[The Life of the Spirit and the Life of To-day by Evelyn Underhill]@TWC D-Link book
The Life of the Spirit and the Life of To-day

CHAPTER IV
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It is indeed characteristic of those in whom this life is dominant, that they are capable of receiving and responding to the highest and most vivifying suggestions which the universe in its totality pours in on us.
This movement of response, often quietly overlooked, is that which makes them not spiritual hedonists but men and women of prayer.

Grace--to give these suggestions of Spirit their conventional name--is perpetually beating in on us.

But if it is to be inwardly realized, the Divine suggestion must be transformed by man's will and love into an auto-suggestion; and this is what seems to happen in meditation and prayer.
Everything indeed points to a very close connection between what might be called the mechanism of prayer and of suggestion.

To say this, is in no way to minimize the transcendental character of prayer.

In both states there is a spontaneous or deliberate throwing open of the deeper mind to influences which, fully accepted, tend to realize themselves.
Look at the directions given by all great teachers of prayer and contemplation; and these two acts, rightly performed, fuse one with the other, they are two aspects of the single act of communion with God.
Look at their insistence on a stilling and recollecting of the mind, on surrender, a held passivity not merely limp but purposeful: on the need of meek yielding to a greater inflowing power, and its regenerating suggestions.


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