The Split Between Truth and Illusion
One of the most difficult challenges for students of A Course in Miracles (ACIM) is learning to live in two awarenesses at once: the eternal truth that only spirit is real, and the daily illusion of bodies, sickness, and needs. ACIM tells us, “The world you see is an illusion of a world. God did not create it, for what He creates must be eternal.” Yet this illusory world feels very real to us. Our minds are split — one part remembers the truth of God’s Oneness, while another part is caught in the ego’s dream of separation.
Living with this split mind means we cannot ignore the appearances of the world altogether. Even as we practice forgiveness and learn to see with Christ’s vision, we still eat food, drive cars, pay bills, and, when necessary, consult doctors and take medicine. This apparent contradiction can be unsettling: If the Course teaches that sickness is an illusion, why do we continue to treat it with the tools of the illusion?
The Course itself anticipates this question. It compassionately reminds us that while we remain in the dream, our brothers — friends, family, physicians, caregivers — still believe in the dream as real. And love, not arrogance, must be our response.
“Do What Your Brother Asks”
The phrase “Do what your brother asks” comes from A Course in Miracles, Text, Chapter 2, Section IV, “The Separation and the Atonement.” Jesus says:
“Do not refuse to give help to your brother when he asks for it, for his need is your own. If you do not recognize his need, you will not recognize yours. By refusing to help, you will only strengthen the need in both of you. Do what he asks of you, because it is what you are asking of yourself. If you do not help him, you will not hear the answer to your own asking.” (T-2.V.A.12:5-9)
This passage shows that what we do in form matters not because the form is real, but because it becomes a channel of love. When my brother asks for something — whether it is reassurance, companionship, or even that I take my medication — my act of compliance is not about validating illusion but about extending love and meeting him where he believes he is.
Medicine as Magic
ACIM makes a startling claim about medicine: it calls it a form of magic. In the Text, we read:
“All material means that you accept as remedies for bodily ills are restatements of magic principles. This is the first step in believing that the body makes its own illness. It is a second misstep to attempt to heal it through non-creative agents. It does not follow, however, that the use of such agents is evil. Sometimes the illness has a sufficiently strong hold over the mind to render a person temporarily inaccessible to the Atonement. In this case it may be wise to utilize a compromise approach, which both reduces fear and promotes healing.” (T-2.IV.4:1-6)
Here Jesus acknowledges that medicine is not true healing. True healing is of the mind, through forgiveness and the acceptance of the Atonement. Yet He also recognizes our fear. The mind so deeply identifies with the body that to ignore its cries would create more fear, not less. Thus, medicine — while still an illusion — can serve a gentle purpose: it reduces fear and creates the conditions in which the mind can be more open to true healing.
So when we take our pills, undergo surgery, or follow medical advice, we need not feel guilty for resorting to “magic.” We are not betraying the Course. Rather, we are practicing kindness. We are making a concession to our brother — to the part of the split mind that still believes in bodies — so that we can keep fear at bay and continue our practice of forgiveness.
A Concession to Our Brother
Think of a loved one — a spouse, a child, a physician — urging you to take your medicine. If you were to refuse, insisting that sickness is an illusion, what would happen? Fear and conflict would rise. Your loved one would feel unheard or abandoned, and you would risk strengthening both your ego and theirs through a display of spiritual superiority.
But if you lovingly agree, saying in effect, “I understand this matters to you, and I will do it,” then peace is preserved. You are not affirming the reality of the illness; you are affirming the reality of love.
This is what ACIM means when it tells us to “Do what your brother asks.” It is not about validating illusion but about extending kindness. To take your medicine becomes, in this sense, an act of forgiveness. It acknowledges that while you know the body is unreal, you also honor the current level of belief shared by those around you. This is not weakness but strength, for it demonstrates love.
The Split Mind and Practical Compassion
The Course teaches that the mind is split between the ego and the Holy Spirit. The ego insists the body is real, vulnerable, and in need of constant care. The Holy Spirit whispers that only the mind can be sick and only forgiveness can heal.
Both voices seem to speak to us, and until we have fully awakened, we live with this tension. Pretending the body does not matter when we still believe it does is dishonest. Ignoring the concerns of our brothers is unkind. The wiser path is to recognize the illusion, remember that its only purpose is forgiveness, and then use the form — even medicine — as a way to extend peace.
Thus, I take my medicine not because I believe it has ultimate power, but because I choose to remove unnecessary fear and to walk gently with my brothers. My action says, “I love you enough to meet you where you believe you are.”
Illusion Used for Healing
ACIM does not ask us to deny our experience but to reinterpret it. Medicine, while magic, can be reinterpreted as a classroom in forgiveness. When I take a pill, I can say silently, “This medicine does not heal me. Only God heals. Yet I take it as an act of peace, to reduce fear and to honor the request of my brother.”
This is how illusion can serve truth. A body is not real, but it can be used by the Holy Spirit as a communication device. Medicine is not real, but it can be used by the Holy Spirit as a symbol of care. Relationships themselves are illusions of separation, yet they are the very means through which the Atonement is remembered.
In every case, form is secondary. The content — love — is what matters.
Scriptural Parallels
This principle has echoes in Scripture. Paul, writing to the Corinthians, said: “Though I am free and belong to no one, I have made myself a slave to everyone, to win as many as possible” (1 Corinthians 9:19). Paul knew freedom in Christ, yet he conformed outwardly to the needs of those he served so as not to create stumbling blocks.
Similarly, Jesus healed with words and touch, though He knew the body itself was nothing. He met people where they believed they were. His miracles were symbols, teaching aids, not ends in themselves. ACIM continues this same spirit: we live in the illusion, but we do not fight against it. We use it gently until we are ready to let it go altogether.
The Gentle Path
The ego often tempts students of the Course to practice “spiritual arrogance.” It whispers, “If you were truly advanced, you would never need medicine. You would never listen to doctors. You would never comply with illusions.” But this is the ego masquerading as Spirit. The Course reminds us that gentleness is the way.
“The miracle is a sign of love among equals. Equals should not be in awe of one another, because awe implies inequality. It is therefore an inappropriate reaction to me. An elder brother is entitled to respect for his greater experience, and obedience for his greater wisdom. He is also entitled to love because he is a brother, and to devotion if he is devoted.” (T-1.II.3:1-5)
If even Jesus, our elder brother, approaches us with gentleness and patience, how much more should we approach one another the same way? To do what our brother asks is to walk gently, not arrogantly, through the dream.
Living the Balance
So how do we live this balance in daily life? We might think of it in these steps:
- Remember truth. Begin each day with the affirmation: “I am as God created me. Nothing real can be threatened. Nothing unreal exists.” This anchors you in Spirit.
- Acknowledge illusion. Recognize that bodies, medicine, and sickness are not real, but do not deny your experience.
- Choose love. When a brother asks you to take medicine, follow advice, or seek help, see this as an opportunity to extend kindness.
- Release guilt. Do not feel guilty for using medicine or medical care. Instead, reinterpret the act as a gesture of love.
- Practice forgiveness. Each moment you comply with love becomes a moment to forgive the illusion and remember the truth behind it.
The Higher Purpose of Obedience
At first glance, “Do what your brother asks” may seem like an instruction to surrender to illusion. In truth, it is the opposite. It is an invitation to surrender to love.
When I follow my physician’s advice, when I take my medication, when I honor the concerns of friends and relatives, I am not affirming the body. I am affirming the relationship. I am affirming peace. I am affirming that my brother’s comfort matters, even within the dream.
Medicine may be magic, but when used without fear and with the Holy Spirit’s reinterpretation, it becomes a stepping stone to truth. It buys us time, calms our minds, and creates space for forgiveness. And forgiveness is the only healing that matters.
In the end, the body will pass, the medicine will lose its meaning, and the illusion will fade. But the love expressed in every small act of kindness — in every concession to a brother’s request — will remain. For love is eternal, and only love is real.
“Do what your brother asks of you, because it is what you are asking of yourself. If you do not help him, you will not hear the answer to your own asking.” (T-2.V.A.12:8-9)
This is the wisdom of the Course: love always guides us to meet one another where we are, even in illusion, until the day comes when the dream is no more.
Robert@dinojamesbooks.com