Conversations with God
Conversations with God is a sequence of books written by Neale Donald Walsch. It was written as a dialogue in which Walsch asks questions and God answers. The first book of the Conversations with God series, Conversations with God, Book 1: An Uncommon Dialogue, was published in 1995 and became a publishing phenomenon, staying on The New York Times Best Sellers List for 137 weeks.
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?" When Walsch turned around, he saw no one there, yet Walsch felt answers to his questions filling his mind and decided to write them down. The ensuing automatic writing became the Conversations with God books. When asked in a 2010 interview how he opens up to God, Neale stated, "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."
Basis of the dialogue
The series contains nearly three thousand pages of material. The second and third books in the trilogy deal with political and social issues.Themes
In Friendship with God, Walsch writes that God presents four concepts that are central to the entire dialogue:- We are all one.
- There's enough.
- There's nothing we have to do.
- Ours is not a better way, ours is merely another way.
According to the books, God recommends many economic and social changes if people want to make a more functional, adaptable, and sustainable world. The books recommend 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.In Walsch's viewpoint, this present creation 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 "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. Walsch claims that God says that we have a common interest in keeping the game going. 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 chosen. But within this, there are ways that people will gradually come to see their thoughts, words, and actions are either working or not working. A thing is either functional or dysfunctional, not right or wrong. These rememberings take place over "time" and can take hundreds and thousands of lifetimes.
Nature of the dialogue
- Book 1 argues that words are not the ultimate truth; instead, words are symbols and are open to interpretations. Thus the readers are advised to consult their inner knowing or intuition to determine their truth while reading the book or any other book. Though the books bear the title Conversations with God and the author states in book one that he is "taking dictation" from God, the dialogue is said to be between God and all people at all times. The question, according to Neale, is not to who does God talk, but who listens. This is clarified by the statement that God can communicate with people in many ways, and not necessarily through words 'spoken' by God to a person. "All these devices are mine. All these avenues are open to me. I will speak to you if you invite me.".
- Jesus is said to have sought to lead by example, which is why he said, "I am the way and the life, follow me". Follow me meant that we should follow his example and become one with God rather than become his followers. Jesus and other living things are/were not one with God presently. Jesus is supposed to have said, "The Father and I are one, and you are my brethren". This means that living things are all one .
- Jesus is said to have said, "without the Father, I am nothing". The Father of all is pure thought, the energy of life.
- In Book 3 of Conversations with God, by Neale Donald Walsch, it is mentioned that Mahavatar Babaji may at one time have resurrected himself from the dead, just like Lazarus, Jesus and other humans. When Neale asks God if reincarnation is a false doctrine, God replies that it is not. Neale then asks why some religions do not know the truth about something so basic. In response, God says that we must understand that humans have many fear-based religions whose teachings surround the doctrine of a God who is to be worshipped and feared. It was through fear that the entire Earth society reformed itself from a matriarchy into patriarchy.
- Through fear, the holy priests got people to mend their wicked ways and heed the word of the Lord. It was through fear that the churches gained and controlled their membership. Churches even insisted that God will punish you if you did not go to church every Sunday. Not going to church was declared a sin - and not just any church, it had to be a particular one.
- One had to attend one particular church. If you went to a church of a different denomination, that too was a sin. That was an attempt at control using fear. It worked. People will always believe in hell and a God who would send them there as long as we believe that God is like man — ruthless, self-serving, unforgiving, and vengeful.
Parallels in other belief systems
- All things are one, there is no polarity, no right or wrong, no disharmony, but only identity. All is one, and that one is love/light, light/love, the Infinite Creator.
- Souls reincarnate to eventually experience God-realization.
- Feelings are more important as a source of guidance than intellect.
- We are not here to learn anything new but to remember what we already know.
- Physical reality is an illusion.
- One cannot understand one thing unless he or she understands its opposite.
- God is everything.
- God is self-experiential, in that it is the nature of the Universe to experience itself.
- 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.
- Good and evil do not exist.
- Reality is a representation created by will.
- Nobody knowingly desires evil.
Complete title list of all CWG books
Dialogue Books series
The following are the ten books in the Conversations With God Dialogue Books series. Each of these books is a claimed transcript of dialogue between two beings, Neale Donald Walsch and "God", with the exception of Communion with God, which is written only by "God".- Conversations with God: An Uncommon Dialogue
- Conversations with God: An Uncommon Dialogue
- Conversations with God: An Uncommon Dialogue
- Friendship with God: An Uncommon Dialogue
- Communion With God: An Uncommon Dialogue
- Conversations with God for Teens
- The New Revelations: A Conversation with God
- Tomorrow's God: Our Greatest Spiritual Challenge
- Home with God: In a Life That Never Ends
- Conversations with God: Awaken the Species
The first three books in the series are often called the CwG trilogy. In 2005, the trilogy was re-released as one combined 'Gift Edition' book. This edition contains the entire text of the first three books with God's words in blue ink and Neale's in black ink, and features a combined 3-in-1 index at the back:
- ''The Complete Conversations with God''