Living the Infinite Way

Living the Infinite Way

by Joel S Goldsmith
Living the Infinite Way

Living the Infinite Way

by Joel S Goldsmith

Paperback

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Overview

Living the Infinite Way is one of the four foundational books of the Infinite Way teachings. Joel Goldsmith recommended that new students begin with this book, together with Practicing the Presence. In Living the Infinite Way, Goldsmith awakens the reader to the possibility that the presence of God is within every individual, and that one can live by that Presence and enjoy a more harmonious, loving, and abundant life.

The book focuses largely on the nature of God, for as Goldsmith says, "The writings of The Infinite Way contain hundreds of truths, but actually there is only one truth that we must know. This one truth is the nature of God. Take this one thought into meditation: What is God? What is the nature of God? What is the character of God? What are the qualities of God? What is the true God--not the God we were taught to worship as children, or that we ignorantly worship? Try to empty the already too full vessels, because they cannot be filled with the new wine. Even if you are seventy, empty your old misconceptions and be willing to begin all over with the admission that you do not know God or you would be showing forth more of God's grace. Forget all that you have thought or been taught about God and start afresh with this question, 'What is God?'"

Goldsmith answers these questions about the nature of God with "the letter of truth," explaining that when one does not know the correct letter of truth, it is difficult to acquire the consciousness that leads to the God experience. But, he emphasizes, we must do more than know the letter of truth intellectually. We must consciously realize these truths, and it is the practice of meditation that will lift us to that realization. Goldsmith goes on to give the reader basic instruction in how to meditate and enter the secret sanctuary of inner quiet, where we become aware of the presence of God. "Meditation," he says, "is the way by which we attain the kingdom of God, and then life is lived by Grace. The ultimate of meditation is a state of complete silence within."

Living the Infinite Way thoughtfully ushers the reader along the first steps in the Infinite Way message, and helps the reader arrive at the truth that "That which I am seeking, I already am."


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781889051796
Publisher: Acropolis Books, Incorporated
Publication date: 01/01/2019
Pages: 122
Sales rank: 458,650
Product dimensions: 5.01(w) x 7.06(h) x 0.38(d)

About the Author

Joel Goldsmith (1892-1964), one of America's great mystics, spent his life lecturing on "The Infinite Way" — his personally developed principles of spirituality. He is the author of more than 30 books, including The Art of Spiritual Healing, Living the Infinite Way, and The Thunder of Silence.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter One

The Mystery Of The Invisible

All through the ages men have sought to understand the mystery of life. They have searched for that something called the secret of life, particularly the secret of success and happiness; and like those who sought for the Holy Grail, they have looked for it every place in the world except where it is to be found.

The truly successful people of life are not readily identified because, while it is easy to find the person who has acquired the most millions or the one who has gained the greatest fame in some area, it is not always easy to find those who have attained real success. Success should bring happiness, and especially inner peace and security, and so true success means something far different from the mere acquisition of things or the attainment of personal power or glory.

Spiritual living may carry with it just as much of fame and fortune as material living but these are acquired, first of all, not as the goal, but as the added things, and secondly, not from without, but from within through an understanding of their Source. In material living, whatever can be gained from without is of necessity limited, but there is absolutely no limit to the attainment of a person who has discovered, the secret of the inner life. Therein lies the difference between material and spiritual living.

The secret of the inner life is revealed through meditation which, in its earliest stages, is an act of conscious awareness whereby we make contact with an area of consciousness within ourselves which is actually the storehouse of ourlives.

There was a time when man was pure, spiritual being, when he lived entirely from within himself, when his thoughts always remained at the center of his being, and life flowed out from within — ideas came from within, means of action came from within, and whenever there was an apparent need, all that he had to do was to close his eyes, go within, and let it come forth into expression.

We have no actual knowledge of this period or of its ending, but we do know that the Bible symbolically relates the story of Adam and Eve who lived a divinely spiritual life without a problem, but who were compelled to leave the Garden of Eden and thereafter experienced all the troubles of human living — materialistic living. We are told that the reason for this fall from Grace was the acceptance of the belief in two powers — good and evil.'

It was an act of consciousness and, despite the commonly accepted theological interpretation, was not in any way related to sex.

The Garden of Eden episode contains a lesson in living for all of us. How often we feel that our lives are made or marred by some external act, but this is never true because it is always something that takes place within our consciousness that brings about the change for good or evil, and in the allegory of Adam and Eve, the downfall of man is explained as the acceptance of the belief in good and evil.

Another symbolic story in Scripture is that of the prodigal son. Here, the son of the king, who in and of himself was nothing, but who as the heir of the king was not only regal but wealthy, decided to cut himself off from the source of his good, that is, from his Father's house, his Father-consciousness. Taking the substance which he felt was his due, be began to live on that finite and limited amount that be had received. Living thus finitely, he cut himself off from his Source. Whatever money he spent left him with that much less; every day of life he lived found him with a day less to live; every bit of strength or substance that he used found him with that much less, because he was using the substance that he had without being able to replenish it from the Source from which he had cut himself off by his own act.

That same principle is brought out in the lesson of the vine and the branches which the Master gave to his disciples in the fifteenth chapter of John:

I am the vine, ye are the branches: He that abideth in me, and I in him, the same bringeth forth much fruit: for without me ye can do nothing.

If a man abide not in me, he is cast forth as a branch, and is withered; and men gather them, and cast them into the fire, and they are burned.

Herein lies the essence of biblical wisdom: Cut off from the vine, the branch withers, no longer having access to the Source; cut off from the Father's house, or consciousness, the prodigal consorts with the swine; cut off from their Source and expelled from the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve are compelled to live on their own substance.

In all three illustrations, there is the one spiritual lesson: When we are cut off from the Source of our being, we are using up our own life — our own mind, strength, health, wisdom, guidance, and direction — and eventually we come to that period when we are withered. On the other hand, by maintaining our contact with the vine, by maintaining our relationship with the Father as the son or heir, or by remaining in Eden, in the kingdom of God, we draw on the infinite Storehouse. This way leads to eternality, immortality, infinity, harmony, completeness, and perfection.

As human beings living a materialistic life in the world, we are the branch that is cut off from the tree; we are the prodigal without a Father; we are that Adam expelled from the Garden. Living such a life, there is no God-government, God-protection, or God-sustenance. Infants, children, young men, and young women suffer and die;...

Living the Infinite Way. Copyright © by Joel S. Goldsmith. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Table of Contents


Introduction     1
The Mystery of the Invisible     9
Attaining the God-Experience     25
God Is     39
God Is One     51
God as Law in Operation     63
I Am the Vine     77
God Is Omnipresent     97
Meditation     115
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