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The Science of Being Great
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A View Of Evolution
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BUT how shall we avoid throwing ourselves into altruistic work if we are surrounded by poverty, ignorance, suffering, and
every appearance of misery as very many people are? Those who live where the withered hand of want is thrust upon them from
every side appealingly for aid must find it hard to refrain from continuous giving. Again, there are social and other irregularities,
injustices done to the weak, which fire generous souls with an almost irresistible desire to set things right.
We want to start a crusade; we feel that the wrongs will never be righted until we give ourselves wholly to the task. In all
this we must fall back upon the point of view. We must remember that this is not a bad world but a good world in the process
of becoming.
Beyond all doubt there was a time when there was no life upon this earth. The testimony of geology to the fact that the globe
was once a ball of burning gas and molten rock, clothed about with boiling vapors, is indisputable. And we do not know how
life could have existed under such conditions; that seems impossible. Geology tells us that later on a crust formed, the globe
cooled and hardened, the vapors condensed and became mist or fell in rain. The cooled surface crumbled into soil; moisture
accumulated, ponds and seas were gathered together, and at last somewhere in the water or on the land appeared something that
was alive.
It is reasonable to suppose that this first life was in single-celled organisms, but behind these cells was the insistent
urge of Spirit, the Great One Life seeking expression. And soon organisms having too much life to express themselves with
one cell had two cells and then many, and still more life was poured into them.
Multiple-celled organisms were formed; plants, trees, vertebrates, and mammals, many of them with strange shapes, but all
were perfect after their kind as everything is that God makes. No doubt there were crude and almost monstrous forms of both
animal and plant life; but everything filled its purpose in its day and it was all very good.
Then another day came, the great day of the evolutionary process, a day when the morning stars sang together and the sons
of God shouted for joy to behold the beginning of the end, for man, the object aimed at from the beginning, had appeared upon
the scene. An ape-like being, little different from the beasts around him in appearance, but infinitely different capacity
for growth and thought. Art and beauty, architecture and song, poetry and music, all these were unrealized possibilities in
that ape man’s soul. And for his time and kind he was very good.
“It is God that works in you to will and to do of his good pleasure,” says St. Paul. From the day the first man appeared God
began to work IN men, putting more and more of himself into each succeeding generation, urging them on to larger achievements
and to better conditions, social, governmental, and domestic. Those who looking back into ancient history see the awful conditions
which existed, the barbarities, idolatries, and sufferings, and reading about God in connection with these things are disposed
to feel that he was cruel and unjust to man, should pause to think. From the ape-man to the coming Christ man the race has
had to rise. And it could only be accomplished by the successive unfolding of the various powers and possibilities latent
in the human brain.
God desired to express himself, to live in form, and not only that, but to live in a form through which he could express himself
on the highest moral and spiritual plane. God wanted to evolve a form in which he could live as a god and manifest himself
as a god. This was the aim of the evolutionary force. The ages of warfare, bloodshed, suffering, injustice, and cruelty were
tempered in many ways with love and justice as time advanced.
And this was developing the brain of man to a point where it should be capable of giving full expression to the love and justice
of God. The end is not yet; God aims not at the perfection of a few choice specimens for exhibition, like the large berries
at the top of the box, but at the glorification of the race. The time will come when the Kingdom of God shall be established
on earth; the time foreseen by the dreamer of the Isle of Patmos, when there shall be no more crying, neither shall there
be any more pain, for the former things are all passed away, and there shall be no night there.
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