Great thinkers challenge us not so much by what they have thought as by the "still unknown" to which their thinking points. If we are to meet their challenge, then we too must turn toward that "still unknown" and, through our new thinking and our acceptance of their thought, bring a portion of the unknown into the light of common knowledge.
Ernest Holmes was such a thinker. He articulated clearly, in the language of his time, a cosmology based on the foundation of great thinkers and mystics before him. His basic theory of how the Universe works, which we are calling in our present studies Core Concepts, has proved to be enduring, spiritually empowering, and practical. It was Holmes's deepest desire that students of this teaching practice its principles in their dailyThis is our vast legacy from Ernest Holmes-this wonderful structure of concepts which he researched through the religions and philosophies of human history , sometimes correlating his findings with the then-emerging "new" physics. He named the teaching a science because he believed that its principles were scientifically provable in practice. But he knew and continually reiterated that the practice must be activated and empowered by an individual consciousness of the all-pervading Loving Presence within and 'round about.
He organized these basic concepts into a clear and simple system of thought, a way of life, which can be followed by anyone who takes the trouble to understand, embody, and practice it. From this enduring base, we can adventure into infinity and never get lost in space.
It is our purpose in the outline which follows to summarize the "top ten" of these concepts in concise modern terms, documented by references to Holmes's writings. The outline is based on the premise that the "universal Principles" to which we as metaphysicians continually refer are actually One Cosmic Reality Principle and Presence, which has been called God. In Its Infinite Inclusiveness, the One encompasses
many contributory Spiritual Laws and Principles. It will be noted that some concepts integral to the Science of Mind are not mentioned here. Our purpose has been to delineate only the ten foundational ideas.
This statement, originally written by Ernest Holmes as "What I Believe," was published in the first issue of Science of Mind Magazine, October 1927.
Or Download the Core Concepts here:
Concept 1 Concept 2 Concept 3 Concept 4 Concept 5 Concept 6 Concept 7 Concept 8 Concept 9 Concept 10