philosophies. You
can dissect a daisy and enumerate its parts; but you never know a daisy
until you have seen the unseen things thereof, until you have felt the
subtle appeal of its beauty. Bobbie Burns saw more of the daisy than
the greatest botanist without his spiritual eyes.
The danger is that in our hard workaday we shall forget the reality of
the unseen, we shall get to think that gold and steel and land are the
only real things, and we shall shape ourselves by the blind and base
creed of gold, and steel, and land. How easy it is to measure every
man by his possessions in tangible things. How easy to make these our
chief end in life, to slight the real prizes, the unseen wealth that
lies so close at hand or already possessed, while we rush and strive
for the rainbow of riches.
Deep within us we know that he is rich, and he alone, who has wisdom,
love, patience, who possesses friends, who creates kindly thoughts,
whose life with simple joy abounds. Once again and often do we need to
see Bunyan's picture of the man bending over his refuse, gathered with
the muck rake, and heedless of the angel holding the crown that only
waits his taking.
A man is wealthy according to what is within him. His greatness is of
the things that are unseen. There are limits to the possession and the
use of the things that are seen; but who shall set a limit to a man's
possible wealth in love and honour, in wisdom and integrity, in all the
things that make up the soul of man? Few are the things that a man may
hold for his own all the days of his life, and fewer still are those he
may grasp with pleasure when the hands are falling helpless by his
side. But many are the riches he may have to hold forever in the
things of the unseen. Many a man walks through the fields penniless
and yet richer far than their owner; to him the birds sing, for him the
flowers bloom, to his eyes there are beauties in the blue beyond all
words, and all the loveliness of the fair land lifts his heart within
him. The other man who holds the title deeds sees nothing beside them.
Possession is wholly a matter of appreciation. The earth is the Lord's
and He gives it to those who have eyes to see.
It is the eye to see the unseen that gives wealth to the seen. Values
depend on vision. Appreciation does not prevent possession; it makes
the possession actual. And the vision of the realities behind things
keeps a man from the sense of destitution whe
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