– Image: “Mystic Christ” by Dana Lynn Andersen
It’s been noted twice now at The Wild Reed that author, activist, and former presidential candidate Marianne Williamson has a new book out (see here and here).
It’s called The Mystic Jesus: The Mind of Love, and Tom Rapsas, author of Wake Up Call, recently reviewed it over at Patheos.
Following with added images and links is Tom’s review in its entirety.
The Jesus People Are Waiting For?
Maybe He’s Already Here
A review of Marianne Williamson’s
The Mystic Jesus
By Tom Rapsas
Patheos
June 7, 2024
In her new book The Mystic Jesus, Marianne Williamson sees Jesus as a living presence, as alive as you and me. Forget the dusty Jesus of the Bible. This Jesus is more a state of mind, with the power to shape and influence our lives today.
Unless you follow politics, Williamson is probably best known for her writings on A Course in Miracles. A mysterious 1,300-page text that appeared in the 1960s, Williamson calls it “a self-study program based on universal spiritual themes, employing traditional Christian concepts.” It is one tough read.
I first read parts of A Course in Miracles decades ago and could not get past its ornate prose. So, you might think of Williamson as sort of a Course whisperer, a valuable guide that can pull out some of the essential messages from the texts. While The Mystic Jesus is informed by the Course, it stands on its own. It paints a vivid picture of what it’s like to live with the consciousness of Christ.
What is “Christ Consciousness”? I first saw the phrase coined by the author and spiritual sage Richard Rohr who says simply that when we see the world with Christ Consciousness, we see God in all things. Rohr explains, you are “enlivened by a force larger than yourself . . . you are never separate from God, nor can you be, except in your mind.” Like Jesus, God permeates every fiber of your being.
Jesus can serve as a conduit to God
Williamson does not believe in the stuffy religion of the church who wants to “oversee and guide our relationship to God.” Her beliefs are more akin to the religion of Teresa of Avila, Julian of Norwich and the Gnostic Gospels. It’s about finding God through direct experience, without the need for a middleman.
The mystic Jesus is an aspect of ourselves that lives within us. “He was present as a man on the earth two thousand years ago, and he is present as a spirit within our psyches even now. He is a name for the unalterable love that all of us share.” Through him, we can forge an intimate relationship with God.
One of Williamson's core teachings in The Mystic Jesus is that there’s a profound disconnect between the love in our hearts and how we live on earth. We feel one way internally – but when we are out in the world, we act another way. Williamson’s message: “Move toward love and thrive. Move toward fear and slowly, or at least metaphorically, perish.” Jesus moves us toward love.
Five key themes from The Mystic Jesus
I have rearranged and lightly edited some of the key points in The Mystic Jesus in a loose narrative. I’ll write more on this book in the future, as it’s crammed with thought-provoking ideas.
1. We Forget Our Relationship with God
We are like children of the wealthiest, most powerful father who have forgotten our identity and the inheritance that comes with it. We wander endlessly in search of something that cannot be found but only realized.
The world as we know it perpetuates our forgetfulness, constantly disrupting our relationship to God by disrupting our relationship to each other. The only thing that separates us is an illusion of the mind . . . the misperception that we are separate.
Eventually everyone begins to recognize, however dimly, that there must be a better way. The mystic Jesus is exactly that. Think of him as a better way. He is like someone who helps us cross the river when we’re too tired to go on.
2. We Are All One
The Mind of God is an infinite ocean of loving thought, and when we think with love we are thinking with God. The purpose of our lives is to learn to think as God thinks.
We’re like waves in the ocean thinking we are separate from other waves. There is no place where one wave stops and another wave starts. If I think of myself as one with other waves, how could I not feel safe and powerful?
3. We Must Rise Above the Ego
When we align our minds with the Mind of God, we rise above the ego. The thinking of the world is no longer like quicksand that sucks us into it. We are invulnerable to the chaos that dominates the world.
The ego’s kingdom is the low road of negativity and anger, limitation and fear. But there is a high road, a path of peace and positivity, abundance and love. We don’t need to create the high road; we need merely to follow it.
The mystic Jesus has the power to override the ego’s dictates, to save us from our chronic temptation to withhold our love. Choosing to align with him, we co-create with God a different kind of world.
4. What We Seek is Already Here
The world blinds us to who we are and why we’re here. The world as we know it is not home to the true self, and we cannot find ourselves within its walls.
The light we seek is not something to be found but something to be chosen. It is already there waiting to be realized.
The mystic Messiah won’t be coming down from outside but from the inside. He’s not coming from the sky; he’s coming from our higher mind.
5. We Must Bring Our Own Light to the World
Even the tiniest candle casts out the darkness. Even the tiniest thought of forgiveness, of mercy, of love, can change the trajectory of our lives.
Without our willingness, the miracle cannot occur. When we are willing to forgive, be merciful, be gentle, be kind, we are allowing our lives to be channels for his appearance. The light Jesus brings to the world is the light he brings to your world.
– Tom Rapsas
Patheos
June 7, 2024
Patheos
June 7, 2024
– Image: Michael J. Bayly
Related Off-site Links:
What Marianne Williamson Believes About Jesus – Bill Elliott (BeliefNet, February 2003).
The Mysical Body of Christ: Heaven Now – Cynthia Bourgeault (Center for Action and Contemplation, May 3, 2019).
For more on A Course in Miracles at The Wild Reed, see:
• Be in My Mind, Beloved One
• Your Peace Is With Me, Beloved One
• You Are My Goal, Beloved One
• The Beauty and Challenge of Being Present in the Moment
• Resting in the Presence of the Beloved
• I Need Do Nothing . . . I Am Open to the Living Light
• Returning the Mind to God
• Being the Light
• Stepping Out of Time and Resting Your Mind
• In the Stillness and Silence of This Present Moment
• Pollyanna, “Miracle Worker”
• In the Midst of the “Great Unraveling,” a Visit to the Prayer Tree
For more of Marianne Williamson at The Wild Reed, see:
• “What I Want to Remember Are the Moments of Love”
• For Marianne Williamson, One Season Passes and Another Begins
• Marianne Williamson, the Cassandra of U.S. Politics, on the “True State of the Union”
• Marianne Williamson: “Repairing Our Hearts Is Essential to Repairing Our Country”
• “Two of the Most Dedicated and Enlightened Heroes of Present Day America”
• A Deeper Perspective on What’s Really Attacking American Democracy
• Cultivating Stillness
• Cultivating Peace
• “We Have an Emergency On Our Hands”: Marianne Williamson On the “Freefall” of American Democracy
• Marianne Williamson: Quote of the Day – November 11, 2021
• Marianne Williamson: Quote of the Day – June 2, 2020
• Deep Gratitude
• “A Beautiful Message, So Full of Greatness”
• Marianne Williamson: “Anything That Will Help People Thrive, I’m Interested In”
• Caitlin Johnstone: “Status Quo Politicians Are Infinitely ‘Weirder’ Than Marianne Williamson”
• Presidential Candidate Marianne Williamson: “We’re Living at a Critical Moment in Our Democracy”
• Why Marianne Williamson Is a Serious and Credible Presidential Candidate
• In the Garden of Spirituality – Marianne Williamson
• Easter for Mystics
• Christmas for Mystics
See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
• Jesus: Prophet and Mystic
• Why Jesus Is My Man
• Jesus: The Revelation of Oneness
• Jesus: Our Guide to Mystical Love in Action – Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3
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