Man’s Place In The Universe
For Thou hast made man little lower than God, and Crownest him with glory and honor.
—Psalms.
Spiritual Freedom
The human soul is greater, more sacred than the State, and must never be sacrificed to it. The distinction of nations is to pass away. But the individual mind survives, and the obscurest subject, if true to God, will rise to power never wielded by earthly potentates.
A human being is a member of the community, not as a limb is a member of the body, or as a wheel is a part of a machine, intended only to contribute to some general joint result. He was created not to be merged- in the whole, as a drop in the ocean, or as a particle of sand on the seashore, and to aid only in composing a mass. He is an ultimate being, made for bis own perfection as his highest end; made to maintain an individual existence, and to serve others as far as consists with his own virtue and progress. Hitherto governments have tended greatly to obscure this importance of the individual, to depress him in his own eyes, to give him the idea of an outward interest more important than the invisible soul, and of an outward authority more sacred than the voice of God in his own secret conscience.
Rulers have called the private man the property of the State, meaning generally by the State themselves, and thus the many have been sacrificed to the few, and have even believed that this was their highest destination. Nothing seems to me so needful as to give to the individual mind the consciousness, which governments have done so much to suppress, of its own separate worth.
Let the individual feel that through his immortality he may concentrate in his own being a greater good than that of nations. Let him feel that he is placed in the community, not to part with his individuality or to become a tool, but that he should find a sphere for his various powers, and a preparation for immortal glory. To me the progress of society consists in nothing more than in bringing out the individual, of giving him a consciousness of his own being, and in quickening him to strengthen and elevate bis own mind.
—William E. Channing.
Alternate Reading: John 15:1-16.