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One must see in every human being only that which is worthy of praise. When this is done, one can be a friend to the whole human race. If, however, we look at people from the standpoint of their faults, then being a friend to them is a formidable task. (169:2) It happened one day in the time of Christ-- may the life of the world be a sacrifice unto Him-- that He passed by the dead body of a dog, a carcass reeking, hideous, the limbs rotting away. One of those present said: `How foul its stench!' And another said: `How sickening! How loathsome!' To be brief, each one of them had something to add to the list. (169:3) But then Christ Himself spoke, and He told them: `Look at that dog's teeth! How gleaming white!' (169:4) The Messiah's sin- covering gaze did not for a moment dwell upon the repulsiveness of that carrion. The one element of that dead dog's carcass which was not abomination was the teeth: and Jesus looked upon their brightness. (169:5) Thus is it incumbent upon us, when we direct our gaze toward other people, to see where they excel, not where they fail. (169:6) Praise be to God, thy goal is to promote the well- being of humankind and to help the souls to overcome their faults. This good intention will produce laudable results. (169:7) 145. Thou didst write as to the question of spiritual discoveries. The spirit of man is a circumambient power that encompasseth the realities of all things. Whatsoever thou dost see about thee-- wondrous products of human workmanship, inventions, discoveries and like evidences-- each one of these was once a secret hidden away in the realm of the unknown. The human spirit laid that secret bare, and drew it forth from the unseen into the visible world. There is, for example, the power of steam, and photography and the phonograph, and wireless telegraphy, and advances in mathematics: each and every one of these was once a mystery, a closely guarded secret, yet the human spirit unravelled these secrets and brought them out of the invisible into the light of day. Thus is it clear that the human spirit is an all- encompassing power that exerteth its dominion over the inner essences of all created things, uncovering the well kept mysteries of the phenomenal world.
(169:8)
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