The world is filled with men and women
seeking pleasure, excitement, novelty; seeking ever
to be moved to laughter or tears; not seeking strength,
stability, and power; but courting weakness, and eagerly
engaged in dispersing what power they have.
Men and women of real power and influence
are few, because few are prepared to make the sacrifice
necessary to the acquirement of power, and fewer still
are ready to patiently build up character.
To be swayed by your fluctuating thoughts
and impulses is to be weak and powerless; to rightly
control and direct those forces is to be strong and
powerful. Men of strong animal passions have much
of the ferocity of the beast, but this is not power.
The elements of power are there; but it is only when
this ferocity is tamed and subdued by the higher intelligence
that real power begins; and men can only grow in power
by awakening themselves to higher and ever higher
states of intelligence and consciousness.
The difference between a man of weakness
and one of power lies not in the strength of the personal
will (for the stubborn man is usually weak and foolish),
but in that focus of consciousness which represents
their states of knowledge.
The pleasure-seekers, the lovers of
excitement, the hunters after novelty, and the victims
of impulse and hysterical emotion lack that knowledge
of principles which gives balance, stability, and
influence.
A man commences to develop power when,
checking his impulses and selfish inclinations, he
falls back upon the higher and calmer consciousness
within him, and begins to steady himself upon a principle.
The realization of unchanging principles in consciousness
is at once the source and secret of the highest power.
When, after much searching, and suffering,
and sacrificing, the light of an eternal principle
dawns upon the soul, a divine calm ensues and joy
unspeakable gladdens the heart.
He who has realized such a principle
ceases to wander, and remains poised and self-possessed.
He ceases to be “passion’s slave,”
and becomes a master-builder in the Temple of Destiny.
The man that is governed by self,
and not by a principle, changes his front when his
selfish comforts are threatened. Deeply intent
upon defending and guarding his own interests, he
regards all means as lawful that will subserve that
end. He is continually scheming as to how he may
protect himself against his enemies, being too self-centered
to perceive that he is his own enemy. Such a
man’s work crumbles away, for it is divorced
from Truth and power. All effort that is grounded
upon self, perishes; only that work endures that is
built upon an indestructible principle.
The man that stands upon a principle
is the same calm, dauntless, self-possessed man under
all circumstances. When the hour of trial comes,
and he has to decide between his personal comforts
and Truth, he gives up his comforts and remains firm.
Even the prospect of torture and death cannot alter
or deter him. The man of self regards the loss
of his wealth, his comforts, or his life as the greatest
calamities which can befall him. The man of principle
looks upon these incidents as comparatively insignificant,
and not to be weighed with loss of character, loss
of Truth. To desert Truth is, to him, the only
happening which can really be called a calamity.
It is the hour of crisis which decides
who are the minions of darkness, and who the children
of Light. It is the epoch of threatening disaster,
ruin, and persecution which divides the sheep from
the goats, and reveals to the reverential gaze of
succeeding ages the men and women of power.
It is easy for a man, so long as he
is left in the enjoyment of his possessions, to persuade
himself that he believes in and adheres to the principles
of Peace, Brotherhood, and Universal Love; but if,
when his enjoyments are threatened, or he imagines
they are threatened, he begins to clamor loudly for
war, he shows that he believes in and stands upon,
not Peace, Brotherhood, and Love, but strife, selfishness,
and hatred.
He who does not desert his principles
when threatened with the loss of every earthly thing,
even to the loss of reputation and life, is the man
of power; is the man whose every word and work endures;
is the man whom the afterworld honors, reveres, and
worships. Rather than desert that principle of
Divine Love on which he rested, and in which all his
trust was placed, Jesus endured the utmost extremity
of agony and deprivation; and today the world prostrates
itself at his pierced feet in rapt adoration.
There is no way to the acquirement
of spiritual power except by that inward illumination
and enlightenment which is the realization of spiritual
principles; and those principles can only be realized
by constant practice and application.
Take the principle of divine Love,
and quietly and diligently meditate upon it with the
object of arriving at a thorough understanding of it.
Bring its searching light to bear upon all your habits,
your actions, your speech and intercourse with others,
your every secret thought and desire. As you
persevere in this course, the divine Love will become
more and more perfectly revealed to you, and your
own shortcomings will stand out in more and more vivid
contrast, spurring you on to renewed endeavor; and
having once caught a glimpse of the incomparable majesty
of that imperishable principle, you will never again
rest in your weakness, your selfishness, your imperfection,
but will pursue that Love until you have relinquished
every discordant element, and have brought yourself
into perfect harmony with it. And that state
of inward harmony is spiritual power. Take also
other spiritual principles, such as Purity and Compassion,
and apply them in the same way, and, so exacting is
Truth, you will be able to make no stay, no resting-place
until the inmost garment of your soul is bereft of
every stain, and your heart has become incapable of
any hard, condemnatory, and pitiless impulse.
Only in so far as you understand,
realize, and rely upon, these principles, will you
acquire spiritual power, and that power will be manifested
in and through you in the form of increasing dispassion,
patience and equanimity.
Dispassion argues superior self-control;
sublime patience is the very hall-mark of divine knowledge,
and to retain an unbroken calm amid all the duties
and distractions of life, marks off the man of power.
“It is easy in the world to live after the world’s
opinion; it is easy in solitude to live after our
own; but the great man is he who in the midst of the
crowd keeps with perfect sweetness the independence
of solitude.”
Some mystics hold that perfection
in dispassion is the source of that power by which
miracles (so-called) are performed, and truly he who
has gained such perfect control of all his interior
forces that no shock, however great, can for one moment
unbalance him, must be capable of guiding and directing
those forces with a master-hand.
To grow in self-control, in patience,
in equanimity, is to grow in strength and power; and
you can only thus grow by focusing your consciousness
upon a principle. As a child, after making many
and vigorous attempts to walk unaided, at last succeeds,
after numerous falls, in accomplishing this, so you
must enter the way of power by first attempting to
stand alone. Break away from the tyranny of custom,
tradition, conventionality, and the opinions of others,
until you succeed in walking lonely and erect among
men. Rely upon your own judgment; be true to your
own conscience; follow the Light that is within you;
all outward lights are so many will-o’-the-wisps.
There will be those who will tell you that you are
foolish; that your judgment is faulty; that your conscience
is all awry, and that the Light within you is darkness;
but heed them not. If what they say is true the
sooner you, as a searcher for wisdom, find it out the
better, and you can only make the discovery by bringing
your powers to the test. Therefore, pursue your
course bravely. Your conscience is at least your
own, and to follow it is to be a man; to follow the
conscience of another is to be a slave. You will
have many falls, will suffer many wounds, will endure
many buffetings for a time, but press on in faith,
believing that sure and certain victory lies ahead.
Search for a rock, a principle, and having found it
cling to it; get it under your feet and stand erect
upon it, until at last, immovably fixed upon it, you
succeed in defying the fury of the waves and storms
of selfishness.
For selfishness in any and every form
is dissipation, weakness, death; unselfishness in
its spiritual aspect is conservation, power, life.
As you grow in spiritual life, and become established
upon principles, you will become as beautiful and
as unchangeable as those principles, will taste of
the sweetness of their immortal essence, and will realize
the eternal and indestructible nature of the God within.
No harmful shaft can reach
the righteous man,
Standing erect
amid the storms of hate,
Defying hurt and injury and
ban,
Surrounded by
the trembling slaves of Fate.
Majestic in the strength of
silent power,
Serene he stands,
nor changes not nor turns;
Patient and firm in suffering’s
darkest hour,
Time bends to
him, and death and doom he spurns.
Wrath’s lurid lightnings
round about him play,
And hell’s
deep thunders roll about his head;
Yet heeds he not, for him
they cannot slay
Who stands whence
earth and time and space are fled.
Sheltered by deathless love,
what fear hath he?
Armored in changeless
Truth, what can he know
Of loss and gain? Knowing
eternity,
He moves not whilst
the shadows come and go.
Call him immortal, call him
Truth and Light
And splendor of
prophetic majesty
Who bideth thus amid the powers
of night,
Clothed with the
glory of divinity.