All of man's
truly religious reactions are sponsored by the early
ministry of the adjutant of worship and are censored by
the adjutant of wisdom. Man's first supermind endowment
is that of personality encircuitment in the Holy Spirit
of the Universe Creative Spirit; and long before either
the bestowals of the divine Sons or the universal
bestowal of the Adjusters, this influence functions to
enlarge man's viewpoint of ethics, religion, and
spirituality. Subsequent to the bestowals of the
Paradise Sons the liberated Spirit of Truth makes mighty
contributions to the enlargement of the human capacity
to perceive religious truths. As evolution advances on
an inhabited world, the Thought Adjusters increasingly
participate in the development of the higher types of
human religious insight. The Thought Adjuster is the
cosmic window through which the finite creature may
faith-glimpse the certainties and divinities of
limitless Deity, the Universal Father.
The
religious tendencies of the human races are innate; they
are universally manifested and have an apparently
natural origin; primitive religions are always
evolutionary in their genesis. As natural religious
experience continues to progress, periodic revelations
of truth punctuate the otherwise slow-moving course of
planetary evolution.
On
Urantia, today, there are four kinds of religion:
1.
Natural or evolutionary religion.
2.
Supernatural or revelatory religion.
3.
Practical or current religion, varying degrees of the
admixture of natural and supernatural religions.
4.
Philosophic religions, man-made or philosophically
thought-out theologic doctrines and reason-created
religions.
1.
PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION
The unity
of religious experience among a social or racial group
derives from the identical nature of the God fragment
indwelling the individual. It is this divine in man that
gives origin to his unselfish interest in the welfare of
other men. But since personality is unique--no two
mortals being alike--it inevitably follows that no two
human beings can similarly interpret the leadings and
urges of the spirit of divinity which lives within their
minds. A group of mortals can experience spiritual
unity, but they can never attain philosophic uniformity.
And this diversity of the interpretation of religious
thought and experience is shown by the fact that
twentieth-century theologians and philosophers have
formulated upward of five hundred different definitions
of religion. In reality, every human being defines
religion in the terms of his own experiential
interpretation of the divine impulses emanating from the
God spirit that indwells him, and therefore must such an
interpretation be unique and wholly different from the
religious philosophy of all other human beings.
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When one
mortal is in full agreement with the religious
philosophy of a fellow mortal, that phenomenon indicates
that these two beings have had a similar religious
experience touching the matters concerned in their
similarity of philosophic religious interpretation.
While
your religion is a matter of personal experience, it is
most important that you should be exposed to the
knowledge of a vast number of other religious
experiences (the diverse interpretations of other and
diverse mortals) to the end that you may prevent your
religious life from becoming egocentric--circumscribed,
selfish, and unsocial.
Rationalism is wrong when it assumes that religion is at
first a primitive belief in something which is then
followed by the pursuit of values. Religion is primarily
a pursuit of values, and then there formulates a system
of interpretative beliefs. It is much easier for men to
agree on religious values--goals--than on
beliefs--interpretations. And this explains how religion
can agree on values and goals while exhibiting the
confusing phenomenon of maintaining a belief in hundreds
of conflicting beliefs--creeds. This also explains why a
given person can maintain his religious experience in
the face of giving up or changing many of his religious
beliefs. Religion persists in spite of revolutionary
changes in religious beliefs. Theology does not produce
religion; it is religion that produces theologic
philosophy.
That
religionists have believed so much that was false does
not invalidate religion because religion is founded on
the recognition of values and is validated by the faith
of personal religious experience. Religion, then, is
based on experience and religious thought; theology, the
philosophy of religion, is an honest attempt to
interpret that experience. Such interpretative beliefs
may be right or wrong, or a mixture of truth and error.
The
realization of the recognition of spiritual values is an
experience which is superideational. There is no word in
any human language which can be employed to designate
this "sense," "feeling," "intuition," or "experience"
which we have elected to call God-consciousness. The
spirit of God that dwells in man is not personal--the
Adjuster is prepersonal--but this Monitor presents a
value, exudes a flavor of divinity, which is personal in
the highest and infinite sense. If God were not at least
personal, he could not be conscious, and if not
conscious, then would he be infrahuman.
2.
RELIGION AND THE INDIVIDUAL
Religion
is functional in the human mind and has been realized in
experience prior to its appearance in human
consciousness. A child has been in existence about nine
months before it experiences birth. But the
"birth" of religion is not sudden; it is rather a
gradual emergence. Nevertheless, sooner or later there
is a "birth day." You do not enter the kingdom of heaven
unless you have been "born again"--born of the Spirit.
Many spiritual births are accompanied by much anguish of
spirit and marked psychological perturbations, as many
physical births are characterized by a "stormy labor"
and other abnormalities of "delivery." Other spiritual
births are a natural and normal growth of the
recognition of supreme values with an enhancement of
spiritual experience, albeit no religious development
occurs without conscious effort and positive and
individual determinations. Religion is never a passive
experience, a negative attitude. What is termed the
"birth of religion" is not directly associated with
so-called conversion experiences which usually
characterize religious episodes occurring later in life
as a result of mental conflict, emotional repression,
and temperamental upheavals.
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But those
persons who were so reared by their parents that they
grew up in the consciousness of being children of a
loving heavenly Father, should not look askance at their
fellow mortals who could only attain such consciousness
of fellowship with God through a psychological crisis,
an emotional upheaval.
The
evolutionary soil in the mind of man in which the seed
of revealed religion germinates is the moral nature that
so early gives origin to a social consciousness. The
first promptings of a child's moral nature have not to
do with sex, guilt, or personal pride, but rather with
impulses of justice, fairness, and urges to
kindness--helpful ministry to one's fellows. And when
such early moral awakenings are nurtured, there occurs a
gradual development of the religious life which is
comparatively free from conflicts, upheavals, and
crises.
Every
human being very early experiences something of a
conflict between his self-seeking and his altruistic
impulses, and many times the first experience of
God-consciousness may be attained as the result of
seeking for superhuman help in the task of resolving
such moral conflicts.
The
psychology of a child is naturally positive, not
negative. So many mortals are negative because they were
so trained. When it is said that the child is positive,
reference is made to his moral impulses, those powers of
mind whose emergence signals the arrival of the Thought
Adjuster.
In the
absence of wrong teaching, the mind of the normal child
moves positively, in the emergence of religious
consciousness, toward moral righteousness and social
ministry, rather than negatively, away from sin and
guilt. There may or may not be conflict in the
development of religious experience, but there are
always present the inevitable decisions, effort, and
function of the human will.
Moral
choosing is usually accompanied by more or less moral
conflict. And this very first conflict in the child mind
is between the urges of egoism and the impulses of
altruism. The Thought Adjuster does not disregard the
personality values of the egoistic motive but does
operate to place a slight preference upon the altruistic
impulse as leading to the goal of human happiness and to
the joys of the kingdom of heaven.
When a
moral being chooses to be unselfish when confronted by
the urge to be selfish, that is primitive religious
experience. No animal can make such a choice; such a
decision is both human and religious. It embraces the
fact of God-consciousness and exhibits the impulse of
social service, the basis of the brotherhood of man.
When mind chooses a right moral judgment by an act of
the free will, such a decision constitutes a religious
experience.
But
before a child has developed sufficiently to acquire
moral capacity and therefore to be able to choose
altruistic service, he has already developed a strong
and well-unified egoistic nature. And it is this factual
situation that gives rise to the theory of the struggle
between the "higher" and the "lower" natures, between
the "old man of sin" and the "new nature" of grace. Very
early in life the normal child begins to learn that it
is "more blessed to give than to receive."
Man tends
to identify the urge to be self-serving with his
ego--himself. In contrast he is inclined to identify the
will to be altruistic with some influence outside
himself--God. And indeed is such a judgment right, for
all such nonself desires do actually have their origin
in the leadings of the indwelling Thought Adjuster, and
this Adjuster is a fragment of God. The impulse of the
spirit Monitor is realized in human consciousness as the
urge to be altruistic, fellow-creature minded. At least
this is the early and fundamental experience of the
child mind. When the growing child fails of personality
unification, the altruistic drive may become so
overdeveloped as to work serious injury to the welfare
of the self. A misguided conscience can become
responsible for much conflict, worry, sorrow, and no end
of human unhappiness.
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3.
RELIGION AND THE HUMAN RACE
While the
belief in spirits, dreams, and diverse other
superstitions all played a part in the evolutionary
origin of primitive religions, you should not overlook
the influence of the clan or tribal spirit of
solidarity. In the group relationship there was
presented the exact social situation which provided the
challenge to the egoistic-altruistic conflict in the
moral nature of the early human mind. In spite of their
belief in spirits, primitive Australians still focus
their religion upon the clan. In time, such religious
concepts tend to personalize, first, as animals, and
later, as a superman or as a God. Even such inferior
races as the African Bushmen, who are not even totemic
in their beliefs, do have a recognition of the
difference between the self-interest and the
group-interest, a primitive distinction between the
values of the secular and the sacred. But the social
group is not the source of religious experience.
Regardless of the influence of all these primitive
contributions to man's early religion, the fact remains
that the true religious impulse has its origin in
genuine spirit presences activating the will to be
unselfish.
Later
religion is foreshadowed in the primitive belief in
natural wonders and mysteries, the impersonal mana. But
sooner or later the evolving religion requires that the
individual should make some personal sacrifice for the
good of his social group, should do something to make
other people happier and better. Ultimately, religion is
destined to become the service of God and of man.
Religion
is designed to change man's environment, but much of the
religion found among mortals today has become helpless
to do this. Environment has all too often mastered
religion.
Remember
that in the religion of all ages the experience which is
paramount is the feeling regarding moral values and
social meanings, not the thinking regarding theologic
dogmas or philosophic theories. Religion evolves
favorably as the element of magic is replaced by the
concept of morals.
Man
evolved through the superstitions of mana, magic, nature
worship, spirit fear, and animal worship to the various
ceremonials whereby the religious attitude of the
individual became the group reactions of the clan. And
then these ceremonies became focalized and crystallized
into tribal beliefs, and eventually these fears and
faiths became personalized into gods. But in all of this
religious evolution the moral element was never wholly
absent. The impulse of the God within man was always
potent. And these powerful influences--one human and the
other divine--insured the survival of religion
throughout the vicissitudes of the ages and that
notwithstanding it was so often threatened with
extinction by a thousand subversive tendencies and
hostile antagonisms.
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4.
SPIRITUAL COMMUNION
The
characteristic difference between a social occasion and
a religious gathering is that in contrast with the
secular the religious is pervaded by the atmosphere of
communion. In this way human association
generates a feeling of fellowship with the divine, and
this is the beginning of group worship. Partaking of a
common meal was the earliest type of social communion,
and so did early religions provide that some portion of
the ceremonial sacrifice should be eaten by the
worshipers. Even in Christianity the Lord's Supper
retains this mode of communion. The atmosphere of the
communion provides a refreshing and comforting period of
truce in the conflict of the self-seeking ego with the
altruistic urge of the indwelling spirit Monitor. And
this is the prelude to true worship--the practice of the
presence of God which eventuates in the emergence of the
brotherhood of man.
When
primitive man felt that his communion with God had been
interrupted, he resorted to sacrifice of some kind in an
effort to make atonement, to restore friendly
relationship. The hunger and thirst for righteousness
leads to the discovery of truth, and truth augments
ideals, and this creates new problems for the individual
religionists, for our ideals tend to grow by geometrical
progression, while our ability to live up to them is
enhanced only by arithmetical progression.
The sense
of guilt (not the consciousness of sin) comes either
from interrupted spiritual communion or from the
lowering of one's moral ideals. Deliverance from such a
predicament can only come through the realization that
one's highest moral ideals are not necessarily
synonymous with the will of God. Man cannot hope to live
up to his highest ideals, but he can be true to his
purpose of finding God and becoming more and more like
him.
Jesus
swept away all of the ceremonials of sacrifice and
atonement. He destroyed the basis of all this fictitious
guilt and sense of isolation in the universe by
declaring that man is a child of God; the
creature-Creator relationship was placed on a
child-parent basis. God becomes a loving Father to his
mortal sons and daughters. All ceremonials not a
legitimate part of such an intimate family relationship
are forever abrogated.
God the
Father deals with man his child on the basis, not of
actual virtue or worthiness, but in recognition of the
child's motivation--the creature purpose and intent. The
relationship is one of parent-child association and is
actuated by divine love.
5.
THE ORIGIN OF IDEALS
The early
evolutionary mind gives origin to a feeling of social
duty and moral obligation derived chiefly from emotional
fear. The more positive urge of social service and the
idealism of altruism are derived from the direct impulse
of the divine spirit indwelling the human mind.
This
idea-ideal of doing good to others--the impulse to deny
the ego something for the benefit of one's neighbor--is
very circumscribed at first. Primitive man regards as
neighbor only those very close to him, those who treat
him neighborly; as religious civilization advances,
one's neighbor expands in concept to embrace the clan,
the tribe, the nation. And then Jesus enlarged the
neighbor scope to embrace the whole of humanity, even
that we should love our enemies. And there is something
inside of every normal human being that tells him this
teaching is moral--right. Even those who practice this
ideal least, admit that it is right in theory.
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1134
All men
recognize the morality of this universal human urge to
be unselfish and altruistic. The humanist ascribes the
origin of this urge to the natural working of the
material mind; the religionist more correctly recognizes
that the truly unselfish drive of mortal mind is in
response to the inner spirit leadings of the Thought
Adjuster.
But man's
interpretation of these early conflicts between the
ego-will and the other-than-self-will is not always
dependable. Only a fairly well unified personality can
arbitrate the multiform contentions of the ego cravings
and the budding social consciousness. The self has
rights as well as one's neighbors. Neither has exclusive
claims upon the attention and service of the individual.
Failure to resolve this problem gives origin to the
earliest type of human guilt feelings.
Human
happiness is achieved only when the ego desire of the
self and the altruistic urge of the higher self (divine
spirit) are co-ordinated and reconciled by the unified
will of the integrating and supervising personality. The
mind of evolutionary man is ever confronted with the
intricate problem of refereeing the contest between the
natural expansion of emotional impulses and the moral
growth of unselfish urges predicated on spiritual
insight--genuine religious reflection.
The
attempt to secure equal good for the self and for the
greatest number of other selves presents a problem which
cannot always be satisfactorily resolved in a time-space
frame. Given an eternal life, such antagonisms can be
worked out, but in one short human life they are
incapable of solution. Jesus referred to such a paradox
when he said: "Whosoever shall save his life shall lose
it, but whosoever shall lose his life for the sake of
the kingdom, shall find it."
The
pursuit of the ideal--the striving to be Godlike--is a
continuous effort before death and after. The life after
death is no different in the essentials than the mortal
existence. Everything we do in this life which is good
contributes directly to the enhancement of the future
life. Real religion does not foster moral indolence and
spiritual laziness by encouraging the vain hope of
having all the virtues of a noble character bestowed
upon one as a result of passing through the portals of
natural death. True religion does not belittle man's
efforts to progress during the mortal lease on life.
Every mortal gain is a direct contribution to the
enrichment of the first stages of the immortal survival
experience.
It is
fatal to man's idealism when he is taught that all of
his altruistic impulses are merely the development of
his natural herd instincts. But he is ennobled and
mightily energized when he learns that these higher
urges of his soul emanate from the spiritual forces that
indwell his mortal mind.
It lifts
man out of himself and beyond himself when he once fully
realizes that there lives and strives within him
something which is eternal and divine. And so it is that
a living faith in the superhuman origin of our ideals
validates our belief that we are the sons of God and
makes real our altruistic convictions, the feelings of
the brotherhood of man.
Man, in
his spiritual domain, does have a free will. Mortal man
is neither a helpless slave of the inflexible
sovereignty of an all-powerful God nor the victim of the
hopeless fatality of a mechanistic cosmic determinism.
Man is most truly the architect of his own eternal
destiny.
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1135
But man
is not saved or ennobled by pressure. Spirit growth
springs from within the evolving soul. Pressure may
deform the personality, but it never stimulates growth.
Even educational pressure is only negatively helpful in
that it may aid in the prevention of disastrous
experiences. Spiritual growth is greatest where all
external pressures are at a minimum. "Where the spirit
of the Lord is, there is freedom." Man develops best
when the pressures of home, community, church, and state
are least. But this must not be construed as meaning
that there is no place in a progressive society for
home, social institutions, church, and state.
When a
member of a social religious group has complied with the
requirements of such a group, he should be encouraged to
enjoy religious liberty in the full expression of his
own personal interpretation of the truths of religious
belief and the facts of religious experience. The
security of a religious group depends on spiritual
unity, not on theological uniformity. A religious group
should be able to enjoy the liberty of freethinking
without having to become "freethinkers." There is great
hope for any church that worships the living God,
validates the brotherhood of man, and dares to remove
all creedal pressure from its members.
6.
PHILOSOPHIC CO-ORDINATION
Theology
is the study of the actions and reactions of the human
spirit; it can never become a science since it must
always be combined more or less with psychology in its
personal expression and with philosophy in its
systematic portrayal. Theology is always the study of
your religion; the study of another's religion is
psychology.
When man
approaches the study and examination of his universe
from the outside, he brings into being the
various physical sciences; when he approaches the
research of himself and the universe from the inside,
he gives origin to theology and metaphysics. The later
art of philosophy develops in an effort to harmonize the
many discrepancies which are destined at first to appear
between the findings and teachings of these two
diametrically opposite avenues of approaching the
universe of things and beings.
Religion
has to do with the spiritual viewpoint, the awareness of
the insideness of human experience. Man's
spiritual nature affords him the opportunity of turning
the universe outside in. It is therefore true that,
viewed exclusively from the insideness of personality
experience, all creation appears to be spiritual in
nature.
When man
analytically inspects the universe through the material
endowments of his physical senses and associated mind
perception, the cosmos appears to be mechanical and
energy-material. Such a technique of studying reality
consists in turning the universe inside out.
A logical
and consistent philosophic concept of the universe
cannot be built up on the postulations of either
materialism or spiritism, for both of these systems of
thinking, when universally applied, are compelled to
view the cosmos in distortion, the former contacting
with a universe turned inside out, the latter realizing
the nature of a universe turned outside in. Never, then,
can either science or religion, in and of themselves,
standing alone, hope to gain an adequate understanding
of universal truths and relationships without the
guidance of human philosophy and the illumination of
divine revelation.
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Always
must man's inner spirit depend for its expression and
self-realization upon the mechanism and technique of the
mind. Likewise must man's outer experience of material
reality be predicated on the mind consciousness of the
experiencing personality. Therefore are the spiritual
and the material, the inner and the outer, human
experiences always correlated with the mind function and
conditioned, as to their conscious realization, by the
mind activity. Man experiences matter in his mind; he
experiences spiritual reality in the soul but becomes
conscious of this experience in his mind. The intellect
is the harmonizer and the ever-present conditioner and
qualifier of the sum total of mortal experience. Both
energy-things and spirit values are colored by their
interpretation through the mind media of consciousness.
Your
difficulty in arriving at a more harmonious
co-ordination between science and religion is due to
your utter ignorance of the intervening domain of the
morontia world of things and beings. The local universe
consists of three degrees, or stages, of reality
manifestation: matter, morontia, and spirit. The
morontia angle of approach erases all divergence between
the findings of the physical sciences and the
functioning of the spirit of religion. Reason is the
understanding technique of the sciences; faith is the
insight technique of religion; mota is the technique of
the morontia level. Mota is a supermaterial reality
sensitivity which is beginning to compensate incomplete
growth, having for its substance knowledge-reason and
for its essence faith-insight. Mota is a
superphilosophical reconciliation of divergent reality
perception which is nonattainable by material
personalities; it is predicated, in part, on the
experience of having survived the material life of the
flesh. But many mortals have recognized the desirability
of having some method of reconciling the interplay
between the widely separated domains of science and
religion; and metaphysics is the result of man's
unavailing attempt to span this well-recognized chasm.
But human metaphysics has proved more confusing than
illuminating. Metaphysics stands for man's well-meant
but futile effort to compensate for the absence of the
mota of morontia.
Metaphysics has proved a failure; mota, man cannot
perceive. Revelation is the only technique which can
compensate for the absence of the truth sensitivity of
mota in a material world. Revelation authoritatively
clarifies the muddle of reason-developed metaphysics on
an evolutionary sphere.
Science
is man's attempted study of his physical environment,
the world of energy-matter; religion is man's experience
with the cosmos of spirit values; philosophy has been
developed by man's mind effort to organize and correlate
the findings of these widely separated concepts into
something like a reasonable and unified attitude toward
the cosmos. Philosophy, clarified by revelation,
functions acceptably in the absence of mota and in the
presence of the breakdown and failure of man's reason
substitute for mota--metaphysics.
Early man
did not differentiate between the energy level and the
spirit level. It was the violet race and their Andite
successors who first attempted to divorce the
mathematical from the volitional. Increasingly has
civilized man followed in the footsteps of the earliest
Greeks and the Sumerians who distinguished between the
inanimate and the animate. And as civilization
progresses, philosophy will have to bridge ever-widening
gulfs between the spirit concept and the energy concept.
But in the time of space these divergencies are at one
in the Supreme.
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Science
must always be grounded in reason, although imagination
and conjecture are helpful in the extension of its
borders. Religion is forever dependent on faith, albeit
reason is a stabilizing influence and a helpful
handmaid. And always there have been, and ever will be,
misleading interpretations of the phenomena of both the
natural and the spiritual worlds, sciences and religions
falsely so called.
Out of
his incomplete grasp of science, his faint hold upon
religion, and his abortive attempts at metaphysics, man
has attempted to construct his formulations of
philosophy. And modern man would indeed build a worthy
and engaging philosophy of himself and his universe were
it not for the breakdown of his all-important and
indispensable metaphysical connection between the worlds
of matter and spirit, the failure of metaphysics to
bridge the morontia gulf between the physical and the
spiritual. Mortal man lacks the concept of morontia mind
and material; and revelation is the only
technique for atoning for this deficiency in the
conceptual data which man so urgently needs in order to
construct a logical philosophy of the universe and to
arrive at a satisfying understanding of his sure and
settled place in that universe.
Revelation is evolutionary man's only hope of bridging
the morontia gulf. Faith and reason, unaided by mota,
cannot conceive and construct a logical universe.
Without the insight of mota, mortal man cannot discern
goodness, love, and truth in the phenomena of the
material world.
When the
philosophy of man leans heavily toward the world of
matter, it becomes rationalistic or naturalistic.
When philosophy inclines particularly toward the
spiritual level, it becomes idealistic or even
mystical. When philosophy is so unfortunate as to lean
upon metaphysics, it unfailingly becomes skeptical,
confused. In past ages, most of man's knowledge and
intellectual evaluations have fallen into one of these
three distortions of perception. Philosophy dare not
project its interpretations of reality in the linear
fashion of logic; it must never fail to reckon with the
elliptic symmetry of reality and with the essential
curvature of all relation concepts.
The
highest attainable philosophy of mortal man must be
logically based on the reason of science, the faith of
religion, and the truth insight afforded by revelation.
By this union man can compensate somewhat for his
failure to develop an adequate metaphysics and for his
inability to comprehend the mota of the morontia.
7.
SCIENCE AND RELIGION
Science
is sustained by reason, religion by faith. Faith, though
not predicated on reason, is reasonable; though
independent of logic, it is nonetheless encouraged by
sound logic. Faith cannot be nourished even by an ideal
philosophy; indeed, it is, with science, the very source
of such a philosophy. Faith, human religious insight,
can be surely instructed only by revelation, can be
surely elevated only by personal mortal experience with
the spiritual Adjuster presence of the God who is
spirit.
True
salvation is the technique of the divine evolution of
the mortal mind from matter identification through the
realms of morontia liaison to the high universe status
of spiritual correlation. And as material intuitive
instinct precedes the appearance of reasoned knowledge
in terrestrial evolution, so does the manifestation of
spiritual intuitive insight presage the later appearance
of morontia and spirit reason and experience in the
supernal program of celestial evolution, the business of
transmuting the potentials of man the temporal into the
actuality and divinity of man the eternal, a Paradise
finaliter.
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But as
ascending man reaches inward and Paradiseward for the
God experience, he will likewise be reaching outward and
spaceward for an energy understanding of the material
cosmos. The progression of science is not limited to the
terrestrial life of man; his universe and superuniverse
ascension experience will to no small degree be the
study of energy transmutation and material
metamorphosis. God is spirit, but Deity is unity, and
the unity of Deity not only embraces the spiritual
values of the Universal Father and the Eternal Son but
is also cognizant of the energy facts of the Universal
Controller and the Isle of Paradise, while these two
phases of universal reality are perfectly correlated in
the mind relationships of the Conjoint Actor and unified
on the finite level in the emerging Deity of the Supreme
Being.
The union
of the scientific attitude and the religious insight by
the mediation of experiential philosophy is part of
man's long Paradise-ascension experience. The
approximations of mathematics and the certainties of
insight will always require the harmonizing function of
mind logic on all levels of experience short of the
maximum attainment of the Supreme.
But logic
can never succeed in harmonizing the findings of science
and the insights of religion unless both the scientific
and the religious aspects of a personality are truth
dominated, sincerely desirous of following the truth
wherever it may lead regardless of the conclusions which
it may reach.
Logic is
the technique of philosophy, its method of expression.
Within the domain of true science, reason is always
amenable to genuine logic; within the domain of true
religion, faith is always logical from the basis of an
inner viewpoint, even though such faith may appear to be
quite unfounded from the inlooking viewpoint of the
scientific approach. From outward, looking within, the
universe may appear to be material; from within, looking
out, the same universe appears to be wholly spiritual.
Reason grows out of material awareness, faith out of
spiritual awareness, but through the mediation of a
philosophy strengthened by revelation, logic may confirm
both the inward and the outward view, thereby effecting
the stabilization of both science and religion. Thus,
through common contact with the logic of philosophy, may
both science and religion become increasingly tolerant
of each other, less and less skeptical.
What both
developing science and religion need is more searching
and fearless self-criticism, a greater awareness of
incompleteness in evolutionary status. The teachers of
both science and religion are often altogether too
self-confident and dogmatic. Science and religion can
only be self-critical of their facts. The moment
departure is made from the stage of facts, reason
abdicates or else rapidly degenerates into a consort of
false logic.
The
truth--an understanding of cosmic relationships,
universe facts, and spiritual values--can best be had
through the ministry of the Spirit of Truth and can best
be criticized by revelation. But revelation
originates neither a science nor a religion; its
function is to co-ordinate both science and religion
with the truth of reality. Always, in the absence of
revelation or in the failure to accept or grasp it, has
mortal man resorted to his futile gesture of
metaphysics, that being the only human substitute for
the revelation of truth or for the mota of morontia
personality.
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The
science of the material world enables man to control,
and to some extent dominate, his physical environment.
The religion of the spiritual experience is the source
of the fraternity impulse which enables men to live
together in the complexities of the civilization of a
scientific age. Metaphysics, but more certainly
revelation, affords a common meeting ground for the
discoveries of both science and religion and makes
possible the human attempt logically to correlate these
separate but interdependent domains of thought into a
well-balanced philosophy of scientific stability and
religious certainty.
In the
mortal state, nothing can be absolutely proved; both
science and religion are predicated on assumptions. On
the morontia level, the postulates of both science and
religion are capable of partial proof by mota logic. On
the spiritual level of maximum status, the need for
finite proof gradually vanishes before the actual
experience of and with reality; but even then there is
much beyond the finite that remains unproved.
All
divisions of human thought are predicated on certain
assumptions which are accepted, though unproved, by the
constitutive reality sensitivity of the mind endowment
of man. Science starts out on its vaunted career of
reasoning by assuming the reality of three
things: matter, motion, and life. Religion starts out
with the assumption of the validity of three things:
mind, spirit, and the universe--the Supreme Being.
Science
becomes the thought domain of mathematics, of the energy
and material of time in space. Religion assumes to deal
not only with finite and temporal spirit but also with
the spirit of eternity and supremacy. Only through a
long experience in mota can these two extremes of
universe perception be made to yield analogous
interpretations of origins, functions, relations,
realities, and destinies. The maximum harmonization of
the energy-spirit divergence is in the encircuitment of
the Seven Master Spirits; the first unification thereof,
in the Deity of the Supreme; the finality unity thereof,
in the infinity of the First Source and Center, the I
AM.
Reason
is the act of recognizing the conclusions of
consciousness with regard to the experience in and with
the physical world of energy and matter. Faith is
the act of recognizing the validity of spiritual
consciousness--something which is incapable of other
mortal proof. Logic is the synthetic
truth-seeking progression of the unity of faith and
reason and is founded on the constitutive mind
endowments of mortal beings, the innate recognition of
things, meanings, and values.
There is
a real proof of spiritual reality in the presence of the
Thought Adjuster, but the validity of this presence is
not demonstrable to the external world, only to the one
who thus experiences the indwelling of God. The
consciousness of the Adjuster is based on the
intellectual reception of truth, the supermind
perception of goodness, and the personality motivation
to love.
Science
discovers the material world, religion evaluates it, and
philosophy endeavors to interpret its meanings while co-ordinating
the scientific material viewpoint with the religious
spiritual concept. But history is a realm in which
science and religion may never fully agree.
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8.
PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION
Although
both science and philosophy may assume the probability
of God by their reason and logic, only the personal
religious experience of a spirit-led man can affirm the
certainty of such a supreme and personal Deity. By the
technique of such an incarnation of living truth the
philosophic hypothesis of the probability of God becomes
a religious reality.
The
confusion about the experience of the certainty of God
arises out of the dissimilar interpretations and
relations of that experience by separate individuals and
by different races of men. The experiencing of God may
be wholly valid, but the discourse about God,
being intellectual and philosophical, is divergent and
oftentimes confusingly fallacious.
A good
and noble man may be consummately in love with his wife
but utterly unable to pass a satisfactory written
examination on the psychology of marital love. Another
man, having little or no love for his spouse, might pass
such an examination most acceptably. The imperfection of
the lover's insight into the true nature of the beloved
does not in the least invalidate either the reality or
sincerity of his love.
If you
truly believe in God--by faith know him and love him--do
not permit the reality of such an experience to be in
any way lessened or detracted from by the doubting
insinuations of science, the caviling of logic, the
postulates of philosophy, or the clever suggestions of
well-meaning souls who would create a religion without
God.
The
certainty of the God-knowing religionist should not be
disturbed by the uncertainty of the doubting
materialist; rather should the uncertainty of the
unbeliever be mightily challenged by the profound faith
and unshakable certainty of the experiential believer.
Philosophy, to be of the greatest service to both
science and religion, should avoid the extremes of both
materialism and pantheism. Only a philosophy which
recognizes the reality of personality--permanence in the
presence of change--can be of moral value to man, can
serve as a liaison between the theories of material
science and spiritual religion. Revelation is a
compensation for the frailties of evolving philosophy.
9.
THE ESSENCE OF RELIGION
Theology
deals with the intellectual content of religion,
metaphysics (revelation) with the philosophic aspects.
Religious experience is the spiritual content of
religion. Notwithstanding the mythologic vagaries and
the psychologic illusions of the intellectual content of
religion, the metaphysical assumptions of error and the
techniques of self-deception, the political distortions
and the socioeconomic perversions of the philosophic
content of religion, the spiritual experience of
personal religion remains genuine and valid.
Religion
has to do with feeling, acting, and living, not merely
with thinking. Thinking is more closely related to the
material life and should be in the main, but not
altogether, dominated by reason and the facts of science
and, in its nonmaterial reaches toward the spirit
realms, by truth. No matter how illusory and erroneous
one's theology, one's religion may be wholly genuine and
everlastingly true.
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Buddhism
in its original form is one of the best religions
without a God which has arisen throughout all the
evolutionary history of Urantia, although, as this faith
developed, it did not remain godless. Religion without
faith is a contradiction; without God, a philosophic
inconsistency and an intellectual absurdity.
The
magical and mythological parentage of natural religion
does not invalidate the reality and truth of the later
revelational religions and the consummate saving gospel
of the religion of Jesus. Jesus' life and teachings
finally divested religion of the superstitions of magic,
the illusions of mythology, and the bondage of
traditional dogmatism. But this early magic and
mythology very effectively prepared the way for later
and superior religion by assuming the existence and
reality of supermaterial values and beings.
Although
religious experience is a purely spiritual subjective
phenomenon, such an experience embraces a positive and
living faith attitude toward the highest realms of
universe objective reality. The ideal of religious
philosophy is such a faith-trust as would lead man
unqualifiedly to depend upon the absolute love of the
infinite Father of the universe of universes. Such a
genuine religious experience far transcends the
philosophic objectification of idealistic desire; it
actually takes salvation for granted and concerns itself
only with learning and doing the will of the Father in
Paradise. The earmarks of such a religion are: faith in
a supreme Deity, hope of eternal survival, and love,
especially of one's fellows.
When
theology masters religion, religion dies; it becomes a
doctrine instead of a life. The mission of theology is
merely to facilitate the self-consciousness of personal
spiritual experience. Theology constitutes the religious
effort to define, clarify, expound, and justify the
experiential claims of religion, which, in the last
analysis, can be validated only by living faith. In the
higher philosophy of the universe, wisdom, like reason,
becomes allied to faith. Reason, wisdom, and faith are
man's highest human attainments. Reason introduces man
to the world of facts, to things; wisdom introduces him
to a world of truth, to relationships; faith initiates
him into a world of divinity, spiritual experience.
Faith
most willingly carries reason along as far as reason can
go and then goes on with wisdom to the full philosophic
limit; and then it dares to launch out upon the
limitless and never-ending universe journey in the sole
company of TRUTH.
Science
(knowledge) is founded on the inherent (adjutant spirit)
assumption that reason is valid, that the universe can
be comprehended. Philosophy (co-ordinate comprehension)
is founded on the inherent (spirit of wisdom) assumption
that wisdom is valid, that the material universe can be
co-ordinated with the spiritual. Religion (the truth of
personal spiritual experience) is founded on the
inherent (Thought Adjuster) assumption that faith is
valid, that God can be known and attained.
The full
realization of the reality of mortal life consists in a
progressive willingness to believe these assumptions of
reason, wisdom, and faith. Such a life is one motivated
by truth and dominated by love; and these are the ideals
of objective cosmic reality whose existence cannot be
materially demonstrated.
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When reason
once recognizes right and wrong, it exhibits wisdom;
when wisdom chooses between right and wrong, truth and
error, it demonstrates spirit leading. And thus are the
functions of mind, soul, and spirit ever closely united
and functionally interassociated. Reason deals with
factual knowledge; wisdom, with philosophy and
revelation; faith, with living spiritual experience.
Through truth man attains beauty and by spiritual love
ascends to goodness.
Faith
leads to knowing God, not merely to a mystical feeling
of the divine presence. Faith must not be overmuch
influenced by its emotional consequences. True religion
is an experience of believing and knowing as well as a
satisfaction of feeling.
There is
a reality in religious experience that is proportional
to the spiritual content, and such a reality is
transcendent to reason, science, philosophy, wisdom, and
all other human achievements. The convictions of such an
experience are unassailable; the logic of religious
living is incontrovertible; the certainty of such
knowledge is superhuman; the satisfactions are superbly
divine, the courage indomitable, the devotions
unquestioning, the loyalties supreme, and the destinies
final--eternal, ultimate, and universal.
[Presented
by a Melchizedek of Nebadon.] |