The
most valuable thing which ever comes into a life is that
experience, that book, that sermon, that person, that incident,
that emergency, that accident, that catastrophethat
something which touches the springs of a persons inner
nature and flings open the doors of their great within,
revealing its hidden resources.
A
cub lion, as the fable runs, was one day playing alone in
the forest while his mother slept. As the different objects
attracted his attention, the cub thought he would explore
a bit and see what the great world beyond his home was like.
Before he realized it, he had wandered so far that he could
not find his way back. He was lost.
Very
much frightened, the cub ran frantically in every direction
calling piteously for his mother, but no mother responded.
Weary with his wanderings, he did not know what to do, when
a sheep, whose offspring had been taken from her, hearing
his pitiful cries, made friends with the lost cub, and adopted
him.
The
sheep became very fond of her foundling, which in a short
while grew so much larger than herself that at times she
was almost afraid of it. Often, too, she would detect a
strange, far-off look in its eyes which she could not understand.
The
foster mother and her adopted lived very happily together,
until one day a magnificent lion appeared, sharply outlined
against the sky, on the top of an opposite hill. He shook
his tawny mane and uttered a terrific roar, which echoed
through the hills. The sheep mother stood trembling, paralyzed
with fear. But the moment this strange sound reached his
ears, the lion cub listened as though spellbound, and a
strange feeling which he had never before experienced surged
through his being until he was all a-quiver.
The
lions roar had touched a chord in his nature that
had never before been touched. It aroused a new force within
him which he had never felt before. New desires, a strange
new consciousness of power possessed him. A new nature stirred
in him, and instinctively, without a thought of what he
was doing, he answered the lions call with a corresponding
roar.
Trembling
with mingled fear, surprise and bewilderment at the new
powers aroused within him, the awakened animal gave his
foster mother a pathetic glance, and then, with a tremendous
leap, started toward the lion on the hill.
The
lost lion had found himself. Up to this he had gamboled
around his sheep mother just as though he were a lamb developing
into a sheep, never dreaming he could do anything that his
companions could not do, or that he had any more strength
than the ordinary sheep. He never imagined that there was
within him a power which would strike terror to the beasts
of the jungle. He simply thought he was a sheep, and would
run at the sight of a dog and tremble at the howl of a wolf.
Now he was amazed to see the dogs, the wolves, and other
animals which formerly had so terrified him flee from him.
As
long as this lion thought he was a sheep, he was as timid
and retiring as a sheep; he had only a sheeps strength
and a sheeps courage, and by no possibility could
he have exerted the strength of a lion. If such a thing
had been suggested to him he would have said, How
could I exert the strength of a lion? I am only a sheep,
and just like other sheep. I cannot do what they cannot
do. But when the lion was aroused in him, instantly
he became a new creature, king of the forest, with no rivals
save the tiger and the panther. This discovery doubled,
trebled and quadrupled his conscious power, a power which
it would not have been possible for him to exert a minute
before he had heard the lions roar.
But
for the roar of the lion on the distant hill, which had
aroused the sleeping lion within him, he would have continued
living the life of a sheep and perhaps would never have
known that there was a lion in him. The roar of the lion
had not added anything to his strength, had not put new
power into him; it had merely aroused in him what was already
there, simply revealed to him the power he already possessed.
Never again, after such a startling discovery, could this
young animal be satisfied to live a sheeps life. A
lions life, a lions liberty, a lions power,
the jungle thereafter for him.
There
is in every normal human being a sleeping lion. It is just
a question of arousing it, just a question of something
happening that will awaken us, stir the depths of our being,
and arouse the sleeping power within us.
Just
as the young lion, after it had once discovered that it
was a lion would never again be satisfied to live the life
of a sheep, when we discover that we are more than mere
clay, when we at last become conscious that we are more
than human, that we are gods in the making, we shall never
again be satisfied to live the life of common clods of earth.
We shall feel a new sense of power welling up within us,
a power which we never before dreamed we possessed, and
never be quite the same again, never again be content with
low-flying ideals, with a cheap success. Ever after we will
aspire. We will look up; struggle up and on to higher and
ever higher planes.
Phillips
Brooks used to say that after a man has once discovered
that he has been living but a half life the other half will
haunt him until he releases it, and he never again will
be content to live a half life. When one becomes conscious
that the reality of them, that the truth of their being
is God, that they are indissolubly connected with omnipotent
power, they feel the thrill of divine force surging through
every atom of their being, and can never doubt their divinity
or possibilities again. They can never again be timid, weak,
hesitating or fearful. They rest serenely conscious that
they are in close touch, in vital union, with the Infinite.
They feel omnipotent power pulsating through their very
being, they feel the omnipotent arm sustaining, upholding
them, and they know that their mission on earth is divinely
planned and divinely protected.
Many
a poor child has grown up in the slums believing that they
were like all the other children in their neighborhood,
that there was no special future for them, nothing distinctive,
nothing out of the dead level of their monotonous environment;
but something unexpectedly happens, some emergency, some
catastrophe, something which makes a tremendous call upon
the great within of themselves, and they are suddenly surprised
to discover that they are different altogether from those
about them. Something has touched them, something in them
have been aroused, something which shows them that they
have a tremendous latent power which they did not before
know they possessed, and they unhesitatingly answer the
call. They go out into the great world, and are never again
satisfied with a cheap success, never again satisfied with
their old nature or content with their old environment.
There
are men and women who have won distinction in every field
who would not believe that there was such a possibility
for them until they had actually proved it. Twenty-five
years ago, for instance, you could not have persuaded Charles
M. Schwab that he was the man later years have proved him
to be. If twenty-five years ago anyone had given a picture
of himself as he is today, had declared that he would be
such a man, he would have ridiculed the idea. He would have
said, Such a thing is absurd, I am not such a man.
This is the picture of a giant. I am no giant, nor genius.
I am just an ordinary, hard-working man. But Mr. Schwab
has not even yet fully found himself. He has not discovered
all the man that it is possible to develop, or anything
like it. He has only brought out part of the giant in him.
Emergency may some time call out the rest, the bigger giant.
There
are plenty of young men and young women in our great industrial
institutions today who could not be made to believe that
perhaps in a single year they will be filling positions
of great responsibility and power, and yet the possibility
is there. The future great general, the successful executive,
is slumbering in the soldier in the ranks, in the clerk
today. Many a future superintendent, many a manager is today
filling the humble position of office boy, errand boy, or
waiter in a restaurant or hotel.
Every
discovery of new powers, new assets in yourself, stimulates
you tremendously to new efforts, to new endeavor. We have
all seen instances where an ordinary clerk, with seemingly
ordinary ability, has suddenly been promoted, and the stimulus,
the tonic of advancement, the new hope of further success
that has prodded them, has often added twenty-five or fifty
per cent to their ability by uncovering new resources, new
and before undreamed of powers.
They
were not conscious of what was in them until the opportunity
came, until the motive uncovered, unlocked and liberated
their before undreamed of resources. In the last world war
thousands of young men who did not think they had much courage,
perhaps even believed they would be cowards in battle, were
whirled into the armies by the excitement, the hypnotism,
the daring of their associates, and found that the bigger
man in them responded to the call, and that when it came
they did not hesitate bravely to face the enemys shells,
the enemys guns. Many youths have joined the army
who were not thought much of at home, who were called stupid
and dull and neer-do-wells, blockheads, by their parents
and teachers, but when they got into the army they found
themselves, found they had courage, grit, determination,
daring, stick-toit-iveness.
The
experience of a multitude of men who have realized an infinitely
bigger man in themselves than they ever imagined was there,
ought to teach us that in every human being, no matter how
successful they may be, there are still enormous undiscovered
possibilities.
It
is the person you are capable of making, not the one you
have become, that is most important to you. You cannot afford
to carry this enormous asset to your grave unused. As a
business man or woman you would not think of having a lot
of idle capital in the bank, drawing no interest, uninvested,
unused. Do you realize that this is exactly what you are
doing with yourself? You have assets within you infinitely
more valuable than money capital. Why do you not use your
capital? This is what you would ask a businessman who was
pinching along, worried all the time because he thought
he could not meet his obligations, pay his notes, when he
had a large amount of idle capital in the bank. You would
declare the man was foolish. You are more foolish because
you have immortal capital lying idle. Why dont you
use it? Why do you hitch along in this little one-horse
way all your life on a little capital when you have so much
unused capital, so much reserve assets? Why not use them?
Try
to bring out that possible man or woman. You know that you
never have done it to anything like its possibility as yet.
Now, why not plan to bring out this enormous residue, these
great unused resources, this locked-up ability which has
never come out of you? You know it is there. You instinctively
feel it. Your intuition, your instinct, your ambition tell
you that there is a much bigger person in you than you have
ever found or used. Why dont you use them, why dont
you get at them, why dont you call them out, why dont
you stir them up? Why dont you get the spark to this
giant powder within you and explode it?
The
finding of the larger possibilities of man, the unused part,
and the undiscovered part is the function of the New Philosophy.
It may be covered under all sorts of debrisdoubt,
lack of self-confidence, timidity, fear, worry, uncertainty,
anxiety, hatred, jealousy, revenge, envy, selfishness. These
may all be neutralized by right thinking.
How
often it happens that people who have long been down-and-out,
who have been considered nobodies, good-for-nothings,
not well balanced, have changed suddenly, as though touched
by a magic wand, and have quickly become men or women of
power, inspirers, and helpers of others! Something happened
that quickened their spirit, and from miserable liabilities
they have suddenly been converted into valuable assets to
their community.
John
B. Gough was an intemperate nobody. All at once, apparently
by accident, he was converted. Something touched Gough and
from being a slave of the bottle he became its master. From
a miserable example he was transformed into a tremendous
uplifting and inspiring force in the community. Before he
came to himself he was dragging men down; after he responded
to the call of the divinity within, he was leading hundreds
and thousands of men to take the pledge, to lead cleaner
and nobler lives.
When
a poor youth working as scullion in a kitchen in Italy first
got a glimpse of a great painting, the sight aroused something
within him which he had never before felt. It revealed a
new artistic impulse, and he exclaimed, I, too, am
a painter! Following this inward call, he got a chance
to work in the studio of a famous artist, and finally became
a greater artist than the painter of the picture which had
inspired him.
How
many men who had been a positive menace to society, all
at once have turned about and become inspired leaders! Something
touched them, awakened the God within, and they turned their
faces from darkness to light, from the lower to the higher,
and accomplished grand things. It may have been an inspiring
book, a lecture, or a flash of divine illumination that
gave them a glimpse of themselves, but whatever it was it
started them on the right road, turned them from ugliness
to beauty, from wrong to right, from enemies of society
to great benefactors.
The
transformation of Saul the persecutor into Paul the great
apostle of the Gentiles is one of the grandest instances
of self revelation through a flash of divine illumination.
What
a revolution would be effected in the whole race if this
something which touched Saul on his way to Damascus, when
suddenly there shined round about him a light from
heaven, could touch all the human beings who are going
wrong, the nobodies, the down-and-outs,
the discouraged, the despondent, those who have fallen by
the wayside! What a leap toward the millennium the race
would take if all these dead souls could be awakened and
made anew by this mysterious something which made the vengeful
persecutor of Christians the greatest of the teachers of
Christianity! If this divine spark, which en-kindles a new
fire in human hearts, makes men out of beasts, and good
citizens out of hoboes, drunkards and criminals, could be
ignited in the breasts of all, despair and misery would
vanish from the earth.
When
one has once discovered or uncovered a bit of their divine
pattern, when enough light is thrown upon it to enable them
to see the divine, immortal plan foreshadowed in their nature,
they will never be content until they uncover the rest of
the pattern; and no one can do this by living a coarse,
low, sensual life. Such a life puts a film on the ideals,
and dims the spiritual vision.
The
world has a right to expect those who have even partly discovered
themselves, who have become conscious of their divine origin,
to hold up their heads, to do their work a little better,
to be a little more dead-in-earnest, to live on a higher
plane, to set a little better example in general than those
who have not yet tasted of their hidden power. The world
needs great inspirers more than it needs great lawyers,
physicians, clergymen or statesmen. It needs the Lincolns
more than it needs railroad magnates, steel magnates, great
financiers or great merchants.
When
the consciousness of his heredity touched the lion cub,
when his inheritance of strength, of terrific power, was
revealed to him, he turned his back forever on the old life.
Never again could he return to the sheepfold, never again
could he be satisfied with his sheep nature, with the half
life he had been living. From the moment he realized he
was a lion, there was no more sheepfold for him. Freedom,
the great open world, the jungle, the forest for him, for
he felt his kingship, his power over all the things that
had so terrified him in the past.
When
an individual has once proved beyond question that they
have great latent power, vast possibilities which had never
before been called out, it would be impossible that they
should ever again be satisfied with the half life they had
been living. Their whole newly discovered nature would revolt
against a return to the lower plane on which their weaker,
lesser self had lived.
You
perhaps were reared under conditions which have kept you
ignorant of your own possibilities until something has happened
to throw a new light upon your real nature. Then you discovered
that you were not the tame, timid sheep that you had always
thought you were, until that something happened which has
revealed the lion in you.
Perhaps
you have been wandering all your past life, living in the
shepherds folds in the churches, perhaps never dreaming
that you were not a sheep, that you did not belong to that
particular shepherds fold. Yet you may have had an
instinctive feeling that there was something in you which
did not respond to the sheep call, that there was a something
within you which did not fit your environment, which did
not belong to the conditions in which you found yourself.
You may have been conscious that there was something in
you which never responded to the call which appealed to
those about you.
You
may have heard the voice that answered your yearning while
reading an inspiring book, or while listening to a new philosophy
conversation which seemed to open up a new compartment in
your nature.
No
matter where you hear this call, when yo do hear it something
within you will answer the call and you will know that you
have been touched to a higher, a finer purpose.
The
new philosophy, however, especially appeals to the undiscovered
part of us, to those hidden, latent forces within us, which
we have not hitherto been able to get hold of. In other
words, it appeals to our hitherto unused assets, our plus
or surplus life capital. You will find something in people
who have embraced it, in people who understand it, which
you do not find in others.
The
new philosophy acts like a leaven in the nature, giving
new life, new force, new meaning to the individual. In short,
it discovers a new human being in the old one. It neutralizes,
destroys, that which would degrade them, those things which
were working against their welfare, and it develops new
forces, unlocks new resources which enlarge the individual.
During
the past hundred years not a single new quality or new principle
has been added to the laws of chemistry, not an iota of
change has been made in the laws of physics, and yet what
miracles of discovery, of invention, the great scientists
and inventors have called out of these very same qualities
and laws during the last hundred years!
Sir
Isaac Newton had the same identical material, the same identical
laws of chemistry, physics which Edison is using today,
but Edison has called out hundreds of inventions to Newtons
one discovery.
Human
nature, like natural law, is the same today as it was centuries
ago, but what a marvelous development of mans power
we are witnessing today! How amazing has been the advancement
of human ability! What marvelous strides in intelligence,
in efficiency, and in the development of his natural resources
man has made!
We
marvel at all this, but the new philosophy is disclosing
to man a new and more potent law back of the flesh but not
of it, an intelligence back of the crystal, back of the
atom, back of the electron which directs, molds, fashions,
conditions the future of every particle of matter in the
universe. Previously this was ascribed to an unknown law.
A hundred years ago people did not know that when a crystal
was dissolved it would always assume the exact form of the
same kind of crystal when its particles were free to re-arrange
themselves. We did not then know that the ambition which
appears in man is really an aggregate of the ambition in
the separate electrons. We did not then know that a mans
history was largely determined in the electrons themselves.
But science is now beginning to recognize that the great
cosmic intelligence is back of everything in the universe,
of every expression of nature, of every step in mans
upward journey through the ages.
The
new philosophy especially appeals to that unknown part of
us which is still waiting to be discovered, that part which
is still locked up tight in the great within of us. It plays
the part of a Columbus, and discovers vast territory within
us of which we had been unconscious.
An
honest dissatisfaction with our achievement means we have
more resources inside, and that until we find at least a
measure of satisfaction there is still more to discover.
We have an instinctive feeling, that there is something
sublimely beautiful in life we have never yet found, because
we have never yet been satisfied. We have an intuition that
this something will satisfy our inmost yearnings, that it
will quench the souls thirst, satisfy the souls
hunger.
The
orthodox churches undertook to find this satisfying something,
and while they have done much, yet many church members feel
that there is still a tremendous, unfilled vacuum in their
hearts, unsatisfied longings and yearnings in their souls.
After centuries of hunting for the divine balm of Gilead,
the elixir which would heal the souls hurts, the great
majority of churches are being less and less frequented.
Pastors are finding it more and more difficult to induce
people to attend their church services, because they are
not fed; they do not get that satisfaction which they instinctively
feel belongs to the children of the King of Kings.
On
every hand we find people who have been groping all their
lives in vain, trying to find something which would answer
the inner call for a larger life, something which would
satisfy their longings, feed their soul hunger, and help
them to find fulfillment of their life dreams.
If
you are groping to find that something which will give enduring
satisfaction, which will satisfy your soul; if you have
not yet found that something which answers the persistent
inward call of your being; if you have not yet found that
living water which quenches the souls thirst, come
and drink at the fountain of the new philosophy.
Man
has glimpsed only a little bit of the divine plan, but this
glimpse promises so much that he feels he must see the whole.
The part of ourselves we have discovered reveals only a
part of the divine pattern, and we shall never rest until
we trace the whole.
The
larger, grander, superb thing we know and instinctively
feel we ought to be beats so mightily so persistently beneath
the little dwarfed thing we are that we must uncover it,
we must develop it, and we must use it. No human being can
be satisfied while they are haunted by that other part of
the divine pattern, the part which was shown to them in
the mount of their highest moment. The part of ourselves
we have discovered is a prophecy of an infinitely larger
and more magnificent whole, and we must find it. This is
the great object of our existence. We are here to find the
rest of the pattern of the divine man.
Individually
we have gotten a glimpse of the larger possible man, and
we must bring them out. We have been shown a part which
prophesies the possible whole, and every now and then lest
we become discouraged and give up the pursuit, nature gives
us a Lincoln, a Gladstone, a Phillips Brooks, in order apparently
to show us the possibilities of man and to stimulate us
in our efforts to evolve the God man.
The
new life philosophy is the Christ motive which has been
working in man all up through the ages in its efforts to
produce the master man, not the selfish, grasping, greedy
man, but the masterful, selfless, impersonal man, the Christ
like man or woman with the God consciousness, the man or
woman who realizes that they are part of all mankind; that
they have come out from God and that they are going back
to God.