Everything I have written — all 23 manuscripts, all 1,448 pages — points toward a single destination: the Peace of God. Not happiness. Not success. Not even healing in the conventional sense. The Peace of God. And I want to be precise about what I mean, because it is not what most people think.
The Peace of God is not the feeling you get when everything in your life is going well. That kind of peace is conditional — it depends on circumstances that are always changing. When circumstances change, that peace vanishes.
The Peace of God is something entirely different. It is a state of recognition — the recognition that what you truly are cannot be threatened, damaged, or destroyed by anything that happens in the physical world. It is not indifference to suffering. It is a stability so deep that suffering passes through you without destroying you, because you know — at the level of direct experience, not just intellectual belief — that you are not what you thought you were.
The Peace of God does not come through effort. This is the hardest thing for most people to accept. We are conditioned to believe that everything worth having must be earned, worked for, struggled toward. But the Peace of God is already present. It cannot be earned because it was never lost — it was only covered over.
What covers it is the ego's thought system: the belief in separation, the belief in vulnerability, the belief that we are bodies living in a dangerous world that can take everything from us at any moment. A Course in Miracles — and the work I have tried to do in my manuscripts — is a systematic dismantling of that thought system. Not through willpower. Through recognition.
When you recognize what is not real, what is real becomes visible. And what is real is peace. God Bless.
"The Peace of God is not the absence of difficulty. It is the recognition that what you truly are cannot be touched by any difficulty."
— Robert Hall — Living the Truth
Written by the Big Jam Consultant team, rooted in Bob's manuscripts and spiritual vision.
God Bless — Robert (Bob) Hall