THIS Part tells of the search for truth, which is another name
for ultimate cause. If we can find the truth we shall have found the
cause for every effect, and having found the cause we shall be in a
position to control the effect. It explains that all things are
finally resolvable into one thing, and that as they are thus
translatable they must ever be in relation and can never be in
opposition to one another. It explains that a knowledge of this
primary substance is power; it explains that a knowledge of cause
and effect is power, that wealth is the offspring of power, that
events and conditions are significant only as they effect power, and
finally that all things represent certain forms and decrees of
power. It tells of a certain form of power which can control every
other power, why it is superior and how we may make use of this
superior power.
INTRODUCTION. PART NINETEEN
Fear is a powerful form of thought. It paralyses the nerve
centres,
thus affecting the circulation of the blood. This, in turn,
paralyses the muscular system, so that fear affects the entire
being, body, brain and nerve, physical, mental and muscular.
Of course the way to overcome fear is to become conscious of
power. What is this mysterious vital force which we call power? We
do not know; neither do we know what electricity is. But we do know
that by conforming to the requirements of the law by which
electricity is governed, it will be our obedient servant; that it
will light our homes, our cities, run our machinery and serve us in
many useful capacities.
And so it is with vital force. Although we do not know what it
is, and possibly may never know, we do know that it is a primary
force which manifests through living bodies, and that by complying
with the laws and principles by which it is governed, we can open
ourselves to a more abundant inflow of this vital energy, and thus
express the highest possible degree of mental, moral and spiritual
efficiency.
Part Nineteen, which follows, tells of a very simple way of
developing this vital force. If you put into practice the
information outlined in this Part you will soon develop the sense of
power which has ever been the distinguishing mark of genius.
PART NINETEEN.
[XIX:1]1. The search for truth is no longer a haphazard
adventure, but it is a systematic process, and is logical in its
operation. Every kind of experience is given a voice in shaping its
decision.
[XIX:2]2. In seeking the truth we are seeking ultimate cause; we
know that every human experience is an effect; then if we may
ascertain the cause, and if we shall find that this cause is one
which we can consciously control, the effect or the experience will
be within our control also.
[XIX:3]3. Human experience will then no longer be the football of
fate; a man will not be the child of fortune, but destiny, fate and
fortune will be controlled as readily as a captain controls his
vessel, or an engineer his train.
[XIX:4]4. All things are finally resolvable into the same element
and as they are thus translatable, one into the other, they must
ever be in relation and may never be in opposition to one another.
[XIX:5]5. In the physical world there are innumerable contrasts,
and these may for convenience sake be designated by distinctive
names. There are sizes, colours, shades or ends to all things. There
is a North Pole, and a South Pole, an inside and an outside, a seen
and an unseen, but these expressions merely serve to place extremes
in contrast.
[XIX:6]6. They are names given to two different parts of one
quantity. The two extremes are relative; they are not separate entities, but are two parts or
aspects of the whole.
[XIX:7]7. In the mental world we find the same law; we speak of
knowledge and ignorance, but ignorance is only a lack of knowledge
and is therefore found to be simply a word to express the absence of
knowledge; it has no principle in itself.
[XIX:8]8. In the Moral World we again find the same law; we speak
of good and evil, but Good is a reality, something tangible, while
Evil is found to be simply a negative condition, the absence of
Good. Evil is sometimes thought to be a very real condition, but it
has no principle, no vitality, no life; we know this because it can
always be destroyed by Good; just as Truth destroys Error and light
destroys darkness, so Evil vanishes when Good appears; there is
therefore but one principle in the Moral World.
[XIX:9]9. We find exactly the same law obtaining in the Spiritual
world; we speak of Mind and Matter as two separate entities, but
clearer insight makes it evident that there is but one operative
principle, and that is Mind.
[XIX:10]10. Mind is the real and the eternal. Matter is for ever
changing; we know that in the aeons of time a hundred years is but
as a day. If we stand in any large city and let the eye rest on the
innumerable large and magnificent buildings, the railways, the electric trams, the telephones, the electric
lights and all the other conveniences of modern civilization, we may
remember that not one of them was there 100 years ago, excepting
perhaps several of the buildings; and if we could stand on the same
spot in a hundred years from now, in all probability we should find
that but few of them remained.
[XIX:11]11. In the animal kingdom we find the same law of change.
The millions and millions of animals come and go, a few years
constituting their span of life. In the plant world the change is
still more rapid. Many plants and nearly all grasses come and go in
a single year. When we pass to the inorganic, we expect to find
something more substantial, but as we gaze on the apparently solid
continent, we are told that it arose from the ocean; we see the
giant mountain and are told that the place where it now stands was
once a lake; and as we stand in awe before the great cliffs in the
Yosemite Valley we can easily trace the path of the glaciers which
carried all before them.
[XIX:12]12. We are in the presence of continual change, and we
know that this change is but the evolution of the Universal Mind,
the grand process whereby all things are continually being created
anew, and we come to know that matter is but a form which Mind takes
and is therefore simply a condition. Matter has no principle; Mind
is the only principle.
[XIX:13]13. We have then come to know that Mind is the only
principle which is operative in the physical, mental, moral and
spiritual world.
[XIX:14]14. We also know that this mind is static, or mind at
rest; and we know that the ability of the individual to think is his
ability to act upon the Universal Mind and convert it into dynamic
mind, or mind in motion.
[XIX:15]15. In order to do this fuel must be applied in the form
of food, for man cannot think without eating, and so we find that
even a spiritual activity such as thinking cannot be converted into
sources of pleasure and profit except by making use of material
means.
[XIX:16]16. It requires energy of some kind to collect
electricity and convert it into a dynamic power; it requires the
rays of the sun to give the necessary energy to sustain plant life;
so it also requires energy in the form of food to enable the
individual to think and thereby act upon the Universal Mind.
[XIX:17]17. You may know that thought constantly, eternally, is
taking form, is for ever seeking expression, or you may not, but the
fact remains that if your thought is powerful, constructive, and
positive, this will be plainly evident in the state of your health,
your business and your environment. If your thought is weak,
critical, destructive and negative generally, it will manifest in
your body as fear, worry and nervousness, in your finance as lack and limitation, and in discordant
conditions in your environment.
[XIX:18]18. All wealth is the offspring of power; possessions are
of value only as they confer power. Events are significant only as
they affect power; all things represent certain forms and degrees of
power.
[XIX:19]19. A knowledge of cause and effect as shown by the laws
governing steam, electricity, chemical affinity and gravitation
enables men to plan courageously and to execute fearlessly. These
laws are called Natural Laws, because they govern the physical
world, but all power is not physical power; there is also mental
power, and there is moral and spiritual power.
[XIX:20]20. What are our schools, our universities, but mental
power-houses, places where mental power is being developed?
[XIX:21]21. As there are many mighty power-houses for the
application of power to ponderous machinery, whereby raw material is
collected and converted into the necessities and comforts of life,
so the mental power-houses collect the raw material and cultivate
and develop it into a power which is infinitely superior to all the
forces of Nature, marvellous though these may be.
[XIX:22]22. What is this raw material which is being collected in
these thousands of mental powerhouses all over the world and
developed into a power which is evidently controlling every other power? In its
static form it is Mind, in its dynamic form it is Thought.
[XIX:23]23. This power is superior because it exists on a higher
plane, because it has enabled man to discover the law by which these
wonderful forces of Nature could be harnessed and made to do the
work of hundreds and thousands of men. It has enabled man to
discover laws whereby time and space have been annihilated, and now
apparently the law of gravitation is to be overcome.
[XIX:24]24. Thought is the vital force or energy which is being
developed and which has produced such startling results in the last
half century as to bring about a world which would be absolutely
inconceivable to a man existing only fifty or even twenty-five years
ago. If such results have been secured by organizing these mental
power-houses in fifty years, what may not be expected in another
fifty years?
[XIX:25]25. The substance from which all things are created is
infinite in quantity; we know that light travels at the rate of
186,000 miles per second, and we know that there are stars so remote
that it takes light 2,000 years to reach us, and we know that such
stars exist in all parts of the heaven; we know, too, that this
light comes in waves, so that if the ether on which these waves
travel was not continuous the light would fail to reach us; we can then only come to the conclusion
that this substance, or ether, or raw material, is universally
present.
[XIX:26]26. How, then does it manifest in form? In electrical
science a battery is formed by connecting the opposite poles of zinc
and copper, which causes a current to flow from one to the other and
so provides energy. This same process is repeated in respect to
every polarity, and as all form simply depends upon the rate of
vibration and consequent relations of atoms to each other if we wish
to change the form of manifestation we must change the polarity.
This is the principle of causation.
[XIX:27]27. For your next exercise, concentrate, and when I use
the word concentrate, I mean all that the word implies; become so
absorbed in the object of your thought that you are conscious of
nothing else, and do this a few minutes every day. You take the
necessary time to eat in order that the body may be nourished, why
not take the time to assimilate your mental food?
[XIX:28]28. Let the thought rest on the fact that appearances are
deceptive. The earth is not flat, neither is it stationary; the sky
is not a dome, the sun does not move, the stars are not small specks
of light, and matter which was once supposed to be fixed has been
found to be in a state of perpetual flux.
[XIX:29]29. Try to realize that the day is fast approaching--its
dawn is now at hand--when modes of thought and action must be
adjusted to rapidly increasing knowledge of the operation of eternal
principles.
Nothing is comparable to the pleasure of an active and prevailing
thought; a thought prevailing over the difficulty and obscurity of
the object, and refreshing the soul with new discoveries and images
of things; andthereby extending the bounds of apprehension, and as
it were enlarging the territory of reason.--South.
PART NINETEEN
181. How are extremes placed in contrast?
They are designated by distinctive names, such as inside and
outside, top and bottom, light and dark, good and bad.
182. Are these separate entities?
No, they are parts or aspects of one Whole.
183. What is the one creative Principle in the physical, mental
and spiritual world?
The Universal Mind, or the Eternal Energy from which all things
proceed.
184. How are we related to this creative Principle?
By our ability to think.
185. How does this creative Principle become operative?
Thought is the seed which results in action, and action results
in form.
186. Upon what does form depend?
Upon the rate of vibration.
18y. How may the rate of vibration be changed?
By mental action.
188. Upon what does mental action depend?
Upon polarity, action and reaction, between the individual and
the Universal.
189. Does the creative energy originate in the individual or the
Universal?
In the Universal, but the Universal can manifest only through the
individual.
190. Why is the individual necessary?
Because the Universal is static, and requires energy to start it
in motion. This is furnished by food which is converted into energy,
which in turn enables the individual to think. When the individual
stops eating he stops thinking; then he no longer acts upon the
Universal; there is consequently no longer any action or reaction;
the Universal is then only pure mind in static form mind at rest.
There is no thought in my mind but it quickly tends to convert
itself into a power and organizes a huge instrumentality of
means.--Emerson.
Suggested Further Reading
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THE MASTER KEY SYSTEM IN TWENTY-FOUR PARTS WITH
QUESTIONNAIRE AND GLOSSARY By CHARLES F.HAANEL Saint
Louis, MO: Inland Printery [1919].
This text has been reformatted for the web at
Hinduwebsite.com by Jayaram V. This text is not an
exact reproduction of the original edition
published in 1919. The title
pages, page numbers, contents and index pages of the
book are not included in this electronic version.
Those who are interested in the entire version of the
text may refer the original copy. This text is in the
public domain in the US as it was published before
1923. |
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