Going Up
How We Become Great
We go up as we grow great.
That is, we go up as we grow up. But so many
are trying to grow great on the outside without growing
great on the inside. They rattle on the inside!
They fool themselves, but nobody else.
There is only one greatness inside
greatness. All outside greatness is merely an
incidental reflection of the inside.
Greatness is not measured in any material
terms. It is not measured in inches, dollars,
acres, votes, hurrahs, or by any other of the world’s
yardsticks or barometers.
Greatness is measured in spiritual
terms. It is education. It is life expansion.
We go up from selfishness to unselfishness.
We go up from impurity to purity.
We go up from unhappiness to happiness.
We go up from weakness to strength.
We go up from low ideals to high ideals.
We go up from little vision to greater vision.
We go up from foolishness to wisdom.
We go up from fear to faith.
We go up from ignorance to understanding.
We go up by our own personal efforts.
We go up by our own service, sacrifice, struggle and
overcoming. We push out our own skyline.
We rise above our own obstacles. We learn to
see, hear, hold and understand.
We may become very great, very educated,
rise very high, and yet not leave our kitchen or blacksmith
shop. We take the kitchen or blacksmith shop
right up with us! We make it a great kitchen or
great blacksmith shop. It becomes our throne-room!
Come, let us grow greater. There is a throne
for each of us.
“Getting to the Top”
“Getting to the top” is
the world’s pet delusion. There is no top.
No matter how high we rise, we discover infinite distances
above. The higher we rise, the better we see
that life on this planet is the going up from the
Finite to the Infinite.
The world says that to get greatness
means to get great things. So the world is in
the business of getting getting great fortunes,
great lands, great titles, great applause, great fame,
and folderol. Afterwhile the poor old world hears
the empty rattle of the inside, and wails, “All
is vanity. I find no pleasure in them. Life
is a failure.” All outside life is a failure.
Real life is in being things on the inside, not in
getting things on the outside.
I weary of the world’s pink-sheet
extras about “Getting to the Top” and
“Forging to the Front.” Too often
they are the sordid story of a few scrambling over
the heads of the weaker ones. Sometimes they are
the story of one pig crowding the other pigs out of
the trough and cornering all the swill!
The Secret of Greatness
Christ Jesus was a great Teacher.
His mission was to educate humanity.
There came to him those two disciples
who wanted to “get to the top.” Those
two sons of Zebedee wanted to have the greatest places
in the new kingdom they imagined he would establish
on earth.
They got very busy pursuing greatness,
but I do not read that they were half so busy preparing
for greatness. They even had their mother out
electioneering for them.
“O, Master,” said the
mother, “grant that these my two sons may sit,
the one on thy right hand, and the other on the left,
in thy kingdom.”
The Master looked with love and pity
upon their unpreparedness. “Are ye able
to drink of the cup?” Then he gave the only definition
of greatness that can ever stand: “Whosoever
will be great among you, let him be your minister;
and whosoever will be chief among you, let him be
your servant.”
That is we cannot be “born great,”
nor “have greatness thrust upon” us.
We must “achieve greatness” by developing
it on the inside developing ability to
minister and to serve.
We cannot buy a great arm. Our
arm must become a great servant, and thus it becomes
great.
We cannot buy a great mind. Our
mind must become a great servant, and thus it becomes
great.
We cannot buy a great character.
It is earned in great moral service.
The First Step at Hand
This is the Big Business of life going
up, getting educated, getting greatness on the inside.
Getting greatness on the outside is little business.
Much of it mighty little.
Everybody’s privilege and duty
is to become great. And the joy of it is that
the first step is always nearest at hand. We do
not have to go off to New York or Chicago or go chasing
around the world to become great. It is a great
stairway that leads from where our feet are now upward
for an infinite number of steps.
We must take the first step now.
Most of us want to take the hundredth step or the
thousandth step now. We want to make some spectacular
stride of a thousand steps at one leap. That is
why we fall so hard when we miss our step.
We must go right back to our old place into
our kitchen or our workshop or our office and take
the first step, solve the problem nearest at hand.
We must make our old work luminous with a new devotion.
We must battle up over every inch. And as fast
as we solve and dissolve the difficulties and turn
our burdens into blessings, we find love, the universal
solvent, shining out of our lives. We find our
spiritual influences going upward. So the winds
of earth are born; they rush in from the cold lands
to the warm upward currents. And so as our problems
disappear and our life currents set upward, the world
is drawn toward us with its problems. We find
our kitchen or workshop or office becoming a new throne
of power. We find the world around us rising up
to call us blessed.
As we grow greater our troubles grow
smaller, for we see them thru greater eyes. We
rise above them.
As we grow greater our opportunities
grow greater. That is, we begin to see them.
They are around us all the time, but we must get greater
eyes to see them.
Generally speaking, the smaller our
vision of our work, the more we admire what we have
accomplished and “point with pride.”
The greater our vision, the more we see what is yet
to be accomplished.
It was the sweet girl graduate who
at commencement wondered how one small head could
contain it all. It was Newton after giving the
world a new science who looked back over it and said,
“I seem to have been only a boy playing on the
seashore while the great ocean of truth lay
all undiscovered before me.” That great
ocean is before us all.
The Widow’s Mites
The great Teacher pointed to the widow
who cast her two mites into the treasury, and then
to the rich men who had cast in much more. “This
poor widow hath cast in more than they all. For
all these have of their abundance cast in unto the
offerings of God: but she of her penury hath
cast in all the living that she had.”
Tho the rich men had cast in more,
yet it was only a part of their possessions.
The widow cast in less, but it was all she had.
The Master cared little what the footings of the money
were in the treasury. That is not why we give.
We give to become great. The widow had given
all had completely overcome her selfishness
and fear of want.
Becoming great is overcoming our selfishness
and fear. He that saveth his life shall lose
it, but he that loseth his life for the advancement
of the kingdom of happiness on earth shall find it
great and glorified.
Our greatness therefore does not depend
upon how much we give or upon what we do, whether
peeling potatoes or ruling a nation, but upon the
percentage of our output to our resources. Upon
doing with our might what our hands find to do.
Quit worrying about what you cannot get to do.
Rejoice in doing the things you can get to do.
And as you are faithful over a few things you go up
to be ruler over many.
The world says some of us have golden
gifts and some have copper gifts. But when we
cast them all into the treasury of right service, there
is an alchemy that transmutes every gift into gold.
Every work is drudgery when done selfishly. Every
work becomes golden when done in a golden manner.
Finding the Great People
I do not know who fitted the boards
into the floor I stand upon. I do not know all
the great people who may come and stand upon this floor.
But I do know that the one who made the floor and
the one who sweeps it is just as great
as anybody in the world who may come and stand upon
it, if each be doing his work with the same love, faithfulness
and capability.
We have to look farther than the “Who’s
Who” and Dun and Bradstreet to make a roster
of the great people of a community. You will find
the community heart in the precious handful who believe
that the service of God is the service of man.
The great people of the community
serve and sacrifice for a better tomorrow. They
are the faithful few who get behind the churches, the
schools, the lyceum and chautauqua, and all the other
movements that go upward.
They are the ones who are “always
trying to run things.” They are the happy
ones, happy for the larger vision that comes as they
go higher by unselfish service. They are discovering
that their sweetest pay comes from doing many things
they are not paid for. They rarely get thanked,
for the community does not often think of thanking
them until it comes time to draft the “resolutions
of respect.”
I had to go to the mouth of a coal-mine
in a little Illinois town, to find the man the bureau
had given as lyceum committeeman there. I wondered
what the grimy-faced man from the shaft, wearing the
miner’s lamp in his cap, could possibly have
to do with the lyceum course. But I learned that
he had all to do with it. He had sold the tickets
and had done all the managing. He was superintendent
of the Sunday school. He was the storm-center
of every altruistic effort in the town the
greatest man there, because the most serviceable, tho
he worked every day full time with his pick at his
bread-and-butter job.
The great people are so busy serving
that they have little time to strut and pose in the
show places. Few of them are “prominent
clubmen.” You rarely find their names in
the society page. They rarely give “brilliant
social functions.” Their idle families attend
to such things.
A Glimpse of Gunsaulus
I found a great man lecturing at the
chautauquas. He preaches in Chicago on Sundays
to thousands. He writes books and runs a college
he founded by his own preaching. He is the mainspring
of so many uplift movements that his name gets into
the papers about every day, and you read it in almost
every committee doing good things in Chicago.
He had broken away from Chicago to
have a vacation. Many people think that a vacation
means going off somewhere and stretching out under
trees or letting the mind become a blank. But
this Chicago preacher went from one chautauqua town
to another, and took his vacation going up and down
the streets. He dug into the local history of
each place, and before dinner he knew more about the
place than most of the natives.
“There is a sermon for me,”
he would exclaim every half-hour. He went to
see people who were doing things. He went to see
people who were doing nothing. In every town
he would discover somebody of unusual attainment.
He made every town an unusual town. He turned
the humdrum travel map into a wonderland. He
scolded lazy towns and praised enterprising ones.
He stopped young fellows on the streets. “What
are you going to do in life?” Perhaps the young
man would say, “I have no chance.”
“You come to Chicago and I’ll give you
a chance,” the man on his vacation would reply.
So this Chicago preacher was busy
every day, working overtime on his vacation.
He was busy about other people’s business.
He did not once ask the price of land, nor where there
was a good investment for himself, but every day he
was trying to make an investment in somebody else.
His friends would sometimes worry
about him. They would say, “Why doesn’t
the doctor take care of himself, instead of taking
care of everybody else? He wears himself out
for other people until he hasn’t strength enough
left to lecture and do his own work.”
Sometimes they were right about that.
But he that saveth his life shall
lose it, and he that loseth his life in loving service
finds it returning to him great and glorious.
This man’s preaching did not make him great.
His college did not make him great. His books
did not make him great. These are the by-products.
His life of service for others makes him great makes
his preaching, his college and his books great.
This Chicago man gives his life into
the service of humanity, and it becomes the fuel to
make the steam to accomplish the wonderful things
he does. Let him stop and “take care of
himself,” and his career would stop.
If he had begun life by “taking
care of himself” and “looking out for
number one,” stipulating in advance every cent
he was to get and writing it all down in the contract,
most likely Dr. Frank W. Gunsaulus would have remained
a struggling, discouraged preacher in the backwoods
of Morrow county, Ohio.
Give It Now
Gunsaulus often says, “You are
planning and saving and telling yourself that afterwhile
you are going to give great things and do great things.
Give it now! Give your dollar now, rather than
your thousands afterwhile. You need to give it
now, and the world needs to get it now.”