Conversations with God

Conversations with God
Book 1 in the Conversations with God series by Neale Donald Walsch. (North America book cover).
UK edition of 'Conversations with God' books (Book 1 is known as the 'blue cover'.)

Conversations with God (CwG) is a sequence of books written by Neale Donald Walsch, written as a dialogue in which Walsch asks questions and God answers.[1] The first book of the Conversations with God series, Conversations with God, Book 1: An Uncommon Dialogue, appeared on bookshelves in 1995, and quickly became a publishing phenomenon, staying on the New York Times Best-Sellers List for 137 weeks. The succeeding volumes in the nine book series also appeared prominently on the List.

In an interview with Larry King, Walsch described the inception of the books as follows: at a low period in his life, Walsch wrote an angry letter to God asking questions about why his life wasn't working. After writing down all of his questions, he heard a voice over his right shoulder say: "Do you really want an answer to all these questions or are you just venting?"[2] Though when he turned around he saw no one there, Walsch felt answers to his questions filling his mind and decided to write them down. The ensuing dialogue became the Conversations with God books. When asked in recent interview how does he ‘open up’ to God these days, Neale argued “I am reaching out to touch others with this information. When I reach out and touch others with this information I reconnect immediately with the divine presence.”[3]

Contents

Basis of the dialogue

Containing nearly 3000 pages of material in total, the series presents a vast number of ideas. The second and third books in the original trilogy deal with political and social issues.

CwG's basic messages

In Friendship with God , Walsch writes that God presents four concepts which are central to the entire dialogue:

  1. We are all one.
  2. There's enough.
  3. There's nothing we have to do.
  4. Ours is not a better way, ours is merely another way.

Existence is essentially non dual in nature. At the highest level there is no separation between anything and there is only one of us; there is only God, and everything is God. The second statement, following from the first, means that we, in this seeming existence, lack nothing and if we choose to realize it, we have enough of whatever we think we need (or the means to create it) within us. The third statement combines the first two to conclude that God, being all there is and is thus always sufficient unto Itself, has no need of anything and therefore has no requirements of humanity. The final concept puts an end to our need to always be right. Given that we have and are everything, and there's nothing we have to do, there are an infinite number of ways to experience this, not just the one way we may have chosen so far.

According to the books, God recommends many economic and social changes if people want to make a more functional, adaptable, and sustainable world and recommends that more attention should focus on the environment. The conversations also speak of reincarnation and the existence of life on other planets.

God's motive for creation

In Walsch's first dialogue, God notes that "knowing" and "experiencing" oneself are different things. Before creation there was only That-Which-Is, which cannot know or experience itself fully, without something it is not. It cannot know itself as love, since nothing exists but love. It cannot know itself as giving since nothing else exists to give to. It cannot experience itself in myriad ways because everything is one.

This present creation then, in Walsch's viewpoint, is established by and within God, so that sentience can exist which does not directly remember its true nature as God. Split into infinite forms, all life can live, experience, and recreate its nature as God, rather than just "know" itself as the creator in theory. It is essentially a game, entered into by agreement, to remember who and what we are and enjoy and create, knowing that ultimately there is no finish line that some will not reach, no understanding that is not without value, no act that does not add meaning to the future or for others. In Walsch's view we have a common interest in keeping the game going, for there is nothing else to do except to experience our existence and then experience more of it, to uncover deeper layers of truth and understanding. There are no external rules, because all experience is subjective, and is chosen. But within this, there are ways that (it is stated and implied) people will gradually come to see their thoughts, words, actions are either working or they are not working. A thing is either functional or dysfunctional. These rememberings take place over "time" and can take hundreds and thousands of lifetimes.

Nature of the dialogue

The voice of God states in Book 1 that words are not the truth, and thus readers must ultimately take what is being said and consult their own feelings to determine their own truth {CwG1 page 4.} The voice says this is true of any other book or words we come across. Though the books bear the title Conversations with God and the author introduces the first book by stating he is "taking dictation" from God, the voice of God in the trilogy explains that the dialogue is God speaking to everyone all the time. The question is not to whom does God talk, but who listens. This is clarified by the statement that God can communicate with you in the next song you hear, the next sunset you experience, the next time you hear laughter, the next movie that really moves you, the next breeze that caresses your ear, the next conversation you overhear. "All these devices are mine. All these avenues are open to me. I will speak to you if you invite me." {CwG1 page 58.}

At the deepest level consciousness is being aware of the balance between mind, body and soul(spirit) and that there is only one "voice" regardless whether it is thought to belong to God, or an individual, or imagination. This leads to a statement of the Divine Dichotomy: that two apparently contradictory truths can exist, neither making the other untrue. This is possible only in the realm of the relative, because, as was stated above, in the absolute all things are one thing, and there is nothing else.

Parallels in other belief systems

In the dialogue many philosophical ideas are presented that had already been advanced earlier by major Eastern and Western thinkers, but Walsch presents the information in language for modern readers and does not specifically cite any of these philosophers. In fact, Walsch claims that he had never known most of these ideas before his revelatory experiences. Since the beginning of the series, and especially in the latter volumes, Walsch and "God" acknowledge that most of the concepts presented are previously known to humanity, but are profound enough to warrant being explored repeatedly, and put into this cohesive unified form. Since humanity is still mired in strife and conflict, there is value in their restatement. Fundamental parts of Walsch's writings are also mirrored within other well known spiritual writings and traditions:

  • Souls reincarnate to eventually experience God-realization ([Hinduism]/' 'Bhagavad-Gita/Sikhism).
  • Feelings are more important as a source of guidance than intellect (Rousseau).
  • We are not here to learn anything new but to remember what we already know (Hinduism/Plato).
  • Physical reality is an illusion (Hinduism/ Sikhism/Buddhism's concept of maya).
  • One cannot understand one thing unless he or she understands its opposite (Tao Te Ching).
  • God is everything. (Hinduism / Spinoza / Brahman)
  • God is self-experiential, in that it is the nature of the Universe to experience itself. (Hinduism/Hegel, and process theology as first outlined by Alfred North Whitehead)
  • God is not fear-inducing or vengeful, only our parental projections onto God are. Fear or love are the two basic alternative perspectives on life (Drewermann)
  • Good and evil do not exist (as absolutes, but can exist in a different context and for different reasons as Nietzsche).
  • Reality is a representation created by will. (Schopenhauer)
  • Nobody knowingly desires evil. (Socrates)
  • It's just a ride. (Bill Hicks)

Prophecies and predictions

The CwG books sometimes make hints and suggestions about future events. An example of this is The Impeachment of Bill Clinton in book 2 of the trilogy. This account was first published in May of 1997, God told Walsch in Chapter 19 (p. 226) that because the President Bill Clinton was "courageously fighting big money's vested interest" there were going to be "tremendous powers attempting to remove him from office." Less than a year later, in 1998, the Lewinsky scandal broke and resulted in calls for Clinton's impeachment and possible eviction from his position. Eventually President Clinton was officially impeached, although the resulting vote to convict and remove him from office then failed to win sufficient votes.

In one of the books God states that our universe had a beginning and will have an end (as part of the "breathing in and breathing out of God"){CwG book 2, page 71}. Taken in the "physically" literal sense, the latter part of this statement could appear to have been disproved by the discovery of Dark Energy and its implications on the ultimate fate of the universe - some of the best current observational evidence indicates that the energy density of Dark Energy is sufficient to ensure the universe expands forever, according to the current Inflationary model. However, the new Cyclic model of the universe by P.Steinhardt and N.Turok has shown mathematically using M-theory that an eternal Cyclic model is a possibility and all current observational evidence supports this model as well. However, another perspective by which to consider this statement may be that as the act of "breathing in and out" is a continuum, each breath begins as it is inhaled and each breath ends as it is exhaled; however, the "action" of "breathing in and out of God" in itself being infinite, would lead one to perceive the statement from God about the beginning and ending of the universe to indicate a similarly infinite parallel in demonstration. Thus as the breath begins, so do various chapters of experience and manifestation of events in our world. As the breath ends so each chapter in history ends and moves into new experiences and events which we may look back on as sequencing chapters of life ever evolving and changing. Ending life as we know it and beginning anew not once, but in continuum of beginning and ending as does the "breathing in and out of God". Therefore this statement may be seen to mean that as "we" recognize the "beginning" of the universe in a particular form known to humanity in this moment, we may come to see the "end" of such universe, however this does not necessarily mean an ending of the existence of the universe, as God knows it as infinity.

The CwG books do NOT claim to make predictions.{CwG book 3, page 109. "NDW: Won’t You tell us how this will all turn out? God: l am not here to predict your future, and I will not do that."}

Bibliography

The CwG series

The following are the nine books in the Conversations With God series. Each of these books is a transcipt of a dialogue between two beings, Neale Donald Walsch and "God", with the exception of "Communion with God", which is written only by "God".

  1. Conversations With God, Book 1 (1995)
  2. Conversations With God, Book 2 (1997)
  3. Conversations With God, Book 3 (1998)
  4. Friendship With God (1999)
  5. Communion With God (2000)
  6. Conversations With God For Teens (2001)
  7. The New Revelations (2002)
  8. Tomorrow's God (2004)
  9. Home With God, in a life that never ends - a final Conversation with God (2006)

The first three books in the series are often called the CwG trilogy. Home With God we are told is the final book in this series of two-way written communication {see page HwG page 308, "Our final conversation in public."}.

Neale Donald Walsch has written a number of other books which he describes as "in the CwG cosmology", none of these are dialogues with God. These include What God Wants, "Happier than God", "When Everything Changes, Change Everything", and his latest book "The Storm Before the Calm" (2011/09). He also has written some Applications for Living as listed in the next section.

Other books by Neale Donald Walsch

In addition to the books of the CwG series, there are also a number of guidebooks, meditation books, and other books adapted from the CwG series and referring to the CwG message. The following books do not have any new information from the voice of God, but were written by Neale Donald Walsch to assist with understanding and applying the messages:

  • Guidebook: Conversations With God, Book 1 (1997)
  • Meditations from Conversations With God, Book 1 (1997)
  • Meditations from Conversations With God, Book 2 (1997)
  • Re-Minder Cards: Conversations With God, Book 1 (1998)
  • The Little Soul and the Sun (illustrated parable, extracted from Conversations with God, Books 1 and 3) (1998)
  • Questions and Answers on Conversations with God (1999)
  • Applications for Living from Conversations With God (1999)
  • The Wedding Vows from Conversations With God (2000)
  • What God Wants (2005)
  • The Little Soul and the Earth (illustrated parable) (2005)
  • The Complete Conversations With God (first 3 books, Gift Edition) (2006)
  • Happier Than God: Turn Ordinary Life into an Extraordinary Experience (2008)
  • When Everything Changes, Change Everything: In A Time Of Turmoil, A Pathway To Peace (2009)
  • The Storm Before the Calm (2011)

2006 movie

A Conversations with God movie dramatizing the author's experience opened in theatres across USA on October 27, 2006. Walsch is played by Henry Czerny (Mission: Impossible, The Pink Panther) in the film.

The DVD version of the film was released on February 27, 2007.

References

  1. ^ Walsch, Neale Donald (Paperback). Conversations with God. ISBN 0399142789. 
  2. ^ Neale Donald Walsch on CNS's Larry King Live (April 7th, 2000)
  3. ^ 'Being at One': Neale Donald Walsch Interview with Gil Dekel, PhD (Part 1 of 3), Paragraph 16

External links


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