as published in "Theosophical Siftings" Volume 2- 1889-1890
No greater contrast can be found to the orthodoxy" we have noticed than the ”orthodoxy" of “Natural
Law in the Spiritual World." Here we have a recognition of what may really be called “cosmic
or universal law", and a full and frank declaration of our obligation to science for teaching us those
laws. The fundamental principles which the author lays down, are for the most part identical with those
upon which Theosophy is based, the principal difference being that Theosophy includes in those universal
laws a much-wider range of phenomena than have yet been recognised by either religion or science. There
is, moreover, a fallacy in the application of these principles in the book before us, which we shall presently
point out, and which will not be found in the conclusions which Theosophy draws from the very same premises.
In the preface to the book the author says :—
"The real problem I have
set myself may be stated in a sentence. Is there not reason to believe that
many of the Laws of the Spiritual World, hitherto regarded as occupying an
entirely separate province, are simply the Laws of the Natural World ? Can we identify the Natural Laws
or anyone of them, in the spiritual-sphere ? That vague lines everywhere run through the Spiritual World
is already beginning to be recognised. Is it possible to link them with those great lines running through
the visible universe which we call the Natural Laws, or are they fundamentally distinct ? In a word, is
the Supernatural Natural or Unnatural ? "
We need scarcely remark that Theosophy hardly considers this question
worth stating, for it shows it to have been settled ages ago. The unity of all things, the correspondence between
the microcosm and the macrocosm, the subjective and the objective, the natural and the spiritual, has been
a fundamental axiom with occult science from the earliest ages. But when we come to the applications which
the author makes of this principle we come upon a fallacy which runs through the whole argument, for when the
author speaks of the “Laws of the Spiritual
world", we find that he means simply those dogmas [Page 4] which have accumulated
round the teachings of Christ; in other words — orthodoxy. Now, it is doubtless a great step for orthodoxy
to set itself this problem as to whether the supernatural is natural or unnatural, and thus we hail the book
as a step in advance, albeit a tardy one.
Here is a quotation which illustrates the fallacy we have pointed out,
and which runs all through the book:—
“Natural Law, could it be traced
in the spiritual world, would have an important scientific value — it would offer
religion a new credential. The effect of the introduction of law among the
scattered phenomena of nature has simply been to make science, to transform
knowledge into eternal truth. The same crystallizing touch is needed for
religion. Can it be said that the phenomena of the spiritual world are other
than scattered ? Can we shut our eyes to the fact that the religious opinions of mankind are in a state
of flux? ....... Is it not plain that the one thing thinking men are waiting for is the introduction of Law among
the phenomena
of the spiritual world ? When that comes we shall offer to such men a truly scientific theology.
And the reign of Law will transform the whole spiritual world as it has already transformed the natural
world."
The fallacy here is very apparent. The “phenomena of the spiritual
world", of which he speaks are
the “religious opinions of mankind", viz., “orthodoxy"; while, in respect
to the last statement of the paragraph, we should like to ask, how has the reign of Law ”already transformed
the natural world" ? It has certainly transformed men's ideas of the natural world, but these ideas are
not the phenomena of the natural world; and the author can hardly have intended to claim that nature as
something different in itself and in its phenomena, since men discovered the universality of Natural Law. Have
not the Laws of Nature always been the same, whatever men's ideas (orthodox science) conceived of them
? It is certainly not merely possible, but highly probable that the discovery of the Reign of Law — the
extension of Natural Law, observe — in the Spiritual World will transform the whole of men's ideas with
regard to that world. But this is only saying in other words, that just as orthodox science has been transformed
by the discovery of the universality of Law, so will be orthodox religion.
For the “religious opinions of mankind" are no more connected, as cause and effect, with the phenomena of
the Spiritual World, than the scientific opinions in any age are connected with the phenomena of the Natural
World. Surely the “Spiritual World" is something which exists altogether sui generis as regards men's
ideas and doctrines concerning it, just as the “Natural World" exists, and always has and will exist,
altogether apart from any scientific knowledge or theories in reference to it. To say, therefore, that “the
reign of Law will transform the whole Spiritual World as it has already transformed the “Natural World," is
to make the “Natural World " consist of current scientific doctrines, and the “Spiritual World" of
orthodox dogmas.
This would be a fallacy even if the “Natural" and the “Spiritual" were [Page 5] two
separate regions, so to speak, marked off from each other by no connecting links, but it applies with double
force when, according to the whole contention of the author, we find that there is really no separation between
the natural and the spiritual, but that the Laws of the one are the Laws of the other. He says :— “The position we have been led to take up is not that the Spiritual "Laws
are analogous to the Natural Laws, but that they are the same Laws." The italics are his own.
Thus we see that, however accurate may be his premises, his conclusions have no connection with them in any sense,
a fallacy which is still further disclosed when he comes to deal with the subject in detail.
The following is
eminently satisfactory as a statement of principle:—
"The
only legitimate questions one dare put to nature are those which concern
universal human good and the Divine interpretation of things. These, I conceive, may be there actually studied
at first hand, and before their purity is soiled by human touch. We have truth in Nature as it came from God, and
it has to be read with the same unbiassed mind, the same open eye, the same faith, and the same reverence
as all other Revelation. All that is found there, whatever its place in Theology, whatever its orthodoxy
or heterodoxy,
whatever its narrowness or its breadths, we are bound to accept as Doctrine from which on the lines of Science
there is no escape."
But how does he apply this ? He goes on to say:—
"When this presented itself to me as a method, I felt it to be due to it ........ to begin again
at the beginning,
and reconstruct my Spiritual World step by step."
Here we see plainly the use of the term "Spiritual World" as
synonymous with his own ideas respecting it, and it is just as absurd to a speak of "reconstructing" one's
Spiritual World as it would be to speak of "reconstructing" our Natural World. We may reconstruct
our ideas of these any number of times over — and this is the history of all religion and all science — but
these ideas will not alter or modify or "transform" one single Law or phenomenon in either the “Natural" or
the "Spiritual" World.
It is, of course, quite a common and conventional way of using the term "Spiritual
World", to denote the region of religious emotion. We hear people remark that the Spiritual World is far
more real to them than the Material World, by which they simply mean that they live in their religious ideals
much more intensely than in those matters which concern their life on earth. If, therefore, the term had been
used consistently in this sense throughout the whole of the book, it might have been valuable as pointing out
a certain analogy between Natural Law and Christian orthodoxy.
But the author is anxious to point out that it is not a question of analogy but of identity, and therefore
we say that there is no connection whatever, as cause and effect, between religious opinions of any kind, and
the Laws or phenomena of either the Natural or the Spiritual Worlds as these are defined by [Page
6] him in laying down his premises. The Spiritual World per se, or as a natural sequence, or extension, or unity
with the Natural World, must be some thing which is, always has been, and always will be, the same, whatever
may be the religions, philosophies, or sciences at any period of the world's history.
It. is curious to note that the author says:—
“The extension of the analogy
to Laws, or rather the extension of the Laws themselves so far as is known
to me, is new."
Probably this is so with most orthodox people, who refuse to believe
that there is any light or safety outside of the Bible, but it is just this principle of "the extension of the Laws themselves",
which it is the province of Theosophy to teach, and which is shown to have been familiar from the remotest periods
to the custodians of occult science.
Those who belong to the "orthodoxy" of the which the author of "Earth's
Earliest Ages" belongs, would to ponder these words:—
"Children do not need Laws, except Laws in the sense
of commandments. They repose with simplicity on authority, and
ask no questions. But there comes a time, as the world reaches
its manhood, when they will ask questions, and stake, moreover," everything on the answers. That time
is now. Hence, we must exhibit our
doctrines, not lying athwart the lines of the world's thinking, in a place reserved, and therefore shunned,
for the Great Exception; but in their kinship to all truth, and in their Law-relation to the whole of Nature."
Again, what better statement could we have of the Theosophical doctrine
than the following:—
"The law of continuity furnishes an à priori argument for
the position we are attempting to establish of the most convincing kind — of
such a kind, indeed, as to seem to our mind final. Briefly indicated, the
ground taken up is this, that if Nature be a harmony, man in all his relations — physical, mental, moral,
and spiritual — fails to be included within its circle.
It is altogether unlikely that man spiritual should be violently separated in all conditions of growth,
development and life, from man physical. It is, indeed, difficult to conceive that one set of principles
should guide the natural
life, and these at a certain period — the very point where they are needed —
suddenly give place to another set of principles altogether new and unrelated.
Nature has never taught us to expect such a catastrophe. She has nowhere
prepared us for it. And man cannot in the nature of things, in the nature of thought, in the nature of language,
be separated into two such incoherent
halves."
We reply that she never has been so separated in the one "Secret
Doctrine" or "Wisdom Religion", but
only in the exoteric dogmas and formulas of that which now passes as Religion.
The following is also the teaching
of occult science:—
"The first in the field was the Spiritual World .........
the visible universe has been [Page 7] developed from the unseen ....... There
is a point in time when the energy of the universe must come to an end; and that which has its end in time
cannot be infinite, it must have also had a beginning in time. Hence the
unseen existed before the seen."
Precisely so; but what is this but a statement of the doctrine of emanation
and reabsorption ? For, if the visible universe has made its appearance out of the invisible or “Spiritual
World," and will again disappear
into that region, it will do so by virtue of that which is now “matter", rebecoming “spirit".
If the law of continuity holds good, as the author desires to prove, from the natural into the spiritual, it
is at least strong evidence of the doctrine of the identity of matter and spirit in the “Absolute";
that is to say, that spirit and matter are the two opposite poles, or manifestations, of one and the same thing.
In confirmation of this, we may quote what he says later on:—
“The lines
of the spiritual existed first, and it was natural to expect that
when the' intelligence resident in the unseen' proceeded to frame the material universe, He should go upon the
lines already laid down. He would, in
short, simply project the higher Laws downward, so that the Natural World
would become an incarnation, a visible representation, a working model of
the spiritual. The whole function of the material world lies here. The
world is not a thing that is; it is not. It is a thing that teaches, yet not
even a thing — a show that shows, a teaching shadow. However useless the
demonstration otherwise, philosophy does well in proving that matter is a
nonentity. We Work with it as a mathematician with an x. The reality is
alone Spiritual ......... When shall we learn the true mysticism of one
who was yet far from being a mystic — ‘We look not at the things which are
seen, but at the things which are not seen; for the things which are seen
are temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal', (2 Cor. iv., 18)?
The visible is the ladder up to the invisible; the temporal is but the scaffolding of the eternal. And when the
last immaterial souls have climbed through
this material to God, the scaffolding shall be taken down, and the earth dissolved with fervent heat — not
because it was base, but because its work is
done."
One recognises Theosophy in almost every line of this, and were it not that the author indulges in the fallacy
we have already pointed out, he would be obliged to state his conclusions in terms of Theosophy and occult science
instead of in terms of orthodox Christianity.
Perhaps the most important part of the work is that in which the
author deals with the law of Biogenesis. This law states that life — that is to say, that which
we know as life in the physical world — can only come from life. “Omne vivum ex vivo".
It is opposed to the theory which has sometimes been advanced o f"Spontaneous Generation". Let us now
see how he applies this law.
He says:—
“Translating from the language of Science into that of Religion, the [Page 8] theory
of Spontaneous Generation is simply that a man may become gradually better and better until, in course of the process,
he reaches that quality of religious nature known as Spiritual Life. This life is not something added ab extra to
the natural man; it is the normal and appropriate development of the natural man. Biogenesis opposes to
this the whole doctrine of Regeneration; The Spiritual Life is the gift of the Living Spirit. The spiritual
man is no mere development of the natural man. He is a New
Creation born from above."
The "Spiritual Life" is the gift (or rather manifestation) of the Living Spirit undoubtedly, but
what are we to understand by its being a "quality of religious nature" ? As we have pointed out before,
the Spiritual as an extension of the Natural must exist independently of the quality of any religious life whatsoever.
It is just this constant interchange of the terms "Religion" and “Spiritual Life" which
destroys the whole force of his argument. Here is another instance of the way in which this is done:—
"Life cannot develop out of anything that is not Life. There is no Spontaneous Generation in
Religion any more than in Nature. Christ is the source of Life in the Spiritual World; and he that hath the
Son hath Life, and he that hath not the Son, “whatever else he may have, hath not Life".
Here the word "Religion" is deliberately substituted for "Spiritual
Life".
Elsewhere he speaks of the "spiritually inorganic and the spiritually organic", and he also says:—
"The spiritual faculties are organized in the spiritual
protoplasm of the soul, just as other faculties are organized in the protoplasm of the body. The plant
is made of materials which have once been inorganic. An organizing principle not belonging to their kingdom
lays hold of them and elaborates them until they have correspondences with the kingdom to which the organizing
principle belonged ....... In the Spiritual World, similarly, we find an organizing principle at work among
the materials of the organic kingdom, performing a further miracle, but not a different kind of miracle,
producing organizations of a novel kind, but not by a novel method."
Thus he is continually playing fast and loose with the terms " Spiritual World" or "Spiritual
Life," using the terms sometimes to express a set of ideas or emotions known as "Religion",
and sometimes as an extension of the Natural or Material World.
If, now, we endeavour to elucidate the meaning which he attaches to the term Life, we find that he accepts
the definition of Herbert Spencer, that Life is "The continuous adjustment of internal to external relations",
or, in other words, "correspondence with environment". Eternal Life is further defined thus:— “ Perfect
correspondence would be perfect life. Were there no changes in the environment but such as the organism
had adapted changes to [Page 9] meet, and were it never to fail in the efficiency
with which it met them, there would be eternal existence and eternal knowledge".
We now take these definitions in connection with those theological
doctrines which he puts forward as fundamental laws of the Spiritual Life. “He that hath the Son hath
life, and he that hath not the Son hath not life " (I
John v.,12). "This is life eternal, that they might know Thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom
Thou hast sent " (John xvii., 3). "Except a man be born of water and the spirit, he cannot enter into
the Kingdom of God" (John iii:, 5). How does the author apply these statements, and harmonize them with
the scientific definition of Life just given ?
He says:—
“There is no Spontaneous Generation in Religion any more than in Nature. Christ is the source of life
in the Spiritual World; He that hath the Son hath life, and he that hath not the Son, whatever else he may
have, hath not life". Here, as we have already pointed out, the word religion is
used as a synonym for Spiritual Life. He also says:— “The attitude of the natural man, again,
with reference to the spiritual, is a subject on which the New Testament is equally pronounced. Not only
in relation to the Spiritual man, but to the whole Spiritual World, the natural man is regarded as dead. “The
natural world is to the Spiritual as the inorganic to the organic."
And elsewhere:—
“The breath of God, blowing where it listeth, touches with its mystery of Life the dead souls
of men, bears them across the bridgeless gulf between the natural and the spiritual, between the spiritually
inorganic and
the spiritually organic, endows them with its own high qualities, and develops within them these new secret
faculties, by which those who are born again are said to see the kingdom of God."
In the above paragraph we have a new element, viz.: the soul, introduced
which tends very much to increase the confusion in the use of the term Spiritual Life. It would appear now
that the natural man, spoken of in this paragraph as being dead, is the spiritually inorganic, viz., the soul.
The next question which naturally suggests itself is, what is the nature of this third element, or soul, which
is now introduced between the natural and the spiritual ? Is it in any sense material, and does
it survive the death of the body, whether it be touched with the “breath of God" or not ?
The mineral, we are told by the author, is touched with the “mystery
of life" and brought up, ennobled
and transformed to the “living sphere". But the mineral, it may be argued, does not cease to be a
mineral when it becomes part of the vegetable kingdom. The atom of oxygen or carbon belongs to the mineral kingdom
just as much when it is imprisoned in the organism of a plant, as when it is in its free state, and it inevitably
returns to that state sooner or later. There is no analogy, therefore, between that life which touches the mineral
and brings it into the vegetable kingdom, and the life which touches the “dead soul", and gives it “life
eternal". [Page 10]
Carrying out the author's idea, however, that the man who has this spiritual life in
Christ has life eternal; that his soul is transformed by that life from the dead natural world to the
living spiritual world, we have next to inquire what becomes of the soul of the man who has not
been touched by this life, the soul of the man who does not "know Christ". His answer is that it first
of all degenerates and then dies. But we must observe that he attaches a special meaning to the world death.
He says:
“The question of life or death to a man" is
simply the question of the amount of remaining environment he is able to compass."
After defining the spiritual as the outer circle of the natural,
he says: —
"Now
of the great mass of living organisms, of the great mass of men, is it not to be affirmed that they are
out of correspondence with this outer circle? Suppose, to make the final issue more real, we give this
outermost circle of
environment a name. Suppose we call it God. Suppose, also, we substitute a word for 'correspondence' to
express more intimately the personal relation. Let us call it communion. We can now determine accurately the
spiritual relation of different sections of mankind. Those who are in communion with God live, those who are
not are dead."
No Theosophist will object to this, only he prefers to call this "outermost
circle of environment Atma — the
seventh principle — instead of God, for the latter term has accumulated round it a thousand theological
and dogmatic conceptions which he can by no means accept. But by whatever name it may be called, it is spiritually
the one universal Divine principle, the inner life, and sustainer, as well as the outer environment
of all things. This is supported by what the author says in another place: —
"God is not confined to the outermost circle of environment. He lives and moves and has His being in
the whole. Those who seek Him in the further zone can only find a part."
We can only remark that this intra cosmic God must be very
different from the extra cosmic God of the orthodox theology. Yet this is pure Theosophical teaching
all the same, for it is the "God within him", the "Higher
Self" whom the Theosophist seeks. And, recognising also the true Divinity of the "Son", who is "one
with the Father", he understands and realises to the fullest extent that " No man cometh unto the Father,
but by me" (John xiv., 6). Read the Gospel of John, where this mystical union of the “Father" and
the " Son" is the constant theme, as also in the two Epistles (and observe that it is only in these
that the subject is thus set forth in various aspects), and then transfer the idea in a spiritual sense, and
apart from its counterpart, reflection, or analogy on the material and physical plane, and you have the key to
the mystery of the Incarnation and Divinity of Christ. If God be intra-cosmic in His highest spiritual
manifestation, so must Christ, for He is "one with the Father." But from the highest spiritual plane
down to the lowest material (our present objective world) the same mystery is reflected and repeated. The microcosm
is the counterpart of the macrocosm; the universe is not a diversity, but a Unity. “As above, so below",
is the old Kabalistic axiom. And [Page 11] this is exactly what the author states,
when he says that the Laws of the Natural "are
the same Laws" as those of the Spiritual, and that "God is not confined to the outermost circle of
environment, He lives and moves and has His Being in the Whole".
“Know ye not that ye are the temple of God", said Paul — another Initiate or “Master Builder".
This is the great central truth of the “Secret Doctrine” under whatever form it may have been
taught in all ages. Those who will read the Bible in the light of one or more of the “seven keys", will
find it throughout the whole of the Old Testament under every variety of allegory; in the story of the “fall",
in Noah's ark, the Tabernacle in the Wilderness, and Solomon's Temple, where “there was neither hammer nor
axe nor any tool of iron heard in the house while it was building"m But “Moses put a veil upon his
face", and "until this very day at the reading of the old covenant ( or Testament) the same veil remaineth
unlifted " (2 Cor. iii., 14) and Paul goes on to
say: — “Whensoever a man shall turn to the Lord, the veil is taken away. Now, the Lord is the Spirit".
The veil remains, therefore, with those who look upon these things with the eye of the flesh, and not with the
eye of the spirit, with those who turn not to the Lord, that is to say, with those who understand these
mysteries in their lowest material and physical aspect only, mistaking the form for the spirit, the “quality
of religious nature known as Spiritual Life", for that Spiritual Life which is free from all forms or qualities
of religion whatsoever; or, as St. Paul says: — “Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty".
Theosophy endeavours to teach this, but those who look upon Theosophy as a creed, at variance with their
own “orthodox" creed,
will never be able to understand it.
We must, however, now endeavour to elucidate what it is that the author
understands by the death of the soul. The question of questions is, whether the “spiritually inorganic",
viz., the "soul", survives the death of the body if it does riot happen to have been touched with this
mystery of spiritual life.
He says:—
“There is no analogy between the Christian religion
and, say, Buddhism
or the Mohammedan religion.
There is no true sense in which a man can say, He that hath Buddha hath life. Buddha has nothing to do
with “life".
This may be perfectly true of Buddha, the historical and physical man, and is just as true of Christ, the historical
and physical man; but Buddhi, the sixth principle, the Divine vehicle of Atma, the Father, has everything to
do with this Life in its mystical and spiritual aspect, and in just the same way as Christ Christos.
But, taking
the author at his word, we are naturally led to ask; What, then, becomes of the millions of souls who profess "Buddhism
instead of Christianity ? The following statement would seem to indicate that, in the author's view, there is
for them no future life: —
“The
broad impression gathered from the utterances of the Founder of the spiritual kingdom is that [Page 12] the
number of organisms to be included in it is to be comparatively small'.‘Many are called, but few
are chosen'. It is an open secret, to be read in a hundred analogies from the world around, that of the
millions of possible entrants for advancement in any department of Nature the number ultimately selected
for preferment is small. Some mineral, but not all, becomes vegetable; some vegetable, but not all, becomes
animal; some animal, but not all, becomes human; some human, but not all, becomes divine."
We have already pointed out a fallacy in this statement, with regard
to the transference from one kingdom to another. We must, however, take the statement as it stands as an indication
of the author's view.
Elsewhere, however, he comes very near to the Theosophical doctrine, that the soul — using this term
now to express the real ego, the individuality — reincarnates, over and over again, until, finally, as
the result of evolution — for
if evolution be a natural law, it must also be a spiritual law — it does become “touched with
this mystery of Life", and having passed through all the lower forms, mineral, vegetable, animal, human,
it reaches, at length, at the end of its long pilgrimage, that life of “perfect correspondence with environment",
which constitutes “eternal life" ; the At-one-ment with God through Christ, the merging of the finite consciousness
into the infinite.
Needless to add that this is but in other words the Buddhist doctrine
of Nirvana :—
“Seeking nothing, he gains all;
Foregoing self, the universe grows ‘I’
If any teach Nirvana is to cease,
Say unto such they lie.
If any teach Nirvana is to live
Say unto such they err; not knowing this,
Or what light shines beyond their broken lamps,
Nor lifeless timeless bliss."
What shall we say then ? Is it Christianity alone which can give this
divine life to the soul. The answer must be both Yes and No. If by Christianity is meant the theological, dogmatic,
materialised, orthodox system called by that name, then the answer must be emphatically No.
Religious life
of any kind or quality has no necessary connection with that which exists independently of all religion — the
Soul of Man, and the Divine Spark within him.
If by Christianity, however, is meant those truths which are the
same — under whatever form may have
been taught — in all ages; the inner mystery of Divine Sonship, then the reply must be Yes. “This
is life eternal, to know thee and the son whom thou hast sent", was taught ages before Christ came to teach
it in a new form. Orthodoxy, however, ever ties men to a certain fixed environment of creeds and
dogmas, claiming authority and infallibility. But the Theosophist has entered into a Spiritual Life which [Page
13] is
free from such restrictions. St. Paul understood what this freedom was. “All things are lawful unto me;
but all things are not expedient", he says.
What does it matter whether this principle of eternal life be
called “Christos" or “Krishna” ?
It is ever that divine life towards which all things are tending. What does it matter whether we call the “outermost
circle of environment " God, or Parabrahm ? The spiritual truth is ever the same, whatever orthodoxy may
teach.
In conclusion, we may recommend every Theosophist to read “Natural Law in the Spiritual World," for
not merely will it tend to enlarge his ideas as to the domain of natural law, but will enable him to understand
more clearly the real esoteric meaning of Christianity, and its connection with the one universal Wisdom Religion,
or Theo-sophia. But it is only those who can understand the “Secret Doctrine" spiritually who
will be able to do this; for Theosophy as a creed is of little more value than Christianity as a creed.
Both are a LIFE, not a creed, and he who realizes this Life will understand both, while he to whom the Spiritual
Life is only a “quality of religious nature", will be as unable to understand the spiritual teachings
of Theosophy as he is to understand the spiritual mystery of Christ. Truly, "the letter killeth, but the
spirit giveth life".
Finally, we would say in the words of Krishna-Christos :—
"But — higher, deeper, innermost — abides
Another Life, not like the life of sense,
Escaping sight, unchanging. This endures
When all created things have passed away.
This is that Life named the Unmanifest,
The Infinite! the AlI the Uttermost.
Thither arriving none return. That Life
Is mine, and I am there! and, Prince! by faith
Which wanders not, there is a way to come
Thither. I, the PURUSHA. I, who spread
The Universe around me — in whom dwell
All living Things — may so be reached and seen !
Richer than holy fruit on Vedas growing.
Greater than gifts, better than prayer or fast
Such wisdom is! The Yôgi, this way knowing,
Comes to the Utmost Perfect Peace at last.”