The Power of Thought
Chapter 9
THOUGHT-CONTROL AND SPIRITUAL ATTAINMENT
IN this little book I have dwelt too much, perhaps, upon material
achievement; but the principal reason for doing this has been that
it is our duty to serve our day and generation and to be as big
and useful in service as we possibly can. I do not advocate a selfish
success. Our ambition should be, not how much can I get, but how
much can I give, in service and in doing things for the world. Thus
the success and achievement that I advocate need not be the making
of money or the winning of position at all, for it may mean giving
one's life in missionary service, or other forms of self-sacrifice
and devotion to one's fellows. But no matter what our calling in
life may be, the power of thought and the control of thought are
of great importance. A young man may become a missionary, in spite
of opposition and discouragement, simply because his mind is steadfast
and his thoughts directed towards the goal of his ambition. Apparently
insuperable difficulties are overcome simply through the thoughts
being directed and focused upon one given object. If his mind were
allowed to "wobble" and his thoughts to wander, he would
never achieve his ambition.
It must be pointed out that if we pursue success wholeheartedly,
it becomes in time our master. At first we find success to be a
very shy bird indeed and difficult to catch. It leads us on and
on, demanding ever self-sacrifice and yet more sacrifice, until
at last we find ourselves committed to a life full of responsibility
and of comparative importance, from which we cannot turn back or
desert with decency. Then we find that success, instead of being
our servant, has become our master, while we have become its slave.
It is of importance then that we limit our material ambitions. There
no reason, however, why we should limit our spiritual ambitions,
for if we are successful in our quest of God, there is only joy
awaiting us when we find that success has become our master and
we its slave.
It is not generally acknowledged, that no great degree of spiritual
attainment is possible without thought-control, the result of thought
training. Brother Lawrence is an outstanding example of this. He
is the great exponent of the practice of the Presence of God. This
humble servant of God, working daily amongst his pots and pans in
the kitchen and scullery of a monastery, found that by training
his thoughts always to flow towards his Lord, he became conscious
of His presence always. So clear was this realisation that Brother
Lawrence found that he was far more conscious of the Divine presence
while he was at work scouring greasy pots and pans than when in
his cell for the express purpose of engaging in devotional exercises.
This humble, unlearned brother became a saint (although not called
one) and a teacher of many, simply through directing his thoughts
towards God, and persevering, in spite of their liability to wander.
It is possible for us really to pray if we possess a measure of
thought-control. We direct our attention to God and this forms a
ladder by which our thoughts and affection ascend up to God. Thought-control
is really a fixation of the attention upon a given object and keeping
it there. So long as our attention is fixed on God, just so long
will our thoughts travel up the ladder thus set up.
Those whose powers of attention and thought-control are so weak
as to be almost entirely lacking should repeat prayers. This is
not as good as praying oneself, but it is a beginning and a step
in the right direction. One who "says" or repeats his
prayers, night and morning, possesses a connecting link between
himself and Heaven that others who never make any such attempt lack.
But really to pray by directing the attention and thoughts toward
God is a very different thing. It is a much greater thing; it is
a spiritual exercise of the highest order. It is not an easy thing
to do however, for until our thoughts have become disciplined they
wander away. The cares of life, or its ambitions, lure our thoughts
away so that we soon find ourselves thinking of things material,
instead of things spiritual. Our thoughts must, of course, be brought
back again and again, until a habit is set up which then makes real
prayer possible.
There are many grades of real prayer. There is supplicatory prayer;
there is the prayer of praise and thanksgiving; there is the prayer
of meditation; there is contemplation. The last two are very advanced.
They become possible only when an almost perfect degree of thought-control
has been developed.
It is not only during times of prayer, however, that thought-control
is needed in the pursuit and development of spiritual faculties
and powers. We need it just as much during the day when engaged
in the "mud and scum of things". We too can share the
experience of Brother Lawrence, who found that his work which he
disliked, in the ordinary way, became enjoyable because of the Divine
presence. Tasks, also, which before were difficult and beyond his
powers became possible of accomplishment when once he had learnt
to let the Lord help him with His presence.
By frequently turning our thoughts and aspirations to the Divine
Innermost we become greatly helped and strengthened. Also, in course
of time, our work which we may dislike in itself, becomes transformed
and made enjoyable, through a realisation of the fact that it is
a service of love to our fellows. We become conscious of a new fellowship
and companionship. We are not alone, for there is One with us helping
to make life a nobler thing, to become more faithful workers and
servers, to do things from a higher motive.
The result of all this is that a new and finer character is built
up, and this is eternal, for character can never die. And, in addition,
we become entirely new creatures. We may not be religious, as generally
understood, or sanctimonious, but we can become nobler, truer, finer
types of men and women, for whom the world will have cause to be
thankful.
The inner, or spiritual, life is a very real thing. Two people may
become spiritually awakened, and through it may desire to live a
nobler and higher life. One may be successful while the other may
after a hard fight go back to his old life. The reason is that the
former keeps alive the flame of his inner life, while the latter
allows it to go out. The former perseveres with real prayer and
directing his thoughts to God, raising them continually to higher
and better things; while the latter neglects his praying, does not
persevere in the control of his thoughts, so that his spiritual
life withers away and becomes dead through lack of nourishment.
Then temptation comes in like a flood and the battle is too much
for one who is not fortified by prayer. He gives in and goes back
again to the same old hopeless life, simply because it does not
seem possible to do anything else. The fault is not that temptation
is too strong but that he cuts himself off from the One Source of
infinite Power through his neglect of prayer, and his lack of perseverance
in thought-control.
The importance of training the thoughts to turn away from unworthy
things to the things that are noble, true, beautiful and really
worthwhile is so great, is it any wonder that I write books and
publish a magazine on the subject?
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