Love Remember Protect
Love Remember Protect
from The Reality of Leadership
Uranda September 17, 1953
Until we recognize the
fundamental, basic nature of the agreement in reality we cannot begin to
understand those factors of the heart which give meaning to the agreement. If
the heart is false to the word of the lips the agreement means nothing.
Therefore we come, by reasonable steps, to a recognition of the basic
principles of cohesion, or centering, which is to say God's love. And how shall
we describe God's love? And how shall we indicate a pattern of personal
experience by reason of which God's love may have meaning in us on earth?
One forgets that about which he
has no feeling. There is a basic principle you might remember. One forgets that
about which he has no feeling. If some incident causes resentment, if the
feeling of resentment is not maintained the incident itself will soon pass from
memory; but if the feeling of resentment is maintained the incident itself will
not pass readily from memory.
We have all known people of
vindictive natures, who held grudges over a long period of time. They schemed
and worked to try to get even with someone. The wrong, real or imaginary, may
very well have been something very small, but because of the deep feeling it
was not forgotten. We have known other people who have suffered some injury at
the hands of another, who held no resentment, who quickly forgot because they
forgave.
If you forgive another you cease
to have feeling with respect to that which is forgiven; therefore it is quickly
forgotten. If you think you have forgiven something about which you still have
feeling, in the sense of resentment, so that you cannot forget it, then you
have not forgiven. Forgiveness in attitude toward another causes that which has
been forgiven to cease to have any meaning in the sense of feeling. You have
heard the expression "Forgive and forget." If you actually forgive,
you do shortly forget, because in forgiveness feeling is gone. Feeling ceases
in relationship to the matter that has been forgiven, and if feeling has not
ceased then you have not forgiven, regardless of what you imagined on the
point.
One quickly forgets that about
which he has no real feeling, and this is true also of God and the things of
God. If you do not have true, deep feeling with respect to any point of truth,
or with respect to God, then you will quickly forget these things; and under
the pressure of circumstance you will forget God, at first at least. You may be
forced to remember later. But it is that first flush of attitude, first flush
of reaction, first flush of feeling, which reveals the individual's true nature.
The quality of leadership requires
stability, and in the expression of true leadership the first flush of reaction
or feeling attitude is not contrary to the basic agreement in reality. When one
remembers the agreement, then if there is pressure which would cause one to
move in the wrong direction, say something wrong, feel something out of
pattern, the question immediately arises: Under this pressure, what leadership
is the individual going to follow? Will he follow the lead of the adverse
vibrational patterns that are present? Or will he follow the lead of the
constructive vibrational patterns that are present?
Always, if there is any contest,
always if there is any pressure, there are two patterns present. If only an
evil pattern be present there is no pressure. If only a good pattern be present
there is no pressure, in the sense of the conflict factors which we are
considering at the moment. Within the scope of reality there are methods, in
harmony with reality, of producing the pressure necessary to creative activity,
but that is not what we are talking about now. If there is pressure, then, in
the sense of the contest, there are two patterns present—never just one, for if
there is only one there is no pressure. If there is pressure, in the sense of
the contest, there are always two patterns present, and the question is, Which
one of these two patterns will govern in the individual life? Which one will
control? Which one will the individual follow?
If in the first flush of reaction
the individual follows the adverse pattern and then laboriously tries to become
true to the right pattern, he has not yet attained to the state of true
leadership. But if in any moment when pressures appear the individual always
remembers there are two patterns present, if he takes time to see, to note, to
examine, to be sure that he follows the right pattern, he will not, in the
first flush of reaction, be subject to the wrong one. Such stability, under
pressure, begins to reveal the reality of leadership material. Such an one
begins to be in the state of functional leadership on the side of reality.
If, then, under pressure the
agreement is remembered, the vibrational patterns of reality are remembered, it
is because there is feeling with respect to these things. If the individual
says or does something wrong and then says to me, "I did not think,"
or "I forgot, I am sorry," I accept, of course, the repentance, but
the individual has revealed something about himself. He has revealed that he
does not yet have an adequate feeling with respect to the things of reality,
that his deeper feelings are with respect to the unreal patterns of the world.
Such an individual cannot be trusted in the field of leadership. Now if we remember that we do
remember that about which we feel keenly we should begin to see readily enough
the means by which we can attain to the state of true leadership.
If you ever have been in
love you had a deep feeling with respect to
the person with whom you were in love, and having that deep feeling you were
not under the necessity of reminding yourself all the time about that person.
You have heard people say, "Well, I love such and such a person. I just
cannot get him or her out of my mind." No! There is deep feeling with
respect to that person. If you love another you do not have to constantly
remind yourself that the other person is in the picture. If you love another
you don't have to remind yourself to remember the one whom you love. So it is
in your relationship with God. If you love God you don't have to remember to
remind yourself to remember God. When we love God in any real sense the fact of
that love conditions every thought and word and deed. We don't have to keep
reminding ourselves, "Well I love God, so thus and so."
If there is love there is feeling.
Loving God is not merely an intellectual process. The awareness and the pattern
have relationship to the mind as such in love, but love is a matter of the
heart. Why should any human being who has an awareness of the reality of God
feel that he must go through some mysterious effort or struggle in order to
love God more than he does?
If you love a certain person, then
you remember that person, and in remembering the person you tend to remember
some specific thing about that person, the manner of appearance perhaps, the
sound of the voice, the touch of the fingertips, something that was said, some
loving act performed. And with the recounting in one's heart of all these
precious things about the one loved there is appreciation. One's heart leaps
anew with joy at the thought of the one loved, the deed that was done, the word
that was spoken.
When we begin to consider our
relationship with God, why should any human being say, "I try so hard not
to forget God"? That sounds like love, doesn't it? "I try so hard not
to forget God." There is life, and that life is the gift of God's love.
The fact that we can feel, see, hear, move, speak, the fact that we can enjoy
anything, association, human relationships, the beauties of nature, the wonder
of music—whatever it may be; everything that we know and feel with respect to
life's satisfactions—comes because we are alive, and life is a gift of God's
love. If God gives us the gift of life, then by reason of that gift we enjoy
whatever it is that we enjoy.
If we recount in our hearts all
the things we love in the one whom we love to think about—something that was
said, a look, a touch, a word, a deed—we find joy in that recounting within our
own hearts. If there is love there is not an inclination to publicize, to tell
someone else all about all of it. One's heart may be so full that one cannot
keep completely still, especially in new-found love. A person may reach a point
where he feels he will burst if he does not talk to someone. And yet, even so,
it is done with a certain delicacy. Something of it is conveyed, some of the
words that were said are recounted, some of the things that were done are
related, but not all. There is always a certain something in love which is not
publicized, which is held sacred in the depths of one's heart, a certain
something that cannot be told, a certain something that can be known only as it
is shared. So it is in our relationship with God. He who loves God does not go
around talking about how he loves God, although on occasion he may surely
mention it. If a person is in love in the human sense there are evidences of it
in relationship to one's attitude, one's words, one's conduct; there are
evidences in one's bearing; it shows in the eyes, in the face, and it is there.
If we love God we don't have to
remind ourselves of God. We don't have to try to think about God. Automatically
everything that comes up is seen in the light of our love. Automatically everything that comes up is seen in the light of our love.
And what is our love? This is true no matter what one loves.
A person who loves the supposedly
almighty dollar—you will find that everything that anyone says or does,
everything that arises, is seen in the light of the individual's love for the
dollar. If some person is characterized by love for himself, everything that
arises will be seen in the light of his love, his love for himself. In actual
fact, every day, for every person, anything that is coming into the range of
perception or function, everything that arises for every person on the face of
the earth, is seen in the light of his love. If there is love of position, then
everything is seen in the light of that desire for position.
Human beings who are in love see
everything in the light of its significance in relationship to that love,
regardless of anything. True all the time—whether function is right or wrong,
every individual sees that which arises in the light of his love, whatever it
may be, love of self or love of God. If there are problems and difficulties
very often the human being reaches a point where he loves his problems and
difficulties. He loves his burdens, he worships his burdens, and everything
that arises he sees in the light of his love, the light of his difficulties,
his burdens. If you will examine yourself and watch yourself a little, you
begin to find out what you love, because everything that arises is seen in the
light of your love.
God is the source of life, which
makes it possible for us to enjoy the good things which He has established on
earth. If we have enjoyment, satisfaction in living, the joy of attainment,
what is our first love? The first flush of reaction under a given circumstance
reveals your first love, whether it is of self or of God. So often it is pride
that governs the first flush of reaction, the first movement of attitude; and
if there is human pride the individual is in love with himself and he sees
everything that arises in the light of his love for himself.
There are steps in love, degrees
of love; there is a pattern in relationship to love—what is the first love?
then there will be the second love, etc—until one begins to find orientation
in the pattern of reality. Then there is the first love, and the meaning and
the value of everything else depends upon its relatedness to that first love.
This tends to be true in the unreal patterns also, but there is more definite
division than there is in the realm of reality, for love provides a cohesive
force.
God is
love, whatever else He may be. Is it difficult for love to love love? It is
because love loves love that human beings in love have satisfaction in the
pattern of relatedness, have satisfaction in the presence of the one loved—because
love loves love. And God is love. Actually there can be no true love except it
be of God. Even self-love is a distortion of something which comes from God. It
is not difficult to remember that in which one has a deep feeling of interest,
and one has a deep feeling of interest in that which one loves.
Love is not something which can be
measured. Sometimes those who are in love try to find words to describe how
much they love. They may say, "I love you so," meaning "I love
you so much." How much is so much? It cannot be described. Sometimes
people in love develop some little pet way of saying it. It is possible to say
"I love you a little bit" and make it mean more than words could
convey; or some little commonplace thing like "I love you a nickel's
worth," and it can convey more than talking about a trillion trillion
dollars' worth. How much is much? You cannot describe it.
This is one of the great secrets
of love. You cannot describe it. You cannot confine it. You cannot experience
it all at once. Love is an ever new thing, an ever unfolding thing. Love never
grows old. Love may die, in the sense of being killed out of the human heart,
or driven out; but if in this sense love dies, it always dies young, no matter
how old the individual may be. Love is something which simply never
grows old. And by its very nature it reveals that it needs eternity to unveil
all of itself. In love there is always something new. When two human beings
love each other there are the words "I love you," and though that
expression has been voiced a dozen times a day for twenty years or more, the
simple words "I love you" are still new, still beautiful, still
welcome. They never grow old. "I love you." Love never grows old.
Insofar as the individual is concerned it may die young, but it never grows
old. Then, if our first love is God, we have a basic center. If under pressure
we prove that our first love is God we begin to be dependable.
Here we see the basic factor of
agreement, for under pressure you will reveal what it is you love, your first
love—self or God. "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart,
and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength."
When there is love eternity seems to be all too short to know the unfolding
fulness of that love. And if we love God first we find God's love made manifest
in the one we love. You here have shown that you love
me. Men and women alike, you have shown in many ways that you love me—not as
the world loves, but something which is heavenly. All true love is heavenly,
because God is love, and you have come to know that love which you hold for me
because you have found something of God's love being made manifest through me
to you. In true love you find God's love made manifest through the one loved.
When this is known it is not difficult to stop loving oneself. When you love
yourself you do not find God's love made manifest through the one loved. This
is the exception, and it is not true love. But when you love another truly,
then you find God's love made manifest through the one loved to you. You cannot
receive God's love for yourself, to yourself, through yourself.
People say, "Oh I want to
feel God's love. I try to feel God's love." And you are going to receive
and feel God's love coming to you through you yourself? Oh, no, no! You say,
"I want to feel God's love." Do you expect to feel God's love coming
through you to you? No, never! If you would know God's love you must let it
come through someone else to you, and you must let it flow through yourself to
someone else. This applies, regardless of marital status. I am not talking
about human love now. You can let God's love flow through you on a noble,
honorable, pure and holy basis to others; and if you do, sooner or later
someone will begin to let God's love manifest to you.
I cannot feel or know God's love
except as it comes to me through you. You may say it comes to me in a special
fashion through my wife. Yes. Through my children, yes. But what I am
privileged to know of God's love is that which comes to me through you, and if
I do not receive it through you, through others, I do not receive it.
If you would know God's love you
must receive it through others; for you cannot receive God's love to yourself
through yourself. You can feel something of God's love working through yourself
to others, but the love of God which you receive must come to you through
others. Because you love me—and why would you be here otherwise—I receive God's
love through you and I know God's love. But why are you here? Because I first
loved you, because I let you begin to feel God's love for you as it expressed
through me to you.
You cannot know God's love in a
direct sense. The idea that a human being in a personal, direct sense can know
and receive God's love is utterly false. God's love is made manifest only as it
works in relationship to human beings. You may think, or you may have thought,
that you knew something of God's love in a direct personal sense, but if you
stop and analyze it you will see that either what you felt was God's love going
through you to others or it was God's love flowing through others to you,
because you cannot receive God's love to yourself for yourself. And in this
love—divine, holy, sacred, noble—we have the basis for agreement.
Here is a peculiar thing: When the
love begins to be real it begins to be protective. There may be infatuation,
where the parties concerned are primarily concerned with what they can get.
They are inclined to take advantage of each other for personal purposes. But
the moment there is real love there is a protective pattern one toward the other,
and no desire to take advantage of the one loved. Human beings have been trying
to get God's love, somehow or other, on a basis where they were trying to take
advantage of God. Millions of human beings are trying to take advantage of God.
The moment there is real love there is a protective pattern.
Does God need a protective pattern
in attitude from you? Assuredly yes. God's protective attitude will be toward
you as you truly receive His love, but you have to love Him, and that provides
a protective pattern for Him in you. You should protect God and the things of
God here on earth. There is never, in any relationship, in friendship, or love
as it manifests between male and female, or in our relationship individually
and collectively with God, a manifestation of true love without the mutuality
of the protective attitude; if the protective attitude is not there it is not a
true cycle of love. If it is a matter of trying to get, instead of seeking to
give, it is not true love.
If there is true love there is this
protective spirit, and where there is the protective spirit there needs to be
no trying to keep the agreement. And when the agreement is kept, in our
centering in God, there is leadership in the realm of reality.
© emissaries of divine light
No comments:
Post a Comment