 In the world comes the development of trust. One has to develop trust in the Holy Spirit. One has to develop a trust in the unseen as being actually the reality of things, to follow that, to lay aside the investment in the world. Without the development of trust, the belief in sacrifice clicks in because it's a very very deep cornerstone of the ego's thought system. And that belief is so deep that it's perceived as the sacrifice to give up the things or the valuing of the world, the ordering and the judgment, the hierarchy of illusions. So the mind really has to have some confidence that there's something else that's going toward before it's willing to let loose of what it knows. If we try to even throw a definition of sacrifice out, we go back to the teacher's manual, around 32, page 32 and 33 or so, what is the real meaning of sacrifice? Then we get that sacrifice always means the giving up of what you want and what, oh holy child of God, do you want? The question comes up in kind of a rhetorical, kind of a sarcastic sense, is it a sacrifice to give up pain?