{"id":5444,"date":"2010-03-07T22:13:00","date_gmt":"2010-03-08T03:13:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/?p=5444"},"modified":"2011-01-08T09:54:01","modified_gmt":"2011-01-08T14:54:01","slug":"the-way-of-peace-james-allen","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/2010\/03\/07\/the-way-of-peace-james-allen\/","title":{"rendered":"The Way of Peace &#8211; James Allen"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>    __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>           Title: The Way of Peace<br \/>\n      Creator(s): Allen, James (1864-1912)<br \/>\n     Print Basis: R.F. Fenno &amp; Company<br \/>\n          Rights: Public Domain<br \/>\n        __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>   Produced by Kevin Handy and PG Distributed Proofreaders<\/p>\n<p>THE WAY OF PEACE<\/p>\n<p>    BY JAMES ALLEN<\/p>\n<p>    AUTHOR OF &quot;AS A MAN THINKETH,&quot; &quot;OUT FROM THE HEART&quot;<\/p>\n<p>CONTENTS<\/p>\n<p>    THE POWER OF MEDITATION<\/p>\n<p>      THE TWO MASTERS, SELF AND TRUTH<\/p>\n<p>      THE ACQUIREMENT OF SPIRITUAL POWER<\/p>\n<p>      THE REALIZATION OF SELFLESS LOVE<\/p>\n<p>      ENTERING INTO THE INFINITE<\/p>\n<p>      SAINTS, SAGES, AND SAVIORS; THE LAW OF SERVICE<\/p>\n<p>      THE REALIZATION OF PERFECT PEACE<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>THE POWER OF MEDITATION<\/p>\n<p>   Spiritual meditation is the pathway to Divinity. It is the mystic<br \/>\n   ladder which reaches from earth to heaven, from error to Truth, from<br \/>\n   pain to peace. Every saint has climbed it; every sinner must sooner or<br \/>\n   later come to it, and every weary pilgrim that turns his back upon self<br \/>\n   and the world, and sets his face resolutely toward the Father&#8217;s Home,<br \/>\n   must plant his feet upon its golden rounds. Without its aid you cannot<br \/>\n   grow into the divine state, the divine likeness, the divine peace, and<br \/>\n   the fadeless glories and unpolluting joys of Truth will remain hidden<br \/>\n   from you.<\/p>\n<p>   Meditation is the intense dwelling, in thought, upon an idea or theme,<br \/>\n   with the object of thoroughly comprehending it, and whatsoever you<br \/>\n   constantly meditate upon you will not only come to understand, but will<br \/>\n   grow more and more into its likeness, for it will become incorporated<br \/>\n   into your very being, will become, in fact, your very self. If,<br \/>\n   therefore, you constantly dwell upon that which is selfish and<br \/>\n   debasing, you will ultimately become selfish and debased; if you<br \/>\n   ceaselessly think upon that which is pure and unselfish you will surely<br \/>\n   become pure and unselfish.<\/p>\n<p>   Tell me what that is upon which you most frequently and intensely<br \/>\n   think, that to which, in your silent hours, your soul most naturally<br \/>\n   turns, and I will tell you to what place of pain or peace you are<br \/>\n   traveling, and whether you are growing into the likeness of the divine<br \/>\n   or the bestial.<\/p>\n<p>   There is an unavoidable tendency to become literally the embodiment of<br \/>\n   that quality upon which one most constantly thinks. Let, therefore, the<br \/>\n   object of your meditation be above and not below, so that every time<br \/>\n   you revert to it in thought you will be lifted up; let it be pure and<br \/>\n   unmixed with any selfish element; so shall your heart become purified<br \/>\n   and drawn nearer to Truth, and not defiled and dragged more hopelessly<br \/>\n   into error.<\/p>\n<p>   Meditation, in the spiritual sense in which I am now using it, is the<br \/>\n   secret of all growth in spiritual life and knowledge. Every prophet,<br \/>\n   sage, and savior became such by the power of meditation. Buddha<br \/>\n   meditated upon the Truth until he could say, &quot;I am the Truth.&quot; Jesus<br \/>\n   brooded upon the Divine immanence until at last he could declare, &quot;I<br \/>\n   and my Father are One.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   Meditation centered upon divine realities is the very essence and soul<br \/>\n   of prayer. It is the silent reaching of the soul toward the Eternal.<br \/>\n   Mere petitionary prayer without meditation is a body without a soul,<br \/>\n   and is powerless to lift the mind and heart above sin and affliction.<br \/>\n   If you are daily praying for wisdom, for peace, for loftier purity and<br \/>\n   a fuller realization of Truth, and that for which you pray is still far<br \/>\n   from you, it means that you are praying for one thing while living out<br \/>\n   in thought and act another. If you will cease from such waywardness,<br \/>\n   taking your mind off those things the selfish clinging to which debars<br \/>\n   you from the possession of the stainless realities for which you pray:<br \/>\n   if you will no longer ask God to grant you that which you do not<br \/>\n   deserve, or to bestow upon you that love and compassion which you<br \/>\n   refuse to bestow upon others, but will commence to think and act in the<br \/>\n   spirit of Truth, you will day by day be growing into those realities,<br \/>\n   so that ultimately you will become one with them.<\/p>\n<p>   He who would secure any worldly advantage must be willing to work<br \/>\n   vigorously for it, and he would be foolish indeed who, waiting with<br \/>\n   folded hands, expected it to come to him for the mere asking. Do not<br \/>\n   then vainly imagine that you can obtain the heavenly possessions<br \/>\n   without making an effort. Only when you commence to work earnestly in<br \/>\n   the Kingdom of Truth will you be allowed to partake of the Bread of<br \/>\n   Life, and when you have, by patient and uncomplaining effort, earned<br \/>\n   the spiritual wages for which you ask, they will not be withheld from<br \/>\n   you.<\/p>\n<p>   If you really seek Truth, and not merely your own gratification; if you<br \/>\n   love it above all worldly pleasures and gains; more, even, than<br \/>\n   happiness itself, you will be willing to make the effort necessary for<br \/>\n   its achievement.<\/p>\n<p>   If you would be freed from sin and sorrow; if you would taste of that<br \/>\n   spotless purity for which you sigh and pray; if you would realize<br \/>\n   wisdom and knowledge, and would enter into the possession of profound<br \/>\n   and abiding peace, come now and enter the path of meditation, and let<br \/>\n   the supreme object of your meditation be Truth.<\/p>\n<p>   At the outset, meditation must be distinguished from idle reverie.<br \/>\n   There is nothing dreamy and unpractical about it. It is a process of<br \/>\n   searching and uncompromising thought which allows nothing to remain but<br \/>\n   the simple and naked truth. Thus meditating you will no longer strive<br \/>\n   to build yourself up in your prejudices, but, forgetting self, you will<br \/>\n   remember only that you are seeking the Truth. And so you will remove,<br \/>\n   one by one, the errors which you have built around yourself in the<br \/>\n   past, and will patiently wait for the revelation of Truth which will<br \/>\n   come when your errors have been sufficiently removed. In the silent<br \/>\n   humility of your heart you will realize that<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;There is an inmost centre in us all<\/p>\n<p>   Where Truth abides in fulness; and around,<\/p>\n<p>   Wall upon wall, the gross flesh hems it in;<\/p>\n<p>   This perfect, clear perception, which is Truth,<\/p>\n<p>   A baffling and perverting carnal mesh<\/p>\n<p>   Blinds it, and makes all error; and to know,<\/p>\n<p>   Rather consists in opening out a way<\/p>\n<p>   Whence the imprisoned splendour may escape,<\/p>\n<p>   Than in effecting entry for a light<\/p>\n<p>   Supposed to be without.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   Select some portion of the day in which to meditate, and keep that<br \/>\n   period sacred to your purpose. The best time is the very early morning<br \/>\n   when the spirit of repose is upon everything. All natural conditions<br \/>\n   will then be in your favor; the passions, after the long bodily fast of<br \/>\n   the night, will be subdued, the excitements and worries of the previous<br \/>\n   day will have died away, and the mind, strong and yet restful, will be<br \/>\n   receptive to spiritual instruction. Indeed, one of the first efforts<br \/>\n   you will be called upon to make will be to shake off lethargy and<br \/>\n   indulgence, and if you refuse you will be unable to advance, for the<br \/>\n   demands of the spirit are imperative.<\/p>\n<p>   To be spiritually awakened is also to be mentally and physically<br \/>\n   awakened. The sluggard and the self-indulgent can have no knowledge of<br \/>\n   Truth. He who, possessed of health and strength, wastes the calm,<br \/>\n   precious hours of the silent morning in drowsy indulgence is totally<br \/>\n   unfit to climb the heavenly heights.<\/p>\n<p>   He whose awakening consciousness has become alive to its lofty<br \/>\n   possibilities, who is beginning to shake off the darkness of ignorance<br \/>\n   in which the world is enveloped, rises before the stars have ceased<br \/>\n   their vigil, and, grappling with the darkness within his soul, strives,<br \/>\n   by holy aspiration, to perceive the light of Truth while the unawakened<br \/>\n   world dreams on.<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;The heights by great men reached and kept,<\/p>\n<p>   Were not attained by sudden flight,<\/p>\n<p>   But they, while their companions slept,<\/p>\n<p>   Were toiling upward in the night.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   No saint, no holy man, no teacher of Truth ever lived who did not rise<br \/>\n   early in the morning. Jesus habitually rose early, and climbed the<br \/>\n   solitary mountains to engage in holy communion. Buddha always rose an<br \/>\n   hour before sunrise and engaged in meditation, and all his disciples<br \/>\n   were enjoined to do the same.<\/p>\n<p>   If you have to commence your daily duties at a very early hour, and are<br \/>\n   thus debarred from giving the early morning to systematic meditation,<br \/>\n   try to give an hour at night, and should this, by the length and<br \/>\n   laboriousness of your daily task be denied you, you need not despair,<br \/>\n   for you may turn your thoughts upward in holy meditation in the<br \/>\n   intervals of your work, or in those few idle minutes which you now<br \/>\n   waste in aimlessness; and should your work be of that kind which<br \/>\n   becomes by practice automatic, you may meditate while engaged upon it.<br \/>\n   That eminent Christian saint and philosopher, Jacob Boehme, realized<br \/>\n   his vast knowledge of divine things whilst working long hours as a<br \/>\n   shoemaker. In every life there is time to think, and the busiest, the<br \/>\n   most laborious is not shut out from aspiration and meditation.<\/p>\n<p>   Spiritual meditation and self-discipline are inseparable; you will,<br \/>\n   therefore, commence to meditate upon yourself so as to try and<br \/>\n   understand yourself, for, remember, the great object you will have in<br \/>\n   view will be the complete removal of all your errors in order that you<br \/>\n   may realize Truth. You will begin to question your motives, thoughts,<br \/>\n   and acts, comparing them with your ideal, and endeavoring to look upon<br \/>\n   them with a calm and impartial eye. In this manner you will be<br \/>\n   continually gaining more of that mental and spiritual equilibrium<br \/>\n   without which men are but helpless straws upon the ocean of life. If<br \/>\n   you are given to hatred or anger you will meditate upon gentleness and<br \/>\n   forgiveness, so as to become acutely alive to a sense of your harsh and<br \/>\n   foolish conduct. You will then begin to dwell in thoughts of love, of<br \/>\n   gentleness, of abounding forgiveness; and as you overcome the lower by<br \/>\n   the higher, there will gradually, silently steal into your heart a<br \/>\n   knowledge of the divine Law of Love with an understanding of its<br \/>\n   bearing upon all the intricacies of life and conduct. And in applying<br \/>\n   this knowledge to your every thought, word, and act, you will grow more<br \/>\n   and more gentle, more and more loving, more and more divine. And thus<br \/>\n   with every error, every selfish desire, every human weakness; by the<br \/>\n   power of meditation is it overcome, and as each sin, each error is<br \/>\n   thrust out, a fuller and clearer measure of the Light of Truth<br \/>\n   illumines the pilgrim soul.<\/p>\n<p>   Thus meditating, you will be ceaselessly fortifying yourself against<br \/>\n   your only real enemy, your selfish, perishable self, and will be<br \/>\n   establishing yourself more and more firmly in the divine and<br \/>\n   imperishable self that is inseparable from Truth. The direct outcome of<br \/>\n   your meditations will be a calm, spiritual strength which will be your<br \/>\n   stay and resting-place in the struggle of life. Great is the overcoming<br \/>\n   power of holy thought, and the strength and knowledge gained in the<br \/>\n   hour of silent meditation will enrich the soul with saving remembrance<br \/>\n   in the hour of strife, of sorrow, or of temptation.<\/p>\n<p>   As, by the power of meditation, you grow in wisdom, you will<br \/>\n   relinquish, more and more, your selfish desires which are fickle,<br \/>\n   impermanent, and productive of sorrow and pain; and will take your<br \/>\n   stand, with increasing steadfastness and trust, upon unchangeable<br \/>\n   principles, and will realize heavenly rest.<\/p>\n<p>   The use of meditation is the acquirement of a knowledge of eternal<br \/>\n   principles, and the power which results from meditation is the ability<br \/>\n   to rest upon and trust those principles, and so become one with the<br \/>\n   Eternal. The end of meditation is, therefore, direct knowledge of<br \/>\n   Truth, God, and the realization of divine and profound peace.<\/p>\n<p>   Let your meditations take their rise from the ethical ground which you<br \/>\n   now occupy. Remember that you are to grow into Truth by steady<br \/>\n   perseverance. If you are an orthodox Christian, meditate ceaselessly<br \/>\n   upon the spotless purity and divine excellence of the character of<br \/>\n   Jesus, and apply his every precept to your inner life and outward<br \/>\n   conduct, so as to approximate more and more toward his perfection. Do<br \/>\n   not be as those religious ones, who, refusing to meditate upon the Law<br \/>\n   of Truth, and to put into practice the precepts given to them by their<br \/>\n   Master, are content to formally worship, to cling to their particular<br \/>\n   creeds, and to continue in the ceaseless round of sin and suffering.<br \/>\n   Strive to rise, by the power of meditation, above all selfish clinging<br \/>\n   to partial gods or party creeds; above dead formalities and lifeless<br \/>\n   ignorance. Thus walking the high way of wisdom, with mind fixed upon<br \/>\n   the spotless Truth, you shall know no halting-place short of the<br \/>\n   realization of Truth.<\/p>\n<p>   He who earnestly meditates first perceives a truth, as it were, afar<br \/>\n   off, and then realizes it by daily practice. It is only the doer of the<br \/>\n   Word of Truth that can know of the doctrine of Truth, for though by<br \/>\n   pure thought the Truth is perceived, it is only actualized by practice.<\/p>\n<p>   Said the divine Gautama, the Buddha, &quot;He who gives himself up to<br \/>\n   vanity, and does not give himself up to meditation, forgetting the real<br \/>\n   aim of life and grasping at pleasure, will in time envy him who has<br \/>\n   exerted himself in meditation,&quot; and he instructed his disciples in the<br \/>\n   following &quot;Five Great Meditations&quot;:&#8211;<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;The first meditation is the meditation of love, in which you so adjust<br \/>\n   your heart that you long for the weal and welfare of all beings,<br \/>\n   including the happiness of your enemies.<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;The second meditation is the meditation of pity, in which you think of<br \/>\n   all beings in distress, vividly representing in your imagination their<br \/>\n   sorrows and anxieties so as to arouse a deep compassion for them in<br \/>\n   your soul.<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;The third meditation is the meditation of joy, in which you think of<br \/>\n   the prosperity of others, and rejoice with their rejoicings.<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;The fourth meditation is the meditation of impurity, in which you<br \/>\n   consider the evil consequences of corruption, the effects of sin and<br \/>\n   diseases. How trivial often the pleasure of the moment, and how fatal<br \/>\n   its consequences.<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;The fifth meditation is the meditation on serenity, in which you rise<br \/>\n   above love and hate, tyranny and oppression, wealth and want, and<br \/>\n   regard your own fate with impartial calmness and perfect tranquillity.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   By engaging in these meditations the disciples of the Buddha arrived at<br \/>\n   a knowledge of the Truth. But whether you engage in these particular<br \/>\n   meditations or not matters little so long as your object is Truth, so<br \/>\n   long as you hunger and thirst for that righteousness which is a holy<br \/>\n   heart and a blameless life. In your meditations, therefore, let your<br \/>\n   heart grow and expand with ever-broadening love, until, freed from all<br \/>\n   hatred, and passion, and condemnation, it embraces the whole universe<br \/>\n   with thoughtful tenderness. As the flower opens its petals to receive<br \/>\n   the morning light, so open your soul more and more to the glorious<br \/>\n   light of Truth. Soar upward upon the wings of aspiration; be fearless,<br \/>\n   and believe in the loftiest possibilities. Believe that a life of<br \/>\n   absolute meekness is possible; believe that a life of stainless purity<br \/>\n   is possible; believe that a life of perfect holiness is possible;<br \/>\n   believe that the realization of the highest truth is possible. He who<br \/>\n   so believes, climbs rapidly the heavenly hills, whilst the unbelievers<br \/>\n   continue to grope darkly and painfully in the fog-bound valleys.<\/p>\n<p>   So believing, so aspiring, so meditating, divinely sweet and beautiful<br \/>\n   will be your spiritual experiences, and glorious the revelations that<br \/>\n   will enrapture your inward vision. As you realize the divine Love, the<br \/>\n   divine Justice, the divine Purity, the Perfect Law of Good, or God,<br \/>\n   great will be your bliss and deep your peace. Old things will pass<br \/>\n   away, and all things will become new. The veil of the material<br \/>\n   universe, so dense and impenetrable to the eye of error, so thin and<br \/>\n   gauzy to the eye of Truth, will be lifted and the spiritual universe<br \/>\n   will be revealed. Time will cease, and you will live only in Eternity.<br \/>\n   Change and mortality will no more cause you anxiety and sorrow, for you<br \/>\n   will become established in the unchangeable, and will dwell in the very<br \/>\n   heart of immortality.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>STAR OF WISDOM<\/p>\n<p>   Star that of the birth of Vishnu,<\/p>\n<p>   Birth of Krishna, Buddha, Jesus,<\/p>\n<p>   Told the wise ones, Heavenward looking,<\/p>\n<p>   Waiting, watching for thy gleaming<\/p>\n<p>   In the darkness of the night-time,<\/p>\n<p>   In the starless gloom of midnight;<\/p>\n<p>   Shining Herald of the coming<\/p>\n<p>   Of the kingdom of the righteous;<\/p>\n<p>   Teller of the Mystic story<\/p>\n<p>   Of the lowly birth of Godhead<\/p>\n<p>   In the stable of the passions,<\/p>\n<p>   In the manger of the mind-soul;<\/p>\n<p>   Silent singer of the secret<\/p>\n<p>   Of compassion deep and holy<\/p>\n<p>   To the heart with sorrow burdened,<\/p>\n<p>   To the soul with waiting weary:&#8211;<\/p>\n<p>   Star of all-surpassing brightness,<\/p>\n<p>   Thou again dost deck the midnight;<\/p>\n<p>   Thou again dost cheer the wise ones<\/p>\n<p>   Watching in the creedal darkness,<\/p>\n<p>   Weary of the endless battle<\/p>\n<p>   With the grinding blades of error;<\/p>\n<p>   Tired of lifeless, useless idols,<\/p>\n<p>   Of the dead forms of religions;<\/p>\n<p>   Spent with watching for thy shining;<\/p>\n<p>   Thou hast ended their despairing;<\/p>\n<p>   Thou hast lighted up their pathway;<\/p>\n<p>   Thou hast brought again the old Truths<\/p>\n<p>   To the hearts of all thy Watchers;<\/p>\n<p>   To the souls of them that love thee<\/p>\n<p>   Thou dost speak of Joy and Gladness,<\/p>\n<p>   Of the peace that comes of Sorrow.<\/p>\n<p>   Blessed are they that can see thee,<\/p>\n<p>   Weary wanderers in the Night-time;<\/p>\n<p>   Blessed they who feel the throbbing,<\/p>\n<p>   In their bosoms feel the pulsing<\/p>\n<p>   Of a deep Love stirred within them<\/p>\n<p>   By the great power of thy shining.<\/p>\n<p>   Let us learn thy lesson truly;<\/p>\n<p>   Learn it faithfully and humbly;<\/p>\n<p>   Learn it meekly, wisely, gladly,<\/p>\n<p>   Ancient Star of holy Vishnu,<\/p>\n<p>   Light of Krishna, Buddha, Jesus.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>THE TWO MASTERS, SELF AND TRUTH<\/p>\n<p>   Upon the battlefield of the human soul two masters are ever contending<br \/>\n   for the crown of supremacy, for the kingship and dominion of the heart;<br \/>\n   the master of self, called also the &quot;Prince of this world,&quot; and the<br \/>\n   master of Truth, called also the Father God. The master self is that<br \/>\n   rebellious one whose weapons are passion, pride, avarice, vanity,<br \/>\n   self-will, implements of darkness; the master Truth is that meek and<br \/>\n   lowly one whose weapons are gentleness, patience, purity, sacrifice,<br \/>\n   humility, love, instruments of Light.<\/p>\n<p>   In every soul the battle is waged, and as a soldier cannot engage at<br \/>\n   once in two opposing armies, so every heart is enlisted either in the<br \/>\n   ranks of self or of Truth. There is no half-and-half course; &quot;There is<br \/>\n   self and there is Truth; where self is, Truth is not, where Truth is,<br \/>\n   self is not.&quot; Thus spake Buddha, the teacher of Truth, and Jesus, the<br \/>\n   manifested Christ, declared that &quot;No man can serve two masters; for<br \/>\n   either he will hate the one and love the other; or else he will hold to<br \/>\n   the one, and despise the other. Ye cannot serve God and Mammon.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   Truth is so simple, so absolutely undeviating and uncompromising that<br \/>\n   it admits of no complexity, no turning, no qualification. Self is<br \/>\n   ingenious, crooked, and, governed by subtle and snaky desire, admits of<br \/>\n   endless turnings and qualifications, and the deluded worshipers of self<br \/>\n   vainly imagine that they can gratify every worldly desire, and at the<br \/>\n   same time possess the Truth. But the lovers of Truth worship Truth with<br \/>\n   the sacrifice of self, and ceaselessly guard themselves against<br \/>\n   worldliness and self-seeking.<\/p>\n<p>   Do you seek to know and to realize Truth? Then you must be prepared to<br \/>\n   sacrifice, to renounce to the uttermost, for Truth in all its glory can<br \/>\n   only be perceived and known when the last vestige of self has<br \/>\n   disappeared.<\/p>\n<p>   The eternal Christ declared that he who would be His disciple must<br \/>\n   &quot;deny himself daily.&quot; Are you willing to deny yourself, to give up your<br \/>\n   lusts, your prejudices, your opinions? If so, you may enter the narrow<br \/>\n   way of Truth, and find that peace from which the world is shut out. The<br \/>\n   absolute denial, the utter extinction, of self is the perfect state of<br \/>\n   Truth, and all religions and philosophies are but so many aids to this<br \/>\n   supreme attainment.<\/p>\n<p>   Self is the denial of Truth. Truth is the denial of self. As you let<br \/>\n   self die, you will be reborn in Truth. As you cling to self, Truth will<br \/>\n   be hidden from you.<\/p>\n<p>   Whilst you cling to self, your path will be beset with difficulties,<br \/>\n   and repeated pains, sorrows, and disappointments will be your lot.<br \/>\n   There are no difficulties in Truth, and coming to Truth, you will be<br \/>\n   freed from all sorrow and disappointment.<\/p>\n<p>   Truth in itself is not hidden and dark. It is always revealed and is<br \/>\n   perfectly transparent. But the blind and wayward self cannot perceive<br \/>\n   it. The light of day is not hidden except to the blind, and the Light<br \/>\n   of Truth is not hidden except to those who are blinded by self.<\/p>\n<p>   Truth is the one Reality in the universe, the inward Harmony, the<br \/>\n   perfect Justice, the eternal Love. Nothing can be added to it, nor<br \/>\n   taken from it. It does not depend upon any man, but all men depend upon<br \/>\n   it. You cannot perceive the beauty of Truth while you are looking out<br \/>\n   through the eyes of self. If you are vain, you will color everything<br \/>\n   with your own vanities. If lustful, your heart and mind will be so<br \/>\n   clouded with the smoke and flames of passion, that everything will<br \/>\n   appear distorted through them. If proud and opinionative, you will see<br \/>\n   nothing in the whole universe except the magnitude and importance of<br \/>\n   your own opinions.<\/p>\n<p>   There is one quality which pre-eminently distinguishes the man of Truth<br \/>\n   from the man of self, and that is humility. To be not only free from<br \/>\n   vanity, stubbornness and egotism, but to regard one&#8217;s own opinions as<br \/>\n   of no value, this indeed is true humility.<\/p>\n<p>   He who is immersed in self regards his own opinions as Truth, and the<br \/>\n   opinions of other men as error. But that humble Truth-lover who has<br \/>\n   learned to distinguish between opinion and Truth, regards all men with<br \/>\n   the eye of charity, and does not seek to defend his opinions against<br \/>\n   theirs, but sacrifices those opinions that he may love the more, that<br \/>\n   he may manifest the spirit of Truth, for Truth in its very nature is<br \/>\n   ineffable and can only be lived. He who has most of charity has most of<br \/>\n   Truth.<\/p>\n<p>   Men engage in heated controversies, and foolishly imagine they are<br \/>\n   defending the Truth, when in reality they are merely defending their<br \/>\n   own petty interests and perishable opinions. The follower of self takes<br \/>\n   up arms against others. The follower of Truth takes up arms against<br \/>\n   himself. Truth, being unchangeable and eternal, is independent of your<br \/>\n   opinion and of mine. We may enter into it, or we may stay outside; but<br \/>\n   both our defense and our attack are superfluous, and are hurled back<br \/>\n   upon ourselves.<\/p>\n<p>   Men, enslaved by self, passionate, proud, and condemnatory, believe<br \/>\n   their particular creed or religion to be the Truth, and all other<br \/>\n   religions to be error; and they proselytize with passionate ardor.<br \/>\n   There is but one religion, the religion of Truth. There is but one<br \/>\n   error, the error of self. Truth is not a formal belief; it is an<br \/>\n   unselfish, holy, and aspiring heart, and he who has Truth is at peace<br \/>\n   with all, and cherishes all with thoughts of love.<\/p>\n<p>   You may easily know whether you are a child of Truth or a worshiper of<br \/>\n   self, if you will silently examine your mind, heart, and conduct. Do<br \/>\n   you harbor thoughts of suspicion, enmity, envy, lust, pride, or do you<br \/>\n   strenuously fight against these? If the former, you are chained to<br \/>\n   self, no matter what religion you may profess; if the latter, you are a<br \/>\n   candidate for Truth, even though outwardly you may profess no religion.<br \/>\n   Are you passionate, self-willed, ever seeking to gain your own ends,<br \/>\n   self-indulgent, and self-centered; or are you gentle, mild, unselfish,<br \/>\n   quit of every form of self-indulgence, and are ever ready to give up<br \/>\n   your own? If the former, self is your master; if the latter, Truth is<br \/>\n   the object of your affection. Do you strive for riches? Do you fight,<br \/>\n   with passion, for your party? Do you lust for power and leadership? Are<br \/>\n   you given to ostentation and self-praise? Or have you given up the love<br \/>\n   of riches? Have you relinquished all strife? Are you content to take<br \/>\n   the lowest place, and to be passed by unnoticed? And have you ceased to<br \/>\n   talk about yourself and to regard yourself with self-complacent pride?<br \/>\n   If the former, even though you may imagine you worship God, the god of<br \/>\n   your heart is self. If the latter, even though you may withhold your<br \/>\n   lips from worship, you are dwelling with the Most High.<\/p>\n<p>   The signs by which the Truth-lover is known are unmistakable. Hear the<br \/>\n   Holy<br \/>\n   Krishna declare them, in Sir Edwin Arnold&#8217;s beautiful rendering of the<br \/>\n   &quot;Bhagavad Gita&quot;:&#8211;<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;Fearlessness, singleness of soul, the will<\/p>\n<p>   Always to strive for wisdom; opened hand<\/p>\n<p>   And governed appetites; and piety,<\/p>\n<p>   And love of lonely study; humbleness,<\/p>\n<p>   Uprightness, heed to injure nought which lives<\/p>\n<p>   Truthfulness, slowness unto wrath, a mind<\/p>\n<p>   That lightly letteth go what others prize;<\/p>\n<p>   And equanimity, and charity<\/p>\n<p>   Which spieth no man&#8217;s faults; and tenderness<\/p>\n<p>   Towards all that suffer; a contented heart,<\/p>\n<p>   Fluttered by no desires; a bearing mild,<\/p>\n<p>   Modest and grave, with manhood nobly mixed,<\/p>\n<p>   With patience, fortitude and purity;<\/p>\n<p>   An unrevengeful spirit, never given<\/p>\n<p>   To rate itself too high&#8211;such be the signs,<\/p>\n<p>   O Indian Prince! of him whose feet are set<\/p>\n<p>   On that fair path which leads to heavenly birth!&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   When men, lost in the devious ways of error and self, have forgotten<br \/>\n   the &quot;heavenly birth,&quot; the state of holiness and Truth, they set up<br \/>\n   artificial standards by which to judge one another, and make acceptance<br \/>\n   of, and adherence to, their own particular theology, the test of Truth;<br \/>\n   and so men are divided one against another, and there is ceaseless<br \/>\n   enmity and strife, and unending sorrow and suffering.<\/p>\n<p>   Reader, do you seek to realize the birth into Truth? There is only one<br \/>\n   way: Let self die. All those lusts, appetites, desires, opinions,<br \/>\n   limited conceptions and prejudices to which you have hitherto so<br \/>\n   tenaciously clung, let them fall from you. Let them no longer hold you<br \/>\n   in bondage, and Truth will be yours. Cease to look upon your own<br \/>\n   religion as superior to all others, and strive humbly to learn the<br \/>\n   supreme lesson of charity. No longer cling to the idea, so productive<br \/>\n   of strife and sorrow, that the Savior whom you worship is the only<br \/>\n   Savior, and that the Savior whom your brother worships with equal<br \/>\n   sincerity and ardor, is an impostor; but seek diligently the path of<br \/>\n   holiness, and then you will realize that every holy man is a savior of<br \/>\n   mankind.<\/p>\n<p>   The giving up of self is not merely the renunciation of outward things.<br \/>\n   It consists of the renunciation of the inward sin, the inward error.<br \/>\n   Not by giving up vain clothing; not by relinquishing riches; not by<br \/>\n   abstaining from certain foods; not by speaking smooth words; not by<br \/>\n   merely doing these things is the Truth found; but by giving up the<br \/>\n   spirit of vanity; by relinquishing the desire for riches; by abstaining<br \/>\n   from the lust of self-indulgence; by giving up all hatred, strife,<br \/>\n   condemnation, and self-seeking, and becoming gentle and pure at heart;<br \/>\n   by doing these things is the Truth found. To do the former, and not to<br \/>\n   do the latter, is pharisaism and hypocrisy, whereas the latter includes<br \/>\n   the former. You may renounce the outward world, and isolate yourself in<br \/>\n   a cave or in the depths of a forest, but you will take all your<br \/>\n   selfishness with you, and unless you renounce that, great indeed will<br \/>\n   be your wretchedness and deep your delusion. You may remain just where<br \/>\n   you are, performing all your duties, and yet renounce the world, the<br \/>\n   inward enemy. To be in the world and yet not of the world is the<br \/>\n   highest perfection, the most blessed peace, is to achieve the greatest<br \/>\n   victory. The renunciation of self is the way of Truth, therefore,<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;Enter the Path; there is no grief like hate,<\/p>\n<p>   No pain like passion, no deceit like sense;<\/p>\n<p>   Enter the Path; far hath he gone whose foot<\/p>\n<p>   Treads down one fond offense.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   As you succeed in overcoming self you will begin to see things in their<br \/>\n   right relations. He who is swayed by any passion, prejudice, like or<br \/>\n   dislike, adjusts everything to that particular bias, and sees only his<br \/>\n   own delusions. He who is absolutely free from all passion, prejudice,<br \/>\n   preference, and partiality, sees himself as he is; sees others as they<br \/>\n   are; sees all things in their proper proportions and right relations.<br \/>\n   Having nothing to attack, nothing to defend, nothing to conceal, and no<br \/>\n   interests to guard, he is at peace. He has realized the profound<br \/>\n   simplicity of Truth, for this unbiased, tranquil, blessed state of mind<br \/>\n   and heart is the state of Truth. He who attains to it dwells with the<br \/>\n   angels, and sits at the footstool of the Supreme. Knowing the Great<br \/>\n   Law; knowing the origin of sorrow; knowing the secret of suffering;<br \/>\n   knowing the way of emancipation in Truth, how can such a one engage in<br \/>\n   strife or condemnation; for though he knows that the blind,<br \/>\n   self-seeking world, surrounded with the clouds of its own illusions,<br \/>\n   and enveloped in the darkness of error and self, cannot perceive the<br \/>\n   steadfast Light of Truth, and is utterly incapable of comprehending the<br \/>\n   profound simplicity of the heart that has died, or is dying, to self,<br \/>\n   yet he also knows that when the suffering ages have piled up mountains<br \/>\n   of sorrow, the crushed and burdened soul of the world will fly to its<br \/>\n   final refuge, and that when the ages are completed, every prodigal will<br \/>\n   come back to the fold of Truth. And so he dwells in goodwill toward<br \/>\n   all, and regards all with that tender compassion which a father bestows<br \/>\n   upon his wayward children.<\/p>\n<p>   Men cannot understand Truth because they cling to self, because they<br \/>\n   believe in and love self, because they believe self to be the only<br \/>\n   reality, whereas it is the one delusion.<\/p>\n<p>   When you cease to believe in and love self you will desert it, and will<br \/>\n   fly to Truth, and will find the eternal Reality.<\/p>\n<p>   When men are intoxicated with the wines of luxury, and pleasure, and<br \/>\n   vanity, the thirst of life grows and deepens within them, and they<br \/>\n   delude themselves with dreams of fleshly immortality, but when they<br \/>\n   come to reap the harvest of their own sowing, and pain and sorrow<br \/>\n   supervene, then, crushed and humiliated, relinquishing self and all the<br \/>\n   intoxications of self, they come, with aching hearts to the one<br \/>\n   immortality, the immortality that destroys all delusions, the spiritual<br \/>\n   immortality in Truth.<\/p>\n<p>   Men pass from evil to good, from self to Truth, through the dark gate<br \/>\n   of sorrow, for sorrow and self are inseparable. Only in the peace and<br \/>\n   bliss of Truth is all sorrow vanquished. If you suffer disappointment<br \/>\n   because your cherished plans have been thwarted, or because someone has<br \/>\n   not come up to your anticipations, it is because you are clinging to<br \/>\n   self. If you suffer remorse for your conduct, it is because you have<br \/>\n   given way to self. If you are overwhelmed with chagrin and regret<br \/>\n   because of the attitude of someone else toward you, it is because you<br \/>\n   have been cherishing self. If you are wounded on account of what has<br \/>\n   been done to you or said of you, it is because you are walking in the<br \/>\n   painful way of self. All suffering is of self. All suffering ends in<br \/>\n   Truth. When you have entered into and realized Truth, you will no<br \/>\n   longer suffer disappointment, remorse, and regret, and sorrow will flee<br \/>\n   from you.<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;Self is the only prison that can ever bind the soul;<\/p>\n<p>   Truth is the only angel that can bid the gates unroll;<\/p>\n<p>   And when he comes to call thee, arise and follow fast;<\/p>\n<p>   His way may lie through darkness, but it leads to light at last.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   The woe of the world is of its own making. Sorrow purifies and deepens<br \/>\n   the soul, and the extremity of sorrow is the prelude to Truth.<\/p>\n<p>   Have you suffered much? Have you sorrowed deeply? Have you pondered<br \/>\n   seriously upon the problem of life? If so, you are prepared to wage war<br \/>\n   against self, and to become a disciple of Truth.<\/p>\n<p>   The intellectual who do not see the necessity for giving up self, frame<br \/>\n   endless theories about the universe, and call them Truth; but do thou<br \/>\n   pursue that direct line of conduct which is the practice of<br \/>\n   righteousness, and thou wilt realize the Truth which has no place in<br \/>\n   theory, and which never changes. Cultivate your heart. Water it<br \/>\n   continually with unselfish love and deep-felt pity, and strive to shut<br \/>\n   out from it all thoughts and feelings which are not in accordance with<br \/>\n   Love. Return good for evil, love for hatred, gentleness for<br \/>\n   ill-treatment, and remain silent when attacked. So shall you transmute<br \/>\n   all your selfish desires into the pure gold of Love, and self will<br \/>\n   disappear in Truth. So will you walk blamelessly among men, yoked with<br \/>\n   the easy yoke of lowliness, and clothed with the divine garment of<br \/>\n   humility.<\/p>\n<p>   O come, weary brother! thy struggling and striving<\/p>\n<p>   End thou in the heart of the Master of ruth;<\/p>\n<p>   Across self&#8217;s drear desert why wilt thou be driving,<\/p>\n<p>   Athirst for the quickening waters of Truth<\/p>\n<p>   When here, by the path of thy searching and sinning,<\/p>\n<p>   Flows Life&#8217;s gladsome stream, lies Love&#8217;s oasis green?<\/p>\n<p>   Come, turn thou and rest; know the end and beginning,<\/p>\n<p>   The sought and the searcher, the seer and seen.<\/p>\n<p>   Thy Master sits not in the unapproached mountains,<\/p>\n<p>   Nor dwells in the mirage which floats on the air,<\/p>\n<p>   Nor shalt thou discover His magical fountains<\/p>\n<p>   In pathways of sand that encircle despair.<\/p>\n<p>   In selfhood&#8217;s dark desert cease wearily seeking<\/p>\n<p>   The odorous tracks of the feet of thy King;<\/p>\n<p>   And if thou wouldst hear the sweet sound of His speaking,<\/p>\n<p>   Be deaf to all voices that emptily sing.<\/p>\n<p>   Flee the vanishing places; renounce all thou hast;<\/p>\n<p>   Leave all that thou lovest, and, naked and bare,<\/p>\n<p>   Thyself at the shrine of the Innermost cast;<\/p>\n<p>   The Highest, the Holiest, the Changeless is there.<\/p>\n<p>   Within, in the heart of the Silence He dwelleth;<\/p>\n<p>   Leave sorrow and sin, leave thy wanderings sore;<\/p>\n<p>   Come bathe in His Joy, whilst He, whispering, telleth<\/p>\n<p>   Thy soul what it seeketh, and wander no more.<\/p>\n<p>   Then cease, weary brother, thy struggling and striving;<\/p>\n<p>   Find peace in the heart of the Master of ruth.<\/p>\n<p>   Across self&#8217;s dark desert cease wearily driving;<\/p>\n<p>   Come; drink at the beautiful waters of Truth.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>THE ACQUIREMENT OF SPIRITUAL POWER<\/p>\n<p>   The world is filled with men and women seeking pleasure, excitement,<br \/>\n   novelty; seeking ever to be moved to laughter or tears; not seeking<br \/>\n   strength, stability, and power; but courting weakness, and eagerly<br \/>\n   engaged in dispersing what power they have.<\/p>\n<p>   Men and women of real power and influence are few, because few are<br \/>\n   prepared to make the sacrifice necessary to the acquirement of power,<br \/>\n   and fewer still are ready to patiently build up character.<\/p>\n<p>   To be swayed by your fluctuating thoughts and impulses is to be weak<br \/>\n   and powerless; to rightly control and direct those forces is to be<br \/>\n   strong and powerful. Men of strong animal passions have much of the<br \/>\n   ferocity of the beast, but this is not power. The elements of power are<br \/>\n   there; but it is only when this ferocity is tamed and subdued by the<br \/>\n   higher intelligence that real power begins; and men can only grow in<br \/>\n   power by awakening themselves to higher and ever higher states of<br \/>\n   intelligence and consciousness.<\/p>\n<p>   The difference between a man of weakness and one of power lies not in<br \/>\n   the strength of the personal will (for the stubborn man is usually weak<br \/>\n   and foolish), but in that focus of consciousness which represents their<br \/>\n   states of knowledge.<\/p>\n<p>   The pleasure-seekers, the lovers of excitement, the hunters after<br \/>\n   novelty, and the victims of impulse and hysterical emotion lack that<br \/>\n   knowledge of principles which gives balance, stability, and influence.<\/p>\n<p>   A man commences to develop power when, checking his impulses and<br \/>\n   selfish inclinations, he falls back upon the higher and calmer<br \/>\n   consciousness within him, and begins to steady himself upon a<br \/>\n   principle. The realization of unchanging principles in consciousness is<br \/>\n   at once the source and secret of the highest power.<\/p>\n<p>   When, after much searching, and suffering, and sacrificing, the light<br \/>\n   of an eternal principle dawns upon the soul, a divine calm ensues and<br \/>\n   joy unspeakable gladdens the heart.<\/p>\n<p>   He who has realized such a principle ceases to wander, and remains<br \/>\n   poised and self-possessed. He ceases to be &quot;passion&#8217;s slave,&quot; and<br \/>\n   becomes a master-builder in the Temple of Destiny.<\/p>\n<p>   The man that is governed by self, and not by a principle, changes his<br \/>\n   front when his selfish comforts are threatened. Deeply intent upon<br \/>\n   defending and guarding his own interests, he regards all means as<br \/>\n   lawful that will subserve that end. He is continually scheming as to<br \/>\n   how he may protect himself against his enemies, being too self-centered<br \/>\n   to perceive that he is his own enemy. Such a man&#8217;s work crumbles away,<br \/>\n   for it is divorced from Truth and power. All effort that is grounded<br \/>\n   upon self, perishes; only that work endures that is built upon an<br \/>\n   indestructible principle.<\/p>\n<p>   The man that stands upon a principle is the same calm, dauntless,<br \/>\n   self-possessed man under all circumstances. When the hour of trial<br \/>\n   comes, and he has to decide between his personal comforts and Truth, he<br \/>\n   gives up his comforts and remains firm. Even the prospect of torture<br \/>\n   and death cannot alter or deter him. The man of self regards the loss<br \/>\n   of his wealth, his comforts, or his life as the greatest calamities<br \/>\n   which can befall him. The man of principle looks upon these incidents<br \/>\n   as comparatively insignificant, and not to be weighed with loss of<br \/>\n   character, loss of Truth. To desert Truth is, to him, the only<br \/>\n   happening which can really be called a calamity.<\/p>\n<p>   It is the hour of crisis which decides who are the minions of darkness,<br \/>\n   and who the children of Light. It is the epoch of threatening disaster,<br \/>\n   ruin, and persecution which divides the sheep from the goats, and<br \/>\n   reveals to the reverential gaze of succeeding ages the men and women of<br \/>\n   power.<\/p>\n<p>   It is easy for a man, so long as he is left in the enjoyment of his<br \/>\n   possessions, to persuade himself that he believes in and adheres to the<br \/>\n   principles of Peace, Brotherhood, and Universal Love; but if, when his<br \/>\n   enjoyments are threatened, or he imagines they are threatened, he<br \/>\n   begins to clamor loudly for war, he shows that he believes in and<br \/>\n   stands upon, not Peace, Brotherhood, and Love, but strife, selfishness,<br \/>\n   and hatred.<\/p>\n<p>   He who does not desert his principles when threatened with the loss of<br \/>\n   every earthly thing, even to the loss of reputation and life, is the<br \/>\n   man of power; is the man whose every word and work endures; is the man<br \/>\n   whom the afterworld honors, reveres, and worships. Rather than desert<br \/>\n   that principle of Divine Love on which he rested, and in which all his<br \/>\n   trust was placed, Jesus endured the utmost extremity of agony and<br \/>\n   deprivation; and today the world prostrates itself at his pierced feet<br \/>\n   in rapt adoration.<\/p>\n<p>   There is no way to the acquirement of spiritual power except by that<br \/>\n   inward illumination and enlightenment which is the realization of<br \/>\n   spiritual principles; and those principles can only be realized by<br \/>\n   constant practice and application.<\/p>\n<p>   Take the principle of divine Love, and quietly and diligently meditate<br \/>\n   upon it with the object of arriving at a thorough understanding of it.<br \/>\n   Bring its searching light to bear upon all your habits, your actions,<br \/>\n   your speech and intercourse with others, your every secret thought and<br \/>\n   desire. As you persevere in this course, the divine Love will become<br \/>\n   more and more perfectly revealed to you, and your own shortcomings will<br \/>\n   stand out in more and more vivid contrast, spurring you on to renewed<br \/>\n   endeavor; and having once caught a glimpse of the incomparable majesty<br \/>\n   of that imperishable principle, you will never again rest in your<br \/>\n   weakness, your selfishness, your imperfection, but will pursue that<br \/>\n   Love until you have relinquished every discordant element, and have<br \/>\n   brought yourself into perfect harmony with it. And that state of inward<br \/>\n   harmony is spiritual power. Take also other spiritual principles, such<br \/>\n   as Purity and Compassion, and apply them in the same way, and, so<br \/>\n   exacting is Truth, you will be able to make no stay, no resting-place<br \/>\n   until the inmost garment of your soul is bereft of every stain, and<br \/>\n   your heart has become incapable of any hard, condemnatory, and pitiless<br \/>\n   impulse.<\/p>\n<p>   Only in so far as you understand, realize, and rely upon, these<br \/>\n   principles, will you acquire spiritual power, and that power will be<br \/>\n   manifested in and through you in the form of increasing dispassion,<br \/>\n   patience and equanimity.<\/p>\n<p>   Dispassion argues superior self-control; sublime patience is the very<br \/>\n   hall-mark of divine knowledge, and to retain an unbroken calm amid all<br \/>\n   the duties and distractions of life, marks off the man of power. &quot;It is<br \/>\n   easy in the world to live after the world&#8217;s opinion; it is easy in<br \/>\n   solitude to live after our own; but the great man is he who in the<br \/>\n   midst of the crowd keeps with perfect sweetness the independence of<br \/>\n   solitude.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   Some mystics hold that perfection in dispassion is the source of that<br \/>\n   power by which miracles (so-called) are performed, and truly he who has<br \/>\n   gained such perfect control of all his interior forces that no shock,<br \/>\n   however great, can for one moment unbalance him, must be capable of<br \/>\n   guiding and directing those forces with a master-hand.<\/p>\n<p>   To grow in self-control, in patience, in equanimity, is to grow in<br \/>\n   strength and power; and you can only thus grow by focusing your<br \/>\n   consciousness upon a principle. As a child, after making many and<br \/>\n   vigorous attempts to walk unaided, at last succeeds, after numerous<br \/>\n   falls, in accomplishing this, so you must enter the way of power by<br \/>\n   first attempting to stand alone. Break away from the tyranny of custom,<br \/>\n   tradition, conventionality, and the opinions of others, until you<br \/>\n   succeed in walking lonely and erect among men. Rely upon your own<br \/>\n   judgment; be true to your own conscience; follow the Light that is<br \/>\n   within you; all outward lights are so many will-o&#8217;-the-wisps. There<br \/>\n   will be those who will tell you that you are foolish; that your<br \/>\n   judgment is faulty; that your conscience is all awry, and that the<br \/>\n   Light within you is darkness; but heed them not. If what they say is<br \/>\n   true the sooner you, as a searcher for wisdom, find it out the better,<br \/>\n   and you can only make the discovery by bringing your powers to the<br \/>\n   test. Therefore, pursue your course bravely. Your conscience is at<br \/>\n   least your own, and to follow it is to be a man; to follow the<br \/>\n   conscience of another is to be a slave. You will have many falls, will<br \/>\n   suffer many wounds, will endure many buffetings for a time, but press<br \/>\n   on in faith, believing that sure and certain victory lies ahead. Search<br \/>\n   for a rock, a principle, and having found it cling to it; get it under<br \/>\n   your feet and stand erect upon it, until at last, immovably fixed upon<br \/>\n   it, you succeed in defying the fury of the waves and storms of<br \/>\n   selfishness.<\/p>\n<p>   For selfishness in any and every form is dissipation, weakness, death;<br \/>\n   unselfishness in its spiritual aspect is conservation, power, life. As<br \/>\n   you grow in spiritual life, and become established upon principles, you<br \/>\n   will become as beautiful and as unchangeable as those principles, will<br \/>\n   taste of the sweetness of their immortal essence, and will realize the<br \/>\n   eternal and indestructible nature of the God within.<\/p>\n<p>   No harmful shaft can reach the righteous man,<\/p>\n<p>   Standing erect amid the storms of hate,<\/p>\n<p>   Defying hurt and injury and ban,<\/p>\n<p>   Surrounded by the trembling slaves of Fate.<\/p>\n<p>   Majestic in the strength of silent power,<\/p>\n<p>   Serene he stands, nor changes not nor turns;<\/p>\n<p>   Patient and firm in suffering&#8217;s darkest hour,<\/p>\n<p>   Time bends to him, and death and doom he spurns.<\/p>\n<p>   Wrath&#8217;s lurid lightnings round about him play,<\/p>\n<p>   And hell&#8217;s deep thunders roll about his head;<\/p>\n<p>   Yet heeds he not, for him they cannot slay<\/p>\n<p>   Who stands whence earth and time and space are fled.<\/p>\n<p>   Sheltered by deathless love, what fear hath he?<\/p>\n<p>   Armored in changeless Truth, what can he know<\/p>\n<p>   Of loss and gain? Knowing eternity,<\/p>\n<p>   He moves not whilst the shadows come and go.<\/p>\n<p>   Call him immortal, call him Truth and Light<\/p>\n<p>   And splendor of prophetic majesty<\/p>\n<p>   Who bideth thus amid the powers of night,<\/p>\n<p>   Clothed with the glory of divinity.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>THE REALIZATION OF SELFLESS LOVE<\/p>\n<p>   It is said that Michael Angelo saw in every rough block of stone a<br \/>\n   thing of beauty awaiting the master-hand to bring it into reality. Even<br \/>\n   so, within each there reposes the Divine Image awaiting the master-hand<br \/>\n   of Faith and the chisel of Patience to bring it into manifestation. And<br \/>\n   that Divine Image is revealed and realized as stainless, selfless Love.<\/p>\n<p>   Hidden deep in every human heart, though frequently covered up with a<br \/>\n   mass of hard and almost impenetrable accretions, is the spirit of<br \/>\n   Divine Love, whose holy and spotless essence is undying and eternal. It<br \/>\n   is the Truth in man; it is that which belongs to the Supreme: that<br \/>\n   which is real and immortal. All else changes and passes away; this<br \/>\n   alone is permanent and imperishable; and to realize this Love by<br \/>\n   ceaseless diligence in the practice of the highest righteousness, to<br \/>\n   live in it and to become fully conscious in it, is to enter into<br \/>\n   immortality here and now, is to become one with Truth, one with God,<br \/>\n   one with the central Heart of all things, and to know our own divine<br \/>\n   and eternal nature.<\/p>\n<p>   To reach this Love, to understand and experience it, one must work with<br \/>\n   great persistency and diligence upon his heart and mind, must ever<br \/>\n   renew his patience and keep strong his faith, for there will be much to<br \/>\n   remove, much to accomplish before the Divine Image is revealed in all<br \/>\n   its glorious beauty.<\/p>\n<p>   He who strives to reach and to accomplish the divine will be tried to<br \/>\n   the very uttermost; and this is absolutely necessary, for how else<br \/>\n   could one acquire that sublime patience without which there is no real<br \/>\n   wisdom, no divinity? Ever and anon, as he proceeds, all his work will<br \/>\n   seem to be futile, and his efforts appear to be thrown away. Now and<br \/>\n   then a hasty touch will mar his image, and perhaps when he imagines his<br \/>\n   work is almost completed he will find what he imagined to be the<br \/>\n   beautiful form of Divine Love utterly destroyed, and he must begin<br \/>\n   again with his past bitter experience to guide and help him. But he who<br \/>\n   has resolutely set himself to realize the Highest recognizes no such<br \/>\n   thing as defeat. All failures are apparent, not real. Every slip, every<br \/>\n   fall, every return to selfishness is a lesson learned, an experience<br \/>\n   gained, from which a golden grain of wisdom is extracted, helping the<br \/>\n   striver toward the accomplishment of his lofty object. To recognize<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;That of our vices we can frame<\/p>\n<p>   A ladder if we will but tread<\/p>\n<p>   Beneath our feet each deed of shame,&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   is to enter the way that leads unmistakably toward the Divine, and the<br \/>\n   failings of one who thus recognizes are so many dead selves, upon which<br \/>\n   he rises, as upon stepping-stones, to higher things.<\/p>\n<p>   Once come to regard your failings, your sorrows and sufferings as so<br \/>\n   many voices telling you plainly where you are weak and faulty, where<br \/>\n   you fall below the true and the divine, you will then begin to<br \/>\n   ceaselessly watch yourself, and every slip, every pang of pain will<br \/>\n   show you where you are to set to work, and what you have to remove out<br \/>\n   of your heart in order to bring it nearer to the likeness of the<br \/>\n   Divine, nearer to the Perfect Love. And as you proceed, day by day<br \/>\n   detaching yourself more and more from the inward selfishness the Love<br \/>\n   that is selfless will gradually become revealed to you. And when you<br \/>\n   are growing patient and calm, when your petulances, tempers, and<br \/>\n   irritabilities are passing away from you, and the more powerful lusts<br \/>\n   and prejudices cease to dominate and enslave you, then you will know<br \/>\n   that the divine is awakening within you, that you are drawing near to<br \/>\n   the eternal Heart, that you are not far from that selfless Love, the<br \/>\n   possession of which is peace and immortality.<\/p>\n<p>   Divine Love is distinguished from human loves in this supremely<br \/>\n   important particular, it is free from partiality. Human loves cling to<br \/>\n   a particular object to the exclusion of all else, and when that object<br \/>\n   is removed, great and deep is the resultant suffering to the one who<br \/>\n   loves. Divine Love embraces the whole universe, and, without clinging<br \/>\n   to any part, yet contains within itself the whole, and he who comes to<br \/>\n   it by gradually purifying and broadening his human loves until all the<br \/>\n   selfish and impure elements are burnt out of them, ceases from<br \/>\n   suffering. It is because human loves are narrow and confined and<br \/>\n   mingled with selfishness that they cause suffering. No suffering can<br \/>\n   result from that Love which is so absolutely pure that it seeks nothing<br \/>\n   for itself. Nevertheless, human loves are absolutely necessary as steps<br \/>\n   toward the Divine, and no soul is prepared to partake of Divine Love<br \/>\n   until it has become capable of the deepest and most intense human love.<br \/>\n   It is only by passing through human loves and human sufferings that<br \/>\n   Divine Love is reached and realized.<\/p>\n<p>   All human loves are perishable like the forms to which they cling; but<br \/>\n   there is a Love that is imperishable, and that does not cling to<br \/>\n   appearances.<\/p>\n<p>   All human loves are counterbalanced by human hates; but there is a Love<br \/>\n   that admits of no opposite or reaction; divine and free from all taint<br \/>\n   of self, that sheds its fragrance on all alike.<\/p>\n<p>   Human loves are reflections of the Divine Love, and draw the soul<br \/>\n   nearer to the reality, the Love that knows neither sorrow nor change.<\/p>\n<p>   It is well that the mother, clinging with passionate tenderness to the<br \/>\n   little helpless form of flesh that lies on her bosom, should be<br \/>\n   overwhelmed with the dark waters of sorrow when she sees it laid in the<br \/>\n   cold earth. It is well that her tears should flow and her heart ache,<br \/>\n   for only thus can she be reminded of the evanescent nature of the joys<br \/>\n   and objects of sense, and be drawn nearer to the eternal and<br \/>\n   imperishable Reality.<\/p>\n<p>   It is well that lover, brother, sister, husband, wife should suffer<br \/>\n   deep anguish, and be enveloped in gloom when the visible object of<br \/>\n   their affections is torn from them, so that they may learn to turn<br \/>\n   their affections toward the invisible Source of all, where alone<br \/>\n   abiding satisfaction is to be found.<\/p>\n<p>   It is well that the proud, the ambitious, the self-seeking, should<br \/>\n   suffer defeat, humiliation, and misfortune; that they should pass<br \/>\n   through the scorching fires of affliction; for only thus can the<br \/>\n   wayward soul be brought to reflect upon the enigma of life; only thus<br \/>\n   can the heart be softened and purified, and prepared to receive the<br \/>\n   Truth.<\/p>\n<p>   When the sting of anguish penetrates the heart of human love; when<br \/>\n   gloom and loneliness and desertion cloud the soul of friendship and<br \/>\n   trust, then it is that the heart turns toward the sheltering love of<br \/>\n   the Eternal, and finds rest in its silent peace. And whosoever comes to<br \/>\n   this Love is not turned away comfortless, is not pierced with anguish<br \/>\n   nor surrounded with gloom; and is never deserted in the dark hour of<br \/>\n   trial.<\/p>\n<p>   The glory of Divine Love can only be revealed in the heart that is<br \/>\n   chastened by sorrow, and the image of the heavenly state can only be<br \/>\n   perceived and realized when the lifeless, formless accretions of<br \/>\n   ignorance and self are hewn away.<\/p>\n<p>   Only that Love that seeks no personal gratification or reward, that<br \/>\n   does not make distinctions, and that leaves behind no heartaches, can<br \/>\n   be called divine.<\/p>\n<p>   Men, clinging to self and to the comfortless shadows of evil, are in<br \/>\n   the habit of thinking of divine Love as something belonging to a God<br \/>\n   who is out of reach; as something outside themselves, and that must for<br \/>\n   ever remain outside. Truly, the Love of God is ever beyond the reach of<br \/>\n   self, but when the heart and mind are emptied of self then the selfless<br \/>\n   Love, the supreme Love, the Love that is of God or Good becomes an<br \/>\n   inward and abiding reality.<\/p>\n<p>   And this inward realization of holy Love is none other than the Love of<br \/>\n   Christ that is so much talked about and so little comprehended. The<br \/>\n   Love that not only saves the soul from sin, but lifts it also above the<br \/>\n   power of temptation.<\/p>\n<p>   But how may one attain to this sublime realization? The answer which<br \/>\n   Truth has always given, and will ever give to this question is,&#8211;&quot;Empty<br \/>\n   thyself, and I will fill thee.&quot; Divine Love cannot be known until self<br \/>\n   is dead, for self is the denial of Love, and how can that which is<br \/>\n   known be also denied? Not until the stone of self is rolled away from<br \/>\n   the sepulcher of the soul does the immortal Christ, the pure Spirit of<br \/>\n   Love, hitherto crucified, dead and buried, cast off the bands of<br \/>\n   ignorance, and come forth in all the majesty of His resurrection.<\/p>\n<p>   You believe that the Christ of Nazareth was put to death and rose<br \/>\n   again. I do not say you err in that belief; but if you refuse to<br \/>\n   believe that the gentle spirit of Love is crucified daily upon the dark<br \/>\n   cross of your selfish desires, then, I say, you err in this unbelief,<br \/>\n   and have not yet perceived, even afar off, the Love of Christ.<\/p>\n<p>   You say that you have tasted of salvation in the Love of Christ. Are<br \/>\n   you saved from your temper, your irritability, your vanity, your<br \/>\n   personal dislikes, your judgment and condemnation of others? If not,<br \/>\n   from what are you saved, and wherein have you realized the transforming<br \/>\n   Love of Christ?<\/p>\n<p>   He who has realized the Love that is divine has become a new man, and<br \/>\n   has ceased to be swayed and dominated by the old elements of self. He<br \/>\n   is known for his patience, his purity, his self-control, his deep<br \/>\n   charity of heart, and his unalterable sweetness.<\/p>\n<p>   Divine or selfless Love is not a mere sentiment or emotion; it is a<br \/>\n   state of knowledge which destroys the dominion of evil and the belief<br \/>\n   in evil, and lifts the soul into the joyful realization of the supreme<br \/>\n   Good. To the divinely wise, knowledge and Love are one and inseparable.<\/p>\n<p>   It is toward the complete realization of this divine Love that the<br \/>\n   whole world is moving; it was for this purpose that the universe came<br \/>\n   into existence, and every grasping at happiness, every reaching out of<br \/>\n   the soul toward objects, ideas and ideals, is an effort to realize it.<br \/>\n   But the world does not realize this Love at present because it is<br \/>\n   grasping at the fleeting shadow and ignoring, in its blindness, the<br \/>\n   substance. And so suffering and sorrow continue, and must continue<br \/>\n   until the world, taught by its self-inflicted pains, discovers the Love<br \/>\n   that is selfless, the wisdom that is calm and full of peace.<\/p>\n<p>   And this Love, this Wisdom, this Peace, this tranquil state of mind and<br \/>\n   heart may be attained to, may be realized by all who are willing and<br \/>\n   ready to yield up self, and who are prepared to humbly enter into a<br \/>\n   comprehension of all that the giving up of self involves. There is no<br \/>\n   arbitrary power in the universe, and the strongest chains of fate by<br \/>\n   which men are bound are self-forged. Men are chained to that which<br \/>\n   causes suffering because they desire to be so, because they love their<br \/>\n   chains, because they think their little dark prison of self is sweet<br \/>\n   and beautiful, and they are afraid that if they desert that prison they<br \/>\n   will lose all that is real and worth having.<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;Ye suffer from yourselves, none else compels,<\/p>\n<p>   None other holds ye that ye live and die.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   And the indwelling power which forged the chains and built around<br \/>\n   itself the dark and narrow prison, can break away when it desires and<br \/>\n   wills to do so, and the soul does will to do so when it has discovered<br \/>\n   the worthlessness of its prison, when long suffering has prepared it<br \/>\n   for the reception of the boundless Light and Love.<\/p>\n<p>   As the shadow follows the form, and as smoke comes after fire, so<br \/>\n   effect follows cause, and suffering and bliss follow the thoughts and<br \/>\n   deeds of men. There is no effect in the world around us but has its<br \/>\n   hidden or revealed cause, and that cause is in accordance with absolute<br \/>\n   justice. Men reap a harvest of suffering because in the near or distant<br \/>\n   past they have sown the seeds of evil; they reap a harvest of bliss<br \/>\n   also as a result of their own sowing of the seeds of good. Let a man<br \/>\n   meditate upon this, let him strive to understand it, and he will then<br \/>\n   begin to sow only seeds of good, and will burn up the tares and weeds<br \/>\n   which he has formerly grown in the garden of his heart.<\/p>\n<p>   The world does not understand the Love that is selfless because it is<br \/>\n   engrossed in the pursuit of its own pleasures, and cramped within the<br \/>\n   narrow limits of perishable interests mistaking, in its ignorance,<br \/>\n   those pleasures and interests for real and abiding things. Caught in<br \/>\n   the flames of fleshly lusts, and burning with anguish, it sees not the<br \/>\n   pure and peaceful beauty of Truth. Feeding upon the swinish husks of<br \/>\n   error and self-delusion, it is shut out from the mansion of all-seeing<br \/>\n   Love.<\/p>\n<p>   Not having this Love, not understanding it, men institute innumerable<br \/>\n   reforms which involve no inward sacrifice, and each imagines that his<br \/>\n   reform is going to right the world for ever, while he himself continues<br \/>\n   to propagate evil by engaging it in his own heart. That only can be<br \/>\n   called reform which tends to reform the human heart, for all evil has<br \/>\n   its rise there, and not until the world, ceasing from selfishness and<br \/>\n   party strife, has learned the lesson of divine Love, will it realize<br \/>\n   the Golden Age of universal blessedness.<\/p>\n<p>   Let the rich cease to despise the poor, and the poor to condemn the<br \/>\n   rich; let the greedy learn how to give, and the lustful how to grow<br \/>\n   pure; let the partisan cease from strife, and the uncharitable begin to<br \/>\n   forgive; let the envious endeavor to rejoice with others, and the<br \/>\n   slanderers grow ashamed of their conduct. Let men and women take this<br \/>\n   course, and, lo! the Golden Age is at hand. He, therefore, who purifies<br \/>\n   his own heart is the world&#8217;s greatest benefactor.<\/p>\n<p>   Yet, though the world is, and will be for many ages to come, shut out<br \/>\n   from that Age of Gold, which is the realization of selfless Love, you,<br \/>\n   if you are willing, may enter it now, by rising above your selfish<br \/>\n   self; if you will pass from prejudice, hatred, and condemnation, to<br \/>\n   gentle and forgiving love.<\/p>\n<p>   Where hatred, dislike, and condemnation are, selfless Love does not<br \/>\n   abide.<br \/>\n   It resides only in the heart that has ceased from all condemnation.<\/p>\n<p>   You say, &quot;How can I love the drunkard, the hypocrite, the sneak, the<br \/>\n   murderer? I am compelled to dislike and condemn such men.&quot; It is true<br \/>\n   you cannot love such men emotionally, but when you say that you must<br \/>\n   perforce dislike and condemn them you show that you are not acquainted<br \/>\n   with the Great over-ruling Love; for it is possible to attain to such a<br \/>\n   state of interior enlightenment as will enable you to perceive the<br \/>\n   train of causes by which these men have become as they are, to enter<br \/>\n   into their intense sufferings, and to know the certainty of their<br \/>\n   ultimate purification. Possessed of such knowledge it will be utterly<br \/>\n   impossible for you any longer to dislike or condemn them, and you will<br \/>\n   always think of them with perfect calmness and deep compassion.<\/p>\n<p>   If you love people and speak of them with praise until they in some way<br \/>\n   thwart you, or do something of which you disapprove, and then you<br \/>\n   dislike them and speak of them with dispraise, you are not governed by<br \/>\n   the Love which is of God. If, in your heart, you are continually<br \/>\n   arraigning and condemning others, selfless Love is hidden from you.<\/p>\n<p>   He who knows that Love is at the heart of all things, and has realized<br \/>\n   the all-sufficing power of that Love, has no room in his heart for<br \/>\n   condemnation.<\/p>\n<p>   Men, not knowing this Love, constitute themselves judge and executioner<br \/>\n   of their fellows, forgetting that there is the Eternal Judge and<br \/>\n   Executioner, and in so far as men deviate from them in their own views,<br \/>\n   their particular reforms and methods, they brand them as fanatical,<br \/>\n   unbalanced, lacking judgment, sincerity, and honesty; in so far as<br \/>\n   others approximate to their own standard do they look upon them as<br \/>\n   being everything that is admirable. Such are the men who are centered<br \/>\n   in self. But he whose heart is centered in the supreme Love does not so<br \/>\n   brand and classify men; does not seek to convert men to his own views,<br \/>\n   not to convince them of the superiority of his methods. Knowing the Law<br \/>\n   of Love, he lives it, and maintains the same calm attitude of mind and<br \/>\n   sweetness of heart toward all. The debased and the virtuous, the<br \/>\n   foolish and the wise, the learned and the unlearned, the selfish and<br \/>\n   the unselfish receive alike the benediction of his tranquil thought.<\/p>\n<p>   You can only attain to this supreme knowledge, this divine Love by<br \/>\n   unremitting endeavor in self-discipline, and by gaining victory after<br \/>\n   victory over yourself. Only the pure in heart see God, and when your<br \/>\n   heart is sufficiently purified you will enter into the New Birth, and<br \/>\n   the Love that does not die, nor change, nor end in pain and sorrow will<br \/>\n   be awakened within you, and you will be at peace.<\/p>\n<p>   He who strives for the attainment of divine Love is ever seeking to<br \/>\n   overcome the spirit of condemnation, for where there is pure spiritual<br \/>\n   knowledge, condemnation cannot exist, and only in the heart that has<br \/>\n   become incapable of condemnation is Love perfected and fully realized.<\/p>\n<p>   The Christian condemns the Atheist; the Atheist satirizes the<br \/>\n   Christian; the Catholic and Protestant are ceaselessly engaged in wordy<br \/>\n   warfare, and the spirit of strife and hatred rules where peace and love<br \/>\n   should be.<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;He that hateth his brother is a murderer,&quot; a crucifier of the divine<br \/>\n   Spirit of Love; and until you can regard men of all religions and of no<br \/>\n   religion with the same impartial spirit, with all freedom from dislike,<br \/>\n   and with perfect equanimity, you have yet to strive for that Love which<br \/>\n   bestows upon its possessor freedom and salvation.<\/p>\n<p>   The realization of divine knowledge, selfless Love, utterly destroys<br \/>\n   the spirit of condemnation, disperses all evil, and lifts the<br \/>\n   consciousness to that height of pure vision where Love, Goodness,<br \/>\n   Justice are seen to be universal, supreme, all-conquering,<br \/>\n   indestructible.<\/p>\n<p>   Train your mind in strong, impartial, and gentle thought; train your<br \/>\n   heart in purity and compassion; train your tongue to silence and to<br \/>\n   true and stainless speech; so shall you enter the way of holiness and<br \/>\n   peace, and shall ultimately realize the immortal Love. So living,<br \/>\n   without seeking to convert, you will convince; without arguing, you<br \/>\n   will teach; not cherishing ambition, the wise will find you out; and<br \/>\n   without striving to gain men&#8217;s opinions, you will subdue their hearts.<br \/>\n   For Love is all-conquering, all-powerful; and the thoughts, and deeds,<br \/>\n   and words of Love can never perish.<\/p>\n<p>   To know that Love is universal, supreme, all-sufficing; to be freed<br \/>\n   from the trammels of evil; to be quit of the inward unrest; to know<br \/>\n   that all men are striving to realize the Truth each in his own way; to<br \/>\n   be satisfied, sorrowless, serene; this is peace; this is gladness; this<br \/>\n   is immortality; this is Divinity; this is the realization of selfless<br \/>\n   Love.<\/p>\n<p>   I stood upon the shore, and saw the rocks<\/p>\n<p>   Resist the onslaught of the mighty sea,<\/p>\n<p>   And when I thought how all the countless shocks<\/p>\n<p>   They had withstood through an eternity,<\/p>\n<p>   I said, &quot;To wear away this solid main<\/p>\n<p>   The ceaseless efforts of the waves are vain.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   But when I thought how they the rocks had rent,<\/p>\n<p>   And saw the sand and shingles at my feet<\/p>\n<p>   (Poor passive remnants of resistance spent)<\/p>\n<p>   Tumbled and tossed where they the waters meet,<\/p>\n<p>   Then saw I ancient landmarks &#8216;neath the waves,<\/p>\n<p>   And knew the waters held the stones their slaves.<\/p>\n<p>   I saw the mighty work the waters wrought<\/p>\n<p>   By patient softness and unceasing flow;<\/p>\n<p>   How they the proudest promontory brought<\/p>\n<p>   Unto their feet, and massy hills laid low;<\/p>\n<p>   How the soft drops the adamantine wall<\/p>\n<p>   Conquered at last, and brought it to its fall.<\/p>\n<p>   And then I knew that hard, resisting sin<\/p>\n<p>   Should yield at last to Love&#8217;s soft ceaseless roll<\/p>\n<p>   Coming and going, ever flowing in<\/p>\n<p>   Upon the proud rocks of the human soul;<\/p>\n<p>   That all resistance should be spent and past,<\/p>\n<p>   And every heart yield unto it at last.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>ENTERING INTO THE INFINITE<\/p>\n<p>   From the beginning of time, man, in spite of his bodily appetites and<br \/>\n   desires, in the midst of all his clinging to earthly and impermanent<br \/>\n   things, has ever been intuitively conscious of the limited, transient,<br \/>\n   and illusionary nature of his material existence, and in his sane and<br \/>\n   silent moments has tried to reach out into a comprehension of the<br \/>\n   Infinite, and has turned with tearful aspiration toward the restful<br \/>\n   Reality of the Eternal Heart.<\/p>\n<p>   While vainly imagining that the pleasures of earth are real and<br \/>\n   satisfying, pain and sorrow continually remind him of their unreal and<br \/>\n   unsatisfying nature. Ever striving to believe that complete<br \/>\n   satisfaction is to be found in material things, he is conscious of an<br \/>\n   inward and persistent revolt against this belief, which revolt is at<br \/>\n   once a refutation of his essential mortality, and an inherent and<br \/>\n   imperishable proof that only in the immortal, the eternal, the infinite<br \/>\n   can he find abiding satisfaction and unbroken peace.<\/p>\n<p>   And here is the common ground of faith; here the root and spring of all<br \/>\n   religion; here the soul of Brotherhood and the heart of Love,&#8211;that man<br \/>\n   is essentially and spiritually divine and eternal, and that, immersed<br \/>\n   in mortality and troubled with unrest, he is ever striving to enter<br \/>\n   into a consciousness of his real nature.<\/p>\n<p>   The spirit of man is inseparable from the Infinite, and can be<br \/>\n   satisfied with nothing short of the Infinite, and the burden of pain<br \/>\n   will continue to weigh upon man&#8217;s heart, and the shadows of sorrow to<br \/>\n   darken his pathway until, ceasing from his wanderings in the<br \/>\n   dream-world of matter, he comes back to his home in the reality of the<br \/>\n   Eternal.<\/p>\n<p>   As the smallest drop of water detached from the ocean contains all the<br \/>\n   qualities of the ocean, so man, detached in consciousness from the<br \/>\n   Infinite, contains within him its likeness; and as the drop of water<br \/>\n   must, by the law of its nature, ultimately find its way back to the<br \/>\n   ocean and lose itself in its silent depths, so must man, by the<br \/>\n   unfailing law of his nature, at last return to his source, and lose<br \/>\n   himself in the great ocean of the Infinite.<\/p>\n<p>   To re-become one with the Infinite is the goal of man. To enter into<br \/>\n   perfect harmony with the Eternal Law is Wisdom, Love and Peace. But<br \/>\n   this divine state is, and must ever be, incomprehensible to the merely<br \/>\n   personal. Personality, separateness, selfishness are one and the same,<br \/>\n   and are the antithesis of wisdom and divinity. By the unqualified<br \/>\n   surrender of the personality, separateness and selfishness cease, and<br \/>\n   man enters into the possession of his divine heritage of immortality<br \/>\n   and infinity.<\/p>\n<p>   Such surrender of the personality is regarded by the worldly and<br \/>\n   selfish mind as the most grievous of all calamities, the most<br \/>\n   irreparable loss, yet it is the one supreme and incomparable blessing,<br \/>\n   the only real and lasting gain. The mind unenlightened upon the inner<br \/>\n   laws of being, and upon the nature and destiny of its own life, clings<br \/>\n   to transient appearances, things which have in them no enduring<br \/>\n   substantiality, and so clinging, perishes, for the time being, amid the<br \/>\n   shattered wreckage of its own illusions.<\/p>\n<p>   Men cling to and gratify the flesh as though it were going to last for<br \/>\n   ever, and though they try to forget the nearness and inevitability of<br \/>\n   its dissolution, the dread of death and of the loss of all that they<br \/>\n   cling to clouds their happiest hours, and the chilling shadow of their<br \/>\n   own selfishness follows them like a remorseless specter.<\/p>\n<p>   And with the accumulation of temporal comforts and luxuries, the<br \/>\n   divinity within men is drugged, and they sink deeper and deeper into<br \/>\n   materiality, into the perishable life of the senses, and where there is<br \/>\n   sufficient intellect, theories concerning the immortality of the flesh<br \/>\n   come to be regarded as infallible truths. When a man&#8217;s soul is clouded<br \/>\n   with selfishness in any or every form, he loses the power of spiritual<br \/>\n   discrimination, and confuses the temporal with the eternal, the<br \/>\n   perishable with the permanent, mortality with immortality, and error<br \/>\n   with Truth. It is thus that the world has come to be filled with<br \/>\n   theories and speculations having no foundation in human experience.<br \/>\n   Every body of flesh contains within itself, from the hour of birth, the<br \/>\n   elements of its own destruction, and by the unalterable law of its own<br \/>\n   nature must it pass away.<\/p>\n<p>   The perishable in the universe can never become permanent; the<br \/>\n   permanent can never pass away; the mortal can never become immortal;<br \/>\n   the immortal can never die; the temporal cannot become eternal nor the<br \/>\n   eternal become temporal; appearance can never become reality, nor<br \/>\n   reality fade into appearance; error can never become Truth, nor can<br \/>\n   Truth become error. Man cannot immortalize the flesh, but, by<br \/>\n   overcoming the flesh, by relinquishing all its inclinations, he can<br \/>\n   enter the region of immortality. &quot;God alone hath immortality,&quot; and only<br \/>\n   by realizing the God state of consciousness does man enter into<br \/>\n   immortality.<\/p>\n<p>   All nature in its myriad forms of life is changeable, impermanent,<br \/>\n   unenduring. Only the informing Principle of nature endures. Nature is<br \/>\n   many, and is marked by separation. The informing Principle is One, and<br \/>\n   is marked by unity. By overcoming the senses and the selfishness<br \/>\n   within, which is the overcoming of nature, man emerges from the<br \/>\n   chrysalis of the personal and illusory, and wings himself into the<br \/>\n   glorious light of the impersonal, the region of universal Truth, out of<br \/>\n   which all perishable forms come.<\/p>\n<p>   Let men, therefore, practice self-denial; let them conquer their animal<br \/>\n   inclinations; let them refuse to be enslaved by luxury and pleasure;<br \/>\n   let them practice virtue, and grow daily into high and ever higher<br \/>\n   virtue, until at last they grow into the Divine, and enter into both<br \/>\n   the practice and the comprehension of humility, meekness, forgiveness,<br \/>\n   compassion, and love, which practice and comprehension constitute<br \/>\n   Divinity.<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;Good-will gives insight,&quot; and only he who has so conquered his<br \/>\n   personality that he has but one attitude of mind, that of good-will,<br \/>\n   toward all creatures, is possessed of divine insight, and is capable of<br \/>\n   distinguishing the true from the false. The supremely good man is,<br \/>\n   therefore, the wise man, the divine man, the enlightened seer, the<br \/>\n   knower of the Eternal. Where you find unbroken gentleness, enduring<br \/>\n   patience, sublime lowliness, graciousness of speech, self-control,<br \/>\n   self-forgetfulness, and deep and abounding sympathy, look there for the<br \/>\n   highest wisdom, seek the company of such a one, for he has realized the<br \/>\n   Divine, he lives with the Eternal, he has become one with the Infinite.<br \/>\n   Believe not him that is impatient, given to anger, boastful, who clings<br \/>\n   to pleasure and refuses to renounce his selfish gratifications, and who<br \/>\n   practices not good-will and far-reaching compassion, for such a one<br \/>\n   hath not wisdom, vain is all his knowledge, and his works and words<br \/>\n   will perish, for they are grounded on that which passes away.<\/p>\n<p>   Let a man abandon self, let him overcome the world, let him deny the<br \/>\n   personal; by this pathway only can he enter into the heart of the<br \/>\n   Infinite.<\/p>\n<p>   The world, the body, the personality are mirages upon the desert of<br \/>\n   time; transitory dreams in the dark night of spiritual slumber, and<br \/>\n   those who have crossed the desert, those who are spiritually awakened,<br \/>\n   have alone comprehended the Universal Reality where all appearances are<br \/>\n   dispersed and dreaming and delusion are destroyed.<\/p>\n<p>   There is one Great Law which exacts unconditional obedience, one<br \/>\n   unifying principle which is the basis of all diversity, one eternal<br \/>\n   Truth wherein all the problems of earth pass away like shadows. To<br \/>\n   realize this Law, this Unity, this Truth, is to enter into the<br \/>\n   Infinite, is to become one with the Eternal.<\/p>\n<p>   To center one&#8217;s life in the Great Law of Love is to enter into rest,<br \/>\n   harmony, peace. To refrain from all participation in evil and discord;<br \/>\n   to cease from all resistance to evil, and from the omission of that<br \/>\n   which is good, and to fall back upon unswerving obedience to the holy<br \/>\n   calm within, is to enter into the inmost heart of things, is to attain<br \/>\n   to a living, conscious experience of that eternal and infinite<br \/>\n   principle which must ever remain a hidden mystery to the merely<br \/>\n   perceptive intellect. Until this principle is realized, the soul is not<br \/>\n   established in peace, and he who so realizes is truly wise; not wise<br \/>\n   with the wisdom of the learned, but with the simplicity of a blameless<br \/>\n   heart and of a divine manhood.<\/p>\n<p>   To enter into a realization of the Infinite and Eternal is to rise<br \/>\n   superior to time, and the world, and the body, which comprise the<br \/>\n   kingdom of darkness; and is to become established in immortality,<br \/>\n   Heaven, and the Spirit, which make up the Empire of Light.<\/p>\n<p>   Entering into the Infinite is not a mere theory or sentiment. It is a<br \/>\n   vital experience which is the result of assiduous practice in inward<br \/>\n   purification. When the body is no longer believed to be, even remotely,<br \/>\n   the real man; when all appetites and desires are thoroughly subdued and<br \/>\n   purified; when the emotions are rested and calm, and when the<br \/>\n   oscillation of the intellect ceases and perfect poise is secured, then,<br \/>\n   and not till then, does consciousness become one with the Infinite; not<br \/>\n   until then is childlike wisdom and profound peace secured.<\/p>\n<p>   Men grow weary and gray over the dark problems of life, and finally<br \/>\n   pass away and leave them unsolved because they cannot see their way out<br \/>\n   of the darkness of the personality, being too much engrossed in its<br \/>\n   limitations. Seeking to save his personal life, man forfeits the<br \/>\n   greater impersonal Life in Truth; clinging to the perishable, he is<br \/>\n   shut out from a knowledge of the Eternal.<\/p>\n<p>   By the surrender of self all difficulties are overcome, and there is no<br \/>\n   error in the universe but the fire of inward sacrifice will burn it up<br \/>\n   like chaff; no problem, however great, but will disappear like a shadow<br \/>\n   under the searching light of self-abnegation. Problems exist only in<br \/>\n   our own self-created illusions, and they vanish away when self is<br \/>\n   yielded up. Self and error are synonymous. Error is involved in the<br \/>\n   darkness of unfathomable complexity, but eternal simplicity is the<br \/>\n   glory of Truth.<\/p>\n<p>   Love of self shuts men out from Truth, and seeking their own personal<br \/>\n   happiness they lose the deeper, purer, and more abiding bliss. Says<br \/>\n   Carlyle&#8211;&quot;There is in man a higher than love of happiness. He can do<br \/>\n   without happiness, and instead thereof find blessedness.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8230; Love not pleasure, love God. This is the Everlasting Yea, wherein<br \/>\n   all contradiction is solved; wherein whoso walks and works, it is well<br \/>\n   with him.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   He who has yielded up that self, that personality that men most love,<br \/>\n   and to which they cling with such fierce tenacity, has left behind him<br \/>\n   all perplexity, and has entered into a simplicity so profoundly simple<br \/>\n   as to be looked upon by the world, involved as it is in a network of<br \/>\n   error, as foolishness. Yet such a one has realized the highest wisdom,<br \/>\n   and is at rest in the Infinite. He &quot;accomplishes without striving,&quot; and<br \/>\n   all problems melt before him, for he has entered the region of reality,<br \/>\n   and deals, not with changing effects, but with the unchanging<br \/>\n   principles of things. He is enlightened with a wisdom which is as<br \/>\n   superior to ratiocination, as reason is to animality. Having yielded up<br \/>\n   his lusts, his errors, his opinions and prejudices, he has entered into<br \/>\n   possession of the knowledge of God, having slain the selfish desire for<br \/>\n   heaven, and along with it the ignorant fear of hell; having<br \/>\n   relinquished even the love of life itself, he has gained supreme bliss<br \/>\n   and Life Eternal, the Life which bridges life and death, and knows its<br \/>\n   own immortality. Having yielded up all without reservation, he has<br \/>\n   gained all, and rests in peace on the bosom of the Infinite.<\/p>\n<p>   Only he who has become so free from self as to be equally content to be<br \/>\n   annihilated as to live, or to live as to be annihilated, is fit to<br \/>\n   enter into the Infinite. Only he who, ceasing to trust his perishable<br \/>\n   self, has learned to trust in boundless measure the Great Law, the<br \/>\n   Supreme Good, is prepared to partake of undying bliss.<\/p>\n<p>   For such a one there is no more regret, nor disappointment, nor<br \/>\n   remorse, for where all selfishness has ceased these sufferings cannot<br \/>\n   be; and whatever happens to him he knows that it is for his own good,<br \/>\n   and he is content, being no longer the servant of self, but the servant<br \/>\n   of the Supreme. He is no longer affected by the changes of earth, and<br \/>\n   when he hears of wars and rumors of wars his peace is not disturbed,<br \/>\n   and where men grow angry and cynical and quarrelsome, he bestows<br \/>\n   compassion and love. Though appearances may contradict it, he knows<br \/>\n   that the world is progressing, and that<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;Through its laughing and its weeping,<\/p>\n<p>   Through its living and its keeping,<\/p>\n<p>   Through its follies and its labors, weaving in and out of sight,<\/p>\n<p>   To the end from the beginning,<\/p>\n<p>   Through all virtue and all sinning,<\/p>\n<p>   Reeled from God&#8217;s great spool of Progress, runs the golden<\/p>\n<p>   thread of light.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   When a fierce storm is raging none are angered about it, because they<br \/>\n   know it will quickly pass away, and when the storms of contention are<br \/>\n   devastating the world, the wise man, looking with the eye of Truth and<br \/>\n   pity, knows that it will pass away, and that out of the wreckage of<br \/>\n   broken hearts which it leaves behind the immortal Temple of Wisdom will<br \/>\n   be built.<\/p>\n<p>   Sublimely patient; infinitely compassionate; deep, silent, and pure,<br \/>\n   his very presence is a benediction; and when he speaks men ponder his<br \/>\n   words in their hearts, and by them rise to higher levels of attainment.<br \/>\n   Such is he who has entered into the Infinite, who by the power of<br \/>\n   utmost sacrifice has solved the sacred mystery of life.<\/p>\n<p>   Questioning Life and Destiny and Truth,<\/p>\n<p>   I sought the dark and labyrinthine Sphinx,<\/p>\n<p>   Who spake to me this strange and wondrous thing:&#8211;<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;Concealment only lies in blinded eyes,<\/p>\n<p>   And God alone can see the Form of God.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   I sought to solve this hidden mystery<\/p>\n<p>   Vainly by paths of blindness and of pain,<\/p>\n<p>   But when I found the Way of Love and Peace,<\/p>\n<p>   Concealment ceased, and I was blind no more:<\/p>\n<p>   Then saw I God e&#8217;en with the eyes of God.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>SAINTS, SAGES, AND SAVIORS: THE LAW OF SERVICE<\/p>\n<p>   The spirit of Love which is manifested as a perfect and rounded life,<br \/>\n   is the crown of being and the supreme end of knowledge upon this earth.<\/p>\n<p>   The measure of a man&#8217;s truth is the measure of his love, and Truth is<br \/>\n   far removed from him whose life is not governed by Love. The intolerant<br \/>\n   and condemnatory, even though they profess the highest religion, have<br \/>\n   the smallest measure of Truth; while those who exercise patience, and<br \/>\n   who listen calmly and dispassionately to all sides, and both arrive<br \/>\n   themselves at, and incline others to, thoughtful and unbiased<br \/>\n   conclusions upon all problems and issues, have Truth in fullest<br \/>\n   measure. The final test of wisdom is this,&#8211;how does a man live? What<br \/>\n   spirit does he manifest? How does he act under trial and temptation?<br \/>\n   Many men boast of being in possession of Truth who are continually<br \/>\n   swayed by grief, disappointment, and passion, and who sink under the<br \/>\n   first little trial that comes along. Truth is nothing if not<br \/>\n   unchangeable, and in so far as a man takes his stand upon Truth does he<br \/>\n   become steadfast in virtue, does he rise superior to his passions and<br \/>\n   emotions and changeable personality.<\/p>\n<p>   Men formulate perishable dogmas, and call them Truth. Truth cannot be<br \/>\n   formulated; it is ineffable, and ever beyond the reach of intellect. It<br \/>\n   can only be experienced by practice; it can only be manifested as a<br \/>\n   stainless heart and a perfect life.<\/p>\n<p>   Who, then, in the midst of the ceaseless pandemonium of schools and<br \/>\n   creeds and parties, has the Truth? He who lives it. He who practices<br \/>\n   it. He who, having risen above that pandemonium by overcoming himself,<br \/>\n   no longer engages in it, but sits apart, quiet, subdued, calm, and<br \/>\n   self-possessed, freed from all strife, all bias, all condemnation, and<br \/>\n   bestows upon all the glad and unselfish love of the divinity within<br \/>\n   him.<\/p>\n<p>   He who is patient, calm, gentle, and forgiving under all circumstances,<br \/>\n   manifests the Truth. Truth will never be proved by wordy arguments and<br \/>\n   learned treatises, for if men do not perceive the Truth in infinite<br \/>\n   patience, undying forgiveness, and all-embracing compassion, no words<br \/>\n   can ever prove it to them.<\/p>\n<p>   It is an easy matter for the passionate to be calm and patient when<br \/>\n   they are alone, or are in the midst of calmness. It is equally easy for<br \/>\n   the uncharitable to be gentle and kind when they are dealt kindly with,<br \/>\n   but he who retains his patience and calmness under all trial, who<br \/>\n   remains sublimely meek and gentle under the most trying circumstances,<br \/>\n   he, and he alone, is possessed of the spotless Truth. And this is so<br \/>\n   because such lofty virtues belong to the Divine, and can only be<br \/>\n   manifested by one who has attained to the highest wisdom, who has<br \/>\n   relinquished his passionate and self-seeking nature, who has realized<br \/>\n   the supreme and unchangeable Law, and has brought himself into harmony<br \/>\n   with it.<\/p>\n<p>   Let men, therefore, cease from vain and passionate arguments about<br \/>\n   Truth, and let them think and say and do those things which make for<br \/>\n   harmony, peace, love, and good-will. Let them practice heart-virtue,<br \/>\n   and search humbly and diligently for the Truth which frees the soul<br \/>\n   from all error and sin, from all that blights the human heart, and that<br \/>\n   darkens, as with unending night, the pathway of the wandering souls of<br \/>\n   earth.<\/p>\n<p>   There is one great all-embracing Law which is the foundation and cause<br \/>\n   of the universe, the Law of Love. It has been called by many names in<br \/>\n   various countries and at various times, but behind all its names the<br \/>\n   same unalterable Law may be discovered by the eye of Truth. Names,<br \/>\n   religions, personalities pass away, but the Law of Love remains. To<br \/>\n   become possessed of a knowledge of this Law, to enter into conscious<br \/>\n   harmony with it, is to become immortal, invincible, indestructible.<\/p>\n<p>   It is because of the effort of the soul to realize this Law that men<br \/>\n   come again and again to live, to suffer, and to die; and when realized,<br \/>\n   suffering ceases, personality is dispersed, and the fleshly life and<br \/>\n   death are destroyed, for consciousness becomes one with the Eternal.<\/p>\n<p>   The Law is absolutely impersonal, and its highest manifested expression<br \/>\n   is that of Service. When the purified heart has realized Truth it is<br \/>\n   then called upon to make the last, the greatest and holiest sacrifice,<br \/>\n   the sacrifice of the well-earned enjoyment of Truth. It is by virtue of<br \/>\n   this sacrifice that the divinely-emancipated soul comes to dwell among<br \/>\n   men, clothed with a body of flesh, content to dwell among the lowliest<br \/>\n   and least, and to be esteemed the servant of all mankind. That sublime<br \/>\n   humility which is manifested by the world&#8217;s saviors is the seal of<br \/>\n   Godhead, and he who has annihilated the personality, and has become a<br \/>\n   living, visible manifestation of the impersonal, eternal, boundless<br \/>\n   Spirit of Love, is alone singled out as worthy to receive the unstinted<br \/>\n   worship of posterity. He only who succeeds in humbling himself with<br \/>\n   that divine humility which is not only the extinction of self, but is<br \/>\n   also the pouring out upon all the spirit of unselfish love, is exalted<br \/>\n   above measure, and given spiritual dominion in the hearts of mankind.<\/p>\n<p>   All the great spiritual teachers have denied themselves personal<br \/>\n   luxuries, comforts, and rewards, have abjured temporal power, and have<br \/>\n   lived and taught the limitless and impersonal Truth. Compare their<br \/>\n   lives and teachings, and you will find the same simplicity, the same<br \/>\n   self-sacrifice, the same humility, love, and peace both lived and<br \/>\n   preached by them. They taught the same eternal Principles, the<br \/>\n   realization of which destroys all evil. Those who have been hailed and<br \/>\n   worshiped as the saviors of mankind are manifestations of the Great<br \/>\n   impersonal Law, and being such, were free from passion and prejudice,<br \/>\n   and having no opinions, and no special letter of doctrine to preach and<br \/>\n   defend, they never sought to convert and to proselytize. Living in the<br \/>\n   highest Goodness, the supreme Perfection, their sole object was to<br \/>\n   uplift mankind by manifesting that Goodness in thought, word, and deed.<br \/>\n   They stand between man the personal and God the impersonal, and serve<br \/>\n   as exemplary types for the salvation of self-enslaved mankind.<\/p>\n<p>   Men who are immersed in self, and who cannot comprehend the Goodness<br \/>\n   that is absolutely impersonal, deny divinity to all saviors except<br \/>\n   their own, and thus introduce personal hatred and doctrinal<br \/>\n   controversy, and, while defending their own particular views with<br \/>\n   passion, look upon each other as being heathens or infidels, and so<br \/>\n   render null and void, as far as their lives are concerned, the<br \/>\n   unselfish beauty and holy grandeur of the lives and teachings of their<br \/>\n   own Masters. Truth cannot be limited; it can never be the special<br \/>\n   prerogative of any man, school, or nation, and when personality steps<br \/>\n   in, Truth is lost.<\/p>\n<p>   The glory alike of the saint, the sage, and the savior is this,&#8211;that<br \/>\n   he has realized the most profound lowliness, the most sublime<br \/>\n   unselfishness; having given up all, even his own personality, all his<br \/>\n   works are holy and enduring, for they are freed from every taint of<br \/>\n   self. He gives, yet never thinks of receiving; he works without<br \/>\n   regretting the past or anticipating the future, and never looks for<br \/>\n   reward.<\/p>\n<p>   When the farmer has tilled and dressed his land and put in the seed, he<br \/>\n   knows that he has done all that he can possibly do, and that now he<br \/>\n   must trust to the elements, and wait patiently for the course of time<br \/>\n   to bring about the harvest, and that no amount of expectancy on his<br \/>\n   part will affect the result. Even so, he who has realized Truth goes<br \/>\n   forth as a sower of the seeds of goodness, purity, love and peace,<br \/>\n   without expectancy, and never looking for results, knowing that there<br \/>\n   is the Great Over-ruling Law which brings about its own harvest in due<br \/>\n   time, and which is alike the source of preservation and destruction.<\/p>\n<p>   Men, not understanding the divine simplicity of a profoundly unselfish<br \/>\n   heart, look upon their particular savior as the manifestation of a<br \/>\n   special miracle, as being something entirely apart and distinct from<br \/>\n   the nature of things, and as being, in his ethical excellence,<br \/>\n   eternally unapproachable by the whole of mankind. This attitude of<br \/>\n   unbelief (for such it is) in the divine perfectibility of man,<br \/>\n   paralyzes effort, and binds the souls of men as with strong ropes to<br \/>\n   sin and suffering. Jesus &quot;grew in wisdom&quot; and was &quot;perfected by<br \/>\n   suffering.&quot; What Jesus was, he became such; what Buddha was, he became<br \/>\n   such; and every holy man became such by unremitting perseverance in<br \/>\n   self-sacrifice. Once recognize this, once realize that by watchful<br \/>\n   effort and hopeful perseverance you can rise above your lower nature,<br \/>\n   and great and glorious will be the vistas of attainment that will open<br \/>\n   out before you. Buddha vowed that he would not relax his efforts until<br \/>\n   he arrived at the state of perfection, and he accomplished his purpose.<\/p>\n<p>   What the saints, sages, and saviors have accomplished, you likewise may<br \/>\n   accomplish if you will only tread the way which they trod and pointed<br \/>\n   out, the way of self-sacrifice, of self-denying service.<\/p>\n<p>   Truth is very simple. It says, &quot;Give up self,&quot; &quot;Come unto Me&quot; (away<br \/>\n   from all that defiles) &quot;and I will give you rest.&quot; All the mountains of<br \/>\n   commentary that have been piled upon it cannot hide it from the heart<br \/>\n   that is earnestly seeking for Righteousness. It does not require<br \/>\n   learning; it can be known in spite of learning. Disguised under many<br \/>\n   forms by erring self-seeking man, the beautiful simplicity and clear<br \/>\n   transparency of Truth remains unaltered and undimmed, and the unselfish<br \/>\n   heart enters into and partakes of its shining radiance. Not by weaving<br \/>\n   complex theories, not by building up speculative philosophies is Truth<br \/>\n   realized; but by weaving the web of inward purity, by building up the<br \/>\n   Temple of a stainless life is Truth realized.<\/p>\n<p>   He who enters upon this holy way begins by restraining his passions.<br \/>\n   This is virtue, and is the beginning of saintship, and saintship is the<br \/>\n   beginning of holiness. The entirely worldly man gratifies all his<br \/>\n   desires, and practices no more restraint than the law of the land in<br \/>\n   which he lives demands; the virtuous man restrains his passions; the<br \/>\n   saint attacks the enemy of Truth in its stronghold within his own<br \/>\n   heart, and restrains all selfish and impure thoughts; while the holy<br \/>\n   man is he who is free from passion and all impure thought, and to whom<br \/>\n   goodness and purity have become as natural as scent and color are to<br \/>\n   the flower. The holy man is divinely wise; he alone knows Truth in its<br \/>\n   fullness, and has entered into abiding rest and peace. For him evil has<br \/>\n   ceased; it has disappeared in the universal light of the All-Good.<br \/>\n   Holiness is the badge of wisdom. Said Krishna to the Prince Arjuna&#8211;<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;Humbleness, truthfulness, and harmlessness,<\/p>\n<p>   Patience and honor, reverence for the wise,<\/p>\n<p>   Purity, constancy, control of self,<\/p>\n<p>   Contempt of sense-delights, self-sacrifice,<\/p>\n<p>   Perception of the certitude of ill<\/p>\n<p>   In birth, death, age, disease, suffering and sin;<\/p>\n<p>   An ever tranquil heart in fortunes good<\/p>\n<p>   And fortunes evil, &#8230;<\/p>\n<p>   &#8230; Endeavors resolute<\/p>\n<p>   To reach perception of the utmost soul,<\/p>\n<p>   And grace to understand what gain it were<\/p>\n<p>   So to attain&#8211;this is true wisdom, Prince!<\/p>\n<p>   And what is otherwise is ignorance!&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   Whoever fights ceaselessly against his own selfishness, and strives to<br \/>\n   supplant it with all-embracing love, is a saint, whether he live in a<br \/>\n   cottage or in the midst of riches and influence; or whether he preaches<br \/>\n   or remains obscure.<\/p>\n<p>   To the worldling, who is beginning to aspire towards higher things, the<br \/>\n   saint, such as a sweet St. Francis of Assisi, or a conquering St.<br \/>\n   Anthony, is a glorious and inspiring spectacle; to the saint, an<br \/>\n   equally enrapturing sight is that of the sage, sitting serene and holy,<br \/>\n   the conqueror of sin and sorrow, no more tormented by regret and<br \/>\n   remorse, and whom even temptation can never reach; and yet even the<br \/>\n   sage is drawn on by a still more glorious vision, that of the savior<br \/>\n   actively manifesting his knowledge in selfless works, and rendering his<br \/>\n   divinity more potent for good by sinking himself in the throbbing,<br \/>\n   sorrowing, aspiring heart of mankind.<\/p>\n<p>   And this only is true service&#8211;to forget oneself in love towards all,<br \/>\n   to lose oneself in working for the whole. O thou vain and foolish man,<br \/>\n   who thinkest that thy many works can save thee; who, chained to all<br \/>\n   error, talkest loudly of thyself, thy work, and thy many sacrifices,<br \/>\n   and magnifiest thine own importance; know this, that though thy fame<br \/>\n   fill the whole earth, all thy work shall come to dust, and thou thyself<br \/>\n   be reckoned lower than the least in the Kingdom of Truth!<\/p>\n<p>   Only the work that is impersonal can live; the works of self are both<br \/>\n   powerless and perishable. Where duties, howsoever humble, are done<br \/>\n   without self-interest, and with joyful sacrifice, there is true service<br \/>\n   and enduring work. Where deeds, however brilliant and apparently<br \/>\n   successful, are done from love of self, there is ignorance of the Law<br \/>\n   of Service, and the work perishes.<\/p>\n<p>   It is given to the world to learn one great and divine lesson, the<br \/>\n   lesson of absolute unselfishness. The saints, sages, and saviors of all<br \/>\n   time are they who have submitted themselves to this task, and have<br \/>\n   learned and lived it. All the Scriptures of the world are framed to<br \/>\n   teach this one lesson; all the great teachers reiterate it. It is too<br \/>\n   simple for the world which, scorning it, stumbles along in the complex<br \/>\n   ways of selfishness.<\/p>\n<p>   A pure heart is the end of all religion and the beginning of divinity.<br \/>\n   To search for this Righteousness is to walk the Way of Truth and Peace,<br \/>\n   and he who enters this Way will soon perceive that Immortality which is<br \/>\n   independent of birth and death, and will realize that in the Divine<br \/>\n   economy of the universe the humblest effort is not lost.<\/p>\n<p>   The divinity of a Krishna, a Gautama, or a Jesus is the crowning glory<br \/>\n   of self-abnegation, the end of the soul&#8217;s pilgrimage in matter and<br \/>\n   mortality, and the world will not have finished its long journey until<br \/>\n   every soul has become as these, and has entered into the blissful<br \/>\n   realization of its own divinity.<\/p>\n<p>   Great glory crowns the heights of hope by arduous struggle won;<\/p>\n<p>   Bright honor rounds the hoary head that mighty works hath done;<\/p>\n<p>   Fair riches come to him who strives in ways of golden gain.<\/p>\n<p>   And fame enshrines his name who works with genius-glowing brain;<\/p>\n<p>   But greater glory waits for him who, in the bloodless strife<\/p>\n<p>   &#8216;Gainst self and wrong, adopts, in love, the sacrificial life;<\/p>\n<p>   And brighter honor rounds the brow of him who, &#8216;mid the scorns<\/p>\n<p>   Of blind idolaters of self, accepts the crown of thorns;<\/p>\n<p>   And fairer purer riches come to him who greatly strives<\/p>\n<p>   To walk in ways of love and truth to sweeten human lives;<\/p>\n<p>   And he who serveth well mankind exchanges fleeting fame<\/p>\n<p>   For Light eternal, Joy and Peace, and robes of heavenly flame.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>THE REALIZATION OF PERFECT PEACE<\/p>\n<p>   In the external universe there is ceaseless turmoil, change, and<br \/>\n   unrest; at the heart of all things there is undisturbed repose; in this<br \/>\n   deep silence dwelleth the Eternal.<\/p>\n<p>   Man partakes of this duality, and both the surface change and<br \/>\n   disquietude, and the deep-seated eternal abode of Peace, are contained<br \/>\n   within him.<\/p>\n<p>   As there are silent depths in the ocean which the fiercest storm cannot<br \/>\n   reach, so there are silent, holy depths in the heart of man which the<br \/>\n   storms of sin and sorrow can never disturb. To reach this silence and<br \/>\n   to live consciously in it is peace.<\/p>\n<p>   Discord is rife in the outward world, but unbroken harmony holds sway<br \/>\n   at the heart of the universe. The human soul, torn by discordant<br \/>\n   passion and grief, reaches blindly toward the harmony of the sinless<br \/>\n   state, and to reach this state and to live consciously in it is peace.<\/p>\n<p>   Hatred severs human lives, fosters persecution, and hurls nations into<br \/>\n   ruthless war, yet men, though they do not understand why, retain some<br \/>\n   measure of faith in the overshadowing of a Perfect Love; and to reach<br \/>\n   this Love and to live consciously in it is peace.<\/p>\n<p>   And this inward peace, this silence, this harmony, this Love, is the<br \/>\n   Kingdom of Heaven, which is so difficult to reach because few are<br \/>\n   willing to give up themselves and to become as little children.<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;Heaven&#8217;s gate is very narrow and minute,<\/p>\n<p>   It cannot be perceived by foolish men<\/p>\n<p>   Blinded by vain illusions of the world;<\/p>\n<p>   E&#8217;en the clear-sighted who discern the way,<\/p>\n<p>   And seek to enter, find the portal barred,<\/p>\n<p>   And hard to be unlocked. Its massive bolts<\/p>\n<p>   Are pride and passion, avarice and lust.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   Men cry peace! peace! where there is no peace, but on the contrary,<br \/>\n   discord, disquietude and strife. Apart from that Wisdom which is<br \/>\n   inseparable from self-renunciation, there can be no real and abiding<br \/>\n   peace.<\/p>\n<p>   The peace which results from social comfort, passing gratification, or<br \/>\n   worldly victory is transitory in its nature, and is burnt up in the<br \/>\n   heat of fiery trial. Only the Peace of Heaven endures through all<br \/>\n   trial, and only the selfless heart can know the Peace of Heaven.<\/p>\n<p>   Holiness alone is undying peace. Self-control leads to it, and the<br \/>\n   ever-increasing Light of Wisdom guides the pilgrim on his way. It is<br \/>\n   partaken of in a measure as soon as the path of virtue is entered upon,<br \/>\n   but it is only realized in its fullness when self disappears in the<br \/>\n   consummation of a stainless life.<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;This is peace,<\/p>\n<p>   To conquer love of self and lust of life,<\/p>\n<p>   To tear deep-rooted passion from the heart<\/p>\n<p>   To still the inward strife.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   If, O reader! you would realize the Light that never fades, the Joy<br \/>\n   that never ends, and the tranquillity that cannot be disturbed; if you<br \/>\n   would leave behind for ever your sins, your sorrows, your anxieties and<br \/>\n   perplexities; if, I say, you would partake of this salvation, this<br \/>\n   supremely glorious Life, then conquer yourself. Bring every thought,<br \/>\n   every impulse, every desire into perfect obedience to the divine power<br \/>\n   resident within you. There is no other way to peace but this, and if<br \/>\n   you refuse to walk it, your much praying and your strict adherence to<br \/>\n   ritual will be fruitless and unavailing, and neither gods nor angels<br \/>\n   can help you. Only to him that overcometh is given the white stone of<br \/>\n   the regenerate life, on which is written the New and Ineffable Name.<\/p>\n<p>   Come away, for awhile, from external things, from the pleasures of the<br \/>\n   senses, from the arguments of the intellect, from the noise and the<br \/>\n   excitements of the world, and withdraw yourself into the inmost chamber<br \/>\n   of your heart, and there, free from the sacrilegious intrusion of all<br \/>\n   selfish desires, you will find a deep silence, a holy calm, a blissful<br \/>\n   repose, and if you will rest awhile in that holy place, and will<br \/>\n   meditate there, the faultless eye of Truth will open within you, and<br \/>\n   you will see things as they really are. This holy place within you is<br \/>\n   your real and eternal self; it is the divine within you; and only when<br \/>\n   you identify yourself with it can you be said to be &quot;clothed and in<br \/>\n   your right mind.&quot; It is the abode of peace, the temple of wisdom, the<br \/>\n   dwelling-place of immortality. Apart from this inward resting-place,<br \/>\n   this Mount of Vision, there can be no true peace, no knowledge of the<br \/>\n   Divine, and if you can remain there for one minute, one hour, or one<br \/>\n   day, it is possible for you to remain there always. All your sins and<br \/>\n   sorrows, your fears and anxieties are your own, and you can cling to<br \/>\n   them or you can give them up. Of your own accord you cling to your<br \/>\n   unrest; of your own accord you can come to abiding peace. No one else<br \/>\n   can give up sin for you; you must give it up yourself. The greatest<br \/>\n   teacher can do no more than walk the way of Truth for himself, and<br \/>\n   point it out to you; you yourself must walk it for yourself. You can<br \/>\n   obtain freedom and peace alone by your own efforts, by yielding up that<br \/>\n   which binds the soul, and which is destructive of peace.<\/p>\n<p>   The angels of divine peace and joy are always at hand, and if you do<br \/>\n   not see them, and hear them, and dwell with them, it is because you<br \/>\n   shut yourself out from them, and prefer the company of the spirits of<br \/>\n   evil within you. You are what you will to be, what you wish to be, what<br \/>\n   you prefer to be. You can commence to purify yourself, and by so doing<br \/>\n   can arrive at peace, or you can refuse to purify yourself, and so<br \/>\n   remain with suffering.<\/p>\n<p>   Step aside, then; come out of the fret and the fever of life; away from<br \/>\n   the scorching heat of self, and enter the inward resting-place where<br \/>\n   the cooling airs of peace will calm, renew, and restore you.<\/p>\n<p>   Come out of the storms of sin and anguish. Why be troubled and<br \/>\n   tempest-tossed when the haven of Peace of God is yours!<\/p>\n<p>   Give up all self-seeking; give up self, and lo! the Peace of God is<br \/>\n   yours!<\/p>\n<p>   Subdue the animal within you; conquer every selfish uprising, every<br \/>\n   discordant voice; transmute the base metals of your selfish nature into<br \/>\n   the unalloyed gold of Love, and you shall realize the Life of Perfect<br \/>\n   Peace. Thus subduing, thus conquering, thus transmuting, you will, O<br \/>\n   reader! while living in the flesh, cross the dark waters of mortality,<br \/>\n   and will reach that Shore upon which the storms of sorrow never beat,<br \/>\n   and where sin and suffering and dark uncertainty cannot come. Standing<br \/>\n   upon that Shore, holy, compassionate, awakened, and self-possessed and<br \/>\n   glad with unending gladness, you will realize that<\/p>\n<p>   &quot;Never the Spirit was born, the Spirit will cease to be never;<\/p>\n<p>   Never was time it was not, end and beginning are dreams;<\/p>\n<p>   Birthless and deathless and changeless remaineth the Spirit for ever;<\/p>\n<p>   Death hath not touched it at all, dead though the house of it seems.&quot;<\/p>\n<p>   You will then know the meaning of Sin, of Sorrow, of Suffering, and<br \/>\n   that the end thereof is Wisdom; will know the cause and the issue of<br \/>\n   existence.<\/p>\n<p>   And with this realization you will enter into rest, for this is the<br \/>\n   bliss of immortality, this the unchangeable gladness, this the<br \/>\n   untrammeled knowledge, undefiled Wisdom, and undying Love; this, and<br \/>\n   this only, is the realization of Perfect Peace.<\/p>\n<p>   O thou who wouldst teach men of Truth!<\/p>\n<p>   Hast thou passed through the desert of doubt?<\/p>\n<p>   Art thou purged by the fires of sorrow? hath ruth<\/p>\n<p>   The fiends of opinion cast out<\/p>\n<p>   Of thy human heart? Is thy soul so fair<\/p>\n<p>   That no false thought can ever harbor there?<\/p>\n<p>   O thou who wouldst teach men of Love!<\/p>\n<p>   Hast thou passed through the place of despair?<\/p>\n<p>   Hast thou wept through the dark night of grief?<\/p>\n<p>   does it move<\/p>\n<p>   (Now freed from its sorrow and care)<\/p>\n<p>   Thy human heart to pitying gentleness,<\/p>\n<p>   Looking on wrong, and hate, and ceaseless stress?<\/p>\n<p>   O thou who wouldst teach men of Peace!<\/p>\n<p>   Hast thou crossed the wide ocean of strife?<\/p>\n<p>   Hast thou found on the Shores of the Silence,<\/p>\n<p>   Release from all the wild unrest of life?<\/p>\n<p>   From thy human heart hath all striving gone,<\/p>\n<p>   Leaving but Truth, and Love, and Peace alone?<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>__________________________________________________________________ Title: The Way of Peace Creator(s): Allen, James (1864-1912) Print Basis: R.F. Fenno &amp; Company Rights: Public Domain __________________________________________________________________ Produced by Kevin Handy and PG Distributed Proofreaders THE WAY OF PEACE BY JAMES ALLEN AUTHOR OF &quot;AS A MAN THINKETH,&quot; &quot;OUT FROM THE HEART&quot; CONTENTS THE POWER OF MEDITATION THE TWO MASTERS, SELF AND&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":14,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"twitterCardType":"","cardImageID":0,"cardImage":"","cardTitle":"","cardDesc":"","cardImageAlt":"","cardPlayer":"","cardPlayerWidth":0,"cardPlayerHeight":0,"cardPlayerStream":"","cardPlayerCodec":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-5444","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5444","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/14"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=5444"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5444\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=5444"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=5444"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=5444"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}