In the preceding chapters we have
found certain definite facts, that all
known matter is formed out of one primordial Universal
Substance, that the ether spreading throughout
limitless space is a Universal Medium, through which
it is possible to convey force by means of vibrations, and
that vibrations can be started by the power of Sound.
These we have found to be well established facts of
ordinary science, and taking them as our starting-point,
we may now begin to speculate as to the possible workings
of the known laws under unknown conditions.
One of the first things that naturally
attract our attention is the question, How
did Life originate? On this point I may quote
two leading men of science. Tyndall says:
“I affirm that no shred of trustworthy experimental
testimony exists, to prove that life in our day has
ever appeared independently of antecedent life”;
and Huxley says: “The doctrine of biogenesis,
or life only from life, is victorious along the whole
line at the present time.” Such is the testimony
of modern science to the old maxim “Omne
vivum exvivo.” “All life proceeds
from antecedent life.” Think it out for
yourself and you will see that it could not possibly
be otherwise.
Whatever may be our theory of the
origin of life on the physical plane, whether we regard
it as commencing in a vivified slime at the bottom
of the sea, which we call protoplasm, or in any other
way, the question of how life got there still remains
unanswered. The protoplasm being material substance,
must have its origin like all other material substances,
in the undifferentiated etheric Universal Substance,
no particle of which has any power of operating upon
any other particle until some initial vibration starts
the movement; so that, on any theory whatever, we
are always brought back to the same question:
What started the condensation of the ether into the
beginnings of a world-system? So whether we consider
the life which characterizes organized matter, or
the energy which characterizes inorganic matter, we
cannot avoid the conclusion, that both must have their
source in some Original Power to which we can assign
no antecedent. This is the conclusion which has
been reached by all philosophic and religious systems
that have really tried to get at the root of the matter,
simply because it is impossible to form any other
conception.
This Living Power is what we mean
when we speak of the All-Originating Spirit.
The existence of this Spirit is not a theological invention,
but a logical and scientific ultimate, without predicating
which, nothing else can be accounted for. The
word “Spirit” comes from the Latin “spiro”
“I breathe,” and so means “The Breath,”
as in Job xxxiii, 4, “The Spirit
of God hath made me, and the breath of the Almighty
hath given me life”; and again in Ps. xxxiii,
6 “By the word of the Lord were the
heavens made, and all the host of them by the breath
of his mouth.”
In the opening chapter of Genesis,
we are told that “the Spirit of God moved upon
the face of the waters.” The words rendered
“the Spirit of God” are, in the original
Hebrew “rouah AElohim,” which is literally
“the Breathing of God”; and similarly,
the ancient religious books of India, make the “Swara”
or Great Breath the commencement of all life and energy.
The word “rouah” in Genesis is remarkable.
According to rabbinical teaching, each letter of the
Hebrew alphabet has a certain symbolic significance,
and when examined in this manner, the root from which
this word is derived conveys the idea of Expansive
Movement. It is the opposite of the word “hoshech,”
translated “darkness” in the same passage
of our Bible, which is similarly derived from a root
conveying the idea of Hardening and Compressing.
It is the same idea that is personified in the Zendavesta,
the sacred book of the ancient Persians, under the
names of Ormuzd, the Spirit of Light; and Ahriman,
the Spirit of Darkness; and similarly in the old Assyrian
myth of the struggle between the Sun-God and Tiamat,
the goddess of darkness.
This conception of conflict between
two opposite principles, Light and Darkness, Compression
and Expansion, will be found to underlie all the ancient
religions of the world, and it is conspicuous throughout
our own Scriptures. But it should be borne in
mind that the oppositeness of their nature does not
necessarily mean conflict. The two principles
of Expansion and Contraction are not necessarily destructive;
on the contrary they are necessary correlatives to
one another. Expansion alone cannot produce form;
cohesion must also be present. It is the regulated
balance between them that results in Creation.
In the old legend, if I remember rightly, the conflict
is ended by Tiamat marrying her former opponent.
They were never really enemies, but there was a misunderstanding
between them, or rather there was a misunderstanding
on the part of Tiamat so long as she did not perceive
the true character of the Spirit of Light, and that
their relation to one another was that of co-operation
and not of opposition. Thus also St. John tells
us that “the light shineth in darkness and the
darkness comprehended it not” (John i, 5).
It is this want of comprehension that is at the root
of all the trouble.
The reader should note, however, that
I am here speaking of that Primeval Substance, which
necessarily has no light in itself, because there
is as yet no vibration in it, for there can be no light
without vibration. We must not make the mistake
of supposing that Matter is evil in itself: it
is our misconception of it that makes it the vehicle
of evil; and we must distinguish between the darkness
of Matter and moral darkness, though there is a spiritual
correspondence between them. The true development
of Man consists in the self-expansion of the Divine
Spirit working through his mind, and thence upon his
psychic and physical organisms, but this can only
be by the individual’s willingness to receive
that Spirit. Where the hindrance to this working
is only caused by ignorance of the true relation between
ourselves and the Divine Spirit, and the desire for
truth is present, the True Light will in due course
disperse the darkness. But on the other hand,
if the hindrance is caused by unwillingness
to be led by the Divine Spirit, then the Light cannot
be forced upon any one, and for this reason
Jesus said: “This is the condemnation, that
light is come into the World, and men loved darkness
rather than light, because their deeds were evil.
For every one that doeth evil hateth the light, neither
cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved.
But he that doeth truth cometh to the light, that
his deeds may be made manifest, that they are wrought
in God” (John iii: 19-21). In physical
science these things have an exact parallel in “Ohm’s
Law” regarding the resistance offered by the
conductor to the flow of the electric current.
The correspondence is very remarkable and will be found
more fully explained in a later chapter. The
Primary Darkness, both of Substance and of Mind, has
to be taken into account, if we would form an intelligent
conception of the twofold process of Involution and
Evolution continually at work in ourselves, which,
by their combined action, are able to lead to the
limitless development both of the individual and of
the race.
According to all teaching, then, both
ancient and modern, all life and energy have their
source in a Primary Life and Energy, of which we can
only say that IT IS. We cannot conceive of any
time when it was not, for, if there was a time when
no such Primary Energizing Life existed, what was
there to energize it? So we are landed in a reductio
ad absurdum which leaves no alternative but to
predicate the Eternal Existence of an All-Originating
Living Spirit.
Let us stop for a moment to consider
what we mean by “Eternal.” When,
do you suppose, twice two began to make four?
And when, do you suppose, twice two will cease to
make four? It is an eternal principle, quite
independent of time or conditions. Similarly with
the Originating Life. It is above time and above
conditions in a word it is undifferentiated
and contains in itself the potential of infinite
differentiation. This is what the Eternal Life
is, and what we want for the expansion of our own
life is a truer comprehension of it. We are like
Tiamat, and must enter into intelligent and loving
union with the Spirit of Light, in order to realize
the infinite possibilities that lie before us.
This is the ultimate meaning of the maxim “Omne
vivum ex vivo.”
We see, then, that the material universe,
including our own bodies, has its origin in the undifferentiated
Universal Substance, and that the first movement towards
differentiation must be started by some initial impulse,
analogous to those which start vibrations in the ether
known to science; and that therefore this impulse
must, in the first instance, proceed from some Living
Power eternal in itself, and independent of time and
conditions. Now all the ancient religions of the
world concur, in attributing this initial impulse
to the power of Sound; and we have seen, that as a
matter of fact, sound has the power of starting vibrations,
and that these vibrations have an exact correspondence
with the quality of the sound, what we now call synchronous
vibration.
At this point, however, we are met
by another fact. Cosmic activity takes place
only in certain definite areas. Solar systems
do not jostle each other in space. In a word
the Sound, which thus starts the initial impulse of
creation, is guided by Intelligent Selection.
Now sounds, directed by purposeful intention, amount
to Words, whether the words of some spoken language
or the tapping of the Morse code it is the
meaning at the back of the sound that gives it verbal
significance. It is for this reason, that the
concentration of creative energy in particular areas,
has from time immemorial been attributed to “The
Word.” The old Sanskrit books call this
selective concentrative power “Vach,” which
means “Voice,” and is the root of the Latin
word “Vox,” having the same meaning.
Philo, and the Neo-Platonists of Alexandria who follow
him, call it “Logos,” which means the
same; and we are all familiar with the opening verses
of St. John’s Gospel and First Epistle in which
he attributes Creation to “The Word.”
Now we know, as a scientific fact,
that solar systems have a definite beginning in the
gyration of nebulous matter, circling through vast
fields of interstellar space, as the great nebula in
Andromeda does at the present day. AEons upon
aeons elapse, before the primary nebula consolidates
into a solar system such as ours is now; but science
shows, that from the time when the nebula first spreads
its spiral across the heavens, the mathematical element
of Law asserts itself, and it is by means of our recognition
of the mathematical relations between the forces of
attraction and repulsion, that we have been able to
acquire any knowledge on the subject. I do not
for an instant wish to suggest that the Spiritual
Power has not continued to be in operation also, but
a centre for the working of a Cosmic Law being once
established, the Spiritual Power works through that
Law and not in opposition to it. On the other
hand, the selection of particular portions of space
for the manifestation of cosmic activity, indicates
the action of free volition, not determined by any
law except the obvious consideration of allowing room
for the future solar system to move in. Similarly
also with regard to time. Spectroscopic analysis
of the light from the stars, which are suns many of
them much greater than our own, shows that they are
of various ages some quite young, some
arrived at maturity, and some passing into old age.
Their creation must therefore be assigned to different
epochs, and we thus see the Originating Spirit exercising
the powers of Selection and Volition as to the time
when, as well as to the place where, a new world-system
shall be inaugurated.
Now it is this power of inauguration
that all the ancient systems of teaching attribute
to the Divine Word. It is the passing of the
undifferentiated into differentiation, of the unmanifested
into manifestation, of the unlocalized into localization.
It is the ushering in of what the Brahminical books
call a “Manvantara” or world-period, and
in like manner our Bible says that “In the beginning
was the Word.” The English word “word”
is closely allied to the Latin word “verbum”
which signifies both word and verb.
Grammarians tell us that the verb “to be”
is a verb-substantive, that is, it does not indicate
any action passing from the subject to the object.
Now this exactly describes the Spirit in its Eternity.
We cannot conceive of It except as always BEING; but
the distribution of world-systems both in time and
space shows that it is not always cosmically active.
In itself, apart from manifestation, it is Pure Beingness,
if I may coin such a word; and it is for this reason
that the Divine Name announced to Moses was “I
AM.” But the fact that Creation exists,
shows that from this Substantive Pure Being there
flows out a Verb Active, which reproduces in action,
what the I AM is in essence. It is just the same
with ourselves. We must first be before
we can do, and we can do only to the
extent to which we are. We cannot express
powers which we do not possess; so that our doing
necessarily coincides with the quality of our being.
Therefore the Divine Verb reproduces the Divine Substantive
by a natural sequence. It is generated
by the Divine “I AM,” and for this reason
it is called “The Son of God.” So
we see that The Verb, The Word, and The Son of God,
are all different expressions for the same Power.
Creative vibration in the Universal
Substance can, therefore, only be conceived of, as
being inaugurated by the “Word” which localizes
the activity of the Spirit in particular centres.
This idea, of the localization of the Spirit through
the “Word,” should be fully realized as
the energizing principle on the scale of the Macrocosm
or “Great World,” because, as we shall
find later on, the same principle acts in the same
way on the scale of the Microcosm or “Small World,”
which is the individual man. This is why these
things have a personal interest for us, otherwise
they would not be worth troubling about. But a
mistake to be avoided at this point, is that of supposing
that the “Word” is something which dictates
to the Spirit when and where to operate. The
“Word” is the word of the Spirit itself,
and not that of some higher authority, for the Spirit
being First Cause there can be nothing anterior to
dictate to it; there can be nothing before that which
is First. The “Word” which centralizes
the activity of the Spirit, is therefore that of the
Spirit itself. We have an analogy in our own case.
If I go to New York the first movement in that direction
is that of my Thought or Desire. It is true that
in my present state of evolution I have to follow
the usual methods of travel, but so far as my Thought
is concerned, I have been there all the time.
Indeed, such a case as the one I have mentioned, of
my being seen in Edinburgh while I was physically
in London, seems to point to the actual transference
of some part of the personality to another locality,
and similarly with my visit to Lanercost Abbey; and
the reader must remember, that such phenomena are
by no means uncommon they are the natural
action of some part of our personality, and must therefore
follow some natural law, even though we may at present
know very little of how it works.
We see, therefore, both from a
priori reasoning, and from observed facts, that
it is the Word, Thought, or Desire of the Spirit, that
localizes its activity in some definite centre.
The student should bear this in mind as a leading
principle, for he will find that it is of general
application, alike in the case of individuals, of groups
of individuals, and of entire nations. It is
the key to the relation between Law and Personality,
the opening of the Grand Arcanum, the equilibrating
of Jachin and Boaz, and it is therefore of immediate
importance to ourselves.
We may take, then, as a starting-point
for further enquiry, the maxim that Volition creates
Centres of Spiritual Activity. But perhaps you
will say: “If this be true, what word or
words am I to employ?” This is a question which
has puzzled a good many people before you. This
“Word” which so many have been in search
of, has been variously called “the Lost Word,”
“the Word of Power,” “the Schemhammaphorasch
or Secret Name of God,” and so on. A quaint
Jewish legend of the Middle Ages says that the “Hidden
Name” was secretly inscribed in the innermost
recesses of the Temple; but that, even if discovered,
which was most unlikely, it could not be retained
because, guarding it, were sculptured lions, which
gave such a supernatural roar as the intruder was quitting
the spot, that all memory of the “Hidden Name”
was driven from his mind. Jesus, however, says
the legend, knew this and dodged the lions. He
transcribed the Name, and cutting open his thigh,
hid the writing in the incision, which, by magical
art, he at once closed up; then, after leaving the
Temple, he took the writing out and so retained the
knowledge of the Name. In this way the legend
accounts for his power to work miracles.
Jesus, indeed, possessed the Word
of Power, though not in the way told in the legend,
and he repeatedly proclaimed it in his teaching: “According
to your Faith be it unto you” “Verily,
I say unto you, whosoever shall say to this mountain,
’Be thou taken up and cast into the sea’;
and shall not doubt in his heart, but shall believe
that what he saith shall come to pass, he shall have
whatsoever he saith” (Mark xi, 23). And
similarly in the Old Testament we are told that the
Word is nigh to us, even in our hearts and in our mouth
(Deut. xxx, 14). What keeps the Word of Power
hidden, is our belief that nothing so simple could
possibly be it.
At the same time, simple though it
be, it has Law and Reason at the back of it, like
everything else. The ancient Egyptians seem to
have had clearer ideas on this subject than we have.
“The name was to the Egyptians the idea
of the thing, without which it could not exist, and
the knowledge of which therefore gave power over that
which answered to it.” “The idea
of the thing represented its soul." This
is the same conception as the “archetypal ideas”
of Plato, only carried further, so as to apply, not
only to classes, but to each individual of the class,
and, as we shall see later, there is a good deal of
truth in it. Put broadly, the conception is this every
external fact must have a spiritual origin, an internal
energizing principle, which causes it to exist in
the particular form in which it does. The outward
fact is called the Phenomenon, and the corresponding
inward principle is called the Noumenon. The
dictionary definition of these two words is as follows:
“Phenomenon the appearance which anything
makes to our consciousness as distinguished from what
it is in itself.” “Noumenon an
unknown and unknowable substance or thing as it is
in itself the opposite to the Phenomenon
or form through which it becomes known to the senses
or the understanding” (Chambers’ Twentieth
Century Dictionary). Whether the dictionary be
right in saying that the “noumena” of things
are entirely unknowable, the reader must decide for
himself; but the present book is an attempt to learn
something about the “noumena” of things
in general, and of ourselves in particular, and what
I want to convey is, that the “noumenon”
of anything is its essence, in terms of the Universal
Energy and the Universal Substance, in their relation
to the particular Form in question. Probably
the Latin word “Nomen,” a Name, is derived
from this Greek word, and in this sense everything
has its “hidden name”; and the region
in which Thought-Power works, is this region of spiritual
beginnings. It deals with “hidden names” that
inward essence which determines the outward form of
things, persons, and circumstances alike; and it is
in order to make this clearer, that I have commenced
by sketching briefly the general principles of Substance
and Energy as now recognized by modern science.
If I have made my meaning clear, you
will see that what is wanted is not the knowledge
of particular words, but an understanding of general
principles. At the same time I would not assert
that the reciting of certain forms of words, such
as the Indian “mantras” or the word AUM,
to which Oriental teachers attach a mystic significance,
is entirely without power. But the power is not
in the words but in our belief in their power.
I will give an amusing instance of this. On several
occasions I have been consulted by persons who supposed
themselves to be under the influence of “malicious
magnetism,” emanating in some cases from known,
and in others from unknown, sources; and the remedy
I have prescribed has been this. Look the adverse
power, mentally, full in the face, and then assuming
an attitude of confidence say “Cock-a-doodle-doo.”
The enquirers have sometimes smiled at first, but
in every case the result has been successful.
Perhaps this is why AEsculapius is represented as
accompanied by a cock. Possibly the ancient physicians
were in the habit of employing the “Cock-a-doodle-doo”
treatment; and I might recommend it to the faculty
to-day as very effective in certain cases. Now
I do not think the reader will attribute any particularly
occult significance to “Cock-a-doodle-doo.”
The power is in the mental attitude. To “cock-a-doodle-doo”
at any suggestion is to treat it with scorn and derision,
and to assume the very opposite of that receptive attitude
which enables a suggestion to affect us. That
is the secret of this method of treatment, and the
principle is the same in all cases.
It matters, then, very little what
particular words we use. What does matter is
the intention and faith with which we use them.
But perhaps some reader will here take the rôle of
cross-examining counsel, and say: “You
have just said it is a case of synchronous vibration then
surely it is the actual sound of the particular syllables
that counts how do you square this with
your present statement?” The answer is that the
Law is always the same, but the mode of response to
the Law is always according to the nature of the medium
in which it is operating. On the plane of physical
matter the vibrations are in tune with physical sounds,
as in the experiments with the eidophone; and similarly,
on the plane of ideas or “noumena,” the
response is in terms of that plane. The word
which creates “noumena,” or spiritual centres
of action, must itself belong to the world of “noumena,”
so that it is not illogical to say that it is the
intention and faith that counts, and not the external
sound. In this is the secret of the Power of Thought.
It is the reproduction, on the miniature scale of
the individual, of the same mode of Power that makes
the worlds. It is that Power of Personality, which,
combined with the action of the Law, brings out results
which the Law alone could never do as the
old maxim has it, “Nature unaided fails.”
This brings us to another important
question is not the creative power of the
Word limited by the immutability of the Law? If
the Law cannot be altered in the least particular,
how can the Word be free to do what it likes?
The answer to this is contained in another maxim:
“Every creation carries its own mathematics
along with it.” You cannot create anything
without at the same time creating its relation to everything
else, just as in painting a landscape, the contour
you give to the trees will determine that of the sky.
Therefore, whenever you create anything, you thereby
start a train of causation, which will work out in
strict accordance with the sort of thought that started
it. The stream always has the quality of its
source. Thought which is in line with the Unity
of the Great Whole, will produce correspondingly harmonious
results, and Thought which is disruptive of the great
Principle of Unity, will produce correspondingly disputive
results hence all the trouble and confusion
in the world. Our Thought is perfectly free, and
we can use it either constructively or destructively
as we choose; but the immutable Law of Sequence will
not permit us to plant a thought of one kind, and
make it bear fruit of another.
Then the question very naturally suggests
itself: Why did not God create us so that we
could not think negative or destructive thoughts?
And the answer is: Because He could not.
There are some things which even God cannot do.
He cannot do anything that involves a contradiction
in terms. Even God could not make twice two either
more or less than four. Now I want the student
to see clearly why making us incapable of wrong-thinking
would involve a contradiction in terms, and would
therefore be an impossibility. To see this we
must realize what is our place in the Order of the
Universe. The name “Man” itself indicates
this. It comes from the Sanscrit root MN, which,
in all its derivatives, conveys the idea of Measurement,
as in the word Mind, through the Latin mens,
the faculty which compares things and estimates them
accordingly; Moon, the heavenly body whose phases afford
the most obvious standard for the periodical measurement
of time; Month, the period thus measured; “Man,”
the largest of the Indian weights; and so on.
Man therefore means “The Measurer,” and
this very aptly describes our place in the order of
evolution, for it indicates the relation between Personal
Volition and Immutable Law.
If we grant the truth of the maxim
“Nature unaided fails” the whole thing
becomes clear, and the entire progress of applied science
proves the truth of this maxim. To recur to an
illustration I have employed in my previous books,
the old ship-builders thought that ships were bound
to be built of wood and not of iron, because wood floats
in water and iron sinks; but now nearly all ships
are made of iron. Yet the specific gravities
of wood and iron have not altered, and a log of wood
floats while a lump of iron sinks, just the same as
they did in the days of Drake and Frobisher.
The only difference is, that people thought out the
underlying principle of the law of flotation,
and reduced it to the generalized statement that anything
will float, the weight of which is less than that
of the mass displaced by it, whether it be an iron
ship floating in water, or a balloon floating in air.
So long as we restrict ourselves to the mere recollection
of observed facts, we shall make no progress; but
by carefully considering why any force acted
in the way it did, under the particular conditions
observed, we arrive at a generalization of principle,
showing that the force in question is capable of hitherto
unexpected applications if we provide the necessary
conditions. This is the way in which all advances
have been made on the material side, and on the principle
of Continuity we may reasonably infer that the same
applies to the spiritual side also.
We may generalize the whole position
thus. When we first observe the working of the
Law under the conditions spontaneously provided by
Nature, it appears to limit us; but by seeking the
reason of the action exhibited under these
limited conditions, we discover the principle, and
true nature, of the Law in question, and we then learn
from the Law itself, what conditions to supply in order
to give it more extended scope, and direct its energy
to the accomplishment of definite purposes. The
maxim we have to learn is that “Every Law contains
in itself the principle of its own Expansion,”
which will set us free from the limitation which that
Law at first appeared to impose upon us. The
limitation was never in the Law, but in the conditions
under which it was working, and our power of selection
and volition enables us to provide new conditions,
not spontaneously provided by Nature, and thus to
specialize the Law, and disclose immense powers
which had always been latent in it, but which would
for ever remain hidden unless brought to light by
the co-operation of the Personal Factor. The Law
itself never changes, but we can specialize
it by realizing the principle involved and providing
the conditions thus indicated. This is our place
in the Order of the Universe. We give definite
direction to the action of the Law, and in this way
our Personal Factor is always acting upon the law,
whether we know it or not; and the Law, under the influence
thus impressed upon it, is all the time re-acting upon
us.
Now we cannot conceive any limit to
Evolution. To suppose a point where it comes
to an end is a contradiction in terms. It is to
suppose that the Eternal Life Principle is used up,
which is to deny its Eternity; and, as we have seen,
unless we assume its Eternity, it is impossible to
account either for our own existence or that of anything
else. Therefore, to say that a point will ever
be reached where it will be used up, is as absurd
as saying that a point will be reached where the sequence
of numbers will be used up. Evolution, the progress
from lower to higher modes of manifestation of the
underlying Principle of Life, is therefore eternal,
but, in regard to the human race, this progress depends
entirely on the extent to which we grasp the principles
of the Law of our own Being, and so learn to specialize
it in the right direction. Then if this be our
place in the Universal Order, it becomes clear that
we could not occupy this place unless we had a perfectly
free hand to choose the conditions under which the
Law is to operate; and therefore, in order to pass
beyond the limits of the mineral, vegetable and animal
kingdoms, and reach the status of being Persons, and
not things, we must have a freedom of selection and
volition, which makes it equally possible for us to
select either rightly or wrongly; and the purpose
of sound teaching is to make us see the eternal principles
involved, and thus lead us to impress our Personality
upon the Law, in the way that will bring out the infinite
possibilities of good which the Law, rightly employed,
contains. If it were possible to do this by an
automatic Law, doubtless the Creative Wisdom would
have made us so. This is why St. Paul says:
“If there had been a law given which could have
given life, verily righteousness should have been by
the law” (Gal. iii, 21). Note the words
“a law given,” that is to say, imposed
by external command; but it could not be. The
laws of the Universe are Cosmic. In themselves
they are impersonal, and the infinite possibilities
contained in them, can only be brought out by the co-operation
of the Personal Factor. It is only as we grasp
the true relation between Jachin and Boaz, that we
can enter into the Temple either of our own Individuality,
or of the boundless Universe in which we live.
The reason, therefore, why God did not make us mechanically
incapable of wrong thinking, is simply because the
very idea involves a contradiction in terms, which
negatives all possibility of Creation. The conception
lands us in a reductio ad absurdum.
Therefore, we are free to use our
powers of Personality as we will, only we must take
the consequences. Now one error we are all very
apt to fall into, is the mistaken use of the Will.
Its proper function is to keep our other faculties
in line with the Law, and thus enable us to specialize
it; but many people seem to think that by force of
will they can somehow manage to coerce the Law; in
other words, that by force of will they can sow a
seed of one kind and make it bear fruit of another.
The Spirit of Life seeks to express itself in our individuality,
through the three avenues of reason, feeling, and
will; but as in the Masonic legend of the murder of
Hiram Abif, the architect of Solomon’s Temple,
it is beaten back on the side of reasoning, by the
plummet of a logic based on false premises; on the
side of feeling, by the level of conventional ideas;
and on the side of will, by the hammer of a short-sighted
self-will, which gives the finishing blow; and it is
not until the true perception of the Principle of
Life is resurrected within us, that the Temple can
be completed according to the true plan.
It should be remembered that the will
is not the Creative Faculty in us. It
is the faculty of Conception that is the creative agent,
and the business of the Will is to keep that faculty
in the right direction, which will be determined by
an enlightened Reason. Conception creates ideas
which are the seed, that, in due time, will produce
fruit after its own kind. In a broad sense we
may call it the Imaging Faculty, only we must not
suppose that this necessarily implies the visualizing
of mental images, which is only a subsidiary mode
of using this faculty. An “immaculate conception”
is therefore the only means by which the New Liberated
Man can be born in each of us. The sequence is
always the same. The Will holds the Conception
together, and the idea thus formed gives direction
to the working of the Law. But this direction
may be either true or inverted; and the impersonal
Law will work constructively or destructively, according
to the conception which it embodies. In this
way, then, will-power may be used to hold together
an inverted conception the conception that
our personal force of will is sufficient to bear down
all opposition. But this mental attitude ignores
the fact, that the fundamental principle of creative
power is the Wholeness of the Creation; and that,
therefore, the idea of forcing compliance with our
wishes, by the power of our individual will, is an
inverted conception, which, though it may appear to
succeed for a time, is bound to fail eventually, because
it antagonizes the very power it is seeking to use.
This inverted use of the Will is the basis of “Black
Magic,” a term some readers will perhaps smile
at, but which is practised at the present day to a
much greater extent than many of us have any idea of not
always, indeed, with a full consciousness of its nature,
but in many ways which are the first steps on the
Left-hand Path. Its mark is the determination
to act by Self-will, rather than using our will to
co-operate with that continuous forward movement of
the Great Whole, which is the Will of God. This
inverted will entirely misses the point regarding the
part we are formed to play in the Creative Order,
and so we miss the development of our own individuality,
and retrograde instead of going forward.
But if we work with the Law
instead of against it, we shall find that our word,
that is to say our conception, will become more and
more the Word of Power, because it specializes the
general Law in some particular direction. The
Law will serve us exactly to the extent to which we
first observe the Law. It is the same in everything.
If the electrician tries to go counter to the fundamental
principle, that the electric current always flows
from a higher to a lower potential, he will be able
to do nothing with it; but let him observe this fundamental
law and there is nothing that electricity will not
do for him within the field of its own nature.
In this sense, then, of specializing the general Law
in a particular direction, we may lay down the maxim
that “The Law flows from the Word, and not vice
versa.”
When we use our Word in this way,
not as expressing a self-will that seeks to crush
all that does not submit to it, but as a portion, however
small, of the Universal Cause, and therefore with the
desire of acting in harmony with that Cause, then
our word becomes a constructive, instead of a destructive
power. Its influence may be very small at first,
because there is still a great mass of doubt at the
back of our mind, and every doubt is, in reality,
a Negative Word warring against our Affirmative Word;
but, by adhering to our principle, we shall gradually
gain experience in these things, and the creative value
of our word will grow accordingly.