The
power of thought, as Emerson says, is a spiritual power. It is the
greatest power that man has at his disposal. The world today is in
its present state simply as a result of mankind's collective
thinking; each nation is in its present state of either peace and
prosperity, or poverty, murder and anarchy, simply as a result of its
thinking as a nation; and each individual is what he is, and his life
is what it is, and his circumstances are what they are, simply as
results of his thoughts. What a man thinks, he becomes; what a man
thinks is the mainspring of all his actions; what a man thinks
attracts to him his circumstances and environment; what a man thinks
determines what type of friends and companions will gather around
him; what a man thinks decides whether he shall be happy or
miserable, successful or unsuccessful, healthy or unhealthy,
prosperous or poverty-stricken, hated or loved. What a man thinks
either builds up his character or pulls it down. What a man thinks
can overcome fate or strengthen it, can bring him into alignment with
his glorious destiny, or make him an outcast and a wanderer in desert
places. Indeed, there is no limit to the power of thought, because it
is a spiritual power of intense potency. It is the power which
distinguishes man from the brute, it is the power by which he can
mount up to God, it is the power which can make the unsuccessful
successful in the battle of life, it is the power which can make the
loftiest achievement possible, it is the power by which difficulties
can be overcome, disadvantages of birth and parentage surmounted, and
the life beautified and inspired and energised with God-given powers.
By
thought man either blesses or curses himself. By it he brings into
his life either success or failure, health or disease, happiness or
unhappiness, poverty or prosperity. It is all in his mind and the
character of his thought. Whatever there is in your life or mine, of
disharmony, lack, sickness or unhappiness, is the result of our
disharmonious thought. We live in an orderly Universe, but we do not
react harmoniously to our environment, we are not in correspondence
with the hidden law and order around us. It is not necessary for the
universe to be altered; what is needed is that we ourselves should be
changed. Within ourselves is the cause of the disorder in our own
individual world--for we each live in a little world of our own
creation-- therefore, the disorder and trouble that afflicts us, or
the lack that restricts our life, can never be overcome, save by a
change of mind, habit of thought, and mental attitude.
In
the following pages an attempt is made to show how the reader can, by
changing his thoughts and mental attitude, "reverse the lever"
and come into harmony with the Divine Idea. When this is
accomplished, his life will blossom like the rose, "he shall be
led forth with peace; the mountains and the hills shall break before
him into singing, and all the trees of the field shall clap their
hands."
Introduction : 'The Power of Thought' - Henry Thomas Hamblin, [Science of Thought Press, 1929]
Henry Thomas Hamblin
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Introduction : 'The Power of Thought' - Henry Thomas Hamblin, [Science of Thought Press, 1929]
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