| THE MYSTIC UNIVERSE IN MY BACK 
			YARD 
												I but open my eyes -- and perfection, no more and no less, In the 
			kind I imagined full fronts me, and God is seen God In the star, in 
			the stone, in the flesh, in the soul, and in the clod. -- Browning
			
 Then felt I like some watcher of the skies When a new planet swims 
			into his ken;
 
 Or like stout Cortes when, with eagle eyes, He stared at the 
			Pacific.
 
 -- Keats --
 
 I am discovering a universe in my back-yard. I am not sure that I 
			lived so intimately with my darling little wife as I have for forty 
			years lived with St. Paul. Far more constantly and intimately than 
			he lived and traveled with his friend Barnabas and his young 
			lieutenants, Silas, Titus, Epaphroditus, and Timothy, has he lived, 
			traveled, slept, and talked with me, only I did the sleeping. I 
			never found him napping. At any hour of the day or night he was 
			waiting wide-awake and ready for me.
 
 A text in John's first Epistle and another in his Gospel proved to 
			be the open door to my soul, leading into the holy of holies, into 
			the experience of cleansing, and the spiritual vision and inward 
			revelation of Christ. But I think Paul has been my greatest teacher, 
			my mentor, my most intimate spiritual guide. But one thing I have 
			not found in him -- a love of Nature. Some of his biographers think 
			he had no such love. He traveled by sea and land, among great 
			mountain passes in Cilicia, through the mountains of Macedonia, and 
			over the Balkan hills, over the blue Mediterranean, and among the 
			lovely isles of Greece. But never once does he in any of his 
			Epistles mention the wonders of Nature, the splendor of sky or sea, 
			or the glory and majesty of mountains, the beauty of flowers, or the 
			flight of birds, except in his discussion of the resurrection of the 
			body that springs from the sown seed, and the difference in the 
			glory of one star from another. 'There is one glory of the sun, and 
			another glory of the moon, and another glory of the stars: for one 
			star differeth from another star in glory.' The fact that there is 
			such glory he admits, but there is nothing to indicate that he was 
			ravished by that glory. Still, we have no right to say that he was 
			not. He was writing Epistles to his Converts and the churches upon 
			infinitely important ethical and spiritual subjects, and there was 
			no occasion for him to enter into rapturous description and comments 
			upon the wonders and beauty of nature. But in my forty years of 
			intimate communion with him I have never once been inspired by him 
			to look for the blinding glories of the passing days and seasons, or 
			the pop and splendor of star-lit nights.
 
 But not so when I turn to Job, to the Psalms of David, the Proverbs 
			and Songs of Solomon, and the sweet talks and parables of Jesus. 
			There we see the sparrows feeding from the Heavenly Father's hand, 
			the ravens and the young lions and every creeping thing looking to 
			Him for daily food, the fox fleeing from enemies to his hole, the 
			conies among the rocks, the wild goat among mountain crags, the 
			nesting bird, the busy ant, the swarming bees, the neighing 
			war-horse, the spouting whale, the bridal lilies, the rose of 
			Sharon, green and smiling meadows, still waters, ice, snow, and hoar 
			frost, the glowing fire, tempestuous wind and billowing seas, the 
			lowering sky of the morning threatening rain and storm, the red sky 
			of the evening presaging fair and smiling weather. 'The heavens 
			declare the glory of God: and the firmament showeth His handiwork. 
			Day unto day uttereth speech, and night unto night showeth 
			knowledge.' The vast deeps of the heavens are the tabernacle of the 
			sun, 'which is as a bridegroom coming out of his chamber, and 
			rejoiceth as a strong man to run a race,' and the race-course 
			compasses the whole circle of Heaven, and the whole creation in one 
			vast antiphonal choral harmony praises God. So David sings.
 
 But the suggestions, and beauty, and wonder, and mysticism in nature 
			to which Paul has never turned me, but to which Jesus, and Job, and 
			David, and Solomon pointed me, I am now finding in large measure in 
			my tiny back-yard.
 
 In the deep, dark, underground crowded railway of New York, roaring 
			along beneath the great city and plunging beneath the broad and 
			lordly Hudson River, late at night after attending Meetings and 
			lecturing Cadets, early one January, I became chilled and waked up 
			in the middle of the night to find my head and throat inflamed with 
			a heavy cold. I spent two days and a half in bed under the doctor's 
			care, and then crawled out and went to Chicago, where a four days' 
			whirlwind campaign awaited me. The Territorial Commander, all his 
			staff at T.H.Q., and all Officers of all departments in the great 
			city and Division, and a host of Cadets and Soldiers, welcomed me, 
			and for four days I gave myself without stint to the Meetings. Once, 
			for the first time I could remember, I feared my chest would fail 
			me, as I gasped for breath while speaking to the Cadets. Oh, those 
			Meetings! They were times of Heaven upon earth. At the last session 
			with the Cadets, which continued from 3 to 7 p.m., the whole place 
			seemed lit up by the reflected glory on their young faces.
 
 At last, weary and happy, I boarded a train late at night for Texas. 
			The temperature outside was zero, the snow was knee deep, and there 
			was no heat in our car. I sat and shivered in my sweater, winter 
			overcoat, and a big cape, and finally went to bed with my clothes 
			on, still to shiver. When we got to Texas I was aching in all my 
			bones. For three weeks I fought on, and then the 'flu' claimed me, 
			and for the next three weeks I was in bed, and for the next few 
			weeks among pine woods trying to get back my strength.
 
 Presently I came home, but could not walk the length of a city block 
			without panting and gasping for a long breath. My doctor examined 
			me, and then sat down silent and stern, looked at me, and then 
			lectured me: 'You have gone to the edge of the abyss. Stop now or 
			you will stop with a crash from which you will find it hard, if not 
			impossible, to recover. If you take my advice, you will stop for six 
			months.' He had warned me at other times, but I had not always 
			listened to him, had laughed at him, and gone my own way, but 
			somehow I felt he was right this time, and I would fail to heed him 
			at a dread risk.
 
 The Commander was informed, and she graciously granted me all the 
			time needed to rest and recuperate. The General heard about it and 
			wrote me: 'After so many years of toil, you no doubt need a pause.' 
			He further advised me to go to the wilderness, away from the roaring 
			city and the crushing crowds, and yield myself to the things 
			peculiar to the wilderness for a complete change, and suggested the 
			Rocky Mountains.
 
 What a joy that would be, if Mrs. Brengle were only here to go with 
			me. But go alone, among strangers, not well, weak and listless, 
			unfit to walk, unable to climb -- that was different.
 
 A further exhaustive physical examination revealed an impoverished 
			state of my blood, not pernicious, but sufficiently grave for the 
			doctors to say that I must keep in the sunshine and open air, live 
			largely on green vegetables, and rest.
 
 For nearly thirty years, by day and night, summer and winter, 
			through long hours I had labored for souls, sung and prayed and 
			preached in crowded, steaming, ill-ventilated Halls, pleading with 
			souls and dealing with penitents in an atmosphere so depleted of 
			oxygen and poisoned that every pore of my body, every lung cell and 
			red blood corpuscle cried out for fresh air, and now I have turned 
			to my back-yard to get what I need. It has been waiting for me for 
			ten years. I saw no beauty in it that I desired it. But it holds no 
			grudge, and welcomes me now and never hints at my lack of 
			appreciation and my past neglect.
 
 A clump of yellow and blue iris is in one corner, a flowering shrub 
			that has never bloomed for eight years and may be cast out as an 
			unprofitable cumberer of the ground, is at one side, a rambler rose 
			bush, now preparing to burst into a blaze of pink flame, and a 
			crab-apple tree, which I believe botanists say is a relative of the 
			rose, occupy the center of the yard, and a few square yards of green 
			grass sprawl around iris and shrub and tree.
 
 Just outside the border of my back-yard on one side is a big oak 
			tree, and on another side a maple tree, and they cast cool shadows 
			over the grass when the sun is hottest. Some distance away are a few 
			other oak trees. One belongs to a robin and some English sparrows. 
			Another belongs to two young grey squirrels, who have bound 
			themselves together by matrimonial ties and only yesterday built a 
			nest for their prospective family in the fork of their tree out of 
			leaves and twigs which they cut with their sharp teeth from tips of 
			the far-reaching branches.
 
 Yesterday one of them slyly visited the tree which belongs to the 
			robin and sparrows. He watched cautiously and climbed quickly. There 
			were some nests up there he hoped to find defenseless. But a 
			sparrow's keen eyes spied him, and she sent out a far-reaching S.O.S., 
			and from every quarter sparrows came, and then a robin. The entente 
			was perfect. And then I heard fierce, shrill war cries and witnessed 
			an aerial battle as thrilling after its kind as any fought over the 
			forts and forests and fields of France. I laughed at the mischievous 
			cunning and daring of the little robber, but I confess my sympathies 
			were all with the allied forces. They chattered and screamed, and 
			dashed upon him with sharp beaks and rending little claws; they came 
			from above and all sides, swift and sure, until he turned 
			ignominiously and fled to escape with whole ears and unimpaired 
			eyes. The little grey rascal! It was wilderness epic.
 
 The trees are glorious. They are not so large as their forefathers, 
			but I think of them as the heirs of all the ages, and as I look at 
			their broad-reaching limbs and into their deep-green foliage, they 
			suggest the dark, solemn, whispering, primeval forest that once 
			clothed this continent with its sheen like a great green ocean. 
			Right here the red Indian, the bear, the deer, the skulking panther 
			roamed only twice as long ago as the lifetime of men now living.
 
 Swift and speeding automobiles, and loud, rumbling trucks rush past 
			my back-yard, and I hear thundering trains and factory whistles not 
			far away, but here in this wee enclosure, partly in fact and partly 
			in imagination, I am living a wilderness life. An ocean of fresh 
			air, fifty miles deep, laves me in its waves that beat upon all the 
			shores and isles of seas, and the mountains and plains of all 
			continents; and sunshine beams ninety million miles long unerringly 
			find me with their life-giving rays.
 
 I would like to tell you about the ants, and the big, fierce horse 
			flies, and the little flowers among the grass, so tiny and so shy as 
			scarcely to be seen, which I have discovered in my back-yard. The 
			grass, to the little creatures who live among its spires and tangled 
			masses, is a forest as vast and mysterious as the great forests that 
			have disappeared before the ruthless onslaughts and march of man. 
			They live and hunt their prey, and make love, and bring forth their 
			young, and flee their enemies, and live their short little lives 
			among the green aisles and shadows of the grass, and know nothing of 
			the greater world that arches above them, with its strifes and loves 
			and labor, and aspiration, and sin and shame and redemption.
 
 The astronomers tells us that, so far as they can judge, there are 
			many sidereal universes. The heaven of heavens is full of them. But 
			if that is so, if there are many universes of the infinitely great 
			in the vast abysses of space, then I am sure there are many 
			universes of the infinitely little in my backyard, as dear to God as 
			those composed of flaming stars; and if health and strength can be 
			found in the wilderness of plain or forest, or on mountain or sea, I 
			believe it can be found among the teeming wonders, the mystic 
			universes, and in the ocean of air and sunshine I find in my 
			back-yard.
 
 O Lord, I worship amid the wonders of Thy creation, and give Thee 
			thanks for a contented mind and the wealthy heritage of my little 
			back yard. Amen.
 
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