The spirit of Love which is manifested
as a perfect and rounded life, is the crown of being
and the supreme end of knowledge upon this earth.
The measure of a man’s truth
is the measure of his love, and Truth is far removed
from him whose life is not governed by Love. The
intolerant and condemnatory, even though they profess
the highest religion, have the smallest measure of
Truth; while those who exercise patience, and who
listen calmly and dispassionately to all sides, and
both arrive themselves at, and incline others to,
thoughtful and unbiased conclusions upon all problems
and issues, have Truth in fullest measure. The
final test of wisdom is this, how does
a man live? What spirit does he manifest?
How does he act under trial and temptation? Many
men boast of being in possession of Truth who are
continually swayed by grief, disappointment, and passion,
and who sink under the first little trial that comes
along. Truth is nothing if not unchangeable,
and in so far as a man takes his stand upon Truth
does he become steadfast in virtue, does he rise superior
to his passions and emotions and changeable personality.
Men formulate perishable dogmas, and
call them Truth. Truth cannot be formulated;
it is ineffable, and ever beyond the reach of intellect.
It can only be experienced by practice; it can only
be manifested as a stainless heart and a perfect life.
Who, then, in the midst of the ceaseless
pandemonium of schools and creeds and parties, has
the Truth? He who lives it. He who practices
it. He who, having risen above that pandemonium
by overcoming himself, no longer engages in it, but
sits apart, quiet, subdued, calm, and self-possessed,
freed from all strife, all bias, all condemnation,
and bestows upon all the glad and unselfish love of
the divinity within him.
He who is patient, calm, gentle, and
forgiving under all circumstances, manifests the Truth.
Truth will never be proved by wordy arguments and
learned treatises, for if men do not perceive the Truth
in infinite patience, undying forgiveness, and all-embracing
compassion, no words can ever prove it to them.
It is an easy matter for the passionate
to be calm and patient when they are alone, or are
in the midst of calmness. It is equally easy for
the uncharitable to be gentle and kind when they are
dealt kindly with, but he who retains his patience
and calmness under all trial, who remains sublimely
meek and gentle under the most trying circumstances,
he, and he alone, is possessed of the spotless Truth.
And this is so because such lofty virtues belong to
the Divine, and can only be manifested by one who
has attained to the highest wisdom, who has relinquished
his passionate and self-seeking nature, who has realized
the supreme and unchangeable Law, and has brought
himself into harmony with it.
Let men, therefore, cease from vain
and passionate arguments about Truth, and let them
think and say and do those things which make for harmony,
peace, love, and good-will. Let them practice
heart-virtue, and search humbly and diligently for
the Truth which frees the soul from all error and
sin, from all that blights the human heart, and that
darkens, as with unending night, the pathway of the
wandering souls of earth.
There is one great all-embracing Law
which is the foundation and cause of the universe,
the Law of Love. It has been called by many names
in various countries and at various times, but behind
all its names the same unalterable Law may be discovered
by the eye of Truth. Names, religions, personalities
pass away, but the Law of Love remains. To become
possessed of a knowledge of this Law, to enter into
conscious harmony with it, is to become immortal,
invincible, indestructible.
It is because of the effort of the
soul to realize this Law that men come again and again
to live, to suffer, and to die; and when realized,
suffering ceases, personality is dispersed, and the
fleshly life and death are destroyed, for consciousness
becomes one with the Eternal.
The Law is absolutely impersonal,
and its highest manifested expression is that of Service.
When the purified heart has realized Truth it is then
called upon to make the last, the greatest and holiest
sacrifice, the sacrifice of the well-earned enjoyment
of Truth. It is by virtue of this sacrifice that
the divinely-emancipated soul comes to dwell among
men, clothed with a body of flesh, content to dwell
among the lowliest and least, and to be esteemed the
servant of all mankind. That sublime humility
which is manifested by the world’s saviors is
the seal of Godhead, and he who has annihilated the
personality, and has become a living, visible manifestation
of the impersonal, eternal, boundless Spirit of Love,
is alone singled out as worthy to receive the unstinted
worship of posterity. He only who succeeds in
humbling himself with that divine humility which is
not only the extinction of self, but is also the pouring
out upon all the spirit of unselfish love, is exalted
above measure, and given spiritual dominion in the
hearts of mankind.
All the great spiritual teachers have
denied themselves personal luxuries, comforts, and
rewards, have abjured temporal power, and have lived
and taught the limitless and impersonal Truth.
Compare their lives and teachings, and you will find
the same simplicity, the same self-sacrifice, the
same humility, love, and peace both lived and preached
by them. They taught the same eternal Principles,
the realization of which destroys all evil. Those
who have been hailed and worshiped as the saviors of
mankind are manifestations of the Great impersonal
Law, and being such, were free from passion and prejudice,
and having no opinions, and no special letter of doctrine
to preach and defend, they never sought to convert
and to proselytize. Living in the highest Goodness,
the supreme Perfection, their sole object was to uplift
mankind by manifesting that Goodness in thought, word,
and deed. They stand between man the personal
and God the impersonal, and serve as exemplary types
for the salvation of self-enslaved mankind.
Men who are immersed in self, and
who cannot comprehend the Goodness that is absolutely
impersonal, deny divinity to all saviors except their
own, and thus introduce personal hatred and doctrinal
controversy, and, while defending their own particular
views with passion, look upon each other as being
heathens or infidels, and so render null and void,
as far as their lives are concerned, the unselfish
beauty and holy grandeur of the lives and teachings
of their own Masters. Truth cannot be limited;
it can never be the special prerogative of any man,
school, or nation, and when personality steps in,
Truth is lost.
The glory alike of the saint, the
sage, and the savior is this, that he has
realized the most profound lowliness, the most sublime
unselfishness; having given up all, even his own personality,
all his works are holy and enduring, for they are
freed from every taint of self. He gives, yet
never thinks of receiving; he works without regretting
the past or anticipating the future, and never looks
for reward.
When the farmer has tilled and dressed
his land and put in the seed, he knows that he has
done all that he can possibly do, and that now he must
trust to the elements, and wait patiently for the course
of time to bring about the harvest, and that no amount
of expectancy on his part will affect the result.
Even so, he who has realized Truth goes forth as a
sower of the seeds of goodness, purity, love and peace,
without expectancy, and never looking for results,
knowing that there is the Great Over-ruling Law which
brings about its own harvest in due time, and which
is alike the source of preservation and destruction.
Men, not understanding the divine
simplicity of a profoundly unselfish heart, look upon
their particular savior as the manifestation of a special
miracle, as being something entirely apart and distinct
from the nature of things, and as being, in his ethical
excellence, eternally unapproachable by the whole
of mankind. This attitude of unbelief (for such
it is) in the divine perfectibility of man, paralyzes
effort, and binds the souls of men as with strong
ropes to sin and suffering. Jesus “grew
in wisdom” and was “perfected by suffering.”
What Jesus was, he became such; what Buddha was, he
became such; and every holy man became such by unremitting
perseverance in self-sacrifice. Once recognize
this, once realize that by watchful effort and hopeful
perseverance you can rise above your lower nature,
and great and glorious will be the vistas of attainment
that will open out before you. Buddha vowed that
he would not relax his efforts until he arrived at
the state of perfection, and he accomplished his purpose.
What the saints, sages, and saviors
have accomplished, you likewise may accomplish if
you will only tread the way which they trod and pointed
out, the way of self-sacrifice, of self-denying service.
Truth is very simple. It says,
“Give up self,” “Come unto Me”
(away from all that defiles) “and I will give
you rest.” All the mountains of commentary
that have been piled upon it cannot hide it from the
heart that is earnestly seeking for Righteousness.
It does not require learning; it can be known in spite
of learning. Disguised under many forms by erring
self-seeking man, the beautiful simplicity and clear
transparency of Truth remains unaltered and undimmed,
and the unselfish heart enters into and partakes of
its shining radiance. Not by weaving complex theories,
not by building up speculative philosophies is Truth
realized; but by weaving the web of inward purity,
by building up the Temple of a stainless life is Truth
realized.
He who enters upon this holy way begins by restraining his
passions. This is virtue, and is the beginning of saintship, and saintship is
the beginning of holiness. The entirely worldly man gratifies all his desires,
and practices no more restraint than the law of the land in which he lives
demands; the virtuous man restrains his passions; the saint attacks the enemy of
Truth in its stronghold within his own heart, and restrains all selfish and
impure thoughts; while the holy man is he who is free from passion and all
impure thought, and to whom goodness and purity have become as natural as scent
and color are to the flower. The holy man is divinely wise; he alone knows Truth
in its fullness, and has entered into abiding rest and peace. For him evil has
ceased; it has disappeared in the universal light of the All-Good. Holiness is
the badge of wisdom. Said Krishna to the Prince Arjuna
“Humbleness, truthfulness, and
harmlessness, Patience and honor, reverence for
the wise, Purity, constancy, control of self,
Contempt of sense-delights, self-sacrifice, Perception
of the certitude of ill In birth, death, age,
disease, suffering and sin; An ever tranquil heart
in fortunes good And fortunes evil, ... ...
Endeavors resolute To reach perception of the
utmost soul, And grace to understand what gain
it were So to attain this is true wisdom,
Prince! And what is otherwise is ignorance!”
Whoever fights ceaselessly against
his own selfishness, and strives to supplant it with
all-embracing love, is a saint, whether he live in
a cottage or in the midst of riches and influence;
or whether he preaches or remains obscure.
To the worldling, who is beginning
to aspire towards higher things, the saint, such as
a sweet St. Francis of Assisi, or a conquering St.
Anthony, is a glorious and inspiring spectacle; to
the saint, an equally enrapturing sight is that of
the sage, sitting serene and holy, the conqueror of
sin and sorrow, no more tormented by regret and remorse,
and whom even temptation can never reach; and yet
even the sage is drawn on by a still more glorious
vision, that of the savior actively manifesting his
knowledge in selfless works, and rendering his divinity
more potent for good by sinking himself in the throbbing,
sorrowing, aspiring heart of mankind.
And this only is true service to
forget oneself in love towards all, to lose oneself
in working for the whole. O thou vain and foolish
man, who thinkest that thy many works can save thee;
who, chained to all error, talkest loudly of thyself,
thy work, and thy many sacrifices, and magnifiest
thine own importance; know this, that though thy fame
fill the whole earth, all thy work shall come to dust,
and thou thyself be reckoned lower than the least
in the Kingdom of Truth!
Only the work that is impersonal can
live; the works of self are both powerless and perishable.
Where duties, howsoever humble, are done without self-interest,
and with joyful sacrifice, there is true service and
enduring work. Where deeds, however brilliant
and apparently successful, are done from love of self,
there is ignorance of the Law of Service, and the
work perishes.
It is given to the world to learn
one great and divine lesson, the lesson of absolute
unselfishness. The saints, sages, and saviors
of all time are they who have submitted themselves
to this task, and have learned and lived it.
All the Scriptures of the world are framed to teach
this one lesson; all the great teachers reiterate
it. It is too simple for the world which, scorning
it, stumbles along in the complex ways of selfishness.
A pure heart is the end of all religion
and the beginning of divinity. To search for
this Righteousness is to walk the Way of Truth and
Peace, and he who enters this Way will soon perceive
that Immortality which is independent of birth and
death, and will realize that in the Divine economy
of the universe the humblest effort is not lost.
The divinity of a Krishna, a Gautama,
or a Jesus is the crowning glory of self-abnegation,
the end of the soul’s pilgrimage in matter and
mortality, and the world will not have finished its
long journey until every soul has become as these,
and has entered into the blissful realization of its
own divinity.
Great glory crowns the heights
of hope by arduous struggle won;
Bright honor rounds the hoary
head that mighty works hath done;
Fair riches come to him who
strives in ways of golden gain.
And fame enshrines his name
who works with genius-glowing brain;
But greater glory waits for
him who, in the bloodless strife
’Gainst self and wrong,
adopts, in love, the sacrificial life;
And brighter honor rounds
the brow of him who, ’mid the scorns
Of blind idolaters of self,
accepts the crown of thorns;
And fairer purer riches come
to him who greatly strives
To walk in ways of love and
truth to sweeten human lives;
And he who serveth well mankind
exchanges fleeting fame
For Light eternal, Joy and
Peace, and robes of heavenly flame.