DEATH AND RESURRECTION. 185 



in this infinity of worlds, would then 

 our conception of the content of eter- 

 nity be exact? By no means. We must 

 include in this present moment every- 

 thing that has happened on these 

 worlds since the dawn of time and 

 similarly all that will occur in the mil- 

 lenniums to come. Is the eternal meas- 

 ure now full and overflowing? By no 

 means. Above us and below us there 

 are beings to whom other universes 

 exist as infinite in all directions as our 

 own. All these infinities of infinities 

 must be drawn into eternity, but then, 

 surely, the measure must be full. By 

 no means. We have all this time moved 

 within the realm of phenomena, that is 

 to say, in the finite world; all this is 

 only a faint shadow of the wealth that 

 eternity contains. God lives in a light 

 that no man hath seen nor yet can see. 

 In this light, in this perfectness, man 

 is a part of the divine entity. This life 

 in God's eternal consciousness is man's 

 primary and original existence. Only 

 in a secondary meaning is he a self- 



