<SPAN name="IV"></SPAN>
<h1 align="center" style="margin-top: 2em;font-variant: small-caps">Chapter IV</h1>
<h2 align="center" style="margin-top: 2em;font-variant: small-caps">The Supremacy of Mind</h2>
<p>Officers and friends urged Philip to reconsider his
determination of resigning, but once decided, he could
not be swerved from his purpose. Gloria persuaded
him to go to New York with her in order to consult
one of the leading oculists, and arrangements were
made immediately. On the last day but one, as they
sat under their favorite fig tree, they talked much
of Philip’s future. Gloria had also been reading
aloud Sir Oliver Lodge’s “Science and
Immortality,” and closing the book upon the final
chapter, asked Philip what he thought of it.</p>
<p>“Although the book was written many years ago,
even then the truth had begun to dawn upon the poets,
seers and scientific dreamers. The dominion of mind,
but faintly seen at that time, but more clearly now,
will finally come into full vision. The materialists
under the leadership of Darwin, Huxley and Wallace,
went far in the right direction, but in trying to
go to the very fountainhead of life, they came to
a door which they could not open and which no materialistic
key will ever open.”</p>
<p>“So, Mr. Preacher, you’re at it again,”
laughed Gloria. “You belong to the pulpit of
real life, not the Army. Go on, I am interested.”</p>
<p>“Well,” went on Dru, “then came
a reaction, and the best thought of the scientific
world swung back to the theory of mind or spirit, and
the truth began to unfold itself. Now, man is at last
about to enter into that splendid kingdom, the promise
of which Christ gave us when he said, ‘My Father
and I are one,’ and again, ’When you have
seen me you have seen the Father.’ He was but
telling them that all life was a part of the One Life--individualized,
but yet of and a part of the whole.</p>
<p>“We are just learning our power and dominion
over ourselves. When in the future children are trained
from infancy that they can measurably conquer their
troubles by the force of mind, a new era will have
come to man.”</p>
<p>“There,” said Gloria, with an earnestness
that Philip had rarely heard in her, “is perhaps
the source of the true redemption of the world.”</p>
<p>She checked herself quickly, “But you were preaching
to me, not I to you. Go on.”</p>
<p>“No, but I want to hear what you were going
to say.”</p>
<p>“You see I am greatly interested in this movement
which is seeking to find how far mind controls matter,
and to what extent our lives are spiritual rather
than material,” she answered, “but it’s
hard to talk about it to most people, so I have kept
it to myself. Go on, Philip, I will not interrupt
again.”</p>
<p>“When fear, hate, greed and the purely material
conception of Life passes out,” said Philip,
“as it some day may, and only wholesome thoughts
will have a place in human minds, mental ills will
take flight along with most of our bodily ills, and
the miracle of the world’s redemption will have
been largely wrought.”</p>
<p>“Mental ills will take flight along with bodily
ills. We should be trained, too, not to dwell upon
anticipated troubles, but to use our minds and bodies
in an earnest, honest endeavor to avert threatened
disaster. We should not brood over possible failure,
for in the great realm of the supremacy of mind or
spirit the thought of failure should not enter.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I know, Philip.”</p>
<p>“Fear, causes perhaps more unhappiness than
any one thing that we have let take possession of
us. Some are never free from it. They awake in the
morning with a vague, indefinite sense of it, and at
night a foreboding of disaster hands over the to-morrow.
Life would have for us a different meaning if we
would resolve, and keep the resolution, to do the
best we could under all conditions, and never fear
the result. Then, too, we should be trained not to
have such an unreasonable fear of death. The Eastern
peoples are far wiser in this respect than we. They
have learned to look upon death as a happy transition
to something better. And they are right, for that
is the true philosophy of it. At the very worst, can
it mean more than a long and dreamless sleep? Does
not the soul either go back to the one source from
which it sprung, and become a part of the whole, or
does it not throw off its material environment and
continue with individual consciousness to work out
its final destiny?</p>
<p>“If that be true, there is no death as we have
conceived it. It would mean to us merely the beginning
of a more splendid day, and we should be taught that
every emotion, every effort here that is unselfish
and soul uplifting, will better fit us for that spiritual
existence that is to come.”</p>
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