Chapter XII
THE VALUE OF DENIALS
MANY devotees of mental healing
believe there is a shortcut to the curing of disease through the practice
of denials. The word "denial" is not to be understood in the
Christian sense of self- denial, losing the self that one may find it,
but in the sense of a declaration that any alleged
enemy, error or evil does not
exist. The first proposition about life in general is, "All is good,"
and the next, "There is
no evil." Radical believers in this method deny even the existence
of the
body and the natural world.
While on the face of it such denials seem absurd, we may well ask ourselves
what is the value of this method from a practical point of view.
The theoretical basis of these
denials is as follows. Man has two selves or minds, the spirit
which is never sick, which never
sins or errs; and "mortal mind" or the consciousness of error,
the intellect or false mind, always in process of change, essentially external
and dependent on
information gathered through
the physical senses. These senses are discounted as giving misinformation
merely, since "there is no intelligence in matter." It is in
this false or mortal mind that all error resides. Disease, being an "error
of mind," its cure consists in denying not only its alleged power
over the flesh but even its existence.
The use of denials is that one
may realize "our oneness with God." Otherwise stated, denials
are for the sake of affirming the reality of the true self, which is pure
spirit, never afraid, never
disturbed, never selfish, never
at fault. In case of any alleged material force, any cause for fear,
any supposed selfishness, one
should positively and persistently deny its power, reality or existence.
One should deny the existence of all evil because there is but one Power
in the universe and that Power is wholly good, and "all is good."
One should deny the reality of all pain, sickness, poverty, old age, suffering,
even the reality of death; since these have no existence in Spirit, One
ought also to deny the existence of all things which appear to be apart
from Spirit, for only Spirit and its manifestations exist. To deny is to
efface, blot out the mental pictures, banish the fear, take the life out
of adverse suggestions by a counter-suggestion, and overcome all "paralyzing
negations." To deny the evil is to affirm the good. To deny pain and
sickness is to affirm health. To deny weakness is to realize strength.
To deny poverty is to affirm prosperity.
By denying the reality of
what seems to exist to mortal sight one realizes what eternally exists,
the unchangeable reality of Spirit. It is all a question of realization,
not of growth. There is no evolution or progressive change from lower to
higher stages. Man does not learn anything from experience, but already
is in deepest truth what he seems to acquire. All ills are imaginary. There
is no reason for learning from experience, since man contains all wisdom
within. Man already possesses perfect love and peace. Hence he may unqualifiedly
say, "I am spirit, perfect, harmonious,
wise, in perfect health, in perfect peace."
Life on this basis would be
"the constant recognition throughout the day of the non-reality of
the material, knowing that as it is not real, the material man cannot do
anything, say anything or think anything; that it is only illusion, appearance
having no basis in reality, and that the only
thing that takes place is the
steady disappearance of this illusionary sense through the action
of God." "When you
see someone in pain, instead of thinking of him as in pain and so increasing
it, turn in thought to heaven and realize that there is no such thing as
pain there, and then think of the absolute joy, bliss and happiness in
that perfect world."
The first observation to be
made is that healers who have adopted these denials have often met
with more immediate success
than other therapeutists who raise objections to denials on the
ground that they are not true.
Outwardly such healers are very prosperous. Their business arrangements
are uncommonly good. They are highly contented with the commodities and
incomes of the material world. Not concerned with the inconsistencies of
their several propositions in contrast with their delight in this world's
goods, they concentrate upon those suggestions which bring the most fruitful
results. Psychologically speaking there is a great advantage in concentration.
To hold absolutely to your point is to succeed where people fail who lose
headway when interested in noting what is inconsistent.
We are all placed at times where
denials are in order. When face to face with an enemy likely to conquer
us if we are not uncommonly skilful
and alert, we must resolutely declare that
he cannot, must not win. Thus a denial is a psychological device adopted
for the time being to
get us out of a tight place. A hard-pressed nation
may even deny the victories which an enemy
is winning, for the sake of keeping up the courage
of the people at home. But the question is,
What of the day of reckoning? Is it possible to
use a denial for the moment, then return to facts
and truths? May one adopt denials for the sake
of concentration without giving the mind over
to extravagances tending toward Oriental pantheism
and the relegation of the natural universe to the category of illusion?
It was P. P. Quimby who introduced
the distinction between the "scientific man" with the
wisdom of Christ to draw upon
and the "man of opinions,"
always changing, subject to errors, fears,
and other false beliefs. Dr. Quimby's silent
realization consisted in making a clear-cut separation
between the two minds. All later disciples
of the silent method have made an equivalent separation in their own terms.
The mind that
is swayed by opinions is the "carnal mind," and
to be "carnally minded is death." It is
this carnal-mindedness which Dr. Quimby sought
to banish by affirming the reality of the truth which makes men free, the
truth we possess when
we have the mind of Christ. No one can make
much headway in this field without drawing this distinction.
Yet one ought to be intelligent
enough to distinguish between opinions and the understanding or intellect.
The understanding can be lifted into spiritual light and learn to think
truly concerning the information the senses give us and the
marvellous universe which God has made. There
is no intelligible reason for ignoring the long series of progressive changes
from simple to
complex, from atom to star, from amoeba to man,
filled as this ascent is by the wisdom of God.
Our part is to learn the order and beauty, the
system and power of this great world of nature as it exists in the divine
purpose. Then it is our
privilege to learn to live by the divine order in
a useful manner, in constancy of health, with steadiness
of purpose and productive courage.
Whatever the reason for making
denials as psychological
aids to concentration, in the long
run we are all compelled to
meet life as it is on this
natural plane. The truth which makes us
permanently free is the truth
which discloses natural existence as it was meant to be for enlightened
man, the existence which makes for freedom
and development, for health and happiness here on earth. The real error
of our carnal mindedness
is that the body is unfriendly, is a source
of evil and misery, prone to disease, weakening old age and a lingering
death. The truth is
that man might live in perfect harmony with natural
law, might use the body as an entirely harmonious
instrument, might conquer every obstacle in the path. This is essentially
a spiritual truth.
One needs to lift the mind into spiritual light,
to perceive it. For it is the spirit alone
which is able to use the body
aright. There is no reason
to deny anything that God has made. The error
to be denied, and that most resolutely, is the
old notion that God wants us to be sick, that He inflicts suffering upon
us for our discipline. There
are, then, denials which are true, and we all
need to make them and most affirmatively. Yet
all the while the ideal is to rise to the level of
affirmations with such strength that we do not need
to deny their opposites. "Perfect love
casteth out fear." If you
can realize the protecting power of that love, you need not deny the
power of the fear. Later, when
you are free and strong,
you may return and learn the lesson of
your fear.
The same is true in the sphere
of moral ideals. The more severely pressed the soldier "who
fights the good fight"
the less reason he has for admitting
the power of evil. There can be no
such word as fail in the moral
world. We declare that all lying, stealing, dishonesty and
wrong- doing shall be overcome,
and that righteousness shall prevail. Yet after all what is it
that calls out a man's potentialities
and makes him
a hero in our eyes? Surely not a mere error. It
is because he rises to meet a well-nigh insuperable difficulty. We grow
strong by meeting opportunities which call us into activity to
the full. Sometimes the more
valiantly we admit the
foe to be conquered the more resolutely we rise to the occasion which "makes
the man."
What the moral soldier affirms
is that right is on his side, a right strong enough to conquer any
wrong whatsoever. He fights
with his spirit. He
first conquers the enemy in himself by facing
his fears and the possibility
of defeat. Then, made
alert and aflirmative, he goes forth to meet
a danger which no denial can
minimize but which
must be faced to the end. At every juncture when tempted to weaken, he
re-affirms the supremacy
of the right and bravely presses forward. He cannot for a moment afford
to entertain a weakening idea.
Here we have concentration in
high degree. Allowing
for different conditions, we may think of
this valiant moral attitude as applied in the inner
world where it is a question of attaining health
or healing others. One ought to be as valiant
in holding to the Christ ideal as the moral soldier
in fighting on the field of battle. For the healer
it is a question of the victorious faith which
pushes through to the end and overcomes every
obstacle.
It is a help in this connection
to distinguish between
lower and higher levels of mentality. On
the lower level with the "mind of opinions" one
sees "in a glass darkly." One is then subject to mere reports,
haunting fears, besetting illusions, misinterpretations. The worst of these
is mistaking this body of flesh
and blood for oneself. To be thus minded is indeed to be in danger
of spiritual death. On the higher
level one seeks to
think with the mind of Christ, to live in perfect peace
and love, realizing that the soul is a "son of Spirit." The knowledge
gained on the higher level
is insight "face to face," a vision in which we
see the same things but see them as they are.
To disconnect from the activities
of the lower level
and open the spirit on the higher is to find
oneself in another realm of
thought. The change from
the one to the other is sufficient in itself to set
higher activities in motion. For it is a dynamic change. It opens the spirit
to the divine influx
of love and wisdom. It is man who makes the
change. It is God who "giveth the increase." Life
"on a purely spiritual basis," then, would be in
unison with God, wherever one might be led, whatever
the work given our hands to do. When "God
and one make a majority" we need no longer
deny what is to be overcome. For we now function
on the level of constructive forces.
It is plain of course that few
of us are open as we
might be on the higher level. Most of us are
placed where it is better to
admit that we are not as
responsive as we might be to the incoming
divine life, and then ask what
needs to be overcome. The whole secret for us to learn is interior
openness and responsiveness,
recovery of the open
vision which will disclose divine truth. In
so far as we are open within
and the channels of our
being are kept open even from the inmost
centre to the outermost parts
of the body, we are in
perfect health, able to function as free spiritual beings.
A denial, then, is a practical
device needed when
we are not sufficiently affirmative. A man might, for example, deny evil
reports concerning himself,
defending himself by arguments, until
he realizes that no man need
contend with unrighteous judgments but may put his whole reliance on what
is true. A person may deny the supposed
power of an illness that is attacking
him, since he is determined
to be well. But later he
may learn to unite in thought with the power
of God making for health. Later
still, his ideal may
be to live so that he may let all external
circumstances take care of themselves
in God's own time.
The real point is that external things
are occasions simply, while
real causes are spiritual. The occasion will make or unmake the
man according to his way of
meeting it. The opportunity
will be a blessing or a curse. Every
occasion meant for our betterment
may serve to call
us into productive activity, if we meet it with
wisdom concerning our true place
and service in
the world. All opportunities are blessings in
God's eyes. We have the power to unite our hearts
to make them blessings. Everything depends on becoming affirmative. Our
affirmations will
become more intelligent as we proceed. What would they be if we habitually
had the mind of
Christ, instead of fluctuating between things
carnal and things spiritual?