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THE
INCOMING
O
dull, gray grub, unsightly and noisome, unable to roam,
Days pass, God's at work, the slow chemistry's
going on,
Behold! Behold!
O brilliant, buoyant life, full winged, all the heaven's
thy home!
O poor, mean man, stumbling and falling, e'en shamed by a clod.
Years pass, God's at work, spiritual awakening
has come,
Behold! Behold!
O regal, royal soul, then image, now the likeness of God.
The
Master Teacher, he who appeals most strongly and comes nearest to us of this
western civilization, has told us that the whole and the highest duty of man
is comprised in two great, two simple precepts—- love to God and love to
the fellow-man. The latter we have already fully considered. We have found
that in its real and true meaning it is not a mere indefinite or sentimental
abstraction, but that it is a vital, living force; and in its manifestation
it is life, it is action, it is service. Let us now for a moment to the
other,—love to God, which in great measure however let it be said, has
been considered in dealing with love to the fellow-man. Let us see, however,
what it in its true and full nature reveals.
The
question naturally arising at the outset is, Who, what is God? I think no
truer, sublimer definition has ever been given in the world's history, in
any language, in any clime, than that given by the Master himself when
standing by the side of Jacob's well, to the Samaritan woman he said, God is
Spirit; and they that worship Him must worship Him in spirit and in truth.
God is Spirit, the Infinite Spirit, the Infinite Life back of all these
physical manifestations we see in this changing world about us, and of which
all, including we ourselves, is the body or outer form; the one Infinite
Spirit which fills all the universe with Himself, so that all is He, since
He is all. All is He in the sense of being a part of Him; for, if He is all,
there can be nothing that is outside of, that is not a part of Him, so that
each one is a part of this Eternal God who is not separate from us, and, if
not separate from us, then not afar off, for in Him we live and move and
have our being, He is the life of our life, our very life itself. The
life of God is in us, we are in the life of God; but that life transcends us
so that it includes all else,—every person, every animal, every
grass-blade, every flower, every particle of earth, every particle of
everything, animate and inanimate. So that God is All; and, if all,
then each individual, you and I, must be a vital part of that all, since
there can be nothing separate from it; and, if a part, then the same in
nature, in characteristics,—the same as a tumbler of water taken from the
ocean is, in nature, in qualities, in characteristics, identical with that
ocean, its source. God, then, is the Infinite Spirit of which each one is a
part in the form of an individualized spirit. God is Spirit, creating,
manifesting, ruling through the agency of great spiritual laws and forces
that surround us on every side, that run through all the universe, and that
unite all; for in one sense, there is nothing in all this great universe but
law. And, oh, the stupendous grandeur of it all! These same great spiritual
laws and forces operate within us. They are the laws of our being. By them
every act of each individual life is governed.
Now
one of the great facts borne ever more and more into the inner consciousness
of man is that sublime and transcendent fact that we have just
noticed,—that man is one with, that he is part of, the Infinite God, this
Infinite Spirit that is the life of all, this Infinite Whole; that he is not
a mere physical, material being,—for the physical is but the material
which the real inner self, the real life or spirit uses to manifest
through,—but that he is this spirit, this spirit, using, living in
this physical, material house or body to get the contact, the experience
with the material world around him while in this form of life, but spirit
nevertheless, and spirit now as much as he ever will or ever can be, except
so far of course, as he recognizes more and more his true, his higher self,
and so consciously evolves, step by step, into the higher and ever higher
realization of the real nature, the real self, the God-self. As I heard it
said by one of the world's great thinkers and writers but a few days ago:
Men talk of having a soul. I have no soul. I am a soul: I have a body. We
are told moreover in the word, that man is created in the image of God. God
is Spirit. What then must man be, if that which tells us is true?
Now
one of the great errors all along in the past has been that we have mistaken
the mere body, the mere house in which we live while in this form of life
for a period,—that which comes from the earth and which, in a greater or
less time, returns to the earth,—this we have mistaken for the real self.
Either we have lost sight of or we have failed to recognize the true
identity. The result is that we are at life from the wrong side, from the
side of the external, while all true life is from within out.
We
have taken our lives out of a conscious harmony with the higher laws of our
being, with the result that we are going against the great current of the
Divine Order of things. Is it any wonder, then, that we find the
strugglings, the inharmonies, the sufferings, the fears, the forebodings,
the fallings by the wayside, the "strange, inscrutable dispensations of
Providence" that we behold on every side? The moment we bring our lives
into harmony with the higher laws of our being, and, as a result, into
harmony with the current of the Divine Order of things, we shall find that
all these will have taken wings; for the cause will have been removed. And
as we look down the long vista of such a life, we shall find that each thing
fits into all others with a wonderful, a sublime, a perfect, a divine
harmony.
This,
it will seem to some,—and to many, no doubt,—is claiming a great deal.
No more, however, than the Master Teacher warranted us in claiming when he
said, and repeated it so often, Seek ye first the kingdom of heaven, and all
these other things shall be added unto you; and he left us not in the dark
as to exactly what he meant by the kingdom of heaven, for again he said: Say
not, Lo here, nor lo there. Know ye not that the kingdom of heaven is within
you? Within you. The interior spiritual kingdom, the kingdom of the
higher self, which is the kingdom of God; the kingdom of harmony,—harmony
with the higher laws of your being.
The
Master said what he said not for the sake merely of using a phrase of
rhetoric, nor even to hear himself talk; for this he never did. But that
great incarnation of spiritual insight and power knew of the great spiritual
laws and forces under which we live, and also that supreme fact of the
universe, that man is a spiritual being, born to have dominion, and
that, by recognizing the true self and by bringing it into complete and
perfect harmony with the higher spiritual laws and forces under which he
lives, he can touch these laws and forces so that they will respond at every
call and bring him whatsoever he wills,—one of the most stupendous
scientific facts of the universe. When he has found and entered into the
kingdom, then applies to him the truth of the great precept, Take ye no
thought for the morrow; for the things of the morrow will take care of
themselves.
Yes,
we are at life from the wrong side. We have been giving all time and
attention to the mere physical, the material, the external, the mere outward
means of expression and the things that pertain thereto, thus missing the
real life; and this we have called living, and seem, indeed, to be satisfied
with the results. No wonder the cry has gone out again and again from many a
human soul, Is life worth the living? But from one who has once commenced to
live, this cry never has, nor can it ever come; for, when the
kingdom is once found, life then ceases to be a plodding, and becomes an
exultation, an ecstasy, a joy. Yes, you will find that all the evil, all
the error, all the disease, all the suffering, all the fears, all the
forebodings of life, are on the side of the physical, the material, the
transient; while all the peace, all the joy, all the happiness, all the
growth, all the life, all the rich, exulting, abounding life, is on the side
of the spiritual, the ever-increasing, the eternal,—that that never
changes, that has no end. Instead of crying out against the destiny of fate,
let us cry out against the destiny of self, or rather against the destiny of
the mistaken self; for everything that comes to us comes through causes
which we ourselves or those before us have set into operation. Nothing comes
by chance, for in all the wide universe there is absolutely no such thing
as chance. We bring whatever comes. Are we not satisfied with the
effects, the results? The thing then to do, is to change the causes; for we
have everything in our own hands the moment we awake to a recognition of the
true self.
We
make our own heaven or our own hell, and the only heaven or hell that will
ever be ours is that of our own making. The order of the universe is one
thing: we take our lives out of harmony with and so pervert the laws under
which we live, and make it another. The order is the all good. We pervert
the laws, and what we call evil is the result,—simply the result of the
violation of law; and we then wonder that a just and loving God could permit
such and such things. We wonder at what we term the "strange,
inscrutable dispensations of Providence," when all is of our own
making. We can be our own best friends or we can be our own worst enemies;
and the only real enemy one can ever have is the self, the very self.
It
is a well-known fact in the scientific world that the great work in the
process of evolution is the gradual advancing from the lower to the higher,
from the coarser to the finer, or, in other words, from the coarser material
to the finer spiritual; and this higher spiritualization of life is the
great work before us all. All pass ultimately over the same road in general,
some more rapidly, some more slowly. The ultimate destiny of all is the
higher life, the finding of the higher self; and to this we are either led
or we are pushed,—led, by recognizing and coming into harmony with the
higher laws of our being, or pushed, through their violation, and hence
through experience, through suffering, and at times through bitter
suffering, until through this very agency we learn the laws and come into
harmony with them, so that we thus see the economy, the blessedness of even
error, shame, and suffering itself, in that, if we are not wise enough to go
voluntarily and of our own accord, it all the more quickly brings us to our
true, our higher selves.
Moreover,
whatever is evolved must as surely first be involved. We cannot conceive
even of an evolution without first an involution; and, if this is true, we
cannot conclude otherwise than that all that will ever be brought forth
through the process of evolution is already within, all the God
possibilities of the human soul are now, at this very moment, latent within.
This being true, the process of evolution need not, as is many times
supposed, take æons or even ages for its accomplishment; for the process is
wonderfully accelerated when we have grasped and when we have commenced to
actualize the reality of that mighty precept, Know thyself.
It
is possible, through an intelligent understanding of the laws of the higher
life, to advance in the spiritual awakening and unfoldment even in a single
year more than one otherwise would through a whole lifetime, or more in a
single day or even hour than in an entire year or series of years otherwise.
This
higher spiritualization of life is certainly what the Master had in mind
when he said, It is as hard for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of
heaven as it is for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle. For, if a
man give all his days and his nights merely to the accumulation of outer
material possessions, what time has he for the growing, the unfolding, of
the interior, the spiritual, what time for finding that wonderful kingdom,
the kingdom of heaven, the Christ within?
This
certainly is also the significance of the temptation in the wilderness. The
temptations were all, you will recall, in connection with the material, the
physical, and the things that pertain thereto. Do so and so, said the
physical: follow after me, and I will give you bread in abundance, I will
give you great fame and notoriety, I will give you vast material
possessions. All, you see, a calling away from the real, the interior, the
spiritual, the eternal. Dominion over all the kingdoms of the world
was promised. But what, what is dominion overall the world, with heaven left
out?
All,
however, was triumphed over. The physical was put into subjection by the
spiritual, the victory was gained once for all and forever; and he became
the supreme and royal Master, and by this complete and glorious mastery of
self he gained the mastery over all else besides, even to material things
and conditions.
And
by this higher spiritual chemicalization of life thus set into operation the
very thought forces of his mind became charged with a living, mighty, and
omnipotent power, so as to effect a mastery over all exterior conditions:
hence the numerous things called miracles by those who witnessed and who had
not entered into a knowledge of the higher laws that can triumph over and
master the lower, but which are just as real and as natural on their plane
as the lower, and even more real and more natural, because higher and
therefore more enduring. But this complete mastery over self during this
period of temptation was just the beginning of the path that led from glory
unto glory, the path that for you and for me will lead from glory unto glory
the same as for him.
It
was this new divine and spiritual chemistry of life thus set into operation
that transformed the man Jesus, that royal-hearted elder brother, into the
Christ Jesus, and forever blessed be his name; for he thus became our
Saviour,—he became our Saviour by virtue of pointing out to us the way.
This overcoming by the calling of the higher spiritual forces into operation
is certainly what he meant when he said, I have overcome the world, and what
he would have us understand when he says, Overcome the world, even as I have
overcome it.
And
in the same sense we are all the saviors one of another, or may become so. A
sudden emergency arises, and I stand faltering and weak with fear. My friend
beside me is strong and fearless. He sees the emergency. He summons up all
the latent powers within him, and springs forth to meet it. This sublime
example arouses me, calls my latent powers into activity, when but for him I
might not have known them there. I follow his example. I now know my powers,
and know them forever after. Thus, in this, my friend has become my savior.
I
am weak in some point of character,—vacillating, yielding, stumbling,
falling, continually eating the bitter fruit of it all. My friend is strong,
he has gained thorough self-mastery. The majesty and beauty of power are
upon his brow. I see his example, I love his life, I am influenced by his
power. My soul longs and cries out for the same. A supreme effort of
will—that imperial master that will take one anywhere when rightly
directed—arises within me, it is born at last, and it calls all the soul's
latent powers into activity; and instead of stumbling I stand firm, instead
of giving over in weakness I stand firm and master, I enter into the joys of
full self-mastery, and through this into the mastery of all things besides.
And thus my friend has again become my savior.
With
the new power I have acquired through the example and influence of my
savior-friend, I, in turn, stand before a friend who is struggling, who is
stumbling and in despair. He sees, he feels, the power of my strength. He
longs for, his soul cries out for the same. His interior forces are
called into activity, he now knows his powers; and instead of the slave, he
becomes the master, and thus I, in turn, have become his savior. Oh, the
wonderful sense of sublimity, the mighty feelings of responsibility, the
deep sense of power and peace the recognition of this fact should bring to
each and all.
God
works through the instrumentality of human agency. Then forever away with
that old, shrivelling, weakening, dying, and devilish idea that we are poor
worms of the dust! We may or we may not be: it all depends upon the self.
The moment we believe we are we become such; and as long as we hold to the
belief we will be held to this identity, and will act and live as such. The
moment, however, we recognize our divinity, our higher, our God-selves, and
the fact that we are the saviors of our fellow-men, we become saviors, and
stand and move in the midst of a majesty and beauty and power that of itself
proclaims us as such.
*
* * * *
There
is a prevalent idea to the effect that overcoming in this sense necessarily
implies more or less of a giving up,—that it means something possibly on
the order of asceticism. On the contrary, the highest, truest, keenest
pleasures the human soul can know, it finds only after the higher is entered
upon and has commenced its work of mastery; and, instead of there being a
giving up of any kind, there is a great law which says that the lower always
and of its own accord falls away before the higher. And the time soon comes
when, as one stands and looks back, he wonders that this or that that he at
one time called pleasure ever satisfied him; for what then satisfied him,
compared to what now is his hourly peace, satisfaction, and joy, was but as
poor brass compared to the finest, purest, and rarest of gold.
From
what has been said let it not be inferred that the body, the physical,
material life is to be despised or looked down upon. This, rather let it be
said, is one of the crying errors of the times, and prolific of a vast
amount of error, suffering, and shame. On the contrary, it should be thought
all the more highly of: it should be loved and developed to its highest
perfections, beauties, and powers. God gave us the body not in vain. It is
just as holy and beautiful as the spirit itself. It is merely the outward
material manifestation of the individualized spirit; and we by our hourly
thoughts and emotions are building it, are determining its conditions, its
structure, and appearance. And, if there are any conditions we are not
satisfied with, we by an understanding of the laws, have it in our power to
make it over and change these conditions. Flamarion, the eminent French
scientist, member of the Royal Academy of Science, and recognized as one of
the most eminent scientists living, tells us that the entire human structure
can be made over within a period of less than one year, some eleven months
being the length of time required for the more compact and more set portions
to respond; while some portions respond much more readily within a period of
from two to three months, and some even within a month.
Every
part, every organ, every function of the body is just as clean, just as
beautiful, just as sweet, and just as holy as every other part; and it is
only by virtue of man's perverted ways of looking at some that they become
otherwise, and the moment they so become, abuses, ill uses, suffering, and
shame creep in.
Not
repression, but elevation. Would that this could be repeated a thousand
times over! Not repression, but elevation. Every part, every organ, every
function of the body is given for use, but not for misuse or abuse;
and the moment the latter takes place in connection with any function it
loses its higher powers of use, and there goes with this the higher powers
of true enjoyment. It is thus that we get that large class known as
abnormals, resorting to the methods they resort to for enjoyment, but which,
in its true sense, they always fail in finding, because law will admit of no
violations; and, if violated, it takes away the very powers of enjoyment, it
takes away the very things that through its violation they thought they had
secured, or it turns them into ashes in their very hands. God, nature, law,
the higher self, is not mocked.
Not
repression, but elevation,—repression only in the sense of mastery; but
this means—nay, this is—elevation. In other words, we should be the
master, and not the body. We should dictate to the body, and should never,
even for an instant, allow it to dictate to us.
Oh,
the thousands, the hundreds of thousands of men and women who are everywhere
being driven hither and thither, led into this and into that which their own
better selves would not enter into, simply because they have allowed the
body to assume the mastery; while they have taken the place of the weakling,
the slave, and all on account of their own weakness,—weakness through
ignorance, ignorance of the tremendous forces and powers within, the forces
and powers of the mind and spirit.
It
would be a right royal plan for those who are thus enslaved by the
body,—and we all are more or less, each in his own particular way, and not
one is absolutely free,—it would be a good plan to hold immediately, at
this very hour, a conversation with the body somewhat after this fashion:
Body, we have for some time been dwelling together. Life for neither has
been in the highest degree satisfactory. The cause is now apparent to me.
The mastery I have voluntarily handed over to you. You have not assumed it
of your own accord; but I have given it over to you little by little, and
just in the degree that you have appropriated it. Neither one is to blame.
It has been by virtue of ignorance. But henceforth we will reverse
positions. You shall become the servant, and I the master. From this time
forth you shall no longer dictate to me, but I will dictate to you.
I,
one with Infinite intelligence, wisdom, and power, longing for a fuller and
ever fuller realization of this oneness, will assume control, and will call
upon you to help in the fuller and ever fuller external manifestation of
this realization. We will thus regain the ground both of us have lost. We
will thus be truly married instead of farcically so. And thus we will help
each the other to a realization of the highest, most satisfying and most
enduring pleasures and joys, possibilities and powers, loves and
realizations, that human life can know; and so, hand in hand, we will help
each the other to the higher and ever-increasing life instead of degrading
each the other to the lower and ever-decreasing. I will become the imperial
master, and you the royal companion; and thus we will go forth to an ever
larger life of love and service, and so of true enjoyment.
This
conversation, if entered into in the spirit, accompanied by an earnest,
sincere desire for its fulfilment, re-enforced by the thought forces, and
continually attended by that absolute magnet of power, firm expectation,
will, if all are firmly and persistently held to, bring the full realization
of one's fondest desires with a certainty as absolute as that effect follows
cause. The higher self will invariably master when it truly and firmly
asserts itself. Much the same attitude can be assumed in connection with the
body in disease or in suffering with the same results. Forces can be set
into operation which will literally change and make over the diseased, the
abnormal portions, and in time transform them into the healthy, the strong,
the normal,—this when we once understand and vitally grasp the laws of
these mighty forces, and are brought to the full recognition of the absolute
control of mind, of spirit, over matter, and all, again let it be said, in
accordance with natural spiritual law.
No,
a knowledge of the spiritual realities of life prohibits asceticism,
repression, the same as it prohibits license and perverted use. To err on
the one side is just as contrary to the ideal life as to err on the other.
All things are for a purpose, all should be used and enjoyed; but all should
be rightly used, that they may be fully enjoyed.
It
is the threefold life and development that is wanted,—physical, mental,
spiritual. This gives the rounded life, and he or she who fails in any one
comes short of the perfect whole. The physical has its uses just the same
and is just as important as the others. The great secret of the highly
successful life is, however, to infuse the mental and the physical with the
spiritual; in other words, to spiritualize all, and so raise all to the
highest possibilities and powers.
It
is the all-round, fully developed we want,—not the ethereal, pale-blooded
man and woman, but the man and woman of flesh and blood, for action and
service here and now,—the man and woman strong and powerful, with all the
faculties and functions fully unfolded and used, all in a royal and bounding
condition, but all rightly subordinated. The man and the woman of this kind,
with the imperial hand of mastery upon all,—standing, moving thus like a
king, nay, like a very God,—such is the man and such is the woman of
power. Such is the ideal life: anything else is one-sided, and falls short
of it.
*
* * * *
The
most powerful agent in character-building is this awakening to the true
self, to the fact that man is a spiritual being,—nay, more, that I, this
very eternal I, am a spiritual being, right here and now, at this very
moment, with the God-powers which can be quickly called forth. With this
awakening, life in all its manifold relations becomes wonderfully
simplified. And as to the powers, the full realization of the fact that man
is a spiritual being and a living as such brings, they are absolutely
without limit, increasing in direct proportion as the higher self, the
God-self, assumes the mastery, and so as this higher spiritualization of
life goes on.
With
this awakening and realization one is brought at once en rapport with
the universe. He feels the power and the thrill of the life universal. He
goes out from his own little garden spot, and mingles with the great
universe; and the little perplexities, trials, and difficulties of life that
to-day so vex and annoy him, fall away of their own accord by reason of
their very insignificance. The intuitions become keener and ever more keen
and unerring in their guidance. There comes more and more the power of
reading men, so that no harm can come from this source. There comes more and
more the power of seeing into the future, so that more and more true becomes
the old adage,—that coming events cast their shadows before. Health in
time takes the place of disease; for all disease and its consequent
suffering is merely the result of the violation of law, either consciously
or unconsciously, either intentionally or unintentionally. There comes also
a spiritual power which, as it is sent out, is adequate for the healing of
others the same as in the days of old. The body becomes less gross and
heavy, finer in its texture and form, so that it serves far better and
responds far more readily to the higher impulses of the soul. Matter itself
in time responds to the action of these higher forces; and many things that
we are accustomed by reason of our limited vision to call miraculous or
supernatural become the normal, the natural, the every-day.
For
what, let us ask, is a miracle? Nothing more nor less than this: a highly
illumined soul, one who has brought his life into thorough harmony with the
higher spiritual laws and forces of his being, and therefore with those of
the universe, thus making it possible for the highest things to come to him,
has brought to him a law a little higher than the ordinary mind knows of as
yet. This he touches, he operates. It responds. The people see the result,
and cry out, Miracle! miracle! when it is just as natural, just as fully in
accordance with the law on this higher plane, as is the common, the
every-day on the ordinary. And let it be remembered that the miraculous, the
supernatural of to-day becomes, as in the process of evolution we leave the
lower for the higher, the commonplace, the natural, the every-day of
to-morrow; and, truly, miracles are being performed in the world to-day just
as much as they ever have been.
And
why should we not to-day have the powers of the foremost in the days of old?
The great universe in which we live is just the same, the great laws under
which we live are identically the same, God the same and working in His
world now just as then. The only difference we shall find is in ourselves,
in that we have taken our lives out of harmony with the higher laws of our
being, and consequently have lost the higher powers through not using them.
Mighty men we are told they were, mighty men who walked with God,—and in
the last clause lies the secret of the first,—- men who lived in the
spirit, men who followed after the real life instead of giving all time and
attention to the mere external, men who lived in the higher stories of their
being, and not continually in the basements.
With
here and there an exception we reverse the process. We live in the valleys,
so to speak, often disease-infected valleys, when we might mount up to the
mountain-tops, and there dwell continually in the warm and mellow sunlight
of God's, or if you please, of nature's great, unchangeable laws, and find
ourselves rising ever higher and higher, and revelations coming new every
day.
The
Master never claimed for himself anything that he did not claim for all
mankind; but, quite to the contrary, he said and continually repeated, Not
only shall ye do these things, but greater than these shall ye do; for I
have pointed out to you the way,—meaning, though strange as it evidently
seems to many, exactly what he said.
Of
the vital power of thought and the interior forces in moulding conditions,
and more, of the supremacy of thought over all conditions, the world has
scarcely the faintest grasp, not to say even idea, as yet. The fact that
thoughts are forces, and that through them we have creative power, is
one of the most vital facts of the universe, the most vital fact of man's
being. And through this instrumentality we have in our grasp and as our
rightful heritage, the power of making life and all its manifold conditions
exactly what we will.
Through
our thought-forces we have creative power, not in a figurative sense, but in
reality. Everything in the material universe about us had its origin first
in spirit, in thought, and from this it took its form. The very world in
which we live, with all its manifold wonders and sublime manifestations, is
the result of the energies of the divine intelligence or mind,—God, or
whatever term it comes convenient for each one to use. And God said, Let
there be, and there was,—the material world, at least the material
manifestation of it, literally spoken into existence, the spoken word,
however, but the outward manifestation of the interior forces of the Supreme
Intelligence.
Every
castle the world has ever seen was first an ideal in the architect's mind.
Every statue was first an ideal in the sculptor's mind. Every piece of
mechanism the world has ever known was first formed in the mind of the
inventor. Here it was given birth to. These same mind-forces then dictated
to and sent the energy into the hand that drew the model, and then again
dictated to and sent the energy into the hands whereby the first instrument
was clothed in the material form of metal or of wood. The lower negative
always gives way to the higher when made positive. Mind is positive: matter
is negative.
Each
individual life is a part of, and hence is one with, the Infinite Life; and
the highest intelligence and power belongs to each in just the degree that
he recognizes his oneness and lays claim to and uses it. The power of the
word is not merely an idle phrase or form of expression. It is a real
mental, spiritual, scientific fact, and can become vital and powerful in
your hands and in mine in just the degree that we understand the omnipotence
of the thought forces and raise all to the higher planes.
The
blind, the lame, the diseased, stood before the Christ, who said, Receive
thy sight, rise up and walk, or, be thou healed; and o! it was so.
The spoken word, however, was but the outward expression and manifestation
of his interior thought-forces, the power and potency of which he so
thoroughly knew. But the laws governing them are the same to-day as they
were then, and it lies in our power to use them the same as it lay in his.
Each
individual life, after it has reached a certain age or degree of
intelligence, lives in the midst of the surroundings or environments of its
own creation; and this by reason of that wonderful power, the drawing
power of mind, which is continually operating in every life, whether it
is conscious of it or not.
We
are all living, so to speak, in a vast ocean of thought. The very atmosphere
about us is charged with the thought-forces that are being continually sent
out. When the thought-forces leave the brain, they go out upon the
atmosphere, the subtle conducting ether, much the same as sound-waves go
out. It is by virtue of this law that thought transference is possible, and
has become an established scientific fact, by virtue of which a person can
so direct his thought-forces that a person at a distance, and in a receptive
attitude, can get the thought much the same as sound, for example, is
conducted through the agency of a connecting medium.
Even
though the thoughts as they leave a particular person, are not consciously
directed, they go out; and all may be influenced by them in a greater or
less degree, each one in proportion as he or she is more or less sensitively
organized, or in proportion as he or she is negative, and so open to forces
and influences from without. The law operating here is one with that great
law of the universe,—that like attracts like, so that one continually
attracts to himself forces and influences most akin to those of his own
life. And his own life is determined by the thoughts and emotions he
habitually entertains, for each is building his world from within. As
within, so without; cause, effect.
A
stalk of wheat and a stock of corn are growing side by side, within an inch
of each other. The soil is the same for both; but the wheat converts the
food it takes from the soil into wheat, the likeness of itself, while the
corn converts the food it takes from the same soil into corn, the likeness
of itself. What that which each has taken from the soil is converted into is
determined by the soul, the interior life, the interior forces of each. This
same grain taken as food by two persons will be converted into the body of a
criminal in the one case, and into the body of a saint in the other, each
after its kind; and its kind is determined by the inner life of each. And
what again determines the inner life of each? The thoughts and emotions that
are habitually entertained and that inevitably, sooner or later, manifest
themselves in outer material form. Thought is the great builder in human
life: it is the determining factor. Continually think thoughts that are
good, and your life will show forth in goodness, and your body in health and
beauty. Continually think evil thoughts, and your life will show forth in
evil, and your body in weakness and repulsiveness. Think thoughts of love,
and you will love and will be loved. Think thoughts of hatred, and you will
hate and will be hated. Each follows its kind.
It
is by virtue of this law that each person creates his own
"atmosphere"; and this atmosphere is determined by the character
of the thoughts he habitually entertains. It is, in fact, simply his thought
atmosphere—the atmosphere which other people detect and are influenced by.
In
this way each person creates the atmosphere of his own room; a family, the
atmosphere of the house in which they live, so that the moment you enter the
door you feel influences kindred to the thoughts and hence to the lives of
those who dwell there. You get a feeling of peace and harmony or a feeling
of disquietude and inharmony. You get a welcome, want-to-stay feeling or a
cold, want-to-get-away feeling, according to their thought attitude toward
you, even though but few words be spoken. So the characteristic mental
states of a congregation of people who assemble there determine the
atmosphere of any given assembly-place, church, or cathedral. Its
inhabitants so make, so determine the atmosphere of a particular village or
city. The sympathetic thoughts sent out by a vast amphitheatre of people, as
they cheer a contestant, carry him to goals he never could reach by his own
efforts alone. The same is true in regard to an orator and his audience.
Napoleon's
army is in the East. The plague is beginning to make inroads into its ranks.
Long lines of men are lying on cots and on the ground in an open space
adjoining the army. Fear has taken a vital hold of all, and the men are
continually being stricken. Look yonder, contrary to the earnest entreaties
of his officers, who tell him that such exposure will mean sure death,
Napoleon with a calm and dauntless look upon his face, with a firm and
defiant step, is coming through these plague-stricken ranks. He is going up
to, talking with, touching the men; and, as they see him, there goes up a
mighty shout,—The Emperor! the Emperor! and from that hour the plague in
its inroads is stopped. A marvellous example of the power of a man who, by
his own dauntless courage, absolute fearlessness, and power of mind, could
send out such forces that they in turn awakened kindred forces in the minds
of thousands of others, which in turn dominate their very bodies, so that
the plague, and even death itself, is driven from the field. One of the
grandest examples of a man of the most mighty and tremendous mind and will
power, and at the same time an example of one of the grandest failures,
taking life in its totality, the world has ever seen.
Again,
as has been said, the great law operating in connection with the
thought-forces is one with that great law of the universe,—that like
attracts like. We can, by virtue of our ignorance of the powers of the mind
forces and the prevailing mental states,—we can take the passive, the
negative, fearing, drifting attitude, and thus continually attract to us
like influences and conditions from both the seen and the unseen side of
life. Or, by a knowledge of the power and potency of these forces, we can
take the positive, the active attitude, that of mastery, and so attract the
higher and more valuable influences, exactly as we will to.
We
are all much more influenced by the thought-forces and mental states of
those around us and of the world at large than we have even the slightest
conception of. If not self-hypnotized into certain beliefs and practices, we
are, so to speak, semi-hypnotized through the influence of the thoughts of
others, even though unconsciously both on their part and on ours. We are so
influenced and enslaved in just the degree that we fail to recognize the
power and omnipotence of our own forces, and so become slaves to custom,
conventionality, the opinions of others, and so in like proportion lose our
own individuality and powers. He who in his own mind takes the attitude of
the slave, by the power of his own thoughts and the forces he thus attracts
to him, becomes the slave. He who in his own mind takes the attitude of the
master, by the same power of his own thoughts and the forces he thus
attracts to him, becomes the master. Each is building his world from within,
and, if outside forces play, it is because he allows them to play; and he
has it in his own power to determine whether these shall be positive,
uplifting, ennobling, strengthening, success-giving, or negative, degrading,
weakening, failure-bringing.
Nothing
is more subtle than thought, nothing more powerful, nothing more
irresistible in its operations, when rightly applied and held to with a
faith and fidelity that is unswerving,—a faith and fidelity that never
knows the neutralizing effects of doubt and fear. If one have aspirations
and a sincere desire for a higher and better condition, so far as
advantages, facilities, associates, or any surroundings or environments are
concerned, and if he continually send out his highest thought-forces for the
realization of these desires, and continually water these forces with firm
expectation as to their fulfilment, he will sooner or later find himself in
the realization of these desires, and all in accordance with natural laws
and forces.
Fear
brings its own fulfilment the same as hope. The same law operates, and if,
as our good and valued friend, Job, said when the darkest days were setting
in upon him,—that which I feared has come upon me,—was true, how much
more surely could he have brought about the opposite conditions, those he
would have desired, had he have had even the slightest realization of his
own powers, and had he acted the part of the master instead of that of the
servant, had he have dictated terms instead of being dictated to, and thus
suffering the consequences.
If
one finds himself in any particular condition, in the midst of any
surroundings or environments that are not desirable, that have nothing—at
least for any length of time—that is of value to him, for his highest life
and unfoldment, he has the remedy entirely within his own grasp the moment
he realizes the power and supremacy of the forces of the mind and spirit;
and, unless he intelligently use these forces, he drifts. Unless through
them he becomes master and dictates, he becomes the slave and is dictated
to, and so is driven hither and thither.
Earnest,
sincere desire, sincere aspiration for higher and better conditions or means
to realize them, the thought-forces actively sent out for their realization,
these continually watered by firm expectation without allowing the contrary,
neutralizing force of fear ever to enter in,—this, accompanied by rightly
directed work and activity, will bring about the fullest realization of
one's highest desires and aspirations with a certainty as absolute as that
effect follows cause. Each and every one of us can thus make for himself
ever higher and higher conditions, can attract ever and ever higher
influences, can realize an ever higher and higher ideal in life. These are
the forces that are within us, simply waiting to be recognized and
used,—the forces that we should infuse into and mould every-day life with.
The moment we vitally recognize them, they become our servants and wait upon
our bidding.
Are
you, for example, a young man or a young woman desiring a college, a
university education, or have you certain literary or artistic instincts
your soul longs the more fully to realize and actualize, and seems there no
way open for you to realize the fulfilment of your desires? But the power is
in your hands the moment you recognize it there. Begin at once to set the
right forces into operation. Put forth your ideal, which will begin to
clothe itself in material form, send out your thought-forces for its
realization, continually hold and add to them, always strongly but always
calmly, never allow the element of fear, which will keep the realization
just so much farther away, to enter in; but, on the contrary, continually
water with firm expectation all the forces thus set into operation. Do not
then sit and idly fold the hands, expecting to see all things drop into the
lap,—God feeds the sparrow, but he does not throw the food into its
nest,—but take hold of the first thing that offers itself for you to
do,—work in the fields, at the desk, saw wood, wash dishes, tend behind
the counter, or whatever it may be,—be faithful to the thing in hand,
always expecting something better, and know that this in hand is the thing
that will open to you the next higher, and this the next and the next; and
so realize that each thing thus taken hold of is but the agency that takes
you each time a step nearer the realization of your fondest ideals. You then
hold the key; and bolts that otherwise would remain immovable, by this
mighty force, will be thrown before you.
We
are born to be neither slaves nor beggars, but to dominion and to plenty.
This is our rightful heritage, if we will but recognize and lay claim to it.
Many a man and many a woman is to-day longing for conditions better and
higher than he or she is in, who might be using the same time now spent in
vain, indefinite, spasmodic longings, in putting into operation forces
which, accompanied by the right personal activity, would speedily bring the
fullest realization of his or her fondest dreams. The great universe is
filled with an abundance of all things, filled to overflowing. All there is,
is in her, waiting only for the touch of the right forces to cast them
forth. She is no respecter of persons outside of the fact that she always
responds to the demands of the man or the woman who knows and uses the
forces and powers he or she is endowed with. And to the demands of such she
always opens her treasure-house, for the supply is always equal to the
demand. All things are in the hands of him who knows they are there.
Of
all known forms of energy, thought is the most subtle, the most irresistible
force. It has always been operating; but, so far as the great masses of the
people are concerned, it has been operating blindly, or, rather, they have
been blind to its mighty power, except in the cases of a few here and there.
And these, as a consequence, have been our prophets, our seers, our sages,
our saviors, our men of great and mighty power. We are just beginning to
grasp the tremendous truth that there is a science of thought, and
that the laws governing it can be known and scientifically applied. The man
who understands and who appropriates this fact has literally all things
under his control. Heredity and its attendant circumstances and influences?
you ask. Most surely. The barriers which heredity builds, the same as those
environment erects, when the awakened interior forces are considered, are as
mud walls standing within the range of a Krupp gun: shattered and crumbled
they are when the tremendous force is applied.
Thought
needs direction to be effective, and upon this effective results depend as
much as upon the force itself. This brings us to the will. Will is not as is
so often thought, a force in itself; will is the directing power. Thought is
the force. Will gives direction. Thought scattered gives the weak, the
uncertain, the vacillating, the aspiring, but the never-doing, the
I-would-like-to, but the get-no-where, the attain-to-nothing man or woman.
Thought steadily directed by the will, gives the strong, the firm, the
never-yielding, the never-know-defeat man or woman, the man or woman who
uses the very difficulties and hindrances that would dishearten the ordinary
person, as stones with which he paves a way over which he triumphantly
walks, who, by the very force he carries with him, so neutralizes and
transmutes the very obstacles that would bar his way that they fall before
him, and in turn aid him on his way; the man or woman who, like the eagle,
uses the very contrary wind that would thwart his flight, that would turn
him and carry him in the opposite direction, as the very agency upon which
he mounts and mounts and mounts, until actually lost to the human eye, and
which, in addition to thus aiding him, brings to him an ever fuller
realization of his own powers, or in other words, an ever greater power.
It
is this that gives the man or the woman who in storm or in sunny weather,
rides over every obstacle, throws before him every barrier, and, as Browning
has said, finally "arrives." Take, for example, the successful
business man,—for it is all one, the law is the same in all cases,—the
man who started with nothing except his own interior equipments. He has made
up his mind to one thing,—success. This is his ideal. He thinks
success, he sees success. He refuses to see anything else. He expects
success: he thus attracts it to him, his thought-forces continually attract
to him every agency that makes for success. He has set up the current, so
that every wind that blows brings him success. He doesn't expect failure,
and so he doesn't invite it. He has no time, no energies, to waste in fears
or forebodings. He is dauntless, untiring, in his efforts. Let disaster come
to-day, and to-morrow—ay, even yet to-day—he is getting his bearings, he
is setting forces anew into operation; and these very forces are of more
value to him than the half million dollars of his neighbor who has suffered
from the same disaster. We speak of a man's failing in business, little
thinking that the real failure came long before, and that the final crash is
but the culmination, the outward visible manifestation, of the real failure
that occurred within possibly long ago. A man carries his success or his
failure with him: it is not dependent upon outside conditions.
Will
is the steady directing power: it is concentration. It is the pilot which,
after the vessel is started by the mighty force within, puts it on its right
course and keeps it true to that course, the pilot under whose control the
rudder is which brings the great ocean liner, even through storms and gales,
to an exact spot in the Liverpool port within a few minutes of its scheduled
time, and at times even upon the very minute. Will is the sun-glass which so
concentrates and so focuses the sun's rays that they quickly burn a hole
through the paper that is held before it. The same rays, not thus
concentrated, not thus focused, would fall upon the paper for days without
any effect whatever. Will is the means for the directing, the concentrating,
the focusing, of the thought-forces. Thought under wise direction,—this it
is that does the work, that brings results, that makes the successful
career. One object in mind which we never lose sight of; an ideal steadily
held before the mind, never lost sight of, never lowered, never swerved
from,—this, with persistence, determines all. Nothing can resist the power
of thought, when thus directed by will.
May
not this power, then, be used for base as well as for good purposes, for
selfish as well as for unselfish ends? The same with this
modification,—the more highly thought is spiritualized, the more subtle
and powerful it becomes; and the more highly spiritualized the life, the
farther is it removed from base, ignoble, selfish ends. But, even if it can
be thus used, let him who would so use it be careful, let him never forget
that that mighty, searching, omnipotent law of the right, of truth, of
justice, that runs through all the universe and that can never be annulled
or even for a moment set aside, will drive him to the wall, will crush him
with a terrific force if he so use it.
Let
him never forget that whatever he may get for self at the expense of some
one else, through deception, through misrepresentation, through the exercise
of the lower functions and powers, will by a law equally subtle, equally
powerful, be turned into ashes in his very hands. The honey he thinks he has
secured will be turned into bitterness as he attempts to eat it; the
beautiful fruit he thinks is his will be as wormwood as he tries to enjoy
it; the rose he has plucked will vanish, and he will find himself clutching
a handful of thorns, which will penetrate to the very quick and which will
flow the very life-blood from his hands. For through the violation of a
higher, an immutable law, though he may get this or that, the power of true
enjoyment will be taken away, and what he gets will become as a thorn in his
side: either this or it will sooner or later escape from his hands. God's
triumphal-car moves in a direction and at a rate that is certain and
absolute, and he who would oppose it or go contrary to it must fall and be
crushed beneath its wheels; and for him this crushing is necessary, in order
that it may bring him the more quickly to a knowledge of the higher laws, to
a realization of the higher self.
This
brings to our notice two orders of will, which we may term, for convenience'
sake, the human and the divine. The human will is the one just noticed, the
sense will, the will of the lower self, that which seeks its own ends
regardless of its connection with the greater whole. The divine will is the
will of the higher self, the god-self, that that never makes an error, that
never leads into difficulties. How attain to its realization? How call it
into a dominating activity? Through an awakening to and a living in the
higher, the god-self, thus making it one with God's will, one with the will
of infinite intelligence, infinite love, infinite wisdom, infinite power;
and when this is done, no mistakes can be made, any more than limits can be
set.
It
is thus that the Infinite Power works through and for us—true
inspiration—while our part is simply to see that our connection with this
power is consciously and perfectly kept. And, when we come to a knowledge of
the true nature, a knowledge of the true self, when we come to a conscious
realization of the fact that we are one with, a part of, this spirit of
infinite life, infinite love, infinite wisdom, infinite power, and infinite
plenty, do we not see that we lack for nothing, that all things are
ours? It is then ours to speak the word: desire induces and gives place to
realization. If you are intelligence, if you are power, if you are that
all-seeing, all-knowing, all-doing, all-loving, all-having, that eternal
self, that eternal one without beginning and without end, the same
yesterday, to-day, and forever, then all things are yours, and you
lack for nothing; and, when you come consciously to know and to live this
truth, then the whole of life for you is summed up in the one word realization.
The striving, the pulling, the running hither and thither to accomplish this
or that, that takes place on all planes of life below this highest plane,
gives place to this realization; and you and your desire become one.
And
what does this mean? Simply this: that you have found and have literally
entered into the kingdom of heaven, and heaven means harmony, so that you
have entered into the kingdom of harmony,—harmony or oneness with the
Infinite Life, the Infinite God. And do we not, then, clearly see the
rational and scientific basis for the injunction—seek ye first the kingdom
of heaven, and all these other things shall be added unto you? Than this
there is nothing in all the wide universe more scientific, nothing more
practical; and in the light of this can we not also see how readily follows
the injunction—Take ye no thought for the things of the morrow, for the
things of the morrow will take care of themselves? This realization gives
you that care-less attitude, free from care. The Infinite Power does the
work for you, and you are relieved of the responsibility. Your
responsibility lies in keeping yourself in a faithful and a never-failing
connection with this Infinite Source. Why, I know a few lives that have come
into such a conscious oneness with the Infinite Life, and who so continually
live in its realization, that all things that have just been said are absolutely
true in their cases. The solution of all things they thus put into the law,
so that, when the time comes, the difficulty is solved, the course is clear,
the way is opened, or the means are at hand. When one knows whereof he
speaks, of this he can speak with authority.
When
this realization comes, fear goes, hope attends, faith dominates,—the
faith of to-day which gives place to the realization of to-morrow. We then
have nothing to do with the past, nothing to do with the future; for the
whole of life is determined by the ever-present to-day. As my life to-day
has been determined by the way I lived my yesterday, so my to-morrow is
being determined by the way I live my to-day. Let me then live in this eternal
now, and realize that I am at this very moment living the eternal life
as much as I ever shall or can live it. I will then waste no time with the
past, except perhaps occasionally to give thanks that its then seeming
trials, sorrows, errors, and stumblings have brought me all the sooner into
harmony with the laws of the higher life. Let me waste no time with the
future, no time in idle dreaming, neither in fears nor forebodings, thus
inviting and opening the door for the entrance of their actualizations; but
rather let me, by the thoughts and so by the deeds of to-day, make the
future exactly what I will.
Every
act is preceded and given birth to by a thought, the act repeated forms the
habit, the habit determines the character, and character determines the
life, the destiny,—a most significant, a most tremendous truth: thought on
the one hand, life, destiny, on the other. And how simplified, when we
realize that it is merely the thought of the present hour, and the next when
it comes, and the next, and the next! so life, destiny, on the one hand, the
thoughts of the present hour, on the other. This is the secret of
character-building. How wonderfully simple, though what vigilance it
demands!
What,
shall we ask, is the place, what the value, of prayer? Prayer, as every act
of devotion, brings us into an ever greater conscious harmony with the
Infinite, the one pearl of great price; for it is this harmony which brings
all other things. Prayer is the soul's sincere desire, and thus is its own
answer, as the sincere desire made active and accompanied by faith sooner or
later gives place to realization; for faith is an invisible and
invincible magnet, and attracts to itself whatever it fervently desires and
calmly and persistently expects. This is absolute, and the results will
be absolute in exact proportion as this operation of the thought forces, as
this faith is absolute, and relative in exact proportion as it is relative.
The Master said, What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe
that ye receive them and ye shall have them. Can any law be more clearly
enunciated, can anything be more definite and more absolute than this?
According to thy faith be it unto thee. Do we at times fail in obtaining the
results we desire? The fault, the failure, lies not in the law but in
ourselves. Regarded in its right and true light, than prayer there is
nothing more scientific, nothing more valuable, nothing more effective.
This
conscious realization of oneness with the Infinite Life is of all things the
one thing to be desired; for, when this oneness is realized and lived in,
all other things follow in its train, there are no desires that shall not be
realized, for God has planted in the human breast no desire without its
corresponding means of realization. No harm can come nigh, nothing can touch
us, there will be nothing to fear; for we shall thus attract only the good.
And whatever changes time may bring, understanding the law, we shall always
expect something better, and thus set into operation the forces that will
attract that something, realizing that many times angels go out that
arch-angels may enter in; and this is always true in the case of the life of
this higher realization. And why should we have any fear whatever,—fear
even for the nation, as is many times expressed? God is behind His world, in
love and with infinite care and watchfulness working out his great and
almighty plans; and whatever plans men may devise, He will when the time is
ripe either frustrate and shatter, or aid and push through to their most
perfect culmination,—frustrate and shatter if contrary to, aid and
actualize if in harmony with His.
It
will readily be seen what a power the life that is fully awake, that fully
grasps and uses the great forces of its own interior self, can be in the
service of mankind. One with these forces highly spiritualized will not have
to go here and there to do the greatest service for mankind. Such a one can
sit in his cabin, in his tent, in his own home, or, as he goes here and
there, he can continually send out influences of the most potent and
powerful nature,—influences that will have their effect, that will do
their work, and that will reach to the uttermost parts of the world. Than
this there can be no more valuable, more vital service, nor one of a higher
nature.
These
facts, the facts relating to the powers that come with the higher awakening,
have been dealt with somewhat fully, to show that the matters along the
lines of man's interior, intuitive, spiritual, thought, soul life, instead
of being, as they are so many times regarded, merely indefinite,
sentimental, or impractical, are, on the contrary, powerfully, omnipotently
real, and are of all practical things in the world the most practical, and,
in the truest and deepest sense, the only truly practical things there are.
And pre-eminently is this true when we look with a long range of vision,
past the mere to-day, to the final outcome, to the time when that transition
we are accustomed to call death takes place, and all accumulations and
possessions material are left behind, and the soul takes with it only the
unfoldment and growth of the real life; and unless it has this, when all
else must be left behind, it goes out poor indeed. And a most wonderful and
beautiful fact of it all is this: that all growth, all advancement, all
attainment made along the lines of the spiritual, the soul, the real life,
is so much made forever, and can never be lost. Hence the great fact in the
admonition, Lay not up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth doth
corrupt and where thieves break through and steal; but lay up for yourselves
treasures in heaven,—the interior, spiritual kingdom,—where neither moth
doth corrupt nor where thieves break through and steal.
What
then, again let us ask, is love to God? It is far more, we have found, than
a mere sentimental abstraction. It is this awakening to the higher, the
god-self, a coming into the conscious realization of the fact that your life
is one with, is a part of, the Infinite Life, the full realization of the
fact that you are a spiritual being here and now, at this very moment, and a
living as such. It is being true to the light that lighteth every man that
cometh into the world, and so a finding of the Christ within; a realization
of the fact that God is the life of your life, and so not afar off; a
realization of a oneness so perfect that you are able to say, as did His
other son, "I and my Father are one"—the ultimate destiny of
each human soul, each of the Father's children, for all, no matter what
differences man may see, are equal in His sight; and He created not one in
vain. So love to God in its true expression is not a mere sentimentality, a
mere abstraction: it is life, it is growth, it is spiritual awakening and
unfoldment, it is realization. Again, it is life: it is the more abundant
life.
Then
recognize this fact, and so fill your life with an intense, a passionate
love for God. Then take this life, so rich, so abundant, and so powerful,
and lose it in the love and service of your fellow-men, the Father's other
children. Fill it with an intense, a passionate love for service; and when
this shall have been done, your life is in complete harmony with all the law
and the prophets, in complete harmony with the two great and determining
facts of human life and destiny,—love to God and love to one's
fellow-men,—the two eternal principles upon which the great universal
religion, which is slowly and gradually evolving out an almost endless
variety and form, is to rest. Do this, and feel once for all the power and
the thrill of the life universal. Do this, and find yourself coming into the
full realization of such splendors and beauties as all the royal courts of
this world combined have never been able even to dream of.
When
the step from the personal to the impersonal, from the personal, the
individual, to the universal, is once made, the great solution of life has
come; and by this same step one enters at once into the realm of all power.
When this is done, and one fully realizes the fact that the greatest life is
the life spent in the service of all mankind, and then when he vitally
grasps that great eternal principle of right, of truth, of justice, that
runs through all the universe, and which, though temporarily it may seem to
be perverted, always and with never an exception eventually prevails, and
that with an omnipotent power,—he then holds the key to all situations.
A
king of this nature goes about his work absolutely regardless of what men
may say or hear or think or do; for he himself has absolutely nothing to
gain or nothing to lose, and nothing of this nature can come near him or
touch him, for he is standing not in the personal, but in the universal. He
is then in God's work, and the very God-powers are his, and it seems as if
the very angels of heaven come to minister unto him and to move things his
way; and this is true, very true, for he himself is simply moving God's way,
and when this is so, the certainty of the outcome is absolute.
How
often did the Master say, "I seek not to do mine own will, but the will
of the Father who sent me"! Here is the world's great example of the
life out of the personal and in the universal, hence his great power. The
same has been true of all the saviors, the prophets, the seers, the sages,
and the leaders in the world's history, of all of truly great and lasting
power.
He
who would then come into the secret of power must come from the personal
into the universal, and with this comes not only great power, but also
freedom from the vexations and perplexities that rise from the misconstruing
of motives, the opinions of others; for such a one cares nothing as to what
men may say, or hear, or think, or do, so long as he is true to the great
principles of right and truth before him. And, if we will search carefully,
we shall find that practically all the perplexities and difficulties of life
have their origin on the side of the personal.
Much
is said to young men to-day about success in life,—success generally
though, as the world calls success. It is well, however, always to bear in
mind the fact that there is a success which is a miserable, a deplorable
failure; while, on the other hand, there is a failure which is a grand, a
noble, a God-like success. And one crying need of the age is that young men
be taught the true dignity, nobility, and power of such a failure,—such a
failure in the eyes of the world to-day, but such a success in the eyes of
God and the coming ages. When this is done, there will be among us more
prophets, more saviors, more men of grand and noble stature, who with a firm
and steady hand will hold the lighted torch of true advancement high up
among the people; and they will be those whom the people will gladly follow,
for they will be those who will speak and move with authority, true sons of
God, true brothers of men. A man may make his millions and his life be a
failure still.
*
* * * *
The
promise was given that our conversation should not be extended; and unless
we conclude it now, the promise will not be kept. Our aim at the outset, you
will remember, was to find answer to the question—How can I make life
yield its fullest and best? how can I know the true secret of power? how can
I attain to true greatness? how can I fill the whole of life with a
happiness, a peace, a joy, a satisfaction, that is ever rich and abiding,
that ever increases, never diminishes?
Two
great laws come forward: the one, that we find our own lives in losing them
in the service of others,—love to the fellow-man; the other, that all life
is one with, is part of, the Infinite Life, that we are not material, but
spiritual beings,—spiritual beings here and now, and a living as such,
which brings us in turn to a realization of the higher, the god-self, thus
bringing us into the realm of all peace, all power, and all plenty,—this
is love to God.
And
I wonder now if we have found the answer true and satisfactory. We have sat
at the feet of the Master Teacher, and he has told us that we have. We have
found that through them, and through them alone, true greatness,
power, and success can come; that through them comes the richest joy, the
greatest peace and satisfaction this world can know. We have also found
that, if one's desire is to make life narrow, pinched, and of little value,
to rob it of its chief charms, the only requirement necessary is to become
self-centred, to live continually with the little, stunted self, which will
inevitably grow more and more diminutive and shrivelled as time passes,
instead of reaching out and having a part in the great life of humanity,
thus illimitably intensifying and multiplying his own. For each act of
humble service is that divine touching of the ground which enables one to
get the spring whereby he leaps to ever greater heights. We have found that
a recognition of these two laws enables one to grow and develop the fullest
and richest life here, and that they are the two gates whereby all who would
must enter the kingdom of heaven.
Around
this great and sweet-incensed altar of love, service, and self-devotion to
God and the fellow-man, can and do all mankind bow and worship. To it can
all religions and creeds subscribe: it is the universal religion.
Then
become at one with God, as did His other son, through the awakening to the
real self and by living continually in this the higher, the god-self. Become
at one with humanity, as did His other son, by bringing your life into
harmony with this great, immutable law of love and service and
self-devotion, and so feel once for all the power and the thrill of the life
universal.
Yours
will then be a life the greatest, the grandest, the most joyous this world
can know; for you will indeed be living the Christ-life, the life that is
beyond compare, the life to which all the world stretches out its eager
palms, and innumerable companies will rise up and call you blessed, and give
thanks that such a life is the rich heritage of the world. The song
continually arising from your lips will then be, There is joy, only joy; for
we are all one with the Infinite Life, all parts of the one great whole, and
the Spirit of Infinite Goodness and Love is ever ruling over all.
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