By Lilian Staveley
London
John M. Watkins
21 Cecil Court, Charing Cross Road, W.C.
1920
What am I? In my flesh I am but
equal to the beasts of the field. In my heart
and mind I am corrupt Humanity. In my soul I know
not what I am or may be, and therein lies my hope.
O wonderful and mysterious soul, more
fragile than gossamer and yet so strong that she may
stand in the Presence of God and not perish!
“Though ye have lien among the
pots, yet shall ye be as the wings of a dove.” Psalm
lxvii.
By what means shall the ordinary man
and woman, living the usual everyday life, whether
of work or of leisure, find God? And this without
withdrawing themselves into a life apart a
“religious” life, and without outward
and conspicuous piety always running to public worship
(though often very cross and impatient at home); without
leaving undone any of the duties necessary to the welfare
of those dependent on them; without making themselves
in any way peculiar; how shall these same
people go up into the secret places of God, how shall
they find the marvellous peace of God, how satisfy
those vague persistent longings for a happiness more
complete than any they have so far known, yet a happiness
which is whispered of between the heart and the soul
as something which is to be possessed if we but knew
how to get it? How shall ordinary mortals whilst
still in the flesh re-enter Eden even for an hour?
for Eden is not dead and gone, but we are dead to
Eden Eden, the secret garden of enchantment
where the soul and the mind and the heart live in
the presence of God and hear once more “the voice
of God walking in the garden in the cool of the day”
(Gen. iii.).
It is possible for these things to
come to us or we to them, and in quite a few years
if we set our hearts on them. First we must desire;
and after the desire, steady and persistent, God will
give. And we say, “But I have desired and
I do desire, and God does not give. Why is this?”
There are two reasons for it. For one are
these marvellous things to be given because of one
cry; for one petulant demand; for a few tears, mostly
of self-pity, shed in an hour when the world fails
to satisfy us, when a friend has disappointed us, when
our plans are spoiled, when we are sick or lonely?
These are the occasions on which we mostly find time
to think of what we call a better world, and of the
consolations of God.
But let anyone have all that he can
fancy, be carried high upon the flood-tide of prosperity,
ambition, and success, and how much time will he or
she give to Almighty God? not two moments
during the day. Yet the Maker of all things is
to bestow His unspeakable riches upon us in return
for two moments of our thought or love! Does a
man acquire great worldly wealth, or fame, in return
for two moments of endeavour?
“Ah,” some of us may cry,
“but it is more than two moments that I give
Him; I give Him hours, and yet I cannot find Him.”
If that is really so, then the second reason is the
one which would explain why He has not been found.
A great wall divides us from the consciousness of
the Presence of God. In this wall there is one
Door, and one only, Jesus Christ. We have not
found God because we have not found Him first as Jesus
Christ in our own heart. Now whether we take
our heart to church, whether we take it to our daily
work, or whether we take it to our amusements, we
shall not find Jesus in any one place more than another
if He is not already in our hearts to begin with.
How shall I commence to love a Being whom I have never
seen? By thinking about Him; by thinking about
Him very persistently; by comparing the world and
its friendships and its loves and its deceits and
its secret enviousnesses with all that we know of
the lovely ways of gentle Jesus. If we do this
consistently, it is impossible not to find Him more
lovable than any other person that we know. The
more lovable we find Him the more we think about Him,
by so much the more we find ourselves beginning to
love Him, and once we have learnt to hold Him very
warmly and tenderly in our heart, then we are well
in the way to find the Christ and afterwards that
divine garden of the soul in which God seems to slip
His hand under our restless anxious heart and lift
it high into a place of safety and repose.
When for some time we have learnt
to go in and out of this garden, with God’s
tender help we make ourself a dear place a
nest under God’s wing, and yet mysteriously
even nearer than this, it is so near to God.
To this place we learn to fly to and fro in a second
of time: so that, sitting weary and harassed
in the counting-house, in an instant a man can be
away in his soul’s nest; and so very great is
the refreshment of it and the strength of it that
he comes back to his work a new man, and so silently
and quickly done that no one else in the room would
ever know he had been there: it is a secret between
his Lord and himself.
But the person who learns to do this
does not remain the same raw uncivilised creature
that once he or she was: but slowly must become
quite changed; all tastes must alter, (all capacities
will increase in an extraordinary manner), and all
thoughts of heart and mind must become acceptable
and pleasant to God.
The man who has not yet begun to seek
God that is to say, has not even commenced
to try and learn how to live spiritually, but lives
absorbed entirely in the things of the flesh is
a spiritual savage. To watch such a man and his
ways and his tastes is to the spiritual man the same
thing as when a European watches an African in his
native haunts, notes his beads, his frightful tastes
in decorations, foods, amusements, habits, and habitations,
and, comparing them with his own ways, says instantly
that man is a savage. This proud European does
not pause to consider that he himself may be inwardly
what the savage is quite dark; that to
God’s eyes his own ways and tastes are as frightful
as those of the African are to himself. What raises
a man above a savage is not the size of his dining-room,
the cut of his coat, the luxuries of his house, the
learned books that adorn his bookshelves, but that
he should have begun to learn how to live spiritually:
this is the only true civilising of the human animal.
Until it is commenced, his manners and his ways are
nothing but a veneer covering the raw instincts of
the natural man instincts satisfied more
carefully, more hiddenly, than those of the African,
but always the same. There is little variety
in the lusts of the flesh; they are all after one
pattern, each of its kind, follow one another in a
circle, and are very limited.
It is not the clay of our bodies fashioned
by God which makes some common and some not.
It is the independent and un-Godlike thoughts of our
hearts and minds which can make of us common, and
even savage, persons. The changing of these thoughts,
the harmonising of them, and, finally, the total alteration
of them, is the work in us of the Holy Spirit.
By taking Christ into our hearts and making for Him
there a living nest, we set that mighty force in motion
which shall eventually make for us a nest in the Living
God. For Jesus Christ is able (but only with
our own entire willingness) to make us not
only acceptable to God, but delightful to Him, so
much so that even while we remain in the flesh He would
seem not to be willing to endure having us always
away from Him, but visits us and dwells with us after
His own marvellous fashion and catches us up to Himself.
To begin with, we must have a set
purpose and will towards God. In the whole
spiritual advance it is first we who must make the
effort, which God will then stabilise, and finally
on our continuing to maintain this effort He will
bring it to complete fruition. Thus step by step
the spirit rises first the effort, then
the gift. First the will to do and
then the grace to do it with. Without the willing
will God gives no grace: without God’s
grace no will of Man can reach attainment. God’s
will and Man’s will, God’s love and Man’s
love these working and joining harmoniously
together raise Man up into Eternal Life.
God is desirous of communicating Himself
to us in a Personal manner. In the Scriptures
we have the foundation, the basis, the cause and reason
of our Faith laid out before us; but He wills that
we go beyond this basis, this reasoning of Faith into
experience of Himself. For this end, then, He
fills us with the aching desire to find and know Him,
to be filled with Him, to be comforted and consoled
by Him, to discover His joys. He fills us with
these desires in order that He may gratify us.
By being willing to receive and understand
as only through the medium of the written word
we limit God in His communications with us. For
by the Holy Ghost He will communicate not by written
word but by personal touching of love brought about
for us by the taking and enclosing of Jesus Christ
within the heart not only as the Written Word, the
Promise and Hope of Scripture, but as the Living God.
For this end inward meditation and
pondering are a necessity.
How is it that we so often find great
virtue, remarkable charity and patience amongst persons
who are yet not conscious of any direct contact with
God? They have never known the pains of repentance,
neither have they known the sublime joys of God.
Are these the ninety-and-nine just persons needing
no repentance? Instinctively, and almost unconsciously,
they hold to, and draw upon, the Universal Christ or
Spirit of Righteousness; but they have not laid hold
of nor taken into themselves that Spirit of the Personal
Christ, whom Christians receive and know through Jesus.
He is the Door into the unspeakable joys of God.
What are these joys of God? They are varying
degrees of the manifestation and experience of reciprocal
Divine Love.
What is the true aim of spiritual
endeavour an attempt at personal and individual
salvation? Yes, to commence with, but beyond that,
and more fully, it is the attempt to comply with the
exquisite Will of God; and the general and universal
improving and raising of the consciousness of the
whole world. Yet this universal improvement must
take place in each individual spirit in an individual
manner. There are those who would deny to individuality
its rights, claiming that the highest spirituality
is the total cessation of all individuality; yet this
would not appear to be God’s view of the matter,
for in the most supreme contacts of the soul with
Himself He does not wipe out the consciousness of
the soul’s individual joy, but, on the contrary,
to an untenable extent He increases it.
And Jesus teaches us that life here is both the means
and the process of the gradual conformation of the
will of Man to the will of God, and our true “work”
is the individual learning of this process. But
this cultivation of our individuality must not be
subverted to the purpose of the mere gain of personal
advantage, but because of the heartfelt wish to conform
to the glorious will of God. The failure of the
human will to run in conjunction with the Divine will
is the cause, as we know, of all sin. In the
friction of these opposing wills, forces baneful to
Man are generated.
From its very earliest commencement
in childhood our system of education is based upon
wrong ideas. With little or no regard to God’s
plans Man lays out his own puny laws and ambitions
and teaches them to his young. We are not taught
that what we are here for is above all and before
all to arrive at a sense of personal connection with
God, to identify ourselves with the spiritual while
still in the flesh. On the contrary, we are taught
to grow shy, even ashamed, of the spiritual! and to
regard the world as a place principally or even solely
in which to enjoy ourselves or make a “successful
career.”
Children are taught to look eagerly
and mainly for holidays and “parties”;
grown men and women the same upon a larger and more
foolish scale, and always under the terribly mistaken
belief that in spiritual things no great happiness
is to be found, but only in materialism: yet
very often we find the greatest unhappiness amongst
the wealthiest people.
Happiness! happiness! We see
the great pursuit of it on every side, and no truer
or more needful instinct has been given to Man, but
he fails to use it in the way intended. This
world is a Touchstone, a Finding-place for God.
Whoever will obey the law of finding God from this
world instead of waiting to try and do it from the
next, he, and he only, will ever grasp and take into
himself that fugitive mysterious unseen Something
which not knowing what it is, yet feeling
that it exists we have named Happiness.
But how commence this formidable,
this seemingly impossible task of finding God in a
world in which He is totally invisible? To the
“natural” or animal Man God is as totally
hidden and inaccessible as He is to the beasts of
the field; yet encased within his bosom lies the soul
which can be the means of drawing Man and God together
in a glorious union. “I have known all
this from my childhood,” we cry, “and
the knowledge of it has not helped me one step upon
my way.”
Then try again, and reverse your method,
for hitherto you have been beseeching gifts from God,
asking for gifts from Jesus, and have forgotten
to give. Give your love to Jesus, give Him
a home, instead of asking Him to give you one.
Give your heart to God, set it upon Him.
What is keeping you back? You
are afraid of what it will entail; you are afraid
of what God will demand of you; those words “Forsake
all, and follow Me” fill you with something
like terror. I cannot leave my business, my children,
my home, my luxuries, my games, my dresses, my friends!
Neither need you but, knowing this initial agony of
mind, Christ said it is easier for a camel to go through
the eye of a needle (the name of an exceedingly narrow
gate into Jerusalem) than for a rich man to enter
the kingdom of heaven.
What does it mean to “set the
heart” upon something? We say, “I
have set my heart on going to see my son,” “I
have set my heart on doing so-and-so,” but this
does not mean that in order to accomplish it we must
wander homeless and lonely until the day of achievement.
No; but we set our heart and mind upon eventually accomplishing
this wish, we shape all our plans towards it, we give
it the first place. This is what God asks us
to do; to give Him the first place. We need not
go to Him in rags: David and Solomon were immensely
wealthy, Job was a rich man; but we must eventually
think more of Him than we do of our dress, more of
Him than we do of our business, more of Him than we
do of lover, friend, or child. Many well-minded
people are under the impression that such love for
an Invisible Being is a total impossibility.
Yet the great commandment stands written all across
the face of the heavens “Thou shalt
love Me with all thy heart and mind and soul and strength.”
Are we then to suppose that God asks the impossible
of His own creatures, that He mocks us? No; for
when we desire He sends the capacity, and day by day
sends us the power to reach this love through Jesus
Christ. There is included in the words “Give
us this day our daily bread,” the bread of the
soul, which is Love.
Divine Love commences in us in a very
small way, as a very feeble flicker, for we are very
feeble and small creatures. But God takes the
will for the deed, and the day comes when suddenly
we are filled with true love, as a gift. This
is indeed the second baptism, the baptism of fire,
the baptism of the Holy Ghost; then at last the great
wall which has hitherto divided our consciousness from
God goes down in its entirety, never again to rise
up and divide us. This is the mighty work of
Jesus Christ.
Though this is not our work, still
we have had the earnest will, the longing desire;
we have made continually, perseveringly, our tiny,
often futile, efforts to please and place Him first,
and though perhaps almost all were failures, He has
counted every one to us for righteousness.
We may at all times be asking ourselves,
“But how shall I know the will of God, how shall
I please Him, how shall I know what Christ would wish
me to do or to think?” There is one test more
sure than any other, which is to ask oneself, “Would
Jesus have done just this?” and the answer will
come from the inward of us instantaneously. But
before we can use this test we must have made a careful
study of Scripture and also have begun the habit of
inward personal intimacy with Jesus Himself.
So immense is the bounty of God to the creature that
truly and persistently wills and endeavours to please
Him, so great are the rewards of that creature for
its tiny work that it is as though a child should
scratch bare ground with its little spade and reap
a harvest of sweet flowers as magic gifts. In
this way it is that we find actually fulfilled in
ourselves the lovely words of the prophet, “the
desert shall blossom like the rose.”
The great initial difficulty that
surely most of us feel is how to come into personal
contact with this Jesus Christ, and to know which are
the first steps that we should take to bring about
this contact. They are just those same steps
that we use to come to a nearer understanding of and
greater intimacy with any persons we are desirous
of making friends with. We commence by thinking
about them, by arranging to spend time in their companionship;
and the more we think about them and the more time
we spend with them if they are very attractive people,
the more we feel in sympathy with them. Form,
then, the habit of making for brief instants a mental
picture of the Saviour. Note the exquisite tenderness
of His hands, so instantly ready to save and heal;
note the calm strength and the great love in His countenance,
walk beside Him down the street, join His daily life,
learn to become familiar with Him as Jesus what
would He do, how would He look, what would His thoughts
be? To feel sympathetically towards a person
is to take one of the most important steps towards
friendship. How many of us stop in the rush of
our daily amusements, interests, and work to sympathise
with Christ? Most probably, if we think of Christ
at all, it is to feel that He ought to sympathise
with us! Now Christ not only sympathises with
but ardently loves us, and our failure to receive the
comfort and help of this love is due to our failure
in returning to Him these same feelings of sympathy
and love and friendship. We are not reciprocal,
but perpetually ask and never give.
It is only by returning love to Christ
that we are able to receive the benefits of His love
for us. His mighty power and help flows around
but not through us until we place ourselves in individual
and direct contact with Him, until we make that mysterious
inward and spiritual connection with Him which can
be achieved only through a personal love for Him.
Again and again we may cry out, “But
how love the invisible?” Christ is invisible,
but for all that, he is not unknown. We all of
us know Him. But we do not give ourselves time
or opportunity to know Him sufficiently well.
What hours, months, years, we devote to making and
knowing our friends; yet a few moments a day are more
than enough for most of us to spend in becoming more
intimate with the only Friend whom it is worth our
while to make.
“But life is so busy I have
no time,” you say. What of those hours
spent in the train, those moments spent waiting for
an appointment, that half-hour taken for a rest, but
which is not a rest because of the rushing inharmonious
turmoil of your thoughts? No one is so restful
to think of as Jesus. Every single quality that
we most admire, trust, and love is to be found in
Jesus Christ. The only reason of our failure
to love Him more ardently than any human being we know
is that we do not think enough about Him.
How much offended we should be if
anyone dared to say to us, “You are not a Christian.”
We all consider ourselves Christians as a matter of
course; but why this certainty, what reason can we
give? Many would say, “I keep the Commandments,
and I am baptised in Christ’s name.”
But Christianity is not an act done by hands, it is
a life, and the Jews keep the Commandments even more
strictly than we and are not Christians. The
mere fact of believing that Christ once lived and
was crucified is not enough. The Jews and also
the Mahommedans believe that He lived and was crucified.
What is then necessary? That
we believe that He is indeed the Son of God, the Messiah,
the Saviour; for if He was no more than a holy man,
by what means has He power to save us more than Moses
has power to save us?
The true inward knowledge that Christ
is God comes not by nature to any man, but by gift
of God which gift must be earnestly sought,
striven, prayed for, and desired: this faith is
the very coming to God by which we are saved.
If we are not yet in this faith that Jesus Christ
is the Messiah, then we are neither Jew, Mahommedan,
nor Christian, but wanderers without a fold, and without
a Shepherd; longing, and not yet comforted.
How do we come by this joy of the
personal loving of God, this Romance of the Soul brought
to sensible fruition whilst still in the flesh?
Is it a gift? Yes. Is it
a gift because of some merit of goodness on our part
beyond the goodness of other persons who are without
it, though striving? No. Is it because of
some work for God that we do in this world, charitable
or social? No. Is it, then, nothing but an
arbitrary favouritism on His part? No. Is
it a sagacity or cleverness, a height of learning,
a result of close study? No.
It is simply and solely a certain
and particular obedient attitude of heart and mind
towards God of the nature of a longing giving,
a grateful outgoing thinking towards Him, continually
maintained, and a heart invitation to, and a receiving
of Jesus Christ into ourselves.
Our part is to maintain this obedient
tender-waiting, giving and receiving attitude under
all the circumstances of daily life, and Christ with
the Holy Ghost will then work the miracle in us.
But so difficult is this attitude
to maintain that we are totally unable to do it without
another gift upon His part Grace. The
whole process from first to last is gift upon gift,
and that because first of our belief and desire, and
then of our continually remembering that to receive
these gifts we have a part to play which God will not
dispense with. For an illustration let us turn
to the artist and his sitter. The sitter does
not produce the work of art, but must maintain his
attitude: if he refuses to do this, the work of
the artist is marred and even altogether foiled.
So with Christ and His Divine Art in bringing us to
our Father by not endeavouring to maintain
our right attitude we foil His work. God would
seem to give us that which we seek and ask for, and
no more. Great ecclesiastics, theologians, philosophers
who sought and desired Him with the intelligence,
seeking for knowledge, for pre-eminence of spiritual
wisdom, were not given as an addition to their learning
this exquisite fire and balm of love. Those who
desired of Christ the healing of the body received
that, and we are not told they received anything further.
So also with the woman at the well: “If
thou hadst asked,” Christ said to her, “I
would have given thee of the water of Life.”
Without we ask for and receive this gift of Love we
hang to God by Faith only.
What is true religion, what is that
religion by which we shall feel wholly satisfied?
It is to have Christ recognised, known, adored, and
living in the soul. This is the New Life within
us, this is the New Birth. The first proofs of
the power of this New Life in us is the victory over
all the lower passions, victory over the animal “that
once was ourself”! A victory so complete
that not only do we cease to desire those former things
or be troubled by them but we no longer “respond”
to that which is base, even though we be brought into
visual contact with such things as would formerly have
inevitably excited at least a passing response in us.
Can any man free himself in such a manner from his
own nature? Common sense forbids us imagine it.
It is then a Living Power within us, slowly transforming
us to higher levels, from the fleshly to the spiritual,
and shaping us to meet the purity of God. And
such is the tender consideration of this Power for
our weakness that while we are learning to give up
these baser pleasures He teaches us the higher pleasures
of the soul we are not left comfortless.
So in our earlier stages we may have many very wonderful
ecstasies which later are altogether dispensed with,
and indeed are eventually not desired by the soul,
or even the more greedy heart and mind, which all now
ask and desire one favour only to be on
earth in continual fellowship with Christ Jesus and
ever able to enter into the love of God. To be
without this glorious power of entering Responsive
Love of God, to be cut off from this, is the great
and only fear of the soul. This fear it is which
holds the soul and the creature towards God both day
and night lest by the least forgetfulness or wrongful
attitude they should lose Him or displease Him.
All these changes no man can bring
about for himself they are accomplished
for him by the Holy Spirit; but this he can and must
do for himself, invite Sweet Jesus into his heart and
enthrone Him there as Ruler. This once accomplished,
that mysterious monitor within us commonly known as
“Conscience” grows until it attains an
excessive sensitiveness which penetrates the minutest
acts of life and the deepest recesses of heart and
mind. It becomes inexorable, it demands instant
and complete obedience. Because of it relations
with other persons undergo a drastic change. Complete,
instant, entire forgiveness for every offence is demanded,
and at last even a momentary annoyance must be effaced;
no matter how great the cause of annoyance, it must
be effaced in the same instant as that in which it
crosses the mind, for a single adverse thought eventually
proves as injurious to the Spirit as a grain of sand
is to the eyes.
The petty human aims, the smallness
of all our former standards, the instinct for “retaliation”
must all be overcome, laid upon one side a
slow task of much humiliation to the creature, revealing
to it its own smallness and vanity and its own extraordinary
ineffectiveness of self-control, its puny powers over
itself: nothing short of an absolute self-conquest
is aimed at and demanded by this inward monitor the
Soul. With what profound veneration for and recognition
of the power of God does the regenerated creature
think of those alterations in its own nature which,
after long strivings, are eventually given it by God,
and of those alterations not yet stabilised because
not yet gifts, but only on the way to perhaps becoming
gifts that is to say, still only where the
power of the creature itself has been able to raise
them: for of these last it may invariably be said
that to-day we may feel serene security and to-morrow
fall and fail and this in the very meanest
way!
We see on every side men and women
who try to fill an emptiness, a wanting that they
feel within themselves, by every sort of means except
the only one which can ever be a permanent success.
Women devote themselves to lovers, husbands, children,
dress, society, and dogs; men to business, ambition,
the racecourse, folly, drink, games, and arts.
Are any of these persons truly happy, truly satisfied
in all their being? No, and they descend to old
age surrounded by the dust of disillusionment.
Lonely and soon forgotten by the hungry pleasure-seeking
crowd, such persons pass from this world, and the
most their friends have to say is that they have gone
to a better one. But have they? For the
mere fact of shedding the flesh does not bring us
any nearer to God. On the contrary, the shedding
of the flesh increases appallingly the difficulty
of the soul in finding God. This world is the
very place in which we can most easily and quickly
get into communication with God. To think that
the mere act of dying improves our character and takes
us to heaven is a delusion of the Enemy it
is living here which can fit us and carry us to heaven;
and we have no great distance to travel either, for
heaven is a state of consciousness, and by entering
that state of consciousness we become united and connected
with such degrees of heaven as the flesh is able to
bear, though these degrees fall infinitely short of
those required by the soul: hence the fearful
hungering and longing of the soul to depart from the
flesh. If we do not find Christ whilst we are
here, when we cast off the flesh we enter a bewildering
vortex of a life of terrible intensity and great solitude.
We are aware of nothing but Self, are tormented by
Self with its forever unsatisfied longings, and by
the impossibility of achieving any other Self.
In this intensity of self-tormenting loneliness the
soul feels to gyrate, and all that she knows of that
which is outside of this Self is the sound of the
rushing of invisible things, for she is blind.
Without the light of this world and without the light
of Christ. The joys of space are not open to
her, only the dark and lonely horrors of it:
she is in an incalculably greater state of isolation
from God than here in this world! The remedy
for all this lies here; let no one think he can afford
to wait to find this remedy until after he leaves this
world, for then his chance is gone, and who is able
to foretell when it will return? What can be
more beautiful, more happy, than to find this remedy,
to find the only Being who loves us as much as we love
ourselves! the gentle, tender, gracious, all-sufficing
Christ; that all-mighty ever-giving Christ who yearns
over and longs for us what madness is it
that prevents us seeking Him?
All of us would seem to have two personalities:
we are the repentant and the unrepentant Magdalene
and daily change from one to the other. But true
repentance cannot come before love: if we think
we repent before we love, then it is no more than
a repentance of the mind, which says to itself, “I
must stand well with God because of my future well-being.”
Where love comes first we get the repentance of the
heart, which works this way in us we love
Jesus a little, we love Him more and more, and because
of this love increasing to real warmth we suddenly
perceive the frightful offences we have committed
against this sweet love, and instantly the heart melts
and breaks and we are shaken to our depths that we
have ever grieved our Holy Lover. This is true
repentance no anxious fears for our own
future, but love grieving and agonised for its offences.
Such repentance as this pierces to the deepest recesses
of the heart and mind, and leaves upon them a deep
indelible mark, changing all the aims of our life,
and is the beginning of all joys in Christ Jesus.
Let us aim therefore not first at repentance, but
first at love. A little love to Jesus given many
times a day as we walk or wait or work, if only at
first said by the lips with desire for more warmth,
after a while we shall find ourselves giving it from
the heart; then the Divine Seed has begun to grow
because we have watered it.
If the natural man were asked, “What
is life? what is it to live?” he would reply,
“It is to eat, drink, laugh, love, and have pleasure
or pain: to hear, see, touch, taste and smell,
and to be conscious that I do all these things.”
Yet this consciousness is but a tiny speck of consciousness,
and some mysterious voice within the deeply-thinking
man tells him that this is so. But how uncover
a further consciousness? This is the secret of
the soul.
To pass from one form of consciousness
to another this is to increase life fifty,
a hundred, a thousand times according to the degrees
of consciousness we can attain. These degrees
would seem to be irrevocably limited because of the
mechanical actions of heart and breathing, which automatic
actions become suspended or seriously interfered with
in very high states of consciousness. When first
these very great expansions of consciousness take place,
the creature is under strong conviction that the soul
has left the body that it has gone upon
some mysterious journey this because of
several reasons. The first is because of a certain
persistent sound of rushing; the second is because
of the sense of living at tremendous speed, in a manner
previously altogether unknown and totally undreamed
of, in which the senses of the body have no concern
whatever and are completely closed down; thirdly, on
returning from this “journey” we are not
immediately able to exact obedience from the body,
which remains inert and stiffly cold and suffers distress
with too slow breathing. But reason demands, “How
is it possible that the soul should leave the body
and the body not die? and also we perceive this, that,
though the consciousness is projected to an infinite
distance, or includes that infinite distance within
itself, it yet remains aware of the existence of the
body, though very dimly.”
The method employed, then, for administering
these experiences to the soul and the creature is
not by means of drawing the soul out of the body,
but by a withdrawal of the condition of insulation
from Divine Life or great magnetic emanation, in which
insulation all creatures have their normal existence,
living in a condition which may be termed a state
of total Unawareness. By Will of God this condition
of insulation is removed, the soul enters Connection
and becomes instantly and vividly aware of Spiritual
Life and of that which Is, at an infinite distance
from herself, so that the soul is at one and the same
time in paradise or heaven, and upon the earth:
space is eaten up. Without seeing or hearing,
the soul partakes in a tremendous and unspeakable
manner of the joys of God, which, all unfelt by us
as “natural” man, pass unceasingly throughout
the universe.
These experiences give an immense
and unshakable knowledge to the soul and the creature
of the immense reality of the Unseen Life, and are
doubtless sent us to effect this knowledge. Why,
then, is not every man given this knowledge?
Because the creature must qualify before being allowed
to receive it, and too many hold back from the tests.
By these experiences we learn some little portion of
the mystery which lies between the pettiness of that
which we now are and the great glories that we shall
come to; and in this awful heavenly mystery in which
are fires that have no flame, and melody which has
no sound, the soul is drawn to Everlasting Love.
But we cannot endure the bliss of it, and the soul
prays to be covered on account of the creature.
But because of the limitations of
the flesh we are not to despise it but regard it not
as an aim or end (as that if we satisfy its lusts that
shall be our paradise), but regard it as a means.
Christ willed the flesh and the world to be a rapid
means of our return to God. Subdue the flesh
without despising it, in humility and thankfulness.
Suffer its trials and penalties not in dejection,
rebellion, or hopelessness, but as a means to an end.
“For everyone shall be salted with fire,”
says Scripture; and can anything whatever be well forged
or made without it be first melted and cleaned?
So, then, for each his Gethsemane. As for Christ,
so for Judas, who, not being able to endure, went
out and hanged himself. Let our care, then, be
to choose that Gethsemane which shall open to us the
gates of heaven and not hell.
In our raw state we fear the Will
of God, thinking it a path of thorns; but as Christ
moulds and teaches us we grow to know the Will of
God as a great Balm: to long to conform to it,
joyfully to join it, to sink into it as into an immense
security where we are safe from all ills; and at last,
no matter what temporary trials we endure, so great
does our love and confidence grow by Grace of
God upholding our tiny efforts that, like Job, we
cry to Him with absolute sincerity and confidence,
“Though Thou slay me, yet will I trust Thee”;
having learnt it is not His Will to slay but to restore
and purify and make glad. Incessant work is the
lot of the awakened and returning soul, and justly
so, for because of what folly and ingratitude did she
ever leave God? A multiplicity of choices lie
before her, and her great concern is which amongst
all these possible decisions will prove the shortest
path to God. These choices and decisions must
be brought down to the meanest details of everyday
life. At first on awakening the soul would like
nothing better than to forsake and cast away material
things altogether, and is inclined to despise the
body. But Jesus teaches her that this is not pleasing:
it is His Will that she should continually lend assistance
to the creature in its weaknesses and uncertainties,
not disdaining it but helping it. It is the soul
which maintains contact with the Divine Guide, and
then in turn should guide the creature. As the
Divine Guide condescends to the soul, never despising
her, so must the soul condescend to the creature:
acknowledging and understanding that nothing is too
small or humble for the soul to attend to and lead
the creature to do in a beautiful and gentle manner.
By these means the permeation of the
natural world by the Divine is carried out, and no
act or fact of life can be considered too insignificant
for the soul to attend to for the development of this
aim.
The more we become familiar with spiritual
life the more we observe the regularity of certain
laws in it, and the more we find analogies between
these new and unmapped laws and the laws and forces
already known to us in the visible world. Rightly
expounded by some scientific mind, these could bring
the world of human thought and aspirations straight
into the arms of God.
Science is the friend and not the
enemy of religion. Science will light up and
illuminate the dark gaps. This world is a house
fully wired for lighting: the wiring is perfect,
the bulbs alone are incomplete; they give no light:
it is the task of the soul to perfect these human
bulbs.
The life of conscious connection with
God is true living as far as we may know it in the
flesh, an enormous increase over the petty normal
life of the world or, more rightly, the petty and lacking
life of the world. For in this life of God-consciousness
is an immense sanity and poise, a balance between
soul and body and heart and mind never achieved in
the “normal” or “natural” life.
Therefore the God-conscious life is not to be named
an abnormal but the complete, full, and only truly
normal life: a life in which both soul and creature
have found their centre, and the whole being in all
its parts is brought to evenness, to harmony, to peace
and a greatly magnified intelligence. If all
men and women attained this state, this world would
automatically become Paradise. In this true life
living and feeling alter their characteristics and
surpass anything that can be imagined by the uninitiated
mind. Now, though to convey some idea of this
condition of consciousness would seem to be impossible,
still there are some types of persons to whom a little
something of the commencement of the larger life of
the awakened soul might be conveyed before they themselves
experience it. The lovers of nature, of music,
of the beautiful and romantic, and of poetry:
in the highest moments reached by such they are aware
of an indefinable Something an expansion,
a going out towards, a longing yearning,
subtly composed of both joy and pain, which goes beyond
the earth, beyond the music, beyond the poetry, beyond
the beautiful into a Nameless Bourne. At these
moments they live with the soul: this is the
commencement of spirit-life. When the Nameless
Bourne has become to the soul that which It really
is God and He sends His responses
to her, then the soul knows the fullness of spiritual
life as we may know it in the flesh.
But she can neither know the Nameless
Bourne as God nor receive His responses till the heart
and the mind have come to repentance of their ways
and have been changed at least in part. Without
this mode of living no one can be said to live in
a full or whole manner, because nothing is whole which
does not include the consciousness of God, and this
in a lively and acute degree.
One of our great difficulties is that
when, as the merely half-repentant creature, we turn
to God and, beginning to ask favours of Him, get no
response, then all our warm feelings and longings
towards Him fall back, we go into a state either of
profounder unbelief (which is further separation)
or into total apathy. Apathy is a deadly thing.
The more God loves us the more He will do His part
to keep us from it. All the circumstances of life
will be used to this end. We may lose our nearest
and dearest. If it is material prosperity that
causes a too complete content to live without Him,
then some or all of that prosperity will be removed.
In whatever spot we are most tender there
He will touch us. “Oh, if it had been anyone
else or anything less that we had lost, then it would
not have been so hard to bear,” we say.
Exactly. For nothing less would have been of any
use, and alas! even this may be of no use, for Christ
is ever willing and trying to save us, and we will
not be saved.
If we do not get out of this apathy,
we shall miss the whole reason of our life here.
By these living thrusts He brings us to our knees,
humbled, humiliated, anguished, in order that, having
awakened and purified us, He may lift us into His
Divine consolations.
We cannot in one step mount up out
of our faithless indifferent wrongful condition into
the glories of the knowledge of God. First we
must learn to know Jesus, intimately, devotedly.
Then Jesus the Christ: then the Father.
Finally God the Holy Trinity, once found and known
by us, becomes our All, and by some unspeakable condescension
He becomes to us all things in all ways. The soul
is filled with romantic and divine love, and instantly
God is her Holy Lover: she is sad, weary, or
afraid, and immediately she turns to Him He comforts
and mothers her: she is filled with adoring filial
love, and at once He is her Father. Oh, the wonders
of the fullness of the finding and knowing of God!
Let the man who would know happiness
here study the works of God, and not think he will
gain virtue by putting everything that he sees here
upon one side, saying it is not real or it is not good.
It is very real of its own kind, and good also if
he learns how to use it, and very marvellous.
Let him study how things are made God’s
things, not trivial man-made things let
him observe how all are made with equal care, the
humblest and the proudest, “the tiny violet
perfect as the oak.” Let him learn the manner
of the ways of light and the colours of all that he
sees, and then stop to consider how, having made
all these marvels, God then fashioned his own delicate
eyes that he might see and know and enjoy them all.
To consider all these things, accepting them from
God with love, makes the heart and the mind and the
soul dance and sing together not with noise but like
sunshine upon water.
Scientific Ideas of To-day, by C. Gibson.
What is Nature but the demonstration
in visible objects of an invisible Will? This
Will we need to trace to its Source; having done this,
we are able to praise and bless God for every single
thing of beauty He has fashioned here: and this
praising and blessing of God becomes nothing less
than a continual ecstasy for both soul and creature,
and, indeed, because of this and by means of this burning
appreciation of God’s works, both soul and creature
find their sweetest consolations as they wait to be
taken to a holier world.
When they both bless God with the
fire of their love for every tender thing that He
has made, then their days become to them one long
delight.
This blessing of God and His works
is not just a blessing with lips, but feels this way.
The words being said by the heart, a burning spark
of enthusiasm is immediately kindled there, which spark
sets light to a spark in the soul; and this invisible
fire joining another Invisible Fire, instantly in
immense exaltation we enter the joys of God.
But because of our flesh we cannot stay but only enter
and come back.
We are made to love and adore God,
but the mode of entry into this is not by beseeching
God to come down and love us, but by constant endeavour
to enter up into His estate, to offer Him
love: this enthusiasm for God brings about a
mysterious accomplishment of all needs, desires, joys.
We are made to love and adore God,
and because of this without Him we are an Emptiness,
a Great Want. Such is the lovely and perfect
reciprocity of love that as this Great Want we are
the pleasure and the joy of the All-Giving God.
And He is the All-Giving that He may rejoice and fill
our extremity of Want. So we are each to each
that which each most desires. This is Divine Love.
Do not let us imagine that by making
very much of earthly loves we shall by that obtain
the heavenly: on the contrary, love of creatures,
and too much turning to and thinking of and depending
upon creatures, is a sure manner of hindering us till
we have learnt to unite with Divine Love. This
love for creatures is often for the heart and soul
what treacle is to the wings of a fly! Do not
be content with creatures, but seek beyond the creaturely
for the heavenly.
This is not to say that we are not
to love our fellow-creatures, attend to them, wait
upon them, bear with them, and work for them; but
whilst doing all these we are not to make them the
object of our life: we are not to think that
by merely running about amongst creatures frenzied
with plans for their social improvement and comfort
the nearer we are necessarily getting to God, or even
truly pleasing Him. All these multiplicities
of frenzied interests are best centred upon the finding
and knowing and loving of Jesus Christ within our own
hearts. When this finding, knowing, loving and
believing has been accomplished, then we shall have
accomplished the only work God asks us to accomplish,
and all other works will automatically, peacefully,
and smoothly come to their proper fruition in us through
Him.
Neither imagine we shall do this finding
of Jesus in, or because of, another person. We
shall not find Him in another person or anywhere till
we have first found Him in ourselves: and this
by inward pondering, delicate tender thinkings, loving
comparisons, sweet enthusiasms, persistent endeavours
to imitate His gentle ways and manners as being some
proof of our desire to love and find Him. The
need which is the most pressing of all our needs is
to find that Light which will light us when we have
to go out from the light of this world into the awful
solitudes of that which we often so lightly and confidently
speak of as “the other world.”
Without Christ we go out into a fearful
loneliness: with Christ we walk the rainbow paths
of Paradise.
Having tasted the blissful wonders
of God, nothing less than God Himself can satisfy,
comfort, or fill either the soul, heart, or mind;
and yet we are still in a too small and imperfect condition
to endure the power and strength of God’s bliss
for more than brief spells, so that after coming to
these high things our portion here is to learn to
be a useful willing servant, carrying with as cheerful
a face as we are able the burden of life in the flesh,
and endure this waiting to be with Christ free of
the flesh.
What are these blisses of God?
They are contact with an immeasurable Ardour, they
are our ardour meeting the Fountain of all Ardours:
and God is communicated to us by a magnetism which
in its higher degrees becomes luminous and unbearable.
Are these divine joys and comforts
of God towards us because we are more loved by God,
because our salvation is more sure than that of those
who are without these comforts? Most emphatically
no. It is because we obey a particular and subtle
law of giving to God, and do not (as is more natural
to us) content ourselves with merely believing, expecting,
and hoping to receive from God.
Let us pray more frequently than we
do: “My Lord, increase my faith, increase
my love, and increase my understanding of how to use
this faith and this love when they have been begotten
in me.”
On every side we hear complaints against
the Church. It is suggested that we are falling
away from God because of some lack in the Church.
But this fault of the Church is exactly the same fault
which is to be found in the members of the congregation
which compose it a tepid love for a dimly
known Lord. When the priest and every member
of the congregation in his own heart worships the beloved
Christ, then the Church will be found to have gained
just that which is now lacking, and which we attribute
to some priestly failure and not our own also.
Of Church cérémonials it is hard
to speak, for the lover of God can have no eyes for
them: he is all heart, but sees it this way that
set rules, regulations, and cérémonials in prayers
and worship are most right and proper for the creature
publicly worshipping its Creator. That the assembling
together in church is the outward and visible acknowledgment
of the creature’s worship of God and also a looking
for the fulfilling of the promise “where two
or three are gathered together in My name.”
The redeemed creature worships very ardently with
all its little heart and mind and all its tiny strength,
learning in its own self the words of David: “I
was glad when they said unto me, We will go into the
house of the Lord.” But the soul cannot
worship in set words, neither can she have need or
use for the cérémonials invented by and for the
creature, but worships God in another manner altogether,
as she is taught by the Holy Spirit, and in the greatness
of her worship mounts to God, and closes with God.
For holy love cannot long be divided.
Often when the creature is alone,
and eating, its Lord will visit it, causing the soul
and the mind and the heart of it to cry out: “But
of what use to me is this meat and drink which is
before me? I have no need of it, I can do nothing
other than sip of the holy beauty of my Lord.”
And immediately we are so pressed the earthly cup must
be set down, and in very great ecstasy we sup in spirit
with the Lord. The unnameable Elixir of God is
the Wine, and Love is the Bread.
When holy love grows great in us we
wonder that we ever thought that human love was love
at all, for no matter how great it may once have seemed
it now seems so small it is no greater than the humming
of a bee around a flower in summer time. But holy
love who can commence to describe it?
It rides upon great wings, it burns like a devouring
fire, it makes nothing of Space and comes before Him
like the lightnings, saying, “Here am I,”
and, gathering all things, all loves into itself,
pours them out at the feet of God.
By baptism we are named and called
for election by the Church. Through personal
and individual repentance and connection by faith
and love with Christ we enter election by baptism
of the Holy Spirit. By the mere following of
rituals, doctrines, dogmas, ceremonies, we are in
great danger of introducing the mind of the Pharisee
with his reliance as means of salvation upon the washing
of hands and cups, and except we exceed this righteousness
we do not enter the Kingdom. Or the mind of the
lawyer, which type of mind seeks obstinately, forcefully,
to mould the secrets of the soul’s communion
with God and fix them upon cold documents where they
quickly cease to have life.
Above the fretful and contentious
human reason is the intelligence of the soul, and
this soul has in itself a higher part for we become
acutely aware of it that part of it with
which we come in contact with God, with which we respond
to God, receive His manifestations, are laid bare
to His blisses. Separated from worldly things
by an impalpable veil, it rests above all such things
in serene calm, and, strangest of all, has no comprehension
whatever of sin: when we enter this part of the
soul and live with it sin and evil become not only
non-existent but unthinkable, unimaginable: we
are totally removed from any such order of existence.
It communicates its knowledge to the lower part of
the soul, the soul to the Reason, the Reason to the
rest of the creature.
We say we are fearfully and wonderfully
made, and in saying this we think of the body, but
far more wonderful is the making of the spiritual
of us. O man, climb out of the gross materialism
of thy fleshly self, for thou canst do it! As
out of the heavy earth come the delicate flowers of
spring, so out of the heavy body, because of that
divine which is within it, come the marvellous
flowers of the soul.
To think that we can come to God and
know Him by means of our intelligence or reason is
as unwise as to suppose we can eat our dinner with
our feet; it is as necessary to use our teeth to eat
our food as it is to use our heart to find God, and
it is nothing but the natural vanity of the human
mind which blinds us to this fact. The human
reason is too small to stand the greatness of God,
and could it ever reach to Him would be withered in
the awfulness of His magnetic light. Even the
soul in her contacts with God whilst still in the
flesh is of necessity totally blind, and yet, blind
as she is, is pierced by this terrible intensity of
light and energy. How then shall the reason stand
naked before God without madness or frenzy? To
reason out upon paper where God is, why He is, what
He is, and how precisely He is to be discovered, will
take us no further up into the mysteries of the actual
knowing of the wonders of His love than the ink and
paper we employ might do. To know this love in
our own heart is the necessity, for the soul and the
heart live hand in hand as it were and together can
find and know God. God once found by the heart,
we can dwell upon Him with our reason, and feed our
reason with the knowledge we have acquired of Him
through the heart and soul.
The Holy Ghost aids us in this deep
search, quickens us, gives us impulses. At first
in our natural state we are able only in a very dim
way to perceive these impulses, but we can become so
sensitive to God that He pierces us, brings us to
the ground with a breath, and we bend and yield before
His lightest wish as a reed bends and quivers to the
wind.
When the heart and soul are greatly
set upon God and we have become true lovers of God,
there comes a danger of falling into so deep a pining
for God that the health both of the mind and of the
body is weakened by it. We should aim at cheerful
and willing waiting: anything else is a falling
short; if we examine into it, we shall see that pining
savours of unwillingness and discontent there
is in it something of the spirit of the servant who
designs to give notice of leaving. The lover
of God is the most blest of all creatures and should
show himself serenely glad, waiting with patience,
knowing as he does from his own experiences that who
has God for a Lover has no need of any other.
Of how to receive from God, and
of the Blessed Sacrament
Nothing is of a deeper mystery or
difficulty or disappointment to the soul and the heart
well advanced in the experience and in the love of
God than to find that in the ceremony of the Blessed
Sacrament it is possible for them to be less sensible
of receiving from God than at any time. How and
why can this be? is it the Ceremonial causing the
mind to be too much alert to guide the body now to
rise, now to kneel, now to move in some direction?
Is it this distraction which prevents perception for
in all communion with God the mind is closed down,
the heart and soul only being in operation? On
the other hand, it is easily possible to be in closest
communion with God in all the noises and distractions
of a great railway station amongst a crowd of shifting
persons. No, it is some imperfection in the attitude
adopted by the heart and mind in approaching this Sacrament.
In what way have we perhaps been approaching it?
In an attitude of awe accompanied by a humble expectancy
or hope of receiving. We hope and believe we
shall receive God’s grace. Now, the experienced
soul and heart know so well what it is and how it feels
to receive God’s grace that they are all the
more disappointed at not receiving it upon this holy
occasion. What were our Lord’s words?
He said, “Do this in remembrance of Me,”
or more correctly translated, “Do or offer this
as a memorial of Me before God.” This implies
an act of giving upon our part, whereas we have come
to regard this ceremony as an act of receiving.
Now though the attitude of humble
expectancy to receive is of itself a worthy one it
does not fulfil the exact command, which is to commemorate,
offer, and hold up before God the Perfect Love and
Sacrifice of our Saviour, as a living memorial of Him
before God. It should be accompanied by an offering
of great love and thanks upon our part without regard
to anything we may receive. But because first
we give we then receive.
About nothing are we in such a state
of ignorance as about the laws which govern the give
and take between God and Man. On the one hand
is God the All-Giving, longing to bestow, and upon
the other is Man the all-needing, aching to receive,
and between them an impasse. Failure to fulfil
God’s laws is the cause of this impasse.
There is both a law of like to like, and a law of like
to opposite. We cannot know God without in some
small degree first being like God, and to be like
God we must not only be pure in heart but also conform
to the God-like condition of giving. First we
obey this law that the second may come into effect that
of like to opposite, or positive to negative, the
All-Giving immediately meeting and filling the all-needing.
We have nothing to give to God but our love, thanks,
and obedience; but of these it is possible to give
endlessly, and the more we give the more God-like
do we become, and the more God-like the higher and
further do we enter into the great riches and blisses
of God. Therefore the more we give to God the
more we receive.
On going to partake of the Blessed
Sacrament we do well to banish from the heart and
mind all thought of what it may please God to still
further give us and to make an offering to God.
The only way we can make an offering to God is upon
the wings of love, and upon this love we hold up before
Him the bread and wine as the Body and Blood of our
Redeemer, repeating and repeating in our heart, “I
eat and drink This as a memorial before Thee of the
Perfect Love and Sacrifice of Jesus Christ.”
When we so do with great love in our heart
we find that we are able sensibly to receive great
grace.
Of Prayer
Of the many kinds and degrees of prayer
first perhaps we learn the prayer of the lips, then
that of the mind, then the prayer of the heart, and
finally the prayer of the soul prayer of
a totally different mode and order, prayer of a strange
incalculably great magnetic power, prayer which enables
us to count on help from God as upon an absolute and
immediate certainty.
We find this about perfect prayer
that it is not done as from a creature beseeching
a Creator at an immense distance, but is done as a
love-flash which, eating up all distance, is immediately
before and with the Creator and is accompanied by
vivid certainty at the heart; this latter is active
faith; we have too much perhaps of that kind of faith
which may be named waiting or passive faith.
This combination of love with active
faith instantly opens to us God’s help.
We may or may not receive this in the form anticipated
by the creature, but later perceive that we have received
it in exactly that form which would most lastingly
benefit us.
After a while we cease almost altogether
from petitioning anything for ourselves, having this
one desire only: that by opening ourselves to
God by means of offering Him great love, we receive
Himself.
Of Contemplation
To enter the contemplation of God
is not absence of will, nor laziness of will, but
great energy of will because of, and for, love:
in which love-condition the energy of the soul will
be laid bare to the energy of God, the two energies
for the time being becoming closely united or oned,
in which state the soul-will or energy is wholly lifted
into the glorious God-Energy, and a state of unspeakable
bliss and an immensity of living is
immediately entered and shared by the soul. Bliss,
ecstasy, rapture, all are energy, and according as
the soul is exposed to lesser or greater degrees of
this energy, so she enters lesser or greater degrees
of raptures.
It is misleading in these states of
ecstasy to say that the soul has vision, if by vision
is to be understood anything that has to do with concrete
forms or any kind of sight; for the soul is totally
blind. But she makes no account of this blindness
and has her fill of all bliss and of the knowledge
of another manner of living without any need whatever
of sight. Has the wind eyes or feet? yet it possesses
the earth and is not prevented. So the soul,
without eyes and without hands, possesses God.
Contact with God is then of the nature
of the Infusion of Energy. The infusions of this
energy may take the form of causing us to have an
acute intense perception and consciousness (but not
such form of perception as would permit us to say
“I saw,” but a magnetic inward cognisance,
a fire of knowledge which scintillates about the soul
and pierces her) of His perfections; of His tenderness,
His sweetness, His holiness, His beauty. When
either of these last two are made known to her, the
soul passes into what can only be named as an agony
of bliss, insupportable even to the soul for more than
a very brief time, and because of the fearful stress
of it the soul draws away and prays to be covered
from the unbearable happiness of it, this being granted
her whether automatically (that is to say, because
of spiritual law) or whether by direct and merciful
will of God who is able to tell?
Such experiences are not for the timid,
but require steady courage and perfect loving trust
in God.
Contemplation even in its highest
forms is not to be confused with spiritual “experiences,”
which are totally apart from anything else that we
may know in life they are entirely outside
of our volition, they are not to be prayed for, they
are not to be even secretly desired, but to be accepted
how and when and if God so chooses.
In contemplation the will is used,
and we are not able to come to it without the will
is penetratingly used towards the joining and meeting
with the will and love of God. In the purely spiritual
“experience” from first to last there is
no will but an absence of will, a total submission
and yielding to God, without questioning, without
fear, without curiosity, and the only will used is
to keep ourselves in willingness to submit to whatever
He shall choose to expose us to. God does not
open to us such experiences in order to gratify curiosity but
expecting that we shall learn and profit by them.
First we find them an immense and unforgettable assurance
of another form of living, of great intensity, at
white heat, natural to a part of us with which we
have hitherto been unfamiliar (the soul) but inimical
to the body, which suffers grievously whilst the soul
glows with marvellous vitality and joy.
This assurance of another manner of
living, though we see nothing with the eyes, is the
opening of another world to us. The invisible
becomes real, faith becomes transformed in knowledge.
If the hundred wisest men of the world should all
prove upon paper that the spiritual life as a separate
and other life from the physical life does not exist,
it would cause nothing but a smile of compassion to
the creature that had experience. God teaches
us by these means to become balanced, poised, and
a complete human being, combining in one personality
or consciousness the Spiritual and the Material.
But we are not given and shown these
mysteries without paying a price: we must learn
to live in extraordinary lowliness and loneliness
of spirit. The interests, enjoyments, pastimes
of ordinary life dry up and wither away. It becomes
in vain that we seek to satisfy ourselves in any occupation,
in anything, in any persons, for God wills to have
the whole of us. When He wills to be sensibly
with us, all Space itself feels scarcely able to contain
our riches and our happiness. When He wills to
disconnect us from this nearness, there is nothing
in all the universe so poor, so destitute, so sad,
so lonely as ourself. And there is no earthly
thing can beguile or console us, because, having tasted
of God, it is impossible to be satisfied or consoled
save inwardly by God Himself. But He opens up
Nature to us in a marvellous way, unbelievable until
experienced. He offers us Nature as a sop to
stay our tears. By means of Nature He even in
absence caresses the soul and the creature, speaks
to them fondly, encourages and draws them after Him,
sending acute and wonderful perceptions to them, so
that, quite consoled, they cry aloud to Him with happiness.
And often when the creature is alone and secure from
being observed by anyone He will open His glamour to
the soul and she passes into union with paradise and
even more high heaven itself. These
are angels’ delights which He lavishes upon the
prodigal.
Another heavy price to be paid is
found by the soul and heart and mind in the return
from the blissful and perfect calm which surrounds
even the lowest degree of the contemplation of God
to the turmoil of the world. For to have been
lifted into this new condition of living, this glamour,
this crystal joy, to know such heights, such immensities,
and to descend from God’s blisses to live the
everyday life of this world and accept its pettiness
is a great pain, in which pain we are of necessity
not understood by fellow-creatures; therefore the
more and the more we become pressed into that great
loneliness which is the inevitable portion of the true
lover, and experience the pain of those prolonged
spiritual conflicts in which the soul learns to bend
and submit to the petty sordidness of life in a world
which has forgotten God. It is the lack of courage
and endurance to perpetually weather these dreadful
storms which causes us to turn to seclusion the
cloister. To refrain from doing this and to remain
in the world though not of it is the sacrifice of the
loving soul she has but the one to make to
leave the delights of God, and for the sake of being
a useful servant to Jesus to pick up the daily life
in the world; which sacrifice is in direct contrariety
to the sacrifice of the creature, which counts its
sacrifices as a giving up of the things of the world.
So by opposites they may come to one similarity perfection.
How to conduct itself in all these difficult ways
so foreign to its own earthly nature is a hard problem
for the creature, belonging so intimately to this
world which it can touch and see: and yet which
it is asked by God bravely to climb out of into the
unknown and the unseen. Bewildered by the enormous
demands of the soul which can never rest in any happiness
without she is contemplating God, adoring Him, conversing
with Him, blessing and worshipping Him, the poor creature
is often bewildered to know how to conduct the ordinary
affairs and duties of life under such pressures.
Of its emotions, of the tears that it sheds, of the
falls that it takes, a library of books might be written.
In the splendour, the grandeur, the great magnitudes
and expanses of spirit life as made known to it by
the soul, the creature feels like some poor beggar
child, ill-mannered, ill-clothed, which by strange
fortune finds itself invited to the house of a mighty
king, and, dumb with humility and admiration, is at
a loss to understand the condescension of this mighty
lord. In this sense of very great unworthiness
lies a profound pain, an agony. To cure this
pain we must turn the heart to give love, to think
love, and immediately we think of this great condescension
as being for love’s sake as love seeking
for love we are consoled. Then all
is well, all is joyful, all is divine. The more
simple, childlike, and unpretentious we can be, the
more easily we shall win our way through. Pretentiousness
or arrogance in Man can never be anything but ridiculous,
and a sense of humour should alone be sufficient to
save us from such error. For the same reason it
is impossible to regard human ceremonies with any respect
or seriousness, for they are not childlike but childish.
How often the heart and mind cry out to Him, “O
mighty God, I am mean and foolish mean
in that which I have created by my vain imaginings,
my pride, my covetousness; but in that which Thou hast
made me I am wonderful and lovely a thing
that can fly to and fro day or night to Thy hand!”
The difficulties of the creature should
not be raised on some self-glorifying pinnacle merely
because the fickle variable heart at lasts learns
the exercise of Fidelity. Do we not see a very
ordinary dog practising this same fidelity as he waits,
so eager that he trembles, outside his master’s
door, having put on one side every desire save his
desire to his master whom, not seeing, he continues
to await; and this out of the generosity of his heart!
And we? Only by great difficulty, long endeavour,
bitter schooling, and having at last accomplished
it we name each other saints or saintly. Let us
think soberly about these things; are we then so much
less than a dog that we also cannot accomplish this
fidelity so that though hands and feet
go about daily duties the heart and mind are fixed
on the Master? Then the Master becomes the Beloved.
Of Blessing God
At first when the creature is being
taught to bless God it shrinks back in a fright, crying,
“What am I that I should dare to bless Almighty
God, I am afraid to do it; I am too unworthy; let me
wait till I am more righteous, till I have done more
works.” Then the divine soul counsels it
so: “Think no more about thyself, moaning
and groaning over thine unworthiness and trusting to
progress in works. Cease thinking of thyself,
and rise up and think only of God. Thou wilt
never be worthy, and all thy works are nothing and
thy learning of no count whatever; and as to thy righteousness,
is it not written that it is as filthy rags?
All that God will give thee is not for any merits
or works of thine, but for Love’s sake.
He desires both to give thee love and to receive thy
love, therefore rise and worship Him, give Him all
the love that thou hast; keep none back either for
thyself, or anything or any creature, but give all
that thou hast to Him with tears and songs and gladness.”
Timidly the creature obeys, and with all its powers
and strength it blesses God, and instantanteously
God blesses the creature, sending His sweetness and
His glamour about it: and the more the soul and
the creature bless God the more does He bless them,
and they bless Him from the bed of sickness and pain
as fully as they bless Him in health. They bless
Him in the night-time and in the noonday, they bless
Him as they walk, they bless Him as they work, and
because of this little bit of blessing and love that
the two of them offer to God He offers them all heaven
in Himself.
It is the duty of the soul to constantly
lend counsel, courage, help, advice, and strength
to the creature, and we are conscious of the voice
of the soul, which without any sound yet makes itself
inwardly heard, calling to the selfishness, the egoism
of the creature, urging the higher part of it to come
higher and the animal in it to become pure and to
subdue itself, saying to it, “Lie down and be
quiet, or thou wilt bring disaster to us both.”
“I cannot be quiet, for I could groan with my
restless distress.” “Cease to think
of thyself with thy roarings and groanings. Lay
hold of love which thinks nothing of itself but always
of that which it may give to the Beloved.”
“I cannot do this; I am no angel nor even a
saint, but a most ordinary creature, forsaken of God
and miserable.” “Thou art never forsaken,
but thy door is closed: it opens from thy side,
and thou art thyself standing across it and blocking
the opening of it I will show thee how to
open it, cry and moan no more for favours and gifts,
but do thou thyself do the giving. Since thou
dost not know at all how to begin do it
with these set words: ’I love and praise
Thee, I love and bless and thank Thee, I love and
bless and worship Thee’; and see thou do it
with all thy heart and mind and strength and with no
thought of thyself and future benefits, but entirely
that thou mayest give Him pleasure.” Then
the creature tries, but fails lamentably, for most
of its heart and mind is on itself and a fraction
only on God.
“Now try again and again and
again,” cries the soul, “O thou miserable
halfhearted shallow worldling!” And the creature
tries again, and, doing better, gets a very slight
warmth about the heart; and, doing it again, gets
a little comfort, and so, gradually progressing in
the way of true love which is all giving, at last one
day the creature does it perfectly because it has altogether
forgotten itself in the fire of its love and is completely
set upon God. Then automatically the door opens,
and immediately in through it there rushes the breath
and the blisses of God. And the creature, weeping
with excess of happiness, cries, “I never asked
for such delights, I did not know such happiness was
to be had; and if I did not ask, how is it that I
have received?” Then the soul answers, “Because
thou hast learnt to give to God, and that is the key
which unlocks the garden of His joys. Thou hast
just three things which He desires to have thy
love and thine obedience, and thy waiting fidelity.
When thou dost conform to His desire with all thy
tiny unadulterated strength, immediately heaven becomes
open to thee and thou dost receive more than thou
didst ever dream or think to ask for. This is
His lovely Will towards thee. But first always
do thy part, and until thou doest thy part I cannot
begin mine, for thou couldst receive neither blessings
nor blisses did I not receive them first from Him
and hand them on to thee; so each are dependent the
one on the other, and only together can we enter paradise.
Think not I do not suffer as much as thyself and far
more. I know thou dost suffer with thy body and
with the losses of thine earthly loves, but I suffer
far more with the loss of my Heavenly Love. At
first I could not understand what had come to me,
buried and choked in thy strange house of flesh.
I despised thee, I hated thee, thy stupid ways, thy
dreadful greeds, thine unspeakable obstinacy and unwillingness;
thou didst give me horrible sicknesses with thine unsavoury
wants, thine undignified requirements. I thought
thee foolish and now know myself to be more foolish
than thee, for thou hardly knowest the heavenly love
whereas I knew and left Him, seeking other loves.
The Fall was not thy fault, poor human thing, but mine.
I am the Prodigal, and thou the means of my return,
for if I can but raise thee to true adoration of our
God, then I shall pay my debt of infidelity to Him
and together as one glorious radiant spirit we shall
enter heaven again.
“Only listen and I can guide
thee, for the Master speaks to me and tells me what
to do. I am partly that which thou dost please
to call thy conscience, and thou dost treat me shockingly,
buffeting and wounding me when I try to whisper to
thee: if thou art not careful, thou wilt so disable
me that all our chance of happiness will be spoiled.
Do thou listen very tenderly for my voice, for I am
of gossamer and thou of strangely heavy clay.”
Of Evil and Temptation and of Grace
The heart and soul are subject to
four principal glamours: the glamour of youth,
the glamour of romance, the glamour of evil, and the
glamour of God.
When once the Spirit of Love, which
is God, descends into our soul then a new light becomes
created in us by which we see the glamour of evil
in its true form and complexion. We see it as
disease, misery, imprisonment, and death; and who
finds it difficult to turn away from such?
The natural man sees evil as an intense
attraction, the spiritual man as a horror of ugliness.
See then how the Spirit of Love is at once and easily
our Salvation.
Amongst all mysteries none seems greater
to us than the mystery of Evil. God Goodness Love:
these we understand. But evil whence
and why, since God is Love, Omnipotence, and Holiness?
We cannot but observe that all things
have their opposites: summer and winter, heat
and cold, light and dark, silence and sound, pleasure
and pain, life and death, action and repose, joy and
sadness, illness and health; and how shall we know
or have true pleasure in the one without we have also
knowledge of the opposite? The man who has never
known sickness has neither true gratitude, understanding,
nor pleasure in his heart over his good health:
he does not know that which he possesses. Neither
can we know the great glory that is Holiness till
we have known evil and can contrast the two.
“But what a price to pay for
knowledge; what fearful risk and danger to His creatures
for God so to teach them!” we may cry, forgetting
that with God all things are possible, “Who is
able and strong to save.” And does He dare
set Himself no difficult thing that He may overcome
it? The strong man’s knowledge of his own
courage forbids us think it. God wills to save
us. We have but to join our will with His, and
we are saved. How shall we mount to God other
than by mounting upon that which offers a foundation
of tangible resistance, overcoming and mounting upon
evil. Evil then becomes our stairway the
servant of Good. By using the evil that we meet
with day by day, we mount daily the nearer to God by
that exact degree of evil which we have overcome by
good that is to say, by practice of forgiveness,
compassion, patience, humility, endurance, held out
over against the invitation of evil to do the exact
opposite. A negligent, thieving, lying servant
that we have to deal with calls forth forgiveness,
and humility also, for are we a perfect servant to
our Lord? The evil of a drunken husband may be
used by the wife as a sure ladder to God, for because
of this evil she may learn to practise all the virtues
of the saints. Truly if we have the will to use
it, Evil is friendly. If we misuse Evil that
is to say, if we do not use it by mounting on it but,
intoxicated with its glamour, consent to it, this
is Sin, and immediately the stairway is not that of
ascent but of descent and death.
The Master says “Resist not
evil.” How are we to understand this but
by assuming that if we try our strength against Evil,
Evil is likely to overcome us? but on being confronted
with Evil we should instantly hold on to and join
with the forces of Good and so have strength quietly
to continue side by side with Evil without being seduced
by it. When Evil cannot seduce that
is to say, make us consent to it, then
for us it is conquered. When we give in or conform
to this seduction we generate Sin. Let us say
that we are in temptation, that Evil of some sort
confronts and invites us; if we battle with this presentment,
this picture, this insinuating invitation held out
before us by Evil, the act of contending with the
invitation will fix it all the more firmly in our
minds. We need to substitute another picture,
another invitation, another presentment, of that which
pertains to the good and the beautiful. He who
has learnt so to substitute and present before his
own heart and mind Jesus and the pure and beautiful
invitations of this Divine Jesus can solve the difficulty.
This is not contending, this is substituting; this
is transferring allegiance from the glamour of Evil
which is present with us, to the glamour of God, which,
because we are in temptation, is not present, but
is yet hoped and waited for.
To return again to the lying, dishonest,
and negligent servant. If we argue, contend,
and battle morally with this evil servant we do not
alter him, but by this contention generate antagonism.
Then what is our own position? Bad temper, a
disturbed heart, an inharmonious angry mind; but if
without contending we bear with and act gently with
this evil, making careful comparisons with our own
service to our own Lord, we learn patience, forgiveness,
and humility also, for have we never lied, have we
never been dishonest, have we never been negligent
to this sweet Lord? Then immediately His patience,
His forgiveness, His love are brought more intimately
to our consciousness, and our heart nearer to His
and His to ours. Is this loss or gain? Is
Evil then an enemy? No, a handmaid. So is
Satan made a servant to his Overlord, and his power
crossed.
Of all false things nothing is more
false than the glamour of Evil, for when on being
drawn into it we sin, instead of the hoped-for delight
we soon find satiety; instead of exhilaration, fatigue;
instead of contentment, disillusion; instead of satisfaction,
dust; instead of romance, the greedy claws of the
harpy; and the further we go in response to this glamour
the more pitiable our outlook; for the sweets and
possibilities of Evil are extraordinarily limited.
Can any man devise a new sin? No, but ever pursues
the same old round, the same pitiful circle.
If we pursue the glamour of God, we
find the exact opposite of all these things.
Spiritual delights know no satiety because of infinite
variety: they know no disease, no disillusionment,
and who can set a boundary or limit to the beautiful,
to love, and light, and God?
It is characteristic of temptation
that while we are exposed to it Christ is absent from
perception; for to perceive Christ would instantly
free us from all temptation (and often it is by temptation
faithfully borne that we mount).
When we are in a condition of contact
with Christ which is His grace, we are raised above
the stem of faith into the flowers of knowledge; but
for the true strengthening of the will it is necessary
that we live also on the harder and more difficult
meat of faith. So we return again and again to
that insulation from things heavenly in which we lived
before we had been made Aware. When we emerge
from these dark periods we find ourselves to have advanced.
With regard to Grace we can neither truly receive
nor benefit by it without our heart, mind, and soul
are previously adjusted to Response to it.
The regenerated creature is not exempt
from further temptations, but contrariwise the poignancy
of these temptations is greatly increased (though
of a quite different order of temptation to that known
to us in an unregenerated state); it is increased
in proportion to the degrees of Grace vouchsafed to
us. That is to say, temptation keeps level with
our utmost capacity of resistance yet never is allowed
to exceed the bounds, for when it would exceed them
a way out is found by the return of Grace; and we
are freed. The cause is the great root called
Self, a hydra-headed growth of selfishness, both material
and spiritual, sprouting in all directions. We
would seem to be here for ever enclosed as in a glass
bottle with this most horrid growth. Through
the glass we see all life, but always and ever in
company with this voracious Self. No sooner do
we lop off one shoot of it than another grows never
was such strenuous gardening as is required to keep
this growth in check, and every time we lop a shoot
we learn another pain. This is the long road to
perfection, for the Cross is “I” with
a stroke through it.
Who can describe the marvels, the
variations, the mystery of Grace? It is a dew
and an elixir, a balm and a fire, a destroyer of all
fear and sorrow, a delight and an anguish, for we
are martyred, pierced with long arrows by the longing
of the love that it calls forth. It is a sweetness
and a might, a glory and a power in which we are sensibly
aware we could walk through a furnace unscathed if
He bade us to do it. And by it we are lifted
in a crystal vase and enclosed in the Presence of
God.
As a man’s desire is so is he.
If our desire is entirely towards fleshly things and
joys and comforts, we are sensualists. If our
desire is all towards sport and horses, we are not
above horses but rather below them, for the human
animal is full of guile and the horse of obedience
and generosity. Nevertheless he is no goal for
the human to aim at. If we desire the beautiful,
we become beautified and refined. If we desire
God, we become godly.
It is characteristic of spiritual
progress that each step is gained through suffering,
through penetrating faithful endeavours, through grievous
incomprehensible turmoils and discords of the spirit,
worked frequently by means of the everyday commonplace
happenings and responsibilities of our daily life;
and finally as each new step is gained we are by Grace
carried to it in a flood of divine happiness to crown
our woes. Grace is God’s magnetic power
acting directly and immediately upon us and is altogether
independent of place, time, services, sacraments,
or ceremonies. We limit God’s communication
with us in this way that He is communicable
to us only in so far as we ourselves respond and are
able, apt, and willing to receive Him.
Is the condition of blessed nearness
to God permanent? No, not as a condition but
as a capacity only. We have need to perpetually
renew this condition by a positive active enthusiasm
toward God. We can in laziness no more retain
and use this condition as a permanency than we can
sleep one night and eat one meal and have these suffice
for our lifetime. But slowly, with work and with
pain, we learn perpetually to regain this condition
by that form of prayer which is the spiritual breathing-in
of the Spirit of Christ.
All God’s help, all God’s
comfortings are to be had by us by Grace. This
Grace will constantly be withdrawn so that we may learn
that we arrive at nothing by our own power but by
gift of God, who is ever willing to give to us provided
we whole-heartedly respond. This Response to
God is surely amongst the most difficult of our achievements;
unaided by Grace it is an impossibility, but we know
that every man born into the world is invited by Christ
to ask for and to receive this Grace. The effect
of Response to God is a unity of our tiny force to
the Might-Presence and company of God as much as we
are able to bear it, producing in us while with us
such wealth of living; and such happiness as passes
all description. As we have capacity to respond
to God so we shall know that of God which is not known
by those as yet unlearned in response. For God,
we know, is neither This nor That, but so infinitely
more than any particularisation that we are able to
know Him only and solely according to our own capacity
to receive Him. To one He is a Personal Power
that ravishes with might, whose awful magnetism draws
the very heart and soul in longing anguish from the
body. To another He is the dimly known silent
Manipulator of the Universe, the secret Ruler to whose
mighty Will creation bows because needs
must. To another He is yet even more remote, being
the unresponsive, impersonal, incomprehensible, immovable
Instigator of all law.
What is it in our religion that we
need for a full happiness? Not the God of our
mere faith, nor the God of the theologian veiled behind
great mysteries of book-learning. It is the Responsive
God that we long for, and how shall we reach Him?
There is one way only through the taking
of Jesus Christ firmly and faithfully into our own
heart and life.
It is not what we now are, or where
we now stand that matters, but what He has the power
to bring us to.
How is God-consciousness to be achieved shall
we do it by study, by reading? No for
the study or reading of it will do no more than whet
the appetite for spiritual things this is
its work, but can do no more in giving
us the actual possession of this joy than the study
of a menu can satisfy hunger.
Individual, personal and inward possession
is in all things our necessity. If our friend
has slept well it is no rest to us if we have slept
ill. Up to a given point in all things each for
himself. It is the law. Of where this law
ends or is superseded by the law of all for all only
the Holy Spirit can instruct us, and that inwardly
and again each to himself. This state of God-consciousness
is a gift, and our work is to qualify for this gift
by persistent ardent desire towards God continued
through every adversity, through every lack of sensible
response on His part a naked will and heart
insisting upon God. This state of God-consciousness
once received and in full vigour of life, there is
without doubt about this condition a principle of
active contagion, very noticeable, very remarkable.
That “something” which
would appear frequently to be needed by persons anxious
to come to God and unable to discover the manner of
achieving it, would seem to be supplied by this contagion,
as though a human spark were often wanted to ignite
the spark in another, which done, the Divine Fire
springs up and rapidly grows without further human
assistance.
We see this contagion as used in its
full perfection by Jesus, for with all His selected
followers He had but to come in momentary contact
with them, using a word or a look, and, instantly forsaking
everything, they followed Him. Was this selection
of His favouritism? No, they were prepared to
receive this contagion, and not one of them but had
been secretly seeking for God; and this perhaps for
long years.
To find this new life we need then
not the reading of profound books of learning, not
the wisdom of the scholar, but an inward persistence
of the heart and will God-wards. This time of
insistent waiting is to be endured with all the more
courage in that we do not know at what blessed moment
we may pierce the veil and the gift come in all its
glorious immensity. Ten years, twenty, thirty what
are such in comparison with the blisses that shall
afterwards be ours for all eternity?
To look up by day or night into the
vastness of the sky with its endless depths, and as
we do it burn with the consciousness of God, this
is to truly live. No distance is too great, no
space too wide. All is our home. Without
this burning consciousness of God, Space is a thing
of fear and Eternity not to be thought of.
Of the many experiences and conditions
of the soul returning to God there is a condition
all too easily entered that of an enervating,
pulseless, seductive inertia. In this condition
of inert but marvellous contentment the soul would
love to stay. This is spiritual sensuality, a
spiritual back-water. The true life and energy
of the soul are lulled to idleness: basking in
happiness, the soul ceases to give and becomes merely
receptive.
This condition is entered from many
levels: we can rise to it (for it is very high)
from ordinary levels, branch sideways to it from high
contemplation; drop to it from the greatest contacts
with God. This condition seems strangely familiar
to the soul. So much so that she questions herself.
Was it from this I started on my wanderings from God?
The true health of the soul when in the blisses of
God is to be in a state of intense living or activity.
She is then in perfect connection with the Divine
Energy. She is then in a state of an immense
and boundless radiantly joyful Life.
To find God is to have the scope of
all our senses increased, but it is easily to be understood
that our power of suffering increases also, because
we are, as it were, flayed and laid bare to everything
alike. But it increases our joys to so great
a degree that for the first time in life joy is greater
than pain, happiness is greater than sorrow, knowledge
is greater than fear, and Good suddenly becomes to
us so much greater than Evil that Evil becomes negligible.
This increase, this wonderful addition to our former
condition, might be partly conveyed by comparison
to a man who from birth has never been able to appreciate
music: for him it has been meaningless, a noise
without suggestion, without delight, without wings,
and suddenly by no powers of his own the immense charms
and pleasures and capacities of it are laid open to
him! These increases of every sense and faculty
God will give to His lovers, so that without effort
and by what has now become to us our own nature we
are continually able to enter the Sublime.
Of the Two Wills
We have in us two wills. The
Will to live, and the Will to love God and to find
Him. The first will we see being used continually
and without ceasing, not only by every man, woman,
and child, but by every beast of the field and the
whole of creation.
The Will to live is the will by which
all alike seek the best for themselves, here gaining
for themselves all that they can of comfort and well-being
out of the circumstances and opportunities of life.
This is our natural Will. But it is not the will
which gains for us Eternal Life, nor does it even
gain for us peace and happiness during this life.
It is this Will to live which in Christ’s Process
we are taught to break and bruise till it finally
dies, and the Will to love, and gladly and joyously
to please God is the only Will by which we live.
Our great difficulty is that we try
at one and the same time to hang to God with the soul
and to the world with our heart. What is required
is not that we go and live in rags in a desert place,
but that in the exact circumstances of life in which
we find ourselves we learn in everything to place
God first. He requires of us a certain subtle
and inward fidelity a fidelity of the heart,
the will, the mind. The natural state of heart
and mind in which we all normally find ourselves is
to have temporary vague longings for something which,
though indefinable, we yet know to be better and more
satisfying than anything we can find in the world.
This is the soul, trying to overrule the frivolity
of the heart and mind and to re-find God. Our
difficulties are not made of great things, but of the
infinitely small our own caprices. Though
we can often do great things, acts of surprising heroism,
we are held in chains at once elastic and
iron of small capricious vanities, so that
in one and the same hour we may have wonderful, far-reaching
aspirations towards the Sublime, and God; and yet
there comes a pretty frock, a pleasant companion,
and behold God is forgotten! The mighty and marvellous
Maker of the Universe, Lord of everything, is placed
upon one side for a piece of chiffon, a flattering
word from a passing lover.
So be it. He uses no force.
We are still in the Garden of Free-Will. And
when the Garden closes down for us, what then?
Will chiffon help us? Will the smiles of a long-since
faithless lover be our strength? Now is the time
to decide; but our decision is made in the world,
and by means of the world and not apart from it, and
in the exact circumstances in which we find ourselves.
Another difficulty we have, and which
forms an insuperable barrier to finding God, is the
ever-recurring we may almost say the continual secret
undercurrent of criticism and hardness towards God
over what we imagine to be His Will. We need to
seek God with that which is most like Him, with a
will which most nearly resembles His own. To
be in a state of hardness or criticism, not only for
God but for any creature, in even the smallest degree
is to be giving allegiance to, and unifying ourselves
with, that Will which is opposite to, furthest away
from, and opposed to God. He Himself is Ineffable
Tenderness.
Having once re-found God, the soul
frequently cries to Him in an anguish of pained wonder,
“How could I ever have left Thee? How could
I ever have been faithless to Thine Unutterable Perfections?”
This to the soul remains the mystery of mysteries.
Was it because of some imperfection left in her of
design by God in order that He might enjoy His power
to bring her back to Him? If this were so, then
every single soul must be redeemed and not
for love’s sake, but for His Honour, His own
Holy Name, His Perfection. If the soul left Him
because of a deliberate choice, a preference for imperfection,
a poisonous curiosity of foreign loves, then love alone
is the cause and necessity of our redemption, and so
it feels to be, for in experience we find that love
is the beginning and the middle and the end of all
His dealings with us.
What is our part and what is our righteousness
in all this Process of the Saviour? This that
we obey, and that we renounce our own will, accepting
and abiding by the Will of God: and this self-lending,
self-surrender, this sacrifice of self-will is counted
to us for sufficient righteousness to merit heavenly
life. But from first to last we remain conscious
that we have no righteousness of our own, that we are
very small and full of weaknesses, and remain unable
to think or say, “This is my righteousness,
I am righteous,” any more than a man standing
bathed in, or receiving the sunlight can say or think,
“I am the sun.” Is all this, then,
as much as to say that we can sit down and do nothing;
but, leaving all to Christ, we merely believe, and
because of this believing our redemption is accomplished?
No, for we have an active part to play, a part that
God never dispenses with the active keeping
of the will in an active state of practical obedience,
submission, humble uncomplaining endurance through
every kind of test. What will these perhaps too
much dreaded tests be that He will put us through?
He will make use of the difficulties, opportunities,
temptations, and events of everyday life in the world
(which difficulties we should have to pass through
whether we become regenerated or not) down to the
smallest act, the most secret thought, the most hidden
intention and desire. But through it all it is
the Great Physician Himself who cures, and we are no
more able to perform these changes of regeneration
in heart and mind than we are able to perform a critical
operation on our own body. So He takes our vanities
and, one by one, strews them among the winds, and we
raise no protest; takes our prides and breaks them
in pieces, and we submit; takes our self-gratifications
and reduces them to dust, and we stand stripped but
patient; takes the natural lusts of the creature and
transfigures them to Holy Love. And in all this
pain of transition, what is the Divine Anæsthetic
that He gives us? His Grace.
Having submitted to all that Christ
esteems necessary for our regeneration, what does
He set us to? Service. Glad, happy service
to all who may need it. He has wonderful ways
of making us acquainted with His especial friends,
and it pleases Him to make us the means of answering
the prayers of His poor for help, to their great wonder
and joy and to the increase of their faith in Him.
Also He uses us as a human spark, to ignite the fires
of another man’s heart: when He uses us
in this way, it will seem to one like the opening
of a window to another a magnetism.
One will see it as a light flashed on dark places,
another receives it as the finding of a track where
before was no track. But however many times we
may be used in this way, the working remains a mystery
to us.
What is our reward whilst still in
this world for our patient obediences and renunciations?
This that all becomes well with us the
moment the process is brought to the stage where the
aim of our life ceases to be the enjoyment of worldly
life and becomes fixed upon the Invisible and upon
God: and all this by and because of love, for
it is love alone which can make us genuinely glad to
give up our own will and which can keep us from sinning.
We commence by qualifying through
our human love, meagre and fluctuating as it is, for
God’s gift of holy love of divine
reciprocity, and with the presentation of this divine
gift immediately we find ourselves in possession of
a new set of desires, which for the first time
in our experience of living prove themselves completely
satisfying in fruition. God does not leave us
in an arid waste, because He would have us to be holy,
and nowhere are there such ardent desires as in heaven;
but He transposes and transfigures the carnal desires
into the spiritual by means of this gift of divine
reciprocity which is at once access to and union with
Himself. Now, and only now do we find the sting
pulled out of every adverse happening and every woe
of life, and out of death also.
And the whole process is to be gone
through just where and how and as we find ourselves in
our own home or in the home of another, married or
single, rich or poor, with these three watchwords,
Obedience, Patience and Simplicity.
But it is not sufficient to have once
achieved this union with God: to rest in happiness
the soul must continually achieve it. It follows
then that our need is not an isolated event but a
life, a life lived with God, and in experience
we find that this alone can satisfy us. A life
in which we receive hourly the breath of His tenderness
and pity, His infinite solace to a pardoned soul.
Of the Interchange of Thought without Sound
Many persons know what it is to have
the experience with another person of a simultaneous
exactitude of thought speaking aloud the
same words in the same instant. Others experience
in themselves the power to exchange thought and to
know the mind of another without the medium of sound,
though not without the medium of word-forms, this
last being a capacity possessed only by the soul in
communion with the Divine. We name these experiences
thought-waves, mind-reading, mental telepathy, and
understand very little about them; but beyond this
mind-telepathy there is a telepathy of the soul about
which we understand nothing whatever. This is
the divine telepathy, with words or without word-forms,
by which Christ instructs His followers. The
telepathy of the mind is the indicator to the existence
of a telepathy of the soul; for the mind indicates
to us that which should be sought and known by the
soul, and without we come to divine things first in
a creaturely way (being creatures) we shall never
come to them at all. The mind desires and indicates,
the soul achieves.
This telepathy with Christ is the
means by which the soul learns in a direct manner
the will and the teaching and the mind of Christ, and
it is by this means she gains such wisdom as it is
God’s will she shall have. The soul seeks
this telepathy during the second stage, vaguely, not
knowing or understanding the mode of it, receiving
it rarely and with great difficulty.
In the third stage she obtains it
in abundance, at times briefly, at others at great
length.
That God has his dwelling-place at
an incalculably great distance from ourselves is a
true knowledge of the soul: but a further knowledge
reveals to us that this calamity is mitigated, and
for short periods even annulled, by provision of His
within the soul to annihilate this distance, and be
the means of bringing the soul into such immediate
contact with Himself as she is able to endure.
But the Joy-Energy of God being insupportable to the
very nature of flesh, in His tender love and pity
He provides us, through the Person of His Son, with
degrees of union of such sweet gentleness that we
may continually enjoy them through every hour of life;
and through His Son He comes out to meet the prodigal
“while yet afar off.”
This is strongly observable, that
as the process of Christ proceeds and grows in us,
though our joys in God are individual, yet they become
also clothed in a garment of the universal, so that
the soul, when she enters the fires of worship and
of blessing and of conversing with God without
any forethought, but by a cause or need now become
a part of herself, enters these states and
gives to Him no longer as I, but as We which
is to say, as All Souls.
Many of us look to death to work a
miracle for us, thinking the mere cessation of physical
living will give entry to paradise or even heaven,
so long as we are baptised and call ourselves Christians.
This is a great delusion. In character, personality,
cleanliness, goodwill we are, after death, exactly
as far advanced as we were before death, and no further.
What then is needed, since death will not help us?
The Seed of Divine love and life planted and consciously
growing in us whilst we are still in this world.
And what is this Seed? the Redeemer.
What is paradise, what is heaven?
The progressive gradations of conditions of a perfect
reciprocity of love, and the greater the perfection
of this reciprocity the greater the altitudes attained
of heaven. Thus we see in Scripture that the
angels who stand nearest to God or highest in heaven
are the cherubim that is to say, they are
those who have attained a greater reciprocity than
all other angels. Now this Divine love is incomprehensible
to us until we are initiated into its mystery as a
gift, and cannot be understood nor guessed at by comparisons
with any human loves however great, noble, or pure;
but this burning fiery essence of joy, this radiant
glory of delight, this holy and ineffable fulfilment
of the uttermost needs, longings, and requirements
of the soul must be personally experienced by us to
be comprehended.
What madness in us is it that can
count as an added cross or burden any means by which
we reach such perfection of bliss for ever? The
Cross is for us the misery of our own blinding sins
and selfishnesses. The burden is the weight of
our own distance from God. “Take up thy
cross (which is our daily life of ignorance and sin),
take up thy cross, and follow Me,” says the
voice of the Saviour; and as we do it and follow Him
the distance between God and ourselves diminishes,
and finally the burden and the cross disappear,
and behold God! awaiting us with His consolations.
It is the stopping half-way that causes
would-be followers of Christ such distress. It
is necessary that we follow Him all the way and not
merely a part of it that He may complete
His process in us. When we are living altogether
in a creaturely, natural, or unregenerated way, absorbed
in the ambitions and interests of a worldly life, we
are perhaps content. When we live regenerated
and in the spirit, we are in great joy; but when we
try to live between the two and would serve God and
worldly interests at the same time we are in gloomy
wretchedness, vacillation, depression.
The Master said, “The kingdom
of heaven is within you,” which signified that
within us was the potentiality to have entrance to,
and to know, the mystery of the Divine Secret, and
to participate whilst still living here, in the early
degrees or manifestations of Divine Love that
Power which glorifies the angels, and is Heaven.
Of the three Stages of God-Consciousness
(Which more properly expressed
is the gift of immediate access of the soul of God)
There are three principal stages on
the way of progress three separate degrees
of God-Consciousness. The first is the Consciousness
of the Presence of Jesus, the Perfect Man. We
take Him into the heart, accept and know Him, love
and obey Him. In the second stage we receive
Jesus as the Christ and recognise Him as the Messiah
(of which the mind was not sure in the first stage).
We rejoice in Him, giving Him a more perfect obedience.
In the third the soul is given the Consciousness of
the Father, and, being filled with a very great love
and joy, worships Him as the Known God. Now life
immediately becomes totally changed, fear and sin are
swept away, and love rules the Universe.
It is now that God makes us know His
glamour; that He casts over the soul His golden net
of spiritual delights, and by them seems to challenge
her, saying to the soul, “Now that I reveal Myself
to thee, canst thou ever return to the joys of the
world, canst thou find its pleasures sweet, canst
thou be satisfied with any human love; canst thou
by any means resist Me now that I show Myself?”
And the soul answers Him, “Nay Lord, in truth
I cannot.”
The remembrance of these powers and
these spells of God make for the soul a sure foundation
of repose and certainty in the days of the testing
of fidelity that still lie before her: they also
further reveal to her His consummate care of her exact
requirements, for she cannot pass beyond a certain
stage without a direct personal assurance is given
her. First He demands of us that we have, and
actively maintain, a clean will to turn and cleave
to Him, without any assurance beyond written assurance
(Scripture); and having given Him a thorough proof
of fidelity, He then grants us the personal assurance.
Having been given these rapturous concessions, what
would perfection demand of us a total withdrawal
from the world a hiding away in secret
with our soul’s treasure of delights? Maybe
for some; but a higher perfection calls us back to
service in the wretched turmoil of the world, to work
and to stand in the House of Rimmon and never bow
the knee, to carry with us everywhere the Divine Consciousness
and preserve its light undimmed in every sordid petty
circumstance of daily life, to endure with perfect
patience the follies and the prides of the unenlightened.
Whoever can achieve those things may find himself
at last a saint.
Very early in this third stage a miracle
is performed in us: without knowing how it came
about or what day it was done, we suddenly know that
the heart and the mind have become virgin and
this without any variation. Every kind of lust,
whether of eye, body, heart, or mind, has been removed
from us, and never again has any power over us, for
the will has become superior to lust, and there is
a finish to all such contending: this moral healing
is more impressive than any physical healing.
Before this miracle is performed for us, we have suffered
many things, as much as we can bear: subtle and
astonishing temptations of mind and body and spirit
“call to remembrance the former days in which
after ye were illuminated ye endured a great fight
of afflictions” (Heb. .
This person that writes formerly supposed
that no creature was admitted to the blessedness of
being in any way with God in Spirit without they were
already become a saint; but this is not so, and He
accepts the sinner long before he is a saint (if ever
we become one in this world, which is doubtful), provided
the will is always held good towards God.
This is the mighty Process of Christ
which he desires to perform for all. Of the tears
we shed over it the less mention the better; they are
precious tears, necessary tears, cleansing tears, and
if we will not lend ourselves to this Process of Christ
we may have as many tears for our portion and no benefit
from them in the way of advancement. Let us weep
the tears that God Himself will wipe away.
So then in the first stage the Soul
tastes of the sweet companionship of Jesus. In
the second, of the might and graciousness of Christ;
in the third, of the fullness of God and His unspeakable
delights. “Thou shalt give them to drink
of Thy pleasures, as out of the river” (Psalm
xxxvi.).
In the third stage of God-Consciousness
a great change takes place in our relationship to
God. Besides the magnitude of the alterations
of the inner life the sweeping spiritual
changes the body also shares in a change,
for, whilst we formerly prayed to God with a bowed
head and a hidden face, we now become unable to pray
or approach Him except with a raised head and an uncovered
face. This change is not from any thought or
intention of our own, but we are forced to it by a
sweet necessity. In a company of persons praying,
all those in the third stage could be immediately known
by this necessity of the raised and bared face if
we were not taught by the Holy Spirit never to reveal
to others that we are in the third stage except in
special instances. For this reason it is not possible
to enter true communion with God in a public place
of worship unless we can conceal ourselves from others.
For the face undergoes a change in communion with
God, and it is not pleasing to Him that this should
be seen by any eye but His own.
If anyone finds great difficulty (and
the most of us do) in coming to the first stage that
of taking Jesus into the heart he must pray
every day in a few short words from the heart
that God will give him to Jesus, and in due time he
will be heard.
In the third stage of progress we
have the home-coming of the soul as far as we are
able to know it in the flesh: “We taste
of the powers of God” (Hebrews).
But the fullness of home-coming is
reserved for that day in which the greatest of all
the mysteries will be revealed to us the
mystery of the Relation of the Soul to God.
In that great day we shall know God by His Own Name.
We do not find God by denying the
existence of things not pleasing to Him. We do
not find the Eternal Goodness by saying that Evil
does not exist. We do not find true health of
spirit because we deny all sickness, pain, and disease.
Such a mode of Christianity may give a sense of comfort,
lend a false security to the heart and mind at once
weary of God-searching, and disenchanted with the world;
but it is not the Christianity which regenerates.
It is a narcotic, not a Redemption. It is the
way of a mind unwilling to face truths because they
pain. If there was anything made plain by Christ
it is that the way of Redemption lies through heroism
and not cowardice. Let those of us who too much
fear a passing pain of sacrifice of will remember
that the deepest of all pains, the last word in the
tragedy of life, is to come to old age and descend
to the grave without having found the Saviour.
For our calamity is that we are lost souls. Our
opportunity is that in this world we find the track
of Christ which leads us home.
God does not create a new world on
purpose for His lovers immediately to live in, yet
though we remain our full time in this same world
it is not the same world. We see a person in a
severe illness and again in full health. It is
the same person, and not the same person. We
see a garden filled with flowers in the rain under
grey clouds, and again the same garden filled with
mellow sunlight under blue skies; it is the same garden,
and not the same garden.
These changes could never be described
or conveyed to the man blind from birth; neither can
spiritual changes be described or conveyed till we
ourselves gain similarity of experience. God
transposes our pleasures, taking the glamour from the
guilty and transferring it to the blameless; by this
transforming our lives. He increases the pleasure
of unworldly enjoyments so we are independent of the
worldly ones. But we cannot remain in this transformed
world of His unless we are at peace both with ourself
and all persons around us.
Though from earliest childhood we
may have found in the beauties of Nature a great delight,
when we become the lover of God He passes His fingers
over our hearts and our eyes and opens them to marvellous
new powers for joy. Oh, the ecstasy that may be
known in one short walk alone with God! The overflowing
heart cries out to Him, What other lover is there
can give such bliss as this, and what is all Nature
but a lovely language between Thee and me! Then
the soul spreads wings into the blue and sings to
Him like soaring lark.
But do not let us seek Him only because
of His Delights, for so we might miss Him altogether.
But let it be because it is His wish: because
Perfection calls, and mystery calls to mystery, and
love to love, and Light calls to the darkness and
the Dawn is born.