14 The Spiritual Life.
Let that man in thisor anyother lifeawaken
to the valuelessness of the gold that he has
heaped together; let him see the beauty of
humanservice; let himcatch aghmpseof the
splendourof the Divineorder; let himrealise
thatallthatlifeisworthistogive itaspartof
the great life bywhich the worlds are main-
tained,andthepowerhehasgainedoverbody,
over mind, over will, will make that man a
giantinthespiritualworld. Hedoesnotneed
tochange those qualities,but toget ridof the
selfishness, to get rid of the indifference to
humanpain,togetridof the recklessnesswith
which he crushed his brother,inorderthathe
might climb into wealth on the starvation of
myriads. He must changehisideal fromsel-
fishness to service; from strength used for
crushing to strengthused foruplifting; and in
thegiant of the money marketyou will have
the spiritual man; his life is concentrated to
humanity, and he owns only to serve and to
help. (Applause.) Differenceof object, dif-
ferenceofmotive,notdifferenceoftheouterlife,