Whatever the explanation, the fact remains: the very causes which
excite fear in most of us, merely appeal, with such people, if at
all. to the instinct of self-preservation and to reason, the
thought-element of the soul which makes for personal peace and
wholeness.
BANISH ALL FEAR.
It is on such considerations that I have come to hold that all
real fear-FEELING should and may be banished from our life, and
that what we call "normal fear" should be substituted in our
language by "instinct" or by "reason," the element of fear being
dropped altogether.
"Everyone can testify that the psychical state called fear
consists of mental representations of certain painful results"
(James). The mental representations may be very faint as such, but
the idea of hurt to self is surely present. If, then, it can be
profoundly believed that the real self cannot be hurt; if the
reason can be brought to consider vividly and believingly all
quieting considerations; if the self can be held consciously in
the assurance that the White Life surrounds the true self, and is
surely within that self, and will suffer "no evil to come nigh,"
while all the instincts of self--preservation may be perfectly
active, fear itself must be removed "as far as the east is from
the west.
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