"I read the papers every day, and oft encounter tales which show
there's hope for every jay who in life's battle fails. I've just
been reading of a gent who joined the has-been ranks, at fifty years
without a cent, or credit at the banks. But undismayed he buckled
down, refusing to be beat, and captured fortune and renown; he's now
on Easy Street. Men say that fellows down and out ne'er leave the
rockly track, but facts will show, beyond a doubt, that has-beens do
come back. I know, for I who write this rhyme, when forty-odd years
old, was down and out, without a dime, my whiskers full of mold. By
black disaster I was trounced until it jarred my spine; I was a
failure so pronounced I didn't need a sign. And after I had soaked
my coat, I said (at forty-three), 'I'll see if I can catch the goat
that has escaped from me.' I labored hard; I strained my dome, to do
my daily grind, until in triumph I came home, my billy-goat behind.
And any man who still has health may with the winners stack, and
have a chance at fame and wealth--for has-beens do come back." --WALT MASON. [**]
DO you know why it is that the Bolsheviki are so opposed to
religion?
Because religion, as it is commonly accepted, teaches man
resignation to conditions as they are--teaches, in effect, that God
created some men poor and some rich. That this unequal distribution
is a perfectly natural thing. And that we must not rail against it
because it will all be made right in the next world.
Napoleon, in his early Jacobin days, denounced religion for that
very reason. But when he had won to power, when he planned to make
himself Emperor, then he found he had need for that religion, and
re-established the Church in France.
For, he reasoned, how can people be satisfied without religion?
If one man is starving, near another who is making himself sick by eating too much, how can you expect to keep the
starving one resigned to his fate unless you teach him it will all
be made right in some indefinite future state?
Organized society could not exist, as he planned it, without some
being rich and some poor, and to keep the poor satisfied, there must
be an authority to declare--"God wills it thus. But just be patient.
In the hereafter all this will be different. YOU will be the ones
then to occupy the places of honor."
Religion, in other words--as it is ordinarily taught--is a fine
thing to keep the common people satisfied!
But Christianity was never meant for a weapon to keep the rich
wealthy and secure, the poor satisfied and in their proper place. On
the contrary, Christianity as taught by Jesus opened the way to all Good. And Christianity as it was practiced in its early
years was an idealized form of Socialism that benefited each and
all. No one was wealthier than his neighbors, it is true--but
neither was any poverty-stricken. Theirs was the creed of the Three
Musketeers--"All for one, and one for all!"
"Ask and ye shall receive," said Jesus. "Seek and ye shall find."
That was not directed to the rich alone. That was to ALL men.
Providence has never made a practice of picking out certain
families or certain individuals and favoring them to the detriment
of other people--much as some of our "leading families" would have
us believe it. It is only man that has arrogated to himself that
privilege. We laugh now at the "divine right of Kings." It is just
as ridiculous to think that a few have the right to all the good things of life, while the many
have to toil and sweat to do them service.
To quote Rumbold's last words from the scaffold--"I never could
believe that Providence had sent a few men into the world ready
booted and spurred to ride, and millions ready saddled and bridled
to be ridden."
There is nothing right in poverty. Not only that, but there is
nothing meritorious in poverty. The mere fact that you are poor and
ground down by fear and worry is not going to get you any forwarder
in the hereafter. On the contrary, your soul is likely to be too
pinched by want, too starved and shrivelled to be able to expand.
"The Kingdom of Heaven is within you." To me that means that
Heaven is here and now. That if we want any happiness from it we've got to get it as we go along. I've never
been much of a believer in accepting these promissory notes for
happiness. Every time one of them falls due, you find you just have
to renew it for another six months or a year, until one of these
days you wake up and find that the bank has busted and all your
notes are not worth the paper they are written on.
The Cumaean Sibyl is said to have offered Tarquin the Proud nine
books for what he thought an exorbitant sum. So he refused. She
burned three of the books, and placed the same price on the six as
on the original nine. Again he refused. She burned three more books,
and offered the remainder for the sum she had first asked. This time
Tarquin accepted. The books were found to contain prophecies and
invaluable directions regarding Roman policy, but alas, they were no longer complete.
So it is with happiness. If you take it as you go along, you get
it in its entirety. But if you keep putting off the day when you
shall enjoy it--if you keep taking promissory notes for
happiness--every day will mean one day less of it that you will
have. Yet the cost is just the same.
The purpose of existence is GROWTH. You can't grow spiritually or
mentally without happiness. And by Happiness I don't mean a timid
resignation to the "Will of God." That so-called "Will of God" is
more often than not either pure laziness on the part of the resigned
one or pure cussedness on the part of the one that is "putting
something over" on him. It is the most sanctimonious expression yet
devised to excuse some condition that no one has the energy or the ability to rectify.
No--by Happiness I mean the everyday enjoyment of everyday
people. I mean love and laughter and honest amusement. Every one of
us is entitled to it. Every one of us can have it--if he has the
WILL and the ENERGY to get out and get it for himself.
Joyless work, small pay, no future, nothing to look forward
to--God never planned such an existence. It is manmade--and you can
be man enough to unmake it as far as you and yours are concerned.
God never made any man poor any more than He made any man sick.
Look around you. All of Nature is bountiful. On every hand you see
profusion--in the trees, in the flowers, in everything that He
planned. The only Law of Nature is the law of Supply. Poverty is un-natural. It is man-made,
through the limits man puts upon himself. God never put them there
any more than He showed partiality by giving to some of His children
gifts and blessings which He withheld from others. His gifts are
just as available to you as to any man on earth. The difference is
all in your understanding of how to avail yourself of the infinite
supply all about you.
Take the worry clamps off your mentality and you will make the
poverty clamps loosen up from your finances. Your affairs are so
closely related to your consciousness that they too will relax into
peace, order, and plenty. Divine ideas in your spiritual
consciousness will become active in your business, and will work out
as your abundant prosperity.
As David V. Bush says in "Applied Psychology and Scientific
Living"--"Thoughts are things; thoughts are energy; thoughts are
magnets which attract to us the very things which we think.
Therefore, if a man is in debt, he will, by continually thinking
about debt, bring more debts to him. For thoughts are causes, and he
fastens more debts on to himself and actually creates more
obligations by thinking about debts.
"Concentrate and think upon things that you want; not on things
which you ought not to have. Think of abundance, of opulence, of
plenty, of position, harmony and growth, and if you do not see them
manifested today, they will be realized to-morrow. If you must pass
through straits of life where you do not outwardly see abundance,
know that you have it within, and that in time it will manifest
itself.
"I say, if you concentrate on debt, debt is what you will have;
if you think about poverty, poverty is what you will receive. It is
just as easy, when once the mind becomes trained, to think
prosperity and abundance and plenty, as it is to think lack,
limitation and poverty."
Prosperity is not limited to time or to place. It manifests when
and where there is consciousness to establish it. It is attracted to
the consciousness that is free from worry, strain, and tension.
So never allow yourself to worry about poverty. Be careful, take
ordinary business precautions--of course. But don't center your
thought on your troubles. The more you think of them, the more
tightly you fasten them upon yourself. Think of the results you are
after--not of the difficulties in the way. Mind will find the way.
It is merely up to you to choose the goal, then keep your thought steadfast until that goal
is won.
The greatest short-cut to prosperity is to LIVE IT! Prosperity
attracts. Poverty repels. To quote Orison Swett Marden--"To be
ambitious for wealth and yet always expecting to be poor, to be
always doubting your ability to get what you long for, is like
trying to reach East by travelling West. There is no philosophy
which will help a man to succeed when he is always doubting his
ability to do so, and thus attracting failure."
Again: "No matter how hard you may work for success, if your
thought is saturated with the fear of failure it will kill your
efforts, neutralize your endeavors, and make success impossible."
The secret of prosperity lies in so vividly imaging it in your
own mind that you literally exude prosperity. You feel prosperous, you
look prosperous, and the result is that before long you ARE
prosperous.
I remember seeing a play a number of years ago that was based on
this thought. A young fellow--a chronic failure--was persuaded by a
friend to carry a roll of $1000 counterfeit bills in his pocket, and
to show them, unostentatiously, when the occasion offered. Of
course, everyone thought he had come into some legacy. The natural
inference was that anyone who carried fifty or a hundred thousand
dollar bills in his pockets must have a lot more in the bank.
Opportunities flocked to him. Opportunities to make good.
Opportunities to make money. He made good! And that without having
to spend any of this spurious money of his. For most business today is done on credit. I know many wealthy men who
seldom carry anything but a little change in their pockets for tips.
Everything they do, everything they buy, is "Charged." And big deals
are put through in the same way. If a man is believed to have plenty
of money, if he has a reputation for honesty and fair-dealing, he
may put through a transaction running into six or seven figures
without paying one cent down. The thing that counts is not the
amount of your balance at the Bank, but what others THINK of you,
the IMAGE you have created in your own and in others minds.
What do you lack? What thing do you want most? Realize that
before it or any other thing can be, it must first be imaged in
Mind. Realize, too, that when you can close your eyes and actually
SEE that thing, you have brought it into
being--you have drawn upon that invisible substance all about
you--you have created something. Hold it in your thought, focus your
mind upon it, "BELIEVE THAT YOU HAVE IT"--and you can safely leave
its material manifestation to the Genie-of-your-Mind.
God is but another name for the invisible, everywhere-present,
Source-of-things. Out of the air the seed gathers the essences which
are necessary to its bountiful growth; out of the invisible ether
our minds gather the rich ideas that stimulate us to undertake and
to carry out enterprises that bring prosperity to us. Let us see
with the eye of the mind a bountiful harvest; then our minds will be
quickened with ideas of abundance, and plenty will appear, not only
in our world, but everywhere.
"As the rain cometh down and the snow from heaven, and returneth
not thither, but watereth the earth, and maketh it bring forth and
bud, and giveth seed to the sower and bread to the eater; so shall
my word be that goeth forth out of my mouth: it shall not return
unto me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please, and it
shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it."--Isaiah.
Suggested Further Reading
Footnotes
^473:* From "Walt Mason--His Book." Barse & Hopkins, Newark, N.J.
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The Secret of the Ages, by Robert Collier, [1926].
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 which was
published in 1925 in seven small volumes. The title
pages, page numbers, contents and index pages of seven
volumes 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, but may not be so in some
countries. |
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