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Book Excerpts:
Chapter
One
Thought and Character
The
aphorism, "As a man thinketh in
his heart so is he," not only
embraces the whole of a man's being,
but is so comprehensive as to reach
out to every condition and
circumstance of his life. A man
is literally what he thinks, his
character being the complete sum of
all his thoughts.
As the
plant springs from, and could not be
without, the seed, so every act of a
man springs from the hidden seeds of
thought, and could not have appeared
without them. This applies equally
to those acts called "spontaneous"
and "unpremeditated" as to those
which are deliberately executed.
Act is
the blossom of thought, and joy and
suffering are its fruits; thus
does a man garner in the sweet and
bitter fruitage of his own
husbandry. Thought in the mind hath
made us. What we are By thought we
wrought and built. If a man's mind
Hath evil thoughts, pain comes on
him as comes The wheel the ox behind
. . . If one endure in purity of
thought joy follows him as his own
shadow - sure.
Man is a
growth by law, and not a creation by
artifice, and cause and effect is as
absolute and undeviating in the
hidden realm of thought as in the
world of visible and material
things. A noble and Godlike
character is not a thing of favor or
chance, but is the natural result of
continued effort in right thinking,
the effect of long-cherished
association with Godlike thoughts.
An ignoble
and bestial character, by the same
process, is the result of the
continued harboring of groveling
thoughts. Man is made or unmade by
himself; in the armory of thought he
forges the weapons by which he
destroys himself. He also fashions
the tools with which he builds for
himself heavenly mansions of joy and
strength and peace.
By the
right choice and true application of
thought, man ascends to the Divine
Perfection; by the abuse and wrong
application of thought, he descends
below the level of the beast.
Between these two extremes are all
the grades of character, and man is
their maker and master.
Of all the
beautiful truths pertaining to the
soul which have been restored and
brought to light in this age, none
is more gladdening or fruitful of
divine promise and confidence than
this - that man is the master of
thought, the molder of character,
and maker and shaper of condition,
environment, and destiny.
As a being of Power,
Intelligence, and Love, and the lord
of his own thoughts, man holds the
key to every situation, and contains
within himself that transforming and
regenerative agency by which he may
make himself what he wills.
Man is always the master, even in
his weakest and most abandoned
state; but in his weakness and
degradation he is the foolish master
who misgoverns his "household." When
he begins to reflect upon his
condition, and to search diligently
for the Law upon which his being is
established, he then becomes the
wise master, directing his energies
with intelligence, and fashioning
his thoughts to fruitful issues.
Such is the conscious master, and
man can only thus become by
discovering within himself the laws
of thought; which discovery is
totally a matter of application,
self-analysis, and experience.
Only by
much searching and mining are gold
an diamonds obtained, and man can
find every truth connected with his
being if he will dig deep into the
mine of his soul.
And that he
is the maker of his character, the
molder of his life, and the builder
of his destiny, he may unerringly
prove: if he will watch, control,
and alter his thoughts, tracing
their effects upon himself, upon
others, and upon his life and
circumstances; if he will link cause
and effect by patient practice and
investigation, utilizing his every
experience, even to the most
trivial, as a means of obtaining
that knowledge of himself. In this
direction, as in no other, is the
law absolute that "He that
seeketh findeth; and to him that
knocketh it shall be opened"; for
only by patience, practice, and
ceaseless importunity can a man
enter the Door of the Temple of
Knowledge. |