THE DIVINE RULE IN THE MIND AND HEART:
THE UNESSENTIALS WE DROP THE SPIRIT ABIDES
That Jesus had a supreme aptitude
for the things of the spirit, there can be no question.
That through desire and through will he followed the
leadings of the spirit that he gave himself
completely to its leadings is evident both
from his utterances and his life. It was this
combination undoubtedly that led him into that vivid
sense of his life in God, which became so complete
that he afterwards speaks I and my Father
are one. That he was always, however, far from
identifying himself as equal with God is indicated
by his constant declaration of his dependence upon
God. Again and again we have these declarations:
“My meat and drink is to do the will of God.”
“My doctrine is not mine, but his that sent
me.” “I can of myself do nothing:
as I hear I judge; and my judgment is righteous; because
I seek not mine own will, but the will of him that
sent me.”
And even the very last acts and words
of his life proclaim this constant sense of dependence
for guidance, for strength, and even for succour.
With all his Divine self-realisation there was always,
moreover, that sense of humility that is always a predominating
characteristic of the really great. “Why
callest thou me good? There is none good but
one that is God.”
It is not at all strange, therefore,
that the very first utterance of his public ministry,
according to the chronicler Mark was: The Kingdom
of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe the
gospel. And while this was the beginning utterance,
it was the keynote that ran through his entire ministry.
It is the basic fact of all his teachings. The
realisation of his own life he sought to make the
realisation of all others. It was, it is, a call
to righteousness, and a call to righteousness through
the only channel that any such call can be effective through
a realisation of the essential righteousness and goodness
of the human soul.
An unbiased study of Jesus’
own words will reveal the fact that he taught only
what he himself had first realised. It is this,
moreover, that makes him the supreme teacher of all
time Counsellor, Friend, Saviour.
It is the saving of men from their lower conceptions
and selves, a lifting of them up to their higher selves,
which, as he taught, is eternally one with God, the
Father, and which, when realised, will inevitably,
reflexly, one might say, lift a man’s thoughts,
acts, conduct the entire life up
to that standard or pattern. It is thus that
the Divine ideal, that the Christ becomes enthroned
within. The Christ-consciousness is the universal
Divine nature in us. It is the state of God-consciousness.
It is the recognition of the indwelling Divine life
as the source, and therefore the essence of our own
lives.
Jesus came as the revealer of a new
truth, a new conception of man. Indeed, the Messiah.
He came as the revealer of the only truth that could
lead his people out of their trials and troubles out
of their bondage. They were looking for their
Deliverer to come in the person of a worldly king
and to set up his rule as such. He came in the
person of a humble teacher, the revealer of a mighty
truth, the revealer of the Way, the only way whereby
real freedom and deliverance can come. For those
who would receive him, he was indeed the Messiah.
For those who would not, he was not, and the same
holds today.
He came as the revealer of a truth
which had been glimpsed by many inspired teachers
among the Jewish race and among those of other races.
The time waited, however, for one to come who would
first embody this truth and then be able effectively
to teach it. This was done in a supreme degree
by the Judaean Teacher. He came not as the doer-away
with the Law and the Prophets, but rather to regain
and then to supplement them. Such was his own
statement.
It is time to ascend another round.
I reveal God to you, not in the Tabernacle, but in
the human heart then in the Tabernacle in
the degree that He is in the hearts of those who frequent
the Tabernacle. Otherwise the Tabernacle becomes
a whited sepulchre. The Church is not a building,
an organisation, not a creed. The Church is the
Spirit of Truth. It must have one supreme object
and purpose to lead men to the truth.
I reveal what I have found I in the Father
and the Father in me. I seek not to do mine own
will, but the will of the Father who sent me.
Everything was subordinated to this
Divine realisation and to his Divine purpose.
The great purpose at which he laboured
so incessantly was the teaching of the realisation
of the Divine will in the hearts and minds, and through
these in the lives of men the finding and
the realisation of the Kingdom of God. This is
the supreme fact of life. Get right at the centre
and the circumference will then care for itself.
As is the inner, so always and invariably will be
the outer. There is an inner guide that regulates
the life when this inner guide is allowed to assume
authority. Why be disconcerted, why in a heat
concerning so many things? It is not the natural
and the normal life. Life at its best is something
infinitely beyond this. “Seek ye first the
Kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these
things shall be added unto you.” And if
there is any doubt in regard to his real meaning in
this here is his answer: “Neither shall
they say, ‘Lo here’ or ‘Lo there’
for behold the Kingdom of God is within you.”
Again and again this is his call.
Again and again this is his revelation. In the
first three gospels alone he uses the expression “the
Kingdom of God,” or “the Kingdom of Heaven,”
upwards of thirty times. Any possible reference
to any organisation that he might have had in mind,
can be found in the entire four gospels but twice.
It would almost seem that it would
not be difficult to judge as to what was uppermost
in his mind. I have made this revelation to you;
you must raise yourselves, you must become in reality
what in essence you really are. I in the
Father, and the Father in me. I reveal only what
I myself know. As I am, ye shall be. God
is your Father. In your real nature you are Divine.
Drop your ideas of the depravity of the human soul.
To believe it depraves. To teach it depraves the
one who teaches it, and the one who accepts it.
Follow not the traditions of men. I reveal to
you your Divine birthright. Accept it. It
is best. Behold all things are become new.
The Kingdom of God is the one all-inclusive thing.
Find it and all else will follow.
“Whereunto shall we liken the
kingdom of God? Or with what comparison shall
we compare it? It is like a grain of mustard seed,
which, when it is sown in the earth, is less than
all the seeds that be in the earth; but when it is
sown, it groweth up, and becometh greater than all
herbs, and shooteth out great branches; so that the
fowls of the air may lodge under the shadow of it.”
“Whereunto shall I liken the kingdom of God?
Is it like leaven, which a woman took and hid in three
measures of meal, till the whole was leavened?”
Seek ye first the Kingdom, and the Holy Spirit, the
channel of communion between God your source, and
yourselves, will lead you, and will lead you into all
truth. It will become as a lamp to your feet,
a guide that is always reliable.
To refuse allegiance to the Holy Spirit,
the Spirit of Truth, is the real sin, the only sin
that cannot be forgiven. Violation of all moral
and natural law may be forgiven. It will bring
its penalty, for the violation of law carries in itself
its own penalty, its own punishment it
is a part of law; but cease the violation and the
penalty ceases. The violation registers its ill
effects in the illness, the sickness, of body and
spirit. If the violation has been long continued,
these effects may remain for some time; but the instant
the violation ceases the repair will begin, and things
will go the other way.
Learn from this experience, however,
that there can be no deliberate violation of, or blaspheming
against any moral or natural law. But deliberately
to refuse obedience to the inner guide, the Holy Spirit,
constitutes a defiance that eventually puts out the
lamp of life, and that can result only in confusion
and darkness. It severs the ordained relationship,
the connecting, the binding cord, between the soul the
self and its Source. Stagnation, degeneracy,
and eventual death is merely the natural sequence.
With this Divine self-realisation
the Spirit assumes control and mastery, and you are
saved from the follies of error, and from the consequences
of error. Repent ye turn from your
trespasses and sins, from your lower conceptions of
life, of pleasure and of pain, and walk in this way.
The lower propensities and desires will lose their
hold and will in time fall away. You will be
at first surprised, and then dumfounded, at what you
formerly took for pleasure. True pleasure and
satisfaction go hand in hand, nor are there
any bad after results.
All genuine pleasures should lead
to more perfect health, a greater accretion of power,
a continually expanding sense of life and service.
When God is uppermost in the heart, when the Divine
rule under the direction of the Holy Spirit becomes
the ruling power in the life of the individual, then
the body and its senses are subordinated to this rule;
the passions become functions to be used; license and
perverted use give way to moderation and wise use;
and there are then no penalties that outraged law
exacts; satiety gives place to satisfaction. It
was Edward Carpenter who said: “In order
to enjoy life one must be a master of life for
to be a slave to its inconsistencies can only mean
torment; and in order to enjoy the senses one must
be master of them. To dominate the actual world
you must, like Archimedes, base your fulcrum somewhere
beyond.”
It is not the use, but the abuse of
anything good in itself that brings satiety, disease,
suffering, dissatisfaction. Nor is asceticism
a true road of life. All things are for use;
but all must be wisely, in most cases, moderately
used, for true enjoyment. All functions and powers
are for use; but all must be brought under the domination
of the Spirit the God-illumined spirit.
This is the road that leads to heaven here and heaven
hereafter and we can rest assured that we
will never find a heaven hereafter that we do not
make while here. Through everything runs this
teaching of the Master.
How wonderfully and how masterfully
and simply he sets forth his whole teaching of sin
and the sinner and his relation to the Father in that
marvellous parable, the Parable of the Prodigal Son.
To bring it clearly to mind again it runs:
“A certain man had two sons:
and the younger of them said to his father, Father,
give me the portion of goods that falleth to me.
And he divided unto them his living. And not
many days after the younger son gathered all together,
and took his journey to a far country, and there wasted
his substance with riotous living. And when he
had spent all, there arose a mighty famine in that
land; and he began to be in want. And he went
and joined himself to a citizen of that country; and
he sent him into his fields to feed swine. And
he would fain have filled his belly with the husks
that the swine did eat: and no man gave unto him.
And when he came to himself, he said, How many hired
servants of my father’s have bread enough and
to spare, and I perish with hunger! I will arise
and go to my father, and will say unto him, Father,
I have sinned against heaven, and before thee, and
am no more worthy to be called thy son: make
me as one of thy hired servants. And he arose
and came to his father.
“But when he was yet a great
way off, his father saw him, and had compassion, and
ran, and fell upon his neck, and kissed him. And
the son said unto him, Father, I have sinned against
heaven, and in thy sight, and am no more worthy to
be called thy son. But the father said to his
servants, Bring forth the best robe and put it on him;
and put a ring on his hand, and shoes on his feet:
and bring hither the fatted calf, and kill it; and
let us eat, and be merry; for this my son was dead,
and is alive again; he was lost, and is found.
And they began to be merry. Now his elder son
was in the field: and as he came and drew nigh
to the house, he heard music and dancing. And
he called one of the servants, and asked what these
things meant. And he said unto him, Thy brother
is come; and thy father hath killed the fatted calf,
because he hath received him safe and sound.
And he was angry and would not go in: therefore
came his father out, and entreated him, and he answering
said to his father, Lo, these many years do I serve
thee, neither transgressed I at any time thy commandment;
and yet thou never gavest me a kid, that I might make
merry with my friends: but as soon as this thy
son was come, which hath devoured thy living with harlots,
thou hast killed for him the fatted calf. And
he said unto him, Son, thou art ever with me, and
all that I have is thine. It was meet that we
should make merry, and be glad: for this thy
brother was dead, and is alive again; and was lost,
and is found.”
It does away forever in all thinking
minds with any participation of Jesus in that perverted
and perverting doctrine that man is by nature essentially
depraved, degraded, fallen, in the sense as was given
to the world long, long after his time in the doctrine
of the Fall of Man, and the need of redemption through
some external source outside of himself, in distinction
from the truth that he revealed that was to make men
free the truth of their Divine nature, and
this love of man by the Heavenly Father, and the love
of the Heavenly Father by His children.
To connect Jesus with any such thought
or teaching would be to take the heart out of his
supreme revelation. For his whole conception of
God the Father, given in all his utterances, was that
of a Heavenly Father of love, of care, longing to
exercise His protecting care and to give good gifts
to His children and this because it is the
essential nature of God to be fatherly.
His Fatherhood is not, therefore, accidental, not
dependent upon any conditions or circumstances; it
is essential.
If it is the nature of a father to
give good gifts to his children, so in a still greater
degree is it the nature of the Heavenly Father to
give good gifts to those who ask Him. As His words
are recorded by Matthew: “Or what man is
there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give
him a stone? Or if he ask a fish, will he give
him a serpent? If ye then, being evil, know how
to give good gifts unto your children, how much more
shall your Father which is in heaven give good things
to them that ask him?” So in the parable as
presented by Jesus, the father’s love was such
that as soon as it was made known to him that his son
who had been lost to him had returned, he went out
to meet him; he granted him full pardon and
there were no conditions.
Speaking of the fundamental teaching
of the Master, and also in connection with this same
parable, another has said: “It thus appears
from this story, as elsewhere in the teaching of Jesus,
that he did not call God our father because He created
us, or because He rules over us, or because He made
a covenant with Abraham, but simply and only because
He loves us. This parable individualises the divine
love, as did also the missionary activity of Jesus.
The gospels know nothing of a national fatherhood,
of a God whose love is confined to a particular people.
It is the individual man who has a heavenly Father,
and this individualised fatherhood is the only one
of which Jesus speaks. As he had realised his
own moral and spiritual life in the consciousness that
God was his father, so he sought to give life to the
world by a living revelation of the truth that God
loves each separate soul. This is a prime factor
in the religion and ethics of Jesus. It is seldom
or vaguely apprehended in the Old Testament teaching;
but in the teaching of Jesus it is central and normative.”
Again in the two allied parables of Jesus the
Parable of the Lost Sheep, and the Parable of the
Lost Coin it is his purpose to teach the
great love of the Father for all, including those lost
in their trespasses and sins, and His rejoicing in
their return.
This leads to Jesus’ conception
and teaching of sin and repentance. Although
God is the Father, He demands filial obedience in the
hearts and the minds of His children. Men by
following the devices and desires of their own hearts,
are not true to their real nature, their Divine pattern.
By following their selfish desires they have brought
sin, and thereby suffering, on themselves and others.
The unclean, the selfish desires of mind and heart,
keep them from their higher moral and spiritual ideal although
not necessarily giving themselves to gross sin.
Therefore, they must become sons of God by repenting by
turning from the evil inclinations of their hearts
and seeking to follow the higher inclinations of the
heart as becomes children of God and those who are
dwellers in the Heavenly Kingdom. Therefore, his
opening utterance: “The time is fulfilled,
and the Kingdom of God is at hand; repent ye, and
believe the gospel.”
Love of God with the whole heart,
and love of the neighbour, leading to the higher peace
and fulfilment, must take the place of these more
selfish desires that lead to antagonisms and dissatisfactions
both within and without. All men are to pray:
Forgive us our sins. All men are to repent of
their sins which are the results of following their
own selfish desires, those of the body,
or their own selfish desires to the detriment of the
welfare of the neighbour.
All men are to seek the Divine rule,
the rule of God in the heart, and thereby have the
guidance of the Holy Spirit, which is the Divine spirit
of wisdom that tabernacles with man when through desire
and through will he makes the conditions whereby it
can make its abode with him. It is a manifestation
of the force that is above man it is the
eternal heritage of the soul. “Now the Lord
is the Spirit and where the Spirit of the Lord is,
there is liberty.” And therein lies salvation.
It follows the seeking and the finding of the Kingdom
of God and His righteousness that Jesus revealed to
a waiting world.
And so it was the spirit of religion
that Jesus came to reveal the real Fatherhood
of God and the Divine Sonship of man. A better
righteousness than that of the scribes and the Pharisees not
a slavish adherence to the Law, with its supposed
profits and rewards. Get the motive of life right.
Get the heart right and these things become of secondary
importance. As his supreme revelation was the
personal fatherhood of God, from which follows necessarily
the Divine sonship of man, so there was a corollary
to it, a portion of it almost as essential as the main
truth itself namely, that all men are brothers.
Not merely those of one little group, or tribe or
nation; not merely those of any one little set or
religion; not merely those of this or that little compartment
that we build and arbitrarily separate ourselves into but
all men the world over. If this is not true then
Jesus’ supreme revelation is false.
In connection with this great truth
he brought a new standard by virtue of the logic of
his revelation. “Ye have heard that it hath
been said, Thou shalt love thy neighbour, and hate
thine enemy. But I say unto you, Love your enemies,
bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate
you, and pray for them which despitefully use you,
and persecute you; that ye may be the children of
your Father which is in heaven.” Struggling
for recognition all through the Old Testament scriptures,
and breaking through partially at least in places,
was this conception which is at the very basis of
all man’s relationship with man.
And finally through this supreme Master
of life it did break through, with a wonderful newborn
consciousness.
The old dispensation, with its legal
formalism, was an eye for an eye and a tooth for a
tooth. The new dispensation was “But
I say unto you, Love your enemies.” Enmity
begets enmity. It is as senseless as it is godless.
It runs through all his teachings and through every
act of his life. If fundamentally you do not
have the love of your fellow-man in your hearts, you
do not have the love of God in your hearts and you
cannot have.
And that this fundamental revelation
be not misunderstood, near the close of his life he
said: “A new commandment I give unto you,
that ye love one another.” No man could
be, can be his disciple, his follower, and fail in
the realisation of this fundamental teaching.
“By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples,
if ye love one another.” And going back
again to his ministry we find that it breathes through
every teaching that he gave. It breathes through
that short memorable prayer which we call the Lord’s
Prayer. It permeates the Sermon on the Mount.
It is the very essence of his summing up of this discourse.
We call it the Golden Rule. “Whatsoever
ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so
to them.” Not that it was original with
Jesus; other teachers sent of God had given it before
to other peoples God’s other children;
but he gave it a new emphasis, a new setting. He
made it fundamental.
So a man who is gripped at all vitally
by Jesus’ teaching of the personal fatherhood
of God, and the personal brotherhood of man, simply
can’t help but make this the basic rule of his
life and moreover find joy in so making
it. A man who really comprehends this fundamental
teaching can’t be crafty, sneaking, dishonest,
or dishonourable, in his business, or in any phase
of his personal life. He never hogs the penny in
other words, he never seeks to gain his own advantage
to the disadvantage of another. He may be long-headed;
he may be able to size up and seize conditions; but
he seeks no advantage for himself to the detriment
of his fellow, to the detriment of his community, or
to the detriment of his extended community, the nation
or the world. He is thoughtful, considerate,
open, frank; and, moreover, he finds great joy in
being so.
I have never seen any finer statement
of the essential reasonableness, therefore, of the
essential truth of the value and the practice of the
Golden Rule than that given by a modern disciple of
Jesus who left us but a few years ago. A poor
boy, a successful business man, straight, square,
considerate in all his dealings, a power
among his fellows, a lamp indeed to the feet of many was
Samuel Milton Jones, thrice mayor of Toledo.
Simple, unassuming, friend of all, rich as well as
poor, poor as well as rich, friend of the outcast,
the thief, the criminal, looking beyond the exterior,
he saw as did Jesus, the human soul always intact,
though it erred in its judgment as we all
err in our judgments, each in his own peculiar way and
that by forbearance, consideration, and love, it could
be touched and the life redeemed redeemed
to happiness, to usefulness, to service. Notwithstanding
his many duties, business and political, he thought
much and he loved to talk of the things we are considering.
His brief statement of the fundamental
reasons and the comprehensive results of the actual
practice of the Golden Rule are shot through with
such fine insight, such abounding comprehension, that
they deserve to become immortal. He was my friend
and I would not see them die. I reproduce them
here: “As I view it, the Golden Rule is
the supreme law of life. It may be paraphrased
this way: As you do unto others, others will
do unto you. What I give, I get. If I love
you, really and truly and actively love you, you are
as sure to love me in return as the earth is sure
to be warmed by the rays of the midsummer sun.
If I hate you, ill-treat you and abuse you, I am equally
certain to arouse the same kind of antagonism towards
me, unless the Divine nature is so developed that
it is dominant in you, and you have learned to love
your enemies. What can be plainer? The Golden
Rule is the law of action and reaction in the field
of morals, just as definite, just as certain here as
the law is definite and certain in the domain of physics.
“I think the confusion with
respect to the Golden Rule arises from the different
conceptions that we have of the word love. I use
the word love as synonymous with reason, and when
I speak of doing the loving thing, I mean the reasonable
thing. When I speak of dealing with my fellow-men
in an unreasonable way, I mean an unloving way.
The terms are interchangeable, absolutely. The
reason why we know so little about the Golden Rule
is because we have not practised it.”
Was Mayor Jones a Christian? you ask.
He was a follower of the Christ for it
was he who said: “By this shall all men
know ye are my disciples, if ye love one another.”
Was he a member of a religious organisation?
I don’t know it never occurred to
me to ask him. Thinking men the world over are
making a sharp distinction in these days between organised
Christianity and essential Christianity.
The element of fear has lost its hold
on the part of thinking men and women. It never
opened up, it never can open up the springs of righteousness
in the human heart. He believed and he acted upon
the belief that it was the spirit that the Master
taught that God is a God of love and that
He reveals Himself in terms of love to those who really
know Him. He believed that there is joy to the
human soul in following this inner guide and translating
its impulses into deeds of love and service for one’s
fellow-men. If we could, if we would thus translate
religion into terms of life, it would become a source
of perennial joy.
It is not with observation, said Jesus,
that the supreme thing that he taught the
seeking and finding of the Kingdom of God will
come. Do not seek it at some other place, some
other time. It is within, and if within it will
show forth. Make no mistake about that, it
will show forth. It touches and it sensitises
the inner springs of action in a man’s or a
woman’s life. When a man realises his Divine
sonship that Jesus taught, he will act as a son of
God. Out of the heart spring either good or evil
actions. Self-love, me, mine; let me get all I
can for myself, or, thou shalt love thy neighbour
as thyself the Divine law of service, of
mutuality the highest source of ethics.
You can trust any man whose heart
is right. He will be straight, clean, reliable.
His word will be as good as his bond. Personally
you can’t trust a man who is brought into any
line of action, or into any institution through fear.
The sore is there, liable to break out in corruption
at any time. This opening up of the springs of
the inner life frees him also from the letter of the
law, which after all consists of the traditions of
men, and makes him subject to that higher moral guide
within. How clearly Jesus illustrated this in
his conversations regarding the observance of the
Sabbath how the Sabbath was made for man
and not man for the Sabbath, and how it was always
right to do good on the Sabbath.
I remember some years ago a friend
in my native state telling me the following interesting
incident in connection with his grandmother. It
was in northern Illinois it might have been
in New England. “As a boy,” said
he, “I used to visit her on the farm. She
loved her cup of coffee for breakfast. Ordinarily
she would grind it fresh each morning in the kitchen;
but when Sunday morning came she would take her coffee-grinder
down into the far end of the cellar, where no one could
see and no one could hear her grind it.”
He could never quite tell, he said, whether it was
to ease her own conscience, or in order to give no
offence to her neighbours.
Now, I can imagine Jesus passing by
and stopping at that home it was a home
known for its native kindly hospitality and
meeting her just as she was coming out of the cellar
with her coffee-grinder his quick and unerring
perception enabling him to take in the whole situation
at once, and saying: “In the name of the
Father, Aunt Susan, what were you doing with your
coffee-grinder down in the cellar on this beautiful
Sabbath morning? You like your cup of coffee,
and I also like the coffee that you make; thank God
that you have it, and thank God that you have the
good health to enjoy it. We can give praise to
the Father through eating and drinking, if, as in
everything else, these are done in moderation and
we give value received for all the things that we use.
So don’t take your grinder down into the cellar
on the Sabbath morning; but grind your coffee up here
in God’s sunshine, with a thankful heart that
you have it to grind.”
And I can imagine him, as he passes
out of the little front gate, turning and waving another
good-bye and saying: “When I come again,
Aunt Susan, be it week-day or Sabbath, remember God’s
sunshine and keep out of the cellar.” And
turning again in a half-joking manner: “And
when you take those baskets of eggs to town, Aunt
Susan, don’t pick out too many of the large
ones to keep for yourself, but take them just as the
hens lay them. And, Aunt Susan, give good weight
in your butter. This will do your soul infinitely
more good than the few extra coins you would gain
by too carefully calculating” Aunt
Susan with all her lovable qualities, had a little
tendency to close dealing.
I think we do incalculable harm by
separating Jesus so completely from the more homely,
commonplace affairs of our daily lives. If we
had a more adequate account of his discourses with
the people and his associations with the people, we
would perhaps find that he was not, after all, so
busy in saving the world that he didn’t have
time for the simple, homely enjoyments and affairs
of the everyday life. The little glimpses that
we have of him along these lines indicate to me that
he had. Unless we get his truths right into this
phase of our lives, the chances are that we will miss
them entirely.
And I think that with all his earnestness,
Jesus must have had an unusually keen sense of humour.
With his unusual perceptions and his unusual powers
in reading and in understanding human nature, it could
not be otherwise. That he had a keen sense for
beauty; that he saw it, that he valued it, that he
loved it, especially beauty in all nature, many of
his discourses so abundantly prove. Religion with
him was not divorced from life. It was the power
that permeated every thought and every act of the
daily life.