From The Sermon On The Mount. Copyright 1934, 1935, 1938 by
Harper-Collins Publishers.
The Lord's Prayer
The Lord's Prayer is the most important of all the Christian documents. It was
carefully constructed by Jesus with certain very clear ends in view. That is
why, of all his teachings, it is by far the best known, and the most often
quoted. It is, indeed, the one common denominator of all the Christian churches.
Every one of them, without exception, uses the Lord's Prayer; it is perhaps the
only ground upon which they all meet. Every Christian child is taught the Lord's
Prayer, and any Christian who prays at all says it almost every day. Its actual
use probably exceeds that of all other prayers put together. Undoubtedly
everyone who is seeking to follow along the Way that Jesus led, should make a
point of using the Lord's Prayer, and using it intelligently, every day.
In order to do this, we should understand that the Prayer is a carefully
constructed organic whole. Many people rattle through it like parrots, forgetful
of the warning that Jesus gave us against vain repetions, and, of course, no
one derives any profit from that sort of thing.
The Great Prayer is a compact formula for the development of the soul. It is
designed with the utmost care for the specific purpose; so that those who use it
regularly, with understanding, will experience a real change of soul. The only
progress is this change, which is what the Bible calls being born again. It is
the change of soul that matters. The mere acquistion of fresh knowledge received
intellectually makes no change in the soul. The Lord's Prayer is especially
designed to bring this change about, and when it is regularly used it invariably
does so.
The more one analyzes the Lord's Prayer, the more wonderful is its
construction seen to be. It meets everyone's need just at his own level. It not
only provides a rapid spiritual development for those who are sufficiently
advanced to be ready, but in its superficial meaning it supplies the more
simpleminded and even the more materially-minded people with just what they need
at the moment, if they use the Prayer sincerely.
The greatest of all prayers was designed with still another purpose in view,
quite as important as either of the others. Jesus foresaw that, as centuries
went by, his simple, primitive teaching would gradually become overlain by all
sorts of external things which really have nothing whatever to do with it. He
foresaw that men who had never known him, relying, quite sincerely, no doubt,
upon their own limited intellects, would build up theologies and doctrinal
systems, obscuring the direct simplicity of the spiritual message, and actually
erecting a wall between God and man. He designed his Prayer in such a way that
it would pass safely through those ages without being tampered with. He arranged
it with consummate skill, so that it could not be twisted or distorted, or
adapted to any man-made system; so that, in fact, it would carry the whole
Christ Message wthin it and yet not have anything on the surface to attract
the attention of the restless, managing type of person. So it has turned out
that, through all the changes and chances of Christian history, this Prayer has
come through to us uncorrupted and unspoiled.
The first thing that we notice is that the Prayer naturallly falls into seven
clauses. This is very characteristic of the Oriental tradition. Seven symbolizes
individual soul, just as the number twelve in the same convention stands for
corporate completeness. In practical use, we often find an eighth clause added -
"Thine is the kingdom, the power, and the glory" - but this, though in itself an
excellent affirmation, is not really a part of the Prayer. The seven clauses are
put together with the utmost care, in perfect order and sequence, and they
contain everything that is necessary for the nourishment of the soul. Let us
consider the first clause:
Our Father
This simple statement in itself constitutes a definite and complete system of
theology. It fixes clearly and distinctly the nature and character of God. It
sums up the Truth of Being. It tells all that man needs to know about God, and
about himself, and about his neighbor. Anything that is added to this can only
be by way of commentary, and is more likely than not to complicate and obscure
the true meaning of the text. Oliver Wendell Holmes said: "My religion is summed
up in the first two words of the Lord's Prayer," and most of us will find
ourselves in full agreement with him.
Notice the simple, clear-cut, definite statement - "Our Father." In this
clause Jesus lays down once and for all that the relationship between God and
man is that of father and child. This cuts out any possibility that the Diety
could be the relentless and cruel tyrant that is often pictured by theology.
Jesus says definitely that the relationship is that of parent and child; not an
Oriental despot dealing with grovelling slaves, but parent and child. Now we all
know perfectly well that men and women, however short they may fall in other
respects, nearly always do the best they can for their children. Unfortunately,
cruel and wicked parents are to be found, but they are so exceptional as to make
a paragraph for the newspapers. The vast majority of men and women are at their
best in dealing with their children. Speaking of the same truth elsewhere, Jesus
said: "If you, who are so full of evil, nevertheless do your best for your
children, how much more so will God, who is altogether good, do for you"; and so
he begins his Prayer by establishing the character of God as that of the perfect
Father dealing with His children.
Note that this clause which fixes the nature of God at the same time fixes
the nature of man, because if man is the offspring of God, he must partake of
the nature of God, since the nature of the offspring is invariably similar to
that of the parent. It is a cosmic law that like begets like. It is not possible
that a rosebush should produce lilies, or that a cow should give birth to a
colt. The offspring is and must be of the same nature as the parent; and so,
since God is Divine Spirit, man must essentially be Divine Spirit too, whatever
appearances may say to the contrary.
Let us pause here for a moment and try to realize what a tremendous step
forward we have taken in appreciating the teaching of Jesus on this point. Do
you not see that at a single blow it swept away nintey-nine percent of all the
old theology, with its avenging God, its chosen and favorite individuals, its
eternal hell fire, and all the other horrible paraphernalia of man's diseased
and terrified imagination. God exists - and the Eternal, All-Powerful,
All-Present God is the loving Father of mankind.
If you would meditate upon this acct, until you had some degree of
understanding of what it really means, most of your difficulties and physical
ailments would disappear, for they are rooted and grounded in fear. The
underlying cause of all trouble is fear. If only you could realize to
some extent that Omnipotent Wisdom is your living, loving Father, most of your
fears would go. If you could realize it completely, every negative thing in your
life would vanish away, and you would demonstrate perfection in every phase. Now
you see the object that Jesus had in mind when he placed this clause first.
Next we see that the Prayer says, not "My Father," but "Our Father," and this
indicates, beyond the possibility of mistake, the truth of the brotherhood of
man. It forces upon our attention at the very beginning the fact that ll men are
indeed brethren, the children of one Father; and that "there is neither Jew nor
Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither chose nor unchosen,"
because all men are brethen. Here Jesus in making his second point, ends all the
tiresome nonsense about a "chosen race,: about the spiritual superiority of any
one group of human beings over any other group. He cuts away the illusion that
the members of any nation, or race, or territority, or group, or class, or
color, are, in the sight of God, superior to any other group. A belief in the
superiority of one's own particular group, or "herd," as the psychologists call
it, is an illusion to which mankind is very prone, but in the teaching of Jesus
it has no place. He teaches that the thing that places a man is the spiritual
condition of his own individual soul, and that as long as he is upon the
spiritual path it makes no difference whatever to what group he belongs or does
not belong.
The final point is the implied command that we are to pray not only for
ourselves but for all mankind. Every student of Truth should hold the thought of
the Truth of Being for the whole human race for a least a moment each day, since
none of us lives to himself nor dies to himself; for indeed we are all truly - and
in a much more literal sense than people are aware - limbs of one Body.
Now we begin to see how very much more than appears on the surface is
contained in thos simple words "Our Father." Simple - one might almost say
innocent - as they look, Jesus has concealed within them a spiritual explosive
that will ultimately destroy every man-made system that holds the human race in
bondage.
Which Art In Heaven
Having clearly established the Fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man,
Jesus next goes on to enlarge upon the nature of God, and to describe the
fundamental facts of existence. Having shown that God and man are parent and
child, he goes on to delineate the function of each in the grand scheme of
things. He explains that it is the nature of God to be in heaven, and of man to
be on earth, because God is Cause, and man is manifestation. Cause cannot be
expression, and expression cannot be cause, and we must be careful not to
confuse the two things. Here heaven stands for God or Cause, because in
religious phraseology heaven is the term for the Presence of God. In metaphysics
it is called the Absolute, because it is the realm of Pure Unconditioned Being,
of archetypal ideas. The word "earth" means manifestation, and man's function is
to manifest or express God, or Cause. In other words, God is the Infinite and
Perfect Cause of all things; but Cause has to be expressed, and God expresses
Himself by means of man. Man's destiny is to express God in all sorts of glorius
and wonderful ways. Some of this expression we see as his surroundings; first
his physical body, which is really only the most intimate part of his
embodiment; then his home; his work; his recreation; in short, his whole
expression. To express means to press outwards, or bring into sight that which
already exists implicity. Every feature of your life is really a manifestation
or expression of something in your soul.
Some of these points may seem at first to be a little abstract; but since it
is misunderstandings about the relationship of God and man that lead to all our
difficulties, it is worth any amount of trouble to correctly understand that
relationship. Trying to have manifestation without Cause is atheism and
materialism, and we know where they lead. Trying to have Cause without
manifestation leads man to suppose himself to be a personal God, and this
commonly ends in megalomania and a kind of paralysis of expression.
The important thing to realize is that God is in heaven and man on earth, and
that each has his own role in the scheme of things. Although they are One, they
are not one-and-the-same. Jesus establishes this point carefully when he says,
"Our Father which art in heaven.
Hallowed Be Thy Name
In the Bible, as elsewhere, the "name" of anything means the essential nature or
character of that thing, and so, when we are told what the name of God is, we
are told what His nature is, and His name or nature, Jesus says, is "hallowed."
Now what does the word "hallowed" mean? Well, if you trace the derivation back
into Old English, you will discover a most extraordinarily interesting and
significant fact. The word "hallowed" has the same meaning as "holy, ", "whole,"
"wholesome," and "heal," or "healed"; so we see that the nature of God is not
merely worthy of our veneration, but is complete and perfect - altogether good.
Some very remarkable consequences follow from this. We have agreed that an
effect must be similar in its nature to its cause, and so, because the nature of
God is hallowed, everything that follows from that Cause must be hallowed or
perfect too. Just as a rosebush cannot produce lilies, so God cannot cause or
send anything but perfect good. As the Bible says, "The same fountain cannot
send forth both sweet and bitter water." From this it follows that God cannot,
as people sometimes think, send sickness or trouble, or accidents - much less
death - for these things are unlike His nature. "Hallowed be thy name" means
"Thy nature is altogether good and Thou art the author only of perfect good."
Of purer eyes than to behold evil, and canst not look on iniquity.
If you think that God has sent any of your difficulties to you, for no matter
how good a reason, you are giving power to your troubles, and this makes it very
difficult to get rid of them.
Thy Kingdom Come, Thy Will Be Done In Earth As It Is In Heaven
Man being manifestation or expression of God has a limitless destiny
before him. His work is to express, in concrete definite form, the abstract
ideas with which God furnishes him, and in order to do this, he must have
creative power. If he did not have creative power, he would be merely a machine
through which God worked - an automaton. But man is not an automaton; he is an
individualized consciousness. God individualizes Himself in an infinite number
of distinct focal points of consciousness, each one quite different; and
therefore each one is a distinct way of knowing the universe, each a distinct
experience. Notice carefully that the word "individual" means undivided.
The consciousness of each one is distinct from God and from all others, and yet
none are separated. How can this be? How can two things be one, and yet not one
and the same? The answer is that in matter, which is finite, they cannot; but in
Spirit, which is infinite, they can. With our present limited, three-dimensional
consciousness, we cannot see this; but intuitively we can understand it through
prayer. If God did not individualize Himself, there would be only one
experience; as it is, there are as many universes as there are individuals to
form them through thinking.
"Thy kingdom come" means that it is our duty to be ever occupied in helping
to establish; the Kingdom of God on earth. That is to say, our work is to bring
more upon this plane. That is what we are here for. The old saying, "God has a
plan for every man, and he has on for you," is quite correct. God has glorious
and wonderful plans for every one of us; He has planned a splendid career, full
of interest, life, and joy, for each, and if our lives are dull, or restricted,
or squalid, that is not his fault, but ours.
If only you will find out the thing God intends you to do, and will do it,
you wil find that all doors will open to you; all obstacles in your path will
melt away; you will be acclaimed a brilliant success; you will be most liberally
rewared from the monetary point of view; and you will be gloriously happy.
There is a true place in life for each one of us, upon the attainment of
which we shall be completely happy, and perfectly secure. On the other hand,
until we do find our true place we never shall be either happy or secure, no
matter what other things we may have. Our true place is the one place where we
can bring the Kingdom of God into manifestation, and truly say, "Thy kingdom
cometh."
We have seen that man too often chooses to use his free will in a negative
way. He allows himself to think wrongly, selfishly, and this wrong thinking
brings upon him all his troubles. Instead of understanding that it is his
essential nature to express God, to be ever about his Father's business, he
tries to set up upon his own account. All our troubles arise from just this
folly. We abuse our free will, trying to work apart from God; and the very
natural result is all the sickness, poverty, sin, trouble, and death that we
find on the physical plane. We must never for a moment try to live for ourselves,
or make plans or arrangements without reference to God, or suppose that we can
be either happy or successful if we are seeking any other end than to do His
Will. Whatever our desire may be, whether it be something concerning our daily
work, or our duty at home, our relations with our fellowman, or private plans
for the employment of our own time, if we seek to serve self instead of God, we
are ordering trouble, disappointment, and unhappiness, notwithstanding what the
evidence to the contrary may seem to be. Whereas, if we choose what, through
prayer, we know to be His Will, then we are insuring for ourselves ultimate
success, freedom, and joy, however much self-sacrifice and self-discipline it
may involve at the moment.
Our business is to bring our whole nature as fast as we can into conformity
with the Will of God, by constant prayer and unceasing, though unanxious,
watching. "Our wills are ours to make them Thine."
"In His Will is our peace," said Dante, and the Divine Comedy is
really a study in fundamental states of consciousness, the Inferno
representing the state of the soul that is endeavoring to live without God, the
Paradise representing the state of the soul that has achieved its
conscious unity with the Divine Will, and the Purgatorio the condition of
the soul that is struggling to pass from the one state to the other. It was this
sublime conflict of the soul which wrung from the heart of the great Augustine
the cry "Thou hast made us for Thyself, and our hearts are restless until they
repose in Thee."
Give Us This Day Our Daily Bread
Because we are the children of a loving Father, we are entitled to expect that
God will provide us fully with everything we need. Children naturally and
spontaneously look to their human parents to supply all their wants, and in the
same way we should look to God to supply ours. If we do so, in faith and
understanding, we shall never look in vain.
It is the Will of God that we should all lead healthy, happy lives, full of
joyous experience; that we should develop freely and steadily, day by day and
week by week, as our pathways unfold more and more unto the perfect day. To this
end we require such things as food, clothing, shelter, means of travel, books,
and so on; above all, we require freedom; and in the Prayer all these
things are included under the heading of bread. Bread, that is to say, means not
merely food in general, but all things that man requires for a healthy, happy,
free, and harmonious life. But in order to obtain these things, we have to claim
them, not necessarily in detail, but we have to claim them, and, we have
to recognize God and God alone as the Source and fountainhead of all our good.
Lack of any kind is always traceable to the fact that we have been seeking our
supply from some secondary source, instead of from God HImself, the Author and
Giver of life.
People think of their supply as coming from certain investments, or from a
business, or from an employer, perhaps; whereas these are merely the channels
through which it comes, God being the Source. The number of possible channels is
infinite, the Source is One. The particular channel through which you are
getting your supply is quite likely to change, because change is the Cosmic Law
for manifestation. Stagnation is really death; but as long as you realize that
the Source of your supply is the one unchangeable Spirit, all is well.
The fading out of one channel will be but the signal for the opening of another.
If, on the other hand, like most people, you regard the particular channel as
being the source, then when that channel fails, as it is very likely to do, you
are left stranded, because you believe that the source has dried up - and
for practical purposes, on the physical plane, things are a we believe them to
be.
A man, for instance, thinks of his employment as the source of his income,
and for some reason he loses it. His employer goes out of business, or cuts down
the staff, or they have a falling out. Now, because he believes that his
position is the source of his income, the loss of the position naturally means
the loss of the income, and so he has to start looking about for another job,
and perhaps has to look a long time, meanwhile finding himself without apparent
supply. If such a man had realized, through regular daily Treatment, that God
was his supply, and his job only the particular channel through which it came,
then upon the closing of that channel, he would have found another, and probably
a better one, opening immediately. If his belief had been in God as his supply,
then since God cannot change or fail, or fade out, his supply would have come
from somewhere, and would have formed its own channel in whatever was the
easiest way.
In precisely the same way the proprietor of a business may find himself
obliged to close down for some cause outside of his control; or one whose income
is dependent upon stocks or bonds may suddenly find that source dried up, owing
to unexpected happenings on the stock market, or to some catastrophe to a factory
or mine. If he regards the business or the investment as his source of
supply, he will believe his source to have collapsed, and will in consequence be
left stranded; whereas, if his reliance is upon God, he will be comparatively
indifferent to the channel and so that channel will be easily supplanted by a
new one. In short, we have to train ourselves to look to God, Cause, for all
that we need, and then the channel, which is entirely a secondary matter, will
take care of itself.
In its inner and most important meaning, our daily bread signifies the
realization of the Presence of God - an actual sense that God exists not merely
in a nominal way, but as the great reality; the sense that He is present
with us; and the feeing that because He is God, all-good, all-powerful,
all-wise, and all-loving, we have nothing to fear; that we can rely upon Him to
take every care of us; that He will supply all that we need to have; teach us
all that we need to know; and guide our steps so that we shall not make
mistakes. This is Emanuel, or God with us; and remember that it absolutely means
some degree of actual realization, that is to say, some experience in
consciousness, and not just a theoretical recognition of the fact; not simply
talking about God, however beautifully one may talk, or thinking about
Him; but some degree of actual experience. We must begin by thinking about God,
but this should lead to the realization which is the daily bread or
manna. That is the gist of the whole matter. Realization, which is experience,
is the thing that counts. It is realization which marks the progress of the
soul. It is realization which guarantees the demonstration. It is realization,
as distinct from mere theorizing and fine words, which is the substance of
things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. This is the Bread of
LIfe, the hidden mann, and when one has that, he has all things in deed and in
truth. Jesus several times refers to this experience as bread because it is the
nourishment of the soul, just as physical food is the nourishment of the
physical body. Supplied with this food, the soul grows and waxes strong,
gradually developing to adult stature. Without it, she, being deprived of her
essential nourishment, is naturally stunted and crippled.
The common mistake, of course, is to suppose that a formal recognition of God
is sufficient, or that talking about Divine things, perhaps talking very
poetically, is the same as possessing them; but this is exactly on a par with
supposing that looking at a tray of food, or discussing the chemical composition
of sundry foodstuffs, is the same things as actually eating a meal. It is this
mistake which is responsible for the fact that people sometimes pray for a thing
for years without any tangible result. If prayer is a force at all, it cannot be
possible to pray without something happening.
A realization cannot be obtained to order; it must come spontaneously as the
result of regular daily prayer. To seek realization by will power is the surest
way to miss it. Pray regularly and quietly - remember that in all mental work,
effort or strain defeats itself - then presently, perhaps when you least
expect it, like a thief in the night, the realization will come. Meanwhile it is
well to know that all sorts of practical difficulties can be overcome by sincere
prayer, without any realization at all. Good workers have said that they have
had some of their best demonstrations without any realization worth speaking
about; but while it is, of course, a wonderful bonus to surmount such particular
difficulties, we do not achieve the sense of security and well-being to which we
are entitled until we have experienced realization.
Another reason why the food or bread symbol for the experience of the
Presence of God is such a telling one is that the act of eating food is
essentially a thing that must be done for oneself. No one can assimilate food
for another. One may hire servants to do all sorts of other things for him; but
there is on thing that one must positively do for himself, and that is to eat
his own food. In the same way, the realization of the Presence of God is a thing
that no one else can have for us. We can and should help one another in the
overcoming of specific difficulties - "Bear ye one another's burdens" - but the
realization (or making real) of the Presence of God, the "substance" and
"evidence," can, in the nature of things, be had only at firsthand.
In speaking of the "bread of life, Emanuel," Jesus called it our daily
bread. The reason for this is very fundamental - our contact with God must be a
living one. It is our momentary attitude to God which governs our being.
"Behold now is the accepted time; behold now is the day of
salvation." The most futile thing in the world is to seek to live upon a past
realization. The thing that means spiritual life to you is your realization of
God here and now.
Today's realization, no matter how feeble and poor it may seem, has a million
times more power to help you than the most vivid realization of yesterday. Be
thankful for yesterday's experience, knowing that it is with your forever in the
change of conciousness which it has brought about, but do not lean upon it for a
single moment for the need of today. Divine Spirit is, and changes not
with the ebb and flow of human apprehension. The manna in the desert is the Old
Testament prototype of this. The people wandering in the wilderness were told
that they would be supplied with manna from heaven every day, each one always
receiving abundantly for his needs, but they were on no account to try to save it
up for the morrow. They were on no account to endeavor to live upon yesterday's
food, and when, notwithstanding the rule, some of them did try to do so, the
result was pestilence or death.
So it is with us. When we seek to live upon yesterday's realization, we are
actually seeking to live in the past, and to live in the past is death. The art
of life is to live in the present moment, and to make that moment as perfect as
we can by the realization that we are the instruments and expression of God
Himself. the best way to prepare for tomorrow is to make today all that it
should be.
Forgive Us Our Trespasses As We Forgive Them That Trespass Against Us
This clause is the turning point of the Prayer. It is the strategic key to the
whole Treatment. Let us notice here that Jesus has so arranged this marvelous
Prayer that it covers the entire ground of the unfoldment of our souls
completely, and in the most concise and telling way. It omits nothing that is
essential for our salvation, and yet, so compact is it that there is not a
thought or a word too much. Every idea fits into its place with perfect harmony
and in perfect sequence. Anything more would be redundance, anything less would
be incompleteness, and at this point it takes up the critical factor of
forgiveness.
Having told us what God is, what man is, how the universe works, how we are
to do our own work - the salvation of humanity and of our own souls - he then
explains what our true nourishment or supply is, and the way in which we can
obtain it; and now he comes to the forgiveness of sins.
The forgiveness of sins is the central problem of life. Sin is a sense of
separateness from God, and is the major tragedy of human experience. It is, of
course, rooted in selfishness. It is essentially an attempt to gain some
supposed good to which we are not entitled in justice. It is a sense of
isolated, self-regarding, personal existence, whereas the Truth of Being is that
all is One. Our true selves are at one with God, undivided from Him, expressing
His ideas, witnessing to His nature - the dynamic Thinking of that Mind. Because
we are all one with the great Whole of which we are spiritually a part, it
follows that we are one with all men. Just because in Him we live and move and
have our being, we are, in the absolute sense, all essentially one.
Evil, sin, the fall of man, in fact, is esentially the attempt to negate
this Truth in our thoughts. We try to live apart from God. We try to do without
Him. We act as though we had life of our own; as separate minds; as though we
could have plans and purposes and interests separate from His. All this, if it
were true, would mean that existence is not one and harmonious, but a chaos of
competition and strife. It would mean that we are quite separate from our fellow
man and could injure him, rob him, or hurt him, or even destroy him, without any
damage to ourselves, and, in fact, that the more we took from other people the
more we would have for ourselves. It would mean that the more we considered our
own interests, and the more indifferent we were to the welfare of others, the
better off we would be. Of course it would then follow naturally that it would
pay others to treat us in the same way, and that accordingly we might expect many
of them to do so. Now if this were true, it would mean that the whole universe
is only a jungle, and that sooner or later it must destroy itself by its own
inherent weakeness and anarchy. But, of course, it is not true, and therein lies
the joy of live.
Undoubtedly, may people do act as though they believed it to be true, and a
great many more, who would be dreadfully shocked if brought face-to-face with
that proposition in cold blood, have, nevertheless, a vague feeling that such
must be very much the way things are, even though they, themselves, are
personally above consciously acting in accordance with such a notion. Now this
is the real basis of sin, of resentment, of condemnation, of jealousy, of
remorse, and all the evil brood that walk that path.
This belief in independent and separate existence is the arch sin, and now,
before we can progress any further, we have to take the knife to this evil thing
and cut it out once and for all. Jesus knew this, and with this definite end in
view he inserted at this critical point a carefully prepared statement that
would compass our end and his, without the shadow of a possibility of
miscarrying. He inserted what is nothing less than a trip clause. He drafted a
declaration which would force us, without any conceivable possibility of escape,
evasion, mental reservation, or subterfuge of any kind, to execute the great
sacrament of forgiveness in all its fullness and far-reaching power.
As we repeat the Great Prayer intelligently, considering and meaning what we
say, we are suddenly, so to speak, caught up off our feet and grasped as though
in a vise, so that we must face this problem - and there is no escape. We must
positively and definitely extend forgiveness to everyone to whom it is possible
that we can owe forgiveness, namely, to anyone who we think can have injured us
in any way. Jesus leaves no room for any possible glossing of this fundamental
thing. He has constructed his Prayer with more skill than any lawyer displayed
in the casting of a deed. He has so contrived it that once our attention has
been drawn to this matter, we are inevitably obligated either to forgive our
enemies in sincerity and truth, or never again to repeat that prayer. It is safe
to say that no one who reads this with understanding will ever again be able to
use the Lord's Prayer unless and until he has forgiven. Should you now attempt
to repeat it without forgiving, it can safely be predicted that you will not be
able to finish it. This great central clause will stick in your throat.
Notice that Jesus does not say, "Forgive me my trespasses and I will try to
forgive others," or "I will see if it can be done," or "I will forgive
generally, with certain exceptions." He obliges us to declare that we have
actually forgiven, and forgiven all, and he makes our claim to our own
forgiveness to depend upon that. Who is there who has grace enough to say
his prayers at all, who does not long for the forgiveness or cancellation of his
own mistakes and faults. Who would be so insane as to endeavor to seek the
Kingdom of God without desiring to be relieved of his own sense of guilt. No
one, we may believe. And so we see that we are trapped in the inescapable
position that we cannot demand our own release before we have released our
brother.
The forgiveness of others is the vestibule of Heaven, and Jesus knew it, and
has led us to the door. You must forgive everyone who has ever hurt you if you
want to be forgiven yourself; that is the long and the short of it. You have to
get rid of all resentment and condemnation of others, and, not least, of
self-condemnation and remorse. You have to forgive others, and having
discontinued your own mistakes, you have to accept the forgiveness of God for
them too, or you cannot make any progress. You have to forgive yourself, but you
cannot forgive yourself sincerely until you have forgiven others first. Having
forgiven others, you must be prepared to forgive yourself too, for to refuse to
forgive oneself is only spiritual pride. "And by that sin fell the angels." We
cannot make this point too clear to ourselves; we have got to forgive. There are
few people in the world who have not at some time or other been hurt, really
hurt, by someone else; or been disappointed, or injured, or deceived, or misled.
Such things sink into the memory where they usually cause inflamed and festering
wounds, and there is only one remedy - they are to be plucked out and thrown
away. And the one and only way to do that is by forgiveness.
Of course, nothing in all the world is easier than to forgive people who have
not hurt us very much. Nothing is easier than to rise above the thought of a
trifliing loss. Anybody will be willing to do this, but what the Law of Being
requires of us is that we forgive not only these trifles, but the very things
that are so hard to forgive that at first it seems impossible to do it at all.
The despairing heart cries, "It is too much to ask. That thing meant too much to
me. It is impossible. I cannot forgive." But the Lord's Prayer makes our own
forgiveness from God, which means our escape from guilt and limitation,
dependant upon just this very thing. There is no escape from this, and so
forgiveness there must be, no matter how deeply we may have been injured, or how
terribly we have suffered. It must be done.
If your prayers are not being answered, search your consciousness and see if
there is not someone whom you have yet to forgive. Find out if there is not some
old thing about which you are very resentful. Search and see if you are not
really holding a grudge (it may be camouflaged in some self-righteous way)
against some individual, or some body of people, a nation, a race, a social
class, some religious movement or which you disapprove perhaps, a political
party, or whatnot. If you are doing so, then you have an act of forgiveness to
perform, and when this is done, you will probably make your demonstration. If
you cannot forgive at present, you will have to wait for your demonstration
until you can, and you will have to postpone finishing your recital of the
Lord's Prayer too, or involve yourself in the position that you do not desire
the forgiveness of God.
Setting others free means setting yourself free, because resentment is really
a form of attachment. It is a Cosmic Truth that it takes two to make a prisoner;
the prisoner - and a goaler. There is no such thing as being a prisoner on one's
own account. Every prisoner must have a goaler, and the goaler is as much a
prisoner as his charge. When you hold resentment against anyone, you are bound
to that person by a cosmic link, a real, though mental chain. You are tied by a
cosmic tie to the thing that you hate. The one person perhaps in the whole world
whom you most dislike is the very one to whom you are attaching yourself by a
hook that is stronger than steel. Is this what you wish? Is this the condition
in which you desire to go on living? Remember, you belong to the thing with
which you are linked in thought, and at some time or other, if that tie endures,
the object of your resentment will be drawn again into your life, perhaps to
work further havoc. Do you think that you can afford this? Of course, no one can
afford such a thing; and so the way is clear. You must cut all such ties, by a
clear and spiritual act of forgiveness. You must loose him and let him go. By
forgiveness you set yourself free; you save your soul. And because the law of
love works alike for one and all, you help to save his soul too, making it just
so much easier for him to become what he ought to be.
But how, in the name of all that is wise and good, is the magic act of
forgiveness to be accomplished, when we have been so deeply injured that, though
we have long wished with all our hearts that we could forgive, we have
nevertheless found it impossible; when we have tried and tried to forgive, but
have found the task beyond us.
The technique of forgiveness is simple enough, and not very difficult to
manage when you understand how. The only thing that is essential is
willingness to forgive. Provided you desire to forgive the offender, the
greater part of the work is already done. People have always made such a bogey
of forgiveness because they have been under the erroneous impression that to
forgive a person means that you have to compel yourself to like him. Happily
this is by no means the case - we are not called upon to like anyone whom we do
not find ourselves liking spontaneously, and, indeed, it is quite impossible to
like people to order. You can no more like to order than you can hold the
winds in your fist, and if you endeavor to coerce yourself into doing so, you
will finish by disliking or hating the offender more than ever. People used to
think that when someone had hurt them very much, it was their duty, as good
Christians, to pump up, as it were, a feeling of liking for him; and since such
a thing is utterly impossible, they suffered a great deal of distress, and
ended, necessarily, with failure, and a resulting sense of sinfulness. We are
not obliged to like anyone; but we are under a binding obligation to love
everyone, love, or charity as the Bible calls it, meaning a vivid sense of
impersonal good will. This has nothing directly to do with the feelings though
it is always followed, sooner or later, by a wonderful feeling of peace
and happiness.
The method of forgiving is this: Get by yourself and become quiet. Repeat any
prayer or treatment that appeals to you, or read a chapter of the Bible. Then
quietly say, "I fully and freely forgive X (mentioning the name of the
offender); I loose him and let him go. I completely forgive the whole business
in question. As far as I'm concerned, it is finished forever. I cast the burden
or resentment upon the Christ within me. He is free now, and I am free too. I
wish him well in every phase of his life. The incident is finished. The Christ
Truth has set us both free. I thank God." Then get up and go about your
business. On no account repeat this act of forgiveness, because you have done it
once and for all, and to do it a second time would be tacitly to repudiate your
own work. Afterward, whenever the memory of the offender of the offense happens
to come into your mind, bless the delinquent briefly and dismiss the thought. Do
this, however many times the thought may come back. After a few days it will
return less and less often, until you forget it altogether. Then perhaps after
an interval, shorter or longer, the old trouble may come back to memory once
more, but you will find that now all bitterness and resentment have disappeared,
and you are both free with the perfect freedom of the children of God. Your
forgiveness is complete. You will experience a wonderul joy in the realization
of the demonstration.
Everybody should practice general forgiveness every day as a matter of
course. When you say your daily prayers, issue a general amnesty, forgiving
everyone who may have injured you in any way, and on no account particularize.
Simply say, "I freely fogive everyone." Then in the course of the day, should
the thought or grievance or resentment come up, bless the offender briefly and
dismiss the thought.
The result of this policy will be that very soon you will find yourself
cleared of all resentment and condemnation, and the effect upon your happiness,
your bodily health, and your general life will be nothing less than
revolutionary.
Lead Us Not Into Temptation But Deliver Us From Evil
This clause has probably caused more difficulty than any other part of the
Prayer. For many earnest people it has been a veritable stumbling block. They
feel, and rightly, that God could not lead anyone into temptation or into evil
in any circumstances, and so these words do not ring true.
For this reason, a number of attempts have been made to recast the wording.
People have felt that Jesus could not have said what he is represented to have
said, and so they look about for some phrasing which they think would be more in
accordance with the general tone of his teaching. Heroic efforts have been made
to wrest the Greek original into something different. All this, however, is
unnecessary. The Prayer in the form in which we have it in English gives us a
perfectly correct sense of the true inner meaning. Remember that the Lord's
Prayer covers the whole of the spiritual life. Condensed though the form is, it
is nevertheless a complete manual for the development of the soul, and Jesus
knew only too well the subtle perils and difficulties that can and do beset the
soul when once the preliminary stages of spiritual unfoldment have been passed.
Because those who are yet at a comparatively early stage of development do not
experience such difficulties, they are apt to jump to the conclusion that this
clause is unnecessary; but such is not the case.
The facts are these - the more you pray, the more time you spend in
meditation and spiritual treatment, the more sensitive you become. And if you
spend a great deal of time working on your soul in the right way, you will
become very sensitive. This is excellent; but like everything in the universe,
it works both ways. The more sensitive and spiritual you become, the more
powerful and effective are your prayers, you do better healing, and you advance
rapidly. But, for the same reason, you also become susceptible to forms of
temptation that simply do not beset those at an earlier stage. You will also
find that for ordinary faults, even things that many men and women in the world
would consider to be trifling, you will be sharply punished, and this is well,
because it keeps you up to the mark. The seemingly minor transgressions, the
"little foxes that spoil the vines," would fritter away our spiritual power if
not promptly dealt with.
No one at this level will be tempted to pick a pocket, or burgle a house;
this does not by any means imply that one will not have difficulties, and
because of their subtlety, even greater difficulties to meet.
As we advance, new and powerful temptations await us on the path, ever ready
to hurl us down if we are not watchful - temptations to work for self-glory, and
self-aggrandizement instead of for God; for personal honors and distinctions,
even for material gain; temptations to allow personal preferences to hold sway
in our counsels when it is a sacred duty to deal with all men in perfect
impartiality. Above and beyond all other sins the deadly sins of spiritual pride,
truly, "the last infirmity of noble mind," lurks on this road. Many fine souls
who have triumphantly surmounted all other testing have lapsed into a condition
of superiority and self-righteousness that has fallen like a curtain of steel
between them and God. Great knowledge brings great repsonsibility. Great
responsibility betrayed brings terrible punishment in its train. Noblesse
oblige is preeminently true in spiritual things. One's knowledge of the
Truth, however little it may be, is a sacred trust for humanity that must not be
violated. While we should never make the mistake of casting our pearls before
swine, nor urge the Truth in quarters where it is not welcome, yet we must do
all that we wisely can to spread the true knowledge of God among mankind, that
not one of "these little ones" may go hungry through our selfishness or our
neglect. "Feed my lambs, feed my sheep."
The old occult writers were so vividly sensible of these dangers that, with
their instinct for dramatization, they spoke of the soul as being challenged by
various tests as it traversed the upward road. It was as though the traveler
were halted at various gates or turnpike bars, and tested by some ordeal to
determine whether he were ready to advance any further. If he succeeded in
passing the test, they said, he was allowed to continue upon his way with the
blessing of the challenger. If, however, he failed to survive the ordeal, he was
forbidden to proceed.
Now, some less experienced souls, eager for rapid advancement, have rashly
desired to be subjected immediately to all kinds of test, and have even looked
about, seeking for difficulties to overcome; as though one's own personality did
not already present quite enough material for any one man or woman to deal with.
Forgetting the lessons of our Lord's own ordeal in the wilderness, forgetting
the injunction "Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God," they have virtually done
this very thing, with sad results. And so Jesus has inserted this clause, in
which we pray that we may not have to meet anything that is too much for us at
present level of our understanding. And, if we are wise, and work daily, as we
should, for wisdom, understanding, purity, and the guidance of the Holy Spirit,
we never shall find ourselves in any difficulty for which we have not the
understanding necessary to clear ourselves. Nothing shall by any means hurt
you. Behold I am with you always.
Thine Is The Kingdom And The Power And The Glory For Ever And Ever
This is a wonderful gnostic saying summing up the essential truth of the
Omnipresence and the Allness of God. It means that God is indeed All in All, the
doer, the doing, and the deed, and one can say also the spectator. The Kingdom
in this sense means all creation on every plane, for that is the Presence of God
- God as manifestation or expression.
The Power, of course, is the Power of God. We know that God is the only
power, and so, when we work, as when we pray, it is really God doing it by means
of us. Just as the pianist produces his music by means of, or through his
fingers, so may mankind be thought of as the fingers of God. His is the Power.
If, when you are praying, you hold the though that it is really God who is
working through you, your prayers will gain immeasurably in efficiency. Say,
"God is inspiring me." If, when you have any ordinary thing to do, you hold the
thought, "Divine Intelligence is working through me now," you will perform the
most difficult tasks with astonishing success.
The wondrous change that comes over us as we gradually realize what the
Omnipresence of God really means, transfigures every phase of our lives, turning
sorrow into joy, age into youth, and dullness into light and life. This is the
glory - and the glory which comes to us is, of course, God's too. And the bliss
we know in that experience is still God Himself, who is knowing that bliss
through us.
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