Excerpts from
The Christ Within:
A Study in the Absolute
.
by
Lillian DeWaters

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Book Description
This study takes the reader
beyond
the mental sciences to the realm of Pure Spiritual Reality, where all
conditions are eternally perfect. This is the realm of the indwelling
Spirit - The Christ Within.
CHAPTER
1
TO,
everyone
that thirsteth!
Come ye to
the waters! And, he that hath no money, come
ye, buy and eat! Come without money and without
price!—Is. 55: 1. "Search the
Scriptures. They testify of Me," was the astounding assertion of Jesus,
the Christ. Again, He announced: "I, if I be lifted up, will draw all
men unto Me."
Who is this "I" and this "Me" that we are to search
after,
find,
and
lift up? Is it man? Is it an idea? Or, Is it the I AM?
The need of the hour is a study of God's Word which is
founded
on
Jesus
Christ, Hence, the vision of the true disciple is on Jesus Christ—the
Way, the Truth, the Resurrection.
Now, whom does Jesus tell us to exalt and lift up?
Oneself? No.
HIMSELF. We are to lift HIM, Jesus Christ.
In the past we have thought that if we lifted ourselves,
we
would
thus
be fitted to lift others, but this is not what Jesus said we should do.
"As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even
so must
the Son
of man be lifted up," John 3:14. Moses lifted up a serpent for the
people to look upon, saying unto them: LOOK AND LIVE. This serpent was
a symbol of the Christ, while Jesus, whom we are to lift up, is the
Christ, Himself.
Friends, are we lifting Christ or are we holding up a
method or
a
system of our own or of another? Are we lifting "the Name that is above
all other names"? Be not afraid to ask yourself these questions and to
answer them, too: Where is my vision? Whom am I lifting up ? Whom do I
follow ?
The test of any teacher, seeker or student is this: Whom
does
he
preach?
Let anyone who makes the stupendous assertion, "I am
self-sufficient,"
DEMONSTRATE it. Let him stand before the world free from disease. Let
him stand before the world in perfect soundness of mind and body. He
cannot do it. There never lived on earth a man or woman who could
demonstrate self-sufficiency.
Why is this true? Because there has been but one who
proclaimed: "I am Life. I hold thee keys to death and hell. All power
in heaven and in earth is given unto Me." There has been but one who
claimed Self-sufficiency and who proved it.
No one on earth can save himself or save another in his
own
name
or by
his own works. There has been but one name given among men whereby man
must triumph,—and this name is Jesus Christ.
Beloved, the self that would be lifted up and would have
his or
her
name blazed on history's pages dies hard. How it tries to shine. Yea,
to such heights will it attempt to ascend that it will even call
itself—God.
Shall the selfhood be lifted to such an height? Is this
what
the
Master
taught? No, The self shall die. The self must die to its own works and
exaltations, for, "He that loveth his life shall lose it," and, "If any
man will come after me, let him deny himself."
Happy are we who can let the self "die daily," even as
Paul
acclaimed,
and can declare, "I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me." None of
self and all of Thee should be our cry. "But," demands the self, "Why
should I thus behold myself? Why not look upon myself as pure and holy?
Why not look upon myself as sinless?"
Listen to the Word of God; "All have sinned." (Rom. 3:23)
"If
we
say
that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves and the Truth is not in us.
If we say that we have not sinned, we make Him a liar, and His Word is
not in us." John 1: 8, 10.
What is the secret? What is the solution to this problem
about
the
"self" and the "Self"? It is this: "Without ME ye can do nothing." John
18; 5. We are not holy and sinless in and of ourselves, but CHRIST IN
us, who is the perfect Self, is both righteous and holy, pure and
sinless.
It is written: "Except a corn of wheat fall into the
ground and
die, it
abideth alone; but, if it die, it bringeth forth much fruit." John 12:
24. Except the self be utterly wiped out by either Truth or suffering,
it abideth alone, or is in a sense of separation from God; but, if the
self die, resurrection takes place, transformation begins, the New
Birth is started, and Christ, the perfect Man, the divine Selfhood, is
revealed.
"That which is born of the flesh is flesh" and that which
is
born
or
originates in the self is "flesh." Only that which is born of the
Spirit is permanent and glorious.
Shall we say, Follow me, or, Follow my method and my
interpretation?
And, shall we place our own name—the name of the self—before a method
or a system that we, in our opinion, believe to be the right way or the
right method? God forbid. Let the name of the self remain in the
background that the Name above all other names shall receive all
worship, all attention, all homage and all glory. The one reborn
directs: Do not follow me nor my methods, but, follow Christ, or,
follow me insofar as I follow
Jesus Christ.
Friends, what are we seeking? Are we seeking health?
Peace?
Joy?
Understanding? Or, are we seeking Christ, Truth? "Put ye on the Lord
Jesus Christ" is the mandate of St. Paul. As we put on Christ, we
simultaneously put on health, joy, peace, harmony,
Life, Truth, Love, Resurrection, Power, Glory, Victory.
Are you seeking happiness and peace or are you seeking
Christ?
Now, "Christ is ALL."
(Col. 3; 11), "for it pleased the Father that in
Him (Christ) should all fulness dwell" (Col. 1; 19). Then,
"Christ in you" means salvation, victory, dominion, authority, glory
and peace in you. Is it not worthwhile that we die
to self that we may "awake in His likeness," and put on the riches and
glories of Christ, the perfect Self?
Let us look now at something that is very important for
us all
to
understand. It is an admonition found in the Bible. This admonition is
a great favorite with those whose vision is placed on mental things and
mental ways, and who believe that their own right thinking is God.
The much-used Bible text is this: "WORK OUT YOUR OWN
SALVATION."
What
can these words mean, they ask, if not that we shall be God to
ourselves? How can one work out his salvation except he be God? What
else could this command mean, they challenge, if not to heal yourself,
free yourself, gain understanding from yourself—in short, look to
yourself for all things?
The answer, my friends, is simple enough, but reason
alone
could
never
produce it; and, it is because the self is not sufficient that it is
unable to discover the true and spiritual meaning of these words—Work
out your own salvation—but, on the contrary, gives explanation full of
labor and opposed to the teachings of the Master.
When the vision of one is placed on himself, or on his
own
mind,
he
weaves everything around this vision, for no one can experience higher
than his vision; but, when the vision lifts from self and rests upon
the Self, then the Christ of God—Truth, is seen and known and felt.
What does it mean to work out salvation? What does it
mean to
spend a
thousand dollars? What does it mean to open a door? What does it mean
to walk in a path ? Does it mean to make the money? Does it mean to
create the door? Does it mean to originate the path? No. It does not
mean this.
Work out your own salvation means—EXPERIENCE: EXPRESS:
APPROPRIATE:
SPEND: LOOK AND BEHOLD THE FINISHED WORK!
Can you spend a thousand dollars if you do not possess
it?
Could
you
open a door if there were no door? Could you walk in a path if there
were no path? Could you, then, work out your own salvation if there
were no salvation?
We can work out our salvation because we already have
it.
We can express the salvation that is prepared, at hand—the salvation
that Christ has given.
What is redemption? The finished work. The finished
kingdom. Who is the Finisher? You or
I? No. Jesus Christ, the
One. "I have finished the work" (John 17; 4). Thus,
salvation is finished, and, to "work out" means that we must
individually experience this finished redemption; we must use it,
express it, appropriate it, eat it, drink it, breathe it, magnify it!
To "work out" means to look and behold; declare and
preach;
recognize
and claim; believe and accept; experience and appropriate the finished
Kingdom, the fields already white, the heaven at hand, the healed
universe, the saved people, the redeemed world!
Oh, how many there are laboring with thought as though
there
were
no
Almighty God, no white fields, no victorious Christ, no finished
Kingdom, no heaven here and now!
Seeker of good, can you of and in and through
yourself
work
out your own
salvation as though to CREATE it? Never. This
is strife and labor on the mental plane, and is not the acceptance of
the great and wonderful fulfillment at hand. "Ye are
bought with a price," visioned Paul. This world is
redeemed according to the Word of God. Redemption is
FINISHED in the sight of God and in reality. Jesus Christ removed the
curse of the law for us and He finished His work.
"It is finished!" announced He. What is finished? "Let
not your
heart
be troubled. I have overcome the world." . . . "It is finished!" What
is
finished? "And the glory which Thou gavest Me, I have given them." . .
. "It is finished!" What is finished? "When He ascended up on high, He
led captivity captive."
"It is finished!" What is finished? "THE FATHER'S
BUSINESS."
The
first
recorded words of Jesus are: "Wist ye not that I must be about My
Father's business?"
What was the Father's business? "And this is the record
that
God
hath
given to us eternal life, and this life is in His Son." . . . "For this
purpose the Son of God was manifested that He might destroy the works
of the devil." . . . "The Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the
world, that we might live through Him."
Thus it is that we accept the finished work of Jesus
Christ—God
the
Son, and accept "salvation" as a finished fact awaiting the individual
recognition.
To no man on earth was given the privilege of
self-sufficiency,
for,
"Without ME ye can do nothing," and, "Not that we are sufficient of
ourselves to think anything as of ourselves; but our sufficiency is of
God," acknowledged Saint Paul, having proved this fact for himself.
If we consider that we are to work out as though to
create our
happiness, health and harmony, then, of what use is Jesus Christ as our
King? And what are we doing with the words: "He is the propitiation for
our sins; and not for yours only but also for the sins of the whole
world"? And this: "By grace are ye saved through faith, and not of
yourselves; it is the gift of God"?
When we leave out Jesus Christ, the Door, God the Son, we
leave
out
Living Water, Heavenly Bread, Resurrection.
Are we the finishers of ourselves, or, have we had a
Finisher?
Without
the Finisher ye can do nothing. Without the Spirit of Christ in us, our
efforts, no matter how strenuous or how supreme, are built upon self as
power and understanding and will end in disappointment and failure.
When we stand upon our own ideas and opinions, what does it amount to?
They change from day to day. When we stand upon the systems and
opinions of others, of what permanent value are these? Theories come
and go; rise and fall.
Then, upon WHAT shall we stand? Stand on the "Rock that
is
Christ!"
(I Cor. 10; 4). "The same yesterday, today and forever!"
While it is true that Jesus Christ is our Way, our Door,
our
Finisher,
there is an individual work for us to do. If we do not accept Him as
the Way, the Finisher, the work that He did for us is not benefiting
us; that is, we are not experiencing the good that is prepared for us.
The finished kingdom is here, yet all are not appropriating it or
experiencing it.
If one is in a dense forest, in which is no path of
escape, and
some
one appears and cuts a path, a way of escape, the original one in the
forest did not make the path himself, but by walking in the path that
is made for him, he may reach safety. The one who made the path does
not also do the walking for him. He himself must do the walking; and,
should he close his eyes to the path that is made and that will bring
him safely into the wonderful sunshine, and begin to make another path,
he, alone, is to blame and will suffer for his blindness.
Our part in life is to lift our vision, behold and accept
the
path
that
is already made for us and walk in that path. We are to take and to
enjoy the great good already prepared, and cease trying to cut new
paths and create new ways. Let us "work out" or express that which we
already possess, that
which we already ARE.
Another gravely important question is this: How do we
regard
Jesus
Christ? How many of us have been separating Jesus from Christ? We
certainly do not find ground for this in the Bible. Let us read what
the disciples say: "Philip preached CHRIST unto them." "Philip preached
unto him JESUS." (Acts.8, 5, 35) "Paul preached CHRIST. Paul preached
JESUS." (Acts 9; 20:17, 18) "We preach not ourselves but CHRIST JESUS."
(2 Cor. 4; 5)
Can you see any distinction in the above verses between
"Jesus"
and
"Christ"? There is none. Then why should we, if we accept the Bible as
the Word of God, our sufficient guide, make any distinction? The
disciples had one Christ and this was Jesus Christ.
The Godhead is a trinity. When this is understood by the
student,
it
becomes easy to accept Jesus Christ as God. God is tri-une;— God, the
Father invisible: God, the Son, visible as Jesus Christ: God, the Holy
Ghost, in visible Spirit or Comforter. Thus it was that Jesus was
"without sin" and had the right to give Himself as Savior of the
world. "That ye might believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God
(God the Son or second), and, that believing, ye might have life in His
Name" (John 20; 31).
Why "in His Name"? Why not your name or my name? Because
His
name
is
God's name. Because Jesus is God the Son. "I am come in My Father's
Name" (John 5; 43).
Said Paul: "This Jesus is Christ!" Said John: "Jesus is
the
Christ!"
Said Peter: "Thou art the Christ!" Said Thomas: "My Lord and my God!"
"What shall I do with Jesus that is called Christ?" asked
Pilate.
This
question will be repeated in the heart of each one of us. Ask yourself,
What Christ have I? Have I Jesus the Christ? Have I this Christ of God,
or, have I been calling my own mind or my intellect or my reason—Christ?
Is your own reason sufficient to save you? Reason is used
in
two
directions. A man reasons out how he shall kill another and a man
reasons out how he shall cure another. How could reason, which can be
used for wrong and right, to kill
and to cure, be Christ, "the same
yesterday, today and forever"? Was
it not wrong reason that crucified Jesus? Did they not "reason together
how that they might kill Him"—Him altogether lovely? Because of
their wrong reason, did they not "hate Him without a cause"?
They led Him away to a hill, which had the appearance of
a
human
skull—human reason—and they took off His raiment and beat Him with
many stripes. They thrust cruel nails into the very hands that had
blessed them and fed them, and they put spikes into the very feet that
had walked among them, bringing sight to the blind, feet to the lame
and life to the dead. They pierced the heart that had loved them with
an everlasting love, that had wept for them and which now would pass
through the ordeal called death for them.
Come, Beloved. Face upward and behold the real Christ of
God—Jesus, the
I AM, who came that we "might have life more abundantly"; who "is the
same, yesterday, today and forever"; who said, "I will never leave you
nor forsake you"; who promised, Believe in Me and in My finished work,
so will I rule in your life, so will I guide and direct you, so will I
bless and glorify you, so will I be in you a living Fountain, springing
up into perpetual and continual health, joy and harmony.
Is not this a wonderful Christ to have? What more
glorious and
satisfying Christ could there be for us than the indwelling Christ?
"Know ye not that Jesus Christ is in you?" inquired Paul.
"This
is
the
true God and eternal life." Let us think well. Can we afford to thrust
aside the Bible, the Word of God, regarding Jesus Christ, and
substitute teachings at variance with this Word? Can we afford to have
any other Christ than the Spirit of God?
Can we afford to have any other method save that given to
us by
Jesus
Christ, who DEMONSTRATED His teaching, who left victory, glory and
triumph? Can we afford to listen to man rather than to hear the "still
small Voice" of Soul?
We cannot serve two masters. Are we looking to Christ or
to
self?
Are
we trying to create or are we appropriating the finished kingdom with
its own creations and glories?
"Master, Where dwellest Thou?" we ask. "Behold, I stand
at the
door and
knock. If any man will hear My voice and open the door, I will come in
to him." (Rev. 3; 20) WHEN will Christ come to us? When we open the
door. He has already come universally, and He will come individually,
or will come to the individual consciousness when that consciousness
has prepared itself for Him. It is as we say "Christ liveth in me" that
our lives become transfigured and glorified.
"When Christ, who is our life, shall appear, then shall
ye also
appear
with Him in glory" (Col. 3; 4). "When He shall appear, we shall be like
Him" (I John 3; 2).
Now that we recognize the real Christ of God, what shall
we do
with
"reason" that has been erroneously called Christ? Shall we cast it
away? Certainly not. We shall use it as a process, a modus operandi. We
do not cast away the eye when we discover that sight itself is not the
eye, but that the eye manifests and expresses sight. Nor shall we cast
away reason when we know that reason is not THE Christ but that right
reason is a help in discovering this Christ.
When we see that an electric light bulb brings light into
a
room,
we do
not forget that the bulb is simply the means of light and is not the
power of light, itself.
Let no man deify his reason simply because his reasoning
can
bring
him
a conclusion. The electric wire carries the message, but the wire is
not the electricity nor the message; neither is reason Christ nor is
individual man—God. He is the vehicle through which God works.
* * *
* * *
HE who has the
consciousness of
God knows beyond his mind and wakes a
new kind of body in tune with the Infinite Immortal.
The upward watcher
knows
things
which before he knew not, and which
neither teachers nor books have mentioned.
The mind is not capable
of
bringing anything to pass except it be
transfixed by inward vision. To endure as seeing the invisible is to
fetch it forth into visibility. Man's inward visional direction creates
his judgments or mentals; mentals then translate into manifest affairs
and manifest bodies.
This looking faculty
antedates
the mind. It is primarily what we see
and not what we think that constitutes our presence, power and history.
The farther toward the
celestial
zenith we send the limitless eye, the
deeper our assurance of our divine origin and transcendent Selfhood.
Lifting the inner eye
to Him
who
is above reason lights our two outer
eyes to see the world in a new aspect, gives the tongue new
descriptions of the world, and tips the pen with fadeless phrases.
Look to the man who
threw
aside
the wrappings of the grave, the
stone-sealed tomb and the soldiers' swords, bursting their three
dimensional bindings with risen divinity, as the law for the whole of
us. world without end.
—E. C. H.
CHAPTER
2
THERE
is a way to heaven,
harmony. For the sake of an
illustration let us suppose a grand palace, great and wonderful, filled
with all the desirable things of earth and heaven,—filled with music,
laughter, beauty, wealth, joy, health and happiness.
To this great
building there
is but
one door or one way of
entrance.
Here stands a Sentinel who knows the Word that grants admittance.
A seeker comes with
questions:
"What
is there in a mere word? And,
if
some particular word, then why not the most recent and up-to-date
expression, something to stand for progress and unfoldment?
"There is but one Rock upon
which to
build," explains the
Sentinel,
"There is but one Door, one Way, one Light. There is but one Beginning
and one Ending. There is but one Name written in the Holy City. There
is but one Name to be placed in our foreheads."
"Oh," implores
another, "Tell
us the
name! Is it 'Spirit,'—for
Spirit
is all there is? Is it 'Right Thought' or 'Right Reason,' or
'Affirmation'?"
"No," comes back the
answer.
"The
one magical name is JESUS
CHRIST!
God hath given Him a name that is far above every name; that at the
name of JESUS every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in
earth, and things under the earth; that every tongue should confess
that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father." (Phil. 2;
9, 10).
" 'Far above all
principality
and
power, and might and dominion,
and
every name that is named, not only in this world but also in that which
is to come.' (Eph. 1; 21) 'There is none other name under heaven
whereby we must be saved'." (Acts 4; 12).
"What! Believe in
Jesus
Christ? Why,
this is not the twentieth
century
idea of salvation. I must use my own reason. I cannot blindly believe
in anyone or in anything. I must SEE where I am going. I must use my
mind and understand my way. My own right thoughts are sufficient that I
gain heaven!" "HALT! 'My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are
your ways My ways. As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are My
ways higher than your ways, and My thoughts than your thoughts'." (Is.
55; 9).
"Well," states
another, "If
right
thoughts are not sufficient,
then
I'll go with my works. I've healed the sick,—thousands of cases. I've
caused cancer, goiter, rheumatism, diseases of all names to disappear
by thinking them away, by reasoning them out of existence. I'll lay my
works at the door, for, 'By their fruits ye shall know them,' and I
have even raised the dead!"
"HALT! 'Not of works
lest any
man
should boast'." (Eph. 2; 9).
"What," cries
another, "Right
thoughts and even good works
insufficient? Then I'll go in my own majesty. I will go as God, myself.
God is all there is and I am something, thus, I am God." Bold, and full
of self-assurance, he seeks admittance.
The Sentinel
appears. All
around him
glows a light of transcendent
glory and, there before him, stretched out like a huge water-color, the
seeker beholds what appears to him to be a picture of himself. He sees
himself stripped of all coverings and he is made aware of his
nakedness, his arrogance and his ignorance. Speechless, he sinks down,
undone.
The Sentinel,
beholding his
nakedness and shame, and contrasting
it
with that of the Presence with body of transparent glory, whose face
shines as the sun and whose raiment is white as the light, asks:
"How could you claim
to be God
when
your face lacks holy light?
When
your body shows forth disease? When your speech betrayeth you? Away,
you are a thief and a robber if you try to enter the Holy City, the
Promised Land, by some door other than Jesus Christ. Behold your reason
in ignorance! You cannot buy heaven with your right thoughts. You
cannot earn heaven by your good works. You cannot think yourself into
heaven by any lofty statements or any high thoughts of your own. Heaven
is given to those who 'have been baptized into Christ' and have 'put on
Christ'. (Gal. 3; 27).
"The sick that you
healed,—did
you
heal them 'in His Name'? Did
you
tell them of the Deity of Jesus Christ and thus His right to be the
Savior of the world? Did you preach and teach the finished kingdom at
hand? Did you tell them that without Christ, the Truth, ye can do
nothing?
"Look well into your
heart for
the
answers to these questions and
you
will find that you did not give enough attention to Christ and the
Christ-healing, but that other methods and means were used and many
have been led astray in trying to create for themselves that which
already is created, finished, and at hand, waiting their recognition,
their love, their faith and their acceptance.
"Unless, through
recognition
and
repentance of your mistakes, you
now
turn from yourself and your self-sufficiency and accept Jesus Christ,
the Self, the Great Omnipotent in every breast,—unless you come with
JESUS name written in your forehead, you cannot enter the New Jerusalem
nor join the throng of the 'redeemed,' but will hear the words. 'Away,
I know you not.' "
Friends, Blessed are
we if we
hear
the words, "Come ye faithful,"
and
blessed are we if in the past we did not hear them, we determine from
this day forth to turn our gaze inward and upward to Christ, our
sufficient Guide, that these words may yet be whispered to us.
It is a grave
question to us
and to
those who are looking to us
for
help and guidance whether we are following Christ or following man;
whether we are building on the Rock or building on the sand. "Whosoever
shall confess Me before men, him will I confess also before My Father
which is in heaven. . . . Whosoever shall deny Me before men, him will
I also deny before My Father which is in heaven." (Mat. 10; 32, 33).
We see clearly how
careful we
should
be that we speak to others
only
the Christ-Truth. He who is ignorant of heart, yet honest and upright,
filled with pure love for God and man, he who sees the error of his own
ways and turns from this error, hastening also to turn others to the
High Way, let him listen to these words: "If thou warn the wicked, and
he turn not from his wickedness, he shall die in his iniquity, but thou
hast delivered thy soul." (Ez. 3;19).
The Holy Spirit,
divine
inspiration,
ever guiding and protecting
the
loyal heart, will forever "turn and overturn" until that heart rests
secure and serene on the Rock, Christ.
The personal "I"
must be
dethroned
that place be given Reality,
Jesus
Christ, the perfect Self. ALL who are building upon self to the point
of
importance, assurance, arrogance and self-righteousness, are building a
mountain, which sooner or later will crumble in all terror upon their
heads.
This is a work
difficult for
the
mind to do, for the mind of the
self
is at enmity with the Mind of Jesus Christ, nay, mind of and in itself
cannot attain to this surrender, for mind ever seeks the place of
importance and the seat of instructor and king. Love for God, devotion
to Truth, love for our fellow-man, is the "one thing needful" that the
death of self be accomplished.
In each life there
is one
vulnerable
spot, one tender place, one
vital
point, one dearest thing in life, and, if necessary for our recognition
and appropriation of the true God, the hour will strike for us when
this tenderest spot is invaded, and the "two-edged sword" is applied;
yet, if we but heed the lesson that is waiting our recognition, if we
must "listen for Thy Voice," if we but cry, "Speak, Lord, for Thy
servant heareth," if we but lay down that something that is separating
our clear vision of the One God,—the cloud lifts, the sword is
withdrawn, the darkness passes and the white Christ is enthroned in
that heart as never before.
The sword of the
Spirit would
slay
nothing but that which is not
of God.
There are no periods
in our
lives of
such paramount importance to
us as
the "trying as of fire" experiences, wherein the dross of self is
consumed and all the beautiful and lovely characteristics of Spirit
shine forth. The cleansing may indeed not be pleasant, may be filled
with fear and suffering, yet, as Springtime, with its sun's wooing rays
melts the snow and calls forth the waiting flowers of His Presence, so
the white flame of God burns away from us all that is interfering with
our highest vision,—calling, wooing with gentle grace and touch, the
divine spark within.
"I will take away
the stony
heart
out of your flesh and a new
spirit
will I put in you," says the Voice of the Presence. There must be
nothing in our vision,
thought or action that would keep us from High Watch. It is certain
that without accompanying holiness we cannot lift our
vision higher and still higher. To attempt to "strike the rock" or
command the blessings of the heavenly kingdom while our hearts and
minds are engaged in anything that obscures our high vision, is to
bring upon us disappointment and sorrow.
"He shall baptize
you with the
Holy
Ghost and with fire." (Mat. 3;
11).
Fire is the symbol of the protecting Presence; it was thus seen and
felt by Moses in the burning bush and by Elijah on Mt. Carmel.
There is a place or
period in
our
journey heavenward wherein the
earnest and loving heart either listens to the Voice, and, listening,
obeys and enters the secret place of the Most High, waiting for the
Red Sea to open,—or else,
because of insufficient love for holiness, he passes on to seeming
disappointment and
failure.
There was a time for
Moses to
"strike the rock," and there was
also a
time that Moses was not to strike the rock. To strike the rock is an
act of the law, and while Moses was the law-giver, he was told to
"strike the rock," and the abundance of good came forth. However, in a
later experience Moses was told that the rock was not to be struck,
mental means were not to be used, but the Word of Spirit was to be
utilized. Moses was told that he must simply speak to the rock and the
water would spring forth. But Moses disobeyed the Voice, he could not
rest his mind in quiet and peace of the Spirit and vehemently he struck
the rock, and we all know that this disobedience excluded him from the
promised Land.
There is a time to
declare the
Truth
vehemently and there is a
time in
which we are simply to "rest in the promise,"—speak the Word that of
and in itself is Power Omnipotent. Shall we be afraid of the "flaming
sword"? Shall we fear the "consuming fire"?
"The Lord went
before them in
a
pillar of cloud by day and of fire
by
night." (Ex. 13; 21). And a writer of recent day wrote: "As the
children of Israel were guided triumphantly through the Red Sea, the
dark ebbing and flowing tides of human fear,—as they were led through
the wilderness, the great desert of human hopes, anticipating the
promised joy,—so shall the spiritual idea guide all right desires in
their passage from sense to Soul, to the glory prepared
for those who love God."
What does the pillar
of cloud
and
fire represent if not the love
and
care of the One Presence? Why should not God as a loving Presence and a
protecting Power be as real to us today as this Presence was real to
Moses, and to Daniel, and to Job and to Isaiah ? And, why cannot the
miracles of Pentecost be as present today as then, since the I AM is
the same yesterday, today and forever?
Clouds appear before
the
transfiguration. As it was thus with
Jesus, so
it is with us. When clouds appear upon our sky and fire of God begins
to consume us, let us hasten to absorb the lesson they would teach us,
and, if obedient, the clouds break blessings upon our heads and become
like chariots, carrying us up and away into greater heights.
The baptism of fire
purifies,
cleanses and transforms. It never
leaves
us where it finds us, but, penetrating our whole being and "cutting
asunder" even to the most secret place, it leaves us quickened and
glorified.
Does not the love of
self,
love of
money, love of pleasure, love
of
importance, hinder the soul's upward vision? Hinder progress, hinder
our appropriation of the finished kingdom? Are not anxiety, fear,
doubt,—sin? "Whatever is not of faith is sin." (Rom. 14; 23) . There is
an hour for each one wherein "the Lord with His great sword shall
punish leviathan, the piercing serpent, and He shall slay the dragon
that is in the sea." (Is. 27; 1).
"Our God is a
consuming fire,"
yet,
it is possible that though the
flaming sword rest upon us, we be unharmed. In our journey from sense
to Soul, we need to learn well the lesson of obedience. When we first
hear the faintest whispering of the Voice,—do we listen and obey? Or,
are we so filled with our own thoughts that the gentle whispering is
crowded out of hearing?
The lesson of
obedience is one
of
the hardest for us to learn, and
yet
one of the most necessary. The sooner we learn it, and love it, and
heed it, the more rapid will be our progress, the more wonderful our
experience and the more helpful our living." Whom the Lord loveth, He
chasteneth (purifieth)."
"This is the way;
walk ye in
it,"
directs the Voice to the
trusting
heart. It is ours to inherit all the fulness of Omnipotence, all the
strength and glory of Life eternal, and, to be filled with the "Giver"
is greater far than to be filled with the "gifts," for all the gifts
without the Giver are bare, while the Giver and the gifts are one and
inseparable.
All the castles of
gold or
precious
stones would not be a suitable
temple for the sun, but just simple and transparent glass admits the
warm and radiant glow in all its glory. We are the "temple of God," and
in us dwells the living Christ. We do not have to be great or noted or
brilliant in order that Christ abide.
Peter. "Lovest them
Me?" asks
the
Christ of you and of me.
With infinite
tenderness did
Jesus
three times ask Peter this
paramount
question. Had not Peter three times denied Him, and must he not fully
recompense for his sin? Does not every cloud that arises and appears to
separate us from Christ, Truth, come because of our lack of love for
Christ, our lack of devotion, our lack of high vision?
"Lovest thou Me more
than
these?"
persists the inner Voice. More
than
wealth, more than fame, more than selfishness, more than any other
affection? More than the loaves and the fishes? Many desire Christ for
what Christ brings them, instead of desiring Christ because Christ is
God.
Jesus could forgive
Peter his
momentary weakness and failure,
could
forgive his cowardice, if only He might be sure of his love. And, Peter
with broken spirit and with intense devotion, cried, "Thou knowest that
I love Thee dearly,— (more than all else)."
Is it not through
our love and
devotion to the Highest that we
attain
to the Highest? And, is it not through our selfishness, our love of
self, that we retard our progress? Are we finding the "sheep and the
lambs" and are we bringing them to the Presence that there may be "one
fold and one Shepherd"? The true Shepherd exacts not large sums from
his sheep in order that they graze in His pasture.
High vision causes
the highest
to be
the nearest, for the "high"
is the
perfect, that is ever within our reach, ever at hand, already prepared,
and in reality already in manifestation. To claim this perfection of
God and man, to lay hold of it with our faith and recognition, with our
thinking and acting, is the activity of "Christ in you," and is the modus
operandi of spiritual
healing.
"He shall cry unto
Me and I
will
make him higher than the kings of
the
earth," promises the High Presence. "The Gentiles shall come to thy
light, and kings to the brightness of thy rising." (Is. 60; 3).
Let us reach up and
up until
our
vision, like the dove, rests in
peace
upon the TRI-UNE God, —Root, Finisher, Comforter,—and, resting the
vision here, we shall see Him as He is," and we "shall be like Him,"
for, it is a spiritual law, that which our vision beholds, our minds
think and our bodies express.
Do you now accept,
Reader,
that
Jesus is not only divine but that
He is
Deity? Do you accept that Jesus is not only a Wayshower but that He is
the WAY? Do you accept that Jesus is the Christ and that Jesus Christ
is God?
Listen to these
confirming
words of
Jesus: "I am from above; ye
are
from beneath. I am the Vine; ye are the branches. . . . He that seeth
Me
seeth the Father. . . . All power in heaven and in earth is given unto
Me. . . . I am Alpha and Omega."
"The Word was made
flesh
(Jesus
Christ) and dwelt among us. . . .
And the
Word was God, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes,
and our hands have handled, and which was manifested unto us," declared
the great John.
"The second man
(Jesus Christ)
is
the Lord from heaven! In Him
dwelleth
the fulness of the Godhead bodily!" wrote the great Paul.
What think ye of
Jesus
Christ? "What shall I do with
Jesus
that is called the Christ?" Shall I crucify Him or glorify Him? Shall I
recognize Him or reject Him? Shall I deny Him or deify Him? Shall I
follow Him or discredit Him?
Let us speak boldly
where we
stand.
Do we believe the Bible
regarding
the miraculous birth of Jesus? His mission, His free gift of love, His
victory, His indwelling? Do we believe with Isaiah that "His name shall
be called The Mighty God"?
Said Jesus, Himself:
"If ye
believe
not that I AM HE, ye shall die
in
your sins." Said Peter: "In the latter days, there shall be false
teachers among you, denying the Lord that bought them!" What think YE
of Christ?
Who announces that
we have had
another on earth as great or
greater
than Jesus the Christ? Let him answer these questions: Has anyone ever
been on earth who spoke and demonstrated as did Jesus Christ?
Has any one in the
flesh
overcome
death and proved immortality?
Let us suppose that
there is
or has
been such an one, call his
name
John Doe, and hear him say to the world: "He that hath me, John Doe,
hath life, and he that hath not me, hath not life. No man cometh unto
the Father but by me, John Doe. I am he that liveth and was dead and
behold I am alive for evermore. I have led captivity captive. I hold
the keys to death and hell. Ye are complete in me, John Doe. At the
name of John Doe every knee shall bow."
We need not continue
for all
must
admit that no one ever lived on
earth
who could proclaim and PROVE these things. Whosoever declares that any
individual is as great or is greater than Jesus Christ, denies God and
denies Jesus Christ, and, according to Bible-Truth, is a "thief and
robber."
"All hail! Behold
your King!"
These
words are said in praise and
in
recognition, in honor and in glory of Jesus Christ.
Hundreds of verses
might be
quoted
to prove that according to
Scripture, Jesus is the Christ, and Jesus Christ is God the Son; and,
only by having "Christ in you" can heaven, harmony be attained.
This book is like a
seed which
the
author drops into your
consciousness
and whether it takes root and bears fruit or whether it withers and
dies is for the reader alone to decide.
.
"The Christ Within:
A Study of the Absolute"
by
Lillian DeWaters
Order in Adobe PDF eBook form for $4.95
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