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Archive for the ‘Good Morning’ Category

Brains or Excelsior?

You all know the Great Law. One way of stating it is to say: Like produces like. What we sow in thought we reap in experience.

People know that these things are true, and yet in spite of this transcendent knowledge they constantly use the Great Law for their own destruction. They would not dream of pouring water in the gas tank of their car, or sand into their watch, or broken glass into their food; but they do something just as foolish every time they think, speak, or act negatively. One cannot help wondering what such people have inside their heads – brains or excelsior.

In the future, when you catch yourself thinking negatively, say to your self severely, “Brains or excelsior?” and immediately switch to what you know to be the Truth of Being.

Knowing that whatsoever good thing any man doeth, the same shall he receive of the Lord… (Ephesians 6:8).

Our gardens are the worldly manifestations of our thoughts, words and deeds. When we plant loving thoughts; water them with joy , tolerance, patience and hope; our gardens will be filled with fragrance, beauty and bounty. But just as any good gardener knows, we must also till the soil, pull the weeds and keep the bugs out for our gardens to thrive. Our attitudes are the soil which must be properly prepared. Negative thoughts, words and deeds are the bugs and weeds which degrade our gardens and rob them of fruit and flower.

So, let us remember the words of Christ, “Get thee behind me, Satan”, whenever these threats enter our gardens. And, just like the burrowing insects trying to create a nest in our garden, we must immediately eliminate our negative thoughts so they do not infect our words and deeds. Even though no human can totally resist negative thoughts, we can turn away from them and root them out of our consciousness before the get a foothold, or multiply to infest our garden. Then, like every good gardener, we can rest from our work in the garden with joy in ourselves and confidence in the harvest to come.

Planting love,
Stan

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The Good God

God knows everything, at all times. The Bible sometimes speaks of God as having changed His mind or being disappointed. God is supposed to have tested Abraham’s obedience in the matter of Isaac. God is supposed to have had His plans upset by the misconduct of Adam and Eve, by the general wickedness of humanity before the flood, and, in fact, He is frequently represented as being disappointed and even frustrated by the conduct of mankind. In orthodox theology, the devil was continually upsetting God’s arrangements and bringing his plans to naught. Indeed, to listen to some preachers, one would have supposed that the devil was a good deal more powerful than God.

Of course, all this is nonsense. Such things could not be really true of God. It was Abraham’s idea of God that led him to prepare to kill Isaac. It was the wickedness of mankind in the antediluvian world that brought on the flood as a natural consequence, just as the fears, hatreds, jealousies, and greed of mankind over many years have brought on war.

We make an idolatrous image of ourselves and call it God. Let us destroy this image today and worship the true God who is infinite and unchanging Good.

God is not a man, that he should lie; neither the son of man, that he should repent … (Number 23:19).

The examples from the Bible cited above are among the most difficult to understand. We can not know what moved the writer of the Abraham story, what actually caused the great flood or whether God knew before hand that Adam and Eve would choose free will over obedience. What we do know is that we are physical beings, existing in a physical world, that is interpreted by us in terms of our limitations such as sight, sound, smell and touch. We know that we are also spiritual beings living in a non-physical existence that reveals itself to us through thought, intuition and understanding of God.

God exists in both planes and reveals spiritual insight through teaching, experience and revelation. That which God reveals to us, must makes sense to us in light of our limitations and physical nature. So, when the Bible speaks to a subject, even to God’s intent, reactions and actions, it is within the framework of human limitations in understanding and perception. That which we can not perceive, sense or understand, must be explained or revealed in terms that we can grasp even with our limitations. When God speaks to us, it is as an adult who speaks to a child. As any good parent would do, God explains things to us that we are not capable of understanding through our own means. A parent does not tell their toddler child about the physics of combustion, they simply say “don’t play with matches or you will get hurt”.

One thing of which we can be sure is that God will reveal all things to us as we are capable of understanding them. And that, if we study the Bible, commit to God and live according to God’s will, then “the scales will drop from our eyes and the mud will fall from our ears”, so we can understand all we need to know for our best good. One last thing, there are likely some things that we are incapable of understanding or do not need to know. Just as any good parent would do, God would withhold these insights from us until we are ready to understand them and not abuse them. Until then, we should trust God, lean on our faith and pursue the multitudes of right things of which we have no doubt. This is the sure path to enlightenment, joy and harmony with the Creator, whatever God’s intentions are.

Leaning on God,
Stan

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Theoretical Centipede

Do not dissect things too much. By the time you have dissected a living thing you have killed it, and you no longer have the thing that you began with. Take a rose out of the bowl, pull its petal apart, count them, weigh them, measure them, and then, while you will have certain interesting information, you no longer have a rose.

There is a place for analysis, but it is apt to be quite fatal in prayer and meditation. Do not dissect the love of God, but feel it. Do not dissect divine intelligence, but realize it. Do not wonder how God can possibly solve this problem, but just watch Him do it in His own way – and He will if you will give Him a chance.

You know that God is Love. So go ahead on that, and do not get theoretical about it.

Do you remember the old verse that says:

A centipede was happy quite,
Until a frog in fun
Said, “Pray, which leg comes after which?”
This raised her mind to such a pitch,
She lay distracted in the ditch,
Considering how to run.

The righteous shall be glad in the Lord, and shall trust in him: and all the upright in heart shall glory (Psalm 64:10).

To any person who likes to think about things, figure them out and understand how they work, this may seem like strange advice. But we should be clear, this advice does say “do not think, ponder and analyze things” It is saying that we should not let our pondering and analyzing detract from the true experience of God’s love and power. The advice is pointing out that such over-thinking can cause us to miss the forest while looking at all the trees.

Our relationship with God is not at its root, intellectual or analytical. It is intuitive, emotional and spiritual. And while we may someday possess enough knowledge of the universe to fully analyze and quantify God’s power and love, even then it won’t make it one ounce more special or powerful. So, let us accept joy, beauty and love for what it is instead of filling our brain with mind-numbing and paralyzing intellectual exercises. They are vanity and meaningless in the great scheme of things, and most importantly, can inhibit the true proof of God’s power. Love is the best proof of God and it can neither be weighed, measured or quantified.

And for those of us who like to ponder the imponderable, let our musings not detract from our true joy, peace and hope that is found in our gardens more so than in a physics textbook.

In the garden,
Z gardener

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Most people feel intuitively that the simplest things in life are the most important, or, if you prefer, that the most important things in life are found to be the simplest. This is a very profound discovery. What is more important to us than breathing, for instance?

Another simple thing that is of great moment is a smile. A smile affects your whole body from the skin right in to the skeleton, including all blood vessels, nerves, and muscles. It affects the functioning of every organ. It influences every gland. Even one smile often relaxes a number of muscles, and when the thing becomes a habit you can easily see how the effect will mount up. Last year’s smiles are paying you dividends today.

The effect of a smile on other people is no less remarkable. It disarms suspicion, melts away fear and anger, and brings forth the best in the other person – which best he immediately proceeds to give to you.

A smile is to personal contacts what oil is to machinery, and no intelligent engineer ever neglects lubrication.

Rejoice evermore (1 Thessalonians 5:16).

Brothers and sisters,

There are few things that have better return on investment than a smile. Ironically, it has more impact on the one smiling than upon those who receive the smile. The greatest benefits accrue when we don’t feel like smiling. Like lighting a match in a dark room, a smile illuminates everything and in so doing changes everything for the better. If one wants to act divinely today, let them smile and bring the joy of that smile to others. Especially for those who are down, if they can just muster a smile, their world will be little brighter and so will everyone else’s. And guess what, God will be smiling right along with us because God loves us and wants us to rejoice each day.

Smiling on,
Z gardener

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Foresight and Hindsight

When you have to make a decision or take a certain action, all that you can do is to do the best you know at that time, and if you do that you will have done your duty. In the light of after events it may turn out that you made a mistake, but that will not be your fault because you could not possibly do better that the best you know at the time.

Claim that the Christ is guiding you; and believe it, and the ultimate outcome will be favorable even if things seem to go wrong for a time.

And the Lord shall guide thee continually (Isaiah 58:11).

The key to this wisdom to “do the best we know at that time”. Doing “the best we know” usually means doing that which is hardest and often times least attractive for us. We do not have to know everything to “do the best we know”. We do have to “do the best’ about that which we know. Then we will be sure the outcome will be blessed even if we make the wrong choice. It is the intent to “do the best we know” that turns the key which opens the door to our gardens. So, let us claim Christ’s guidance, believe in it and have faith that our decisions will enhance and nurture our gardens and all who enter therein.

Seeking guidance,
Z gardener

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The Consecrated Life

Of what does the consecrated life consist?

Your life is a consecrated one when you are ready at all times to do the will of God – when you are willing and anxious that God may be fully expressed through you, through your thoughts, words, and deeds, during every hour of the day.

You are not concerned with the question of results. Results belong to God.

Here am I; send me (Isaiah 6:8).

Are we really willing and anxious to go where God sends us? For God to fully express his will through us, we must empty out the self and replace it with God’s spirit, will and consciousness. This is a very hard thing to accomplish, and it takes most of us all our lives to get there. To put God and others before ourselves turns every human instinct on its head. Turning the other cheek, forgiving the transgressor, serving instead of being served and giving away our treasures are all hard things to do. But the reward is priceless.

Only those who climb the mountain get to experience the awesome beauty and perspective of the world from the peak. So it is with living a consecrated life. Those who pay the price get to enjoy life’s peak experiences such a joy, confidence, hope and peace. The entrance to our gardens are to be found on the spiritual mountain tops of selflessness, service, sacrifice, forgiveness and all other means of following God’s will and Jesus’ example. The path to that entrance is the narrow and rocky one that begins when we lay down the human self and take up our spiritual calling. We take the first step on that path when we say “Here I am; send me”.

Being sent,
Z gardener

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Tail Wags Dog

Man controls his own life. The Bible says that God has given him “dominion over all things,” and this is true when he understands the Truth; and the Truth is that our outer conditions – your environment – are not cause; they are effect. You are not happy because you are well. You are well because you are happy. You do not have faith because things are going well. They are going well because you have faith. You are not depressed because trouble has come to you, but trouble has come because your realization of the Truth had first fallen off.

The secret of life then is to control your mental states. To accept sickness, trouble, and failure as unavoidable, and perhaps inevitable, is folly, because it is this very acceptance by you that keeps these evils in existence. Man is not limited by his environment. He creates his environment by his beliefs and feelings. To suppose otherwise is like thinking that the tail can wag the dog.

If you have been thinking that outer conditions are stronger that you are, say to yourself: “Tail wags dog” and immediately reverse the belief.

… who did hinder you that ye should not obey the truth? (Galatians 5:7).

All we experience inwardly and outwardly is a result of our mental state. That is not to say that the death or illness of a friend is caused by our attitude. It does mean that how we react and respond to that death is purely a mental state, and that is what determines our environment. All “objective reality” is subject to our mental states, and most of it is created by some past decision, perspective or action. We are where we are, as a result of our thoughts and the words and deeds that flow from them, much more than the environment in which we operate.

To live in our garden, we must create and nurture that mental state which accepts God’s will, follows it and believes that all things are sent by God for our best good. That is when experience yields to faith and joy rules our garden.

Living the truth,
Z gardener

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Praying With A Feather

Years ago many devoted preachers and Sunday School teachers were fond of telling people to “pray hard.” Well-meaning as this advice was, it was mistaken. I often tell people to pray “soft,” which of course, means gently.

I do this because I know that the more quietly and gently we pray, the better results we get. In prayer, as in many other activities, effort defeats itself. More than once I have said to my congregation, “Pray with a feather – not with a pickax.”

Always pray gently, and especially if you have a good deal of fear, or if your difficulty seems to be a very important one.

For thou, Lord, art good, and ready to forgive; and plenteous in mercy unto all them that call upon thee (Psalm 86:5).

This not to confuse fervent prayer with “hard” prayer”. We are to pray with feeling lest we simply mouth words that mean nothing. But we are succumbing to vanity and pride when we think that praying longer or more willfully is the way to answered prayers. We must assume the opposite mindset when communicating with God. Our faith is manifested in quiet acceptance of God’s primacy, not in our ability to will certain outcomes. It is when we release the ego, will and desire for self-determination, that God flows through us in majesty and might.

When we act according to God’s will and live according to our faith, then we have the confidence given by God upon which successful prayer is founded. So, pray fervently, regularly and with quiet belief that God’s will brings our best good in all circumstances. Then we can turn over our fears, pains and problems to our loving God with confidence in God’s promises to us. Then, we can awaken each day in our gardens and tend them with joy, hope and certainty that all our prayers are being answered in the best way.

Praying softly,
Z gardener

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Shack or Palace?

There is no use in merely saying that everything will be all right. Thinking rightly, of course, means putting God into all your affairs and expecting him to change them. For example, if you are living in a shack it is not any good pretending that it is a palace. Cheap optimism is never spiritual. Realize that you are living in a shack, but claim the Presence of God to guide you to something better.

Teach me the way, O Lord, and lead me in a plain path … (Psalm 27:11).

Thinking rightly is the gateway to positive change. That does not mean we can change things by thinking they are are changed. It does mean changing the way we think to reflect God’s will. When we alter the way we think in order to become loving, giving, patient, tolerant, faithful and the other traits required by our faith, then we can expect our circumstances to change for the better. Just saying we believe is not enough. We must change our thinking and our behavior so God can then lead us to our true garden.

Being taught,
Z gardener

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An Experiment

Try this experiment today. Select one particular thing in your life that is not going well and you wish to make right. Next consider the matter in the light of your knowledge of God and of prayer. Realize that this thing cannot remain inharmonious or negative once you know the Truth about it. Realize that you are now knowing the Truth and claim that the divine Power in you is now healing the condition completely and permanently.

Then give thanks. Remember that praise and thanksgiving are the most powerful prayers of all.

The next day, repeat your thanksgiving, until the answer comes.

In between prayers you must keep your thought right concerning the problem. This is vital. All-day-long guiding of your thought cannot fail to bring your demonstration.

My meditation of him shall be sweet: I will be glad in the Lord (Psalm 104:34).

When we effectively contemplate any problem in light of our faith in and understanding of God, it will yield. The hard part of this is accepting the blessing hidden in our pain, frustration, fear or faults. Yet God’s unbreakable promise is that our faith and trust in God will bring us to our best good.

Even when our challenges seem undeniably bad or hurtful, if we place God in their midst and reflect on them in the light of God’s promise, they will produce the blessings God intends. The tough part is letting go of our anger, self-recrimination, resentment or grief and embracing God’s blessing in our troubles.

In sweet and glad meditation,
Z gardener

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