Book
Description
The Revealing Word
offers
Truth students the metaphysical meanings and uses of words and phrases
that frequently appear in Unity publications, and many that appear in
the Bible. Whereas Unity's Metaphysical Bible Dictionary explains the
esoteric meanings of scriptural proper names,
The Revealing Word is devoted
mostly to common names. In addition to words that have religious
significance, hundreds of words that are in everyday use appear in this
book. Thus the reader is given inner meanings that he or she can apply
to daily living. All things in life are expressed in words. Equipped
with the inner meanings of words, a person can control all the issues
of his or her life, from the insignificant to the great. (Bible
quotations in this book are from the American Standard Version.)
A
abate--To lessen; to moderate. In making a demonstration, when
we
reach the point where the mind changes from the negative to the
positive state the troubled thoughts begin to abate. A certain set of
negative ideas has run its course, and the restorative thought forces
are in evidence.
Abba--A word of endearment signifying father. It is only as we
come
to know our sonship, our true relation to God, that we enter into the
consciousness of love and tender affiliation with Spirit, signified by
the word Abba. (see Mark 14:36)
abdicate--To let go; to relinquish; to renounce. The ability
to
abdicate is twofold in action: it eliminates the error, and it expands
the good. When the ego consciously lets go and willingly gives up its
personal ideas and loves, it has fulfilled the law of denial and is
restored to the Father's house.
abide--To continue in a fixed thought of God, the All-Good; to
dwell
in the Christ consciousness. "If ye abide in me, and my words abide in
you, ask whatsoever ye will, and it shall be done unto you" (John
15:7).
abiding--A conscious centering of the mind in divine Principle
within us by means of repeated affirmations of our faith and trust in
Principle.
abiding Presence--Christ, the presence of light, peace, joy,
love,
life, and substance that is ever within, about, before, and beside man.
(see presence of God)
Absolute, the--Divine Mind; unlimited Principle; the almighty
One;
the all-pervading Spirit; the Infinite; the Eternal; the Supreme Being.
The one ultimate creative Mind; the Source of all things. That which is
unconditioned, unlimited, unrestricted, and free from all limitations.
The self-existent God.
Absolute, to place judgment in the--The metaphysician finds it
necessary to place his judgment in the Absolute in order to demonstrate
His supreme power. This is accomplished by first declaring that one's
judgment is spiritual and not material, that its origin is in God, that
all its conclusions are based on Truth, and that they are absolutely
free from prejudice, false sympathy, or personal ignorance.
Absolute, treating in the--Treating in the consciousness of
the
Spirit of God; affirming the absolute Truth of Being for man.
Absolute, unification of man with the--Man unifies himself
with the
Absolute through recognition that he is the son and heir of the Father,
in whose image and likeness he was created. By realizing the Mind of
Christ, he becomes one with the Absolute.
abstract, the--The realm of pure ideas such as goodness,
purity,
wisdom, and love.
abundance, spiritual--Ideas in consciousness of the
omnipresent
supply and support of the one Mind; invisible substance, with infinite
capacity of expansion when held in mind, affirmed, and praised. "All
things whatsoever the Father hath are mine" (John 16:15).
abundance, steps in demonstrating--First, we must recognize
abundance as an idea that is real and has the power to expand. Then, we
must talk abundance--choose words representing abundance--and thus
build up an invisible world of substance. In this way, we build or form
in our mind that which draws to us an abundance of every good thing.
"For whosoever hath, to him shall be given" (Luke 8:18).
accident--An unfortunate event that takes place without our
conscious foreknowledge.
accidents, cause and cure of--The cause of all accidents lies
in
sense consciousness. To be free from all accidents, we must raise our
consciousness, so that it is spiritually positive and Christlike. Then
we shall attract only good.
accuser--Opposer; hater; an enemy. (see Devil and Satan) The
accuser
is overcome by casting him down in the name of Jesus Christ.
achievement, universal desire for--The craving for
accomplishment,
innate in every man. The universal desire for worth-while achievement,
giving a mighty impulse to all things, is divinely good.
acquisitiveness--The desire to acquire. It is a legitimate
faculty
of mind, but covetousness is the Judas trait. When a man seeks to
acquire from God only, acquisitiveness builds up his consciousness, but
when he oversteps the law and seeks that which belongs to another his
acquisitiveness becomes a destroyer. (see covetousness)
activity, spiritual--Thoughts in relation to spiritual
Principle.
Mind movement in accordance with the activity of Divine Mind.
Adam--Red; reddish. The first movement of mind in its contact
with
life and substance. Adam was created from the "dust of the ground"
(Gen. 2:7). Dust represents the radiant earth or substance. When
spiritual man (I AM) enters into this substance and makes use of the
God ideas inherent in him, he brings forth the ideal body in its
elemental perfection. Adam was first perfect as an idea in elemental
divinity.
Adam man--Unregenerate sense man; antichrist: the man who has
fallen
away from spirituality. Originally Adam was the spiritually illumined
man of God. The Adam man was primitively identified with an infinite
capacity for expansion. When he recognizes his identity as spiritual he
expands in divine order and brings forth only good.
Adam man, ills of--The many ills of the Adam man grew out of
his
belief that he could satisfy and nourish himself with material food and
drink alone. To feed the body is not enough. The spiritual man hungers
for the bread of life and thirsts for living water, even the Word of
God.
Adam man, transformation of--We are not to erase Adam, but we
are to
transform him by the renewing of our mind. "And be not fashioned
according to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your
mind, that ye may prove what is the good and acceptable and perfect
will of God" (Rom. 12:2).
adjustment--The rearrangement of thoughts according to the
divine
order of the Christ Mind; a bringing of man's consciousness into exact
correspondence with God's perfect harmony, or heaven. "And the crooked
shall become straight, and the rough ways smooth" (Luke 3:5).
adultery--Mixed thoughts, errors that have their existence in
the
unregenerated feelings; thoughts that have not come under the dominion
of the I AM.
Adversary, the--The vain imagination that there could, in
reality,
be anything opposed to Divine Mind, or could be any separation of man
from it, led to the forming of a state of mind that is described in the
Bible as the "adversary." We find that the various names--Satan; Devil;
Adversary; accuser; carnal mind; old man; man of sin; and
personality--all refer to the consciousness that man has built up in
his ignorance of his true estate.
affirm--To hold steadfast in mind or to speak aloud a
statement of
Truth.
affirm the salvation of the Lord--To realize silently and to
declare
audibly that the Christ within us is taking charge of all our affairs.
affirmation--A positive statement of Truth. By the use of
affirmations we claim and appropriate that which is ours in Truth. (see
denial)
affirmation, act of--The "yes" action of the mind; the act of
affirming; the declaring of Truth; the mental movement that asserts
confidently and persistently the Truth of Being in the face of all
appearances to the contrary.
affirmation and denial--Two movements of the mind that express
power
to accept or to reject, to lay hold of or to let go. (see denial)
affirmation, how made--Affirmations do not have to be made
only in
set terms such as, "I affirm my body to be spiritual." The sum total of
thought in all its positive aspects composes the affirmations that
bring ideas into form.
affirmation, purpose of--To establish in consciousness a broad
understanding of the divine principles on which all life and existence
depend. By affirming Truth we are lifted out of false thinking into the
consciousness of Spirit.
affirmation, remedial effects of--All unrighteous conditions
may be
adjusted through affirming the power of the great universal Spirit of
justice. Affirm: "The infinite Spirit of love and justice is now
operating in all my affairs, and all is well."
age--A cycle or a dispensation. Jesus was acquainted with
cycles or
ages of spiritual development of which the natural man knew nothing.
Jesus came at the end of an age. Age to mortal man is the measurement
of the life or existence of a person or thing. It is based on the false
concept of time as reality. "What is the signal of Your presence, and
the completion of this age?" (Matt. 24:3, Fenton.)
air--The deific breath of God. It symbolizes a purifying,
vitalizing
power that revives and makes alive.
alchemy, divine--Transmutation; changing in action and in
character
from the mortal into the spiritual. It has been said that the mind is
the crucible in which the ideal is transmuted into the real.
alcoholism--A diseased condition brought about by one who,
thirsting
for the true stimulation of Spirit, resorts to the excessive use of
false stimulants, such as alcoholic beverages. The way to demonstrate
over this condition is to turn wholeheartedly to Spirit and to realize
and to affirm that the desire for false stimulants is dissolved and
dissipated and that the pure spiritual life of Christ satisfies and
uplifts.
allegiance to the Father--The consciousness that divine wisdom
is
guiding the universe and man, which gives man a feeling of security.
Allegiance to the Father signifies a constant devotion to and trust in
the Father.
allegory--A symbolical representation of Truth. "Which things
contain an allegory" (Gal. 4:24).
All-Good--Divine Mind; God; the principle of divine
benevolence that
permeates the universe.
almighty--All-powerful; having all power or force to
accomplish
anything. All things are possible with God, because He is infinitely
all-mighty. All the power, all the force, all the might of the universe
are God's; He is, in truth, almighty God. "Jehovah appeared to Abram,
and said unto him, I am God Almighty" (Gen. 17:1).
Alpha and Omega--The beginning and the end; the Son of God;
all in
all. "I am the Alpha and the Omega" (Rev. 22:13).
altar--Stabilized place of worship. A fixed, definite center
in
consciousness; the place in consciousness where we meet the Lord and
are willing to give up our sins, to give up the lower for the higher,
the personal for the impersonal.
The altar mentioned in Rev. 11:1 symbolizes the consciousness
of
full consecration that takes place first in the temple of worship
within: "Present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to
God, which is your spiritual service" (Rom. 12:1).
altar, brazen, of temple worship--Represents the generative
life.
altar, golden, of incense--Symbolizes the establishing of
permanent
resolutions of purity and covenants with the higher law of obedience,
although it may entail daily sacrifice. (This applies to the altar of
the burnt offerings also.)
altar, to an unknown God--A yearning to know the unrevealed
Spirit
and a reaching out for a fuller realization of its source.
alternate between good and evil--To swing the mind from good
to evil
and vice versa, with consequent variation in the application of Truth
principles. Alternation is fatal to realization. "For let not that man
think that he shall receive anything of the Lord; a double-minded man,
unstable in all his ways" (James 1:7,8).
ambition--A subtle mental force that drives men toward their
goals.
If it is dedicated wholly to Spirit and acts from Principle, it will
work for good. If its motto is, "The end justifies the means," it is a
menace.
ancestors--Forefathers. Those who think of themselves as
descended
from human ancestors are in bondage to all the limitations of those
ancestors, regardless of their claims to the contrary. It is a falling
short of the full stature of man to regard himself as descending from
the human family. This is the sin that keeps the majority of men in
bondage to sense consciousness.
angel--A messenger of God; the projection into consciousness
of a
spiritual idea direct from the Fountainhead, Jehovah. "And there
appeared unto him an angel of the Lord standing on the right side of
the altar" (Luke 1:11). The word of Truth, in which is centered the
power of God to overcome all limited beliefs and conditions.
angel, of Jehovah--The quickening thought of God appearing in
the
form of light or divine intelligence, intuition, and understanding.
angels, ascending and descending--The imaging power of the
mind
receiving divine ideas and reflecting them into the consciousness.
angels, office of--To guard, to direct, and to redeem the
natural
forces of the body and mind, which have in them the future of the whole
man.
anointed of God, the--One who is conscious of the real
spiritual
outpouring from the source of his being; a consecrated person, "The
Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he anointed me" (Luke 4:18).
anointing--A symbolical expression of the pouring out of the
spirit
of love on one who has faith in God. Rubbing with oil; consecrating the
body with the living Spirit of Christ. "But thou, when thou fastest,
anoint thy head, and wash thy face" (Matt. 6:17).
antichrist--That which denies or opposes the idea that the
Christ
dwells in and is the true self of each individual. The active effort in
the world to exalt death and to delude men into believing that death is
the way to eternal life is an instance of work that is antichrist. Such
a thought is opposed to Christ. Jesus came to deliver the human race
from death and to fulfill in man God's perfect will, abundant life. The
antichrist thoughts must be persistently denied. The perfect will of
God for all men is abundant life, not death.
anxiety--A form of fear; a negative mental attitude that keeps
God's
good from man.
apostles--Those sent forth; messengers; ambassadors; active
spiritual thoughts. Jesus conferred this title on the Twelve whom He
sent forth to teach and to heal.
In order to command our powers and to bring them into unity of
action, we must know what they are and their respective places on the
staff of Being. The Grand Man, Christ, has twelve powers of fundamental
ideas, represented in the history of Jesus by the Twelve Apostles. So
each of us has twelve faculties or fundamental ideas to make manifest,
to bring out, and to use in the attainment of his ideals. There are
innumerable other ideas, but each one stems from some one of these
fundamental ideas.
Jesus' twelve apostles were: Peter (faith); Andrew (strength);
James, son of Zebedee (wisdom or judgment); John (love); Philip
(power); Bartholomew (imagination); Thomas (understanding); Matthew
(will); James (order); Simon the Cananaean (zeal); Thaddaeus
(renunciation or elimination); and Judas (life conserver). (see
disciple, calling of)
appetite--Either the craving of the sense man for fulfillment
of his
fleshly desires or the hunger and thirst of the spirit for its divine
inheritance. "But he awaketh . . . and, behold, he is faint, and his
soul hath appetite" (Isa. 29:8).
appetite, carnal or sensual--A hunger and thirst for sensual
pleasures; misdirected effort to obtain satisfaction through feeding
the insatiable sense man. All indulgence of such appetite must be
denied out of man's consciousness before Christ can be manifested.
appreciation--The act of appreciating; esteeming. Spiritually,
man's
mind esteems to a great measure the loveliness and power of omnipresent
God, All-Good. "I will give thee thanks with my whole heart" (Psalms
138:1).
appropriation--The act of taking possession of something. To
appropriate the word of Truth is to take the substance of the word into
one's mind and heart.
ark--A holy place; a sanctuary; a tabernacle; the Christ
center
within wherein man is one with pure Being.
ark, Noah's--Symbolizes the spiritual part of oneself, built
in the
midst of the flood of error. One builds one's ark on the scientific
understanding of the wisdom, presence, and power of God and on the
affirmations of what one is in Spirit.
The only refuge from the Flood (see Gen. 6:18) was the ark of
Jehovah. The ark represents a positive, saving state of consciousness,
which agrees with or forms a covenant with the principle of Being, with
subconscious inspiration, with Christ. This ark is the product of
"rest" (Noah) in the spiritual part of us, right in the midst of the
flood of error.
Ark of the Covenant--Represents the original spark of divinity
in
man's being, which is a sacred and holy thing. On its development
depends man's immortality. The original spark (Ark of the Covenant)
occupies the most holy place in the body temple and must be cared for
with great devotion; otherwise, the spiritual forces are scattered.
No human hand is allowed to touch this ark of the covenant. No
human
thought can enter the sacred precincts, which are kept veiled from all
eyes.
armor of God--The robe of righteousness. Error cannot enter
the
consciousness that is strongly fortified with the light, life, power,
and substance of Spirit.
ascension--The ascending or progressive unfoldment of man from
the
animal to the spiritual. It is measured by three degrees or states of
consciousness: first, the animal; second, the mental or psychical; and
third, the spiritual. Jesus first manifested Himself as the man on the
physical plane, from which He was resurrected to the mental or
psychical; from thence He ascended to the spiritual.
asceticism--The practice of severe self-denial; the attempt to
deny
the body itself as an evil thing instead of beholding it as the sacred
temple of the living God to be revered, respected, and loved.
aspirations--The deep longing of man for union with his
source, with
his Father-Mother, God.
"As the hart panteth after the water brooks,
So panteth my soul after thee, O God.
My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God"
(Psalms 42:1, 2).
ass--In Oriental countries in Bible times kings and rulers
rode the
ass, and it was the accepted bearer of royalty. The animal part of the
human consciousness is typified by the ass, and the purpose of Jesus'
riding an ass into Jerusalem was to portray the mastery by the I AM of
the animal nature and its manifestation (colt). Jerusalem is the city
of peace or spiritual consciousness. The characteristics of the ass are
stubbornness, persistency, and endurance. To ride these is to make them
obedient to one's will.
association, spiritual--Living in an uninterrupted
relationship with
ideas that come into consciousness from God.
astrology--"The pseudo science which treats of the influence
of the
stars upon human affairs, and of foretelling terrestrial events by
their position and aspects" (Webster). Astrology represents the belief
in man that his good depends wholly on something outside himself--his
ruling star, fate, providence--instead of depending on the power of his
own thoughts to establish within himself and his world what he wills.
It is true that we are in sympathy with all nature, which
includes
the earth, the sun, the moon, and the stars. These are all ensouled,
and their actions can affect us when we do not believe in a higher
power. But there is a higher power in everyone: Spirit. In Genesis it
is stated that spiritual man, the image-and-likeness man, was given
dominion over all creation.
astronomy--"The science which treats of the celestial bodies,
their
magnitudes, motions, constitution, etcetera" (Webster).
The material universe is only the outpicturing of the
spiritual
universe. The pulsations of the spiritual forces impinge on and sway
men, nations, and planets according to laws whose sweep in space and
time is so stupendous as to be beyond the ken or comprehension of
astronomy. But the fact should not be overlooked that higher astronomy
had its votaries in the past. The Magi and the illumined sages of
Chaldea and Egypt had astronomical knowledge of universal scope.
There is evidence that proves that the sages of the distant
past
knew a higher astronomy than do we of this age and that they predicted
the future of this planet through cycles and aeons--its nights of
mental darkness and the dawn of its spiritual day--with the same
accuracy that our astronomers do its present-day planetary revolutions.
Jesus evidently understood this higher astronomy, and He knew
that
His work as a teacher and demonstrator of spiritual law was related to
it, yet not controlled by it. He co-operated with the "law . . . and
the prophets," as far as they went, but He knew the higher law of the
Christ man and affirmed His supremacy in the words, "All authority hath
been given unto me in heaven and on earth" (Matt. 28:18).
atmosphere--Individually, an extension of consciousness;
collectively, the pervading influence of the predominating thoughts.
atom--"One of the small parts out of which any physical
quantity is
built up" (Webster). A particle charged with tremendous energy that may
be released and made to give to man powers beyond expression. Jesus
used the dynamic power of thought to break the bonds of the atoms
composing the few loaves and fishes of the boy's lunch--and five
thousand persons were fed. Material science says that each atom of
matter has force and intelligence and a certain individuality; hence,
it is a form of mind.
atonement--Reconciliation between God and man through Christ;
the
uniting of our consciousness with the higher consciousness. Jesus
became the way by which all who accept Him may "pass over" to the
higher consciousness. We have atonement through Him.
attainment, intellectual--Intellectual attainments are not in
themselves of use in matters spiritual. They have their end in teaching
the student how to command his faculties and to bring them into
subjection. We must drop them out of our mind as quickly as we can and
be willing to commence anew in the school of the higher life. Let us
affirm often: "I am meek and lowly of heart. I am led of the Spirit."
attainment, spiritual--A laying hold of the high and lofty
ideas of
the Christ Mind; the bringing of spiritual ideas into manifestation in
one's mind, body, and affairs.
attention--(see concentration)
attitude--The state of mind in relation to some matter or
situation;
a mental position. Attitude of mind toward environment determines the
nature of man's environment. A positive attitude draws the good; a
negative attitude brings its train of sin, sickness, poverty, and
death. "For as he thinketh within himself, so is he" (Prov. 23:7).
attributes of Being--That which is inherent in the twelve
powers of
faculties.
augury--The blind following of the commands of some omen or
voice,
not of Spirit.
aura--The thought emanation that surrounds every person. As to
whether it is an illumined aura, or medium, or dark and cloudy depends
on the dominant thought force of each person. The aura around the
bodies of sincere, honest persons is usually bright blue or some
modification of blue. The aura is not visible to all persons, but only
to those who have their psychical nature quickened on the spiritual
plane.
There are in the world today men and women who have followed
the
teaching of Jesus and developed in their bodies a superenergy or life
that not only permeates the physical structure but envelops it in a
luminous aura that can be and is felt by both themselves and others.
Spirit reveals that spiritual thinking breaks open the physical cells
and atoms and releases their imprisoned life, which originally came
from Divine Mind. Jesus carried this process so far that His whole body
was transformed and became a conscious part of the Father's life and
intelligence. (see halo)
aura, how created--Prayer liberates the energies pent up in
the mind
and body. Those who pray much create a spiritual aura that eventually
envelops the whole body. The bands of light painted by artists around
the heads of saints are not imaginary; they actually exist and are
visible to the sharp eye of the painter. Luke testifies (9:29) that
when Jesus was praying "his countenance was altered, and his raiment
became white and dazzling." After Moses had been praying on the
mountain his face shone so brightly that the people could not look at
it, and he had to wear a veil.
authority--Rightful power; mastery; or dominion. "For he
taught them
as having authority" (Mark 1:22).
authority, having--Inspired by Spirit within. The Spirit of
truth is
the one and only authority in the study of Truth. (see John 16:13)
authority, parental--Human parental authority is a thought of
bondage or slavery in mortal consciousness based on desire of parents
to domineer and to wield power. Divine parental authority is child
guidance based on love and understanding. It includes willingness to
grant freedom to the child by helping him to know and to live Truth.
autosuggestion--The conscious impression of selected thoughts
on the
subconscious mind by oneself.
avarice--Inordinate greed for material riches. (Symbolized by
"the
money-changers.") The avaricious suffer most in body and are the most
difficult to heal, because of the mental bias that prompts them to get
all things as cheaply as possible, including the kingdom of heaven.
avarice, how to be free from--Establish in consciousness the
idea of
giving generously and freely, not from compulsion or for the sake of
reward but from the pure love of giving.
awakening, spiritual--Becoming conscious of the things of
Spirit, or
God.
"THE REVEALING WORD:
A Dictionary of Metaphysical Terms"
by
Charles Fillmore
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