PAPER 73
- THE GARDEN OF EDEN
The cultural
decadence and spiritual poverty resulting from the
Caligastia downfall and consequent social confusion had
little effect on the physical or biologic status of the
Urantia peoples. Organic evolution proceeded apace, quite
regardless of the cultural and moral setback which so
swiftly followed the disaffection of Caligastia and
Daligastia. And there came a time in the planetary history,
almost forty thousand years ago, when the Life Carriers on
duty took note that, from a purely biologic standpoint, the
developmental progress of the Urantia races was nearing its
apex. The Melchizedek receivers, concurring in this opinion,
readily agreed to join the Life Carriers in a petition to
the Most Highs of Edentia asking that Urantia be inspected
with a view to authorizing the dispatch of biologic
uplifters, a Material Son and Daughter.
This request was
addressed to the Most Highs of Edentia because they had
exercised direct jurisdiction over many of Urantia's affairs
ever since Caligastia's downfall and the temporary vacation
of authority on Jerusem.
Tabamantia,
sovereign supervisor of the series of decimal or
experimental worlds, came to inspect the planet and, after
his survey of racial progress, duly recommended that Urantia
be granted Material Sons. In a little less than one hundred
years from the time of this inspection, Adam and Eve, a
Material Son and Daughter of the local system, arrived and
began the difficult task of attempting to untangle the
confused affairs of a planet retarded by rebellion and
resting under the ban of spiritual isolation.
1. THE NODITES
AND THE AMADONITES
On a normal
planet the arrival of the Material Son would ordinarily
herald the approach of a great age of invention, material
progress, and intellectual enlightenment. The post-Adamic
era is the great scientific age of most worlds, but not so
on Urantia. Though the planet was peopled by races
physically fit, the tribes languished in the depths of
savagery and moral stagnation.
Ten thousand
years after the rebellion practically all the gains of the
Prince's administration had been effaced; the races of the
world were little better off than if this misguided Son had
never come to Urantia. Only among the Nodites and the
Amadonites was there persistence of the traditions of
Dalamatia and the culture of the Planetary Prince.
The Nodites
were the descendants of the rebel members of the Prince's
staff, their name deriving from their first leader, Nod,
onetime chairman of the Dalamatia commission on industry and
trade. The Amadonites were the descendants of those
Andonites who chose to remain loyal with Van and Amadon.
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"Amadonite" is more of a
cultural and religious designation than a racial term;
racially considered the Amadonites were essentially
Andonites. "Nodite" is both a cultural and racial term,
for the Nodites themselves constituted the eighth race of
Urantia.
There existed a
traditional enmity between the Nodites and the Amadonites.
This feud was constantly coming to the surface whenever the
offspring of these two groups would try to engage in some
common enterprise. Even later, in the affairs of Eden, it
was exceedingly difficult for them to work together in
peace.
Shortly after
the destruction of Dalamatia the followers of Nod became
divided into three major groups. The central group remained
in the immediate vicinity of their original home near the
headwaters of the Persian Gulf. The eastern group migrated
to the highland regions of Elam just east of the Euphrates
valley. The western group was situated on the northeastern
Syrian shores of the Mediterranean and in adjacent
territory.
These Nodites
had freely mated with the Sangik races and had left behind
an able progeny. And some of the descendants of the
rebellious Dalamatians subsequently joined Van and his loyal
followers in the lands north of Mesopotamia. Here, in the
vicinity of Lake Van and the southern Caspian Sea region,
the Nodites mingled and mixed with the Amadonites, and they
were numbered among the "mighty men of old."
Prior to the
arrival of Adam and Eve these groups÷Nodites and
Amadonites÷were the most advanced and cultured races on
earth.
2. PLANNING FOR
THE GARDEN
For almost one
hundred years prior to Tabamantia's inspection, Van and his
associates, from their highland headquarters of world ethics
and culture, had been preaching the advent of a promised Son
of God, a racial uplifter, a teacher of truth, and the
worthy successor of the traitorous Caligastia. Though the
majority of the world's inhabitants of those days exhibited
little or no interest in such a prediction, those who were
in immediate contact with Van and Amadon took such teaching
seriously and began to plan for the actual reception of the
promised Son.
Van told his
nearest associates the story of the Material Sons on
Jerusem; what he had known of them before ever he came to
Urantia. He well knew that these Adamic Sons always lived in
simple but charming garden homes and proposed, eighty-three
years before the arrival of Adam and Eve, that they devote
themselves to the proclamation of their advent and to the
preparation of a garden home for their reception.
From their
highland headquarters and from sixty-one far-scattered
settlements, Van and Amadon recruited a corps of over three
thousand willing and enthusiastic workers who, in solemn
assembly, dedicated themselves to this mission of preparing
for the promised÷at least expected÷Son.
Van divided his
volunteers into one hundred companies with a captain over
each and an associate who served on his personal staff as a
liaison officer, keeping Amadon as his own associate. These
commissions all began in earnest their preliminary work, and
the committee on location for the Garden sallied forth in
search of the ideal spot.
Although
Caligastia and Daligastia had been deprived of much of their
power for evil, they did everything possible to frustrate
and hamper the work
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of preparing the Garden. But
their evil machinations were largely offset by the faithful
activities of the almost ten thousand loyal midway creatures
who so tirelessly labored to advance the enterprise.
3. THE GARDEN
SITE
The committee on
location was absent for almost three years. It reported
favorably concerning three possible locations: The first was
an island in the Persian Gulf; the second, the river
location subsequently occupied as the second garden; the
third, a long narrow peninsula÷almost an island÷projecting
westward from the eastern shores of the Mediterranean Sea.
The committee
almost unanimously favored the third selection. This site
was chosen, and two years were occupied in transferring the
world's cultural headquarters, including the tree of life,
to this Mediterranean peninsula. All but a single group of
the peninsula dwellers peaceably vacated when Van and his
company arrived.
This
Mediterranean peninsula had a salubrious climate and an
equable temperature; this stabilized weather was due to the
encircling mountains and to the fact that this area was
virtually an island in an inland sea. While it rained
copiously on the surrounding highlands, it seldom rained in
Eden proper. But each night, from the extensive network of
artificial irrigation channels, a "mist would go up" to
refresh the vegetation of the Garden.
The coast line
of this land mass was considerably elevated, and the neck
connecting with the mainland was only twenty-seven miles
wide at the narrowest point. The great river that watered
the Garden came down from the higher lands of the peninsula
and flowed east through the peninsular neck to the mainland
and thence across the lowlands of Mesopotamia to the sea
beyond. It was fed by four tributaries which took origin in
the coastal hills of the Edenic peninsula, and these are the
"four heads" of the river which "went out of Eden," and
which later became confused with the branches of the rivers
surrounding the second garden.
The mountains
surrounding the Garden abounded in precious stones and
metals, though these received very little attention. The
dominant idea was to be the glorification of horticulture
and the exaltation of agriculture.
The site chosen
for the Garden was probably the most beautiful spot of its
kind in all the world, and the climate was then ideal.
Nowhere else was there a location which could have lent
itself so perfectly to becoming such a paradise of botanic
expression. In this rendezvous the cream of the civilization
of Urantia was forgathering. Without and beyond, the world
lay in darkness, ignorance, and savagery. Eden was the one
bright spot on Urantia; it was naturally a dream of
loveliness, and it soon became a poem of exquisite and
perfected landscape glory.
4. ESTABLISHING
THE GARDEN
When Material
Sons, the biologic uplifters, begin their sojourn on an
evolutionary world, their place of abode is often called the
Garden of Eden because it is characterized by the floral
beauty and the botanic grandeur of Edentia, the
constellation capital. Van well knew of these customs and
accordingly provided that the entire peninsula be given over
to the Garden. Pasturage and animal husbandry were projected
for the adjoining mainland. Of animal life, only the
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birds and the various
domesticated species were to be found in the park. Van's
instructions were that Eden was to be a garden, and only a
garden. No animals were ever slaughtered within its
precincts. All flesh eaten by the Garden workers throughout
all the years of construction was brought in from the herds
maintained under guard on the mainland.
The first task
was the building of the brick wall across the neck of the
peninsula. This once completed, the real work of landscape
beautification and home building could proceed unhindered.
A zoological
garden was created by building a smaller wall just outside
the main wall; the intervening space, occupied by all manner
of wild beasts, served as an additional defense against
hostile attacks. This menagerie was organized in twelve
grand divisions, and walled paths led between these groups
to the twelve gates of the Garden, the river and its
adjacent pastures occupying the central area.
In the
preparation of the Garden only volunteer laborers were
employed; no hirelings were ever used. They cultivated the
Garden and tended their herds for support; contributions of
food were also received from near-by believers. And this
great enterprise was carried through to completion in spite
of the difficulties attendant upon the confused status of
the world during these troublous times.
But it was a
cause for great disappointment when Van, not knowing how
soon the expected Son and Daughter might come, suggested
that the younger generation also be trained in the work of
carrying on the enterprise in case their arrival should be
delayed. This seemed like an admission of lack of faith on
Van's part and made considerable trouble, caused many
desertions; but Van went forward with his plan of
preparedness, meantime filling the places of the deserters
with younger volunteers.
5. THE GARDEN
HOME
At the center of
the Edenic peninsula was the exquisite stone temple of the
Universal Father, the sacred shrine of the Garden. To the
north the administrative headquarters was established; to
the south were built the homes for the workers and their
families; to the west was provided the allotment of ground
for the proposed schools of the educational system of the
expected Son, while in the "east of Eden" were built the
domiciles intended for the promised Son and his immediate
offspring. The architectural plans for Eden provided homes
and abundant land for one million human beings.
At the time of
Adam's arrival, though the Garden was only one-fourth
finished, it had thousands of miles of irrigation ditches
and more than twelve thousand miles of paved paths and
roads. There were a trifle over five thousand brick
buildings in the various sectors, and the trees and plants
were almost beyond number. Seven was the largest number of
houses composing any one cluster in the park. And though the
structures of the Garden were simple, they were most
artistic. The roads and paths were well built, and the
landscaping was exquisite.
The sanitary
arrangements of the Garden were far in advance of anything
that had been attempted theretofore on Urantia. The drinking
water of Eden was kept wholesome by the strict observance of
the sanitary regulations designed to conserve its purity.
During these early times much trouble came about from
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neglect of these rules, but
Van gradually impressed upon his associates the importance
of allowing nothing to fall into the water supply of the
Garden.
Before the later
establishment of a sewage-disposal system the Edenites
practiced the scrupulous burial of all waste or decomposing
material. Amadon's inspectors made their rounds each day in
search for possible causes of sickness. Urantians did not
again awaken to the importance of the prevention of human
diseases until the later times of the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries. Before the disruption of the Adamic
regime a covered brick-conduit disposal system had been
constructed which ran beneath the walls and emptied into the
river of Eden almost a mile beyond the outer or lesser wall
of the Garden.
By the time of
Adam's arrival most of the plants of that section of the
world were growing in Eden. Already had many of the fruits,
cereals, and nuts been greatly improved. Many modern
vegetables and cereals were first cultivated here, but
scores of varieties of food plants were subsequently lost to
the world.
About five per
cent of the Garden was under high artificial cultivation,
fifteen per cent partially cultivated, the remainder being
left in a more or less natural state pending the arrival of
Adam, it being thought best to finish the park in accordance
with his ideas.
And so was the
Garden of Eden made ready for the reception of the promised
Adam and his consort. And this Garden would have done honor
to a world under perfected administration and normal
control. Adam and Eve were well pleased with the general
plan of Eden, though they made many changes in the
furnishings of their own personal dwelling.
Although the
work of embellishment was hardly finished at the time of
Adam's arrival, the place was already a gem of botanic
beauty; and during the early days of his sojourn in Eden the
whole Garden took on new form and assumed new proportions of
beauty and grandeur. Never before this time nor after has
Urantia harbored such a beautiful and replete exhibition of
horticulture and agriculture.
6. THE TREE OF
LIFE
In the center of
the Garden temple Van planted the long-guarded tree of life,
whose leaves were for the "healing of the nations," and
whose fruit had so long sustained him on earth. Van well
knew that Adam and Eve would also be dependent on this gift
of Edentia for their life maintenance after they once
appeared on Urantia in material form.
The Material
Sons on the system capitals do not require the tree of life
for sustenance. Only in the planetary repersonalization are
they dependent on this adjunct to physical immortality.
The "tree of the
knowledge of good and evil" may be a figure of speech, a
symbolic designation covering a multitude of human
experiences, but the "tree of life" was not a myth; it was
real and for a long time was present on Urantia. When the
Most Highs of Edentia approved the commission of Caligastia
as Planetary Prince of Urantia and those of the one hundred
Jerusem citizens as his administrative staff, they sent to
the planet, by the Melchizedeks, a shrub of Edentia, and
this plant grew to be the tree of life on Urantia. This form
of nonintelligent life is native to the constellation
headquarters spheres, being also found on the headquarters
worlds of the local and superuniverses as well as on the
Havona spheres, but not on the system capitals.
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This superplant
stored up certain space-energies which were antidotal to the
age-producing elements of animal existence. The fruit of the
tree of life was like a superchemical storage battery,
mysteriously releasing the life-extension force of the
universe when eaten. This form of sustenance was wholly
useless to the ordinary evolutionary beings on Urantia, but
specifically it was serviceable to the one hundred
materialized members of Caligastia's staff and to the one
hundred modified Andonites who had contributed of their life
plasm to the Prince's staff, and who, in return, were made
possessors of that complement of life which made it possible
for them to utilize the fruit of the tree of life for an
indefinite extension of their otherwise mortal existence.
During the days
of the Prince's rule the tree was growing from the earth in
the central and circular courtyard of the Father's temple.
Upon the outbreak of the rebellion it was regrown from the
central core by Van and his associates in their temporary
camp. This Edentia shrub was subsequently taken to their
highland retreat, where it served both Van and Amadon for
more than one hundred and fifty thousand years.
When Van and his
associates made ready the Garden for Adam and Eve, they
transplanted the Edentia tree to the Garden of Eden, where,
once again, it grew in a central, circular courtyard of
another temple to the Father. And Adam and Eve periodically
partook of its fruit for the maintenance of their dual form
of physical life.
When the plans
of the Material Son went astray, Adam and his family were
not permitted to carry the core of the tree away from the
Garden. When the Nodites invaded Eden, they were told that
they would become as "gods if they partook of the fruit of
the tree." Much to their surprise they found it unguarded.
They ate freely of the fruit for years, but it did nothing
for them; they were all material mortals of the realm; they
lacked that endowment which acted as a complement to the
fruit of the tree. They became enraged at their inability to
benefit from the tree of life, and in connection with one of
their internal wars, the temple and the tree were both
destroyed by fire; only the stone wall stood until the
Garden was subsequently submerged. This was the second
temple of the Father to perish.
And now must all
flesh on Urantia take the natural course of life and death.
Adam, Eve, their children, and their children's children,
together with their associates, all perished in the course
of time, thus becoming subject to the ascension scheme of
the local universe wherein mansion world resurrection
follows material death.
7. THE FATE OF
EDEN
After the first
garden was vacated by Adam, it was occupied variously by the
Nodites, Cutites, and the Suntites. It later became the
dwelling place of the northern Nodites who opposed
co-operation with the Adamites. The peninsula had been
overrun by these lower-grade Nodites for almost four
thousand years after Adam left the Garden when, in
connection with the violent activity of the surrounding
volcanoes and the submergence of the Sicilian land bridge to
Africa, the eastern floor of the Mediterranean Sea sank,
carrying down beneath the waters the whole of the Edenic
peninsula. Concomitant with this vast submergence the coast
line of the eastern Mediterranean was greatly elevated. And
this
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was the end of the most
beautiful natural creation that Urantia has ever harbored.
The sinking was not sudden, several hundred years being
required completely to submerge the entire peninsula.
We cannot regard
this disappearance of the Garden as being in any way a
result of the miscarriage of the divine plans or as a result
of the mistakes of Adam and Eve. We do not regard the
submergence of Eden as anything but a natural occurrence,
but it does seem to us that the sinking of the Garden was
timed to occur at just about the date of the accumulation of
the reserves of the violet race for undertaking the work of
rehabilitating the world peoples.
The Melchizedeks
counseled Adam not to initiate the program of racial uplift
and blending until his own family had numbered one-half
million. It was never intended that the Garden should be the
permanent home of the Adamites. They were to become
emissaries of a new life to all the world; they were to
mobilize for unselfish bestowal upon the needy races of
earth.
The instructions
given Adam by the Melchizedeks implied that he was to
establish racial, continental, and divisional headquarters
to be in charge of his immediate sons and daughters, while
he and Eve were to divide their time among these various
world capitals as advisers and co-ordinators of the
world-wide ministry of biologic uplift, intellectual
advancement, and moral rehabilitation.
[Presented by
Solonia, the seraphic "voice in the Garden."] |