Notes on Review IV Introduction
LESSON 141 (rIV)May
21
REVIEW IV COMMENTS
If
you will recall, back in the Workbook Introduction we
were told that “The workbook is divided into two main
sections, the first dealing with the undoing of the
way you see now, and the second with the acquisition
of true perception” (W-IN.3:1). Although Part II does
not begin for another 80 lessons, Review IV announces
that we are entering a transition stage of the
Workbook, “preparing for the second part of learning
how the truth can be applied.” Part II of the
Workbook, if you will look at it, consists of lessons
that are a half page long, or less. They give very
few specific practice instructions, and offer us a
great deal more latitude in exactly how we practice.
They are geared to students who have begun to make
the truths of the Course their own, and who are ready
to apply them independently. This review gives us
some preliminary exercises in that kind of
independent practice. In Lesson 153, shortly after we
complete this review, there will be a major shift in
practice, as we shall see, which will set the pattern
for the practice during the rest of Part I of the
Workbook.
Therefore, following the practice instructions for
this review is quite important, if we want to be
prepared for what is to come. You’ll notice that the
reviews give us nothing but the theme thought for the
review and the two theme ideas being reviewed; there
is no additional commentary. In a sense, we are meant
to supply that commentary for ourselves. We are meant
to take the ideas and let the Holy Spirit open their
meaning in our own minds, without the prop of printed
words to help us. “Let each word shine with the
meaning God has given it, as it was given to you
through His Voice” (7:4).
Perhaps you do not feel ready for this. I confess
that when I first did the Workbook I pretty much lost
interest after Part I; I did the lessons but really
all I did was read them, think about them for a
minute or two, and then forget them. The reviews such
as this one seemed particularly pointless to me. Two
or three sentences wasn’t enough to stimulate my
mind, and I was not ready, apparently, to allow the
Holy Spirit to “let each word shine” in my mind. You
may find yourself in the same boat. Still, I would
say, try to follow the instructions. Take the few
lines given for each day, and ruminate on them. Chew
them over. Think about what you know of their
meaning, and ask to be shown more. If it works for
you, try to initiate a dialogue with the Holy Spirit
about the ideas. Turn them into prayers. Think how
they can apply to your life. Be still before God and
let the feeling
of the ideas
wash over you. Do whatever seems to work for you.
Maybe you won’t feel like you’re doing very well, but
what is the purpose of practice, if not to learn to
do something you don’t know how to do well?
Notice the theme thought for the review: My mind
holds only what I think with God. The instructions
tell us to spend five minutes letting this one
thought, and this alone, engage our minds, and remove
all other thoughts. What we are doing is clearing the
stage, making way for the Holy Spirit to teach us.
The five minutes spent with this idea each day is our
warm-up period. We are making ourselves ready to
receive the thoughts of God, through His Holy Spirit.
We are preparing ourselves to hold communion with
God.
Only after
this five-minute
warm-up are we instructed to take the two thoughts
for review, and let their meaning illuminate our
minds. There is no time limit given here; we are to
review them “slowly” and with “no hurry.” Surely this
will be more than a few seconds! More like several
minutes, at the least. The best way is to be able to
do this review without concern about time; if we take
five minutes or twenty-five, it does not matter. The
important thing is that we commune with God, and let
His thoughts fill our minds. As the review says of
our hourly review sessions, we should take “time
enough to see the gifts that they [the two ideas]
contain for you, and let them be received where they
were meant to be” (8:2). The exact amount of time you
spend is left to you.
PRACTICE
SUMMARY
Review
IV
Purpose:
To prepare for part II of the Workbook, by
concentrating on readiness for it and by reviewing
the last 20 lessons in a way that will facilitate
that readiness.
Longer:
2—beginning and ending of the day, for 5 minutes or
more.
• Open
your mind, clear it of all distracting thoughts. For
five minutes let this thought alone occupy it,
displacing all others: “My mind holds only what I
think with God.”
• Read the day’s two ideas. Close eyes and repeat
ideas slowly, without hurry, for this is what time
was made for. Let each word shine with the meaning
God gave it. Receive from each idea the gift God
placed in it.
Remarks:
Phase 1 will be enough to set your day along the
lines God planned, making it a special time of
blessing for you and for the world. It will be enough
to place Him in charge of all your thoughts. Your
thoughts will come from more than you. They will also
come from Him and tell you of His Love. Thus will
you, His completion, join with Him. And He, your
completion, will join with you. He thanks you for
your practicing. And as your day ends, His gratitude
will surround you.
Shorter:
hourly a quiet moment
• Say:
“My mind holds only what I think with God.” Spend a
quiet moment with it.
• Then repeat the day’s two ideas, slowly enough to
see their gifts and receive their gifts.