THE PROPHET—LIFE

When a man faces a life—problem, with an ethical purpose, and having found a key thereto, works out the difficulty to its end, he brings into relief the true meaning of service for humanity. He enters the "holy place" of Christian ministry, begins to live the prophet—life, a life which not only declares the nature of light but which, torch in hand, seeks out every dark place in human experience, that there, too, a flame may be kindled which shall never be put out.

The significance of the prophetic word cannot be over—stated. It speaks for the dawn, as did the voice of him who came "preaching in the wilderness of Judea." To open the heart to the divine illumination, so that intuition may lay hold upon eternal verities,—this means inspiration, and it is potential; but the practical demonstration of the truth of the spoken word, the living before men so that they may see our good works and glorify the Father which is in heaven,—this is realization; it is dynamic, and it is the Christian Science standard and ideal.

As the supreme exmplification of this prophet—life the Christian world instinctively recalls the story of the Nazarene, but human annals have not lacked the life—record of those who have proved worthy to follow in his steps and bear his name. The Stephens and the Winkelrieds of history have studded the firmament of the past with galaxies that can never fade, and their greatness finds its explanation in the simple fact that they were loyal enough to the ideal not only to speak for it but to stand for it in the crucial hour. They not only pointed the way, but they walked in it. A simple rose may voice the appeal of a beauty as vast and impelling as the divine manifestation, and a humble man may become the "minister plenipotentiary" of a truth so all—encompassing that the resources of the infinite are pledged to its maintenance. Herein lies the secret of great leadership and of immortal service.

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Letters
LETTERS TO OUR LEADER
February 6, 1909
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