As
the sun,
Ere it is risen, sometimes paints its
image
In the atmosphere, so often do the spirits
Of great events stride on before the events,
And in to-day already walks to-morrow.
There exist moments in the life of
man When he is nearer the great Soul of the world
Than is man’s custom, and possesses freely
The power of questioning his destiny.
COLERIDGE.
Think of the power of anticipation
everywhere! Think of the difference it would
make to us if events rose above the horizon of our
lives with no twilight that announced their coming.
God has given man the powers which compel him
to anticipate the future for something.
PHILLIPS
BROOKS.
The unexpected and the unaccountable
play so large a part in human life that they may well
incite study. It is not conceivable that man should
always remain at the mercy of events without conscious
and intelligent choice in selecting and grouping them.
Is there no Roentgen ray that will pierce the horizon
of the future and disclose to us what lies beyond?
Of course it is a sort of stock-in-trade, axiomatic
assertion, that if it were intended for man to know
the future God would have revealed it to him; and
as it is not thus revealed, it is unwise, or unlawful,
or immoral to seek to read it. On the same principle
and with just as much logic, it might be solemnly
declared that we have no right to endeavor to surprise
any of the secrets of the Universe; that if it had
been intended for us to know the weight and composition
of the stars, to understand the laws that hold them
in their courses, or to know what is conquered by
the scientist in geology, or chemistry, or anything
else, that the knowledge would have been ready made,
and as it is not so, it is not lawful for man to explore
any of these territories of the unknown. Or this
assertion could be carried to a still further absurdity,
and construed that if man had been intended to read
he would have been born with the knowledge, and have
had no need of learning the alphabet; or that if God
had intended man to dwell in cities they would have
sprung up spontaneously like forests. As a matter
of fact, the extending of the horizon line of knowledge
in every direction is man’s business in this
part of life; and why, indeed, if he can weigh and
measure the stars in space, shall he not be able to
compel some magic mirror to reveal to him his future?
As it is, we all tread on quicksands of mystery, that
may open and engulf us at any instant. It is simply
appalling when one stops to think of it, to
realize the degree to which all one’s achievements,
and possibilities, and success, and happiness depend
on causes apparently outside his own control.
One awakens to begin the day without the remotest
idea of what that day holds for him. All his
powers of accomplishment, all his energy, all his
peace of mind, even the very matter of life
or death hangs in the balance, and the scales are
to him invisible and intangible. The chance of
a moment may make or mar. A letter, a telegram,
with some revelation or expression that paralyzes
all his powers; the arrival of an unforeseen friend
or guest, a sudden summons to an unexpected matter, all
these and a thousand other nebulous possibilities that
may, at any instant, fairly revolutionize his life,
are in the air, and may at any moment precipitate
themselves.
Is not the next step in scientific
progress to be into the invisible and the unknown?
Doctor Loeb conceived the idea that
the forces which rule in the realm of living things
are not different from the forces that we know in the
inanimate world. He has made some very striking
and arresting experiments with protoplasm and chemical
stimuli and opened a new field of problems in biology.
If the physical universe can be so increasingly explored,
shall not the spiritual universe be also penetrated
by the spiritual powers of man?
There is no reason why clairvoyance
should not be developed into a science as rational
as any form of optical research or experiment.
Not an exact science, like mathematics, for the future
is a combination of the results of the past with the
will and power and purposes of the individual in the
present, and of those events that have been in train
and are already on their way. It is a sort of
spiritual chemistry. But it seems reasonably
clear that all the experiences on this plane have
already transpired in the life of the spirit on the
other plane of that twofold life that we live, and
they occur here because they have already occurred
there. They are precipitated into the denser world
after having taken place in the ethereal world.
And so, if the vision can be cultivated that penetrates
into this ethereal world, the future can thereby be
read. It is the law and the prophets.
Now as the present largely determines
the future, the things that shall be are partly of
our own creation.
“We shape ourselves the joy or fear
Of which our coming life is
made,
And fill our future’s atmosphere
With sunshine or with shade.”
There are no conditions of being that
are not plastic to the potency of thought. As
one learns to control his thought he controls the issues
of life. He becomes increasingly clear in intuition,
in perceptions, and in spiritual vision.
As the planets and the stars and the
solar systems are evolved out of nebulae through attraction
and motion and perpetual combination, so the present
and the future is evolved for each individual out of
his past, and he is perpetually creating it.
Nothing is absolute, but relative, “no
truth so sublime but that it may become trivial to-morrow
in the light of new thoughts.” There is
no relationship, no casual meeting, no accident or
incident of the moment, however trivial it may seem,
but that is a sign, a hint, an illustration of the
human drama, perpetually moving onward, and demanding
from each and all insight, as well as outlook, and
a consciousness of the absolute realities involved
in the manifestation of the moment. “The
present moment is like an ambassador which declares
the will of God,” says the writer of a little
Catholic book of devotions; “the events of each
moment are divine thoughts expressed by created objects,”
and the one serious hindrance, it may be, to the acceptance
of events in this spirit, lies in the fact of not
being prepared for their acceptance. The problem
of life, then, resolves itself into the question of
so ordering one’s course of living as to be
prepared to receive the event of the moment; but the
entire rush and ceaseless demands of the life of the
present form the obstacle in the way of this harmonious
recognition. One cannot accept the event of the
moment because he is absorbed in the event of yesterday,
or last week, and his life is not, thereby, “up-to-date.”
To be always behindhand is to be under a perpetual
and ever-increasing burden. Empedocles under
Mt. Etna was no more imprisoned than is the life
of to-day which is filled with the things of yesterday.
Yet where does the remedy lie? It is the problem
of the hour. “In nature every moment is
new,” says Emerson, and it is that sense of freshness
and exhilaration that one needs in order successfully
to enter into the experiences of the present hour.
The world of mechanism keeps pace
in the most curiously interesting way with the world
of thought. Inventions came as material correspondences
to the immaterial growth and demand. When in the
middle of the nineteenth century the human race had
achieved a degree of development that made swift communication
essential to the common life, the telegraph and the
ocean cable were invented; or it might rather be said,
the laws that make them possible were discerned, and
were taken advantage of to utilize for this purpose.
The constant developments in rapid transit, in the
instantaneous conveniences of telephonic communication,
and, latest of all, in wireless telegraphy, are all
in the line of absolute correspondence with the advancing
needs of humanity.
More than a decade ago Doctor Edward
Everett Hale made the prediction in an article in
“The Forum” that writing (in the mechanical
sense) would become a lost art, and that the people
of future centuries would point to us as “the
ancients,” who communicated our ideas by means
of this slow and clumsy process. According to
Doctor Hale’s vision, the writing of all this
present period would come to be regarded in much the
same light as that in which we look at the Egyptian
hieroglyphics or the papyrus. At that time the
phonograph, if invented, was not in any way brought
to the practical perfection of the present, and telepathy
was more a theory than an accepted fact; but Doctor
Hale has the prophetic cast of mind, and already his
theory is more in the light of probability than that
of mere possibility. The demands of modern life
absolutely require the development of some means of
communication that shall obviate the necessity of
the present laborious means of handwriting. There
is needed the mechanism that shall transfer the thought
in the mind to some species of record without the
intervention of the hand. Whether the phonograph
can be popularized to meet this need; whether some
still finer means that photograph thought shall be
evolved, remains to be seen. Thought is already
photographed in the ether, but whether this image
can be transferred to a material medium is the question.
That telepathy shall yet come to be so well understood;
its laws formulated as to bring it within the range
of the definite sciences, there can be no doubt; but
this result can only attend a higher development of
the spiritual power of humanity. In its present
status telepathy is seen as a result of wholly unconscious
and unanalyzed processes that open a new region of
life and a new range of possibilities. It is
the discovery of a new keyboard, so to speak, in the
individual, enabling him to still more “live
in thought,” and to “act with energies
that are immortal.” Science is continually
revealing the truth that the world, the solar system,
the infinite universes are all created as the theatre
of man’s evolutionary development. As Emerson
so truly says, “the world is the perennial miracle
which the soul worketh.”
“The Discovery of the Future”
was the title of an interesting lecture by Mr. H.
G. Wells, given in London early in 1901, before the
Royal Institute, in which the subject was speculatively
discussed, and in the course of his lecture Mr. Wells
said:
“Along certain lines, with certain
limitations, he argued, a working knowledge of
the things of the future was practicable and possible.
As during the past century the amazing searchlights
of inference had been passed into the remoter
past, so by seeking for operating causes instead
of for fossils the searchlight of inference might
be thrown into the future. The man of science
would believe at last that events in A. D. 4000
were as fixed, settled, and unchangeable as those
of A. D. 1600, with the exception of the affairs
of man and his children. It is as simple and sure
to work out the changing orbit of the earth in
future until the tidal drag hauls one unchanging
face at last toward the sun, as it is to work back
to its blazing, molten past. We are at the beginning
of the greatest change that humanity has ever
undergone. There will be no shock, as there
is no shock at a cloudy daybreak. We are creatures
of twilight, but out of our minds and the lineage
of our minds will spring minds that will reach
forward fearlessly. A day will come one
day in the unending succession of days when
the beings now latent in our thoughts, hidden
in our loins, shall stand on this earth as one
stands on a footstool, and they shall laugh and reach
out their hands among the stars.”
Mr. Wells is a disciple of Darwin,
and he is applying to the life of humanity certain
laws of evolution. In this lecture he argued that
great men are merely “the images and symbols
and instruments taken at haphazard by the incessant,
consistent forces behind them. They were the
pen nibs which fate used in her writing, and the more
one was inclined to trust these forces behind individuals,
the more one could believe in the possibility of a
reasoned inductive view of the future that would serve
us in politics, morals, social contrivances, and in
a thousand ways.”
The lecturer argued that “a
deliberate direction of historical, economic, and
social study toward the future, and a deliberate and
courageous reference to the future in moral and religious
discussion, would be enormously stimulating and profitable
to the intellectual life.”
One incalculable aid in thus throwing
a spiritual searchlight forward and discussing the
future is the realization embodied by Dr. Lyman Abbott,
that there is no death, and no dead; that the entire
universe is life; and that we are encompassed round
about by invisible companions and friends; sustained,
guided, helped by forces that we see not.
To see the future as clearly as we
see the past, what does it require?
Saint Paul tells us that “spiritual
things are spiritually discerned.” The
future is visible to the spiritual sight. No one
doubts but that the future is known to God, for it
is He who creates and controls it. And man is
the child of God, and his true life is in co-operating
with God in every form of the higher activity.
So far as he may co-operate with God he becomes, himself,
a creative force; making, shaping, and determining
this future, and thus, to an increasing degree, he
becomes aware of it, or sees it, before it is realized
on the outward plane. The day is not, indeed,
distant, when humanity will live far less blindly
than now. As man develops his psychic self and
lives the life of the spirit, the life
of intellect and thought and purpose and prayer, rather
than the life of the senses, he will perceive his future.
To just the degree that one lives in the energies
which are immortal does he perceive the future.
Knowledge penetrates into the unknown and the unseen.
Leverrier postulated Neptune long before his “long-distance”
theory was verified. The intelligent recognition
of the unseen forces and unseen presences, the intelligent
conception of the manner in which these unseen forces
are working out the problems of destiny, alone enables
one to consciously combine with them; to enter into
the processes of evolution as an intelligent factor,
and thus redeem his individual life to harmony, beauty,
and happiness.
The question confronts one as a very
determining problem in life, can man control
his circumstances? To go deeper still, can he
create them? Or is he the product of his environment?
Is every life just that which it is made? Or
does there work, under all our human will and endeavor,
a force resistless as gravitation and as constant
as attraction? A writer, considering this subject,
thus expresses his own convictions:
“I believe that every life is
the exact and necessary outcome of its environment,
and that there is in reality not one particle of actual
freedom in this respect from the cradle to the grave.
I cannot here go into any extended proof of my
position. The syllogism may be stated as
follows:
“Every phenomenon
is the necessary result of pre-existing causes:
“Life is but a
succession of phenomena.
“Therefore every
life is necessarily determined by pre-existing
causes.
“I do not see how the conclusion
can be escaped that from the time we open our
eyes upon the world and receive our first impressions,
we are thrust forward between insurmountable walls
of fate that leave no room for freedom.
It is true that so far as external or objective
forces are concerned we may be, as a rule, under no
compulsion to follow one more than another; but
subjectively we are in no sense free,
because the peculiar way in which the will
will act under given conditions must depend upon
the preponderating subjective force.
To hold otherwise is to contend that a lesser force
can overcome a greater, which is absurd.”
Certainly the problem as to the degree
to which environment determines life is an interesting
one, but may it not be reversed and stand as the problem
to what degree life controls and fashions the environment?
Does not the environment change with the life in a
corresponding evolutionary process? “Every
spirit builds its house.” Then, too, the
thing we call life is not composed exclusively of
character and circumstances. There enters into
it a third element, that of the unknown.
The environment of Tennyson, for instance,
in his early youth, was that of the limited, even
though thoughtful and refined life of the son of a
country clergyman of modest means; as his powers expanded
and developed his environment kept pace with it in
extension of breadth. Is it not, then, true that
a life really belongs to the environment it creates
for himself, rather than to that in which it is first
nurtured? “It doth not yet appear what
we shall be” applies to the possibilities of
life in the present as well as in that future which
lies beyond the change we call death. The divine
electric spark leaps through the atmosphere and communicates
its kindling power. The inner force of the spirit
works outward and begins to shape and fashion its
own world. Environment is simply another name
for that series “of the more stately mansions”
that each one may build according to the power that
worketh in him. A great sorrow comes; or an overwhelming
joy, on which one rises to heights of ecstasy, to
the very Mount of Transfiguration itself, and thus
transcends all former limits and creates his new environment,
whose walls are transparent to the sunrise flame and
through which the glory enters in. What has he
to do with that far-away, opaque, limited environment
into which he was born? No more than has the giant
oak, tossing its branches under the stars, to do with
the acorn cup out of which it sprang. Let one
realize, ever so faintly, even, the miracle of possibilities
that may unfold, and his life is uplifted into a richness
and a peace, and a serene confidence that carries with
it the essential essence of all that is best and noblest
in its past, and all that is potential in its infinite
future. The problem evolves into a definite work
to be fulfilled, and this work, in turn, leads to another
problem involving its demonstration, in actual performance,
as well; and by this alternation life progresses, growing
ever larger and deeper and more exalted with its increasing
power. In this way man produces his circumstances creates
his outer conditions. His successive environments
become the expressions of his inner life and energy
in their series of development and growth.
But this growth, this development,
may be stimulated or retarded. It depends entirely
upon the degree to which one may relate himself to
the spiritual energy of the divine atmosphere, ever
ready to pour itself, with unlimited power, through
every receptive channel. And this energy is the
Divine Will, and entering into it man does not lose
his own free choice, but only enters into that which
makes his conscious choice vital and magnetic with
infinite power of achievement.
Maurice Maeterlinck offered a fascinating
contribution to this range of discussion, in the course
of which he said:
“One would say that man had always
the feeling that a mere infirmity of his mind
separates him from the future. He knows it to
be there, living, actual, perfect, behind a kind
of wall, around which he has never ceased to
turn since the first days of his coming on this
earth. Or rather, he feels it within himself and
known to a part of himself; only, that importunate
and disquieting knowledge is unable to travel,
through the too narrow channels of his senses,
to his consciousness, which is the only place where
knowledge acquires a name, a useful strength,
and, so to speak, the freedom of the human city.
It is only by glimmers, by casual and passing
infiltrations, that future years, of which he
is full, of which the imperious realities surround
him on every hand, penetrate to his brain.
He marvels that an extraordinary accident should have
closed almost hermetically to the future that
brain which plunges into it entirely, even as
a sealed vessel plunges, without mixing with
it, into the depths of a monstrous sea that overwhelms
it, entreats it, teases it, and caresses it with
a thousand billows.”
Time and space are the two dimensions
which differentiate the physical and the spiritual
worlds; the higher the degree of spiritual development
and advancement, the less is the individual limited
and hampered and fettered by these two conditions.
One may get a certain analogy on it by realizing to
how much greater extent the infant or the child is
bound by the conditions of Space and Time than is
the man or the woman. To the child the idea of
the next year is, practically, an eternity; while the
man calmly and confidently makes his plans for the
next year, or for five years or ten years later; with
a matter-of-course assurance. The next year to
the man is not so remote as the next day is to the
child. So by this analogy it is not difficult
to realize that when one is released from the physical
world and advances into the realm of the subtle and
potent forces of the ethereal world, with his faculties
responsive to the larger environment, it
is not difficult to realize that he is increasingly
free from these conditions that are so strong in their
power of limitation over the mortal life.
“It is,” continues Maurice
Maeterlinck, “quite incomprehensible that we
should not know the future. Probably a mere nothing,
the displacement of a cerebral lobe, the resetting
of Broca’s convolution in a different manner,
the addition of a slender network of nerves to those
which form our consciousness, any one of
these would be enough to make the future unfold itself
before us with the same clearness, the same majestic
amplitude as that with which the past is displayed
on the horizon, not only of our individual life? but
also of the life of the species to which we belong.
A singular infirmity, a curious limitation of our
intellect, causes us not to know what is going to happen
to us, when we are fully aware of what has befallen
us. From the absolute point of view to which
our imagination succeeds in rising, although it cannot
live there, there is no reason why we should not see
that which does not yet exist, considering that that
which does not yet exist in its relation to us must
necessarily have its being already, and manifest itself
somewhere. If not, it would have to be said that,
where Time is concerned, we form the centre of the
world, that we are the only witnesses for whom events
wait so that they may have the right to appear and
to count in the eternal history of causes and effects.
It would be as absurd to assert this for Time as it
would be for Space, that other not quite
so incomprehensible form of the twofold infinite mystery
in which our whole life floats.”
The latest progress in this new century
is that of overcoming space. It is being overcome;
it is being almost annihilated. When on the Atlantic
Coast we call up a friend in Chicago and speak with
him any hour; when we cable across three thousand
miles of water and receive a speedy reply; when wireless
telegraphy wafts its message through the etheric currents
of the air; when the electric motor is about to revolutionize
all our preconceived ideas of distance and journeyings, we
see how space is being dominated and is no longer
to be one of the conditions that limit man’s
activities. To a degree, overcoming space is also
overcoming time. In an essay of Emerson’s,
written somewhere in the middle of the nineteenth
century, he speaks of something as being worth “going
fifty miles to see.” Fifty miles, at that
time, represented a greater space than three thousand
miles represent at the present. Regarding the
condition of space Maeterlinck further says: “Space
is more familiar to us, because the accidents of our
organism place us more directly in relation with it
and make it more concrete. We can move in it
pretty freely, in a certain number of directions, before
and behind us. That is why no traveller would
take it into his head to maintain that the towns which
he has not yet visited will become real only at the
moment when he sets his foot within their walls.
Yet this is very nearly what we do when we persuade
ourselves that an event which has not yet happened
does not yet exist.”
The only explanation of certain phases
of the phenomena of life is in the theory that life
is twofold; that what we call life in the
sense of experiences and events and circumstances is
simply the result, the precipitation into the physical
world, of the events and experiences that have already
occurred to us on the spiritual side of life, and that
they occur here because they have occurred there.
Maeterlinck says further (in this paper entitled “The
Foretelling of the Future"): “But I do
not intend, in the wake of so many others, to lose
myself in the most insoluble of enigmas.
Let us say no more about it, except this alone, that
Time is a mystery which we have arbitrarily divided
into a past and a future, in order to try to understand
something of it. In itself, it is almost certain
that it is but an immense, eternal, motionless Present,
in which all that takes place and all that will take
place takes place immutably, in which To-morrow, save
in the ephemeral mind of man, is indistinguishable
from Yesterday or To-day.” The question
is raised by Mr. Maeterlinck as to whether the clairvoyant
who foretells to one future events gets his knowledge
from the subliminal consciousness of the person himself.
He relates a series of experiences that he had in
Paris with all sorts and degrees of the professed seers,
and he says:
“It is very astonishing that
others can thus penetrate into the last refuge
of our being, and there, better than ourselves, read
thoughts and sentiments at times forgotten or
rejected, but always long-lived, or as yet unformulated.
It is really disconcerting that a stranger should
see further than ourselves into our own hearts.
That sheds a singular light on the nature of our
inner lives. It is vain for us to keep watch
upon ourselves, to shut ourselves up within ourselves;
our consciousness is not water-tight, it escapes,
it does not belong to us, and though it requires
special circumstances for another to install
himself there and take possession of it, nevertheless
it is certain that, in normal life, our spiritual
tribunal, our for interieur, as the
French have called it, with that profound intuition
which we often discover in the etymology of words, is
a kind of forum, or spiritual market place,
in which the majority of those who have business there
come and go at will, look about them and pick
out the truths, in a very different fashion and
much more freely than we would have to this day
believed.”
Mr. Maeterlinck reiterates that it
is incredible that we should not know the future.
The truth is that it is even more than incredible;
it is unpardonably stupid, and the great desideratum
is to so develop and unfold the spiritual faculties
that they will discern the experiences on the spiritual
side, those which will, later on, precipitate
themselves into the mortal life, and that will be
“knowing the future.” That is to
say, if we can read our spiritual past, we then know
our earthly future; for that which has been,
in the inner experience, shall be, in the outer
experience. Mr. Maeterlinck says:
“I cannot think that we are not
qualified to know beforehand the disturbances
of the elements, the destiny of the planets, of the
earth, of empires, peoples, and races. All
this does not touch us directly, and we know
it in the past, thanks only to the artifices of
history. But that which regards us, that which
is within our reach, that which is to unfold
itself within the little sphere of years, a secretion
of our spiritual organism, that envelops us in Time,
even as the shell or the cocoon envelops the mollusc
or the insect in space; that, together with all
the external events relating to it, is probably
recorded in that sphere. In any case, it
would be much more natural that it were so recorded
than comprehensible that it be not. There
we have realities struggling with an illusion;
and there is nothing to prevent us from believing
that, here as elsewhere, realities will end by
overcoming illusion. Realities are what
will happen to us, having already happened in the
history that overhangs our own, the motionless and
superhuman history of the universe. Illusion
is the opaque veil woven with the ephemeral threads
called Yesterday, To-day, and To-morrow, which we
embroider on those realities. But it is not
indispensable that our existence should continue
the eternal dupe of that illusion. We may even
ask ourselves whether our extraordinary unfitness for
knowing a thing so simple, so incontestable,
so perfect and so necessary as the future, would
not form one of the greatest subjects for astonishment
to an inhabitant of another star who should visit
us....
“Moreover, we must not believe
that the march of events would be completely
upset if we knew it beforehand. First, only they
would know the future, or a part of the future,
who would take the trouble to learn it; even
as only they know the past, or a part of their
own present, who have the courage and the intelligence
to examine it. We should quickly accommodate
ourselves to the lessons of this new science,
even as we have accommodated ourselves to those
of history. We should soon make allowance for
the evils we could not escape and for inevitable
evils. The wiser among us, for themselves,
would lessen the sum total of the latter; and the
others would meet them half-way, even as now they
go to meet many certain disasters which are easily
foretold. The amount of our vexations
would be somewhat decreased, but less than we hope;
for already our reason is able to foresee a portion
of our future, if not with the material evidence
that we dream of, at least with a moral certainty
that is often satisfying; yet we observe that the
majority of men derive hardly any profit from
this easy fore-knowledge. Such men would
neglect the counsels of the future, even as they
hear, without following it, the advice of the past.”
Not to know the future is extremely
inconvenient, to say the least, and it may present
itself as the next most needed advance in progress.
The question is in the air; the demand for its solution
may increase, and demands penetrate the unknown and
reconstruct it for the higher use of man. Meanwhile,
as Mr. Maeterlinck continues:
“Our life must be lived while
we wait for the word that shall solve the enigma,
and the happier, the nobler our life, the more vigorous
shall it become, and we shall have the more courage,
clear-sightedness, boldness to seek and desire
the truth.... We should live as though we
were always on the eve of the great revelation,
and we should be ready with welcome, with, warmest
and keenest and fullest, most heartfelt and intimate
welcome. And whatever the form it shall
take on the day that it comes to us, the best
way of all to prepare for its fitting reception is
to crave for it now, to desire it as lofty, as
perfect, as vast, as ennobling as the soul can
conceive. It must needs be more beautiful,
glorious, and ample than the best of our hopes.
For when it differs therefrom or even frustrates
them, it must of necessity bring something nobler,
loftier, nearer to the nature of man, for it
will bring us truth. To man, though all that he
value go under, the intimate truth of the universe
must be wholly, pre-eminently admirable.
And though on the day it unveils, our meekest desires
turn to ashes and float on the wind, still there
shall linger within us all we have prepared;
and the admirable will enter into our soul, the
volume of its waters being as the depth of the channel
that our expectation has fashioned.”
May it not be that the degree to which
one is enabled to dominate his own life in the sense
of controlling and selecting and grouping its outer
events is precisely in proportion to the spiritual
power that he has achieved? Nor has this spiritual
power any conceivable relation to what is currently
known as occultism, or a thing to be attained by any
series of prescribed outer actions. There has
sprung up a species of literature with explicit directions
for “concentration” and “meditation”
and one knows not what, directions to spend
certain hours of the day gazing upon a ten-penny nail
or something quite as inconsequential, and a more
totally demoralizing and negative series of performances
can hardly be imagined. But all this is not even
worth denunciation. The only real spiritual power
is that of the union of the soul with the divine.
“Lift up your hearts.”
“We lift them up unto the Lord.”
In these lines lies the secret of
all that makes for that mental and moral energy whose
union is spiritual power. The question of what
happens to one daily and constantly, as weeks and months
go on, is the one most practical question of life.
In it is involved all one’s personal happiness
as well as all his power for usefulness. To feel
that this ever-flowing current of events is something
entirely outside one’s own choice or volition
is to stand helpless if not hopeless before
the spectacle of life. It is out of this aimless
and chaotic state that resort is had to the seeking
of all kinds of divination, omens, prophecies, and
foreshadowings, with the result of more and more completely
separating the individual from his legitimate activities
and endeavor, and leading him to substitute for spiritual
realities a mere false and mirage-like outlook, and
instead of that rational activity and high endeavor
that create events and increasingly control their
conditions, there is merely an impatient and restless
expectation of something or other that may suddenly
occur to transform the entire outlook.
The unforeseen events do occur, and
they are the crowning gift and grace and sweetness
of life. But they are the product, the result,
the fine inflorescence of intense spiritual activity,
not of stagnation and idleness. “It might
almost be said that there happens to one only that
which he desires,” says Maeterlinck: “it
is time that on certain external events an influence
is of the feeblest, but we have all-powerful action
on that which these events shall become in ourselves in
other words on their spiritual part, on what is radiant,
undying within them.... There are those with whom
this immortal part absorbs all; these are like islands
that have sprung up in the ocean; for they have found
immovable anchorage whence they issue commands that
their destiny must needs obey.... Whatever may
happen is lit up by their inward life. When you
love, it is not your love that forms part of your
destiny, but the knowledge of self that you will have
found, deep down in your love this it is
that will help you to fashion your life. If you
have been deceived, it is not the deception that matters,
but the forgiveness whereto it leads, and the loftiness,
wisdom, completeness of this forgiveness by
these shall your life be steered to destiny’s
haven of brightness and peace; by these shall your
eyes see more clearly.... Let us always remember
that nothing befalls us that is not of the nature
of ourselves. There comes no adventure but means
to our soul the shape of our every-day thoughts....
And none but yourself shall you meet on the highway
of fate.... Events seem as the watch for the signal
we hoist from within.”
The inner life that is lived the
life of thought, purpose, aspiration, and prayer dominates
and determines the outer life. It creates it.
And when one feels helplessly drifting, at the mercy
of events, his only safety lies in a more positive
and abounding energy; in deeper purpose and a firmer
grasp on his work, a higher and diviner trend to his
thought, and a closer clinging to the divine promises.
“In man,” says Balzac,
“culminates a visible finite universe; in him
begins a universe invisible and infinite, two
worlds unknown to each other.” But one’s
life always belongs far more to his future than to
his past. He is more closely and truly related
to that which he shall be than to that which he has
been; as the flower, the plant, the tree, is in more
intimate and vital relation with the air and sunshine
than with the dark ground in which the seed germinated.
It retains its hold on the kingdom of the earth, but
it has achieved a new and a higher relation with the
kingdom of the air. Man’s relations with
the invisible and the infinite universe are his truest
and most determining relations. And these are
governed and are constantly extended by his power of
will. The power of will is so akin to the divine
energy that it is the power through which, and by
means of which, the closest relation with the divine
energy can be effected. Man, by the power of will,
unites his life with the life of God; he so relates
himself to the divine energy that he becomes receptive
to it, and when this irresistible force pours itself
into his life all nobler realizations become possible;
all sublimest aspiration may express itself in the
daily quality of life, and fulfil its visions in actual
tasks and deeds.
Nothing is ever hopeless. There
is no situation nor complication that has not its
key simply in lifting up the heart to God; in willing,
through prayer, to work, as well as to walk, with Him;
and in praying, through power of will brought to bear
in all its resistless intensity of aspiration, that
the power of God may work through all the conditions
of the human life.
The subjective or subliminal self
is capable of extending the mental faculties in a
way almost undreamed of by the ordinary consciousness.
“There is in the mind a faculty,” says
a writer on this subject, “which, if it receives
the correct impression, is able to correct the mental
and physical life of a person and produce a manifest
impression on his environment, the secret of which
is conscious and concentrated attention under direction
of the will of the individual.
“The subjective mind is a distinct
entity. It occupies the whole human body, and,
when not opposed in any way, it has absolute control
over all the functions, conditions, and sensations
of the body. While the objective mind has control
of all our voluntary functions and motions, the subjective
mind controls all the silent, involuntary, and vegetative
functions. This subjective mind can see without
the use of physical eyes. It perceives by intuition.
It has the power to communicate with others without
the use of ordinary physical means. It can read
the thoughts of others. It receives intelligence
and transmits it to people at a distance. Distance
offers no resistance against the successful missions
of the subjective mind. It never forgets anything,
It never sleeps. It is capable of sustaining
an existence independent of the body. It never
dies. It is the living soul.”
That “distinct entity”
which has been called the “subjective mind”
is probably more accurately defined as the real person,
the man himself, the immortal being who inhabits for
a time the physical body. The development of
this immortal self by an intellectual and moral and
religious progress is the real business of life, the
raison d’etre of man’s sojourn
on earth. There is no more important truth to
be grasped at the present time than that this culture
and development of the spiritual self, or this spiritualization
of life, is in no sense a matter of incantations and
mysterious rites, but is only to be achieved through
faith in God, through prayer and the constant uplifting
of the spirit to the Divine. The inspiration
of life lies in the unceasing effort to unite all
the conscious inner life with the Divine will and
guidance. The problem that presents itself to
the instructors of the deaf, dumb, and blind is in
this development and liberation of the spiritual self,
that the psychic powers may, to some extent, take the
place of the outer senses that are closed. The
physical mechanism of communication with the visible
world is defective, and that perception, which is
spiritual sight, must overcome blindness; that swift
recognition which is spiritual hearing must overcome
deafness; and the wonderful delicacy and intense keenness
that these perceptions develop in those with defective
senses is itself an incontrovertible proof of the
reality of the inner spiritual being that for a time
inhabits the physical body. The observation of
the deaf and blind leads one to see that sight and
hearing in all people vary in degree, and that a vast
number of people are partially defective in these senses,
and that all mankind are defective beyond a given
point. There are vibrations too fine to be detected
by the human ear; and the sight of the eye is, as is
well known, entirely limited to a certain degree of
distance even in those whose eyesight is the keenest.
Clairvoyance and clairaudience are considered as abnormal
and phenomenal gifts, and as in no way conceivable,
nor even desirable, as general and usual powers for
every one. Yet what are they but the sight and
hearing of the spiritual man, the development of the
powers of the subtle body transcending those of the
physical body? This ethereal or psychic body is
in correspondence with the ethereal world. It
is formed to be an inhabitant of that world in which
it finds itself the moment it is released by death.
But if sufficiently developed to take command, so
to speak, while here, of the will and the consciousness
and all the mechanism of the physical body, it then
brings to bear upon practical, daily life all this
infinite and irresistible energy of the higher planes
with which it is in receptive relation. Then,
whether in the body or out of the body matters little
in the responsive communion with those who have passed
through death. “Could the spiritual vision
of the present man be unfolded but for a moment, to
realize the mighty forces of nature that will one day
be at his command, he would become dizzy at the contemplation
of such wondrous possibilities,” says a recent
writer. “The electro-magnetic energy that
holds worlds in their orbits, and neutralizes the power
of gravitation, is but one of those powers that awaits
the growing genius of man to utilize. The magnetic
force is the attractive or centripetal power; the
electric force is the repellent or centrifugal power.
A machine will be invented, in the near future, that
will combine these into a single electro-magnetic
force, and with this force the power of gravitation
will be neutralized. Then the world’s traffic
will be as readily carried in the air as now it is
upon the ground. The forces of the Universe await
only the dissipation of ignorance, selfishness, and
greed to bless and harmonize the world.”
The outlook for the twentieth century
in its grandeur; in the unfolding and expanding powers
of man, and the new and deeper insights into the hidden
forces of nature, can hardly be exaggerated. We
stand on the threshold of a new heaven and a new earth.
The drama of life is to be uplifted to a higher plane,
to the realm of beauty and blessedness and radiance
and joy.