Chapter 7 - Peace
WHERE PASSION is, peace is not; where peace is, passion is not. To know this is to
master the first letter in the divine language of perfect deeds. To know that passion
and peace cannot dwell together is to be well prepared to renounce the lesser and
embrace the greater.
Men pray for peace, yet cling to passion. They foster strife, yet pray for heavenly rest.
This is ignorance, profound spiritual ignorance. It is not to know the first letter in the
alphabet of things divine.
Hatred and love, strife and peace, cannot dwell together in the same heart. Where one
is admitted as a welcome guest, the other will be turned away as an unwelcome
stranger. He who despises another will be despised by others. He who opposes his
fellow man will himself be resisted. He should not be surprised, and mourn, that men
are divided. He should know that he is propagating strife. He should understand his
lack of peace.
He is brave who conquers another; but he who conquers himself is supremely noble.
He who is victorious over another may, in turn, be defeated; but he who overcomes
himself will never be subdued.
By the way of self-conquest is Perfect Peace achieved. Man cannot understand it,
cannot approach it, until he sees the supreme necessity of turning away from the
fierce fighting of things without, and entering the noble warfare against evils within.
He who has realized that the enemy of the world is within, and not without; that his
own ungoverned thoughts are the source of confusion and strife; that his own
unchastened desires are the violators of his peace, and of the peace of the world; such
a man is already on the Saintly Way.
If a man has conquered lust and anger, hatred and pride, selfishness and greed, he has
conquered the world. He has slain the enemies of peace, and peace remains with him.
Peace does not fight; is not partisan; has no blatant voice. The triumph of peace is an
unassailable silence.
He who is overcome by force is not thereby overcome in his heart; he may be a
greater enemy than before. But he who is overcome by the spirit of peace is thereby
changed at heart. He that was an enemy has become a friend. Force and strife work
upon the passions and fears, but love and peace reach and reform the heart.
The pure-hearted and wise have peace in their hearts. It enters into their actions; they
apply it in their lives. It is more powerful than strife; it conquers where force would
fail. Its wings shield the righteous. Under its protection, the harmless are not harmed.
It affords a secure shelter from the heat of selfish struggle. It is a refuge for the
defeated, a tent for the lost, and a temple for the pure.
Where peace is practiced, and possessed, and known, then sin and remorse, grasping
and disappointment, craving and temptation, desiring and grieving—all the turbulence
and torment of the mind—are left behind in the dark sphere of the self to which they
belong, and beyond which they cannot go.
Beyond where these dark shadows move, the radiant Plains of Divine Beatitude bask
in Eternal Light, and to these, the traveler on the High and Holy Way comes in due
time. From the blinding swamps of passion, through the thorny forests of many
vanities, across the arid deserts of doubt and despair, he travels on, not turning back
nor straying his course. He ever moves toward his sublime destination, until at last he
comes, a humble and lowly, yet strong and radiant conqueror, to the beautiful City of
Peace.