|
GRIEVE......................5
|
in which to sigh and grieve and die in honor of | T 20 G 11 T(754)577 |
toys, my children. Do not grieve for them. Their dancing never | T 30 E 4 T(1028)842 |
state for him. No-one can grieve nor fear nor think him | W 152 L 1 W(321) |
those who suffer pain, or grieve for loss, or think they | W 245 L 1 W(489) |
are happily provided. Who can grieve or suffer, when the present | W 314 L 1 W(565) |
|
GRIEVED.....................1
|
you think of him who grieved you, let your mind be | W 78 L 7 W(155) |
|
GRIEVES.....................1
|
not part of me. What grieves is not myself. What is | W 248 L 1 W(492) |
|
GRIEVOUS....................1
|
death. And sickness, suffering and grievous loss become the lot of | S 3 E 5 S(26) |
|
GRIM........................10
|
slow procession that honors their grim master, lord of death? Touch | T 19 I 2 T(721)545 |
funeral, no dark altars, no grim commandments, nor twisted rituals of | T 19 J 7 T(723)547 |
to cease. And all this grim determination was for this: YOU | T 24 G 11 T(858)677 |
which can look beyond these grim appearances, and can behold the | W 151 L 11 W(318) |
madness in a form so grim that hope of sanity seems | W 153 L 4 W(324) |
darkness holds the world in grim imprisonment. Nor will you learn | W 153 L 11 W(326) |
an outside world. Let this grim sword be taken from you | M 18 A 9 M(47) |
walls, no bodies, and the grim appeal of guilt and death | U 5 A 7 U(9) |
sometimes together and sometimes in grim succession. Yet all these things | P 3 E 3 P(9) |
all this is but the grim refusal to forgive. God may | P 3 G 1 P(14) |
|
GRIMLY......................1
|
accepts. This it will follow, grimly or happily, but ALWAYS with | T 21 D 2 T(772)594 |
|
GRIMNESS....................1
|
to obscure the sun. The grimness of the symbol is enough | M 28 A 3 M(64) |
|
GRIP........................4
|
hold of great intensity, and grip the mind with terror and | W 138 L 8 W(301) |
nor ending in the ever-tightening grip of imprisonment upon the mind | W 153 L 3 W(324) |
sacrifice who feel its iron grip upon your heart. | W 153 L 4 W(324) |
in which terror seems to grip your mind so wholly that | W 196 L 10 W(440) |
|
GROPE.......................2
|
is not my will to grope about in darkness, fearful of | W 87 L 2 W(170) |
Without its kindly light we grope in darkness, using reason but | W 192 L 7 W(426) |
|
GROPED......................1
|
understand what freedom IS. You groped but feebly in the dust | T 20 D 10 T(743)567 |
|
GROSS.......................1
|
has touched your sight with gross distortions that the world thinks | G 1 A 5 G(2) |
|
GROSSLY.....................1
|
side, everything you see is grossly distorted, and COMPLETELY out of | T 16 G 6 T(623)- 450 |
|
GROTESQUE...................3
|
shift from loveliness to the grotesque. And back and forth they | T 18 J 8 T(691)515 |
of mad illusions. The more grotesque the dream, the fiercer and | M 5 G 1 M(14) |
be but guilts shadow, grotesque and ugly since it mimics | P 3 E 2 P(9) |
|
GROUND......................33
|
emphasis on Feet on the ground and fingertips in the Heaven | T 1 B 37t T(32)32 |
which were ALWAYS on shaky ground. You can check this against | T 1 B 37u T(33)33 |
my feet are on the ground and my hands are in | T 1 B 40ab T(43)43 |
and are laid in the ground, and seem to be no | T 11 J 2 T(480)307 |
stand with me on holy ground. Remember for everyone your Father | T 14 B 10 T(542)- 369 |
perfect love. Here is holy ground, in which no substitutes can | T 18 B 7 T(661)488 |
and shine upon the barren ground. See how life springs up | T 18 I 9 T(687)511 |
the Holy Spirit prepare the ground for the most holy garden | T 19 B 14 T(698)522 |
that there IS no middle ground where you can pause uncertainly | T 22 C 8 T(803)623 |
sanity, with feet on solid ground, and through a world where | T 23 C 14 T(829)648 |
the principles which makes the ground beneath your feet seem solid | T 23 C 14 T(829)648 |
YOU protect. Here is the ground of battle which you wage | T 24 B 9 T(841)660 |
love, and stand upon the ground where sin has left a | T 26 E 3 T(910)729 |
stand no longer on the ground that lies between the worlds | T 26 F 12 T(916)742 |
for an ancient hate? The ground whereon you stand is holy | T 26 J 2 T(928)754 |
whereon you stand is holy ground BECAUSE of Them Who, standing | T 26 J 2 T(928)754 |
and flowers on the barren ground which hate had scorched and | T 26 J 3 T(928)754 |
And now you stand on ground so holy Heaven leans to | T 26 J 3 T(928)754 |
to join Them on the ground whereon you stand. T | T 26 J 4 T(929)755 |
and walk upon an alien ground which your Creator did not | T 28 F 3 T(982)808 |
and the truth? A middle ground, where you can be a | T 28 F 3 T(982)808 |
opposite? There is no middle ground, in ANY aspect of salvation | T 28 H 2 T(987)813 |
feet have touched the holy ground whereon you stand, and where | T 29 C 4 T(994)820 |
than the stones upon the ground, and look to idols that | T 29 J 1 T(1012)826 |
using the idea on the ground that you are not sure | W 27 L 1 W(46) |
we begin again on solid ground. Do not forget how little | W 110 R3 12 W(230) |
leaves before you on the ground, that you may walk in | W 156 L 4 W(337) |
s vision is the holy ground in which the lilies of | W 159 L 8 W(345) |
down with foreheads to the ground, they whisper fearfully that it | W 163 L 5 W(357) |
the angels to surround the ground on which you stand, and | W 182 L 2 W(391) |
Child shall go is holy ground. It is His holiness that | W 183 L 4 W(394) |
or dash us to the ground in hopelessness. | W 186 L 8 W(407) |
Let it but leave the ground where it begins to rise | S 1 F 1 S(10) |
|
GROUNDLESS..................1
|
associated with miracles becomes entirely groundless. The Crucifixion did NOT establish | T 3 C 1 T(132)131 |
|
GROUNDS.....................27
|
this on the wholly spurious grounds that it makes you seem | T 6 C 3 T(278)C 105 |
course FOR knowing, on the grounds that you do not know | T 8 A 1 T(346)C 173 |
Simply on the grounds of your own experience with | T 8 C 2 T(349)C 176 |
or becomes unsatisfying, on the grounds of DISillusionment. T 16 | T 16 E 3 T(612)439 |
Can YOUR mistake be reasonable grounds for depression and disillusionment, and | T 19 H 4 T(718)542 |
YOUR mistake will GIVE you grounds for faith. | T 19 H 4 T(718)542 |
make your strange alliances, on grounds that have no meaning. For | T 23 B 3 T(821)640 |
sets apart, but serves as grounds from which attack on those | T 24 B 4 T(839)658 |
that hopefullness IS warranted, on grounds that are NOT in this | T 25 C 3 T(868)687 |
what has ALWAYS failed on grounds that it will suddenly succeed | T 25 C 3 T(868)687 |
Spirits perception leaves no GROUNDS for an attack. Only a | T 25 J 4 T(898)717 |
and deprived, and thus with grounds for vengeance. Problem SOLVING can | T 25 J 4 T(898)717 |
of healing, and the lasting grounds for hell. If this were | T 26 H 5 T(919)745 |
nor bad nor good. No grounds are offered that it may | T 27 B 8 T(937)763 |
that the damaged HAVE no grounds for peace. Who has been | T 27 C 1 T(938)764 |
Their helplessness and weakness represent grounds on which they justify his | T 27 C 9 T(940)766 |
And we will see the grounds for laughter, NOT a cause | T 27 I 5 T(963)789 |
Where is the grounds for sickness, when the minds | T 28 D 5 T(977)- 803 |
cannot BE coercion here, nor grounds for opposition that you may | T 30 B 10 T(1019)833 |
on others, on the fallacious grounds that they are more obvious | W 21 L 3 W(36) |
completely undependable, and offers no grounds for trust. Nothing in madness | W 53 L 3 W(96) |
has failed, there is still grounds for hope in other places | W 71 L 3 W(134) |
on this. If I see grounds for grievances in this, I | W 86 L 6 W(169) |
I will not see the grounds for my salvation. This calls | W 86 L 6 W(169) |
be true, forgiveness has no grounds on which to rest dependably | W 126 L 5 W(256) |
our assignment on the specious grounds that modesty is outraged. It | W 186 L 3 W(406) |
loving God, nor re-establish any grounds for trust. If death is | M 28 A 4 M(64) |
|
GROUNDWORK..................1
|
If he is laying the groundwork for a future life, he | M 25 A 2 M(58) |
|
GROUP.......................3
|
to an elect and special group, and kept APART from others | T 25 J 6 T(899)718 |
an instant, break apart to group again, and scamper off. Or | W 186 L 9 W(408) |
C 2. In this group, first, there are the forms | S 2 C 2 S(15) |