page 4
this end. How excellent, how honorable is man if he
arises to fulfil his responsibilities; how wretched and
contemptible, if he shuts his eyes to the welfare of society
and wastes his precious life in pursuing his own
selfish interests and personal advantages. Supreme happiness
is man's, and he beholds the signs of God in the
world and in the human soul, if he urges on the steed
of high endeavor in the arena of civilization and justice.
"We will surely show them Our signs in the world
and within themselves." (4)
And this is man's uttermost wretchedness: that he should live inert, apathetic, dull, involved only with his own base appetites. When he is thus, he has his being in the deepest ignorance and savagery, sinking lower than the brute beasts. "They are like the brutes: Yea, they go more astray... For the vilest beasts in God's sight, are the deaf, the dumb, who understand not." (5)
We must now highly resolve to arise and lay hold of
all those instrumentalities that promote the peace and
well-being and happiness, the knowledge, culture and
industry, the dignity, value and station, of the entire
human race. Thus, through the restoring waters of pure
intention and unselfish effort, the earth of human potentialities
will blossom with its own latent excellence
and flower into praiseworthy qualities, and bear and
flourish until it comes to rival that rosegarden of knowledge
which belonged to our forefathers. Then will this
Previous Next