![]() ![]() ![]() The atheist Schucman continued to have intellectual problems with her channeling activity, problems complicated by the apparent source of the material she was receiving -the biblical Jesus Christ. Over the next seven years she also received the material for a 478-page Workbook and 88-page teacher's Manual. That very evening she began receiving what was to become a 622-page textbook, the heart of the Course. Tetford, and he encouraged her to follow her inner instructions. Please take notes." She confided this experience with a colleague, William N. Then one day, the voice said, "This is a course in miracles. In spite of having adopted a secular atheist perspective earlier in her life, Schucman began to have visionary experiences and to hear an inner voice. Helen Schucman (1910-1981), the assistant to the head of the Department of Psychology at Presbyterian Hospital in New York City, and an associate professor of psychology at Columbia University's College of Physicians and Surgeons. The material in ACIM was received quietly over eight years (1965-1973) by Dr. By the end of the twentieth century, more than a million copies had been published. A Course in Miracles (ACIM), published in 1975, emerged as the most successful channeled work to be produced in the English-speaking world in the last half of the twentieth century. ![]()
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