THE SUPREME FACT OF THE UNIVERSE
The great central fact of the universe
is that Spirit of Infinite Life and Power that is
behind all, that animates all, that manifests itself
in and through all; that self-existent principle of
life from which all has come, and not only from which
all has come, but from which all is continually coming.
If there is an individual life, there must of necessity
be an infinite source of life from which it comes.
If there is a quality or a force of love, there must
of necessity be an infinite source of love whence
it comes. If there is wisdom, there must be the
all-wise source behind it from which it springs.
The same is true in regard to peace, the same in
regard to power, the same in regard to what we call
material things.
There is, then, this Spirit of Infinite
Life and Power behind all which is the source of all.
This Infinite Power is creating, working, ruling
through the agency of great immutable laws and forces
that run through all the universe, that surround us
on every side. Every act of our every-day lives
is governed by these same great laws and forces.
Every flower that blooms by the wayside, springs
up, grows, blooms, fades, according to certain great
immutable laws. Every snowflake that plays between
earth and heaven, forms, falls, melts, according to
certain great unchangeable laws.
In a sense there is nothing in all
the great universe but law. If this is true
there must of necessity be a force behind it all that
is the maker of these laws and a force greater than
the laws that are made. This Spirit of Infinite
Life and Power that is behind all is what I call God.
I care not what term you may use, be it Kindly Light,
Providence, the Over Soul, Omnipotence, or whatever
term may be most convenient. I care not what
the term may be as long as we are agreed in regard
to the great central fact itself.
God, then, is this Infinite Spirit
which fills all the universe with Himself alone, so
that all is from Him and in Him, and there is nothing
that is outside. Indeed and in truth, then, in
Him we live and move and have our being. He
is the life of our life, our very life itself.
We have received, we are continually receiving our
life from Him. We are partakers of the life
of God; and though we differ from Him in that we are
individualized spirits, while He is the Infinite Spirit
including us as well as all else beside, yet in
essence the life of God and the life of man are identically
the same, and so are one. They differ not
in essence, in quality; they differ in degree.
There have been and are highly illumined
souls who believe that we receive our life from God
after the manner of a divine inflow. And again,
there have been and are those who believe that our
life is one with the life of God, and so that God
and man are one. Which is right? Both are
right; both right when rightly understood.
In regard to the first: if God
is the Infinite Spirit of Life behind all, whence
all comes, then clearly our life as individualized
spirits is continually coming from this Infinite Source
by means of this divine inflow. In the second
place, if our lives as individualized spirits are
directly from, are parts of this Infinite Spirit of
Life, then the degree of the Infinite Spirit that
is manifested in the life of each must be identical
in quality with that Source, the same as a drop of
water taken from the ocean is, in nature, in characteristics,
identical with that ocean, its source. And how
could it be otherwise? The liability to misunderstanding
in this latter case, however, is this: in that
although the life of God and the life of man in essence
are identically the same, the life of God so far transcends
the life of individual man that it includes all else
beside. In other words, so far as the quality
of life is concerned, in essence they are the same;
so far as the degree of life is concerned, they are
vastly different.
In this light is it not then evident
that both conceptions are true? and more, that they
are one and the same? Both conceptions may be
typified by one and the same illustration.
There is a reservoir in a valley which
receives its supply from an inexhaustible reservoir
on the mountain side. It is then true that the
reservoir in the valley receives its supply by virtue
of the inflow of the water from the larger reservoir
on the mountain side. It is also true that the
water in this smaller reservoir is in nature, in quality,
in characteristics identically the same as that in
the larger reservoir which is its source. The
difference, however, is this: the reservoir on
the mountain side, in the amount of its water,
so far transcends the reservoir in the valley that
it can supply an innumerable number of like reservoirs
and still be unexhausted.
And so in the life of man. If,
as I think we have already agreed, however we may
differ in regard to anything else, there is this Infinite
Spirit of Life behind all, the life of all, and so,
from which all comes, then the life of individual
man, your life and mine, must come by a divine inflow
from this Infinite Source. And if this is true,
then the life that comes by this inflow to man is necessarily
the same in essence as is this Infinite Spirit of
Life. There is a difference. It is not
a difference in essence. It is a difference in
degree.
If this is true, does it not then
follow that in the degree that man opens himself to
this divine inflow does he approach to God? If
so, it then necessarily follows that in the degree
that he makes this approach does he take on the God-powers.
And if the God-powers are without limit, does it
not then follow that the only limitations man has are
the limitations he sets to himself, by virtue of not
knowing himself?