Excerpts
from
The San Francisco Lecture Series (1948) by Joel Goldsmith Order in Adobe PDF eBook form or printed form for $4.95 or click here to order in printed form from Amazon.com Book
Description
Joel
Goldsmith’s “San Francisco Lecture
Series” was a result of an invitation
extended by students who had earlier attended his classes
given on the Bible.
These talks took place in the beginning of his ministry but after the
release
of The Infinite Way. The students attending this
class-work requested
that it be transcribed and distributed in mimeographed form for further
study.
These lectures appear in this series in their pure form. They have
never before
been professionally published, and very few original copies remain in
circulation. The lectures embody the subjects of meditation, spiritual healing, spiritual freedom and the true nature of prayer. They serve to awaken us to the one Creative Spirit pervading the universe and all mankind, and to raise us above desires for personal attainment to the mystical consciousness of oneness with God. They urge us to participate in establishing that consciousness universally. The eBook version has 262 pages divided into 18 chapters. Chapter 1 CREATIVE
MEDITATION WE ARE
UNFOLDING STATES OF CONSCIOUSNESS, and our
outer experience is never going to be any greater than
our inner unfoldment. If we have not developed spiritually to a greater
extent
by next week than we have at this point today, our demonstration of
life and
its harmonies will not be any greater or better next week than it is
today. The
only hope we have for greater health, greater success and greater
harmony in
our human relations is through the unfolding of our
“inner” or “real”
consciousness.
So why not let us take today as merely the beginning of a week
of unfoldment
and see how much farther we will have progressed in our understanding
and in
our outer experience by this time next week. Now, as to
the meaning of the words “creative
meditation.” You and I have heard a lot
about meditation and certainly we have read much about it, but this
idea of
creative meditation gives us something new to think about. Creative
meditation
goes a step further because in it, there must be an expectancy of a
causative
principle and a specific effect. Let us
not forget that when we think
of the idea, creative meditation, we are thinking of a creative
principle at
work; and we are thinking also of an effect that must take
place—under, of
course, one condition:
If the seed is planted in fertile soil; if our consciousness is
receptive and
responsive to the truth, and if our consciousness is not so cluttered
up with
the idea of demonstration, with the idea of an effect of some material
good
which we are expecting. If our consciousness is open to God
and to the unfolding
of divine consciousness, that is the state of consciousness which is
receptive
and responsive to the seed that will be planted there during meditation. That is
the idea of creative meditation. You plant the seed to allow the
creative
principle to act upon it and to produce fruit after its own kind. In
our
creative meditation then let us above all be expectant of
good; expectant of
an answer; expectant of a greater degree of spiritual understanding
and,
therefore, of more harmony in what we call our human experience. As you
know,
it is not really a human, but a divine, spiritual experience. The
“world” has
turned it into a material one and has finitized that which is really
the life
of God made manifest as you and as me. The object of meditation is to
achieve
the spiritual life. Meditation of itself is but a means to an
end—and the end
is the attainment of spiritual life. Yesterday
while I was in the chapel in Palo Alto I took from the wall this
statement: “The
world is new to every soul when Christ has entered into it,”
That is the
purpose of meditation! As humans, we have become separated from our
source and
this is what makes us appear to the world as humans. Now we are opening
consciousness to where the Christ, the presence of God, the spirit of
God, can
enter in and make us new. Listen to Jesus when he says, “I
can of mine own self
do nothing . . . the father that dwelleth in me, he doeth the
works.” And Paul:
“I live, yet not I, the Christ liveth in me.” Just
think, if I were sitting here as a human being and all there was to me
was a
mind and body, you would not benefit very much by that. There is only
one thing
that can bring some measure of unfolding spiritual
consciousness to you, and
that is the presence of God, the Christ that liveth in me, for which I
am the
presentation or vehicle. You, of course, are identically that same
thing when
you open your consciousness and let the Christ enter in, so that you
also can
say—and mean it—“I can of mine own self
do nothing . . . the Father that
dwelleth in me, he doeth the works.” And, “I live,
yet not I, the Christ liveth
in me.” Now the
object of meditation is to still the human mind, to still the activity
of the human
senses to that degree which will permit us to become consciously aware
of the
presence of God, to become consciously aware of the divine activity
operating
in, through and as us—and, as a matter of fact, as our
consciousness. It is to
become consciously aware of the divine activity operating as
our consciousness!
God, the divine being individualized as the Christ, becomes
our individual
consciousness and that consciousness is the savior of the
world—the savior of
my world. Your consciousness is the savior of your world. Lift your
world up
from the material sense of existence into the spiritual reality! Your
own
consciousness does that when it is imbued with this Christ! Therefore,
the
purpose of this meditation is opening consciousness to that inflow so
that it
becomes spiritualized; so that it becomes the very Christ itself in
individual
expression. On this
thought of stilling the human senses or the human mind, do not believe
for a
moment that that means trying to stop your thinking process, because you will
never succeed in that.
No one ever has. But there does come a time to those who continue
meditation,
when the human mind of itself stops, when thoughts no longer intrude
during
meditation. But you cannot bring that about through trying to stop
thinking.
All you can do is to dam it up for a little while, and then it breaks
out
stronger than ever. What you can do during
meditation is to learn to pay
no attention to the thoughts that are going through your mind. These
will
neither harm you nor help you. And as a matter of fact, that is what we
are
learning in this work—that no amount of human good thinking
will help, and no
amount of human evil thinking will hurt. On this point, too, it is so
natural
for me to know and say this, that I often do not remember that there
are apt to
be those who have been brought up in metaphysical teachings
that stress the
sense of “right thinking,” or “human
thinking,’’ or “learning to hold the
right
thoughts.” What I say is in no sense in criticism or judgment
or condemnation
of that method or approach to living. Every path that we take leads up,
up to
the final one, which is God. I am not, therefore, speaking in
contradiction or
contradistinction of any other approach. I am merely
presenting what has been
my individual unfoldment, which has been that the human mind is not a
power.
The human mind cannot create good and cannot create evil. It appears
to, that
is true. That is why we have the human world; that is why we have this
metaphysical
teaching—because there is this appearance of evil, and we
think something is required
to correct that view. Two times
two are four and no amount of human thinking will ever change that.
Love is
love, and nothing will change that. And so, while we are in meditation,
if
thoughts persist in coming to our mind, passing through our
“upper story,” let us
not be concerned about it. Let these thoughts come and let them go.
They may be
personal and sensual too, but let us not pay attention to them. Let us
remember
to let them come and go of their own accord and pretty soon, for lack
of
feeding them, they will not come any more. We can starve them by
learning to
disregard them; and when we are disregarding them, we are keeping our
real
thought on the object of our work. The object of our work is a state of
receptivity so that the Christ may flow in. That is the purpose for
which we
meditate. That is the object we hope to attain—the ability to
have a conscious
recognition of the presence of God. Where the
Christ becomes the reality of our being, we are then no longer in the
human
sense of existence but in the spiritual. And that is the first step, as
I see
it, on this spiritual path. Take your thought off of person, place and
thing.
Take your thought off of body, health, money or employment. Take your
thought
off of every human situation, right now, this minute, and send it to
God!
Center your thought, right now, on God! What is God? God is love; God
is soul;
God is life. You cannot define God. If you could, it would not be God.
We are
not going to define what God is. We are going to remove
thought from person,
place and things, and say the word God. God—the
divine consciousness of
my being. God—the soul of my being. God—the law of
my being. God—the substance
of my being—the substance of all form. God—the
creative principle of the
universe; the law unto my being; God—the substance, the law
of all form, of all
formation; God—the substance, the law, the cause, and even
the form of all
effect; God—the substance, the law, the life eternal
of all form. You cannot
separate God, life, from its form which you are! God is the
life of all form. God is the substance, the law, of all form. God is
the spirit
and soul of our form. God, appearing individually
as you, constitutes
all there is of you. God is the life of you, and that is why you are
immortal—and
now! Because God is the substance of your body, even your body is
immortal!
Your body is not flesh and blood as it appears to be. God is spirit and
your
body is spiritual. Your body is as immortal as your life, which is God!
There
is no reason for any body to ache and change, or decay and die. We
permit that
through the acceptance of the belief of a selfhood apart from God. We
permit it
through accepting God as the form of spiritual creation, but not the
form and
substance of all creation. God is the form, the substance, the
law of all
creation, including your body. Your body is not material. Neither is
the food
you eat material. It is spiritual. All that is material is our concept
of
creation. Creation itself is all God in the sense that God is the
essence, substance,
and form. Now, in
this meditation, we are not thinking of form or figure, of outline,
color,
grace, or body. We are thinking of God as the substance of all form,
color,
grace, outline, body. God is the substance of our being, the substance
of the stone.
God is the law of the stars and planets. The stars and planets are not
a law
unto themselves. God is the law unto them, as we are the law unto
ourselves.
And because we are infinite consciousness, the sun, moon,
stars, and planets
are embodied in us, and we are the law unto them. Yes, we are the law
unto the
stars, the moon and the planets! This
divine consciousness of ours, imbued with the Christ, is the law unto
all
creation. Nothing in this world acts upon us. We are the law unto all
that appears
in our universe.
All of us are the activity of God; the universal I; the universal ego,
individualized
as you and as me. That is the law unto all creation. And so, in our
creative
meditation, we remember that our entire consciousness is filled with
God. God
as the law. God as the substance. God as the creative principle! And
God
appearing as effect. God appearing as form. God appearing to us as sun,
moon,
stars—as food, as pets, and as all other relationships on
earth. So, while our
consciousness, our main thought, is centered on that, these human
thoughts that
come and go are of no importance. Do not try to stop them or throw them
out.
Let them come and go, and they will fade out. I promise you, they will
fade
out. It is only a matter of practice. Now as to
our class beginning next week—and that is just an opportunity
to continue this
idea of meditation. For many years I practiced and taught metaphysical
healing,
not as a class teacher but merely as an individual, a
practitioner, who taught
those who came for help and for healing; I taught only those who wanted
the
teaching in addition to the healing. The day finally came when I made
the
decision never to teach again, and when I made that decision I heard a
laugh
inside of me. It really was a laugh, and I heard it right out loud. And
this
voice said: “Oh, yes you will! You will teach, but you will
teach those I send
to you, and you will teach them what I give you to teach.” I
did not question
that, but neither did I understand or know how it would come about.
Then, one
day, a lady who had been coming to my office for help asked me if I
would talk
to a small group on the subject of the Bible. I said no, that I was not
teaching. But the calls kept coming for several weeks, and finally I
thought I
would make an exception
and for four nights
would talk on the Bible. And those four
nights have stretched out to this present time without the interruption
of even
a single night. And so I
have found it to come literally true. I have not sought students, and
those who
came have come of their own accord, either through reading my writings
or
through recommendations. So I feel impelled to say regarding these
classes,
that those who come to them must not come expecting them to be
lectures, or
expecting a good time. If the object is to be achieved which
we have set out
to achieve, it is really going to be work for two solid
weeks—good, strenuous
work! Why? Because here again, unless consciousness is enriched; unless
it is
changed or unfolded in a spiritual way, the outer experience
will be no
different. Unless one is prepared to really put in conscientious work,
so that
at the end of the class they can say, “I am farther along in
spiritual
development,” it will be of no use to come to the
class—not unless one is
thinking beyond the immediate day or the immediate problem, beyond the
meditation to realization. Let us then accept that the object of
meditation,
the object of my being in the spiritual realm is that I may become
consciously
aware of the presence of Christ, and become that which I
am—the light of the
world. Let us dedicate ourselves to that now. In my own
work when this began, I went through three months of inner initiation.
It took
place every morning from five to seven. It was a magnificent
experience and
one that can never be shared with anyone. It was in that period that it
was
shown to me that the only purpose of our existence on earth is to be
the light
of the world; to be a path or a way, to show these others who are what
I was
before the ordainment—a seeker—so that they may
rise above the human sense of
existence. Now
remember that everyone in the human world is faced with the belief of a
physical body. They are faced with the belief of physical supply. And
right
now, they are being faced with the belief of atomic bombs and rumors of
wars.
In the human picture there is no way of avoiding those experiences or
of rising
above them. The only way is the spiritual way, and the spiritual way is
that
way where the Christ becomes the reality of our being! And when we
begin to
look out from the standpoint of God, the sum total of all
creation, then we
are fulfilling the greatest law ever revealed by Jesus
Christ—the law of
forgiveness. There is no greater law than that of forgiveness.
Remember, love
God with all thy might and love your neighbor as yourself. That
neighbor is
every human being on earth, every animal, every plant! And there is no
way you
can love them while holding them in condemnation. In this
meditation, then, see and understand that God is the life, soul, mind,
not only
of friends, but of all so-called enemies. And, in that way, you will
eliminate
all enemies. Jesus said to Pilate, “Thou canst have no power
over me, unless it
came from the Father in heaven.” That is our answer to
enemies or enmity of
every form whether appearing as man, sin, disease, or lack. Some of you
who
heard me in January will remember how many times I stressed
this fact: that
this law of forgiving, this law of forgiveness, is the real law of
demonstration. This ability to see God as the mind, the life and soul
of
enemies as well as of friends. Why? Because not only in the Old
Testament, but
all the way through the teachings of Jesus, we have this reminder-the
first
commandment is the secret of life. Only one God, only one life; the
life of
every one of us; the life of our
so-called enemies. God is the only mind, and therefore
God must be the mind of what we call enemies! Only one God, and only
one
creation—and all spiritual! In that
meditation, can you not see that as long as your consciousness is
filled with
this oneness—one God, one creation, all oneness, you are
opening your
consciousness for the inflow of the Christ? There is no other way. Love
is the
way and love is truth, and truth is the ability to become aware of God
as the
form and formation, the cause and effect of all that appears as our
world! Thus
our objective is embodied in these meditations: “The world is
new to every soul
when Christ has entered into it” . . . “I can of
mine own self do nothing”, “The
Father within, he doeth the works” . . . “I live,
yet not I, the Christ liveth
in me.” Let us now
sit in silence and take any or all of these three thoughts as the
central theme
in our consciousness. Paying no attention to the human thoughts, we
center our
thought on these and when we have finished, we can feel that we have
become connected
to the divine source of our being. As a help,
may I offer you this: You are familiar with the illustration I have
used on the
subject of supply and will know immediately what I mean. I said that
the
oranges growing on the orange tree are not our supply, they are not
even the
supply of oranges. They are the effect, the result, the fruitage of
supply.
Supply is the law that operates in and as
the tree. You can take
away all the oranges and as long as that law is in operation, you will
have
more oranges. Now to think of the oranges as supply and try to hold on
to them
or even give them away and think you are giving something is foolish.
You are
not giving a thing away because they are multiplying rapidly
all the time. And
so, with that as an illustration, you will remember that everything you
see is
only the result of the law of God! You will remember that behind the
visible is
the law of God producing and reproducing. That which is visible to you,
whether
money or whatever, is but an effect of supply—it is
not supply. It is only an
effect of supply! Supply is the consciousness of good within, and as
long as we
have that, we have what we call dollars. Now, in
the same way, when we look at people do not look at them and think of
them as
good or bad or sick or well. Look through the individual and see that
every
individual is just the product, the result, the presentation, the
vehicle
through which or as which God is appearing. Remember not to put value
on
oranges, or dollars, or people! And even the good that appears to come
through
them, while being grateful for it, look behind to see the actual source
through
which it comes. No one is good of himself. Every bit of good you have
ever done
has not been a result of your own nature at all. We are neither good
nor bad in
life—it is God shining through. We of ourselves have never
been charitable or
kind; that is a quality of God shining through. And although we have
those
qualities, it does not mean we have them of ourselves. It is
God. Evil is
not a quality of itself, either. There is no such thing as a concrete
evil.
Evil is just God shining through. It is our misinterpretation of it
that causes
it to appear to us as evil. There cannot be the first commandment,
“Thou shalt
have no other gods-powers-besides me,” and evil. There cannot
be infinite good
and evil. So the evil we behold is only a negative appearance, concept,
false
idea of that which is real and which is God, good. Jesus said: “Thou couldest have no power over me unless it be given to thee of the Father.” And so now, as we look at the individual, let us look through him, and see that only God is appearing through him or as him, and there is no evil. God is the only power to whatever is given effect. The same with oranges and dollars. Do not let us see those as supply, but as the effect of the law of God, which I am . . . the effect of the law of God—which I am! Order in Adobe PDF
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