Please join our current Thurs. series at any point… you can come try it at any time and see if it ‘works’ for you.
Ken Wapnick book discussion
on Thursday Evenings @ 5:30pm Mountain Time
** If possible, we suggest getting the hard copies of Ken Wapnick’s books for Thursday evening class discussions, and not the download versions… to be able to more easily follow along in class… thanks!
Quickest way to get these Ken Wapnick books: from Amazon Prime
** To receive the Zoom link for classes: click here
Quickest way to get this: from Amazon Prime: click here
Thursdays @ 5:30pm Mt. in December 2024: Discussion (with Tim) of Helen Schucman’s poetry in Gifts of God
During the process of scribing the revered spiritual book “A Course in Miracles” Helen Schucman wrote the poems in this volume. Readers familiar with the Course will be aware of the stylistic similarities between the two, as well as their shared spiritual content. Despite these similarities, Helen felt that there was a difference between them. She considered herself the “scribe” of the Course but the “inspired author” of the poems.
The poems were written over a ten-year period. They have been divided into four sections: Early Poems, Personal Poems, Later Poems and The Gifts of God. The actual dates of the poems may be found in the appendix.
The poetry included in the first section dates from March to November of 1971. (There was one earlier poem, “The Gifts of Christmas,” which is included with the other Christmas poems in the third section.) These poems were written while Helen was still scribing the Course and deal with spiritual themes found in it.
The personal poems in the second section were written between December, 1973 and February, 1977. They clearly express the ambivalence of Helen’s relationship with Jesus: both her love and longing for him, and her fears and wavering faith.
The third section covers a wider span of time—from “The Gifts of Christmas” to Helen’s final poem, “The Second Easter,” completed in March, 1978. The last poem in this section, “Requiem,” was written for a friend whose mother was near death.
The fourth section consists of a long blank verse poem in five sections which is printed here in prose form. It bears a marked similarity to the material in the Course, both in form and content.
On Thursdays beginning Jan. 2024, Daniela will lead discussion of Ken Wapnick’s book:
“Cast No One Out”
Make it about them, a phrase that reflects A Course in Miracles’ teaching that we enter Heaven “together, or not at all” is the important theme of this program. In other words, we are to be thinking of others instead of our neediness, setting our specialness aside.
Thus, by making a relationship or situation about another instead of ourselves, we are truly making it about us—God’s one Son.