by Thomas Troward
Contents List:Creative PowerAdverse Conditions Power Amplification Mind as Channel |
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Now by the very hypothesis of the case the whole Creative Process consists in the continual pressing forward of the Universal Spirit for expression through the individual and particular, and Spirit in its different modes is therefore the Life and Substance of the universe. Hence it follows that if there is to be an expression of thinking power it can only be by expressing the same thinking power which subsists latent in the Originating Spirit. If it were less than this it would only be some sort of mechanism and would not be thinking power, so that to be thinking power at all it must be identical in kind with that of the Originating Spirit. It is for this reason that man is said to be created in the image and likeness of God; and if we realise that it is impossible for him to be otherwise, we shall find a firm foundation from which to draw many important deductions.
It is therefore not surprising that the creative power of our thought, thus used in a wrong direction, has produced the limitations of which we complain. The remedy, then, is to reverse our method of thinking, and instead of taking external facts as our starting point, to start instead from the inherent nature of mental power.
We have already taken two great steps in this direction, first by seeing that the whole manifested cosmos could have had its origin nowhere but in mental power, and secondly by realising that our own mental power must be the same in kind with that of the Originating Mind.
A poor analogy of the process may be found in a self-influencing dynamo where the magnetism generates the current and the current intensifies the magnetism with the result of producing a still stronger current until the limit of saturation is reached — only in the substantive infinitude of the Universal Mind and the potential infinitude of the Individual Mind, there is no limit of saturation.
Or we may compare the interaction of the two minds to two mirrors, a great and a small one, opposite each other, with the word "Life" engraved on the large one. Then, by the law of reflection, the word "life" will also appear on the image of the smaller mirror reflected in the greater.
Of course these are only very imperfect analogies; but if you can once grasp the idea of your own individuality as a thought in the Divine Mind which is able to perpetuate itself by thinking of itself as the thought which it is, you have got at the root of the whole matter, and by the same process you will not only perpetuate your life but will also expand it.
When we realise this on the one hand, and on the other that all external conditions, including the body, are produced by thought, we find ourselves standing between two infinites, the infinite of Mind and the infinite of Substance — from both of which we can draw what we will, and mould specific conditions out of the Universal Substance by the Creative Power which we draw in from the Universal Mind.
But we must never lose sight of the reason for the creative power of our thought: that it is because our mind is itself a thought of the Divine Mind, and that consequently our increase in livingness and creative power must be in exact proportion to our perception of our relation to the Parent Mind. In such considerations as these is to be found the philosophical basis of the Bible doctrine of "Sonship", with its culmination in the conception of the Christ. These are not mere fancies but the expression of strictly scientific principles in their application to the deepest problems of the individual life; and their basis is that each one's world, whether in or out of the flesh, must necessarily be created by his own consciousness and, in its turn, his mode of consciousness will necessarily take its colour from his conception of his relation to the Divine Mind — to the exclusion of light and colour if he realises no Divine Mind, and to their building up into forms of beauty in proportion as he realises his identity of being with that All-originating Spirit which is Light, Love, and Beauty in itself.
Thus the great creative work in each of us is to make us consciously "sons and daughters of the Almighty", realising that by our divine origin we can never be really separated from the Parent Mind which is continually seeking expression through us, and that any apparent separation is due to our own misconception of the true nature of the inherent relation between the Universal and the Individual. This is the lesson which the Great Teacher has so luminously put before us in the parable of the Prodigal Son.