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Visioning - Beckwith Interview

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Some of the key takeaways are that visioning is a process of tapping into one's inner wisdom and guidance from God to discover life purpose and direction. It relies on meditation, prayer, and surrender to divine will. Dr. Beckwith founded this approach at his Agape Church, where membership grew rapidly using visioning.

Visioning is a process of being open and receptive to divine guidance for life goals or projects. Dr. Beckwith discovered its power from his early spiritual experiences, and it evolved as a way to apply his insights. It is based on being available for God's plans rather than asking God for things.

Those without vision drift aimlessly, subject to outside influences, while those with vision understand their purpose and allow their divine nature to guide them. Visioning helps one discover their role as a revealer of love.

VISIONING

An Interview with Rev. Dr. Michael Beckwith


By Kathy Juline, This interview originally appeared in the December 1996 issue of
Science of Mind® magazine.

Each of us has the greatest gift imaginable—life—but all too often we can't imagine what
to do with it. We feel adrift and lost, yet long desperately for meaning. We want to make
our life count and to express the gifts of Spirit we know we are here to bring forth. But
we search in vain to discover just what these unique gifts of ours are and how we might
express them. We search in vain because we look outside ourselves. Perhaps we follow
someone's well-intended suggestion or a popular trend of the times. However, that kind
of reactive approach to seeking the right and best way to use the gift of life itself leaves
us feeling frustrated, confused, and more lost than ever. The Science of Mind philosophy
teaches that the way to our true path and to the successful expression of who we are is
through the use of our own spiritual sight, or inner vision. Dr. Ernest Holmes writes in
The Science of Mind that “as we bring ourselves to a greater vision, we induce a greater
concept and thereby demonstrate more in our experience. In this way there is a
continuous growth and unfoldment taking place.” Dr. Michael Beckwith teaches Holmes'
ideas, offering practical guidance and specific techniques. When deep meditation and
affirmative prayer combine in an attitude of receptivity and surrender, says Dr. Beckwith,
the result is a high state of consciousness in which we become instruments of God. This
approach to spiritual living that he calls visioning has been used with tremendous success
in the rapid growth of Agape Church of Religious Science and Center of Truth, which Dr.
Beckwith founded 10 years ago in Santa Monica, Calif. The dynamic power of visioning
as a way of discovering direction and clarity regarding life goals or a current project
comes from its reliance upon the inner knower, the deep self within each of us, always
available and ever responsive when we call upon it.

Science of Mind: You have used visioning at Agape Church with the result that your
membership has grown to 4000 in only 10 years, and many wonderful programs and
activities are being offered there. The results you have achieved using this approach are
truly astonishing. What exactly is visioning and how did you come to begin using it?

Beckwith: Visioning is a process by which we train ourselves to be able to hear, feel, see,
and catch God's plan for our life or for any particular project we're working on. An
organic process that has evolved for me as I grow spiritually, it is based on the idea that
we're not here to tell God what do or to ask God for things but to absolutely be available
for what God is already doing, to open ourselves up to catch what's already happening.
My initial discoveries more than 20 years ago on my spiritual path allowed me to see that
there is a bigger pattern of life, a level of reality beyond the mere human experiential life.
These awarenesses shifted my perception tremendously and the visioning process
developed as a way of applying that new insight.

How does a life based on visioning differ from one that is not?
A passage in Proverbs says, “Where there is no vision, the people perish.” People who
have no vision for their life are sleepwalking without a hint as to why they are here or
what their purpose is. They are drifting along on the currents of the culture's beliefs of the
day, whether those beliefs be good or bad. Actuarial tables tell us that so many people
will die at a certain age or that a certain number of accidents will occur. People who don't
have a vision and are not open to their purpose in life become these statistics. They are
the average men and women who live out the collective beliefs of society and seem to be
at the whim of forces outside themselves. But as spiritual beings made in the image and
likeness of pure Spirit, we are so much more than that. Each of us is a composite spiritual
idea containing every idea that infinite Mind has ever thought. When we begin to
understand our purpose for being here, which is to be a revealer of love, then we can start
to open ourselves up to God's vision for us and to discover our own unique way to deliver
that love, our individual mechanism by which we can express that love.

What is the difference between our purpose in life and our vision?

Our purpose for being on the planet simply is to be an emanation or an expression of


love. Anyone who has made a breakthrough into fourth-dimensional living or has had a
near-death experience or a mystical realization will know this. We're here to love—to
perfect, amplify, and express the unconditional divine love of God. That's our purpose.
God's vision for our life is the means or manner by which we bring forth that love. It's our
heart's desire, our own unique way of expressing the love. I like to call it our delivery
system. Whether that vision involves being a doctor or a teacher or whatever, it is the
way we fulfill our purpose of expressing love. We're multidimensional, multifaceted
beings, and there are many ways in which we express love, but each of us has a primary
vision to catch or open up to, and that is the particular delivery system which enables us
to serve our purpose of revealing love.

What happens to us as we open to the vision God has for our life and begin to live it?

We become less and less influenced by the popular or entrenched beliefs of a particular
society or culture, and we become much more available to Spirit. We become inspired by
the ideas held in the mind of God, and they begin to live and express through us. We
begin to be able to articulate them and to live and embody and reveal them. The feeling
we have is that we have come home. We are fulfilling our heart's desire, which is the
same thing, I believe, as God's will for us. God's will is for the greater expression of life,
of beauty, of everything that God is. Our heart's desire is generally about expressing
ourselves, allowing our latent talents, gifts, and abilities to become actualized. When we
express God's vision for our life, we feel fulfilled.

What is the difference between visioning and the technique of visualization?

Visualization is a beginning phase in metaphysics in which we mentally conceive of


something we want. We imagine doing it or having it and we generate the feelings that
would accompany the experience. Visualization involves having an idea of what we want
to accomplish or how we want to live our life, then imaging that goal as already achieved
and establishing the necessary mental and emotional vibrations to bring it forth and
manifest it. Visualization is a beautiful and wonderful stage in our evolution, and it's very
important. When we do visioning, on the other hand, we align in consciousness with our
divine purpose, which is to love and to express a greater degree of life. Then we open
ourselves to catch a sense of how that expression is supposed to occur through us.

What are the stages we go through in the visioning process?

Visioning always begins with a deep sense that we're surrounded by unconditional love.
We enter into the conscious awareness that we live, move, and have our being in this
unconditional love, and we open ourselves up to what that love feels like. I don't mean
just emotionally, though. The feeling tone we develop is of a spiritual nature, and this
feeling is the whole foundation of visioning. We then declare what it is we are doing the
visioning about. For example, we may ask, “How does God see Itself as my life?” We
then wait to inwardly hear, see, and catch what comes to us, what it looks like, what it
feels and sounds like, and we pay close attention to any symbols or metaphors that
appear. All of this is done without judgment. We are throwing ourselves open to
whatever comes up and we notice what begins to flow through so we can articulate it,
write it down, express it, dialogue about it, and be aware of how it feels, not just
emotionally but spiritually. In this way we can begin to articulate God's vision for our
life.

You seem to be saying that willingness to make the necessary changes is an important
factor in the success of the visioning process.

Absolutely. Once we begin to be able to get God's vision for our life, and are feeling and
sensing it, we ask the question: “What is it that I have to embody or become in order for
this vision to manifest?” As we listen inwardly in a meditative state, we begin to hear
from the deep levels of our being what we have to know, what we have to become, what
we have to embody and change. Then we write it down and dialogue about it. We know
metaphysically that we cannot have anything we are not willing to become. It's an
impossibility for us to have something in our life that is not aligned with our
consciousness. So we begin to get a picture of how we need to develop and grow and
unfold, of how we must change. Then we are ready to go on to the next stage, which is
affirmative prayer. We pray affirmatively not about how to accomplish the vision but
rather about the ways in which we need to grow. What qualities do we need to embody,
what things do we need to know, what do we need to change in our life, and how do we
need to unfold spiritually in order to bring forth the vision?

Why aren't the prayers directed toward bringing forth the vision itself?

The vision is already accomplished in the mind of God. It's already a complete idea in
Spirit, so we don't need to pray for its accomplishment. What we do need to pray for is to
be a willing and able vehicle or delivery system for the vision. Here's an example from
my own experience. When I first called everyone together who had said they wanted to
be involved in creating a church, we began doing the visioning process for Agape
Church. I instructed everyone to throw away all preconceived ideas of what church is and
to disregard their past experience of being in church, whether it was good or bad. We
started the visioning with a clean slate. We anchored in unconditional love and we threw
ourselves open to God's idea of Itself as the Agape Church. People began describing it in
a number of ways: It's unconditional love, it's multicultural, it's community. We began to
articulate the vision that was coming through to us. Then I asked what we each have to
become, know, or embody. What is the role each of us is to play? We all had prayer
partners and we prayed that each would embody the qualities that were needed. We didn't
even talk about the vision—that was unnecessary, because it was already held in the
Mind of God. But we do have to become willing and able to carry the vision, to express
it. At one point the church was growing, we were doing a visioning process, and some
people were a little nervous about the growth. Previously they had a little private church
for themselves, but now others were starting to come, just as we had visioned, and this
was making some members of the initial group uncomfortable. When I asked what we
have to know or become in order for the vision to manifest, many people said they had to
become more loving, more accepting, more responsive, and more willing to meet new
people. They realized they had to stop hanging out in their cliques and expand their circle
of friends. But throughout this process we didn't pray for the growth of the church—we
prayed for everyone to have open hearts, to be flexible and loving. So using the vision
process is always self-examination. It's never, “God, I want this. Make this happen.” It's
always, “What do I have to become to live the vision, to manifest it, to reveal it?” The
visioning process, then, is a process of transformation of the individual or of the group.

What other factors besides willingness are important?

First of all, let me emphasize that the person being prayed for must be willing to change
and grow. Whoever is doing affirmative prayer for that person must know and believe
that he or she is a divine emanation of God, and that God is divine Love revealing Itself
as whatever spiritual qualities are needed. The person's willingness to change and to
evolve spiritually, together with the prayer partner's affirmative prayer, create the synergy
that allows for outer manifestation to take place. The realized vision is simply an
outpicturing or a by-product of the spiritual growth and development of the people who
are involved. As a divine idea, Agape Church is a state of consciousness in which all of
us are growing, unfolding, and manifesting the vision—and it keeps changing. The
visioning process becomes more and more refined, and as we get greater clarity, we have
an easier time articulating what we have felt and sensed. We develop a deeper trust to
hang out in the vision, to let go rather than trying to make something happen.

So no matter what the visioning process focuses on, spiritual transformation of the
individual using it is the ultimate result?

Absolutely. Visioning is always for self-transformation. It's always to shift our perception
of reality. And this process goes on forever. We never reach a place where the process is
complete, because God's idea is infinite and it's always expressing. We just become
bigger and bigger places for it to express through. The prayer work that is part of
visioning allows for the invisible spiritual idea to be made visible through and as the
individuals involved. They literally become it, give it clothes, make it visible. And this
process goes on and on, because people keep becoming willing to be bigger, so there's no
stagnation. New ideas proliferate, and change is always going on. It's an organic growth
and transformation. For example, at Agape we're doing things now that we didn't do four
or five years ago, and the only thing we retain as a tradition is the visioning process itself.
We don't insist that something has to be done a certain way because that's how it was
done before. The visioning process keeps us all flexible and ready for change. We watch
the outer changes take place, while at the same time, we're always touching that
Something within us that doesn't change—the presence of God.

Does the practice of visioning help, then, to foster a mystical sense of Oneness?

Yes. When we do visioning, we become more aware that we are spiritual beings, made in
the likeness of God and not separate from God, and that all the divine ideas God has are
within us already. We learn consciously to shift our perceptions and lift our vibrations so
these ideas can express through us. Since visioning starts with the awareness that we are
unified with God already, this process encourages a mystical awareness, that absolute
sense of the undissolvable union with the presence of God. We develop a willingness to
become big enough for the expression of God, and enter into a mystical state of being.

What is happening when we seem to lose touch with our vision and to feel that we are
just drifting along?

This does happen, for several reasons. Sometimes it happens as part of the refinement
process, part of the transformational walk. As we shed our false concepts and ideas about
life and our false identities, then there is a feeling of being separate and adrift, because
the deeper dimension of our being has not yet emerged or we are not yet conscious of it.
So it feels as if we are out in the wilderness, in no-man's-land, and there's a sense of
barrenness and emptiness. But in the transformational process, that's good. We're
shedding, we're releasing, we're being purified. All promised lands are barren, all
promised lands have nothing there—because if they were clothed with something
already, they wouldn't be the promised land. That sense of barrenness or darkness just
means undeveloped capacity, something that has not yet been developed but is in the
process of developing so a deeper dimension of our being can emerge. As we do our
spiritual work, we go through these periods of darkness, of barrenness, of wilderness,
which is all part of refining and eliminating the false concepts and false identities.

Sometimes, though, we experience a sense of wilderness because we've gotten off the
path. We've been inundated by the limited beliefs of the world and have become
receptive to false ideas of reality that capture us and keep us in bondage. Thoreau said
that most people live lives of quiet desperation. These are people who are not in touch
with themselves. They don't know who they are spiritually, so they carry the quiet
desperation and existential dread of the average person, feeling out of touch and fearful.
To them the world seems unfriendly and nothing ever seems to go right. They clutch at
moments of happiness. That's the average person's experience, which goes up and down,
at random. People who live like this seek desperately to control the external world in
order to make themselves happy. But that's different from the sense of wilderness that a
person who is walking the spiritual path goes through. In this case a clear purging or
elimination of something is occurring so the deeper self can emerge. All spiritual growth,
100 percent of it, is about releasing or eliminating rather than attaining something,
because we're already It spiritually. We're in the process of releasing inhibitions,
limitation, false concepts, and all the other baggage that prevents our greater yet-to-be
self from expressing. So it's always a good sign on the path when we start to hit bottom.
Something's being dissolved, transformed, redeemed.

Is someone who has lost touch with the deeper self, who is experiencing quiet
desperation, ready in consciousness to begin doing the visioning process, or is there some
necessary preparation?

I believe that everyone's ready to do visioning, but it's helpful to start with a basic
understanding of Science of Mind or New Thought principles, in order to be able to trust
the process. If we've been involved with a spiritual tradition which teaches that there is
only one Power, then it's easier for us not to try to manipulate conditions or to make
something happen, because we have an inner awareness that there is already order in the
universe. We don't have to create some kind of order but can simply trust the order we
know already exists. People who have been on the path for a while tend to develop an
inner awareness that there is order. They realize they don't have to create it, and when
they release limiting beliefs or old ideas, they know they're not releasing them to greater
chaos but rather to a greater sense of order. People who don't have that spiritual
viewpoint, however, are usually feeling more comfortable trying to make something
happen than just letting themselves to open to God's will. So someone who still has the
false belief that God's will is other than magnificent and beautiful may need to build a
greater sense of trust before doing the visioning process.

For such a person, would the approach of visualization and manifestation be a good way
to start?

Yes. This is a very appropriate and effective way to begin. Basic Science of Mind
teachings are right there at whatever level we start on, as we embark on the spiritual path
and continue to develop ever higher levels of faith and trust. The visioning process,
which requires a high degree of trust, is the logical evolution or deepening of the Science
of Mind teaching. In Religious Science we've done an excellent job of teaching spiritual
principles, such as the Law of Cause and Effect and how visualization works—so much
so that the entire world knows these basic principles. Schoolchildren know them.
Businesspeople visualize the attainment of their goals, which is all to the good. But what
Science of Mind is now being called to do and to become as a teaching is to provide a
pathway for accessing the deeper dimensions of our being—not purely for manipulation,
not purely to make things happen to get things in our life, but as a greater expression of
our divinity. In formulating the Science of Mind teaching, Dr. Ernest Holmes correlated
mystical teachings from around the world, but in his day he had to focus primarily on
teaching the Law, because if he had started off talking about divine love and the
omnipresence of God, his philosophy would not have sounded any different from the
religious teachings prevalent at the time. His great gift has been to awaken us to the idea
that we are made in God's image, that God does not change, and that God is no respecter
of persons.

Are you saying that an understanding of the Law forms a foundation for a more mystical
approach to spirituality?

Yes. By emphasizing the Law in the beginning, the Science of Mind teaching has helped
us to realize that we can stop trying to use the Law and now start allowing the Presence to
use us. Dr. Holmes said that if he could do it all over again, he would emphasize love
more, but I believe he did what was right at the time he lived. He compiled the mystical
teachings, yet emphasized Law because that was the emphasis needed at that time. He did
his job so well, and we as metaphysicians have done our job so well, that everyone knows
about using the Law of Attraction and the Law of Cause and Effect. They know about
visualizing and treasure mapping. These techniques are used all over the place, not only
in churches. Years ago it was all secretive and occult, but now kids do it in school. Pat
Riley used it with the Lakers when he played a film of their highlights for them over and
over again so they could establish in their minds a sense of doing great things on the
basketball court. Visioning, however, is for a higher purpose. Visioning lets the presence
of God use us, which is what all the great mystics who have walked the planet have done.
They haven't walked around telling God what to do or what they wanted. They came here
to glorify God. It's the difference between saying, “There's a power for good in the
universe, and I can use it,” and saying, “There's a power that can use me.” The latter
statement suggests allowing ourselves to be available to the deeper levels of this Spirit
that is everywhere and that is always expressing through and as each of us. We know we
can't be destroyed, we know God's will is for good, and we know a greater order, better
than we can imagine, is going to emerge, so we let God.

Do you believe the use of visioning as a spiritual practice can make a difference in the
world?

Absolutely. When even one individual is true to his or her vision, it assists in liberating
everyone. When even one individual neutralizes or requalifies the thought forms of
separation and lack and limitation that run rampant in human experience, he or she
creates a spiritual vortex that allows others to be pulled into that same vibration. Jesus
said, “If I be lifted up, I draw all men unto me.” Because he attained and embodied a high
level of consciousness, then it became possible for other people to have the same
realizations that he had. Whoever touches that spiritual realm has a tendency to lift
everyone else up. Whoever has the ability and the willingness to become very still and
catch a vision will create an opening for others. When Jesus said, “Greater things than
these shall you do,” he was telling us this. Ernest Holmes said, “If we could stand aside
and let this one perfect Life flow through us, we could not help healing people! This is
the highest form of healing. We have gone through many abstract processes of reasoning
and found out what the Law is and how it works. Now we can forget all about the Law
and know there is nothing but the word—the Law will be working automatically. We
must forget everything else and let our word be spoken with a deep inner realization of
love, beauty, peace, poise, power, and of the great presence of Life at the point of our
own consciousness.” Whoever uses the visioning process in this way lifts us all, because
it is a technique that allows us to realize we're at one with God, at one with the love that
is everywhere. There are only divine ideas in the universe, whole, perfect, complete
ideas. All we have to do is be receptive to these ideas, and then to expand our willingness
to be at one with them, releasing anything within us that prevents them from expressing
through us. When we align ourselves with divine ideas of joy, harmony, love, and
wisdom, they uniquely express through us. The visioning process allows God to reveal
Itself through us in infinite ways. We become a living embodiment of God's ideas if we
let God work through us. It's our reason for being here. In periods of meditation we catch
the spirit of the living God, which is everywhere in its wholeness. Each of us represents
the totality of God and has the capacity to know that. With every greater increase in our
awareness, we have more freedom and more creativity, because we know who we are.

© 2001 United Church of Religious Science. All rights reserved.

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