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    Wednesday
    Nov122008

    DEVELOPING AND MAINTAINING POWER - TAKE ACTION

    From Self-Development and the Way to Power, by L. W. Rogers (9)

    What is the law of soul growth? Through adherence to what principle
    may we reach spiritual illumination?
    There are certain well
    established facts about the laws of growth that we should not overlook
    when seeking the way forward. Nothing whatever can grow without use,
    without activity. Inaction causes atrophy. Physiologists tell us that
    if the arm be tied to the body so that it cannot be used it will in
    time become so enfeebled, that it is of no further service. It will
    wither away. That is nature's law of economy. She never gives life
    where it is useless, where it can not, or will not, be utilized. On
    the other hand, exercise increases power. To increase the size and
    strength of muscles we must use them. This is just as true of mental
    and moral faculties as it is of the physical body. The only way to
    make the brain keen and powerful is to exercise it by original
    thinking. One way to gain soul powers is to give free play to the
    loftiest aspirations of which we are capable, and to do it
    systematically instead of at random. We grow to be like the things we
    think about. Now, the reverse of all this must be equally true. To
    give no thought to higher things, to become completely absorbed in
    material affairs, is to stifle the soul, to invite spiritual atrophy.

    Turning our attention to nature we shall find in the parasite
    convincing proof of all this. The parasite, whether plant or animal,
    is living evidence that to refuse or neglect to use an organ or
    faculty results in being deprived of it. The dodder, says Drummond,
    has roots like other plants, but when it fixes sucker discs on the
    branches of neighboring plants and begins to get its food through
    them, its roots perish. When it fails to use them it loses them. He
    also points to the hermit-crab as an illustration of this great fact
    in nature, that disuse means loss, and that to shirk responsibility is
    the road to degeneration. The hermit-crab was once equipped with a
    hard shell and with as good means of locomotion as other crabs. But
    instead of courageously following the hardy life of other crustaceans
    it formed the bad habit of taking up its residence in the cast-off
    shells of mollusks. This made life easy and indolent. But it paid the
    price of all shirking. In time it lost four legs, while the shell over
    the vital portion of its body degenerated to a thin membrane which
    leaves it practically helpless when it is out of its captured home.
    And this is the certain result of all shirking of responsibility.
    There may be an apparent temporary gain, but it always means greater
    loss, either immediate or remote. So nature punishes inaction with
    atrophy. Whatever is not used finally ceases to be. In plain language,
    apathy, inaction, idleness, uselessness, is the road to degeneration.
    On the other hand, aspiration and activity mean growth, development,
    power.

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