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In Tune with the Infinite (1897)

af Ralph Waldo Trine

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2002135,598 (3.9)1
New Age. Self-Improvement. Nonfiction. HTML:

Underneath all of the surface differences, tension, and conflicts that separate different faith traditions, there are a number of fundamental similarities that underpin virtually every religion. In the volume In Tune with the Infinite: Fullness of Peace, Power, and Plenty, prominent New Thought writer Ralph Waldo Trine explores the timeless moral and ethical precepts that the world's religion's share.

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This book reads like a series of sermons and draws on the "law of attraction". Apparently, it inspired the book Think and Grow Rich. In its modern form, it might be compared to The Secret, but Trine was an academic and his practical influence inspired the likes of Henry Ford to greatness. This work is of the New Thought Movement which apparently developed from Christian Science. Members of the Christian Science church believe that illness can be cured by prayer alone and works best when not combined with medicine. Yet members of the congregation have often been in trouble with the law for refusing to give their children medicine. None of this is covered by Trine, but he too suggests that the ailments of the body are a result of poor living and can be cured through right living. When taken to the extreme, it seems that Trine's work is less helpful in a practical sense. However, Trine's work draws on the teachings of Jesus and his scholarly background is obvious. Trine states (p. 108):
It has been my aim to base nothing on the teachings of others, though they may be the teachings of those inspired.
Yet it is obvious that he was familiar with Stoicism and the work of Ralph Waldo Emerson. Trine's work is inspiring and I took copious notes. He suggests that all religions are based on a single truth and that it does not matter what religion one follows. He covers a lot of ground, including pedagogy (p. 67):
The true teacher is one whose endeavour is to bring the one they teach to a true knowledge of himself and hence of his or her own interior powers, that they may become their own interpreter.
He discusses the creation of art, literature, and music and suggests that great works emanate from one who knows both God and oneself, echoing the ideas of the ancient Greek philosophers. Further, his work echoes Nietzsche's concept of amor fati (p. 52):
You must recognise, you must realise yourself as one with Infinite Spirit. God's will is then your will, your will is God's will, and with God all things are possible.
While I will not be taking Trine's medical advice any time soon, there is much to be gained from a reading of this work. Originally published in 1897, it is one of the earliest self-help books I have read. Although he was at one time a salesman, Trine was no charlatan - he was a philosopher and a teacher and lived to the age of 92, realising in many ways what he argues in this book. This work amounts to a series of sermons based on some of the greatest philosophical ideas about the inner life. Although it is not referenced (although he occasionally refers to authors and prominent individuals), this is as good an overview of the inner life as I have read. The big lesson I take away from this book is to have faith and to be cautious of the thought-word-action cycle so as to avoid self-fulfilling prophecies. But make sure you go to the doctor if you get sick. ( )
  madepercy | Oct 10, 2018 |
Although he authored dozens of books which sold millions of copies, and his ideas "influenced" Ernest Holmes (founder of Religious Science) and Henry Ford (bought his books en masse), Ralph Waldo Trine is now infamous as a prime source of material now released from copyright protection, being plagiarized by the current crop of "religious" preachers. The "New Thought" movement of the late 1800s was inspired and reflected in this work.

Trine rarely indulged in scholarship or science, or for that matter, theology or hermeneutics. He wrote for inspiration in hard times and for money. "The word heaven means harmony. The word hell is from the old English hell, meaning to build a wall around, to separate; to be 'helled' was to be shut off from." [14] This is incorrect etymology, cited without authority, but he makes such an upllfted point of it.

The following is a theme in all of his books, and one relentlessly plagiarized before and since: "This is the law of prosperity: When apparent adversity comes, be not cast down by it, but make the best of it, and always look forward for better things, for conditions more prosperous. To hold yourself in this attitude of mind is to set into operation suble, silent and irresistible forces that sooner or later will actualize in material form that which is today merely an idea. But ideas have occult power, and ideas, when rightly planted and rightly tended, are the seeds that actualized material conditions." [138]

RWT lived off his royalties and metaphysical seminars at Oscawana. He and his poet/wife Grace, moved to Claremont, California, in the "Plymouth Place" spiritual community, where he died at age 91 tending his garden.
1 stem keylawk | Jan 19, 2013 |
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New Age. Self-Improvement. Nonfiction. HTML:

Underneath all of the surface differences, tension, and conflicts that separate different faith traditions, there are a number of fundamental similarities that underpin virtually every religion. In the volume In Tune with the Infinite: Fullness of Peace, Power, and Plenty, prominent New Thought writer Ralph Waldo Trine explores the timeless moral and ethical precepts that the world's religion's share.

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