8)-8- |
| its Oneness DOES transcend the sum of its parts. However, it | T 2 E 52 T(114) 113 |
| in its totality transcends the sum of its parts which we | T 4 D 2 T(208)C 35 |
| is far beyond the petty sum of all the separate bodies | T 15 I 5 T(589)- 416 |
| For if He be the sum of everything, then what is | T 29 C 10 T(996)822 |
| 6. This is the sum of the inheritance the world | W 184 L 6 W(399) |
| 1. Creation is the sum of all God's Thoughts, in | W 320 W11 1 W(572) |
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SUMMARIZES..................1
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| them in a way that summarizes all that must occur for | T 26 H 1 T(918)744 |
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SUMMARY.....................2
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| learning ends in one last summary that will extend beyond itself | W 300 W9 3 W(550) |
| in terms of a brief summary of some of the major | M 30 A 1 M(68) |
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SUMMED......................1
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| Its dictates, then, can be summed up simply as, Seek and | T 11 E 1 T(463)- 290 |
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SUMMER......................4
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| along a quiet path in summer. Only your own volition seems | T 13 I 7 T(538)365 |
| or hinder the advance of summer? Can it interfere with the | T 19 E 10 T(710)534 |
| you not rather greet the summer sun, than fix your gaze | T 19 E 10 T(710)534 |
| white and sparkling in the summer sun. What was a place | T 26 J 2 T(928)754 |
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SUMMER'S....................1
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| interfere with the EFFECTS of summer's sun upon a garden covered | T 19 E 10 T(710)534 |
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SUN.........................34
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| everything sparkling under the open sun. Nothing is hidden here, for | T 17 C 2 T(632)- 459 |
| disappear in light, and the sun, which opened up the world | T 17 C 4 T(633)- 460 |
| smallest sunbeam is to the sun. Or like the faintest ripple | T 18 I 3 T(685) 509 |
| has decided it IS the sun; this almost imperceptible ripple hails | T 18 I 3 T(685) 509 |
| apart, against the universe. The sun becomes the sunbeam's enemy, which | T 18 I 3 T(685) 509 |
| I 4. Yet neither sun nor ocean is even aware | T 18 I 4 T(686)510 |
| remains IN THEM. Without the sun, the sunbeam WOULD be gone | T 18 I 4 T(686)510 |
| 6. Yet, like the sun and ocean, your Self continues | T 18 I 6 T(686)510 |
| aspect as your Self. The sun and ocean are as nothing | T 18 I 7 T(686)510 |
| the ocean. Yet in neither sun nor ocean is the power | T 18 I 7 T(686)510 |
| a solid wall before the sun. Its impenetrable appearance is WHOLLY | T 18 J 7 T(691)515 |
| above it, to see the sun. It is not strong enough | T 18 J 7 T(691)515 |
| through a mist into the sun? For that is all it | T 19 C 9 T(701)525 |
| wall of shadows. The sun has risen OVER it. How | T 19 E 7 T(710)534 |
| shadow KEEP you from the sun? No more can YOU be | T 19 E 7 T(710)534 |
| with the EFFECTS of summer's sun upon a garden covered by | T 19 E 10 T(710)534 |
| not rather greet the summer sun, than fix your gaze upon | T 19 E 10 T(710)534 |
| obscure and hidden from the sun. IT DOES NOT SEEK FOR | T 20 G 4 T(751)574 |
| Beyond the body, beyond the sun and stars, past EVERYTHING you | T 21 B 6 T(766)588 |
| saying that the moon and sun are one BECAUSE they come | T 21 D 11 T(776)597 |
| light far brighter than the sun which lights the sky YOU | T 22 G 4 T(814)633 |
| to be remembered, as the sun shines them to nothingness. | T 25 E 3 T(878)697 |
| die, will disappear before the sun you bring. Would you not | T 25 E 4 T(878)697 |
| and farther off, because the sun in you has risen that | T 25 E 4 T(878)697 |
| and sparkling in the summer sun. What was a place of | T 26 J 2 T(928)754 |
| does not put out the sun. No more a veil can | T 29 I 3 T(1009)823 |
| disappear as mists before the sun. A miracle has come to | T 31 G 6 T(1070)884 |
| the match that lights the sun, and gives it all its | W 92 L 2 W(177) |
| does the radiance of the sun outshine the tiny gleam a | W 97 L 7 W(193) |
| of the water by the sun, the silver of the moon | W 140 R4 4 W(311) |
| more be sinful than the sun could choose to be of | W 156 L 3 W(337) |
| is the pathway of the sun laid down before it rises | W 361 EP 2 W(619) |
| heritage. The universe beyond the sun and stars, and all the | M 21 A 6 M(51) |
| shield held to obscure the sun. The grimness of the symbol | M 28 A 3 M(64) |
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SUN'S.......................1
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| lovely contrast, certain as the sun's return each morning to dispel | W 186 L 11 W(408) |
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SUNBEAM.....................4
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| it is like the smallest sunbeam is to the sun. Or | T 18 I 3 T(685) 509 |
| its amazing arrogance, this tiny sunbeam has decided it IS the | T 18 I 3 T(685) 509 |
| THEM. Without the sun, the sunbeam WOULD be gone; the ripple | T 18 I 4 T(686)510 |
| beside what YOU are. The sunbeam sparkles only in the sunlight | T 18 I 7 T(686)510 |
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SUNBEAM'S...................1
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| universe. The sun becomes the sunbeam's enemy, which would devour it | T 18 I 3 T(685) 509 |
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SUNDAY......................1
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| 1. This is Palm Sunday, the celebration of victory, and | T 20 A 1 T(733) 557 |
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SUNG........................2
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| of thanks to your Creator, sung without words, or thoughts, or | S 1 C 8 S(7) |
| a song that will be sung throughout all time and afterwards | G 5 A 2 G(13) |