The invisible is the heart of the
visible, the kernel of the visible. The visible is nothing compared to the
invisible. Countless are the forms in which the invisible appears; it appears
and disappears. The sun is visible, but the force that gives it its warmth is
invisible. The numerous constellations are visible, but the force that wisely
guides them through the infinity of space, which prevents them from colliding,
is invisible. A magnet is visible, but its force is invisible. The earth is
visible, but its gravitational field is invisible. The nightingale is visible,
but the life force that gives it its being is invisible. Many creatures on the
earth are visible, but the force that from the same earth brings forth a variety
of herbs, a diversity of flowers and different fruits is invisible.
The earth! The most interesting and
most mysterious workshop, and at the same time the most ingenious creator. She
unceasingly produces from herself animals, and plants, and minerals. In her are
simultaneously produced roses and thorns, wheat and tare, basil and wormwood,
incense and stinkweed. This is evidently so. But, that same obviousness raises a
question: who works through her, and who creates through her, who acts through
her? There, basil and wormwood grow side by side on the same square of land. And
while the earth produces in the seed of basil its pleasant smell, at the same
time the earth enacts in the seed of wormwood its own unpleasant odor. The same
holds true for physical laws, the same conditions, the same; and the sun, and
moon, and the stars, and the earth, and snow, and wind, and rain, and frost, and
droughts, all the same and the results are all diametrically opposed. How is it
that sunlight and drops of rain should become a pleasing aroma in basil but a
foul odor in stinkweed? And furthermore: how is it that the earth’s fluids
become sweet in a cherry and bitter in wormwood? Who performs this unusual
differentiation? On the same ground, under the same conditions, a vast variety
of fruits and vegetables sprout, grow, and ripen, a diversity of animals live,
and the most adverse things coexist. Who infuses this vast secret of life and
existence into all creatures and all things? In one and the same, there exist
opposites; in one, there are many.
Any of the thoughts of man cannot but
be humbled before the truth of the Holy Bible; “And God said, Let the earth
bring forth grass, the herb yielding seed, and the fruit tree yielding fruit
after his kind, whose seed is in itself, upon the earth. And the earth brought
forth grass, and herb yielding seed after his kind, and the tree yielding fruit,
whose seed was in itself, after his kind… and God said, Let the earth bring
forth the living creatures after his kind, cattle and creeping things, and
beasts of the earth after his kind: and it was so” (Genesis 1:11-12, 24).
It is clear: the earth received its
creative, life-giving power from God. God has transferred to the earth one part
of his divine omnipotence, and the earth in a mysterious way extends God’s
creative, life-giving work. Hence, the many inexhaustible forces and supremely
wise adaptations in the earth’s creations. The word of God has fertilized the
earth and has granted it creativeness, fertility, and life-giving power for all
time. Not only in the beginning but now and forever the earth creates, produces,
and gives life according to the word of God.
There is a fact that holds true in the
visible world; the things that are most important in life are invisible. The air
is invisible. Yet is there anything more essential for the life of men, animals,
and plants? Molecules are invisible, as are atoms and electrons. And is not the
visible world built up from these invisible elements?
Invisible particles make up the visible
world. How does the invisible become the visible? In what manner does the
invisible become the visible? How is it that these invisible particles become
objective and appear as the visible material world? From where do these
invisible particles receive their visible, tangible, and numerous forms? Visible
matter is composed of invisible particles. This is a paradox, yet it is also a
fact. And on that paradox rest the world and its existence. The visible rests on
the invisible and is composed of the invisible. The fact of the matter is that
in the visible we ceaselessly observe and look up the objectification and
manifestation of the invisible. Such is the law that governs the visible world;
at the same time it is an endless enigma and an infinite mystery.
Man is the best example of how the
invisible is transformed into the visible; his invisible thoughts, his invisible
feelings, his invisible desires and wishes are transformed into visible works,
visible actions, and visible achievements. No matter from what angle he is
observed, man, every man, is a miracle-worker simply because he is a man. He
endlessly works miracles; he transforms the invisible into the visible. If he
defends his honor, look! He defends something that is invisible, and he is ready
to sacrifice for that invisible thing that which is visible in him; his own
body.
Like all feelings, love is something
invisible, yet how many lives have been sacrificed for her, the invisible? In
its own nature, conscience is the most inner and most invisible thing; but by
the reality of its manifestation, what is more evident and tangible?
Men hold to their convictions, suffer
death for them; but are they not something invisible? And in general, all of
man’s thoughts and feelings, desires and beliefs are essentially invisible, even
though their manifestations may be evidently perceptible. The visible man is
just a manifestation, a projection of the invisible man: the outer man a
projection of the inner. The visible man rest on the invisible, he exists
through the invisible and of the invisible.
The bottom line is that the foundation
of everything that is visible is the invisible; of man, his invisible soul; of
the world, the invisible God. The invisible is the hypostasis of everything, the
basis of everything, the substance of all things, that is, it is that upon which
the world and everything in it rests. Every man who seriously inquires into the
mysteries of this world and this life has to feel this. At the bottom of all
that is visible an invisible force is at work. The invisible is the strongest
thing in our world of earthly perception; electricity, radium. The gravitational
force is invisible, yet is stronger than all of the planets. It moves them like
children move marbles.
The law that presides over all other laws in this world
is the following: the invisible is the core of the visible; the invisible
governs the visible. This world is God’s laboratory in which the invisible is
manufactured into the visible, but only up to a certain point. For there are
limits to the transformation of the invisible into the visible. This is because
the invisible is always larger, infinitely and profoundly broader, than the
visible. Just as the spirit is incomparably wider and larger and more profound
than the body it inhabits, so too the invisible core of every substance is
wider, larger, and more profound than the matters it finds itself in. In fact,
the visible is the materialization of the invisible. But around the visible, and
behind the visible, there extends the endless sea of the invisible.
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