WHAT ALL THE
WORLD'S A-SEEKING
OR
THE VITAL LAW OF TRUE LIFE,
TRUE GREATNESS, POWER,
AND HAPPINESS
BY
RALPH WALDO TRINE
PART IV.
THE AWAKENING.
If you'd live a religion that's noble,
That's God-like and true,
A religion the grandest that men
Or that angels can,
Then live, live the truth
Of the brother who taught you,
It's love to God, service and love
To the fellow-man.
SOCIAL problems are to be among the greatest problem of the
generation just moving on to the stage of action. They, above all
others, will claim the attention of mankind, as they are already
claiming it across the waters even as at home. The attitude of the
two classes toward each other, or the separation of the classes,
will be by far the chief problem of them all. Already it is
imperatively demanding a solution. Gradually, as the years have
passed, this separation has been going on, but never so rapidly as
of late. Each has come to regard the other as an enemy, with no
interests in common, but rather that what is for the interests of
the one must necessarily be to the detriment of the other.
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The great masses of the people, the working classes, those who as
much, if not more than many others ought to be there, are not in our
churches to-day. They already feel that they are not wanted there,
and that the Church even is getting to be their enemy. There must be
a reason for this, for it is impossible to have an effect without
its preceding cause. It is indeed time to waken up to these facts
and conditions; for they must be squarely met. A solution is
imperatively demanded, and the sooner it comes, the better; for, if
allowed to continue thus, all will come back to be paid for,
intensified a thousand-fold,—ay, to be paid for even by many
innocent ones.
Let this great principle of service, helpfulness, love, and
self-devotion to the interests of one's fellow-men be made the
fundamental principle of all lives, and see how simplified these
great and all-important questions will become. Indeed, they will
almost solve themselves. It is the man all for self, so small and so
short sighted that he can't get beyond his own selfish interests,
that has done more to bring about this state of affairs than all
other causes combined. Let the cause be removed, and then note the
results.
For many years it has been a teaching even
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of political economy that an employer buys his help just as he buys
his raw material or any other commodity; and this done, he is in no
way responsible for the welfare of those he employs. In fact, the
time isn't so far distant when the employed were herded together as
animals, and were treated very much as such. But, thanks be to God,
a better and a brighter day is dawning. Even the employer is
beginning to see that practical ethics, or true Christianity, and
business cannot and must not be divorced; that the man he employs,
instead of being a mere animal whose services he buys, is, after all
his fellow-man and his brother, and demands a treatment as such, and
that when he fails to recognize this truth, a righteous God steps
in, demanding a penalty for its violation.
He is recognizing the fact that whatsoever is for the well-being of
the one he employs, that whatever privileges he is enabled to enjoy
that will tend to grow and develop his physical, his mental, and his
moral life, that will give him an agreeable home and pleasant family
relations, that whatever influences tend to elevate him and to make
his life more happy, are a direct gain, even from a financial
standpoint for himself, by its increasing for
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him the efficiency of the man's labor. It is already recognized as a
fact that the employer who interests himself in these things, other
things being equal, is the most successful. Thus the old and the
false are breaking away before the right and the true, as all
inevitably must sooner or later; and the divinity and the power of
the workingman is being ever more fully recognized.
In the very remote history of the race there was one who, violating
a great law, having wronged a brother, asked, "Am I my brother's
keeper?" Knowing that he was, he nevertheless deceitfully put the
question in this way in his desire, if possible, to avoid the
responsibility. Many employers in their selfishness and greed for
gain have asked this same question in this same way. They have
thought they could thus defeat the sure and eternal laws of a Just
Ruler, but have thereby deceived themselves the more. These more
than any others have to a great degree brought about the present
state of affairs in the industrial and social world.
Just as soon as the employer recognizes the falsity of these old
teachings and practices, and the fact that he cannot buy his
employee's services the same as he buys his raw material,
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with no further responsibility, but that the two are on vastly
different planes, that his employee is his fellow-man and his
brother, and that he is his brother's keeper, and will be held
responsible as such, that it is to his own highest interests, as
well as to the highest interests of those he employs and to society
in general, to recognize this; and just as soon as he who is
employed fully appreciates his opportunities and makes the highest
use of all, and in turn takes an active, personal interest in all
that pertains to his employer's welfare,—just that soon will a
solution of this great question come forth, and no sooner.
It is not so much a question of legislation as of education and
right doing, thus a dealing with the individual, and so a prevention
and a cure, not merely a suppression and a regulation, which is
always sure to fail; for, in a case of right or wrong no question is
ever settled finally until it is settled rightly.
The individual, dealing with the individual is necessarily at the
bottom of all true social progress. There can't be anything worthy
the name without it. The truth will at once be recognized by all
that the good of the whole depends upon the good of each, and the
good of
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each makes the good of the whole. Attend, then, to the individual,
and the whole will take care of itself. Let each individual work in
harmony with every other, and harmony will pervade the whole. The
old theory of competition that in order to have great advancement,
great progress, we must have great competition to induce it—is as
false as it is savage and detrimental in its nature. We are just
reaching that point where the larger men and women are beginning to
see its falsity. They are recognizing the fact that, not
competition, but co-operation, reciprocity, is the great, the true
power,—to climb, not by attempting to drag, to keep down one's
fellows, but by aiding them, and being in turn aided by them, thus
combining, and so multiplying the power of all instead of wasting a
large part one against the other.
And grant that a portion do succeed in rising, while the other
portion remain in the lower condition, it is of but little value so
far as their own peace and welfare are concerned; for they can never
be what they would be, were all up together. Each is but a part, a
member, of the great civil body; and no member, let alone the entire
body, can be perfectly well, perfectly at ease, when any other part
is
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in dis-ease. No one part of the community, no one part of the
nation, can stand alone: all are dependent, interdependent. This is
the uniform teaching of history from the remotest times in the past
right through to the present. A most admirable illustration of this
fact—if indeed the word "admirable" can be used in connection with a
matter so deplorable—was the unparalleled labor trouble we had in
our great Western city but a few summers ago. The wise man is he who
learns from experiences of this terrific nature.
No, not until this all-powerful principle is fully recognized, and
is built upon so thoroughly that the brotherhood principle, the
principle of oneness can enter in, and each one recognizes the fact
that his own interests and welfare depend upon the interests, the
welfare of each, and therefore of all, that each is but a part of
the one great whole, and each one stands shoulder to shoulder in the
advance forward, can we hope for any true solution of the great
social problems before us, for any permanent elevation of the
standard in our national social life and welfare.
This same principle is the solution, and the only true solution, of
the charities question, as indeed the whole world during the last
few
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years or so, and during this time only, is beginning to realize. And
the splendid and efficient work of the organized charities in all
our large cities, as of the Elberfeld system in Germany, is
attesting the truth of this. Almost numberless methods have been
tried during the past, but all have most successfully failed; and
many have greatly increased the wretched condition of matters, and
of those it was designed to help. During this length of time only
have these all-important questions been dealt with in a true,
scientific, Christ-like, common-sense way. It has been found even
here that nothing can take the place of the personal and friendly
influences of a life built upon this principle of service.
The question of aiding the poor and needy has passed through three
distinct phases of development in the world's history. In early
times it was, "Each one for himself, and the devil take the
hindmost." From the time of the Christ, and up to the last few years
it has been, "Help others." Now it is, "Help others to kelp
themselves." The wealthy society lady going down Fifth Avenue in New
York, or Michigan Avenue in Chicago, or Charles Street in Baltimore,
or Commonwealth Avenue in Boston, who flings a coin to one asking
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alms, is not the one who is doing a true act of charity; but, on the
other hand, she may be doing the one she thus gives to and to
society in general much more harm than good, as is many times the
case. It is but a cheap, a very cheap way of buying ease for her
sympathetic nature or her sense of duty. Never let the word
"charity," which always includes the elements of interested service,
true helpfulness, kindliness, and love, be debased by making it a
synonym of mere giving, which may mean the flinging of a quarter in
scorn or for show.
Recognizing the great truth that the best and only way to help
another is to help him to help himself, and that the neglected
classes need not so much alms as friends, the Organized Charities
with their several branches in different parts of the city have
their staffs of "friendly visitors," almost all voluntary, and from
some of the best homes in the land. Then when a case of need comes
to the notice of the society, one of these goes to the person or
family as a friend to investigate, to find what circumstances have
brought about these conditions, and, if found worthy of aid, present
needs are supplied, an effort is made to secure work, and every
effort is made to
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put them on their feet again, that self-respect may be regained,
that hope may enter in; for there is scarcely anything that tends to
make one lose his self-respect so quickly and so completely as to be
compelled, or of his own accord, to ask for alms.
It is thus many times that a new life is entered upon, brightness
and hope taking the place of darkness and despair. This is not the
only call the friendly visitor makes; but he or she becomes a true
friend, and makes regular visits as such. If by this method the one
seeking charity is found to be an impostor, as is frequently the
case, proper means of exposure are resorted to, that his or her
progress in this course may be stopped. The organizations are thus
doing a most valuable work, and one that will become more and more
valuable as they are enabled to become better organized, the
greatest need to-day being more with the true spirit to act as
visiting friends.
It is this same great principle that has given birth to our college
and university settlements and our neighborhood guilds which are so
rapidly increasing, and which are destined to do a great and
efficient work. Here a small colony of young women, many from our
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best homes, and the ablest graduates of our best colleges, and young
men, many of them the ablest graduates of our best universities,
take up their abode in the poorest parts of our large cities, to try
by their personal influence and personal contact to raise the
surrounding life to a higher plane. It is in these ways that the
poor and the unfortunate are dealt with directly. Thus the classes
mingle. Thus that sentimentalism which may do and which has done
harm to these great problems, and by which the people it is designed
to help may be hindered rather than helped, is done away with. Thus
true aid and service are rendered, and the needy are really helped.
The one whose life is built upon this principle will not take up
work of this kind as a "fad," or because it is "fashionable," but
because it is right, true, Christ-like. The truly great and noble
never fear thus to mingle with those poorer and less fortunate. It
is only those who would like to be counted as great, but who are too
small to be so recognized, and who, therefore, always thinking of
self, put forth every effort to appear so. There is no surer test
than this.
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Very truly has it been said that "the greatest thing a man can do
for God is to be kind to some of His other children." All children
of the same Father, therefore all brothers, sisters. Man is next to
God. Man is God incarnate. Humanity, therefore, cannot be very far
from being next to godliness. Many people there are who are greatly
concerned about serving God, as they term it. Their idea is to build
great edifices with costly ornaments to Him. A great deal of their
time is spent in singing songs and hallelujahs to Him, just as if He
needed or wanted these for Himself, forgetting that He is far above
being benefited by anything that we can say or do, forgetting that
He doesn't want these, when for lack of them some of His children
are starving for bread to eat or are dying for the bread of life.
Can you conceive of a God who is worthy of love and service,—and I
speak most reverently,—who under such conditions would take a
satisfaction in these things? I confess I am not able to. I can
conceive of no way in which I can serve God only as I serve Him
through my own life and through the lives of my fellow-men. This,
certainly, is the only kind of service He needs or wants, or that
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is acceptable to Him. At one place we read, "He that says he loves
God and loves not his fellow-men, is a liar; and the truth is not in
him."
Even in religion I think we shall find that there is nothing greater
or more important than this great principle of service, helpfulness,
kindliness, and love. Is not Christianity, you ask, greater or more
important? Why, bless you, is this any other than Christianity, is
Christianity any other than this,—at least, if we take what the
Master Teacher himself has said? For what, let us ask, is a
Christian,—the real, not merely in name? A follower of Christ, one
who does as he did, one who lives as he lived. And, again, who was
Christ? He that healed the sick, clothed the naked, bound up the
broken-hearted, sustained and encouraged the weak, the faltering,
befriended and aided the poor, the needy, condemned the proud and
the selfish, taught the people to live nobly, truly, grandly, to
live in their higher, diviner selves, that the greatest among them
should be their servant, and that his followers were those who lived
as he lived. He spent all his time in the service of humanity. He
gave his whole life in this way. He it was who went about doing
good.
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Is it your desire then, to be numbered among his followers, to bear
that blessed name, the name "Christian"? Then sit at his feet, and
learn of him, love him, do as he did, as he taught you to do, live
as he lived, as he taught you to live, and you are a Christian, and
not unless you do. True Christianity can be found in no other way.
Naught is the difference what one may call himself; for many call
themselves by this name to whom Christ says it will one day be said,
"I never knew you: depart from me, ye cursed." Naught is the
difference what creeds one may subscribe to, what rites and
ceremonies he may observe, how loud and how numerous his professions
may be. All of these are but as a vain mockery, unless he is a
Christian; and to be a Christian is, as we have found, to be a
follower of Christ, to do as he did, to live as he lived. Then live
the Christ life. Live so as to become at one with God, and dwell
continually in this blessed at-one-ment. The trouble all along has
been that so many have mistaken the mere person of the Christ, the
mere physical Jesus, for his life, his spirit, his teachings, and
have succeeded in getting no farther than this as yet, except in
cases here and there.
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Now and then a rare soul rises up, one with great power, great
inspiration, and we wonder at his great power, his great
inspiration, why it is. When we look deeply enough, however, we will
find that one great fact will answer the question every time. It is
living the life that brings the power. He is living the Christ life,
not merely standing afar off and looking at it, admiring it, and
saying, Yes, I believe, I believe, and ending it there. In other
words, he has found the kingdom of heaven. He has found that it is
not a place, but a condition; and the song continually arising from
his heart is, There is joy, only joy.
The Master, you remember, said: "Seek ye not for the kingdom of
heaven in tabernacles or in houses made with hands. Know ye not that
the kingdom of heaven is within you?" He told in plain words where
and how to find it. He then told how to find all other things, when
he said, "Seek ye first the kingdom of heaven, and all these other
things shall be added unto you." Now, do you wonder at his power,
his inspiration, his abundance of all things? The trouble with so
many is that they act as if they do not believe what the Master
said. They do not take him
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at his word. They say one thing: they do another. Their acts give
the lie to their words. Instead of taking him at his word, and
living as if they had faith in him, they prefer to follow a series
of old, outgrown, man-made theories, traditions, forms, ceremonies,
and seem to be satisfied with the results. No, to be a Christian is
to live the Christ life, the life of him who went about doing good,
the life of him who came not to be ministered unto, but to minister.
We will find that this mighty principle of love and service is the
greatest to live by in this life, and also one of the gates whereby
all who would must enter the kingdom of heaven.
Again we have the Master's words. In his own and only description of
the last judgment, after speaking of the Son of Man coming in all
his glory and all the holy angels with him, of his sitting on the
throne of his glory with all nations gathered before him, of the
separation of this gathered multitude into two parts, the one on his
right, the other on his left, he says: "Then shall the King say unto
them on his right hand, Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the
kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world. For I was
an
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hungered, and ye gave me meat; I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink;
I was a stranger, and ye took me in; naked, and ye clothed me; I was
sick, and ye visited me; I was in prison, and ye came unto me. Then
shall the righteous answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee an
hungered, and fed thee? or thirsty, and gave thee drink? When saw we
thee a stranger, and took thee in? or naked, and clothed thee? Or
when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee? And the
King shall answer, and say unto them, Verily I say unto you,
Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my
brethren, ye have done it unto me.
"Then shall he say unto them on the left hand, Depart from me, ye
cursed. For I was an hungered, and ye gave me no meat; I was
thirsty, and ye gave me no drink; I was a stranger, and ye took me
not in; sick, and in prison, and ye visited me not. Then shall they
answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee an hungered, or athirst,
or a stranger, or naked, or sick, or in prison, and did not minister
unto thee? Then shall he answer them, saying, Verily I say unto you,
Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these, ye did it
not to me."
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After spending the greater portion of his life in many distant
climes in a fruitless endeavor to find the Cup of the Holy Grail, *
thinking that thereby he was doing the greatest service he could for
God, Sir Launfal at last returns an old man, gray-haired and bent.
He finds that his castle is occupied by others, and that he himself
is an outcast. His cloak is torn; and instead of the charger in
gilded trappings he was mounted upon when as a young man, he started
out with great hopes and ambitions, he is afoot and leaning on a
staff. While sitting there and meditating, he is met by the same
poor and needy leper he passed the morning he started, the one who
in his need asked for aid, and to whom he had flung a coin in scorn,
as he hurried on in his eager desire to be in the Master's service.
But matters are changed now, and he is a wiser man. Again the poor
leper says:—
“‘For Christ's sweet sake, I beg an alms’;—
The happy camels may reach the spring,
But Sir Launfal sees only the grewsome thing, p. 129
The leper, lank as the rain-blanched bone,
That cowers beside him, a thing as lone
And white as the ice-isles of Northern seas
In the desolate horror of his disease.
“And Sir Launfal said: ‘I behold in thee
An image of Him who died on the tree;
Thou also hast had thy crown of thorns,—
Thou also hast had the world's buffets and scorns,—
And to thy life were not denied
The wounds in the hands and feet and side:
Mild Mary's Son, acknowledge me;
Behold, through him, I give to thee!’
“Then the soul of the leper stood up in his eyes
And looked at Sir Launfal, and straightway he
Remembered in what a haughtier guise
He had flung an alms to leprosie,
When he girt his young life up in gilded mail
And set forth in search of the Holy Grail.
The heart within him was ashes and dust;
He parted in twain his single crust,
He broke the ice on the streamlet's brink,
And gave the leper to eat and drink,
’Twas a mouldy crust of coarse brown bread,
’Twas water out of a wooden bowl,—
Yet with fine wheaten bread was the leper fed,
And 'twas red wine he drank with his thirsty soul.
“As Sir Launfal mused with a downcast face,
A light shone round about the place; p. 130
The leper no longer crouched at his side,
But stood before him glorified,
Shining and tall and fair and straight
As the pillar that stood by the Beautiful Gate,—
Himself the Gate whereby men can
Enter the temple of God in Man.
“And the voice that was calmer than silence said,
‘Lo, it is I, be not afraid!
In many climes, without avail,
Thou hast spent thy life for the Holy Grail;
Behold, it is here,—this cup which thou
Didst fill at the streamlet for me but now;
This crust is my body broken for thee,
This water His blood that died on the tree;
The Holy Supper is kept, indeed,
In whatso we share with another's need;
Not what we give, but what we share,—
For the gift without the giver is bare;
Who gives himself with his alms feeds three,—
Himself, his hungering neighbor, and me.’”
The fear is sometimes entertained, and the question is sometimes
asked, May not adherence to this principle of helpfulness and
service become mere sentimentalism? or still more, may it not be the
means of lessening another's sense of self-dependence, and thus may
it not at times do more harm than good? In reply let it be said: If
the love which impels it be a selfish love, or a weak
sentimentalism, or an effort at show, or devoid of good
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common sense, yes, many times. But if it be a strong, genuine,
unselfish love, then no, never. For, if my love for my fellow-man be
the true love, I can never do anything that will be to his or any
one's else detriment,—nothing that will not redound to his highest
ultimate welfare. Should he, for example come and ask of me a
particular favor, and were it clear to me that granting it would not
be for his highest good ultimately, then love at once resolves
itself into duty, and compels me to forbear. A true, genuine,
unselfish love for on 's fellow-man will never prompt, and much less
permit, anything that will not result in his highest ultimate good.
Adherence, therefore, to this great principle in its truest sense,
instead of being a weak sentimentalism, is, we shall find, of all
practical things the most intensely practical.
And a word here in regard to the test of true love and service, in
distinction from its semblance for show or for vain glory. The test
of the true is this: that it goes about and 0' does its good work,
it never says anything about it, but lets others do the saying. It
not only says nothing about it, but more, it has no desire to have
it known; and, the truer it is, the greater the desire to have it
unknown save
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to God and its own true self. In other words, it is not sicklied
o’er with a semi-insane desire for notoriety or vainglory, and hence
never weakens itself nor harasses any one else by lengthy recitals
of its good deeds. It is not the professional good-doing. It is
simply living its natural life, open-minded, openhearted, doing each
day what its hands find to do, and in this finding its own true life
and joy. And in this way it unintentionally but irresistibly draws
to itself a praise the rarest and divinest I know of,—the praise I
heard given but a day or two ago to one who is living simply his own
natural life without any conscious effort at anything else, the
praise contained in the words: And, oh, it is beautiful, the great
amount of good he does and of which the world never hears.
Footnotes
128:* "According to the mythology of the Romancers, the Sangreal, or
Holy Grail, was the cup out of which Jesus partook of the Last
Supper with his disciples. It was brought into England by Joseph of
Arimathea, and remained there, an object of pilgrimage and
adoration, for many years in the keeping of his lineal descendants.
It was incumbent upon those who had charge of it to be chaste in
thought, word, and deed; but, one of the p. 129 keepers having
broken this condition, the Holy Grail disappeared. From that time it
was a favorite enterprise of the Knights of Sir Arthur's court to go
in search of it."—James Russell Lowell.
from What all the World is
Seeking