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We introduced The Power of Positive Thinking into the life of our church several years ago
believing the principles that Dr. Peale used would be valuable in helping
people fulfill their callings in Christ. We were not disappointed in
the results. God's children must learn to be positive thinkers if
they are going to succeed in their walk of faith with the Lord.
Book Information
The Power Of Positive Thinking
Norman Vincent Peale
©1978, 1952, by Prentice-Hall, Inc.
Paperback - 276 pages
$10.00
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Power of Positive Thinking
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The Power of Positive Thinking
by Norman Vincent Peale

Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction
1. Believe in Yourself
2. A Peaceful Mind Generates Power
3. How to Have Constant Energy
4. Try Prayer Power
5. How to Create Your Own Happiness
6. Stop Fuming and Fretting
7. Expect the Best and Get It
8. I Don't Believe in Defeat
9. How to Break the Worry Habit
10. Power to Solve Personal Problems
11. How to Use Faith in Healing
12. When Vitality Sags, Try This Health
Formula
13. Inflow of New Thoughts Can Remake You
14. Relax for Easy Power
15. How to Get People to Like You
16. Prescription for Heartache
17. How to Draw upon That Higher Power
Epilogue
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 Preface
Preface to Peale Center's Golden Anniversary Edition
As one might imagine, many significant experiences and events occurred
in my life before I first wrote this book. Among the most dear to me,
personally, were the years spent as the minister at Marble Collegiate
Church and the establishment of Peale Center for Christina Living, which
was started to print and distribute the messages delivered at the church.
Marble Collegiate Church and Peale Center became the laboratory for
testing the principles I would later fashion into The Power of Positive
Thinking.
In 1990, Peale Center for Christian Living celebrates 50 years of
sharing the faith that overcomes life's problems. To me, it is astounding
that nearly two million people read each issue of Plus: The Magazine of
Positive Thinking. Plus carries the simple message, written by me and
others, that positive thinking, coupled with deep faith, can profoundly
change the life of any person.
Of course, the most widely distributed medium for that simple message
has been this book. The working title of the book was "The Power of
Positive Faith." But I wanted the book to go out into the whole world
of people beyond the walls of the church, so the title was changed to The
Power of Positive Thinking. I am truly grateful that God blessed that
title by letting it reach millions of people to help them live more
constructive, more victorious lives.
Naturally, I am pleased that now, after almost 40 years, the book is
still reaching people in the 44 languages into which it has been
translated. Particularly gratifying is the large number of letters
received daily at Peale Center from young people, in their teens and
twenties, who were not born when the book first appeared. They write that
the principles described in The Power of Positive Thinking are proving
applicable in their lives today, just as they did for their elders back in
1952.
Recently, I have been truly amazed by the evidence of how far the
concept of positive thinking has permeated every aspect of our culture.
One branch of Peale Center is the Center for Positive Thinking, where a
researcher has uncovered thousands of articles showing the use of these
concepts in business, sports, medicine, education, and so forth. Before
me, on my desk, is a clipping from no less than the New York Times. Titled
"Research Affirms Power of Positive Thinking," the article
quotes professors from Princeton University, Carnegie-Mellon University,
and the University of Pennsylvania. Another clipping, entitled
"Helping Students Accentuate Positive Thoughts," comes from the
esteemed Education Digest.
As I browse through this material, I am struck that while the concept
of positive thinking is becoming accepted, and even celebrated, one of its
elements I found to be most important is often being neglected. As I've
often said, these principles work when you work them, but they work best
when supported by a deep, growing, and abiding faith in God.
Since this book was first published, its success and the work of Peale
Center have been inseparably intertwined. It is both fitting and
gratifying that Peale Center for Christian Living has decided to prepare
this new edition for future generations. But I would not want any edition
to be circulated that did not contain the very personal and practical
history behind its writing.
As a child, I was inordinately shy and shrinking. Actually, I was what
used to be called bashful. I had the most highly developed inferiority
complex one could possibly imagine.
I constantly minimized myself, thinking that I had no ability, very few
brains, and would probably never amount to anything. This I glumly told
myself. Then I became aware that people were agreeing with me, for it is a
fact that others intuitively tend to take you at your own self-evaluation.
But no one who has not had feelings of inferiority and inadequacy can
possibly be aware of the acute misery of one thus afflicted.
This state of personality suffering continued through boyhood years and
until well along in my college days. In class, when called upon by the
professor, while I knew the material under discussion, I was so terribly
self-conscious and shy that I could not express myself adequately, and
therefore gave the impression of not being prepared. Only when writing
answers on examination papers could I prove my knowledge and so get a
passing grade.
Yet strangely enough, despite these in-depth inferiority feelings and
this excruciating shyness, I had a goal, and that was to be a public
speaker. In my dreams, I saw myself moving big crowds with eloquence and
assurance. Thus I lived and suffered in an inconsistency between what I
wanted to be and what I actually was.
Then, one day, a professor really let me have it: "Norman,"
he asked in a private after-class meeting, "what is the matter with
you? Why do you go skulking through life like a sacred rabbit? You've got
enough brains and native ability to do something in this world. Haven't
you got any faith either in God or yourself?" The comments were
pretty devastating, though designed to be friendly - a teacher wanting to
help a boy to find himself. And he did just that. And to this day I revere
the memory of that professor.
I stumbled out of his classroom and down the steps of the college
building, angry, tearful, hopeless. Then I stopped short. I recall the
exact spot - the fourth step from the bottom - for a thought had pierced
my mind. It was the exciting, almost incredible thought, "I don't
need to be this way any longer!"
Being the son of religious parents, my father a minister, I had been
taught where to turn for help, though to this point had failed to do so.
So, there on that fourth step, I asked the Lord to take over my life.
Sincerely, I committed myself to Jesus Christ, believing that what I could
not do with myself could be done through the grace of God.
I was not suddenly changed, but what I did do from that moment was to
start down a new road of thinking. As I read and studied, I learned a
great truth enunciated so well by William James, who said, "The
greatest discovery of my generation is that a human being can change his
life by changing his attitude of mind." I was a negative thinker, but
I knew it was fatal to remain so. Gradually, my thinking became more
positive. I had read somewhere a statement ascribed to an ancient thinker,
"Take charge of your thoughts. You can do what you will with
them." So, gradually, I built a system of thought for myself. And it
was for myself alone, for I had to form a new and better thought pattern
to give me victory over myself.
By this time, I had become a minister and began to stress in my talks
the glorious truths that were revolutionizing my own life. I became aware
that all around were people defeated by fear and guilt; that everywhere
were those who were failing who did not need to fail if only they could
find themselves. I preached and taught a message of faith and hope. Many
got the message and found the same answers from the same source as I had
found in my own experience.
Then, one day, I decided to put my personal discovery and that of
others into a book. It was to be a simple book filled with simple new life
formulas that work when worked. All I wanted to do was to share this
wonderful way of life with others who had suffered as I had suffered.
At the time of writing the book, I had, of course, no idea that it
would ever become one of the best-selling books in American history. My
only concern was, as it is now, that the book reach the defeated, the
failing, the self-doubtful, the timorous and fearful, with the assurance
that positive thinking, or the life of faith, is the true secret of
living. Or, as the New Testament says it in Philippians 4:13, "I can
do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me."
During my own struggles, I found incredible help in a verse of
Scripture. Indeed, it became my favorite passage. And it underlies all of
my thinking and teaching. It is John 10:10: "I am come that they
might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly."
As Peale Center of Christian Living celebrates its 50th Anniversary,
its goal remains the same. Far beyond my lifetime, it will serve to
present the positive and practical principles of Jesus Christ. It will
always do so on a personal and caring level. So in that spirit, I invite
you to read this book, and then write us with your thoughts, reactions,
and comments. If we hear from you, my dreams for this book will be
realized.
Norman Vincent Peale
Pawling, N.Y.
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 Introduction
What This Book Can Do for You
THIS BOOK IS WRITTEN to suggest techniques and to give examples which
demonstrate that you do not need to be defeated by anything, that you can
have peace of mind, improved health, and a never-ceasing flow of energy.
In short, that your life can be full of joy and satisfaction. Of this I
have no doubt at all for I have watched countless persons learn and apply
a system of simple procedures that has brought about the foregoing
benefits in their lives. These assertions, which may appear extravagant,
are based on bona-fide demonstrations in actual human experience.
Altogether too many people are defeated by the everyday problems of
life. They go struggling, perhaps even whining, through their days with a
sense of dull resentment at what they consider the "bad breaks"
life has given them. In a sense there may be such a think as "the
breaks" in this life, but there is also a spirit and method by which
we can control and even determine those breaks. It is a pity that people
should let themselves be defeated by the problems, cares, and difficulties
of human existence, and it is also quite unnecessary.
In saying this I certainly do not ignore or minimize the hardships and
tragedies of the world, but neither do I allow them to dominate. You can
permit obstacles to control your mind to the point where they are
uppermost and thus become the dominating factors in your thought pattern.
By learning how to cast them from the mind, by refusing to become mentally
subservient to them, and by channeling spiritual power through your
thoughts you can rise above obstacles which ordinarily might defeat you.
By methods I shall outline, obstacles are simply not permitted to destroy
your happiness and well-being. You need be defeated only if you are
willing to be. This book teaches you how to "will" not to be.
The purpose of this book is a very direct and simple one. It makes no
pretense to literary excellence nor does it seek to demonstrate any
unusual scholarship on my part. This is simply a practical, direct-action,
personal improvement manual. It is written with the sole objective of
helping the reader achieve a happy, satisfying, and worthwhile life. I
thoroughly and enthusiastically believe in certain demonstrated and
effective principles which, when practiced, produce a victorious life. My
aim is to set them forth in this volume in a logical, simple and
understandable manner so that the reader feeling a sense of need, may
learn a practical method by which he can build for himself, with God's
help, the kind of life he deeply desires.
If you read this book thoughtfully, carefully absorbing its teachings,
and if you will sincerely and persistently practice the principles and
formulas set forth herein, you can experience an amazing improvement
within yourself. By using the techniques outlined here you can modify or
change the circumstances in which you now live, assuming control over them
rather than continuing to be directed by them. Your relations with other
people will improve. You will become a more popular, esteemed, and
well-like individual. By mastering these principles, you will enjoy a
delightful new sense of well-being. You may attain a degree of health not
hitherto known by you and experience a new and keen pleasure in living.
You will become a person of greater usefulness and will wield an expanded
influence.
How can I be so certain that the practice of these principles will
produce such results? The answer is simply that for many years in the
Marble Collegiate Church of New York City we have taught a system of
creative living based on spiritual techniques, carefully noting its
operation in the lives of hundreds of people. It is no speculative series
of extravagant assertions that I make, for these principles have worked so
efficiently over so long a period of time that they are now firmly
established as documented and demonstrable truth. The system outlined is a
perfected and amazing method of successful living.
In my writings, including several books, in my regular weekly newspaper
column in nearly one hundred dailies, in my national radio program over
seventeen years, in our magazine, Guideposts, and in lectures in scores of
cities, I have taught these same scientific yet simple principles of
achievement, health, and happiness. Hundreds have read, listened, and
practiced, and the results are invariably the same: new life, new power,
increased efficiency, greater happiness.
Because so many have requested that these principles be put into book
form, the better to be studied and practiced, I am publishing this new
volume under the title, The Power of Positive Thinking. I need not point
out that the powerful principles contained herein are not my invention but
are given to us by the greatest Teacher who ever lived and who still
lives. This book teaches applied Christianity; a simply yet scientific
system of practical techniques of successful living that works.
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DR. NORMAN VINCENT PEALE, the renowned author of 42 books, is a
distinguished motivational speaker internationally known as
"Minister to Millions."
Dr. Peal's ministry spans six decades, including an unprecedented 52
years as senior minister of Marble Collegiate Church in New York. He is
the founder of the religiopsychiatric clinic, Blanton-Peale Institute,
and Guideposts magazine, which has a paid circulation of more than four
million.
His messages continue to inspire more than two million readers each
month in Plus: The Magazine of Positive Thinking, published by Peale
Center for Christian Living, which he and his wife, Ruth Stafford Peale,
founded in 1940.
Dr. Peale's inspirational messages have been published in books,
booklets, magazines, and newspapers and are now available on audio- and
videocassette. His best-known book, The Power of Positive Thinking, has
sold more than 20 million copies and has been translated into 44
languages.
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