This is the Spirit of Infinite Wisdom,
and in the degree that we open ourselves to it does
the highest wisdom manifest itself to and through
us. We can in this way go to the very heart of
the universe itself and find the mysteries hidden
to the majority of mankind, hidden to them,
though not hidden of themselves.
In order for the highest wisdom and
insight we must have absolute confidence in the Divine
guiding us, but not through the channel of some one
else. And why should we go to another for knowledge
and wisdom? With God is no respect of persons.
Why should we seek these things second hand?
Why should we thus stultify our own innate powers?
Why should we not go direct to the Infinite Source
itself? “If any man lack wisdom let him
ask of God.” “Before they call I
will answer, and while they are yet speaking, I will
hear.”
When we thus go directly to the Infinite
Source itself we are no longer slaves to personalities,
institutions, or books. We should always keep
ourselves open to suggestions of truth from these agencies.
We should always regard them as agencies, however,
and never as sources. We should never recognize
them as masters, but simply as teachers. With
Browning, we must recognize the great fact that
“Truth is within ourselves; it takes
no rise
From outward things, whate’er you
may believe.
There is an inmost centre in us all,
Where truth abides in fullness.”
There is no more important injunction
in all the world, nor one with a deeper interior meaning,
than “To thine own self be true.”
In other words, be true to your own soul, for it
is through your own soul that the voice of God speaks
to you. This is the interior guide. This
is the light that lighteth every man that cometh into
the world. This is conscience. This is
intuition. This is the voice of the higher self,
the voice of the soul, the voice of God. “Thou
shalt hear a voice behind thee, saying: This
is the way, walk ye in it.”
When Moses was on the mountain it
was after the various physical commotions and manifestations
that he heard the “still, small voice,”
the voice of his own soul, through which the Infinite
God was speaking. If we will but follow this
voice of intuition, it will speak ever more clearly
and more plainly, until by and by it will be absolute
and unerring in its guidance. The great trouble
with us is that we do not listen to and do not follow
this voice within our own souls, and so we become
as a house divided against itself. We are pulled
this way and that, and we are never certain
of anything. I have a friend who listens so
carefully to this inner voice, who, in other words,
always acts so quickly and so fully in accordance
with his intuitions, and whose life as a consequence
is so absolutely guided by them, that he always does
the right thing at the right time and in the right
way. He always knows when to act and how to
act, and he is never in the condition of a house divided
against itself.
But some one says, “May it not
be dangerous for us to act always upon our intuitions?
Suppose we should have an intuition to do harm to
some one?” We need not be afraid of this, however,
for the voice of the soul, this voice of God speaking
through the soul, will never direct one to do harm
to another, nor to do anything that is not in accordance
with the highest standards of right, and truth, and
justice. And if you at any time have a prompting
of this kind, know that it is not the voice of intuition;
it is some characteristic of your lower self that
is prompting you.
Reason is not to be set aside, but
it is to be continually illumined by this higher spiritual
perception, and in the degree that it is thus illumined
will it become an agent of light and power. When
one becomes thoroughly individualized he enters into
the realm of all knowledge and wisdom; and to be individualized
is to recognize no power outside of the Infinite Power
that is back of all. When one recognizes this
great fact and opens himself to this Spirit of Infinite
Wisdom, he then enters upon the road to the true education,
and mysteries that before were closed now reveal themselves
to him. This must indeed be the foundation of
all true education, this evolving from within, this
evolving of what has been involved by the Infinite
Power.
All things that it is valuable for
us to know will come to us if we will but open ourselves
to the voice of this Infinite Spirit. It is thus
that we become seers and have the power of seeing
into the very heart of things. There are no
new stars, there are no new laws or forces, but we
can so open ourselves to this Spirit of Infinite Wisdom
that we can discover and recognize those that have
not been known before; and in this way they become
new to us. When in this way we come into a knowledge
of truth we no longer need facts that are continually
changing. We can then enter into the quiet of
our own interior selves. We can open the window
and look out, and thus gather the facts as we choose.
This is true wisdom. “Wisdom is the knowledge
of God.” Wisdom comes by intuition.
It far transcends knowledge. Great knowledge,
knowledge of many things, may be had by virtue simply
of a very retentive memory. It comes by tuition.
But wisdom far transcends knowledge, in that knowledge
is a mere incident of this deeper wisdom.
He who would enter into the realm
of wisdom must first divest himself of all intellectual
pride. He must become as a little child.
Prejudices, preconceived opinions and beliefs always
stand in the way of true wisdom. Conceited opinions
are always suicidal in their influences. They
bar the door to the entrance of truth.
All about us we see men in the religious
world, in the world of science, in the political,
in the social world, who through intellectual pride
are so wrapped in their own conceits and prejudices
that larger and later revelations of truth can find
no entrance to them; and instead of growing and expanding,
they are becoming dwarfed and stunted, and still more
incapable of receiving truth. Instead of actively
aiding in the progress of the world, they are as so
many dead sticks in the way that would retard the
wheels of progress. This, however, they can never
do. Such always in time get bruised, broken,
and left behind, while God’s triumphal car of
truth moves steadily onward.
When the steam engine was still being
experimented with, and before it was perfected sufficiently
to come into practical use, a well-known Englishman well
known then in scientific circles wrote an
extended pamphlet proving that it would be impossible
for it ever to be used in ocean navigation, that is,
in a trip involving the crossing of the ocean, because
it would be utterly impossible for any vessel to carry
with it sufficient coal for the use of its furnace.
And the interesting feature of the whole matter was
that the very first steam vessel that made the trip
from England to America, had among its cargo a part
of the first edition of this carefully prepared pamphlet.
There was only the one edition. Many editions
might be sold now.
This seems indeed an amusing fact;
but far more amusing is the man who voluntarily closes
himself to truth because, forsooth, it does not come
through conventional, or orthodox, or heretofore accepted
channels; or because it may not be in full accord
with, or possibly may be opposed to, established usages
or beliefs. On the contrary
“Let there be many windows in your
soul,
That all the glory of the universe
May beautify it. Not the narrow
pane
Of one poor creed can catch the radiant
rays
That shine from countless sources.
Tear away
The blinds of superstition: let the
light
Pour through fair windows, broad as truth
itself
And high as heaven. . . . Tune your
ear
To all the worldless music of the stars
And to the voice of nature, and your heart
Shall turn to truth and goodness as the
plant
Turns to the sun. A thousand unseen
hands
Reach down to help you to their peace-crowned
heights,
And all the forces of the firmament
Shall fortify your strength. Be
not afraid
To thrust aside half-truths and grasp
the whole.”
There is a great law in connection
with the coming of truth. It is this: Whenever
a man or a woman shuts himself or herself to the entrance
of truth on account of intellectual pride, preconceived
opinions, prejudices, or for whatever reason, there
is a great law which says that truth in its fullness
will come to that one from no source. And on
the other hand, when a man or a woman opens himself
or herself fully to the entrance of truth from whatever
source it may come, there is an equally great law
which says that truth will flow in to him or to her
from all sources, from all quarters. Such becomes
the free man, the free woman, for it is the truth
that makes us free. The other remains in bondage,
for truth has had no invitation and will not enter
where it is not fully and freely welcomed.
And where truth is denied entrance
the rich blessings it carries with it cannot take
up their abode. On the contrary, when this is
the case, it sends an envoy carrying with it atrophy,
disease, death, physically and spiritually as well
as intellectually. And the man who would rob
another of his free and unfettered search for truth,
who would stand as the interpreter of truth for another,
with the intent of remaining in this position, rather
than endeavoring to lead him to the place where he
can be his own interpreter, is more to be shunned
than a thief and a robber. The injury he works
is far greater, for he is doing direct and positive
injury to the very life of the one he thus holds.
Who has ever appointed any man, whoever
he may be, as the keeper, the custodian, the dispenser
of God’s illimitable truth? Many indeed
are moved and so are called to be teachers of truth;
but the true teacher will never stand as the interpreter
of truth for another. The true teacher
is the one whose endeavor is to bring the one he teaches
to a true knowledge of himself and hence of his own
interior powers, that he may become his own interpreter.
All others are, generally speaking, those animated
by purely personal motives, self-aggrandizement, or
personal gain. Moreover, he who would claim to
have all truth and the only truth, is a bigot, a fool,
or a knave.
In the Eastern literature is a fable
of a frog. The frog lived in a well, and out
of his little well he had never been. One day
a frog whose home was in the sea came to his well.
Interested in all things, he went in. “Who
are you? Where do you live?” said the frog
in the well. “I am so and so, and my home
is in the sea.” “The sea? What
is that? Where is that?” “It is
a very large body of water, and not far away.”
“How big is your sea?” “Oh, very
big.” “As big as this?” pointing
to a little stone lying near. “Oh, much
bigger.” “As big as this?”
pointing to the board upon which they were sitting.
“Oh, much bigger.” “How much
bigger, then?” “Why, the sea in which
I live is bigger than your entire well; it would make
millions of wells such as yours.” “Nonsense,
nonsense; you are a deceiver and a falsifier.
Get out of my well. Get out of my well.
I want nothing to do with any such frogs as you.”
“Ye shall know the truth and
the truth shall make you free,” is the promise.
Ye shall close yourselves to truth, ye shall live
in your own conceits, and your own conceits shall
make fools and idiots of you, would be a statement
applicable to not a few, and to not a few who pride
themselves upon their superior intellectual attainments.
Idiocy is arrested mental growth. Closing one’s
self for whatever reason to truth and hence to growth,
brings a certain type of idiocy, though it may not
be called by this name. And on the other hand,
another type is that arrested growth caused by taking
all things for granted, without proving them for one’s
self, merely because they come from a particular person,
a particular book, a particular institution.
This is caused by one’s always looking without
instead of being true to the light within, and carefully
tending it that it may give an ever-clearer light.
With brave and intrepid Walt Whitman,
we should all be able to say
“From this hour I ordain myself
loos’d of limits
and imaginary
lines,
Going where I list, my own master total
and absolute,
Listening to others, considering well
what they say,
Pausing, searching, receiving, contemplating,
Gently, but with undeniable will divesting
myself of the
holds that would
hold me.”
Great should be the joy that God’s
boundless truth is open to all, open equally
to all, and that it will make each one its dwelling
place in proportion as he earnestly desires it and
opens himself to it.
And in regard to the wisdom that guides
us in our daily life, there is nothing that it is
right and well for us to know that may not be known
when we recognize the law of its coming, and are able
wisely to use it. Let us know that all things
are ours as soon as we know how to appropriate them.
“I hold it as a changeless law,
From which no soul can sway
or swerve,
We have that in us which will draw
Whate’er we need or
most deserve.”
If the times come when we know not
what course to pursue, when we know not which way
to turn, the fault lies in ourselves. If the
fault lies in ourselves then the correction of this
unnatural condition lies also in ourselves.
It is never necessary to come into such a state if
we are awake and remain awake to the light and the
powers within us. The light is ever shining,
and the only thing that it is necessary for us diligently
to see to is that we permit neither this thing nor
that to come between us and the light. “With
Thee is the fountain of life; in Thy light shall we
see light.”
Let us hear the words of one of the
most highly illumined men I have ever known, and one
who as a consequence is never in the dark, when the
time comes, as to what to do and how to do it.
“Whenever you are in doubt as to the course
you should pursue, after you have turned to every outward
means of guidance, let the inward eye see, let the
inward ear hear, and allow this simple, natural,
beautiful process to go on unimpeded by questionings
or doubts. . . . In all dark hours and times
of unwonted perplexity we need to follow one simple
direction, found, as all needed directions can be
found, in the dear old gospel, which so many read,
but alas, so few interpret. ’Enter
into thine inner chamber and shut the door.’
Does this mean that we must literally betake ourselves
to a private closet with a key in the door?
If it did, then the command could never be obeyed
in the open air, on land or sea, and the Christ loved
the lakes and the forests far better than the cramping
rooms of city dwelling houses; still his counsels
are so wide-reaching that there is no spot on earth
and no conceivable situation in which any of us may
be placed where we cannot follow them.
“One of the most intuitive men
we ever met had a desk in a city office where several
other gentlemen were doing business constantly and
often talking loudly. Entirely undisturbed by
the many various sounds about him, this self-centred,
faithful man would, in any moment of perplexity, draw
the curtains of privacy so completely about him that
he would be as fully enclosed in his own psychic aura,
and thereby as effectually removed from all distractions
as though he were alone in some primeval wood.
Taking his difficulty with him into the mystic silence
in the form of a direct question, to which he expected
a certain answer, he would remain utterly passive
until the reply came, and never once through many
years’ experience did he find himself disappointed
or misled. Intuitive perceptions of truth are
the daily bread to satisfy our daily hunger; they
come like the manna in the desert day by day; each
day brings adequate supply for that day’s need
only. They must be followed instantly, for dalliance
with them means their obscuration, and the more we
dally the more we invite erroneous impressions to cover
intuition with a pall of conflicting moral phantasy
born of illusions of the terrence will.
“One condition is imposed by
universal law, and this we must obey.
Put all wishes aside save the one desire to know truth;
couple with this one demand the fully consecrated
determination to follow what is distinctly perceived
as truth immediately it is revealed. No other
affection must be permitted to share the field with
this all-absorbing love of truth for its own
sake. Obey this one direction and never forget
that expectation and desire are bride and bridegroom
and forever inseparable, and you will soon find your
hitherto darkened way grow luminous with celestial
radiance, for with the heaven within, all heavens
without incessantly co-operate.” This may
be termed going into the “silence.”
This it is to perceive and to be guided by the light
that lighteth every man that cometh into the world.
This it is to listen to and be guided by the voice
of your own soul, the voice of your higher self.
The soul is divine and in allowing
it to become translucent to the Infinite Spirit it
reveals all things to us. As man turns away from
the Divine Light do all things become hidden.
There is nothing hidden of itself. When the
spiritual sense is opened, then it transcends all the
limitations of the physical senses and the intellect.
And in the degree that we are able to get away from
the limitations set by them, and realize that so far
as the real life is concerned it is one with the Infinite
Life, then we begin to reach the place where this voice
will always speak, where it will never fail us, if
we follow it, and as a consequence where we will always
have the divine illumination and guidance. To
know this and to live in this realization is not to
live in heaven hereafter, but to live in heaven here
and now, today and every day.
No human soul need be without it.
When we turn our face in the right direction it comes
as simply and as naturally as the flower blooms and
the winds blow. It is not to be bought with money
or with price. It is a condition waiting simply
to be realized, by rich and by poor, by king and by
peasant, by master and by servant the world over.
All are equal heirs to it. And so the peasant,
if he find it first, lives a life far transcending
in beauty and in real power the life of his king.
The servant, if he find it first, lives a life surpassing
the life of his master.
If you would find the highest, the
fullest, and the richest life that not only this world
but that any world can know, then do away with the
sense of the separateness of your life from the life
of God. Hold to the thought of your oneness.
In the degree that you do this you will find yourself
realizing it more and more, and as this life of realization
is lived, you will find that no good thing will be
withheld, for all things are included in this.
Then it will be yours, without fears or forebodings,
simply to do today what your hands find to do, and
so be ready for tomorrow, when it comes, knowing
that tomorrow will bring tomorrow’s supplies
for the mental, the spiritual, and the physical life.
Remember, however, that tomorrow’s supplies are
not needed until tomorrow comes.
If one is willing to trust himself
fully to the Law, the Law will never fail him.
It is the half-hearted trusting to it that brings
uncertain, and so, unsatisfactory results. Nothing
is firmer and surer than Deity. It will never
fail the one who throws himself wholly upon it.
The secret of life then, is to live continually in
this realization, whatever one may be doing, wherever
one may be, by day and by night, both waking and sleeping.
It can be lived in while we are sleeping no less than
when we are awake. And here shall we consider
a few facts in connection with sleep, in connection
with receiving instruction and illumination while
asleep?
During the process of sleep it is
merely the physical body that is at rest and in quiet;
the soul life with all its activities goes right on.
Sleep is nature’s provision for the recuperation
of the body, for the rebuilding and hence the replacing
of the waste that is continually going on during the
waking hours. It is nature’s great restorer.
If sufficient sleep is not allowed the body, so that
the rebuilding may equalize the wasting process, the
body is gradually depleted and weakened, and any ailment
or malady, when it is in this condition, is able to
find a more ready entrance. It is for this reason
that those who are subject to it will take a cold,
as we term it, more readily when the body is tired
or exhausted through loss of sleep than at most any
other time. The body is in that condition where
outside influences can have a more ready effect upon
it, than when it is in its normal condition.
And when they do have an effect they always go to
the weaker portions first.
Our bodies are given us to serve far
higher purposes than we ordinarily use them for.
Especially is this true in the numerous cases where
the body is master of its owner. In the degree
that we come into the realization of the higher powers
of the mind and spirit, in that degree does the body,
through their influence upon it, become less gross
and heavy, finer in its texture and form. And
then, because the mind finds a kingdom of enjoyment
in itself, and in all the higher things it becomes
related to, excesses in eating and drinking,
as well as all others, naturally and of their own
accord fall away. There also falls away the
desire for the heavier, grosser, less valuable kinds
of food and drink, such as the flesh of animals, alcoholic
drinks, and all things of the class that stimulate
the body and the passions rather than build the body
and the brain into a strong, clean, well-nourished,
enduring, and fibrous condition. In the degree
that the body thus becomes less gross and heavy, finer
in its texture and form, is there less waste, and what
there is is more easily replaced, so that it keeps
in a more regular and even condition. When this
is true, less sleep is actually required. And
even the amount that is taken does more for a body
of this finer type than it can do for one of the other
nature.
As the body in this way grows finer,
in other words, as the process of its evolution is
thus accelerated, it in turn helps the mind and the
soul in the realization of ever higher perceptions,
and thus body helps mind the same as mind builds body.
It was undoubtedly this fact that Browning had in
mind when he said:
“Let
us cry ’All good things
Are ours, nor soul helps flesh, more now,
Than flesh helps soul.’”
Sleep, then, is for the resting and
the rebuilding of the body. The soul needs no
rest, and while the body is at rest in sleep the soul
life is active the same as when the body is in activity.
There are some, having a deep insight
into the soul’s activities, who say that we
travel when we sleep. Some are able to recall
and bring over into the conscious, waking life the
scenes visited, the information gained, and the events
that have transpired. Most people are not able
to do this and so much that might otherwise be gained
is lost. They say, however, that it is in our
power, in proportion as we understand the laws, to
go where we will, and to bring over into the conscious,
waking life all the experiences thus gained.
Be this, however, as it may, it certainly is true
that while sleeping we have the power, in a perfectly
normal and natural way, to get much of value by way
of light, instruction, and growth that the majority
of people now miss.
If the soul life, that which relates
us to Infinite Spirit, is always active, even while
the body is at rest, why may not the mind so direct
conditions as one falls asleep, that while the body
is at rest, it may continually receive illumination
from the soul and bring what it thus receives over
into the conscious, waking life? This, indeed,
can be done, and is done by some to great advantage;
and many times the highest inspirations from the soul
come in this way, as would seem most natural, since
at this time all communications from the outer, material
world no longer enter. I know those who do much
work during sleep, the same as they get much light
along desired lines. By charging the mind on
going to sleep as to a particular time for waking,
it is possible, as many of us know, to wake on the
very minute. Not infrequently we have examples
of difficult problems, problems that defied solution
during waking hours, being solved during sleep.
A friend, a well-known journalist,
had an extended newspaper article clearly and completely
worked out for her in this way. She frequently
calls this agency to her aid. She was notified
by the managing editor one evening to have the article
ready in the morning, an article requiring
more than ordinary care, and one in which quite a knowledge
of facts was required. It was a matter in connection
with which she knew scarcely anything, and all her
efforts at finding information regarding it seemed
to be of no avail.
She set to work, but it seemed as
if even her own powers defied her. Failure seemed
imminent. Almost in desperation she decided to
retire, and putting the matter into her mind in such
a way that she would be able to receive the greatest
amount of aid while asleep, she fell asleep and slept
soundly until morning. When she awoke her work
of the previous evening was the first thing that came
into her mind. She lay quietly for a few minutes,
and as she lay there, the article, completely written,
seemed to stand before her mind. She ran through
it, arose, and without dressing took her pen and transcribed
it on to paper, literally acting simply as her own
amanuensis.
The mind acting intently along a particular
line will continue so to act until some other object
of thought carries it along another line. And
since in sleep only the body is in quiet while the
mind and soul are active, then the mind on being given
a certain direction when one drops off to sleep, will
take up the line along which it is directed, and can
be made, in time, to bring over into consciousness
the results of its activities. Some will be
able very soon to get results of this kind; for some
it will take longer. Quiet and continued effort
will increase the faculty.
Then by virtue of the law of the drawing
power of mind, since the mind is always active, we
are drawing to us even while sleeping, influences from
the realms kindred to those in which we in our thoughts
are living before we fall asleep. In this way
we can put ourselves into relation with what ever
kinds of influence we choose and accordingly gain much
during the process of sleep. In many ways the
interior faculties are more open and receptive while
we are in sleep than while we are awake. Hence
the necessity of exercising even greater care as to
the nature of the thoughts that occupy the mind as
we enter into sleep, for there can come to us only
what we by our own order of thought attract.
We have it entirely in our own hands.
And for the same reason, this
greater degree of receptivity during this period, we
are able by understanding and using the law, to gain
much of value more readily in this way than when the
physical senses are fully open to the material world
about us. Many will find a practice somewhat
after the following nature of value: When light
or information is desired along any particular line,
light or information you feel it is right and wise
for you to have, as, for example, light in regard to
an uncertain course of action, then as you retire,
first bring your mind into the attitude of peace and
good-will for all. You in this way bring yourself
into an harmonious condition, and in turn attract to
yourself these same peaceful conditions from without.
Then resting in this sense of peace,
quietly and calmly send out your earnest desire for
the needed light or information; cast out of your mind
all fears or forebodings lest it come not, for “in
quietness and in confidence shall be your strength.”
Take the expectant attitude of mind, firmly believing
and expecting that when you awake the desired results
will be with you. Then on awaking, before any
thoughts or activities from the outside world come
in to absorb the attention, remain for a little while
receptive to the intuitions or the impressions that
come. When they come, when they manifest themselves
clearly, then act upon them without delay. In
the degree that you do this, in that degree will the
power of doing it ever more effectively grow.
Or, if for unselfish purposes you
desire to grow and develop any of your faculties,
or to increase the health and strength of your body,
take a corresponding attitude of mind, the form of
which will readily suggest itself in accordance with
your particular needs or desires. In this way
you will open yourself to, you will connect yourself
with, and you will set into operation within yourself,
the particular order of forces that will make for
these results. Don’t be afraid to voice
your desires. In this way you set into operation
vibratory forces which go out and which make their
impress felt somewhere, and which, arousing into activity
or uniting with other forces, set about to actualize
your desires. No good thing shall be withheld
from him who lives in harmony with the higher laws
and forces. There are no desires that shall not
be satisfied to the one who knows and who wisely uses
the powers with which he or she is endowed.
Your sleep will be more quiet, and
peaceful, and refreshing, and so your power increased
mentally, physically, and spiritually, simply by sending
out as you fall asleep, thoughts of love and good-will,
thoughts of peace and harmony for all. In this
way you are connecting yourself with all the forces
in the universe that make for peace and harmony.
A friend who is known the world over
through his work along humane lines, has told me that
many times in the middle of the night he is awakened
suddenly and there comes to his mind, as a flash of
inspiration, a certain plan in connection with his
work. And as he lays there quietly and opens
himself to it, the methods for its successful carrying
out all reveal themselves to him clearly. In
this way many plans are entered upon and brought to
a successful culmination that otherwise would never
be thought of, plans that seem, indeed, marvelous to
the world at large. He is a man with a sensitive
organism, his life in thorough harmony with the higher
laws, and given wholly and unreservedly to the work
to which he has dedicated it. Just how and from
what source these inspirations come he does not fully
know. Possibly no one does, though each may have
his theory. But this we do know, and it is all
we need to know now, at least, that to
the one who lives in harmony with the higher laws of
his being, and who opens himself to them, they come.
Visions and inspirations of the highest
order will come in the degree that we make for them
the right conditions. One who has studied deeply
into the subject in hand has said: “To receive
education spiritually while the body is resting in
sleep is a perfectly normal and orderly experience,
and would occur definitely and satisfactorily in the
lives of all of us, if we paid more attention to internal
and consequently less to external states with their
supposed but unreal necessities. . . . Our thoughts
make us what we are here and hereafter, and our thoughts
are often busier by night than by day, for when we
are asleep to the exterior we can be wide awake to
the interior world; and the unseen world is a substantial
place, the conditions of which are entirely regulated
by mental and moral attainments. When we are
not deriving information through outward avenues of
sensation, we are receiving instruction through interior
channels of perception, and when this fact is understood
for what it is worth, it will become a universal custom
for persons to take to sleep with them the special
subject on which they most earnestly desire particular
instruction. The Pharaoh type of person dreams,
and so does his butler and baker; but the Joseph type,
which is that of the truly gifted seer, both dreams
and interprets.”
But why had not Pharaoh the power
of interpreting his dreams? Why was Joseph the
type of the “truly gifted seer?” Why did
he not only dream, but had also the power to interpret
both his own dreams and the dreams of others?
Simply read the lives of the two. He who runs
may read. In all true power it is, after all,
living the life that tells. And in proportion
as one lives the life does he not only attain to the
highest power and joy for himself, but he also becomes
of ever greater service to all the world. One
need remain in no hell longer than he himself chooses
to; and the moment he chooses not to remain longer,
not all the powers in the universe can prevent his
leaving it. One can rise to any heaven he himself
chooses; and when he chooses so to rise, all the higher
powers of the universe combine to help him heavenward.
When one awakes from sleep and so
returns to conscious life, he is in a peculiarly receptive
and impressionable state. All relations with
the material world have for a time been shut off,
the mind is in a freer and more natural state, resembling
somewhat a sensitive plate, where impressions can
readily leave their traces. This is why many
times the highest and truest impressions come to one
in the early morning hours, before the activities
of the day and their attendant distractions have exerted
an influence. This is one reason why many people
can do their best work in the early hours of the day.
But this fact is also a most valuable
one in connection with the moulding of every-day life.
The mind is at this time as a clean sheet of paper.
We can most valuably use this quiet, receptive, impressionable
period by wisely directing the activities of the mind
along the highest and most desirable paths, and thus,
so to speak, set the pace for the day.
Each morning is a fresh beginning.
We are, as it were, just beginning life. We
have it entirely in our own hands. And
when the morning with its fresh beginning comes, all
yesterdays should be yesterdays, with which we have
nothing to do. Sufficient is it to know that
the way we lived our yesterday has determined for
us our today. And, again, when the morning with
its fresh beginning comes, all tomorrows should be
tomorrows, with which we have nothing to do.
Sufficient to know that the way we live our today
determines our tomorrow.
“Every day is a fresh beginning,
Every morn is the world made
new;
You who are weary of sorrow and sinning,
Here is a beautiful hope for
you,
A hope for me and a hope for
you.
“All the past things are past and
over,
The tasks are done, and the
tears are shed.
Yesterday’s errors let yesterday
cover;
Yesterday’s wounds,
which smarted and bled,
Are healed with the healing
which might has shed.
“Let them go, since we cannot relieve
them,
Cannot undo and cannot atone.
God in His mercy receive, forgive them!
Only the new days are our
own.
Today is ours, and today alone.
“Here are the skies all burnished
brightly;
Here is the spent earth all
reborn;
Here are the tired limbs springing lightly
To face the sun and to share
with the morn
In the chrism of dew and the
cool of dawn.
“Every day is a fresh beginning,
Listen, my soul, to the glad
refrain,
And, spite of old sorrow and older sinning,
And puzzles forecasted, and
possible pain,
Take heart with the day and
begin again.”
Simply the first hour of this new
day, with all its richness and glory, with all its
sublime and eternity-determining possibilities, and
each succeeding hour as it comes, but not before
it comes. This is the secret of character building.
This simple method will bring any one to the realization
of the highest life that can be even conceived of,
and there is nothing in this connection that can be
conceived of that cannot be realized somehow, somewhen,
somewhere.
This brings such a life within the
possibilities of all, for there is no one,
if really in earnest and if he really desires it, who
cannot live to his highest for a single hour.
But even though there should be, if he is only
earnest in his endeavor, then, through the law
that like builds like, he will be able to come a little
nearer to it the next hour, and still nearer the next,
and the next, until sooner or later comes the time
when it becomes the natural, and any other would require
the effort.
In this way one becomes in love and
in league with the highest and best in the universe,
and as a consequence, the highest and best in the
universe becomes in love and in league with him.
They aid him at every turn; they seem literally to
move all things his way, because forsooth, he has
first moved their way.