“The Golden Age lies onward, not
behind.
The pathway through the past has led us
up:
The pathway through the future will lead
on,
And higher.”
The Life Radiant is that transfiguration
of the ordinary daily events and circumstances which
lifts them to the spiritual plane and sees them as
the signs and the indications of the divine leading.
Every circumstance thus becomes a part of the revelation;
and to constantly live in this illuminated atmosphere
is to invest all experiences with a kind of magical
enchantment. Life prefigures itself before us
as a spiritual drama in which we are, at once, the
actors and the spectators. The story of living
goes on perpetually. The days and the years inevitably
turn the pages and open new chapters. Nothing
is ever hopeless, because new combinations and groupings
create new results. The forces that determine
his daily life are partly with man and partly with
God. They lie in both the Seen and the Unseen.
We are always an inhabitant of both realms, and to
recognize either alone and be blind to the other is
to deprive ourselves of the great sources of energy.
The divine aid, infinite and all-potent as it is,
capable at any moment of utterly transforming all
the conditions and transferring them to a higher plane,
is yet limited by the degree of spiritual receptivity
in the individual. As one may have all the air
that he is able to breathe, so may one have all the
aid of the Holy Spirit which he is capable of receiving.
Man can never accept so gladly and so freely as God
offers; but in just the proportion to which he can,
increasingly, lift up his heart in response, to that
degree God fills his life with a glory not of earth.
“Man may ask, and God may answer,
but we may not understand,
Knowing but our own poor language, all
the writing of His hand.”
Science has discovered the existence
of that incalculable energy, the ether, interpenetrated
in the atmosphere. Electro-magnetic currents of
power beyond all conception are revealed, and when
intelligently recognized by some happy genius, like
that of Marconi, they begin to be utilized in the
service of human progress. Now as this ethereal
energy which is only just beginning to be recognized
can be drawn upon for light, for heat, for motor power,
for communication, just as this hitherto undreamed-of
power can be drawn upon for the fundamental needs
of the physical world, so, correspondingly, does there
exist the infinite reservoir of spiritual energy which
God freely opens to man in precisely the proportion
in which he recognizes and avails himself of its transforming
power. And in this realm lies the Life Radiant.
If this transfiguration of life could only be experienced
by the aid of wealth and health and all for which
these two factors stand, it would not be worth talking
about. We hear a great deal of the “privileged
classes” and of “fortunate conditions,”
as if there were certain arbitrary divisions in life
defined by impassable boundaries, and that he who
finds himself in one, is unable to pass to another.
Never was there a more fatally erroneous
conception. In the spiritual world there are
no limits, no boundaries, no arbitrary divisions.
Just so far as the soul conquers, is it free.
Conquer ignorance, and one enters the realm of education,
of culture; conquer vice, and he enters into the realm
of virtue; conquer impatience and irritability and
bitterness, and their result in gloom and despondency,
and he enters into the realm of serenity and sweetness
and exaltation with their result in power of accomplishment.
The Life Radiant can be achieved, and is within the
personal choice of every individual. One may place
himself in relation with this infinite and all-potent
current of divine energy and receive its impetus and
its exhilaration and its illumination every hour in
the day. The toiler in manual labor may lead this
twofold life. On the visible side he is pushing
onward in the excavation of a tunnel; he is laying
the track of a new railroad; he is engaged in building
a house; he stands at his appointed place in a great
factory, but is this all? His real
work lies both in the visible and in the invisible.
On the one hand he is contributing to the material
resources of the world, and he is earning his wage
by which to live; on the other hand he is developing
patience, faithfulness, and judgment, quantities
of the spiritual man and possessions of the spiritual
life which extend the spiritual territory. Faithfulness
to the immediate duty creates a larger theatre for
duty. There are not wanting examples that could
be named of statesmen, senators, governors,
and others in high places, to say nothing of the supreme
example of a Lincoln; there are not wanting examples
of professional men in high and important places who
initiated their work by any humble and honest industrial
employment that chanced to present itself at the moment.
Conquering this rudimentary realm, they passed on
to others successively. Integrity is a spiritual
quantity, and it insures spiritual aid. The cloud
of witnesses is never dispersed. The only imprisonment
is in limitations, and limitations can be constantly
overcome. The horizon line of the impossible recedes
as we advance. In the last analysis nothing is
too sublime or too beautiful to be entirely possible.
Its attainment is simply a question of conditions.
These conditions lie in entering into this inner realm
of spiritual energy in which the personal will is
increasingly identified with the will of God.
Like an echo of celestial music are
these lines by Sully-Prudhomme:
“The lilies fade with the dying
hours,
Hushed is the song-bird’s
lay;
But I dream of summers and dream of flowers
That last alway.”
Nor is this only the day-dream of
a poet. The summers and flowers that last alway
are a very immediate treasure which one has only to
perceive, to grasp, to recognize, and to realize.
“Surely,” exclaimed the Psalmist, “goodness
and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life,
and I shall dwell in the house of the Lord forever.”
This dwelling in “the house of the Lord”
is by no means a figure of speech. Nor is it to
be regarded as some ineffable privilege to be possibly
to be enjoyed after that change we call
death. Its real significance is here and now.
One must dwell in “the house of the Lord”
to-day, and every day. The “house of the
Lord” is a beautiful figurative expression for
that spiritual atmosphere in which one may perpetually
live, and in which it is his simple duty both to live
and to radiate to all around him.
In these summer days of 1903, in this
golden dawn of the twentieth century, the world is
echoing with wonder in the discovery of a new and
most mysterious force in nature, radium.
Science is, at this date, powerless to analyze or
explain its marvellous power. The leading scientists
of the world of learning Sir William Crookes,
Sir Oliver Lodge, and Professor Curie (who, with Mme.
Curie, has the honor of being its discoverer) believe
that in radium will be found the true solution of
the problem of matter. Radium gives off rays at
the speed of one hundred and twenty thousand miles
a second, and these rays offer the most extraordinary
heat, light, and power. Yet with this immense
radiation it suffers no diminution of energy; nor can
any scientist yet discern from what source this power
is fed. A grain of it will furnish enough light
to enable one to read, and, as Professor J. J. Thomson
has observed, it will suffer no diminution in a million
years. It will burn the flesh through a metal
box and through clothing, but without burning the
texture of the garments. The rays given out by
radium cannot be refracted, polarized, or regularly
reflected in the way of ordinary light, although some
of them can be turned aside by a magnet.
Professor Curie has reported to the
French Academy of Science that half a pound of radium
salts will in one hour produce a heat equal to the
burning of one-third of a foot of hydrogen gas.
This takes place, it must be remembered, without any
perceptible diminution in the radium. It emits
heat maintaining a temperature of 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit
above its surroundings. It evolves sufficient
heat to melt more than its own weight of ice every
hour. Radium projects its rays through solid
substances without any perceptible hindrance and burns
blisters through a steel case. The light is pale
blue. Down in the deepest pitchblende mines,
where particles of radium have been hidden away since
the creation of the world, they are still found shining
with their strange blue light. The radium electrons
pass through the space which separates every molecule
in a solid body from another. The scientific theory
is that no two molecules in any body, however dense,
actually touch. The relative power of radium
to the X-ray is as six to one. The rays of radium
have one hundred thousand times the energy of those
of uranium and over one hundred times the energy of
barium radiation. The scarcity of the metal will
be understood when it is stated that there is far less
radium in pitchblende than gold in ordinary sea water.
Radium colors glass violet; transforms oxygen into
ozone, white phosphorus to red; electrifies various
gases and liquids, including petroleum and liquid
air.
Professor Sir William Crookes, the
world’s greatest living physicist and experimental
scientist, said of radium in the June of this 1903:
“In total darkness I laid a piece
of pitchblende the ore from which
radium is extracted face down upon a sensitized
plate, and let it act with its own light for
twenty-four hours. The result was a photograph,
where the black pitchblende appeared light owing to
the emanations from the radium contained in it.
The photograph also shows these going off into
space from the sides of the specimen.
“Radium is dangerous to handle.
Once I carried a tiny piece of radium in my waistcoat
pocket to a soiree at the Royal Society, and on
reaching home found a blister in my side. The
blisters from radium may take months to get well,
as the injurious effect goes so deep. Now
I carry a thick lead box just large enough to hold
the little brass case in which I keep the radium
itself. There it lies a little,
tawny, crystalline patch. There would hardly be
a larger quantity together in one box anywhere
in England.
“There are several kinds of emanations
from radium. Photographs similar to those
produced by the Roentgen ray tube and induction coil
can be got by means of the emanations from a small
quantity of radium. I took a screen made
of zincblende, which will phosphoresce when the
emanations of radium fall upon it. I then painted
upon it, in a solution of radium, the word ‘Radium.’
In the dark this screen (about three inches by
four inches) gives off sufficient light to read
by. But the most striking way of showing the emanations
is by the little contrivance I call a Spinthariscope.
In this a zinc sulphide screen is fitted at the
end of a short brass tube, with a speck of radium
about a millimeter away from it. Looking in the
dark through the lens at the other end one sees
a regular bombardment of the screen by the emanations.
The phenomena of radium require us to recast
many of our ideas of matter, electricity, and
energy, and its discovery promises to realize what
for the last hundred years have been but day-dreams
of philosophy.
“Although the fact of emission
of heat by radium is in itself sufficiently remarkable,
this heat is probably only a small portion of
the energy radium is constantly sending into space.
It is at the same time hurling off material particles
which reveal their impact on a screen by luminous
scintillations. Stop these by a glass or
mica screen, and torrents of Roentgen rays still
pour out from a few milligrams of radium salt
in quantity to exhibit to a company all the phenomena
of Roentgen rays, and with energy enough to produce
a nasty blister on the flesh, if kept near it for an
hour.”
It is hardly possible to contemplate
this remarkable element in the world of nature without
recognizing its correspondence in the world of spirit.
If an element radiates perpetual light, heat, and power
with no loss of its own inherent energy, so the spirit
can radiate love, sympathy, sweetness, and inspiration
with no diminution of its own quality. Science
may be unable to recognize the medium from which radium
is fed; but religion recognizes the medium from which
the spirit draws its sustenance in the power of God.
The human will merged in the divine will is invincible.
There is no ideal of life which it may not realize,
and this realization is in the line of the inevitable
and is experienced with the unerring certainty of
a mathematical demonstration.
Yet, when one comes to examine the
actual average attitude of humanity toward this subject
of the divine will, one finds it is largely that of
a mere gloomy and enforced resignation, even at its
best, and, at its worst, of distrust and rebellion
to the will of God. It seems to be held as the
last resort of desperation and despair, rather than
as the one abounding source of all joy and success
and achievement.
The average individual holds a traditional
belief that he ought, perhaps, to be able sincerely
to wish that God’s will be done, but as a matter
of fact he far prefers his own. The petition is,
in his mind, invariably associated with seasons of
great sorrow, disaster, and calamity, when, having
apparently nothing else to hope for, a prayer is offered
for the will of God! It is somewhat vaguely held
to be the appropriate expression for the last emergency,
and that it implies resigning one’s self to
the most serious and irreferable calamity. There
is also a nebulous feeling that while the will of God
may be entirely appropriate to the conditions and
circumstances of the aged, the poor, the unfortunate,
and the defective classes, it is the last thing in
the world to be invoked for the young, the gifted,
the strong, and the brilliant orders of society.
It is tacitly relegated to a place in some last hopeless
emergency, and not to a place in the creative energy
of the most brilliant achievement.
Now, as a matter of profoundest truth,
this attitude is as remote from the clear realization
of what is involved in the will of God as would be
the conviction that the flying express train or the
swift electric motor cars might be suitable enough
for the aged, and the weary, and the invalid, and
the people whose time was of little consequence, but
that the young, the radiant, the eager, the gifted,
the people to whom time was valuable, must go by their
own conveyances of horse or foot under their immediate
personal control. This fallacy is no more remote
from truth than is the fallacy that the will of God
is something to be accepted with what decorum of resignation
one may, only when he cannot help it! On the
contrary, the will of God is the infinitely great motor
of human life. Its power is as incalculably greater
over the soul than that of radium over other elements,
as it is higher in the scale of being; as spirit rather
than substance; and the Life Radiant is really entered
upon when one has come absolutely to merge all his
longing and desire into the divine purposes.
It is like availing one’s self of the great
laws of attraction and gravitation in nature.
With the human will identified with the divine will,
every day’s experience becomes invested with
the keenest zest and interest. The events that
may arise at any moment enlist the energy and fascinate
the imagination. The consciousness of union with
God produces an exquisite confidence in the wise and
sweet enchantment of life; the constant receptivity
of the soul to the influence and the guiding of the
Holy Spirit make an atmosphere ecstatic, even under
the most commonplace or outwardly depressing circumstances.
Celestial harmonies thrill the air. In this divine
atmosphere the soul’s native air every
energy is quickened. The divine realm is as truly
the habitat of the spiritual man who, temporarily
inhabiting a physical body that he may thus come into
relations with a physical world, is essentially a
spiritual rather than a physical being as
the air is the habitat of the bird, or the water of
the fish. When the divine statement is made,
“Without Me ye can do nothing,” it is
simply that of a literal fact. The gloom, the
depression, the irritation that so often prevail and
persist in mental conditions, do not arise, primarily,
from any outward trial or perplexity; they are the
result the inevitable result of
the soul’s lack of union with God; the lack
of that rapport between the spirit of man and
the divine spirit in which alone is exhilaration and
joy. When this union is forged, when the human
will rests perfectly in the divine will, one then absolutely
knows, with the most positive and literal conviction,
that “all things work together for good to them
that love God.” The assurance is felt with
the unchallenged force of a mathematical demonstration.
Not merely that the pleasant and agreeable things
work together for good, but all things pain,
loss, sorrow, injustice, misapprehension. Then
one realizes in his own experience the significance
of the words, “We glory in tribulation, also.”
One has heard all one’s life, perhaps, of “the
ministry of sorrow,” and similar phrases, and
he has become a trifle impatient of them as a sort
of incantation with which he has little sympathy.
At the best, he relegates this order of ministry to
the rank and file of humanity; to those whose lives
are (to his vision) somewhat prosy and dull; and for
himself he proposes to live in a world beautiful,
where stars and sunsets and flames and fragrances enchant
the hours, where, with his feet shod with silver bells,
he is perpetually conscious of being
“Born and nourished in miracles.”
He is perfectly confident that every
life can be happy, if it will; and he regards sorrow
as a wholly stupid and negative state which no one
need fall into if only he have sufficient energy to
generate a perpetual enchantment. Thus he dances
down the years like the daffodils on the morning breeze,
singing always his hymn to the radiant goddess:
“The Fairest enchants me,
The Mighty commands me,”
pledging his faith at the Altar of
Perpetual Adoration that one has only but to believe
in happiness and make room for it in his life in order
to live in this constant exhilaration. Then,
one day, he awakens to find his world in ruins.
Sorrow, pain, loss, have come upon him, and have come
in the one form of all others that seems most impossible
to bear. If it were death, even of the one dearest
on earth, he would be sustained by divine consolations.
If it were financial deprivation, he could meet it
with fortitude and accept Goethe’s counsel to
“go and earn more.” If it were any
one of various other forms of trial, he reflects,
there would be for his pain various forms of consolation;
but the peculiar guise it has assumed paralyzes him
with its baffling power, its darkness of eclipse.
The element of hopelessness in it, his own
utter inability to understand the cause of the sorrow
which is literally a thunderbolt out of a clear sky, plunges
him almost into despair. He had endeavored to
give the best, but the result is as if he had given
the worst; he had come to rely on a perfect and beautiful
comprehension and sympathy, but he is confronted with
the most inexplicable misapprehension of all his motives,
the most complete misunderstanding of all his aspirations
and prayers. This, or other combinations and
conditions of which it may serve as a type, is one
of the phases of human experience. If pain were
only the inevitable result of conscious and intentional
wrong-doing, then might one even learn to refrain from
the error and thus avoid the result. But a deeper
experience in life, a more profound insight into the
springs of its action, reveal that pain, as well as
joy, falls into experience as an event encountered
on the onward march, rather than as being, invariably,
conditions created by ourselves. In the final
analysis of being, we may have created the causes
sometime and somewhere; but in the immediate sense
we fail to discern the trace of our own action.
A joy, a radiance undreamed of, suddenly drops into
a day, making it a memorable date forever; a joy that
transmutes itself into exaltation and a higher range
of energy. Naturally, we count such an experience
divine, and offer our gratitude to God, the giver
of all blessings. But a tragedy of sorrow, a darkness
of desolation impenetrable and seemingly final, also
falls suddenly into a day, and inexpressible amazement
and incredulity that it can be real are added to the
pain. But it is real. The sunshine has vanished;
the stars have hidden their light; the air is leaden
where once it was all gold and rose and pearl; one
is alone in the desert, in a loneliness that no voice
sounds through, in an anguish that no human sympathy
can reach or sustain. All that made life worth
the living has been inexplicably withdrawn; and how,
then, shall he live? And why shall he
live? he may even question. The springs of energy
are broken and his powers are paralyzed. Whatever
he has hitherto done, whatever he has tried or hoped
to do in the joyous exaltation of the days that have
vanished from all save memory, he can do no longer.
It is not a question of choice, not a decision that
he would not still continue his efforts; but it is
the total impossibility of doing so that settles down
upon him like a leaden pall. The blind cannot
see, the deaf cannot hear, the dumb cannot speak,
the paralyzed cannot walk, no matter how
gladly they would fulfil these functions. So
he looks at his own life. His world is in ruins,
and he has no power to ever rebuild it again.
In such conditions the problem of suicide may arrive
like a ghastly spectre to confront the mind.
It is a spectre that, according to statistics, is
alarmingly prevalent. The statisticians talk of
periods of it as “an epidemic.” Both
science and religion take note of it, discuss its
bearing upon life, its tendency and its possible prevention.
It is seen as the result of both great and of trivial
causes. It is seen to follow a great sin, and
to be the terribly mistaken refuge
of a great sorrow. And the remedy lies, where?
It can hardly lie elsewhere than in a truer understanding
of the very nature of life itself. The only remedy
will be found in the larger general understanding
that life cannot be extinguished. One may destroy
his physical body, he can do that
at any moment and by an infinite variety of methods.
But he cannot destroy himself. He may
deprive himself of the instrument that was given to
him for use in the physical world; he cannot escape
from the duties that he should have fulfilled when
he had the means of doing so in the use of this instrument
we call the body. If science and religion could
clearly teach the awful results that follow suicide,
the terrible isolation and deprivation in which the
spiritual being who has thrown away his instrument
of service finds himself, it would be the one effective
cure for a demoralizing tendency. If one has sinned,
sometime and somewhere must he meet the consequences.
He cannot escape them by escaping from his body, and
the sooner he meets them, in repentance and atonement,
the sooner will he work out to better and brighter
conditions. If one encounters disaster or great
personal sorrow, what then? One does not throw
away all his possibilities of usefulness because he
is himself unhappy. If he does do this he is ignoble.
Life is a divine dream. It is a divine responsibility,
primarily between each soul and God. It is one’s
business to live bravely, with dignity, with faith,
with generosity of consideration and good will, with
love, indeed, which is the expression of the highest
energy. Yet, with his personal world in ruins,
what shall he do? He must learn that supreme
lesson of all time and eternity, the lesson
to accept and to joyfully embrace the will of God
as thus revealed to him, in an inscrutable way.
Until he shall learn to accept this
experience as divine, and offer his gratitude to God
for pain as sincerely as he offered it for experiences
of joy and of beauty, he cannot enter upon the Life
Radiant. For the radiant life is only achieved
through these mingled experiences as all equally accepted
from the Divine Power.
“Ah, when the infinite burden
of life descendeth upon us,
Crushes to earth our hopes, and
under the earth in the graveyard,
Then it is good to pray unto God,
for His sorrowing children
Turns He ne’er from the door,
but He heals and helps and consoles them.
Yet is it good to pray when all
things are prosperous with us;
Pray in fortunate days, for life’s
most beautiful fortune
Kneels before the Eternal’s
gate, and with hands inter-folded,
Praises, thankful and moved, the
only Giver of blessings.”
The Life Radiant comes when one can
as sincerely thank God for pain as for joy; when,
after long groping in the darkness, clinging, indeed,
to his faith in God (for without that he could not
live an hour, though that faith be totally without
sight), he suddenly realizes how a great sorrow has
wrought in him a great result; that it has perfected
and crystallized all that was nebulous in his faith,
and that it has absolutely brought him into perfect
rest in the Divine Will; that it has forged that indissoluble
link which forevermore identifies his will with the
will of God, and thus opens to him a realm fairer far
than a “World Beautiful” even
a World Divine. Only in this finer ether is revealed
to him the Life Radiant; in the atmosphere made resplendent
and glorious by this revelation of the soul’s
union with God. It is a life only experienced
after one who has seen before him the Promised Land
is led into the Wilderness instead, and who, standing
there in the midst of denial, and defeat, and desolation,
can rejoice in the sea of glass mingled with fire
through which he must pass. Only in this supreme
surrender of the soul to God; only in this rapture
of union with the divine power, lies the Life Radiant.
It is a glory not of earth; it is the instant crystallization
of an intense and infinite energy that pours itself
into every need of the varied human life. It is
the igniting of a spark that flashes its illumination
on every problem and perplexity. It is the coming
to “know God” in the sense meant by Saint
Paul, and thus to enter into the eternal life.
For the eternal life is not a term that implies mere
duration. It implies present conditions.
The eternal life is now. It is a spiritual state,
and implies the profound and the realized union with
God, rather than a prolongation of existence through
countless ages. Only the eternal life can thus
prolong itself. The life of the spirit is alone
immortal.
“The soul looketh steadily forward,
creating a world before her, leaving worlds behind
her,” and “the web of events is the flowing
robe in which she is clothed.” That union
of energy and will which we call the soul is capable
of creating a new world every day, and any adequate
perception of the life that now is, as well as that
which is to come, suggests consolation for the ills
of the day and leads one into the atmosphere of peace
and joy.
When one comes into any clear realization
of this life of the spirit, of its infinite
outlook, its command of resources, the
entanglement with trifles falls off of itself.
Not unfrequently a great deal of time and energy is
totally wasted in endeavoring to combat or to conquer
the annoyances and troubles that beset one; that weight
his wings and blind his eyes and render him impervious
and unresponsive to the beauty and joy of life.
Nine times out of ten it is far better to ignore these,
to put them out of sight and out of mind, and press
on to gain the clearer atmosphere, to create the new
world. “The whole course of things goes
to teach us faith. We need only obey. There
is guidance for each of us, and by lowly listening
we shall hear the right word. Why need you choose
so painfully your place, and occupation, and associates,
and modes of action and of entertainment? Certainly
there is a possible right for you that precludes the
need of balance and wilful election. For you
there is a reality, a fit place and congenial duties.
Place yourself in the middle of the stream of power
and wisdom which animates all whom it floats, and
you are without effort impelled to truth, to right,
and a perfect contentment. Then you put all gainsayers
in the wrong. Then you are the world, the measure
of right, of truth, of beauty. If we will not
be marplots with our miserable interferences, the
work, the society, letters, arts, science, religion
of men would go on far better than now, and the heaven
predicted from the beginning of the world, and still
predicted from the bottom of the heart, would organize
itself, as do now the rose, and the air, and the sun.”
The poet declares that “sorrow’s
crown of sorrow is remembering happier things,”
but there is a certain morbidness in even the sensitive
delicacy and intensity of feeling that broods too deeply
over the past. It is a great art to learn to
let things go let them pass. They are
a part of the “flowing conditions.”
Even the pain and sorrow that result from failures
and changes in social relations; loss of friends, the
vanishing of friendships in which one had trusted, even
this phase of trial, which is truly the hardest of
all, can be best endured by closing the door of consciousness
on it, and creating a new world by that miracle-working
power of the soul. Friendships that hold within
themselves any permanent, any spiritual reality, come
to stay. “Only that soul can be my friend
which I encounter on the line of my own march, that
soul to which I do not decline and which does not decline
to me, but, native of the same celestial altitude,
repeats in its own all my experience.”
Life has too many claims and privileges and resources
to waste it in lamentations. Let one look forward,
not backward. Fairy realms of enchantment beckon
him on. These “flowing conditions of life”
are, really, the conditions of joy, of exhilaration,
of stimulus to energy rather than the reverse.
They invest each day, each week, each year, with the
enchantment of the unknown and the untried. They
produce the possibility of perpetual hope, and continuity
of hope is continuity of endeavor. Without hope,
faith, and courage, life would be impossible; and
courage and all power of energy and endeavor depend
entirely upon hope and faith. If a man believes
in nothing and is in a state of despair and not hope,
his energies are paralyzed. But hope lends wings, hope
and faith are creative, and can both control and change
the trend of events. Circumstances are but the
crude material, which is subject to any degree of
transformation by the alchemy of faith. “When
a god wishes to ride, every chip and stone will bud
and shoot out winged feet to carry him,” and
it is hope and faith that give the power of the gods.
There is, perhaps, no adequate realization
on the part of humanity of the enormous extent to
which the forces in the Unseen mingle with the forces
of the Seen, and thus complete the magnetic battery
of action. Life approaches perfection in just
the degree to which it can intelligently and reverently
avail itself of this aid which is a divine provision.
It is not only after death that the soul “stands
before God.” The soul that does not stand
before God, now and here, in the ordinary daily life,
does not even live at all, in any true sense.
“I am come that ye might have life,”
said Jesus, “and have it more abundantly.”
It is only as one holds himself receptive to the divine
currents that he has life, and it rests with himself
to have it “more abundantly” every day
and hour.
This constant communion with Jesus,
this living in constant receptivity to the divine
energy, includes, too, the living in telepathic communion
with those who have gone on into the Unseen world.
The spirituality of life is conditioned on so developing
our own spiritual powers by faith and prayer and communion
with God, that one is sensitive to the presence and
responsive to the thought of friends who have been
released from the physical life. Shall Phillips
Brooks, the friend and helper and wise counsellor
when here, be less so now that he has entered into
the next higher scale of being? Shall the friend
whom we loved, and who was at our side in visible
presence yesterday, be less our friend because his
presence is not visible to us to-day? Why is it
not visible? Simply because the subtle spirit-body
is in a state of far higher vibration than the denser
physical body, and the physical eye can only recognize
objects up to a certain vibratory degree. It is
a scientific fact. Musicians and scientists know
well that above a certain pitch the ear cannot recognize
sound; it becomes silence. But as Saint Paul says,
“there is a natural body, and there is a spiritual
body,” and the spiritual body also has its organs
of sight and hearing. Clairvoyance and clairaudience
are as natural, when the spiritual faculties are sufficiently
developed, as are the ordinary sight and hearing.
Even when there is no clairvoyance and clairaudience,
in the way of super-normal development, the mind kept
in harmonious receptivity to the divine world may
be telepathically in more or less constant communion
with those in the unseen.
“The power of our own will to
determine certain facts is, itself, one of the facts
of life,” says Professor Josiah Royce. The
power of our own will is but another name for spiritual
power that positive force to which all
events and circumstances are negative.
“There never was a right endeavor
but it succeeded,” says Emerson. “Patience
and patience, we shall win at the last. We must
be very suspicious of the deceptions of the element
of time. It takes a good deal of time to eat
or to sleep, or to earn a hundred dollars, and a very
little time to entertain a hope and an insight which
becomes the light of our life. We dress our garden,
eat our dinners, discuss the household, and these
things make no impression, are forgotten next week;
but in the solitude to which every man is always returning,
he has a sanity and revelations which in his passage
into new worlds he will carry with him. Never
mind the ridicule, never mind the defeat: up
again, old heart! it seems to say, there
is victory yet for all justice; and the true romance
which the world exists to realize will be the transformation
of genius into practical power.”
A large percentage of the anxieties
and perplexities of daily experience could be eliminated
at once and struck off the balance, never to return
again, if life were but viewed aright, and held in
the scale of true valuations. Nothing is more
idle than to sell one’s soul for a mess of pottage;
for the pottage is not worth the price. Seen in
the most practical, every-day light, it is a bad bargain.
Not only is it true that a man’s life consisteth
not in the abundance of things that he possesseth,
but, conversely, as a rule, the greater the mass of
things the less the life. The spiritual energy
becomes clogged and fettered and strangled amid its
entanglement with things. The very power of finance,
that might and that ought to insure its possessor a
certain peace of mind, a liberation from petty anxieties,
and a power to devote himself to higher aims, too
often reverses this and chains him as to a wheel.
Recently there arrived at a fashionable hotel a family
whose command of finance might have redeemed every
day from the sordid and from any anxious efforts,
and enabled them to live in the realm of high thought,
of generous and beautiful expressions of sympathy and
love to all. Their visit might have made the
time a glorified interlude to every one with whom
they came in contact by its radiation of hope and happiness
and sympathy and good cheer. Instead, each and
all, individually and collectively, were entangled
in possessions, weighted down with things,
and quite illustrating the terse little couplet of
Emerson,
“Things are in the saddle
And ride mankind.”
The things which rode these unfortunate
beings for the multi-millionaires may not
unfrequently be so classed were masses of
jewels, that could not be worn and enjoyed because
too elaborate to be suitable, and so must be instantly
consigned to the safe. Such part of these treasures
as were in use, and left in rooms, suffered from losses
or theft. They caused more or less vexation, anger,
discord, and fret in general to the owners and every
one concerned, until the onlooker was ready to exclaim,
“If this is the price of diamonds and rubies
and pink pearls, and rich and rare gems in general,
let one escape the tyranny of purple and fine linen,
and take simplicity and its accompanying peace of
mind.” After a certain limit of ordinary
comfort, great possessions seem to enslave rather
than to liberate. If the price of costly jewels
is peace of mind, as well as a cheque of imposing
figures, then, indeed, let one keep his peace of mind,
and go without the necklace. It is often curious
to see how little imagination goes into the spending
of colossal fortunes. The possessors simply build
more houses than they can live in; each one has more
space and more impedimenta than he knows what to do
with, and the multiplication of all these possessions
results in perpetual anxieties, and fret, and worry,
until one would prefer a crust and a garret, and his
spiritual freedom, to any such life as that entailed
by the golden shower of fortune.
“Are you rich? rich enough to
help somebody?” There is the test. The
diamond and ruby necklace, whose chief use seems to
be to incite anxieties, would give some aspiring youth
or maiden a college course. The costly ring left
carelessly on the bureau, tempting theft, would give
a gifted young girl just the study in a musical conservatory
that she needs, or would make a young artist happy
and encouraged by buying his picture, and some one
else might be made happy and helped on to new endeavor
by having the gift of the picture. Money can be
transmuted into spiritual gifts, and only when thus
used is it of much importance in promoting any real
comfort or enjoyment or stimulus to progress.
The event, the thing, is purely negative, and only
when acted upon by force of spirit does it become
positive.
Let one go on through the days doing
the beautiful thing in every human relation.
Life is a spiritual drama, perpetually being played.
The curtain never goes down. The actors come
and go, but the stage is never vacant. To inform
the drama with artistic feeling, with beauty, with
generous purpose, is in the power of every one.
It depends, not on possessions, but on sympathy, insight,
and sweetness of spirit. These determine the
Life Radiant.
“I will wait heaven’s perfect
hour
Through the innumerable years.”
The saving grace of life is the power
to hold with serene and steadfast fidelity the vision,
the ideal, that has revealed itself in happier hours;
to realize that this, after all, is the true reality,
and that it shines in the spiritual firmament as the
sun does in the heavens, however long the period of
storm and clouds that obscure its radiance. The
tendency to doubt and depression is often as prevalent
as an epidemic. In extreme cases it becomes the
suicidal mania; in others it effectually paralyzes
the springs of action and leaves its victim drifting
helplessly and hopelessly with the current; and any
such mental tendency as this is just as surely a definite
evil to be recognized and combated as would be any
epidemic of disease. To rise in the morning confronting
a day that is full of exacting demands on his best
energies; on his serenest and sunniest poise; that
require all the exhilaration and sparkle and radiance
which have vanished from his possession, and yet to
be forced, someway and somehow, to go through his
appointed tasks, no one can deny that here
is a very real problem, and one that certainly taxes
every conceivable force of will far more than might
many great and visible calamities. For all this
form of trial is invisible and very largely incommunicable,
and it is like trying to walk through deep waters
that are undiscerned by those near, but which impede
every step, and threaten to rise and overwhelm one.
The poetic and artistic temperament
is peculiarly susceptible to this form of trial.
In work of an industrial or mechanical nature, a certain
degree of will force alone will serve to insure its
accomplishment whether one “feels in the mood”
or not. The mood does not greatly count.
But in work of any creative sort, the mood, the condition
of mind, is the determining factor. And is it
within human power, by force of will alone, to call
up this working mood of radiant energy when all energy
has ebbed away, leaving one as inert as an electric
machine from which the current has been turned off?
And yet and yet the
saving gift and grace of life and achievement comes,
in that there is a power higher than one’s own
will, on which one may lay hold with this serene and
steadfast fidelity.
Physicians and scientists have long
since recognized that intense mental depression is
as inevitably an accompaniment of la grippe
as are its physical symptoms, and the more fully the
patient himself understands this, and is thus enabled
to look at it objectively, so to speak, the better
it is for him. The feeling is that he has not
a friend on earth, and, on the whole, he is rather
glad of it. He feels as if it were much easier
to die than to live, not to say that the
former presents itself to him as far the preferable
course. So he envelops himself in the black shadows
of gloom, and, on the whole, quite prefers drawing
them constantly deeper. And this is very largely
the semi-irresponsible state of illness combined with
ignorance of the real nature of the malady.
The knowledge of how to meet it with
a degree of that “sweet reasonableness”
which should invest one’s daily living, is knowledge
that can hardly come amiss. One must treat it
as a transient visitation of those
“Black spirits or white, blue spirits
or gray,”
which are to be exorcised by keeping
close to beautiful thought, to something
high, poetic, reverent. “Thou wilt keep
him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on Thee”
is one of the most practical aids in life. It
can be relied upon more fully than the visit of the
physician. From the Bible, from the poets, one
may draw as from a sustaining fountain. As this
intense depression is a mental feature of the disease
it must be met by mental methods, of resolutely
holding the thoughts to high and beautiful themes;
by allying the imagination with serene and radiant
ideals. Emerson is the greatest of magicians.
His words will work marvels. His thought is as
luminous as a Roentgen ray.
“Heaven’s perfect hour”
is sure to sometime dawn if one but keep his face
turned toward the morning. “Heaven’s
perfect hour” is within one’s own possibilities
of creation, if he live aright and think aright; and
with joy and radiance may he make it his perpetual
experience; although it is the supreme anomaly in
life that the social relations which are designed
to offer the profoundest joy, the most perfect consolation
for disaster or sorrow, and to communicate the happy
currents of electrical energy, are yet those which
not unfrequently make themselves the channel of the
most intense suffering. There is something wrong
in this. The friendships of life, all forms and
phases and degrees through which regard and friendship
reveal themselves, are the one divinest, perhaps it
may be said are the only, part of life on earth that
is absolutely divine, and the divine element should
communicate perpetual joy. This is the ideal
view of the entire panorama of social interchange and
social relations, and being the purest ideal, it is
also the most intensely and absolutely real.
For nothing is real, in the last analysis, save that
which is ideal; and nothing is ideal that is not a
spiritual reality. Then the question recurs, how
is it possible, how can it be accounted for that the
one phase of suffering which seems past even trying
to endure, comes through the sources which should
radiate only joy and blessedness?
The old proverb, “Save me from
my friends,” is founded on a certain basis of
fact. “Twenty enemies cannot do me the mischief
of one friend,” rather cynically, but perhaps
not wholly untruly, said Gail Hamilton. For it
certainly is not the avowed enemy, or the person to
whom one is indifferent, who has the power to greatly
harm or pain him. So far as injury goes, Emerson
is probably right when he says, “No one can work
me injury but myself.” Misrepresentation,
misinterpretation, there may be, but in the long run
truth is mighty, and will, and does, prevail.
One need not greatly concern himself with misinterpretations,
but, rather, only with striving to live the life of
truth and righteousness.
Perhaps one cause of much of the unhappiness
and suffering that not infrequently invests relations
that should only be those of joy and peace and mutual
inspiration, is an over and an undue emphasis on material
things. Now, when viewed in the light of absolute
truth, material things are of simply no consequence
at all. They do not belong to the category of
realities. Money, possessions, the
mere goods and chattels of life, are, even
at their best appraisal, a mere temporary convenience.
As a convenience they fill a place and are all very
well. As anything beyond that they have no place
at all in one’s consciousness. Whatever
luxury they can offer is simply in using them to the
best advantage, and human nature is so constituted
that this best advantage is usually more closely connected
with those who are dear to one than it is with himself.
For himself alone, what does he want that money, mere
money, can buy? He wants and needs the average
conditions of life, in the “food, clothing,
and shelter” line; he needs and requires certain
conditions of beauty, of harmony, of gratification
of tastes and enlargement of opportunities, all
these are legitimate needs, and are part of the working
conditions of life; of the right development and progress
which one is in duty bound to make, both for his own
personal progress and as the vantage ground of his
efforts for usefulness. Beyond that, the luxury
of life lies in doing what the heart prompts.
The one heavenly joy of life is in the enlargement
of social sympathies; it is in the offering of whatever
appreciation and devotion it is possible to offer
to those whose noble and beautiful lives inspire this
devotion. To have this accepted not
because it is of intrinsic value, not because it is
of any particular importance per se, but because
it is the visible representation of the spiritual
gift of reverence, appreciation, and devotion is
the purest happiness one may experience, and that which
inspires him anew to all endeavor and achievement.
To have it refused or denied is to have the golden
portals close before one and shut him out in the darkness.
Why, the heavenly privilege, the infinite obligation,
is on the part of him who is permitted to offer his
tribute of love and devotion, expressed, if it so
chances, in any material way, and he is
denied his sweetest joy if this privilege be denied
him. There are gifts that are priceless, but
they are not of the visible and tangible world.
They are the gifts of sympathy, of intuitive comprehension,
of helpful regard; and, curiously, these the
priceless and precious are never regarded
as too valuable for acceptance, while regarding the
material and temporal, which, at best, are the merest
transient convenience, there will be hesitation and
pain. And this hesitation arises, too, from the
most beautiful and delicately exquisite qualities,
but it produces the pain that is
“ the
little rift within the lute,
That by and by will make the music mute.”
There is in life a proportion of pain
and jarring that is inevitable, probably, to the imperfect
conditions with which the experience on earth is temporarily
invested; and because of this, all the range of friendship
should be held apart as divine, and any interchange
of material gifts should not receive this undue emphasis,
but be regarded as the mere incidental trifle of momentary
convenience, while all the regard and devotion that
may lie behind should give its mutual joy as free
and as pure as the fragrance of a rose. Of all
that a friend may be Emerson so truly says:
“I fancied he was fled,
And, after many a year,
Glowed unexhausted kindliness
Like daily sunrise there.
My careful heart was free again.
O friend, my bosom said,
Through thee alone the sky is arched,
Through thee the rose is red;
All things through thee take nobler form.”
That alone is what all the loves and
friendships of life are for, that through
their ministry life may take on nobler form.
“I fancied he was fled.”
But a friendship that is true cannot
flee; it is, by its very quality and nature, abiding.
It may be silent forever; it may be invisible, inaudible,
immaterial, impersonal; but once forged it is of the
heavenly life, the heavenly language, and the Word
of the Lord abideth forever!
The stress and storm of life, however,
fade away very largely before the power of simple
love and good will, which is the key to all situations
and the solution of all problems. “How shall
I seem to love my people?” asked a French king
of his confessor. “My son, you must
love them,” was the reply. When there is
genuineness one does not need to engage in the elaborate
and arduous labor of counterfeiting qualities and
manufacturing appearances, and it is really easier to
say nothing of its being a somewhat more dignified
process to be what one wishes the
world to regard him, than it is to endeavor to merely
produce the effect of it.
Doctor Holmes had a bit of counsel
for those who were out at sea, that they
should not waste any energy in asking how they looked
from the shore; and the suggestion is not an infelicitous
one in its general application to life. It is
quite enough for one to keep his feet, as best he
may, set on the upward and onward way, without concerning
himself too much as to the effect of his figure in
the landscape. The energy that goes towards attitudinizing
is always wasted, while that which expends itself
on the legitimate fulfilment of tasks contributes
something of real importance to life.
And so, any significance of achievement
seems to be exactly conditioned by the degree of energy
involved the finer the energy, the more
potent the achievement. It would seem as if all
the noble order of success hinged on two conditions, the
initial one of generating sufficient energy, and the
second that of applying it worthily.
The present age is characterized as
that in which new forms of force appear, in
both the physical and the spiritual realms of life.
What a marvel is the new chemical force, thermite,
of which the first demonstration in America was made
in 1902, by the Columbia University Chemical Society
in New York. Here is a force that dissolves iron
and stone. An extremely interesting account of
this new energy appeared in the “New York Herald,”
in which the writer vivifies the subject by saying
of thermite:
“Under its awful lightning blaze
granite flows like water and big steel rails
are welded in the twinkling of an eye.... The
interior of Mount Pelee, whose fiery blast destroyed
St. Pierre in a moment and crumbled its buildings
into dust, would be cool compared with this temperature
of 5400 deg. It would melt the White Mountains
into rivers of liquid fire. Nothing could
withstand its consuming power.... And what
makes this stupendous force? The answer seems
incredible as the claims for the force itself.
It is produced by simply putting a match to a
mixture of aluminum filings and oxide of chromium,
both metallic, and yet, as by magic, a mighty force
is instantly created.”
The writer describes the discovery
and processes at some length, and adds:
“Such are the wonders of chemistry
suggesting Emerson’s claim, ‘Thought
sets men free.’ By a simple process flame
applied to metal filings prison bars
melt and vaulted dungeons flow like water.”
The article closes with this wonderful paragraph:
“By chemistry the pale-faced
modern Faust, working in his laboratory, makes
metals out of clay and many marvellous combinations.
What they will do when skilfully proportioned and
exposed to heat, the story related gives a hint, accounting,
as it were, for the forces at work in space,
creating heat and electricity, making suns burn
with indescribable fury, colliding with peaceful
planets, mixing their metals in a second of time, and
new worlds seem to leap into vision, balls of molten
fire sweeping through space; vast cyclones of
flame, making Pelee a cold-storage vault by comparison.
All this seems simple enough as explained by
modern chemistry, giving men unlimited power, making
them gods, as it were, to first master themselves
and then the universe.”
This description of the new force,
whose intensity is almost beyond realization, is hardly
less remarkable than is the energy described; and
it lends itself, with perfect rhythm of correspondence,
to analysis on the side of the spiritual forces of
life. “Cast thyself into the will of God
and thou shalt become as God” is one of the most
illuminating of the mystic truths. The “will
of God” is the supreme potency, the very highest
degree of energy, in the spiritual realm, which is
the realm of cause, while the outer world is the realm
of effects. Now if one may so ally himself to
the divine will as to share in its all-conquering power,
he partakes of creative power and eternal life, now
and here, just in proportion to the degree to which
he can identify his entire trend of desire and purpose
with this Infinite will. This energy is fairly
typified in the physical world by the stupendous new
force called “thermite,” and it is as
resistless as that attraction which holds the stars
in their courses and the universe in their solar relations.
It is a fallacy to suppose that it
is a hardship and a trial to live the more divine
and uplifting life, and that ease and pleasure are
only to be found in non-resistance to the faults and
defects of character. The truth is just the opposite
of this, and the twentieth century will reveal a fairly
revolutionary philosophy in this respect. Heretofore
poet and prophet have always questioned despondently,
“Does the road wind up hill all
the way?”
as if to wind up hill were the type
of trial, and the “descent of Avernus”
were the type of joy.
Does the road wind up hill? Most
certainly, and thereby it leads on into the purer
light, the fairer radiance, the wider view. Does
one prefer to go down hill into some dark ravine or
deep mountain gorge? It is a great fallacy that
it is the hardship of life to live in the best instead
of in the worst. It is the way of the transgressor
which is hard not of him who endeavors
to follow the divine leading. The deeper truth
is that the moment one commits all his purposes and
his aspirations into the Divine keeping he connects
himself by that very act with a current of irresistible
energy; one that reinforces him with power utterly
undreamed of before.
There is no limit to the power one
may draw from the unseen universe. “It
is possible, I dare to say,” says a thoughtful
writer, “for those who will indeed draw on their
Lord’s power for deliverance and victory, to
live a life on which His promises are taken as they
stand and found to be true. It is possible to
cast every care on Him daily, and to be at peace amidst
the pressure. It is possible to see the will of
God in everything, and to find it not a sigh but a
song. It is possible in the world of inner act
and motion to put away all bitterness, and wrath, and
anger, and evil speaking, daily and hourly. It
is possible, by unreserved resort to divine power,
under divine conditions, to become strongest at our
weakest point; to find the thing which yesterday upset
all our obligations to patience, an occasion to-day,
through Him who loveth us and worketh in us, for a
joyful consent to His will and a delightful sense
of His presence. These things are divinely possible.”
One very practical question that cannot
but confront the world at the present time is as to
whether there is any relation between religion, in
its highest and most inclusive and spiritually uplifting
sense, and the possibility of communication between
those in this life and those who have passed through
the change we call death and have entered on the next
round of experience. It is a fact albeit
a rather curious and unaccountable one that
organized religion, as a whole, has been largely opposed
to the idea of possible communication between what
is currently termed the living and the dead.
Yet when one focusses the question to a matter of
personal individuality, it does not stand the test.
Take, for instance, the revered name of a man who
was universally recognized as one of the greatest
spiritual leaders the world has known, Phillips
Brooks. When he was the rector of Trinity Church,
or the Bishop of the Massachusetts diocese, no one
who sought his companionship or counsel would have
been regarded as being wrong to do so. Now, always
provided that there is full conviction of immortality, why
should it be wrong to seek his companionship or counsel
from the unseen life? Death has no power over
the essential individuality. Indeed, in being
freed from the physical body, the spiritual man becomes
only more powerful, and with his power acting from
a higher plane of energy. Regarding ourselves
as spiritual beings, and if we are not
that we are nothing, regarding ourselves
as temporarily inhabiting a physical body, but
in no sense identified with it save as we use this
body for our instrument of communication with the
physical world; what more logical or natural than
that the spiritual being, not yet released from his
physical body, should hold sweet and intimate communion
with the spiritual being that has been released
from this physical environment? Telepathy has
already become a recognized law. That mind to
mind, spirit to spirit, flashes its messages here
in this present life, is a fact attested by too great
an array of evidence to be doubted or denied.
Now the spiritual being who is released from the physical
body is infinitely more sensitive to impression, more
responsive to mental call, than was possible in conditions
here. The experimental research and investigation
in psychology, as shown in such work as that of Professor
Muensterberg of Harvard in the university laboratory,
reveals increasingly that the brain is an electric
battery of the most potent and sensitive order; that
it generates electric thought waves and receives them.
Does it lose this power by the change called death?
Is this power only inherent in the physical structure?
On the contrary, Professor William James has demonstrated
with scientific accuracy in his book called “Human
Freedom,” that this is not the case. If,
then, intellectual energy survives the process of
death, and if it does not then there is
no immortality, the communication between
those in the Unseen and those in the Seen is as perfectly
natural as is any form of companionship or of social
life here.
As all kinds of people live, so all
kinds of people die, and the mere fact of death is
not a transforming process, spiritually. He who
has not developed the spiritual faculties while here;
who has lived the mere life of the senses with the
mere ordinary intelligence, or without it, but never
rising to the nobler intellectual and moral life is
no more desirable as a companion because he has died
than he was before he died. And the objection
to any of the ordinary séance phenomena is,
that whatever manifestations are genuine proceed very
largely, if not entirely, from this strata of the
crude and inconsequential, if not the vicious, with
whom the high-minded man or woman would not have associated
in life, and after death their presence would be quite
as much to be deplored. Granted all these exceptions.
One may sweep them off and clear the decks. Then
what remains? There remains the truth of the
unity of the spiritual universe; of the truth that
the mere change of death is not a revolutionary one,
transforming the individual into some inconceivable
state of being and removing him, in a geographical
sense, into some unrevealed region in space; there
remains the truth that life is evolutionary in its
processes; that there is no more violent and arbitrary
and instantaneous change by the event of death, than
there is in the change from infancy into childhood,
from childhood into manhood. There remains the
truth that the ethereal and the physical worlds are
inter-related, inter-blended; that man, now and here,
lives partially in each, and that the more closely
he can relate himself to the diviner forces by prayer,
by aspiration, by every thought and deed that is noble
and generous and true, and inspired by love, the more
he dwells in this ethereal atmosphere and is in touch
with its forces and in companionship with his chosen
friends who have gone on into that world. There
is nothing in this theory that is incompatible with
the teachings of the Church, with all that makes up
for us the religious life. On the contrary, it
vitalizes and reinforces that life. This life
of the spirit must be in God. Let one, indeed,
on his first waking each day, place his entire life,
all his heart, mind, and faculties, in God’s
hands; asking Him “to take entire possession,
to be the guide of the soul.” Thus one
shall dwell hourly, daily, in the divine atmosphere,
and spirit to spirit may enjoy their communion and
companionship. The experience of personal spiritual
companionship between those here and those on the
next plane of life is included in the higher religious
life of the spirit while living here on earth.
It vivifies and lends joy to it; for the joy of sympathetic
companionship is the one supreme and transcendent
happiness in life. And to live in this atmosphere
requires one absolute and inevitable condition, the
constant exercise of the moral virtues, of
truth, rectitude, generosity, and love. The life
held amenable to these, the life which commits itself
utterly into the divine keeping, is not a life of
hardship; the “road that winds up hill”
is the road of perpetual interest and exhilaration.
It is a fatal fallacy to invest it with gloom and
despair. It is the only possible source of the
constant, intellectual energy of life, of sweetness,
of joy, of happiness.
The only standard which is worthy
for one to hold as that by which he measures his life
is the divine one illustrated in the character of
Jesus. To measure one’s quality of daily
life by this is always to fall short of satisfactory
achievement; and still there is always the realization
that its achievement is only a question of persistence
and of time. It is the direction in which one
is moving that determines his final destination.
There is the deepest inspiration to the soul in taking
for one’s perpetual watchword, “Be ye therefore
perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect.”
Not that this divine state is attained; but there
is perpetual aid in the conviction that one’s
self his spiritual self can
“press on to the high calling of God.”
Man is a divine being; the divine life is his only
true life.
The deepest loyalty to the divine
ideal involves, however, not only the striving after
perfection, but the charity for imperfection.
To denounce evil is a part of rectitude; to condemn
sin is a moral duty; but to condemn the sinner is
not infrequently to be more deeply at fault than is
he who thus offended. An illustration of this
point has recently been before the public. A
New York clergyman preached on Easter Sunday a sermon
that was not his own. He gave no credit to its
writer. The sermon was published, and a minister
of another church, recognizing it, at once proceeded
to “expose” the matter in the daily press.
Not only did he call public attention to the error,
but he did it in a manner that seemed to rejoice in
the opportunity; a manner so devoid of sorrow or sympathy
as to fill the reader with despair at such an exhibition.
Rev. E. Walpole Warren fittingly rebuked the evident
malice with which the fault was exposed, and quoted
the words of Saint Paul in the injunction: “Brethren,
if a man be overtaken in a fault, ye who are spiritual
restore such an one in the spirit of meekness, considering
thyself, lest thou also be tempted.” To
have gone, in a spirit of love, privately and quietly,
and pointed out the error, would have been Christian-like;
to exult in it must be described by a very different
term. Devotion to truth is good, but it is “speaking
the truth in love” that is the ideal. It
is even possible to convey questioning, counsel, encouragement,
or reproach without the spoken word; to send the message
by the law of suggestion from mind to mind. The
mental intimation will reach the one to whom it is
sent if the conditions for telepathy are observed,
for thought is far more penetrative than the Roentgen
ray, and the atmosphere is magnetic, and carries it
as the wire does the electric current. All these
finer conditions are beginning to make themselves
felt as practicable forces. Humanity is becoming
“plastic to the spirit touch;” sensitive
to those vibrations too fine to be registered by the
outward ear.
“Thought is the wages
For which I sell days,”
said Emerson. Thought is the
motor of the future. “As a man thinketh,
so is he,” is one of the most practical and
literal truths.
It is only by the divine law that
one can measure the ethics of companionship.
The frequent experiences in life of broken friendships;
of those alliances of good will, of mutual sympathies
and mutual enjoyment, that, at last, some way became
entangled amid discords and barriers, and thus come
to a disastrous end, such experiences could
be escaped were life lived by the diviner standards.
Friendship need never deteriorate in quality if each
lives nobly. If one conceives of life more nobly
and generously than the other, it may become, not a
means of separation and alienation, but a means and
measure of just responsibility. There are friendships
whose shipwreck is on the rock of undue encroachment
on one side and undue endurance which has
not the noble and spontaneous character of generosity on
the other. One imposes, the other is imposed
on, and so things run on from bad to worse,
till at last a crisis comes, and those who had once
been much to each other are farther apart than strangers.
In such circumstances there has been a serious failure, the
failure of not speaking the truth in love. The
failure on the part of the one more spiritually enlightened
toward the one less enlightened. One should no
more consent that his friend should do an ignoble
thing than he should consent to do an ignoble thing
himself. He should hold his friend in thought
to the divine standard. He should conceive of
him nobly and expect from him only honor and integrity.
“Those who trust us educate us,” says George
Eliot; and still more do they who hold us in the highest
thought draw us upward to that atmosphere through
which no evil may pass. Each one is his brother’s
keeper, and life achieves only its just and reasonable
possibilities when it is held constantly amenable to
the divine ideal, when it is lived according
to that inspiring injunction of Phillips Brooks:
“Be such a man, live such a life, that if all
lives were like yours earth would be Paradise.”
Let one put aside sorrow and enter
into the joy and radiance. “Omit the negative
propositions. Nerve us with incessant affirmatives.”
If biography teaches any lesson, it is that the events
which occur in life are of far less consequence than
the spirit in which they are received. It is
the attitude of mental receptivity which is the alchemy
to transmute events and circumstances into experience,
and it is experience alone which determines both the
quality and the trend of life. It is in activity;
in doing and giving and loving, that the joy of life
must be sought. And it is joy which is the normal
condition rather than depression and sadness, as health
and not illness is the normal state. Disease
and sadness are abnormal, and if one finds himself
“blue,” it is his first business to escape
from it, to change the conditions and the atmosphere.
The radiant life is the ideal state, both for achievement
as well as for that finer quality of personal influence
which cannot emanate from gloom and depression.
“Everything good is on the highway,” said
Emerson, and the first and only lasting success is
that of character. It may not be, for the moment,
exhilarating to realize that one’s ill fortune
is usually the result of some defect in his selection,
or error in his judgment, but, on the other hand, if
the cause of his unhappiness lies in himself, the
cause of his happiness may also lie with himself,
and thus it is in his power to so transform his attitude
to life as to reverse the gloom and have the joy and
sweetness rather than the bitterness and sadness of
life. Everything, in the last analysis, is a
matter of temperament. Nothing is hopeless, for
life is infinite, and new factors can be evolved whose
working out will create the new heaven and the new
earth.
Here, in the earth life,
we have it in our power to seize our
future destination. FICHTE.
One of the most inspiring injunctions
of Saint Paul is that in which he bids us to “lay
aside every weight.” Poet and prophet have
always recognized the weight of the past as a serious
problem. One has made all sorts of mistakes;
he is entangled in the consequences of his “errors
and ignorances,” if not in his sins, and
how can he enter on a Life Radiant with this burden?
Well does Sidney Lanier express this feeling in the
stanzas:
“My soul is sailing through the
sea,
But the Past is heavy and hindereth me,
The Past hath crusted cumbrous shells
That hold the flesh of cold sea-mells
About my soul.
The huge waves wash, the high waves roll,
Each barnacle clingeth and worketh dole,
And hindereth me from sailing!
“Old Past, let go and drop i’
the sea
Till fathomless waters cover thee!
For I am living, but thou art dead;
Thou drawest back, I strive ahead
The day to find.
Thy shells unbind! Night comes behind,
I needs must hurry with the wind
And trim me best for sailing.”
There is no question but that the
past is heavy and hindereth every one. Its “cumbrous
shells” cling like dead weights around man, and
keep him from the larger, freer life. “Man
is not by any means convinced as yet of his immortality,”
says Sir Edwin Arnold; “all the great religions
have in concert more or less positively affirmed it
to him; but no safe logic proves it, and no entirely
accepted voice from some farther world proclaims it.”
The one proof, of course, so far as
absolute evidential demonstration goes, lies in the
communication from those who have passed through death.
There unfolds an increasingly impressive mass of logical
probabilities that point to but one conclusion to every
student of science and of spiritual laws. Biology
offers its important testimony. The law of the
conservation of forces, of motion and matter, which
is definitely proven by actual demonstration, suggests
with a potency which no one can evade that intellect,
emotion, and will the most intense and
resistless forces of the universe can hardly
be extinguished when the forces of matter persist.
The study of the nature of the ether alone pours a
flood of illumination on the theory of an ethereal
world, a theory with which all the known
facts of science and psychology accord, and with which
they range themselves. Rev. Doctor Newman Smyth
says that the facts disclosed by a study of biology,
as well as the theories advanced by some trained biologists,
fairly open the new and interesting question whether
death itself does not fall naturally under some principle
of selection and law of utility for life? “It
is of religious concern as well as of scientific interest,”
he continues, “for us to learn, as far as possible,
all the facts and suggestions which microscopic researches
may bring to our knowledge concerning the minute processes
or most intimate and hidden laws of life and death.
For if we, children of an age of questioning and change,
are to keep a rational faith in spiritual reality, strong
and genuine as was our fathers’ faith according
to their light, ours must be a faith that shall strike
its roots deep down into all knowledge, although light
from above alone may bring it to its perfect Christian
trust and sweetness.... The least facts of nature
may be germinal with high spiritual significance and
beauty.”
The twentieth century leads faith
to the brink of knowledge. The deepest spiritual
feeling must perpetually recognize that faith alone Christ’s
words alone are enough for every human soul;
but faith grows not less, but more, when informed
by knowledge. When man measures and weighs the
star and discovers their composition; when he sends
messages without visible means, then he may believe
with Fichte, that “here, in the earth life,
we have it in our power to seize our future destination.”
Mr. Weiss objected to any (possible) evidential demonstration
of immortality, because (as he said), “If you
owe your belief in immortality to the assumed facts
of a spiritual intercourse, your belief is at the
mercy of your assumption.... It is merely an opinion
derived from phenomena.” But this reasoning
would not hold good regarding any other trend of knowledge;
the vital necessity of the soul to lay hold on God
and immortality is not lessened, but rather deepened
and reinforced by understanding, when knowledge goes
hand in hand with faith. And the one supreme
argument of all is that a truer knowledge of man’s
spiritual being now and here with
a truer conception of his destiny in the part of life
immediately succeeding the change of death, would make
so marvellous a difference in all his relations on
earth, in all his conceptions of achievement, and
would, as Sir Edwin Arnold says, “turn nine-tenths
of the sorrows of earth into glorious joys and abolish
quite as large a proportion of the faults and vices
of mankind.”
The Past is heavy with misconceptions
of the simple truths of life and immortality as Jesus
taught them. The Present seeks to throw off these
“cumbrous shells.” Death is the liberator,
the divinely appointed means for ushering man into
the more real, the more significant life, whose degree
of reality and significance depends wholly on ourselves;
which is simply the achievement better
or poorer which man creates now and here,
in the same manner in which the quality of manhood
and womanhood depends wholly on the degree of achievement
in childhood and youth. We do not “find,”
but instead, create our lives. As we are perpetually
creating, we are perpetually making them anew.
If we must, this year, live out the errors that we
made last year, there is an encouragement rather than
a penalty in the fact, as this truth argues that if
we now enter on a loftier plane and realize in outward
life a nobler experience, we shall, next year, or
in some future time, find ourselves entirely free
from the weight of the errors we have abandoned, the
mistakes we have learned not to make, and the entanglements
that our “négligences and ignorances”
created. If we have caused our own sorrow, we
can cause our own joy. For the Golden Age lies
onward.