1. Spiritual Consciousness
#126: 1955 Kailua Study Group 17 (no specific side cited)
#107-1: 1955 Chicago Private Class 1:1
#601-1: 1951 Second Portland Series 1:1
2. Demonstrate God
#126: 1955 Kailua Study Group 17 (no specific side cited)
#65-1: 1954 Honolulu Lecture Series 1:1
#65-2: 1954 Honolulu Lecture Series 1:2
#107: 1955 Chicago Private Class 1 (no specific side cited)
#130-132: 1955 Seattle Private Class (no specific class cited)
3. God, the Only Power
1955 May Letter
1955 March Letter
#65-2: 1954 Honolulu Lecture Series 1:2
#107 – 109: 1955 Chicago Private Class (no specific class cited)
4. The Infinite Nature of Individual Being
#19-2: 1952 Honolulu Closed Class 6:2
#19-1: 1952 Honolulu Closed Class 6:1
#20: 1952 Honolulu Closed Class 2 (no specific side cited)
#116-1: 1955 Kailua Study Group 7:1
#617-2: 1952 Second Seattle Closed Class 1:2
#617-1: 1952 Second Seattle Closed Class 1:1
5. Love Thy Neighbor
#620-1: 1953 Second New York Closed Class 1:1
#620-2: 1953 Second New York Closed Class 1:2
#108: 1955 Chicago Private Class 2 (no specific side cited)
#125: 1955 Kailua Study Group 16 (no specific side cited)
#17: 1952 Honolulu Closed Class 4 (no specific side cited)
#15-1: 1952 Honolulu Closed Class 2:1
#617-2: 1952 Second Seattle Closed Class 1:2
#618-2: 1952 Second Seattle Closed Class 2:2
6. To Him That Hath
#126-1: 1955 Kailua Study Group 17:1
#126-2: 1955 Kailua Study Group 17:2
#116-2: 1955 Kailua Study Group 7:2
#107: 1955 Chicago Private Class 1 (no specific side cited)
1955 March Letter
#622: 1953 Second New York Closed Class 3 (no specific side cited)
#130: 1955 Seattle Private Class 1 (no specific side cited)
7. Meditation
#108-1: 1955 Chicago Private Class 2:1
#130-2: 1955 Seattle Private Class 1:2
#132-2: 1955 Seattle Private Class 3:2
#86-2: 1954 Honolulu Closed Class 4:2
8. The Rhythm of God
#146-1: 1956 First Steinway Hall Closed Class 3:1
#157-2: 1956 Chicago Open Class 2:2
#169-1: 1956 Portland Open Class 2:1
9. A Moment of Christhood
#41-2: 1953 First Portland Class 5:2
10. The Vision to Behold
#198-1: 1957 Second Halekou Closed Class 6:1
#198-2: 1957 Second Halekou Closed Class 6:2
Practicing the Presence is one of the four foundational books among Joel Goldsmith’s Infinite Way writings. Goldsmith recommended that new students begin with this book, together with Living the Infinite Way. Practicing the Presence is a celebrated guide to the awareness of the divine and transcendental in our daily lives. Goldsmith writes that it was during one of his periods of contemplation that the words came to him, “Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on thee.” This surprised him, because at that time he was little acquainted with the Bible and only occasionally went to church. But through the study of Scripture and the practice of its teachings, Goldsmith realized that a Presence was with him, counseling, sustaining, and leading him into greater spiritual awareness. Following that realization, he traveled throughout the world, teaching others to know this Presence.
Goldsmith says, “Every person who has known dissatisfaction, incompleteness, and frustration will someday learn that there is only one missing link in this entire chain of harmonious living. That is the practice of the presence of God – consciously, daily and hourly, abiding in some great spiritual truth of scripture, and it makes no difference which scripture: Christian, Hebrew, Hindu, Buddhist, Taoist, or Muslim.” If we begin with practicing the presence of God, it leads to an inner stillness that makes it possible to meditate. Goldsmith sets forth for the reader how to practice the presence from the moment we awaken to the moment we retire for sleep.
To Goldsmith, harmonious living is all a matter of consciousness. When we have the right consciousness, we do not want things, but we express the very things which formerly we sought. So, instead of a change of circumstances, what the seeker needs is a change of consciousness. Practicing the Presence helps the seeker make that change by opening consciousness to the life by grace. In clear and direct language, Goldsmith shows that by constantly and consciously practicing the presence of God in every experience of our daily life, the struggles of existence pass and harmony is established in every department of our lives. “Seek neither health, nor wealth, nor fame, nor fortune,” the author writes. “Seek first the realization of this inner kingdom and be a beholder as these outer things are added.”