“Thou shalt no more be termed
Forsaken; neither shall thy land any more be termed
Desolate; but thou shalt be called Hephzibah, and thy
land Beulah: for the Lord delighteth in thee,
and thy land shall be married” (Isaiah lxii,
4). The name Hephzibah or, as it might
be written, Hafzbah conveys a very distinct
idea to any one who has lived in the East, and calls
up a string of familiar words all containing the same
root hafz, which signifies “guarding”
or “taking care of,” such as hafiz,
a protector, muhafiz, a custodian, as in the
word muhafiz daftar, a head record-keeper;
or again, hifazat, custody, as bahifazat
polis, in custody of the police; or again, daim-ul-hafz,
imprisonment for life, and other similar expressions.
All words from this root suggest the
idea of “guarding,” and therefore the
name Haphzibah at once speaks its own meaning.
It is “one who is guarded,” a “protected
one.” And answering to this there must be
some power which guards, and the name of this power
is given in Hosea ii, 16, where it is called “Ishi.”
“And it shall be at that day, saith the Lord,
that thou shalt call me Ishi; and thou shalt call me
no more Baali.” “Baali” means
“lord,” “Ishi” means “husband,”
and between the two there is a whole world of distinction.
To call the Great Power “Baali”
is to live in one world, and to call it “Ishi”
is to live in another. The world that is ruled
over by Baali is a world of “miserable worms
of the dust” and such crawling creatures; but
the world that is warmed and lightened by “Ishi”
is one in which men and women walk upright, conscious
of their own divine nature, instead of dodging about
to escape being crushed under the feet of Moloch as
he strides through his dominions. If the name
Baali did not suggest a wrong idea there would be
no need to change it for another, and the change of
name therefore indicates the opening of the mind to
a larger and sounder conception of the true nature
of the Ruling Principle of the universe. It is
no imperious autocrat, the very apotheosis of self-glorification,
ill-natured and spiteful if its childish vanity be
not gratified by hearing its own praises formally
proclaimed, often from lips opened only by fear; nor
is it an almighty extortioner desiring to deprive us
of what we value most, either to satisfy its greed
or to demonstrate its sovereignty. This is the
image which men make of God and then bow terrified
before it, offering a worship which is the worship
of Baal, and making life blank because all the livingness
has been wiped out of it.
Ishi is the embodiment of the very
opposite conception, a wise and affectionate husband,
instead of a taskmaster exploiting his slaves.
In its true aspect the relation of husband and wife
is entirely devoid of any question of relative superiority
or inferiority. As well ask whether the front
wheel or the back wheel of your bicycle is the more
important. The two make a single whole, in which
the functions of both parts are reciprocal and equally
necessary; yet for this very reason these functions
cannot be identical.
In a well-ordered home, where husband
and wife are united by mutual love and respect, we
see that the man’s function is to enter into
the larger world and to provide the wife with all
that is needed for the maintenance and comfort of
the home, while the function of the woman is to be
the distributor of what her husband provides, in doing
which she follows her own discretion; and a sensible
man, knowing that he can trust a sensible wife, does
not want to poke his finger into every pie. Thus
all things run harmoniously the woman relieved
of responsibilities which are not naturally hers,
and the man relieved of responsibilities which are
not naturally his. But let any perplexity or danger
arise, and the woman knows that from her husband she
will receive all the guidance and protection that
the occasion may require, he being the wise and strong
man that we have supposed him, and having this assurance
she is able to pursue the avocations of her own sphere
undisturbed by any fears or anxieties.
It is this relation of protection
and guidance that is implied by the word Hephzibah.
It is the name of those who realise their identity
with the all-ordering Divine Spirit. He who realises
this unity with the Spirit finds himself both guided
and guarded. And here we touch the fringe of
a deep natural mystery, which formed the basis of all
that was most valuable in the higher mysteries of
the ancients, and the substance of which we must realise
if we are to make any progress in the future, whatever
form we may adopt to convey the idea to ourselves or
others. It is the relation of the individual
mind to the Universal Mind, the combination of unity
with independence which, though quite clear when we
know it by personal experience, is almost inexpressible
in words, but which is frequently represented in the
Bible under the figure of the marriage relations.
It is a basic principle, and in various
modes pervades all Nature, and has been symbolised
in every religion the world has known; and in proportion
as the individual realises this relation he will find
that he is able to use the Universal Mind,
while at the same time he is guided and guarded by
it. For think what it would be to wield the power
of the Universal Mind without having its guidance.
It would be the old story of Phaeton trying to drive
the chariot of the Sun, which ended in his own destruction;
and limitless power without corresponding guidance
would be the most terrible curse that any one could
bring upon his head.
The relation between the individual
mind and the Universal Mind, as portrayed in the reciprocally
connected names of Hephzibah and Ishi, must never
be lost sight of; for the Great Guiding Mind, immeasurably
as it transcends our intellectual consciousness, is
not another than ourselves. It is The
One Self which is the foundation of all the individual
selves, and which is, therefore, in all its limitlessness,
as entirely one with each individual as though no
other being existed. Therefore we do not have
to go out of ourselves to find it, for it is the expansion
to infinity of all that we truly are, having,
indeed, no place for those negative forms of evil
with which we people a world of illusion, for it is
the very Light itself, and in it all illusion is dispelled;
but it is the expansion to infinity of all in us that
is Affirmative, all that is really living.
Therefore, in looking for its guiding
and guarding we are relying upon no borrowed power
from without, held at the caprice and option
of another, but upon the supreme fact of our own nature,
which we can use in what direction we will with perfect
freedom, knowing no limitation save the obligation
not to do violence to our own purest and highest feelings.
And this relation is entirely natural.
We must steer the happy mean between imploring and
ignoring. A natural law does not need to be entreated
before it will work; and, on the other hand, we cannot
make use of it while ignoring its existence.
What we have to do, therefore, is
to take the working of the law for granted, and make
use of it accordingly; and since that is the law of
Mind, and Mind is Personality, this Power, which is
at once ourselves and above ourselves, may
be treated as a Person and may be spoken with, and
its replies received by the inner ear of the heart.
Any scheme of philosophy that does not result in this
personal intercourse with the Divine Mind falls short
of the mark. It may be right so far as it goes,
but it does not go far enough, and fails to connect
us with our vital centre. Names are of small
importance so long as the intercourse is real.
The Supreme Mind with which we converse is only to
be met in the profoundest depths of our own being,
and, as Tennyson says, is more perfectly ourselves
than our own hands and feet. It is our natural
Base; and realising this we shall find ourselves to
be in very truth “guarded ones,” guided
by the Spirit in all things, nothing too great and
nothing too trivial to come within the great Law of
our being.
There is another aspect of the Spirit
in which it is seen as a Power to be used; and the
full flow of life is in the constant alternation between
this aspect and the one we have been considering, but
always we are linked with the Universal Mind as the
flower lives by reason of its root. The connection
itself is intrinsic, and can never be severed; but
it must be consciously realised before it can be consciously
used. All our development consists in the increasing
consciousness of this connection, which enables us
to apply the higher power to whatever purpose we may
have in hand, not merely in the hope that it may
respond, but with the certain knowledge that by the
law of its own nature it is bound to do so, and likewise
with the knowledge that by the same law it is bound
also to guide us to the selection of right objects
and right methods.
Experience will teach us to detect
the warning movement of the inner Guide. A deepseated
sense of dissatisfaction, an indescribable feeling
that somehow everything is not right, are the indications
to which we do well to pay heed; for we are “guarded
ones,” and these interior monitions are the
working of that innermost principle of our own being
which is the immediate outflowing of the Great Universal
Life into individuality. But, paying heed to
this, we shall find ourselves guarded, not as prisoners,
but as a loved and honoured wife, whose freedom is
assured by a protection which will allow no harm to
assail her; we shall find that the Law of our nature
is Liberty, and that nothing but our own want of understanding
can shut us out from it.