PAPER 75
- THE DEFAULT OF ADAM AND EVE
After more than one
hundred years of effort on Urantia, Adam was able to see
very little progress outside the Garden; the world at large
did not seem to be improving much. The realization of race
betterment appeared to be a long way off, and the situation
seemed so desperate as to demand something for relief not
embraced in the original plans. At least that is what often
passed through Adam's mind, and he so expressed himself many
times to Eve. Adam and his mate were loyal, but they were
isolated from their kind, and they were sorely distressed by
the sorry plight of their world.
1. THE URANTIA
PROBLEM
The Adamic mission on
experimental, rebellion-seared, and isolated Urantia was a
formidable undertaking. And the Material Son and Daughter
early became aware of the difficulty and complexity of their
planetary assignment. Nevertheless, they courageously set
about the task of solving their manifold problems. But when
they addressed themselves to the all-important work of
eliminating the defectives and degenerates from among the
human strains, they were quite dismayed. They could see no
way out of the dilemma, and they could not take counsel with
their superiors on either Jerusem or Edentia. Here they
were, isolated and day by day confronted with some new and
complicated tangle, some problem that seemed to be
unsolvable.
Under normal conditions
the first work of a Planetary Adam and Eve would be the
co-ordination and blending of the races. But on Urantia such
a project seemed just about hopeless, for the races, while
biologically fit, had never been purged of their retarded
and defective strains.
Adam and Eve found
themselves on a sphere wholly unprepared for the
proclamation of the brotherhood of man, a world groping
about in abject spiritual darkness and cursed with confusion
worse confounded by the miscarriage of the mission of the
preceding administration. Mind and morals were at a low
level, and instead of beginning the task of effecting
religious unity, they must begin all anew the work of
converting the inhabitants to the most simple forms of
religious belief. Instead of finding one language ready for
adoption, they were confronted by the world-wide confusion
of hundreds upon hundreds of local dialects. No Adam of the
planetary service was ever set down on a more difficult
world; the obstacles seemed insuperable and the problems
beyond creature solution.
They were isolated, and
the tremendous sense of loneliness which bore down upon them
was all the more heightened by the early departure of the
Melchizedek receivers. Only indirectly, by means of the
angelic orders, could they communicate
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with any being off the
planet. Slowly their courage weakened, their spirits
drooped, and sometimes their faith almost faltered.
And this is the true
picture of the consternation of these two noble souls as
they pondered the tasks which confronted them. They were
both keenly aware of the enormous undertaking involved in
the execution of their planetary assignment.
Probably no Material Sons
of Nebadon were ever faced with such a difficult and
seemingly hopeless task as confronted Adam and Eve in the
sorry plight of Urantia. But they would have sometime met
with success had they been more farseeing and patient.
Both of them, especially Eve, were altogether too impatient;
they were not willing to settle down to the long, long
endurance test. They wanted to see some immediate results,
and they did, but the results thus secured proved most
disastrous both to themselves and to their world.
2. CALIGASTIA'S
PLOT
Caligastia paid frequent
visits to the Garden and held many conferences with Adam and
Eve, but they were adamant to all his suggestions of
compromise and short-cut adventures. They had before them
enough of the results of rebellion to produce effective
immunity against all such insinuating proposals. Even the
young offspring of Adam were uninfluenced by the overtures
of Daligastia. And of course neither Caligastia nor his
associate had power to influence any individual against his
will, much less to persuade the children of Adam to do
wrong.
It must be remembered that
Caligastia was still the titular Planetary Prince of
Urantia, a misguided but nevertheless high Son of the local
universe. He was not finally deposed until the times of
Christ Michael on Urantia.
But the fallen Prince was
persistent and determined. He soon gave up working on Adam
and decided to try a wily flank attack on Eve. The evil one
concluded that the only hope for success lay in the adroit
employment of suitable persons belonging to the upper strata
of the Nodite group, the descendants of his onetime
corporeal-staff associates. And the plans were accordingly
laid for entrapping the mother of the violet race.
It was farthest from Eve's
intention ever to do anything which would militate against
Adam's plans or jeopardize their planetary trust. Knowing
the tendency of woman to look upon immediate results rather
than to plan farsightedly for more remote effects, the
Melchizedeks, before departing, had especially enjoined Eve
as to the peculiar dangers besetting their isolated position
on the planet and had in particular warned her never to
stray from the side of her mate, that is, to attempt no
personal or secret methods of furthering their mutual
undertakings. Eve had most scrupulously carried out these
instructions for more than one hundred years, and it did not
occur to her that any danger would attach to the
increasingly private and confidential visits she was
enjoying with a certain Nodite leader named Serapatatia. The
whole affair developed so gradually and naturally that she
was taken unawares.
The Garden dwellers had
been in contact with the Nodites since the early days of
Eden. From these mixed descendants of the defaulting members
of Caligastia's staff they had received much valuable help
and co-operation, and through them the Edenic regime was now
to meet its complete undoing and final overthrow.
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3. THE TEMPTATION
OF EVE
Adam had just finished his
first one hundred years on earth when Serapatatia, upon the
death of his father, came to the leadership of the western
or Syrian confederation of the Nodite tribes. Serapatatia
was a brown-tinted man, a brilliant descendant of the
onetime chief of the Dalamatia commission on health mated
with one of the master female minds of the blue race of
those distant days. All down through the ages this line had
held authority and wielded a great influence among the
western Nodite tribes.
Serapatatia had made
several visits to the Garden and had become deeply impressed
with the righteousness of Adam's cause. And shortly after
assuming the leadership of the Syrian Nodites, he announced
his intention of establishing an affiliation with the work
of Adam and Eve in the Garden. The majority of his people
joined him in this program, and Adam was cheered by the news
that the most powerful and the most intelligent of all the
neighboring tribes had swung over almost bodily to the
support of the program for world improvement; it was
decidedly heartening. And shortly after this great event,
Serapatatia and his new staff were entertained by Adam and
Eve in their own home.
Serapatatia became one of
the most able and efficient of all of Adam's lieutenants. He
was entirely honest and thoroughly sincere in all of his
activities; he was never conscious, even later on, that he
was being used as a circumstantial tool of the wily
Caligastia.
Presently, Serapatatia
became the associate chairman of the Edenic commission on
tribal relations, and many plans were laid for the more
vigorous prosecution of the work of winning the remote
tribes to the cause of the Garden.
He held many conferences
with Adam and Eve--especially with Eve--and they talked over
many plans for improving their methods. One day, during a
talk with Eve, it occurred to Serapatatia that it would be
very helpful if, while awaiting the recruiting of large
numbers of the violet race, something could be done in the
meantime immediately to advance the needy waiting tribes.
Serapatatia contended that, if the Nodites, as the most
progressive and co-operative race, could have a leader born
to them of part origin in the violet stock, it would
constitute a powerful tie binding these peoples more closely
to the Garden. And all of this was soberly and honestly
considered to be for the good of the world since this child,
to be reared and educated in the Garden, would exert a great
influence for good over his father's people.
It should again be
emphasized that Serapatatia was altogether honest and wholly
sincere in all that he proposed. He never once suspected
that he was playing into the hands of Caligastia and
Daligastia. Serapatatia was entirely loyal to the plan of
building up a strong reserve of the violet race before
attempting the world-wide upstepping of the confused peoples
of Urantia. But this would require hundreds of years to
consummate, and he was impatient; he wanted to see some
immediate results--something in his own lifetime. He made it
clear to Eve that Adam was oftentimes discouraged by the
little that had been accomplished toward uplifting the
world.
For more than five years
these plans were secretly matured. At last they had
developed to the point where Eve consented to have a secret
conference with
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Cano, the most brilliant mind
and active leader of the near-by colony of friendly Nodites.
Cano was very sympathetic with the Adamic regime; in fact,
he was the sincere spiritual leader of those neighboring
Nodites who favored friendly relations with the Garden.
The fateful meeting
occurred during the twilight hours of the autumn evening,
not far from the home of Adam. Eve had never before met the
beautiful and enthusiastic Cano--and he was a magnificent
specimen of the survival of the superior physique and
outstanding intellect of his remote progenitors of the
Prince's staff. And Cano also thoroughly believed in the
righteousness of the Serapatatia project. (Outside of the
Garden, multiple mating was a common practice.)
Influenced by flattery,
enthusiasm, and great personal persuasion, Eve then and
there consented to embark upon the much-discussed
enterprise, to add her own little scheme of world saving to
the larger and more far-reaching divine plan. Before she
quite realized what was transpiring, the fatal step had been
taken. It was done.
4. THE
REALIZATION OF DEFAULT
The celestial life of the
planet was astir. Adam recognized that something was wrong,
and he asked Eve to come aside with him in the Garden. And
now, for the first time, Adam heard the entire story of the
long-nourished plan for accelerating world improvement by
operating simultaneously in two directions: the prosecution
of the divine plan concomitantly with the execution of the
Serapatatia enterprise.
And as the Material Son
and Daughter thus communed in the moonlit Garden, "the voice
in the Garden" reproved them for disobedience. And that
voice was none other than my own announcement to the Edenic
pair that they had transgressed the Garden covenant; that
they had disobeyed the instructions of the Melchizedeks;
that they had defaulted in the execution of their oaths of
trust to the sovereign of the universe.
Eve had consented to
participate in the practice of good and evil. Good is the
carrying out of the divine plans; sin is a deliberate
transgression of the divine will; evil is the misadaptation
of plans and the maladjustment of techniques resulting in
universe disharmony and planetary confusion.
Every time the Garden pair
had partaken of the fruit of the tree of life, they had been
warned by the archangel custodian to refrain from yielding
to the suggestions of Caligastia to combine good and evil.
They had been thus admonished: "In the day that you
commingle good and evil, you shall surely become as the
mortals of the realm; you shall surely die."
Eve had told Cano of this
oft-repeated warning on the fateful occasion of their secret
meeting, but Cano, not knowing the import or significance of
such admonitions, had assured her that men and women with
good motives and true intentions could do no evil; that she
should surely not die but rather live anew in the person of
their offspring, who would grow up to bless and stabilize
the world.
Even though this project
of modifying the divine plan had been conceived and executed
with entire sincerity and with only the highest motives
concerning the welfare of the world, it constituted evil
because it represented the wrong way to achieve righteous
ends, because it departed from the right way, the divine
plan.
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True, Eve had found Cano
pleasant to the eyes, and she realized all that her seducer
promised by way of "new and increased knowledge of human
affairs and quickened understanding of human nature as
supplemental to the comprehension of the Adamic nature."
I talked to the father and
mother of the violet race that night in the Garden as became
my duty under the sorrowful circumstances. I listened fully
to the recital of all that led up to the default of Mother
Eve and gave both of them advice and counsel concerning the
immediate situation. Some of this advice they followed; some
they disregarded. This conference appears in your records as
"the Lord God calling to Adam and Eve in the Garden and
asking, `Where are you?'" It was the practice of later
generations to attribute everything unusual and
extraordinary, whether natural or spiritual, directly to the
personal intervention of the Gods.
5. REPERCUSSIONS
OF DEFAULT
Eve's disillusionment was
truly pathetic. Adam discerned the whole predicament and,
while heartbroken and dejected, entertained only pity and
sympathy for his erring mate.
It was in the despair of
the realization of failure that Adam, the day after Eve's
misstep, sought out Laotta, the brilliant Nodite woman who
was head of the western schools of the Garden, and with
premeditation committed the folly of Eve. But do not
misunderstand; Adam was not beguiled; he knew exactly what
he was about; he deliberately chose to share the fate of
Eve. He loved his mate with a supermortal affection, and the
thought of the possibility of a lonely vigil on Urantia
without her was more than he could endure.
When they learned what had
happened to Eve, the infuriated inhabitants of the Garden
became unmanageable; they declared war on the near-by Nodite
settlement. They swept out through the gates of Eden and
down upon these unprepared people, utterly destroying
them--not a man, woman, or child was spared. And Cano, the
father of Cain yet unborn, also perished.
Upon the realization of
what had happened, Serapatatia was overcome with
consternation and beside himself with fear and remorse. The
next day he drowned himself in the great river.
The children of Adam
sought to comfort their distracted mother while their father
wandered in solitude for thirty days. At the end of that
time judgment asserted itself, and Adam returned to his home
and began to plan for their future course of action.
The consequences of the
follies of misguided parents are so often shared by their
innocent children. The upright and noble sons and daughters
of Adam and Eve were overwhelmed by the inexplicable sorrow
of the unbelievable tragedy which had been so suddenly and
so ruthlessly thrust upon them. Not in fifty years did the
older of these children recover from the sorrow and sadness
of those tragic days, especially the terror of that period
of thirty days during which their father was absent from
home while their distracted mother was in complete ignorance
of his whereabouts or fate.
And those same thirty days
were as long years of sorrow and suffering to Eve. Never did
this noble soul fully recover from the effects of that
excruciating period of mental suffering and spiritual
sorrow. No feature of their subsequent deprivations and
material hardships ever began to compare in Eve's memory
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with those terrible days and
awful nights of loneliness and unbearable uncertainty. She
learned of the rash act of Serapatatia and did not know
whether her mate had in sorrow destroyed himself or had been
removed from the world in retribution for her misstep. And
when Adam returned, Eve experienced a satisfaction of joy
and gratitude that never was effaced by their long and
difficult life partnership of toiling service.
Time passed, but Adam was
not certain of the nature of their offense until seventy
days after the default of Eve, when the Melchizedek
receivers returned to Urantia and assumed jurisdiction over
world affairs. And then he knew they had failed.
But still more trouble was
brewing: The news of the annihilation of the Nodite
settlement near Eden was not slow in reaching the home
tribes of Serapatatia to the north, and presently a great
host was assembling to march on the Garden. And this was the
beginning of a long and bitter warfare between the Adamites
and the Nodites, for these hostilities kept up long after
Adam and his followers emigrated to the second garden in the
Euphrates valley. There was intense and lasting "enmity
between that man and the woman, between his seed and her
seed."
6. ADAM AND EVE
LEAVE THE GARDEN
When Adam learned that the
Nodites were on the march, he sought the counsel of the
Melchizedeks, but they refused to advise him, only telling
him to do as he thought best and promising their friendly
co-operation, as far as possible, in any course he might
decide upon. The Melchizedeks had been forbidden to
interfere with the personal plans of Adam and Eve.
Adam knew that he and Eve
had failed; the presence of the Melchizedek receivers told
him that, though he still knew nothing of their personal
status or future fate. He held an all-night conference with
some twelve hundred loyal followers who pledged themselves
to follow their leader, and the next day at noon these
pilgrims went forth from Eden in quest of new homes. Adam
had no liking for war and accordingly elected to leave the
first garden to the Nodites unopposed.
The Edenic caravan was
halted on the third day out from the Garden by the arrival
of the seraphic transports from Jerusem. And for the first
time Adam and Eve were informed of what was to become of
their children. While the transports stood by, those
children who had arrived at the age of choice (twenty years)
were given the option of remaining on Urantia with their
parents or of becoming wards of the Most Highs of
Norlatiadek. Two thirds chose to go to Edentia; about one
third elected to remain with their parents. All children of
prechoice age were taken to Edentia. No one could have
beheld the sorrowful parting of this Material Son and
Daughter and their children without realizing that the way
of the transgressor is hard. These offspring of Adam and Eve
are now on Edentia; we do not know what disposition is to be
made of them.
It was a sad, sad caravan
that prepared to journey on. Could anything have been more
tragic! To have come to a world in such high hopes, to have
been so auspiciously received, and then to go forth in
disgrace from Eden, only to lose more than three fourths of
their children even before finding a new abiding place!
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7. DEGRADATION OF
ADAM AND EVE
It was while the Edenic
caravan was halted that Adam and Eve were informed of the
nature of their transgressions and advised concerning their
fate. Gabriel appeared to pronounce judgment. And this was
the verdict: The Planetary Adam and Eve of Urantia are
adjudged in default; they have violated the covenant of
their trusteeship as the rulers of this inhabited world.
While downcast by the
sense of guilt, Adam and Eve were greatly cheered by the
announcement that their judges on Salvington had absolved
them from all charges of standing in "contempt of the
universe government." They had not been held guilty of
rebellion.
The Edenic pair were
informed that they had degraded themselves to the status of
the mortals of the realm; that they must henceforth conduct
themselves as man and woman of Urantia, looking to the
future of the world races for their future.
Long before Adam and Eve
left Jerusem, their instructors had fully explained to them
the consequences of any vital departure from the divine
plans. I had personally and repeatedly warned them, both
before and after they arrived on Urantia, that reduction to
the status of mortal flesh would be the certain result, the
sure penalty, which would unfailingly attend default in the
execution of their planetary mission. But a comprehension of
the immortality status of the material order of sonship is
essential to a clear understanding of the consequences
attendant upon the default of Adam and Eve.
1. Adam and Eve, like
their fellows on Jerusem, maintained immortal status through
intellectual association with the mind-gravity circuit of
the Spirit. When this vital sustenance is broken by mental
disjunction, then, regardless of the spiritual level of
creature existence, immortality status is lost. Mortal
status followed by physical dissolution was the inevitable
consequence of the intellectual default of Adam and Eve.
2. The Material Son and
Daughter of Urantia, being also personalized in the
similitude of the mortal flesh of this world, were further
dependent on the maintenance of a dual circulatory system,
the one derived from their physical natures, the other from
the superenergy stored in the fruit of the tree of life.
Always had the archangel custodian admonished Adam and Eve
that default of trust would culminate in degradation of
status, and access to this source of energy was denied them
subsequent to their default.
Caligastia did succeed in
trapping Adam and Eve, but he did not accomplish his purpose
of leading them into open rebellion against the universe
government. What they had done was indeed evil, but they
were never guilty of contempt for truth, neither did they
knowingly enlist in rebellion against the righteous rule of
the Universal Father and his Creator Son.
8. THE SO-CALLED
FALL OF MAN
Adam and Eve did fall from
their high estate of material sonship down to the lowly
status of mortal man. But that was not the fall of man. The
human race has been uplifted despite the immediate
consequences of the Adamic default. Although the divine plan
of giving the violet race to the Urantia peoples miscarried,
the mortal races have profited enormously from the limited
contribution which Adam and his descendants made to the
Urantia races.
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There has been no "fall of
man." The history of the human race is one of progressive
evolution, and the Adamic bestowal left the world peoples
greatly improved over their previous biologic condition. The
more superior stocks of Urantia now contain inheritance
factors derived from as many as four separate sources:
Andonite, Sangik, Nodite, and Adamic.
Adam should not be
regarded as the cause of a curse on the human race. While he
did fail in carrying forward the divine plan, while he did
transgress his covenant with Deity, while he and his mate
were most certainly degraded in creature status,
notwithstanding all this, their contribution to the human
race did much to advance civilization on Urantia.
In estimating the results
of the Adamic mission on your world, justice demands the
recognition of the condition of the planet. Adam was
confronted with a well-nigh hopeless task when, with his
beautiful mate, he was transported from Jerusem to this dark
and confused planet. But had they been guided by the counsel
of the Melchizedeks and their associates, and had they
been more patient, they would have eventually met with
success. But Eve listened to the insidious propaganda of
personal liberty and planetary freedom of action. She was
led to experiment with the life plasm of the material order
of sonship in that she allowed this life trust to become
prematurely commingled with that of the then mixed order of
the original design of the Life Carriers which had been
previously combined with that of the reproducing beings once
attached to the staff of the Planetary Prince.
Never, in all your ascent
to Paradise, will you gain anything by impatiently
attempting to circumvent the established and divine plan by
short cuts, personal inventions, or other devices for
improving on the way of perfection, to perfection, and for
eternal perfection.
All in all, there probably
never was a more disheartening miscarriage of wisdom on any
planet in all Nebadon. But it is not surprising that these
missteps occur in the affairs of the evolutionary universes.
We are a part of a gigantic creation, and it is not strange
that everything does not work in perfection; our universe
was not created in perfection. Perfection is our eternal
goal, not our origin.
If this were a mechanistic
universe, if the First Great Source and Center were only a
force and not also a personality, if all creation were a
vast aggregation of physical matter dominated by precise
laws characterized by unvarying energy actions, then might
perfection obtain, even despite the incompleteness of
universe status. There would be no disagreement; there would
be no friction. But in our evolving universe of relative
perfection and imperfection we rejoice that disagreement and
misunderstanding are possible, for thereby is evidenced the
fact and the act of personality in the universe. And if our
creation is an existence dominated by personality, then can
you be assured of the possibilities of personality survival,
advancement, and achievement; we can be confident of
personality growth, experience, and adventure. What a
glorious universe, in that it is personal and progressive,
not merely mechanical or even passively perfect!
[Presented by Solonia, the
seraphic "voice in the Garden."] |