I share the good with every flower,
I drink the nectar of the hour.
EMERSON.
If we knew how to greet each moment
as the manifestation of the divine will we could
find in it all the heart could desire. Nor what
indeed is more reasonable, more perfect, more divine,
than the will of God? Can its infinite value
be increased by the paltry difference of time,
place, or circumstance? The present moment is
always filled with infinite treasures; it contains
more than one is capable of receiving. Faith
is the measure of these blessings; in proportion
to your faith will you receive. By love also are
they measured; the more your heart loves the
more it desires, and the more it desires the
more it receives. The will of God is constantly
before you as an unfathomable sea, which the heart
cannot exhaust; only in proportion as the heart
is expanded by faith, confidence, and love can
it receive of its fulness.... The divine will
is an abyss of which the present moment is the
entrance; plunge fearlessly therein and you will
find it more boundless than your desires. THE
REV. J. P. DE CAUSSADE, in “Holy Abandonment.”
“The moment we desire God
and His will, that moment we enjoy them,
and our enjoyment corresponds to the order of
our desires.”
What though the bough beneath
thee break?
Remember, thou hast wings.
VICTOR
HUGO.
To enter into the will of God is an
initiation of such power and beauty that language
falters in any effort to interpret this supreme experience.
It can be indicated only in the words of the poet:
“I share the good with every
flower,
I drink the nectar of the hour.”
That wonderful test of seeing every
event of life from the point of view of the will of
God simply transforms and revolutionizes the entire
scale of human experience. It simplifies all
perplexities, it offers the solution for all problems.
It illuminates the small and the apparently insignificant
occurrences which, nevertheless, contrive to play so
large and often so determining a part in our days,
as well as places in high relief the great questions
that beset one in his varied round.
The little book from which the extract
on the preceding page is taken a Catholic
book of devotion is one of the most illuminating
in all spiritual literature. It offers to one
instruction and guidance in that life which alone
is progress, peace, and joy, and one who
comes to use it daily will place it almost next to
the Bible in its practical and almost miraculous helpfulness.
Catholic or Protestant, what matters it
so that one who listens may hear the word? It
is in no wise necessary to embrace Catholicism in
order to concede that some of the most vital literature
of the spiritual life is written by the priests and
thinkers of that communion; and it is good to take
help wherever one can find it, regardless
of sect or creed.
A French priest, preaching in an impassioned
and sublime abandon of enthusiasm; caught up in a
rapture of the heavenly life, poured out these wonderful
words to audiences that thronged the dim shades of
Saint Sulpice, in Paris. His theme was the consecration
of life to the divine will. He called upon all
humanity to recognize that this divine will is revealed, not
exclusively in the cloister or the silence, but in
the common trend of daily life. “The field
is the world.” “All things,”
said this priest, “may further the soul’s
union with God; all things perfect it, save sin, and
that which is contrary to duty;” and he added:
“When God thus gives Himself to a soul, all
that is ordinary becomes extraordinary; therefore
it is that nothing appears of the great work which
is going on in the soul; the way itself is so marvellous
that it needs not the embellishment of marvels which
belong not to it. It is a miracle, a revelation,
a continuous enjoyment of God, interrupted only by
little faults; but in itself it is characterized by
the absence of anything remarkable, while it renders
marvellous all ordinary and sensible things.”
The entire discourse was a fervent
and illuminating illustration of how God’s will
reveals itself through the most common things.
“O Divine Action,” Pere De Caussade exclaims,
“I will cease to prescribe to Thee hours or
methods; Thou shalt be ever welcome. O Divine
Action, Thou seemest to have revealed to me Thy immensity.
I will walk henceforth in Thy infinity. No longer
will I seek Thee within the narrow limits of a book,
or the life of a saint, or a sublime thought.
No longer will I seek Thy action alone in spiritual
intercourse. For since the divine life labors
incessantly and by means of all things for our advancement,
I would draw my life from this boundless reservoir.
The will of God imparts to its every instrument an
original and incomparable action. We do not sufficiently
regard things in the supernatural light which the
divine action gives them. We must always receive
and worthily meet the divine action with an open heart,
full confidence and generosity: for to those
who thus receive it, it can work no ill. The divine
action killeth while it quickeneth; the more we feel
death, the firmer our faith that it will give life.”
These words invest the truth of the
constant revelation of God’s will through ordinary
events, with a burning intensity and vividness that
can hardly fail to leave a permanent impress upon the
reader.
There is probably no thoughtful observer
of the phenomena of life with whom spiritual aspiration
is ever present, who is not often honestly puzzled
as to what extent the ordinary tide of events that
attend him must be accepted as the will of God, and
to what degree he should modify these by his own power
of will in selection and grouping. He is engaged,
for instance, in important work. To what extent
should he yield to the “devastator of the day”?
To what extent should he allow his general onward
course of pursuits and interests to be deflected or
changed by the unforeseen events that attend his pathway?
It may be accepted as a fundamental
truth that good sense, good judgment, discretion,
poise, are not unworthy to be ranked among the Christian
virtues. Jesus was eminently sane. He was
no fanatic. He gave both by precept and example
the ideal of a rational and reasonable life.
The individual has no right to rush off and kill himself
because his dearest hope is denied or his most cherished
purpose defeated. Nor has he any more right to
commit what may be called intellectual suicide, by
relinquishing his aspirations and endeavors, merely
because things go wrong, or because he thinks they
are wrong. The conditions of life are not necessarily
wrong because contrary to what one might desire.
Perhaps it is the desire itself which was wrong, and
the conditions which are right; and which are the
expression of God’s will and are thus to be
joyfully accepted. The test of all circumstances
and influence lies in unchanging fidelity, in unswerving
allegiance to the divine ideal of life. The “devastator
of a day” need not be welcomed to make unlimited
waste of time and energy that have their due channels,
but the interruption may be met with patience and
sweetness, as well as with firmness of purpose in
declining to be turned aside from the duty in hand.
The adverse circumstances of life, loss
of money, of friends, disaster in one way or another,
that may come without visible relation to any error
on one’s own part, shall not such
adverse conditions teach a divine lesson of patience
and incite new springs of energy to overcome trial,
and to gain by it a higher spiritual vantage-ground
on which to live? Cannot even denial and defeat
be held as developing qualities that might otherwise
lie latent? May they not teach the divinest lesson
of all, the one most invaluable to human
life, absolute trust in God?
Gaining this, the soul really gains
all that it was sent on earth to learn through all
the varied phenomena of joy and sorrow, of triumph
and failure. There is a common expression of
one’s “embracing religion and turning
away from the world.” It is a contradiction
of terms. The world is the place in which any
real religion is tested and proved, and it is there
that the soul must recognize and receive the Divine
Action.
In the marvellous sermons of Pere
Lacordaire are found suggestions that might well serve
as a daily manual on this sublime and vital truth of
the relation between the will of God and the daily
experience. These sermons are among the world’s
treasures of help toward a higher spirituality.
The argument of Pere De Caussade one equally
entitled to consideration is that God reveals
himself to us now, in ordinary events, as mysteriously
and as adorably and with as much reality as in the
great events of history or in the Holy Scriptures.
“When the will of God reveals itself to a soul
manifesting a desire to wholly possess her,”
says Pere De Caussade, “if the soul freely gives
herself in return, she experiences most powerful assistance
in all difficulties; she then tastes by experience
the happiness of that coming of the Lord, and her
enjoyment is in proportion to the degree in which she
has learned to practice that self-abandonment which
must bring her at all moments face to face with this
ever adorable will.”
The entire philosophy of this is that
the events of life are the language in which God speaks
to us. The thought is as simple as it is impressive,
and it is yet so great as to be fairly epoch-making
in its complete realization. And it is more than
an open question whether, even to a large majority
of the most prayerful and ardent of Christian believers,
there is not still a new aspect of life revealed in
this simple acceptance of the common details of the
day, the events of the hour, as the divine language
which is to be read and followed.
Because there is a more or less widespread
conviction that events, circumstances, conditions
are things to be battled with, in case they are not
agreeable, and that there is a signal virtue in overcoming
them. Nor is this conviction without value, too,
and a large measure of truth, for aspiration and achievement
must always be among the vital forces in creating
the immediate future; and we must create the future
as well as accept the present.
“Thou speakest, Lord, to all mankind
by general events.
Thou speakest to each one in particular
by the events of his
every moment.”
Pere De Caussade proceeds to say:
“But instead of respecting the
mystery of Thy words and hearing Thy voice in
all the occurrences of life, they only see therein
chance, the acts, the caprice of men; they find
fault with everything; they would add to, diminish,
reform. They revere the word of the Lord, but
have they no respect for words which are not conveyed
by means of ink and paper, but by what they have
to do and suffer from moment to moment, do
these words merit nothing?”
This handwriting on the wall in the
guise of the daily events is a message to be read
by faith alone. Just here is the parting of the
ways.
One fares forth in a certain direction,
intent on a given accomplishment, and unforeseen circumstances
arise that hinder, annoy, delay, or prevent the fulfilment
of the intention. From one point of view, one
would say that interruptions and disasters were things
to be overcome as speedily as possible, and that the
virtue lay in pressing on. But the theory of
life so wonderfully set forth by this great preacher
teaches, instead, that these very obstacles, delays
and embarrassments are a signal and an important thing
in and of themselves; that they are nothing less than
the divine voice; the appointed means through which
the voice of God speaks to us; that each moment, each
hour, is just as valuable during delay and enforced
pause as it could be for the most strenuous action,
because, the only important thing we have
to do in this life is to bring our own will into harmony
with the will of God; to learn to recognize His leading
and to love this leading.
Nor does this interpretation of the
divine purposes of life lead the least in the world
to inertia and dull passivity. On the contrary,
it is, in essence, the theory to do all one can, ceaselessly
and constantly; but, having done this, then await
the results in a believing trust which is peace and
love of harmony. The larger part of the events
and circumstances that have to do with our lives are
not under our personal control. No man liveth
to himself. Regarding this large part of our
lives that are not under our personal control, there
is a perpetual tendency to fret, to worry, to impatience,
to irritation, or to despondency, and the consequent
loss of that cheerfulness and radiant exhilaration
in which one should live if he live aright. Could
one, then, regard all this part of his life which
he cannot change, nor hasten, nor delay, nor alter
in the slightest degree, one way or the other, could
he but recognize all this as the divine language and
meet it, not only with resignation but
with that joyful acceptance of perfect faith which
absolutely realizes the oneness of the will between
himself and God, then would not life gain,
at once, immeasurably in peace and happiness?
“Can the divine will err?”
questions Pere De Caussade. “Can anything
that it sends be amiss? But I have this to do;
I need such a thing; I have been deprived of the necessary
means; that man thwarts me in such good works; this
illness overtakes me when I most need my health.”
The answer is: “No; the
will of God is all that is absolutely necessary to
you, therefore you do not need what He withholds from
you you lack nothing. If you could
read aright these things which you call accidents,
disappointments, misfortunes, contradictions, which
you find unreasonable, untimely, you would blush with
confusion, but you do not reflect that all these things
are simply the will of God.”
The life of faith, that perfect faith
which is perfect peace, consists in this ever-present
recognition, and, tested by its results, tested
by the absolute peace and the larger energy which
is liberated by the cheerful and believing rather
than the sad and distrusting state of mind, tried
by all those tests of actual experience, this attitude
of perfect faith is the attitude most favorable to
progress and achievement.
Renunciation is a word that stands
for a great experience, and it is, perhaps, too often
conceived of as relating to the material rather than
to the spiritual life. The question as to whether
one shall give up this or that article, or practice,
during Lent, for instance, is sometimes in the air, always
with the saving clause that the renunciation is merely
temporal, and if given up for forty days in the year,
is to be fully enjoyed and revelled in on the other
three hundred and twenty-five, a clause
that degrades a religious theory to a purely material
plane. If it is better for one’s command
of his higher powers not to take coffee, for instance,
during Lent, then it is better not to take it for the
greater proportion of the year aside from Lent.
If it is better to be gentle, tolerant, forgiving,
and generous for forty days, it is still better to
be so for three hundred and sixty-five days. There
is really something absolutely absurd as well as repellent
in the apparent acceptation that to live the higher,
sweeter, fuller, nobler life is a penitential affair, to
be endured but not enjoyed, and limited chiefly to
Lenten periods and the special holy days of the Christian
Church. For religion is the life, the continual
life of every hour and moment, and consists in the
quality of that constant life. The offices of
religion, the ceremonial forms, are quite another matter.
They have their place, and a most important one.
The gathering together at stated hours and periods
for the devotions of religious worship is so great
an aid to the Christian life as well to be ranked
indispensable to the community and the nation; and
while it is true that the letter killeth but the spirit
giveth life, yet the letter, rightly interpreted, is
filled with the Spirit, and conveys it to us.
The cry of certain reformers (?) that society has
outgrown the Church, has little claim to consideration,
for the Church itself is a progressive institution,
and moves forward and enlarges itself with still larger
revelations of the Divine Truth. The great opportunities
for renunciation come not in the guise of temporal
and material things; whether one shall eat or drink
this thing or the other; whether he shall forego the
theatre, or deprive himself of music, or array himself
in sackcloth and ashes, or in purple and fine linen.
The real question comes in the guise of the spiritual
problems.
One comes to know, for instance, of
an act of his neighbor’s which is really one
of treachery and betrayal of trust. Circumstances
arise in which he could put his finger upon the evidential
chain revealing this lapse from integrity. Shall
he do it? Perhaps in the spiritual vista three
ways open to him. The one would be to reveal the
affair publicly; but this is crude if not cruel, and
to touch the spring that precipitates discord and
controversy is hardly less disastrous than to precipitate
war. Discord only engenders evil, and it never
produces good results. Evil things must, of course,
be resisted, and combat inevitably results, but
discord for the sake of revealing some one’s
inadvertences is invariably disastrous as well as
morally wrong. Then there is the method of seeking
the person directly, and laying before him his error,
thus giving him the opportunity of any extenuating
explanation, and protecting his reputation in the
genuineness of true friendship, from the world.
And this course is often the wisest as well as the
noblest, and really requires more heroism than the
former one. Yet, after these there is still another,
and it is absolutely the most potent, the most successful
in its results, the most truly uplifting for all concerned.
Has one been wronged, or misrepresented, or in any
way injured? Let him commit it all, unreservedly,
to the very immediate, the very real, the infinitely
potent power of the divine world. Let him, as
his own form of personal renunciation, absolutely
forgive whatever annoyance or injury he has received,
and let him pray, not for any vengeance against the
wrong-doer, but that the Divine Love and Light would
so envelop and direct the one who has erred as to
enable him to free his own spirit from whatever fault
he had been led into, and to rise into such regions
of spiritual life that never again would he repeat
it. How beautiful is the counsel given by Whittier:
“My heart was heavy, for its trust
had been
Abused, its kindness answered
with foul wrong.
So, turning gloomily from my fellow-men,
One summer Sabbath day I strolled
among
The green mounds of the village burial-place;
Where, pondering how all human
love and hate
Find one sad level, and how,
soon or late,
Wronged and wrong-doer, each with meekened
face,
And cold hands folded over
a still heart,
Pass the green threshold of our common
grave,
Whither all footsteps tend,
whence none depart,
Awed for myself, and pitying my race,
Our common sorrow, like a mighty wave,
Swept all my pride away, and trembling
I
forgave!”
Forgiveness, forgiveness
in love, and in readiness to aid and to rejoice in
all future success of the one who had erred, is
not this the highest renunciation of the Christian
life? Is it not this which is set before us in
the progress of spirituality? Mutual forgiveness,
mutual aid, mutual trust and sustaining, realizing
that we all err and need to be forgiven even as we
need to forgive, shall we not in these touch
the blessedness of sacrifice rather than its
barren husk, and find in it that “soul of happiness”
which should be the perpetual atmosphere of the higher
life? For “this is the life eternal to
know Thee, the only true God,” and humanity
knows God just in proportion to the degree in which
it is able to partake of the Divine Spirit and translate
its religious aspiration into practical guidance for
the affairs of the day.
Probably the one solution of the problem
of life in all its intricacies and its perplexing
and baffling experiences lies in that trust in God
which is the soul’s absolute surrender to the
Divine will. Even in this solution, however,
perplexities not unfrequently lie, from the fact that
it is not always easy to separate that inevitableness
which runs through human affairs from the results
that we, ourselves, produce by our own series of choices
and our habitual currents of thought. “A
good will has nothing to fear,” says Pere De
Caussade; “it can but fall under that all-powerful
hand which guides and sustains it in all its wanderings.
It is this divine Hand which draws it toward the goal
when it has wandered therefrom, which restores it
to the path. The work of the divine action is
not in proportion to the capacity of a simple, holy
soul, but to her purity of intention; nor does it
correspond to the means she adopts, the projects she
forms, the counsel she follows. The soul may err
in all these, and this not rarely happens; but with
a good will and pure intention she can never be misled.
When God sees this good disposition He overlooks all
the rest, and accepts as done what the soul would
assuredly do if circumstances seconded her good will.”
Nevertheless, as things go in this
world, the good will may encounter the most peculiarly
trying experiences. The most entire and absolute
devotion of thought and interest, of love, friendship,
regard, whatever may be, pouring
itself out lavishly, asking nothing but to give of
the best the soul conceives, meets the experience
of total indifference in return. Had it given
coldness instead of ardent regard, selfish scheming
instead of infinite and vital interest and absorbing
devotion, the result could not be less devoid of response
or recognition. Nor is this, perhaps, as life
goes, an exceptional experience, though the multiplication
of instances does not tend to make any single one less
bitter or less tragically sad. Loss is common,
but that statistical truth does not make one’s
own losses less disastrous or less difficult to bear.
Yet, accepting all these experiences
that are encountered as absolute facts in life, facts
from which there is no appeal, and for which, alas,
there is no mitigation, what remains? One may
feel as if he would gladly give up the whole business
of trying to live at all, but that is not a matter
that is optional with the individual. One has
to live out his appointed days in this phase of being,
and it is only the person of defective intellect as
well as defective moral power who will not take the
gift of life and make the best not the worst of
it. Mr. Longfellow’s familiar lines,
“Not enjoyment and not sorrow
Is our destined end or way;
But to act, that each to-morrow
Find us further than to-day,”
have often been pronounced trite,
but they contain a vital philosophy. It is not
enjoyment, or the reverse, which is the aim; but development.
And the culture of the soul lies in these mingled experiences;
in the baffled efforts, the devotion that gives itself
without return or response, it lies in
the doing and the giving, and not in the receiving.
Nor does one fare onward uncompanioned by the friends
and helpers unseen, as well as by those in this visible
world.
“‘Mortal,’ they softly
say,
’Peace to thy heart!
We, too, yes, mortal,
Have been as thou art,
Hope-lifted, doubt-depressed,
Seeing in part;
Tried, troubled, tempted,
Sustained as thou art.’”
The spiritual faith and that courage
and persistence of energy which is the fruition of
faith, and which are both results of the
recognition and acceptance of the great truth so luminously
revealed by Bishop Brooks when he says, “Jesus
never treated his life as if it were a temporary deposit
of the divine life on the earth, cut off and independent
of its source; he always treated it as if it lived
by its association with the Father’s life, on
which it rested,” this faith and
courage go forward to complete themselves in exhilaration,
in firmness of purpose, and in actual achievement.
One finds that he not only gains the strength of that
which he overcomes, but that he gains a higher plane
of life altogether, a more exalted view and a purer
atmosphere by accepting cheerfully and lovingly the
discipline of denial and limitation, and using the
experience as a stepping-stone, and not as an obstacle
to his endeavors. There are three ways of meeting
the disappointments and denials that are for
the most part somewhat inevitable to every
human life: one of sheer despair, of the relinquishing
of every effort, and, in the extreme degree of this
feeling, resorting to the apparent extinction of life
by suicide; the second, of resignation, that is still,
however, a hopeless and passive and negative state,
in which the man anchors himself to some mere platitudes
of submission to the Divine Will, misunderstanding
and misinterpreting and misapplying the great and
sublime law of obedience and translating it into conditions
of spiritual and mental inactivity that are only a
degree less degrading than the cowardice and ignorance
that rushes into suicide; and the third, of learning
the great lesson involved in the disappointment.
Submission to the Divine Will is all very well; it
is one of the sublimest of the divine laws; but it
is not fulfilled by a hopeless and inert evasion of
all the duties and demands of life, it
is, instead, in its integrity and its deep significance,
fulfilled by the joyful acceptance of the leading,
the willing surrender that opens a still wider
view and a still more vital faith in the divine wisdom.
Another way in which denial and defeat
and thwarted desires or plans can be met is one still
higher and greater, and is that path by which true
spiritual advancement is made. This is, not despair
and hopelessness because an apparently impassable
wall arises across the pathway; not even mere content,
and cordial or joyful submission however noble that
attitude may be; but there is a loftier state in which
the denial can be met; it is not merely an acceptance
of God’s manifest leading that is so informed
with faith that it becomes ceaselessly joyful, but
it is to even discern in limitation, in denial, new
and sublime opportunities.
One’s dearest hopes are suddenly,
by circumstances and conditions entirely outside his
control, totally cut off. What then? At that
moment an entire world of new possibilities opens,
and it rests with the man himself to develop these
into something far greater than the scope of his former
hope or expectation could reveal. He can bring
to bear a power of spiritual energy that shall transform
the very ill-fortune itself into one transcendently
beautiful and even angelic. He can lift all the
factors of his individual problem to the divine plane
of love. For love is the spiritual alchemy, not
merely the love for friends and for those near and
dear to us; not merely the love for those who are
agreeable and winning and whose high qualities inspire
it, but love, love and good will for all.
The command to love one’s enemies is not an
idle nor even an impossible one. The whole law the
whole philosophy, it may be of life can
be read in the counsel, “As ye have therefore
opportunity, do good unto all men.” Do good, do
the right thing, the kind, the generous thing, regardless
of return (for which one usually cares little or not
at all), or even of recognition (for which one usually
cares a great deal), regardless of the recognition, let
the good be done. Let one, finding himself suddenly
confronted by disaster or defeat, resolve: All
that has been, every factor and every circumstance
that has led up to this moment, shall be for good and
never for evil. It shall be for good to each
and all and every one involved in it. Even loss
or sadness shall be transmuted into gain and joy on
a higher than the mere earthly plane. For life
“shall be kept open, that the Father’s
life may flow through it.” Always may one
realize the profound truth that “the going down
of the walls between our life and our Lord’s
life, though it consisted of the failure of our dearest
theories and the disappointment of our dearest plans, that,
too, could be music to us if through the breach we
saw the hope that henceforth our life was to be one
with His life, and His was to be ours.”
Prayer, in its relation to God and
the divine laws; its practical effect upon the immediate
events of life, and its power to transform the spiritual
self, is one of the great problems of the intellectual
and the scientific as well as of the religious life.
One day a prayer seems absolutely and undoubtedly
answered, the relation between the prayer
and the fulfilment being too direct to admit of classing
it under coincidence; and again the purpose that is
made a continual supplication perhaps recedes from
the realm of the possible to that of the impossible,
and the more fervent the entreaty, the more absolute
and hopeless seems the denial. By means of which,
it may be, one learns a very high spiritual lesson, that
of not desiring any specific event or fulfilment,
but of praying, instead, to be kept in harmony with
the divine laws, to be enabled to make his life a
means of aid and true service to others, and to think
as little as possible about any special conditions
for himself. “He that loseth his life shall
find it,” is the affirmation of a very deep
philosophy as well as of sacred truth. To entirely
emancipate one’s mind from thoughts of himself,
and to fill it with the inspiration and the sweetness
and exhilaration of making his life a quest after
every good, and an increasing means for service to
humanity, is the only way to find it in the truest
and largest sense. So, for the most part, the
highest use of prayer is not to ask for the specific
gift or event.
In a work entitled “Esoteric
Christianity” by Annie Besant there is a chapter
on prayer in which we find Mrs. Besant saying:
“In the invisible world there
exist many kinds of Intelligences, which come
into relationship with man, a veritable
Jacob’s ladder, on which the Angels of
God ascend and descend, and above which stands
the Lord Himself. Some of these Intelligences
are mighty spiritual Powers, others are exceedingly
limited beings, inferior in consciousness to
man. This occult side of Nature is a fact recognized
by all religions. All the world is filled with
living things, invisible to fleshy eyes.
The invisible worlds interpenetrate the visible,
the crowds of intelligent beings throng round
us on every side. Some of these are accessible
to human requests and others are amenable to
the human will. Christianity recognizes
the existence of the higher classes of Intelligences
under the general name of angels, and teaches
that they are ‘ministering spirits;’
but what is their ministry, what the nature of
their work, what their relationship to human beings? all
that was part of the instruction given in the
Lesser Mysteries, as the actual communication
with them was enjoyed in the Greater, but in modern
days these truths have sunk into the background.
For the Protestant the ministry of angels is
little more than a phrase.”
Mrs. Besant notes that it seems almost
impossible for the ordinary student to discover the
law according to which a prayer is or is not productive.
“And the first thing necessary in seeking to
understand this law,” she says, “is to
analyze prayer itself.” Mrs. Besant classifies
prayers as: (1) those which are for definite worldly
advantages; (2) those which are for help in moral
and intellectual difficulties, and for spiritual growth;
and lastly, those which consist in meditation on, and
adoration of, the Divine Perfection; and then we find
her saying:
“In addition to all these man
is himself a constant creator of invisible beings,
for the vibrations of his thoughts and desires create
forms of subtle matter, the only life of which is the
thought or the desire which ensouls them; he thus
creates an army of invisible servants who range
through the invisible worlds seeking to do his
will. Yet, again, there are in the world human
helpers, who work there in their subtle bodies
while their physical bodies are sleeping, whose
attentive ear may catch a cry for help. And
to crown all, there is the ever-present, ever-conscious
life of God Himself, potent and responsive at
every point of his realm, that all-pervading,
all-embracing, all-sustaining Life of Love, in
which we live and move. As naught that can give
pleasure or pain can touch the human body without
the sensory nerves carrying the message of its
impact to the brain centres, so does every vibration
in the universe, which is His body, touch the consciousness
of God, and draw thence responsive action. Nerve
cells, nerve threads, and muscular fibres may
be the agents of feeling and moving, but it is
the man who feels and acts; so may myriads of
intelligences be the agents, but it is God who knows
and answers. Nothing can be so small as
not to affect that delicate omnipresent consciousness,
nothing so vast as to transcend it.”
In the most literal sense we live
and move and have our being in the realm of spiritual
forces. “Our life is hid with Christ in
God.” That assertion is no mere mystic
phase, but a plain and direct assertion of an absolute
spiritual truth. Our real life, all our significant
action, is in the invisible realm, and the manifestation
in the physical sphere is simply the results and effects
of which the processes and causes are all in the ethereal
world. Prayer, in all its many and varied phases,
is simply activity on the spiritual side, and because
of this it is the motor of life. It is the key
to that intense form of energy which is the divine
life, and its highest development is reached when the
soul asks only for one thing, the one that
includes all others, that of union with
God.
“Anxiety and misgiving,”
wrote Fenelon, “proceed solely from love of
self. The love of God accomplishes all things
quietly and completely; it is not anxious or uncertain.
The spirit of God rests continually in quietness.
Perfect love casteth out fear. It is in forgetfulness
of self that we find peace. Happy is he who yields
himself completely, unconsciously, and finally to
God. Listen to the inward whisper of His Spirit
and follow it that is enough; but to listen
one must be silent, and to follow one must yield.”
The quiet and perfect obedience to
the divine will, taught by Fenelon, has nothing in
common with a mere passive and blind acceptance of
events as they occur. Obedience to the Heavenly
Vision is not in standing still, but in following.
It finds its best expression in energy and not in
inactivity. The more absolutely one abandons himself
to the divine will, the more unceasingly will he fill
every hour with effort toward the working out of the
higher and the more ideal conditions. An ideal
once revealed is meant to be realized. That is
the sole reason for its being revealed at all, and
the way of life is to unfalteringly work toward its
realization. It is a curious fact that there can
be no achievement of life so improbable or so impossible
that it cannot be realized by the power the
absolutely invincible power of mental fidelity.
Let one hold his purpose in thought, and the unseen
forces thus generated are working for it day and night.
Like one of the new inventions in electricity, so
thought a force infinitely more potent
than electricity sets up a certain rate
of vibration in the spiritual atmosphere and works
as with irresistible sway. The individual who
is held to possess great strength of will is, really,
simply the one capable of holding the thought, of
keeping a certain tenacity of purpose. This power
alone redeems one from living on shifting sands, and
being perhaps, at last, engulfed and swallowed up in
the quicksands of his own shattered visions and ideals,
which never grew to fulfilment because of his infirmity
of will and his closing his eyes to the star that
had shone in his firmament.
The very pain and trial and multiplying
obstacles that one may encounter who definitely sets
his steps along a certain way, are only helps, not
hindrances. One gains the strength of that which
he overcomes. He transforms obstacles into stepping-stones.
For we live and move and have our being in an ethereal
atmosphere, which is universal, and which unerringly
registers every thought and every energy, and transmutes
these into living forces. Thought is creative,
and if the thought be held with sufficient intensity,
it acts upon every element that has to do with the
final achievement. Imagination which
is simply clairvoyant vision discerns the
ideal in the dim distance, and thought is the motive
force by means of which it is achieved. To be
“infirm of will” is, therefore, the greatest
of misfortunes, as it inevitably produces complete
failure in all the affairs of life. However hopeless
a certain combination of events may look, it really
is not so. Nothing is ever hopeless, because
nothing is final. Conditions are forever flowing
like a river, and may be modified and transformed
at any moment.
Failure or success is optional with
the individual, for each lies in character, and is
not a matter of possessions or external conditions.
To become cynical, despondent, indifferent, is failure,
and one has no moral right to fall to that level.
Associations that induce these feelings should be
abandoned. The happy conditions of life are to
be had on the same terms. The fretful, the ill-tempered,
the selfish, the exacting, must, somewhere and some
way, learn their lesson and grow toward the light;
but their influence should not be allowed to poison
the spiritual atmosphere. It is neither a moral
duty, nor is it even true sympathy to share the gloom
and depression generated by these qualities.
The inward whisper of the Spirit is the summons to
a nobler plane on which all the higher powers find
their expression. It is a fatal mistake to enter
into the dark and unreasoning moods of every unfortunately
constituted person. To do this habitually is to
so deplete the forces of the spirit that one has nothing
left. Let one keep his heart and mind in the
currents of the Divine Power; let him actively follow
the vision that is revealed to him, and he shall achieve
and realize his ideals. It is the law and the
prophets. A force as resistless as that of the
attraction that holds the stars in their courses will
lead him on. “The love of God accomplishes
all things quietly and completely.”
The mystic truth that lies enfolded
in the words, “Cast thyself into the will of
God and thou shalt become as God,” is one of
marvellous potency. To achieve the state of absolute
peace and reconcilement with the Divine will is to
achieve poise and power. For to be thus “cast
into the will of God” means no mere languid
acquiescence or hopeless, despairing acceptance; it
means no merely negative and passive state that accepts
the will of God for lack of sufficient stamina to assert
its own will. But, instead, it means an intelligent
recognition of the divine order; it means the will
to gain the higher plane of life; it means the glad
entering into a new and finer atmosphere charged with
the utmost potency, and to become so receptive to
it, so much a part of this energy as to command its
expression in various forms of activity. The “will
of God” is, indeed, the atmosphere of heavenly
magnetism; it is liberation, not captivity; it is
achievement, not renunciation. People talk about
being “resigned” to the will of God; as
well might they phrase being “resigned”
to Paradise! That has been an inconceivably false
tradition that repeated the prayer, “Thy will
be done,” as if it were the most sorrowful,
instead of the most joyful, petition.
There is another phase of experience
into which those of a certain sensitiveness of temperament
are apt to fall when encountering the loss or pain
that, in one form or another, seems a part of the discipline
of the present life; a phase that can only be described
as spiritual loneliness and desolation, in which no
effort seems possible. It is an experience portrayed
in the following stanzas:
“I see a Spirit by thy side,
Purple-winged and eagle-eyed,
Looking like a heavenly guide.
Though he seems so bright and fair,
Ere thou trust his proffered care,
Pause a little, and beware!
If he bid thee dwell apart,
Tending some ideal smart
In a sick and coward heart;
In self-worship wrapped alone,
Dreaming thy poor griefs are grown
More than other men have known;
Though his words seem true and wise,
Soul, I say to thee, Arise,
He is a Demon in disguise!”
It is a phase in which one feels his
own peculiar sorrow as the most unendurable of all.
Perhaps it is but one must abandon
that point of view. “That way madness lies.”
His life may be desolate, but he must not allow himself
to meditate on that conviction. It is moral as
well as mental disaster, and as life is a divine responsibility,
not to be evaded because things in general go wrong,
one has no right to live in less than his best expression
every day and hour. In darkness and desolation,
even, one may find a spiritual exaltation. Such
a period in life may be like that of the seed, isolated
and buried in the ground that it may germinate
and grow; that it may spring up in leaf and flower
and fruit, and reach out to life and light with multiplied
forces in the transfiguration of new power. A
period that seems empty and devoid of stimulus may
be, after all, that of highest potency. When
nothing crystallizes into events, all the elements
are plastic to the impress of spiritual energy.
“Cast thyself into the will of God.”
This is the crucible from which is distilled the alembic
of power. One may stamp the image of noblest
achievement upon this plastic period. It is the
time in which to create on the spiritual side.
To live in poise, and beauty, and
harmony is the finest of all the fine arts. It
is, in itself, the occupation of life. “I
am primarily engaged to myself,” said Emerson,
“to be a public servant of the gods; to demonstrate
to all men that there is good will and intelligence
at the heart of things, and ever higher and yet higher
leadings. These are my engagements. If there
be power in good intention, in fidelity, and in toil,
the north wind shall be purer, the stars in heaven
shall glow with a kindlier beam, that I have lived.”
It is in the will of God that perfect
serenity and joy shall be found. “In His
will is our peace,” says Dante. The acceptance
of this profound truth is the absolute key to all
harmony and happiness. When sorrow is felt as
a dark cloud, a crushing weight, the energies are paralyzed;
but when one can rise above this inertia and cease
questioning that which he regards as a mysterious
and in all humility undeserved
calamity; when he can simply accept it as an expression
of the divine action that is moulding the soul, and
thus leave it all in peace of spirit; when, forgetting
the past, he can press onward to the things that are
before, then, indeed, does he receive of
the true ministry of pain.
“Every consecration made in
the darkness is reaching out toward the light, and
in the end it must come into the light, strong in the
strength which it won in its life and struggle in the
dark.”
There is a great renewal and regeneration
of life in the actual realization of Saint Paul’s
admonition as to forgetting the things that are behind
to press onward to those before. One should force
himself, simply by an act of will and by his rational
convictions of the beauty and value of life, to let
go past experiences that chain him to sorrow, and,
instead, link himself in that magnetism of spiritual
apprehension possible to achieve, to the enchantment
and power of the future. Even the most tragic
sorrows lose their hold over one if he will reflect
that these, as well as his joys, are alike expressions
of the divine will. “Seek you,” said
a devout Catholic priest, “the secret of union
with God? There is none other than to avail yourselves
of all that He sends you. You have but to accept
all that He sends, and let it do its work in you....
No created mind or heart can teach you what this divine
action will do in you; you will learn it by successive
experiences. Your life unceasingly flows into
this incomprehensible abyss, where we have but to
love and accept as best that which the present moment
brings, with perfect confidence in this divine action
which of itself can only work you good.”
When the divine action comes in the
guise of joy and happiness, one is swift to give thanks.
But when it comes in the guise of pain, shall he not
also see in it the expression of God’s will,
and accept it with that absolute confidence in the
wisdom and beneficence of the divine action that is,
in itself, peace and sweetness? For it is a “light
affliction which is but for a moment,” and the
promise is ours that it “worketh for us a far
more exceeding and eternal weight of glory.”
And this is not merely nor mostly a religious enthusiasm;
it is the only practical working basis on which one
whom experiences touch deeply can live at all.
Without this philosophy sorrow would undermine the
health and paralyze all the energy that should express
itself in achievements. But the secret of joy
is hidden in pain.
“For what God deigns to try with
sorrow
He means not to decay to-morrow;
But through that fiery trial last
When earthly ties and bonds are past.”
An experience that receives this test
must hold deep significance. Let one accept it, not
only with patience and trust, but triumphantly, radiantly,
as in the exquisite realization of the divine words:
“For ye have need of patience, that after ye
have done the will of God, ye shall receive the promise.”
And the promise is sure if the conditions have been
fulfilled. It is only a question of time.
Even heaven itself is but “the perfect sight
of Christ,” and why shall not this radiant vision
flash upon us, now and here in the earthly life, and
make heaven of every day? It is not merely by
the change called death that we enter into the spiritual
world. The turn of thought, the thrill of love
and sacrifice and generous outgoing, carries one,
at any instant, into the heavenly life. It is
only the qualities that find there their native atmosphere
which give beauty, depth, and significance to this
human life. It is only as one lives divinely
that he lives at all, only as one recognizes
“the perfect sight of the Christ” that
he recognizes the full scope of his responsibility
and enters on his truest experiences.
Matthew Arnold dwells often upon “our
need for conduct, our need for beauty;” and
he finds the springs of the supply to be, not in the
“strenuous” life, always at high pressure
and extreme tension, but in the thoughtful leisure,
in the serenity of repose, in the devotion to poetry
and art. “How,” he questions, “are
poetry and eloquence to exercise the power of relating
the modern results of natural science to man’s
instinct for conduct, his instinct for beauty?
And here again I answer that I do not know how
they will exercise it, but that they can and will
exercise it I am sure. I do not mean that modern
philosophical poets and modern philosophical moralists
are to come and relate for us, in express terms, the
results of modern scientific research to our instinct
for conduct, our instinct for beauty. But I mean
that we shall find, as a matter of experience, if
we know the best that has been thought and uttered
in the world, we shall find that the art and poetry
and eloquence of men who lived, perhaps, long ago,
who had the most limited natural knowledge, who had
the most erroneous conceptions about many important
matters, we shall find that this art, and
poetry, and eloquence, have, in fact, not only the
power of refreshing and delighting us, they have also
the power, such is the strength and worth,
in essentials, of their author’s criticism of
life, they have a fortifying, and elevating,
and quickening, and suggestive power, capable of wonderfully
helping us to relate the results of modern science
to our need for conduct, our need for beauty.”
Life has a tendency to become far
too “strenuous” with the best one can
do, even; and the need is not for greater pressure
of intensity, but for greater receptivity of intellectual
and spiritual refreshment; for a calmer trust and
a loftier faith.
The joy of faith in its inspiration
and emotion is wonderfully renewed from the Divine
Word. “The Lord shall be unto thee an everlasting
light, and thy God thy glory.” The gospels
are full of these positive and radiant assurances
that invest faith with the most absolute joy of confidence
and positiveness of trust. These assurances meet
the eye and enter the heart with the certainty of
a personal message, directly given from God.
And it is in this realm of the higher thought, of that
culture of the soul which is the true object and aim
of the temporary life on earth, that the relief from
the too strenuous pressure of affairs must be found.
The human soul is so constituted that it cannot live
unless it breathes its native air of inspiration and
joy and divineness. It is stifled in the “strenuous”
lower life, its energies are paralyzed unless it seek
renewal at the divine springs. It is this strenuousness
of latter-day life, unrelieved by love and by prayer;
unrelieved by the spiritual luxury of loving service
and outgoing thought; this strenuous attitude, intent
on getting and greed and gain and personal advantage,
that, at last, ends in the discords and the crimes,
the despair and the suicides, whose records fill the
daily press. The cure for all these ills is to
be found only in the higher life of conduct and of
beauty. “Thou shalt show me the way of
life: Thou shalt make me full of joy with Thy
countenance.” Here, and here alone, is the
cure, the relief, the leading into peace and serenity
and exaltation. It is not that the “fierce
energy” of life is in excess, but that its application
is in wrong and unmeaning directions. Let the
soul find its true refreshment and infinitely sustaining
tide of energy in God, and immediately “old
things have passed away,” and “all have
become new,” and life is full of exhilaration
and joy. “Every day we ought to renew our
purpose, saying to ourselves: This day let us
make a sound beginning, for what we have hitherto
done is naught.” Every day is a new and
definite re-entrance upon life. Nor is it worth
while to linger too much on the mistakes, the errors
of yesterday. True, the consequences of errors
and mistakes linger in life until they are worked
out; but the working out is, after all, only a question
of time and of unfaltering persistence in the upward
way, and thus a new foundation of life is laid:
“old things have passed away and all things
have become new.” It is in the serene and
joyous exaltation of life alone that one truly lives;
in that sweetness of mutual trust and generous aims
and over-flowing love that radiates its joy and beauty
to all with whom it comes in contact, and which is
perpetually fed and perpetually renewed by the constant
communion of the soul with God.
On the New Year’s eve of 1902
there was a wonderful phenomenon transpiring in the
stellar universe, which continued during several weeks.
That night was one of the utmost beauty. The air
was as clear as crystal, and the constellation of
Orion gleamed and sparkled like a colossal group of
diamonds against an azure background. The entire
sky was a scene of unparalleled grandeur and magnificence.
The superb constellations of Orion and Ursa Major
(familiarly known as the “Dipper”) blazed
with an intense brilliancy that seemed the very incarnation
and concentration of electric vitality. Five of
the stars in Ursa Major were then receding from our
atmosphere at the rate of twenty thousand miles a
second; the other two were approaching; and the phenomenon
of these weeks was in the changing aspect of that
constellation which the astronomers hold will require
some two thousand years to complete. Then will
Ursa Major, as seen from the earth, be entirely changed.
Such facts as these, and the speculation they suggest,
offer to us a new basis for the contemplation of life.
If it require a period of two thousand years to produce
the appreciable change of grouping in a constellation
whose stars are moving at the rate of twenty thousand
miles a second, this fact indicates to us the infinite
spaces and the unlimited time in which the universe
moves onward in its appointed path.
With the individual life, as with
the star, it is the direction in which
it is moving that determines the results. In this
truth lies infinite encouragement. Let one set
his feet in the upward way, and keep steadfastly to
his aim; let him keep unfaltering faith with his ideals, and
his success in whatever direction he is moving, his
ultimate achievement of every aim he follows, is assured.
It becomes simply a question of time when the entire
aspect of his life shall be changed even as that of
constellations in their appointed course.
It is in this manner alone that one
may control his life, not by the working
of an instantaneous miracle, but by absolute fidelity
to a definite ideal of progressive change.
“Quicksand years that whirl me I
know not whither,
Your schemes, politics, fail, lines give
way, substances mock and
elude me,
Only the theme I sing, the great and strong-poss’d
soul, eludes not,
One’s self must never give way that
is the final substance that out
of all is sure,
Out of politics, triumphs, battles, life,
what at last finally remains?
When shows break up what but one’s
self is sure?”
The “quicksand years”
whirl away many things. Schemes dissolve and
vanish; new combinations constantly arise; every day
is, indeed, a new beginning, and
“Every morn is the world made new.”
But a purpose that remains unchanged
amid all the shifting scenery of perpetual new environments
must eventually fulfil itself. The stars in their
courses fight for it. The celestial laws insure
its final goal.
“Out of politics, triumphs, battles,
life, what at last finally remains?
When shows break up, what but one’s
self is sure?”
One has this sure self only in proportion
as he relates his life to the divine life. The
only permanence is to be found in the currents of
divine energy, infinite and exhaustless.
There are many ways of watching the
New Year in; but the somewhat unique personal experience
of welcoming it on that eve of 1902, gazing at the
vast expanse of the brilliant skies through the windows
of a sleeping-car, had its claim to beauty and sacredness.
The rush of the train gave a sense of almost floating
out into the ethereal spaces. There was a detachment
from earth that hardly comes even in the sacred service
of the church on that mystic midnight of a New Year.
One seemed alone with the infinite Powers, and a new
and deeper trust in the Giver of all Good was inspired.
The beautiful lines of Whittier came to memory:
“I know not what the future hath
Of marvel and surprise,
Assured alone that life and death
His mercy underlies.”
Thus might one remember and dream
while flying on under the New Year’s skies,
and realize anew that any trend of thought is inevitably
creating its future. Auto-suggestion is the most
potent of forces, and the assertion that “as
a man thinketh so is he,” is literally true.
As he thinketh, so he shall be, also; and he
can thus think himself into new conditions and attract
to himself new forces. He has the power to keep
his feet set in this upward pathway, and so sure as
is the destiny of the stars and the constellations
on their course through the heavenly spaces, so sure
is his own arrival at the point toward which he is
moving, and his achievement of the supreme end he holds
steadfastly in view. Thus life will be to him
no period of mere “quicksand years,” but,
instead, a series of advancing realization and beautiful
states. Ideals may be swiftly realized by the
accelerated energy of concentration and prayer, and
the secret of transformation from defeat and denial
to the perfect hour of triumph and happiness lies,
for each one, within his own keeping.
“One’s self must never give
way that is the final substance.”
“Do we not all wish that we
could live our lives over again in the light of our
present experience?” remarked Rev. Doctor Charles
Gordon Ames; “but this is just what God lets
us do.”
Here, in a word, was that divine panorama
of the completeness of life revealed; the part of
it lived in this present phase of experience being
infinitely less in its relation, compared to the whole,
than is one day in its relation to the longest life
possible on earth. One day out of seventy, eighty,
ninety years, would not seem so much; yet this entire
period of even the longest life on earth, in its relative
proportion to the life of all the eternities, is far
less than is one day out of a lifetime in its proportional
relation to Immortality. This spiritual panorama
suggests its infinite energy of hope; it reinforces
courage; it reveals in the most impressive manner
the significance of living. For it is the tendency
which always determines the result.
There can hardly be a question but
that distrust of conditions is a fatal element in
all effort and achievement. Depression might,
indeed, well take its place among the seven deadly
sins that Dante names. There are serious errors
whose effect is less disastrous than is that of habitual
depression of spirits. Mental power is one’s
working capital, and the degree of power depends,
absolutely, on the quality of thought, or, as the
phrase goes, on “the state of mind.”
Conditions determine events, but conditions are plastic
to thought. On them one may stamp the impress.
If he persist in regarding himself as a victim to fate
and his life as a sacrifice and burnt offering, he
can very soon work this conception into actuality.
He can indeed he will, and he inevitably
must become that which he continually sees
himself, in mental vision. But if he will take
his stand, with poise and serenity, on spiritual truth;
if he will amend his life according to spiritual laws;
if he will accept failure as merely a stepping-stone
to ultimate success, as “the triumph’s
evidence,” ill fortune can establish
no dominant power over his life. That things
have gone wrong is only, after all, a proof that they
may go right. The consequences of error
or mistake warn one not to make the same error or
mistake again; and therefore the consequences, however
unpleasant or sad at the moment, are really educative
in their nature, and their very trial or pain becomes,
if truly recognized, a friendly and redemptive power.
Then, too, time is a variable factor. It is degree,
not duration, that it means. The consequences
of an error may be accepted and annulled swiftly.
Intensity of feeling will condense a year, an eternity,
even, into an hour. And the “new day,”
days in which, as Doctor Ames so charmingly wrote,
“ God
sets for you
A fair clean page to write anew
The lesson blotted hitherto,”
a new day may be a new lifetime as
well as that “next life” beyond the change
we call death.
How wonderfully Emerson unfolds the
magic possible to a day. “One of the illusions,”
he says, “is that the present hour is not the
critical, decisive hour. Write it on your heart
that every day is the best day in the year. No
man has learned anything rightly, until he knows that
every day is Doomsday. There are days which are
the carnival of the year. The angels assume flesh,
and repeatedly become visible. The imagination
of the gods is excited, and rushes on every side into
forms. Yesterday not a bird peeped; the world
was barren, peaked, and pining: to-day ’t
is inconceivably populous; creation swarms and meliorates.”
The speculative idea that immortality
is an achievement rather than a gift is not new, but
whenever it is formulated, as in a recent sermon by
Rev. Doctor Parkhurst, it startles many people and
arouses antagonism, so far as it is not truly understood.
Yet it has its deepest aspects of spiritual truth,
and it is the idea constantly, persistently, and most
impressively taught by Saint Paul throughout the entire
gospels. We are constantly besought to lay
hold on the eternal life; to press forward toward
immortal things; to be renewed in the spirit; to “put
on the new man, which after God is created in righteousness
and true holiness; to follow Him, who is the Life,
the Truth, the Way.” The entire teaching
of the gospels is one forcible system of active and
unfaltering endeavor in the growing achievement of
spirituality, which determines Immortality. It
is the exact accountant measure for measure.
So much spirituality, so much immortality. Nor
does this assertion partake in the slightest degree
of the nature of a metaphysical problem, to be comprehended
only by the theologian and the philosopher. It
is the most simple, clear, and direct of propositions.
We all accept Saint Paul’s assertion that flesh
and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of heaven.
So far as one lives only in the processes of the physical
life he is not living the life of those spiritual
energies which alone lay hold on immortality.
There is a certain degree of intelligent consciousness
that is inseparable from this physical life; an intelligence
that buys and sells, and bargains and calculates on
the physical plane, and is sufficient to produce a
certain rational status of life. There are not
wanting individuals who never rise above this plane.
They may, and often do, acquire possessions and even
power on the limited plane of the outward life; they
may even have some formal and ceremonial religious
observances which they mistake for Christianity, but
which are the framework ready and able to inspire
them if filled with the spirit, but which, to them,
remain empty and dead. The man whose body, simply,
occupies his church pew on Sunday, and who on Monday
proceeds to cheat his neighbor, is not, we will all
agree, the man who has really entered into the true
privileges offered by the Church. The sacrament
of Sunday must become the consecration of Monday.
Unless this be true the man has not laid hold
on Immortality. So we see that this lower plane
of considerable intelligence and consciousness, related
exclusively to the visible and the tangible, must
be eliminated from our conceptions of Immortality.
There is nothing at all in this that can possibly
survive death. Doctor John Fiske gives a fine
and comprehensive definition of that degree of achievement
which is above the level of death when he says:
“In the highest of creatures
the Divine immanence has acquired sufficient
concentration and steadiness to survive the dissolution
of the flesh, and assert an individuality untrammelled
by the limitations which in the present life
everywhere persistently surround it.”
Here we have the initial truth.
The acquirement of “sufficient concentration
and steadiness to survive the dissolution of the flesh,” and
“to assert an individuality untrammelled by the
limitations of the present life,” when
man has progressed so far as this, then, and then
alone, has he achieved immortality. He
has laid hold on its initial phase. For immortality
is infinite beyond conception. It is as infinite
as space, and as the idea of God. To have achieved
enough of this “concentration and steadiness” which
is merely another phrase for spirituality to
survive death, is no more achieving immortality, in
its wholeness and completeness, than learning the
alphabet is the achievement of scholarship in its infinite
resources. It cannot be conceived of as complete,
but, instead, as an endless chain of infinite possibilities,
of ever new and ever widening vistas.
One of the noblest men and loftiest
thinkers of the day, referring, in a private letter,
to this sermon of Doctor Parkhurst that inspired such
wide discussion, thus wrote:
“That paragraph from Doctor Parkhurst
expresses my idea regarding immortality.
There must be a master (good) thought or passion.
It is the angel with wings that wafts the soul
where the man most longed to be in life, with
the purest and best. ’As one thinks, so
he shall be,’ is sound doctrine. All
this embodies what I once read of Sappho, who
counselled her pupils to cultivate their thoughts
and grow, or they would have nothing to carry
with them, nothing to make a soul of, nothing
to survive the grave.
“I believe that on this idea
rests the scheme of life through faith in Christ.
As He is the highest, the ideal, the supreme, the soul
finds rest in Him, and there grows into a life
that death cannot annihilate. In the presence
of the great master passion, with the soul thrilling
with nobleness, as when dying for another, burned at
the stake for righteousness’ sake, the spirit
goes straight to God, into the infinite bosom,
an angel fit for only heaven.
“If the soul hungers and thirsts
for God it will reach him. If, at the last
moment, a man’s whole nature cries longingly
in faith to Christ, that will save
him, waft him, draw him into the divine abode.
And this explains the Christian plan of so-called salvation.
Faith in Christ is the master passion, and love
the magnet that draws the soul to its own kind.
It may be set down as true that vice and sin
have no vitality. Wickedness is death. Virtue
and love of God are life.”
But the question recurs just here,
Is there absolutely no possibility of immortality
for him who does not advance beyond a certain conscious
and partly automatic intelligence on the physical
plane? Does the gate of possibilities, does the
door of opportunity close with this brief mortal life?
To that question science as well as faith answers “no.”
The law of Evolution is the law of eternal possibility
and opportunity. The spark of immortality the
divine spark, implanted by God, when he made man in
His image, this is eternal in its nature,
and unquestionably survives death. But immortality
is the result of man’s co-operation with the
Divine. God has implanted the spark. He has
placed man in an environment of discipline and of
opportunity. The individual may be whatever
he, himself, decides and chooses to be. Not all
in an hour, or in a year; not, perhaps, even in this
entire lifetime; but sometime and somewhere he who
is unfaltering in his allegiance to his ideal shall
realize it at last. And the degree of immediateness
and celerity with which he realizes it depends entirely
on the degree of spiritual energy that he brings to
bear on his purpose. The higher the potency, the
swifter the result.
Science as well as ethics recognizes
the reality of the unseen potencies. Science
is, indeed, pointing the way. “The influence
of the Holy Spirit, exquisitely called the Comforter,”
says Professor William James, “is a matter of
actual experience, as solid a reality as that of electro-magnetism,”
and he adds:
“The further limits of our being
plunge, it seems to me, into an altogether other
dimension of existence from the sensible and merely
understandable world. Name it the mystical region,
or the supernatural region, whichever you choose.
So far as an ideal impulse originates in this
region (and most of them do originate in it,
for we find them possessing it in a way for which we
cannot otherwise account); we belong to it in
a more intimate sense than that in which we belong
to the visible world, for we belong in the most
intimate sense wherever our ideals belong. Yet
the unseen region in question is not merely ideal,
for it produces effects in the world. When
we commune with it, work is absolutely done upon our
finite personality, for we are turned into new men,
and consequences in the way of conduct follow
in the natural world upon our regenerative change.
But that which produces effects in another reality
must be termed a reality itself, so I feel as if we
had no philosophic excuse for calling the unseen
or mystical world unreal.”
Not unreal. On the contrary,
the unseen is the realm of that which is alone real
and abiding. The positiveness of the divine life
is a quality that has too little recognition from
the world of philosophy and speculation. It is
an infinite reservoir of infinite energy, from which
may be drawn at any moment, peace, courage, and power.
“Man can learn to transcend the limitations
of finite thought at will. The Divine Presence
is known through experience. The turning to a
higher plane is a distinct act of consciousness.
It is not a vague twilight, or semi-conscious experience.
It is not an ecstasy. It is not a trance.
It is not super-consciousness in the Vedantic sense.
It is not due to self-hypnotization. It is a
perfectly calm, sane, sound, rational, common-sense
shifting of consciousness from the phenomena of sense
perception to the phenomena of seer-ship, from the
thought of self to a distinctively higher realm.
For example, if the lower self be nervous, anxious,
tense, one can in a few moments compel it to be calm.
This is not done by a word simply. Nor is it
done by hypnotism. It is by the exercise of power.
One feels the spirit of peace as definitely as heat
is perceived on a hot summer day. The power can
be as surely used as the sun’s rays can be focussed
and made to do work, to set fire to wood.”
In these words there is very clearly
set forth a certain spiritual achievement of a definite
nature. It is simply the act of liberating the
spiritual self from entanglement with the lower self, the
summoning into ascendency of the higher powers.
This intense degree of spiritual energy may be achieved
with the force and suddenness of a special creation.
The physical universe in which man
finds himself is not only surrounded by the spiritual
universe, but the two are so absolutely interpenetrated
that he may live in both, and, as a matter of fact,
whoever lives the life of the spirit does live now
and here, as an inhabitant of both these realms.
The spiritual universe is the reservoir of energy.
“The things that are seen are temporal, but
those that are unseen are eternal,” and faith,
as the substance of those things not seen, is
a definite potency which is practically related to
daily affairs. That is to say, it is an absolute
power, by means of which one can fulfil the practical
duties of every day. The degree of one’s
ability to draw from this energy and assimilate it
into his life measures his degree of success.
Doctor Ostwald, a German scientist,
claims that in energy he has discovered the actual
bridge, the missing link, between mind and matter,
between the spiritual and the physical worlds; that
it is a bridge “which covers the chasm between
force and substance,” and “which is of
a nature sufficiently manifest to embrace the totality
of our experiences, the interior as well as the exterior.”
Doctor Ostwald claims that there is an immaterial
factor, one endowed with neither weight nor mass, which
in a quantitative way is just as unchangeable as the
mass and weight of material substances, and which,
exactly like these, can undergo qualitative transformations
of all kinds. He holds that energy may be converted
from every one of its forms into every other, and its
power of transformation is therefore unlimited, and
that every change which takes place in the outer world,
and every process, may be described by a statement
of the kind and amount of energy that has undergone
conversion.
This conception of energy is a very
clear and remarkable one, placing it as the infinite
power from which any form of force, spiritual or mechanical,
can be derived.
In the moral universe the true expression
of this energy upon which one may draw infinitely
lies in service. It is in so enlarging the personal
sphere of life as to include the widest possible range
of sympathy and comprehension. The mystic spirit
is full of value in reaching out into the realm of
spiritual forces, but when these forces are gained
they must be applied. The old religious idea
used to include a great deal of discussion about saving
the soul; but the larger spiritual enlightenment of
to-day sees that the phrase “saving the soul”
implies a present condition, the state
of love, sympathy, service, by which the soul is saved
to-day, and not a vague condition to be only realized
in some remote eternity. Now is the day of
salvation. The success of life lies not in possessions;
it lies in keeping the harmonious and perfectly receptive
relation with the spiritual realm of forces, and using
these forces in every duty and need and opportunity
that presents itself. As for always compassing
desires, or achieving the possession of this thing
or that, is in reality immaterial. The best things
in life are often the things one does not have; but
they produce effects in the visible world, and often,
just in proportion as the things themselves remain
in the ethereal realm, is the potency of the effects
they produce in the physical realm. This other
dimension of existence is one with which the final
reckoning must be made. It is no longer length
of days, but intensity of energy, that determines
results. Not length of time, but intensity of
purpose, energy of action, in these lie
the secret of achievement. The power that lies
in brief moments is the power required for effective
life and work. Emerson truly says that we talk
of the shortness of life, but that life is unnecessarily
long. Degree and not duration is the test of
power in any work, and the application of this truth
to the ordinary affairs of life would render it possible
to have every day hold in itself the value of a week
or a month as usually estimated. The entire trend
of progress is toward that intensity of creative energy
that fairly speaks things into being. A business
man has now on his desk a long-distance telephone,
connecting him with far-away cities; he answers his
letters by speaking into the phonograph; his typewriting
clerk copies them from this, and an hour of his morning
represents as much accomplishment as by the old and
slower methods would have required days; and thus
time is constantly made more valuable.
The discoveries in nature are in a
perfect correspondence with the advancing requirements
of human life.
The deeper researches of science are
revealing the absolute unity of the entire universe.
The earth and the most remote stars are composed of
the same matter. The wonderful discovery of spectrum
analysis by Kirchoff and Bunsen in 1861 has shown
that the whole stellar universe is made up of the
same chemical materials as those with which we are
familiar upon the earth. A part of the dazzling
brilliance of the noonday sun is due to the vapor
of iron floating in his atmosphere, and the faint
luminosity of the remotest cloudlike nebula is the
glow of just such hydrogen as enters into every drop
of water that we drink....
“... The generalization
of the metamorphosis of forces, which was begun a
century ago by Count Rumford when he recognized heat
as a mode of molecular motion, was consummated about
the middle of the century, when Doctor Joule showed
mathematically just how much heat is equivalent to
just how much visible motion, and when the researches
of Helmholtz, Mayer, and Faraday completed the grand
demonstration that light and heat and magnetism and
electricity and visible motion are all interchangeable
one into the other, and are continually thus interchanging
from moment to moment.”
It is not a far cry from these scientific
data to the recognition that force, in all its various
forms of manifestation, proceeds from the same energy,
and that the curious manifestation of it in radium
is explained by the possibility that this substance
is merely a remarkable conductor of this intense energy
in the ether. The human organism may make itself
increasingly a conductor and transmitter of this energy,
and the secret of coming into perfectly harmonious
relations with this energy is the secret of all achievement.
“Life is a search after power,” says Emerson,
“and this is an element with which the world
is so saturated, there is no chink or crevice
in which it is not lodged, that no honest
seeking goes unrewarded.... All power,”
he adds, “is of one kind; a sharing of the nature
of the world.”
With his characteristically marvellous
insight, Emerson has, in this paragraph, recognized
the truth that, in these latter days, is a matter
of absolute scientific discovery.
The “life that now is and that
which is to come” are no more definitely separable
than are the periods of childhood and youth, or youth
and manhood. The advance is by evolutionary progress,
with no sudden, or visible, change from day to day.
The life that now is creates and determines the life
that is to come. A man is what he is to-day because
of the life he lived yesterday, and last year, and
a decade, or several decades, ago. That which
we call life environment, circumstances,
conditions is the sum of the expression
of all its past experiences, thought, aspirations,
energy, or the lack of thought, aspirations, and energy.
One’s life is in his own hands; it is subject
to his own will power, to his own energy of aspiration.
He must aspire and go forward or he will degenerate.
There is no possibility of an epoch that is stationary.
Both in any form of work or art, as well as in mental
and spiritual life, one must constantly go forward,
or he will find himself going backward. Even
a pianist as great as Paderewski must keep his fingers
in practice on the keyboard every day. The painter
cannot long absent himself from his canvas without
losing in his art. The thinker, the student,
must be forever conquering new realms.
Science is demonstrating the actual
existence of another world, transcending, pervading,
surrounding this one; a world which interpenetrates
our own, the ethereal in the atmospheric, and
there is one part of the personality of man that dwells
continually on this ethereal side. The physical
body only conveys a partial expression of the entire
being. The spiritual self lived long before it
tenanted this present body, and it will continue to
live after it has discarded this body. The life
that is constantly proceeds to create the life that
is to come.
In this ethereal world, which
interpenetrates our atmosphere and in which the higher
part of man’s being continually dwells, there
are stored the finer forces which humanity is now
discovering and learning to use. In this realm
spirit speaks to spirit, telepathically. The power
to thus communicate is an attribute of the spirit,
and, whether in or out of the body, does not seem
to affect the power. In this ethereal realm are
the currents that make possible wireless telegraphy.
The grouping and combination of these finer and more
intense potencies result in great inventions.
This realm is, in short, the miracle world; but a
miracle is not something outside the laws of nature.
Indeed, as Phillips Brooks truly said, “A miracle
is an essential part of the plan of God.”
It is simply an occurrence under the higher laws, and
on a higher plane. The great truths of spiritual
life are pouring themselves out to this age with larger
revelations of God. They teach the deepening
necessity for constant love, for larger service, for
a more complete consecration to the Divine life that
may contribute more and more of usefulness to the
human life. To achieve that “closer walk
with God” that alone gives power, one must constantly
seek larger fields of effort and endeavor, and bring
himself face to face with great problems.
To live the higher life, the life
of the spirit, is not to seek cloistered seclusion,
but to enter into all the great opportunities, the
difficulties, the privileges, or the penalties, that
attend every real endeavor. In this, alone, does
one find the life more abundant. In this, alone,
lies the secret of making noble the life that now is
and glorifying that which is to come.
The profound significance, and the
illumination brought to the problem of living by simply
giving one’s self entirely, with belief, and
love, and joy, to the will of God, is an experience
that transcends human language. Too often has
the acceptance of God’s will been held to be
a spirit of the abandonment of despair, or of the
mere inertia that ceases from striving and from aspiration.
On the contrary, it is the most intense form of action.
It embodies the loftiest aspiration. It compels
the highest degree of energy. It calls into play
every intellectual faculty; it arouses and inspires.
It is the regeneration of the individual. He
does not know what life is; he does not even begin
to live, at all, in any sense worth the name, until
he lives and moves and has his being in the will of
God. It is, indeed, as Professor Carl Hilty has
said, a sense of initiative and power. “What
is the happy life?” questions Professor Hilty.
“It is a life of conscious harmony with the
Divine order of the world, a sense, that is to say,
of God’s companionship.... The better world
we enter is, indeed, entered by faith and not by sight;
but this faith grows more confident and more supporting,
until it is like an inward faculty of life itself.
To substitute for this a world of the outward senses
is to find no meaning in life which can convey confidence.
Faith in God,” continues Professor Hilty, “is
a form of experience, not a form of proof....
Here then, is the first step toward the discovery
of the meaning of life. It is an act of will,
a moral venture, a listening to experience. No
man can omit this initial step, and no man can teach
another the lesson which lies in his own experience.
The prophets of the Old Testament found an accurate
expression for this act of will when they described
it as a ‘turning,’ and they went on to
assure their people of the perfect inward peace and
the sense of confidence which followed this act.
’Look unto me and be ye saved,’ says Isaiah;
’Incline your ear and come unto me; hear, and
your soul shall live.’ From that time to
this, thousands of those who have thus changed the
direction of their wills have entered into the same
sense of peace; while no man who has thus given his
will to God has ever felt himself permanently bewildered
or forsaken.
“Here, also, in this free act
of the will is attained that sense of liberty which
is described as righteousness. It is a sense of
initiative and power, as though one were not wholly
the subject of arbitrary grace, but had a certain
positive companionship with God.... This step
once taken both the world in which one lives and one’s
own personal life get a clear and intelligible meaning.”
Mrs. Browning has a line in “Aurora Leigh”
that runs,
“And having tried all other ways,
to just try God’s.”
Ignorance and blindness may “try
all other ways,” and they prove unavailing.
There is no success, there is no happiness, there is
no progress, until there is the clear inner recognition
and the profound and loving and joyful acceptance
of the Divine will; of coming into such perfect acceptance
of it as to make one’s own will identified with
its harmony.
Thus, when Jesus said, “I am
the way, the truth, and the life,” He simply
expressed a fact that cannot be negatived nor ignored.
It is an actual, a positive law, as impossible to
evade as the law of gravitation. One may refuse
“the way, the truth, and the life,” and
wander in bewilderment and inaction; but he will never
be able to achieve worthy work, or personal peace,
until he accepts and lives by this law. As Professor
Hilty so well says, this, alone, gives life an intelligent
meaning. “As one follows the way, he gains,
first of all, courage, so that he dares to go on in
his search. He goes still further, and the way
opens into the assurance that life, with all its mystery,
is not lived in vain. He pushes on, and the way
issues into health, not only of the soul, but even
of the body; for bodily health is more dependent on
spiritual condition than spiritual condition is on
bodily health; and modern medicine can never restore
and assure health to the body if it limit its problem
to physical relief alone. Nor is even this the
end of the ‘way’ of Christ. Here alone
is positive social redemption.... Finally, the
way is sure to lead every life which follows it, and
is willing to pay the price for the possession of truth,
into the region of spiritual peace.”
Thus, in the end, “out of the
midst of evil, issues at last the mastery of the good.”
Thus moral progress itself is the witness of God.
Living by this faith, life becomes
strong, serene, and radiant. “The Magi
have but to follow their Star in peace.... The
Divine action marvellously adjusts all things.
The order of God sends each moment the appropriate
instrument for its work; and the soul, enlightened
by faith, finds all things good, desiring neither
more nor less than she possesses.”
One of the great discourses of Phillips
Brooks had for its theme the lesson of not laying
too much stress on the recognition of one’s motives
or on any return of sympathetic consideration.
“Let me not think,” said Doctor Brooks,
“that I get nothing from the man who misunderstands
all my attempts to serve him, and who scorns me when
I know that I deserve his sympathy. Ah! it would
be sad enough if only the men who understood us and
were grateful to us when we gave ourselves to them
had help to give us in return. The good reformer
whom you try to help in his reform, and who turns
off from you contemptuously because he distrusts you,
seeing that your ways are different from his, he does
not make you happy, he makes you unhappy;
but he makes you good, he leads you to a truer insight,
a more profound unselfishness. And so (it is the
old lesson), not until goodness becomes the one thing
that you desire, not until you gauge all growth and
gain by that, not until then can you really know that
the law has worked, the promise has been fulfilled.
With what measure you gave yourself to him, he has
given himself the heart of himself, which
is not his favor, not his love, but his goodness,
the real heart of himself to you. For the rest
you can easily wait until you both come to the better
world, where misconceptions shall have passed away,
and the outward forms and envelopes of things shall
correspond perfectly with their inner substances forever.”
In the last analysis one comes to
realize that happiness is a condition depending solely
on the relation of his soul to God; that neither life,
nor death, nor principalities, nor powers, nor height,
nor depth, nor any living creature can separate him
from it, because happiness and the love of God are
one and identical, and it is not in the power of this
world to give, or to take away, this sense of absolute
oneness with the Divine life that comes when man gives
himself, his soul and body, his hopes and aspirations
and ideals, in complete consecration to the will of
God.
For this alone is the Life Radiant.
It may not be ease or pleasure, but it is that ceaseless
joy of the soul that may be the daily experience of
every human being. And to gain the deep inner
conviction of this sublime truth is worth whatever
it may cost of tears or trial. It is the threshold
of joy. It is the initiation into a higher spiritual
state which one may gain in his progress while on
earth as well as in heaven. In fact, no one is
really fitted for the highest privileges and sweetness
he may crave until he has learned to live well, to
live joyfully, without them. No one is fitted
for joy until he can live well without joy.
It is the law and the prophets.
One may tread, not the
“whole round of creation,” as Browning
phrases it, but a minor segment of it, at least, and
come back with added and more profound conviction
that happiness is a condition of the spirit; that
“the soul is ceaselessly joyful;” that
the incidents and accidents of the outward life cannot
mar nor lessen that sense of higher peace and joy
and harmony which is the atmosphere of any true spiritual
life. One may recognize and affirm this truth
by spiritual intuition, and he may then be led through
many phases of actual tests in actual life; he may
for a time lose his hold on it and come to say that
happiness is a thing that depends on so many causes
outside one’s own control; that illness, death,
loss of friends, adverse circumstances, failures and
trials of all kinds, may come into his experience,
and that one is at the mercy of all these vicissitudes.
Can the individual be happy, he will ask, when all
that made happiness is taken away? Can he be happy
if he has lost all his worldly goods? or if death
has taken those nearest and dearest to him? or if
the separations of life, far harder to bear than those
of death, have come to him? And yet, until he
has learned to answer these questions with the most
triumphant affirmative, he has not learned the measure
nor sounded the depth of a true and noble order of
Happiness. The difference is that of being safely
on board a great steamer when wind and wave are tempest-tossed,
or of being helpless in the raging waters. The
storm may be precisely the same; the tempest may rage
as it will, but safe and secure in the cabin or stateroom,
the voyager does not mind its fury. And truly
may this analogy be held in life. It is possible
to emerge from the winds and waves; to enter so entirely
into the sense of security in the Divine; to hold
so absolutely the faith in the Divine leading, that
even in the midst of trial and loss and deprivation
and sorrow, one shall come to know, through
his own experience, that “the soul is ceaselessly
joyful.” For it is one thing to accept
a truth theoretically, or believe it intuitively, and
another to prove it through experience that shall
test the quality of faith and conviction. Learning
this supreme truth of life through outward experiences
as well as through inner revelation is a victory of
the will that may even make itself an epoch, a landmark,
in spiritual progress.
It is the complete recognition of
that invincible aid given to the soul through the
“ever-present” aid of the Holy Ghost, the
Comforter.
“Jesus, the Christ, this one
perfect character, has come into the world and lived
in it; filling all the moulds of action, all the terms
of duty, and love, with His own divine manners, works,
and charities,” wrote Doctor Horace Bushnell.
“All the conditions of our life are raised thus
by the meaning He has shown to be in them and the grace
He has put upon them. The world itself is changed
and is no more the same that it was; it has never
been the same since Jesus left it. The air is
charged with heavenly odors, and a kind of celestial
consciousness, a sense of other worlds, is wafted
on us in its breath. It were easier to untwist
all the beams of light in the sky, separating and expunging
one of the colors, than to get the character of Jesus,
which is the real gospel, out of the world.”
The one deepest need of the world
to-day; the one deepest need of each individual, is
the more actual realization of the personality of Christ.
The perspective of nineteen hundred years only brings
more vividly before the mind, more close to the spiritual
apprehension, the personal holiness of Jesus, and
enforces the truth that shall redeem humanity, the
practical possibility of the increasing achievement
of this personal holiness for every man and woman.
“Because I live ye shall live also,” He
said. But what is it to live? Certainly,
something far above and beyond mere existence.
Life, in its true sense, is to know God. This
is the life eternal. No one can “know God”
save in just the degree to which he lives God’s
life, the divine life, and in
the degree to which he is living the divine life does
he live the life eternal. The life eternal may
be lived to-day as well as after death, in some vague
eternity. The life eternal is simply the life
of spiritual qualities. It is the life in which
truth, honor, integrity, sacrifice, patience, and
love abound, and in which all that is selfish and false
is cast out. Now, however exalted a definition
of the present, daily life this may seem to be, it
is in no sense an impossible one. The more exalted
is one’s standard for the perpetual quality of
his life, the more stimulating it becomes. The
exalted ideal inspires; the low standard depresses.
An invincible energy sweeps instantly through the
atmosphere to sustain him who allies himself with his
noblest ideals. A force that disintegrates and
baffles sweeps down upon him who abandons his nobler
ideals, and substitutes for them the mere selfish,
the commonplace, or the base. The “Choose
ye this day whom ye will serve” is no merely
abstract phrase or trick of rhetoric. Every hour
is an hour of destiny. Every hour is an hour
of choice. Legions of angels are in the unseen
world surrounding humanity. Not one thought, one
aspiration, one prayer, is unheard and unnoted.
No conditions or circumstances are sordid or material
unless he whom they invest make them so by sordid and
material thought; by turning away from that life of
the spirit whose very reality is made and is tested
by these circumstances. “All the conditions
of life are raised,” says Doctor Bushnell, in
the extract quoted above, “by the meaning He
has shown to be in them, and the grace He has put
upon them.” Might not one, with profit,
dwell for a moment upon this statement?
There is a current sweeping through
latter-day life and reflecting itself largely in miscellaneous
literature, to the effect that what the writers are
pleased to call “success in life” is achieved
by self-reliance; that a man must believe in himself;
and the final triumph is illustrated as that of the
man who begins as an errand boy at two dollars a week
and ends as a multi-millionaire. Between these
two points in space the arc of success subtends, according
to this order of literature, and the word is:
make a million, or a hundred millions of dollars, honestly
if you can, dishonestly if you must, but, at all events,
the point is to “arrive.” Now there
is both a most demoralizing fallacy and a strong and
valuable truth mixed up in these exhortations.
“Trust thyself,” said Emerson; “every
heart vibrates to that iron string.”
“I thank whatever gods there be
For my unconquerable soul,”
sings William Ernest Henley, and he
closes with the ringing lines,
“I am the Captain of my fate,
I am the master of my soul.”
And Emerson and Henley are right so
far as they go. And the man who has been industrious,
and economical, and has accumulated a fortune, has,
at all times, some elements that are right; and rigid
economy is far better than selfish indulgence.
But whether a rigid economy is always a virtue depends.
“There is that scattereth, yet increaseth.”
Whether it is nobler to increase one’s bank
account at the expense of all the personal expansion
of life, through study, social life, travel, all
that makes up a choice and fine culture, and at the
expense of depriving one’s self of the untold
luxury of service, as needs come in view, is
certainly an open question, and one in which there
is a good deal to say for other uses of money than
that of establishing an impressive bank account; but
leaving this aspect of the problem, one returns to
that phase of it represented by self-reliance.
It is a great hindrance to the infinite development
of man to conceive of courage and self-reliance as
capacities or powers of his own rather than as fed
from the divine energy. A stream might as well
cut itself off from its source, and from its tributaries,
and expect to flow on, in undiminished current to the
sea, as for man to regard courage and force of will
as generated in himself. Thus he dwarfs and hinders
all his spiritual powers that are found to lay hold
upon God. Thus he stifles himself, rather than
open his windows into the pure air. “All
the conditions of life are raised by the meaning Jesus
has shown to be in them.”
Certainly, it was not for nothing
that Christ came into the conditions of the human
life. His experience on earth comprehended every
privation, every limitation, known to the physical
life. Not only these, but He experienced
every phase of sorrow, of trial, of mental pain, of
spiritual anguish. He was misunderstood, He was
misrepresented, He was assailed and crucified.
He understood the needs of the body as well as of
the spirit. He had no contempt nor condemnation
for comfort, prosperity, or wealth, in and of themselves.
He simply regarded them as means to an end, and if
nobly used to noble ends, life was the better for
whatever phases and factors of power it possessed.
But He taught the truth that here we have no continuing
city; that this temporary sojourn on earth is designed
as a period in which to develop qualities rather than
to heap up accumulations. “What shall it
profit a man,” He well said, “if he gain
the whole world and lose his own soul?”
So here was a man, living the earthly
and physical life; comprehending all the earthly and
physical problems involved in relation with the physical
world; not ignoring or denying them like a mere fanatic,
but estimating them in the true scale of values, here
was a man who by his experience and example proved
that personal holiness of life is not incompatible
with personal attention to every detail of human affairs.
Jesus did not isolate Himself in a monastic cell in
order to live the life of the spirit. He practically
taught that the very supreme test of the life of the
spirit is to live it in the heart of human activities.
It is in the resistless tide of daily affairs, in
the office of the lawyer, the journalist, the physician,
the architect; in the studio of the artist, in the
counting-room, the bank, the salesroom, and the market-place,
that the life of personal holiness is possible, and
it is possible to man because Jesus, taking upon Himself
the human life, so lived it in these very circumstances
and under these conditions. Christ and His all-quickening
life remain in the world. They did not leave it
with His physical death. They remain as the incorruptible,
the glorious, the priceless possession of every man
and woman to-day. To this divine example of a
perfect character revealed in the guise of the human
life, each individual in the world to-day can turn,
as the most practical ideal by which to shape his
own life and to ultimately realize the command, “Be
perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect.”
If this transcendent ideal were not a possibility
for the soul, surely God would not have given it as
an idle command; but man, as a spiritual being, is
designed to live the spiritual life, and this life
is that of perpetual spiritual progress and ideal
achievement; of entering into that golden atmosphere
in which he shall not only
“ dream of summers and
dream of flowers
That last alway,”
but find, in an ever-increasing degree,
that the dream is merged into the profoundest reality
of experience.
“Present suffering is not enjoyable,”
said the late Rev. Doctor Maltbie Davenport Babcock,
“but life would be worth little without it.
The difference between iron and steel is fire, but
steel is worth all it costs. Iron ore may think
itself senselessly tortured in the furnace, but when
the watch-spring looks back it knows better. David
enjoyed pain and trouble no more than we do, but the
time came when he admitted that they had been good
for him. Though the aspect of suffering is hard,
the prospect is hopeful.... The tests of life
are to make, not break us. The blow at the outward
man may be the greatest blessing to the inner man.
If God, then, puts, or permits, anything hard in our
lives, be sure that the real peril, the real trouble,
is what we shall lose if we flinch or rebel.”
Doctor Babcock’s words suggest
that there is perhaps nothing in all the divine teachings
that is less understood and less accepted than the
assertion of Saint Paul, “We glory in tribulation
also.” The general reader of the gospels
and epistles even the prayerful and reverent
reader relegates this expression to some
abstract conditions, as something that might do very
well for Saint Paul and a rudimentary civilization;
as something that might be a very appropriate and decorous
sentiment for Saint Sebastian on his gridiron, or Saint
Catherine keeping her vigils in the vast and gloomy
old church in Siena, but which certainly can bear
no relation and hold no message for the modern reader.
For the electric life of the hour, full
of color and vitality; throbbing with achievement;
the life that craves prosperity as its truest expression,
and finds adversity a poor and mean failure quite
unsuitable to a man of brilliant gifts and energy;
the life that believes in its own right of way and
mistakes possessions for power, what has
it to do with “tribulation” except
to refuse it? If it comes it is met with indignant
protest rather than as a phase of experience in which
to “glory;” it is evaded, if possible;
and if it cannot be evaded it is received with rebellion,
with gloom, with despondency, and perhaps, at last,
an enforced and hopeless endurance, which is not,
by the way, to be mistaken for resignation. Endurance
is a passive condition that cannot, and does not even
try, to help itself. Resignation, in its true
reading, is wholly another matter; it is active, it
is alive, it is conscious and intelligent and in joyful
co-operation with the will of God. It is no poor
and negative mental state; it is rich in vitality
and in hope, as well, for in its absolute identification
of itself, this human will with the divine will, it
enters into a kingdom of untold glory, whose paths
lead by the river of life to the noblest and most
exalted heights of achievement and of undreamed-of
joy.
If this be true of resignation, what
shall be said of tribulation, of glorying
in tribulation? A man awakens to find himself
in poverty instead of in wealth; his possessions suddenly
swept away; or from health, he, or some one whose
life is still dearer to him than his own, prostrated
with illness; or to find himself unjustly accused or
maligned, or misunderstood, or to encounter some other
of the myriad phases of what he calls misfortune and
tribulation. How is he to endure it? How
is he to go on, living his life, in all this pain,
perplexity, trial, or annoyance, much less to “glory”
in this atmosphere of tribulation? One is engaged,
it may be, in a work for which it would seem that
peace of mind and joy and radiance were his only working
capital; his essential resources; and suddenly these
vanish, and his world is in ruins. Clouds of
misapprehension envelop him round about, and he can
neither understand, himself, what has produced them,
nor can he, by any entreaty or appeal, be permitted
the vantage ground of full and clear explanation.
And his energies are paralyzed; the golden glory that
enfolded his days investing them with a magical enchantment,
has gone, and a leaden sky shuts him into a gloomy
and leaden atmosphere. It is not only himself,
but his work; not only what he may feel, but what,
also, he may not accomplish. And his work is of
a nature that is not only his own expression, his
contribution to the sum of living, but one which involves
responsibility to others, and some way, well
or ill, as may be, it must be done.
Shall he, can he, “glory” in this
paralyzing pain and torture that so mysteriously has
fallen upon him, whose causes do not, so
far as he can discern, lie in his own conduct, but
in some impenetrable mystery of misapprehensions and
misunderstandings; a tangled labyrinth to which he
is denied the clue? Can he, indeed, facing all
this torture and tragedy, with all that made the joy
and light of life withdrawn, can he encounter
this form of tribulation with serene poise, with unfaltering
purpose, with an intense and exalted faith? It
is “not enjoyable,” indeed, as Doctor Babcock,
in the quotation above, at once concedes; but that
the experience has a meaning, a very profound
meaning, one must believe; and believing this, he
must feel that the responsibility rests on himself
to accept this new significance that has, in an undreamed-of
way, fallen into his life; to read its hidden lesson;
to transmute it, by the miracle of divine grace, into
something fairer and sweeter; to let its scorching
fire make steel of that which was only iron.
To accept, to believe, to feel this, in every
fibre of his nature, is to “glory” in the
tribulation. It is to extract its best meaning,
and to go on in life better equipped than before.
“The tests of life are to make and not
break us.” Here is the truer view,
and one that reveals the divine significance in all
mysteries of human experience. Beyond all these
views, also, is that inflorescence of joy that springs
from this more complete identification of one’s
own will with that of the divine. One comes into
the full glow and beauty of that wonderful assurance
of Jesus: “These things have I spoken unto
you, that my joy might remain in you, and that your
joy might be full.”
This fulness of joy is a condition
freely offered for perfect acceptance. The varied
experiences are, as Browning has said, “just
a stuff to try the soul’s strength on.”
The kingdom of heaven lies open to all; it is at
hand, not waiting afar in some vague futurity.
Shall we not enter to-day into this kingdom of heaven
which is at hand? Shall we not enter to-day into
the very joy of the Lord? Pain and sorrow may
invest the conditions of the moment, but they are forces
which are transmuting the inconsequential into the
significant; the common and trivial into the exalted
and the sublime. The discord is merged into sublime
harmonies that thrill the air; the glory of the Lord
shines round about, and we enter into its illumination;
we are ascending the Mount of Vision and the soul
looketh steadily onward, discerning the beauty of
holiness, in whose transfiguration gleams the fairest
ideal revealed to humanity, even the Life
Radiant.