PAPER 94
- THE MELCHIZEDEK TEACHINGS IN THE ORIENT
The early teachers of the
Salem religion penetrated to the remotest tribes of Africa
and Eurasia, ever preaching Machiventa's gospel of man's
faith and trust in the one universal God as the only price
of obtaining divine favor. Melchizedek's covenant with
Abraham was the pattern for all the early propaganda that
went out from Salem and other centers. Urantia has never had
more enthusiastic and aggressive missionaries of any
religion than these noble men and women who carried the
teachings of Melchizedek over the entire Eastern Hemisphere.
These missionaries were recruited from many peoples and
races, and they largely spread their teachings through the
medium of native converts. They established training centers
in different parts of the world where they taught the
natives the Salem religion and then commissioned these
pupils to function as teachers among their own people.
1. THE SALEM
TEACHINGS IN VEDIC INDIA
In the days of
Melchizedek, India was a cosmopolitan country which had
recently come under the political and religious dominance of
the Aryan-Andite invaders from the north and west. At this
time only the northern and western portions of the peninsula
had been extensively permeated by the Aryans. These Vedic
newcomers had brought along with them their many tribal
deities. Their religious forms of worship followed closely
the ceremonial practices of their earlier Andite forebears
in that the father still functioned as a priest and the
mother as a priestess, and the family hearth was still
utilized as an altar.
The Vedic cult was then in
process of growth and metamorphosis under the direction of
the Brahman caste of teacher-priests, who were gradually
assuming control over the expanding ritual of worship. The
amalgamation of the onetime thirty-three Aryan deities was
well under way when the Salem missionaries penetrated the
north of India.
The polytheism of these
Aryans represented a degeneration of their earlier
monotheism occasioned by their separation into tribal units,
each tribe having its venerated god. This devolution of the
original monotheism and trinitarianism of Andite Mesopotamia
was in process of resynthesis in the early centuries of the
second millennium before Christ. The many gods were
organized into a pantheon under the triune leadership of
Dyaus pitar, the lord of heaven; Indra, the tempestuous lord
of the atmosphere; and Agni, the three-headed fire god, lord
of the earth and the vestigial symbol of an earlier Trinity
concept.
Definite henotheistic
developments were paving the way for an evolved monotheism.
Agni, the most ancient deity, was often exalted as the
father-head of the
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entire pantheon. The
deity-father principle, sometimes called Prajapati,
sometimes termed Brahma, was submerged in the theologic
battle which the Brahman priests later fought with the Salem
teachers. The Brahman was conceived as the
energy-divinity principle activating the entire Vedic
pantheon.
The Salem missionaries
preached the one God of Melchizedek, the Most High of
heaven. This portrayal was not altogether disharmonious with
the emerging concept of the Father-Brahma as the source of
all gods, but the Salem doctrine was nonritualistic and
hence ran directly counter to the dogmas, traditions, and
teachings of the Brahman priesthood. Never would the Brahman
priests accept the Salem teaching of salvation through
faith, favor with God apart from ritualistic observances and
sacrificial ceremonials.
The rejection of the
Melchizedek gospel of trust in God and salvation through
faith marked a vital turning point for India. The Salem
missionaries had contributed much to the loss of faith in
all the ancient Vedic gods, but the leaders, the priests of
Vedism, refused to accept the Melchizedek teaching of one
God and one simple faith.
The Brahmans culled the
sacred writings of their day in an effort to combat the
Salem teachers, and this compilation, as later revised, has
come on down to modern times as the Rig-Veda, one of the
most ancient of sacred books. The second, third, and fourth
Vedas followed as the Brahmans sought to crystallize,
formalize, and fix their rituals of worship and sacrifice
upon the peoples of those days. Taken at their best, these
writings are the equal of any other body of similar
character in beauty of concept and truth of discernment. But
as this superior religion became contaminated with the
thousands upon thousands of superstitions, cults, and
rituals of southern India, it progressively metamorphosed
into the most variegated system of theology ever developed
by mortal man. An examination of the Vedas will disclose
some of the highest and some of the most debased concepts of
Deity ever to be conceived.
2. BRAHMANISM
As the Salem missionaries
penetrated southward into the Dravidian Deccan, they
encountered an increasing caste system, the scheme of the
Aryans to prevent loss of racial identity in the face of a
rising tide of the secondary Sangik peoples. Since the
Brahman priest caste was the very essence of this system,
this social order greatly retarded the progress of the Salem
teachers. This caste system failed to save the Aryan race,
but it did succeed in perpetuating the Brahmans, who, in
turn, have maintained their religious hegemony in India to
the present time.
And now, with the
weakening of Vedism through the rejection of higher truth,
the cult of the Aryans became subject to increasing inroads
from the Deccan. In a desperate effort to stem the tide of
racial extinction and religious obliteration, the Brahman
caste sought to exalt themselves above all else. They taught
that the sacrifice to deity in itself was all-efficacious,
that it was all-compelling in its potency. They proclaimed
that, of the two essential divine principles of the
universe, one was Brahman the deity, and the other was the
Brahman priesthood. Among no other Urantia peoples did the
priests presume to exalt themselves above even their gods,
to relegate to themselves the honors due their gods. But
they went so absurdly far with these presumptuous claims
that the whole
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precarious system collapsed
before the debasing cults which poured in from the
surrounding and less advanced civilizations. The vast Vedic
priesthood itself floundered and sank beneath the black
flood of inertia and pessimism which their own selfish and
unwise presumption had brought upon all India.
The undue concentration on
self led certainly to a fear of the nonevolutionary
perpetuation of self in an endless round of successive
incarnations as man, beast, or weeds. And of all the
contaminating beliefs which could have become fastened upon
what may have been an emerging monotheism, none was so
stultifying as this belief in transmigration--the doctrine
of the reincarnation of souls--which came from the Dravidian
Deccan. This belief in the weary and monotonous round of
repeated transmigrations robbed struggling mortals of their
long-cherished hope of finding that deliverance and
spiritual advancement in death which had been a part of the
earlier Vedic faith.
This philosophically
debilitating teaching was soon followed by the invention of
the doctrine of the eternal escape from self by submergence
in the universal rest and peace of absolute union with
Brahman, the oversoul of all creation. Mortal desire and
human ambition were effectually ravished and virtually
destroyed. For more than two thousand years the better minds
of India have sought to escape from all desire, and thus was
opened wide the door for the entrance of those later cults
and teachings which have virtually shackled the souls of
many Hindu peoples in the chains of spiritual hopelessness.
Of all civilizations, the Vedic-Aryan paid the most terrible
price for its rejection of the Salem gospel.
Caste alone could not
perpetuate the Aryan religio-cultural system, and as the
inferior religions of the Deccan permeated the north, there
developed an age of despair and hopelessness. It was during
these dark days that the cult of taking no life arose, and
it has ever since persisted. Many of the new cults were
frankly atheistic, claiming that such salvation as was
attainable could come only by man's own unaided efforts. But
throughout a great deal of all this unfortunate philosophy,
distorted remnants of the Melchizedek and even the Adamic
teachings can be traced.
These were the times of
the compilation of the later scriptures of the Hindu faith,
the Brahmanas and the Upanishads. Having rejected the
teachings of personal religion through the personal faith
experience with the one God, and having become contaminated
with the flood of debasing and debilitating cults and creeds
from the Deccan, with their anthropomorphisms and
reincarnations, the Brahmanic priesthood experienced a
violent reaction against these vitiating beliefs; there was
a definite effort to seek and to find true reality.
The Brahmans set out to deanthropomorphize the Indian
concept of deity, but in so doing they stumbled into the
grievous error of depersonalizing the concept of God, and
they emerged, not with a lofty and spiritual ideal of the
Paradise Father, but with a distant and metaphysical idea of
an all-encompassing Absolute.
In their efforts at
self-preservation the Brahmans had rejected the one God of
Melchizedek, and now they found themselves with the
hypothesis of Brahman, that indefinite and illusive
philosophic self, that impersonal and impotent it
which has left the spiritual life of India helpless and
prostrate from that unfortunate day to the twentieth
century.
It was during the times of
the writing of the Upanishads that Buddhism arose in India.
But despite its successes of a thousand years, it could not
compete with
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later Hinduism; despite a
higher morality, its early portrayal of God was even less
well-defined than was that of Hinduism, which provided for
lesser and personal deities. Buddhism finally gave way in
northern India before the onslaught of a militant Islam with
its clear-cut concept of Allah as the supreme God of the
universe.
3. BRAHMANIC
PHILOSOPHY
While the highest phase of
Brahmanism was hardly a religion, it was truly one of the
most noble reaches of the mortal mind into the domains of
philosophy and metaphysics. Having started out to discover
final reality, the Indian mind did not stop until it had
speculated about almost every phase of theology excepting
the essential dual concept of religion: the existence of the
Universal Father of all universe creatures and the fact of
the ascending experience in the universe of these very
creatures as they seek to attain the eternal Father, who has
commanded them to be perfect, even as he is perfect.
In the concept of Brahman
the minds of those days truly grasped at the idea of some
all-pervading Absolute, for this postulate was at one and
the same time identified as creative energy and cosmic
reaction. Brahman was conceived to be beyond all definition,
capable of being comprehended only by the successive
negation of all finite qualities. It was definitely a belief
in an absolute, even an infinite, being, but this concept
was largely devoid of personality attributes and was
therefore not experiencible by individual religionists.
Brahman-Narayana was
conceived as the Absolute, the infinite IT IS, the
primordial creative potency of the potential cosmos, the
Universal Self existing static and potential throughout all
eternity. Had the philosophers of those days been able to
make the next advance in deity conception, had they been
able to conceive of the Brahman as associative and creative,
as a personality approachable by created and evolving
beings, then might such a teaching have become the most
advanced portraiture of Deity on Urantia since it would have
encompassed the first five levels of total deity function
and might possibly have envisioned the remaining two.
In certain phases the
concept of the One Universal Oversoul as the totality of the
summation of all creature existence led the Indian
philosophers very close to the truth of the Supreme Being,
but this truth availed them naught because they failed to
evolve any reasonable or rational personal approach to the
attainment of their theoretic monotheistic goal of
Brahman-Narayana.
The karma principle of
causality continuity is, again, very close to the truth of
the repercussional synthesis of all time-space actions in
the Deity presence of the Supreme; but this postulate never
provided for the co-ordinate personal attainment of Deity by
the individual religionist, only for the ultimate engulfment
of all personality by the Universal Oversoul.
The philosophy of
Brahmanism also came very near to the realization of the
indwelling of the Thought Adjusters, only to become
perverted through the misconception of truth. The teaching
that the soul is the indwelling of the Brahman would have
paved the way for an advanced religion had not this concept
been completely vitiated by the belief that there is no
human individuality apart from this indwelling of the
Universal One.
In the doctrine of the
merging of the self-soul with the Oversoul, the theologians
of India failed to provide for the survival of something
human, something
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new and unique, something
born of the union of the will of man and the will of God.
The teaching of the soul's return to the Brahman is closely
parallel to the truth of the Adjuster's return to the bosom
of the Universal Father, but there is something distinct
from the Adjuster which also survives, the morontial
counterpart of mortal personality. And this vital concept
was fatally absent from Brahmanic philosophy.
Brahmanic philosophy has
approximated many of the facts of the universe and has
approached numerous cosmic truths, but it has all too often
fallen victim to the error of failing to differentiate
between the several levels of reality, such as absolute,
transcendental, and finite. It has failed to take into
account that what may be finite-illusory on the absolute
level may be absolutely real on the finite level. And it has
also taken no cognizance of the essential personality of the
Universal Father, who is personally contactable on all
levels from the evolutionary creature's limited experience
with God on up to the limitless experience of the Eternal
Son with the Paradise Father.
4. THE HINDU
RELIGION
With the passing of the
centuries in India, the populace returned in measure to the
ancient rituals of the Vedas as they had been modified by
the teachings of the Melchizedek missionaries and
crystallized by the later Brahman priesthood. This, the
oldest and most cosmopolitan of the world's religions, has
undergone further changes in response to Buddhism and
Jainism and to the later appearing influences of
Mohammedanism and Christianity. But by the time the
teachings of Jesus arrived, they had already become so
Occidentalized as to be a "white man's religion," hence
strange and foreign to the Hindu mind.
Hindu theology, at
present, depicts four descending levels of deity and
divinity:
1. The Brahman, the
Absolute, the Infinite One, the IT IS.
2. The Trimurti,
the supreme trinity of Hinduism. In this association
Brahma, the first member, is conceived as being
self-created out of the Brahman--infinity. Were it not for
close identification with the pantheistic Infinite One,
Brahma could constitute the foundation for a concept of the
Universal Father. Brahma is also identified with fate.
The worship of the second
and third members, Siva and Vishnu, arose in the first
millennium after Christ. Siva is lord of life and
death, god of fertility, and master of destruction.
Vishnu is extremely popular due to the belief that he
periodically incarnates in human form. In this way, Vishnu
becomes real and living in the imaginations of the Indians.
Siva and Vishnu are each regarded by some as supreme over
all.
3. Vedic and post-Vedic
deities. Many of the ancient gods of the Aryans, such as
Agni, Indra, Soma, have persisted as secondary to the three
members of the Trimurti. Numerous additional gods have
arisen since the early days of Vedic India, and these have
also been incorporated into the Hindu pantheon.
4. The demigods:
supermen, semigods, heroes, demons, ghosts, evil spirits,
sprites, monsters, goblins, and saints of the later-day
cults.
While Hinduism has long
failed to vivify the Indian people, at the same time it has
usually been a tolerant religion. Its great strength lies in
the fact that it
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has proved to be the most
adaptive, amorphic religion to appear on Urantia. It is
capable of almost unlimited change and possesses an unusual
range of flexible adjustment from the high and
semimonotheistic speculations of the intellectual Brahman to
the arrant fetishism and primitive cult practices of the
debased and depressed classes of ignorant believers.
Hinduism has survived
because it is essentially an integral part of the basic
social fabric of India. It has no great hierarchy which can
be disturbed or destroyed; it is interwoven into the life
pattern of the people. It has an adaptability to changing
conditions that excels all other cults, and it displays a
tolerant attitude of adoption toward many other religions,
Gautama Buddha and even Christ himself being claimed as
incarnations of Vishnu.
Today, in India, the great
need is for the portrayal of the Jesusonian gospel--the
Fatherhood of God and the sonship and consequent brotherhood
of all men, which is personally realized in loving ministry
and social service. In India the philosophical framework is
existent, the cult structure is present; all that is needed
is the vitalizing spark of the dynamic love portrayed in the
original gospel of the Son of Man, divested of the
Occidental dogmas and doctrines which have tended to make
Michael's life bestowal a white man's religion.
5. THE STRUGGLE
FOR TRUTH IN CHINA
As the Salem missionaries
passed through Asia, spreading the doctrine of the Most High
God and salvation through faith, they absorbed much of the
philosophy and religious thought of the various countries
traversed. But the teachers commissioned by Melchizedek and
his successors did not default in their trust; they did
penetrate to all peoples of the Eurasian continent, and it
was in the middle of the second millennium before Christ
that they arrived in China. At See Fuch, for more than one
hundred years, the Salemites maintained their headquarters,
there training Chinese teachers who taught throughout all
the domains of the yellow race.
It was in direct
consequence of this teaching that the earliest form of
Taoism arose in China, a vastly different religion than the
one which bears that name today. Early or proto-Taoism was a
compound of the following factors:
1. The lingering teachings
of Singlangton, which persisted in the concept of Shang-ti,
the God of Heaven. In the times of Singlangton the Chinese
people became virtually monotheistic; they concentrated
their worship on the One Truth, later known as the Spirit of
Heaven, the universe ruler. And the yellow race never fully
lost this early concept of Deity, although in subsequent
centuries many subordinate gods and spirits insidiously
crept into their religion.
2. The Salem religion of a
Most High Creator Deity who would bestow his favor upon
mankind in response to man's faith. But it is all too true
that, by the time the Melchizedek missionaries had
penetrated to the lands of the yellow race, their original
message had become considerably changed from the simple
doctrines of Salem in the days of Machiventa.
3. The Brahman-Absolute
concept of the Indian philosophers, coupled with the desire
to escape all evil. Perhaps the greatest extraneous
influence in the eastward spread of the Salem religion was
exerted by the Indian teachers of the Vedic faith, who
injected their conception of the Brahman--the Absolute--into
the salvationistic thought of the Salemites.
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This composite belief spread
through the lands of the yellow and brown races as an
underlying influence in religio-philosophic thought. In
Japan this proto-Taoism was known as Shinto, and in this
country, far distant from Salem of Palestine, the peoples
learned of the incarnation of Machiventa Melchizedek, who
dwelt upon earth that the name of God might not be forgotten
by mankind.
In China all of these
beliefs were later confused and compounded with the
ever-growing cult of ancestor worship. But never since the
time of Singlangton have the Chinese fallen into helpless
slavery to priestcraft. The yellow race was the first to
emerge from barbaric bondage into orderly civilization
because it was the first to achieve some measure of freedom
from the abject fear of the gods, not even fearing the
ghosts of the dead as other races feared them. China met her
defeat because she failed to progress beyond her early
emancipation from priests; she fell into an almost equally
calamitous error, the worship of ancestors.
But the Salemites did not
labor in vain. It was upon the foundations of their gospel
that the great philosophers of sixth-century China built
their teachings. The moral atmosphere and the spiritual
sentiments of the times of Lao-tse and Confucius grew up out
of the teachings of the Salem missionaries of an earlier
age.
6. LAO-TSE AND
CONFUCIUS
About six hundred years
before the arrival of Michael, it seemed to Melchizedek,
long since departed from the flesh, that the purity of his
teaching on earth was being unduly jeopardized by general
absorption into the older Urantia beliefs. It appeared for a
time that his mission as a forerunner of Michael might be in
danger of failing. And in the sixth century before Christ,
through an unusual co-ordination of spiritual agencies, not
all of which are understood even by the planetary
supervisors, Urantia witnessed a most unusual presentation
of manifold religious truth. Through the agency of several
human teachers the Salem gospel was restated and
revitalized, and as it was then presented, much has
persisted to the times of this writing.
This unique century of
spiritual progress was characterized by great religious,
moral, and philosophic teachers all over the civilized
world. In China, the two outstanding teachers were Lao-tse
and Confucius.
Lao-tse built
directly upon the concepts of the Salem traditions when he
declared Tao to be the One First Cause of all creation. Lao
was a man of great spiritual vision. He taught that "man's
eternal destiny was everlasting union with Tao, Supreme God
and Universal King." His comprehension of ultimate causation
was most discerning, for he wrote: "Unity arises out of the
Absolute Tao, and from Unity there appears cosmic Duality,
and from such Duality, Trinity springs forth into existence,
and Trinity is the primal source of all reality." "All
reality is ever in balance between the potentials and the
actuals of the cosmos, and these are eternally harmonized by
the spirit of divinity."
Lao-tse also made one of
the earliest presentations of the doctrine of returning good
for evil: "Goodness begets goodness, but to the one who is
truly good, evil also begets goodness."
He taught the return of
the creature to the Creator and pictured life as the
emergence of a personality from the cosmic potentials, while
death was like the
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returning home of this
creature personality. His concept of true faith was unusual,
and he too likened it to the "attitude of a little child."
His understanding of the
eternal purpose of God was clear, for he said: "The Absolute
Deity does not strive but is always victorious; he does not
coerce mankind but always stands ready to respond to their
true desires; the will of God is eternal in patience and
eternal in the inevitability of its expression." And of the
true religionist he said, in expressing the truth that it is
more blessed to give than to receive: "The good man seeks
not to retain truth for himself but rather attempts to
bestow these riches upon his fellows, for that is the
realization of truth. The will of the Absolute God always
benefits, never destroys; the purpose of the true believer
is always to act but never to coerce."
Lao's teaching of
nonresistance and the distinction which he made between
action and coercion became later perverted into
the beliefs of "seeing, doing, and thinking nothing." But
Lao never taught such error, albeit his presentation of
nonresistance has been a factor in the further development
of the pacific predilections of the Chinese peoples.
But the popular Taoism of
twentieth-century Urantia has very little in common with the
lofty sentiments and the cosmic concepts of the old
philosopher who taught the truth as he perceived it, which
was: That faith in the Absolute God is the source of that
divine energy which will remake the world, and by which man
ascends to spiritual union with Tao, the Eternal Deity and
Creator Absolute of the universes.
Confucius (Kung
Fu-tze) was a younger contemporary of Lao in sixth-century
China. Confucius based his doctrines upon the better moral
traditions of the long history of the yellow race, and he
was also somewhat influenced by the lingering traditions of
the Salem missionaries. His chief work consisted in the
compilation of the wise sayings of ancient philosophers. He
was a rejected teacher during his lifetime, but his writings
and teachings have ever since exerted a great influence in
China and Japan. Confucius set a new pace for the shamans in
that he put morality in the place of magic. But he built too
well; he made a new fetish out of order and
established a respect for ancestral conduct that is still
venerated by the Chinese at the time of this writing.
The Confucian preachment
of morality was predicated on the theory that the earthly
way is the distorted shadow of the heavenly way; that the
true pattern of temporal civilization is the mirror
reflection of the eternal order of heaven. The potential God
concept in Confucianism was almost completely subordinated
to the emphasis placed upon the Way of Heaven, the pattern
of the cosmos.
The teachings of Lao have
been lost to all but a few in the Orient, but the writings
of Confucius have ever since constituted the basis of the
moral fabric of the culture of almost a third of Urantians.
These Confucian precepts, while perpetuating the best of the
past, were somewhat inimical to the very Chinese spirit of
investigation that had produced those achievements which
were so venerated. The influence of these doctrines was
unsuccessfully combated both by the imperial efforts of
Ch'in Shih Huang Ti and by the teachings of Mo Ti, who
proclaimed a brotherhood founded not on ethical duty but on
the love of God. He sought to rekindle the ancient quest for
new truth, but his teachings failed before the vigorous
opposition of the disciples of Confucius.
Like many other spiritual
and moral teachers, both Confucius and Lao-tse were
eventually deified by their followers in those spiritually
dark ages of China
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which intervened between the
decline and perversion of the Taoist faith and the coming of
the Buddhist missionaries from India. During these
spiritually decadent centuries the religion of the yellow
race degenerated into a pitiful theology wherein swarmed
devils, dragons, and evil spirits, all betokening the
returning fears of the unenlightened mortal mind. And China,
once at the head of human society because of an advanced
religion, then fell behind because of temporary failure to
progress in the true path of the development of that
God-consciousness which is indispensable to the true
progress, not only of the individual mortal, but also of the
intricate and complex civilizations which characterize the
advance of culture and society on an evolutionary planet of
time and space.
7. GAUTAMA
SIDDHARTHA
Contemporary with Lao-tse
and Confucius in China, another great teacher of truth arose
in India. Gautama Siddhartha was born in the sixth century
before Christ in the north Indian province of Nepal. His
followers later made it appear that he was the son of a
fabulously wealthy ruler, but, in truth, he was the heir
apparent to the throne of a petty chieftain who ruled by
sufferance over a small and secluded mountain valley in the
southern Himalayas.
Gautama formulated those
theories which grew into the philosophy of Buddhism after
six years of the futile practice of Yoga. Siddhartha made a
determined but unavailing fight against the growing caste
system. There was a lofty sincerity and a unique
unselfishness about this young prophet prince that greatly
appealed to the men of those days. He detracted from the
practice of seeking individual salvation through physical
affliction and personal pain. And he exhorted his followers
to carry his gospel to all the world.
Amid the confusion and
extreme cult practices of India, the saner and more moderate
teachings of Gautama came as a refreshing relief. He
denounced gods, priests, and their sacrifices, but he too
failed to perceive the personality of the One
Universal. Not believing in the existence of individual
human souls, Gautama, of course, made a valiant fight
against the time-honored belief in transmigration of the
soul. He made a noble effort to deliver men from fear, to
make them feel at ease and at home in the great universe,
but he failed to show them the pathway to that real and
supernal home of ascending mortals--Paradise--and to the
expanding service of eternal existence.
Gautama was a real
prophet, and had he heeded the instruction of the hermit
Godad, he might have aroused all India by the inspiration of
the revival of the Salem gospel of salvation by faith. Godad
was descended through a family that had never lost the
traditions of the Melchizedek missionaries.
At Benares Gautama founded
his school, and it was during its second year that a pupil,
Bautan, imparted to his teacher the traditions of the Salem
missionaries about the Melchizedek covenant with Abraham;
and while Siddhartha did not have a very clear concept of
the Universal Father, he took an advanced stand on salvation
through faith--simple belief. He so declared himself before
his followers and began sending his students out in groups
of sixty to proclaim to the people of India "the glad
tidings of free salvation; that all men, high and low, can
attain bliss by faith in righteousness and justice."
Gautama's wife believed
her husband's gospel and was the founder of an order of
nuns. His son became his successor and greatly extended the
cult; he
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grasped the new idea of
salvation through faith but in his later years wavered
regarding the Salem gospel of divine favor through faith
alone, and in his old age his dying words were, "Work out
your own salvation."
When proclaimed at its
best, Gautama's gospel of universal salvation, free from
sacrifice, torture, ritual, and priests, was a revolutionary
and amazing doctrine for its time. And it came surprisingly
near to being a revival of the Salem gospel. It brought
succor to millions of despairing souls, and notwithstanding
its grotesque perversion during later centuries, it still
persists as the hope of millions of human beings.
Siddhartha taught far more
truth than has survived in the modern cults bearing his
name. Modern Buddhism is no more the teachings of Gautama
Siddhartha than is Christianity the teachings of Jesus of
Nazareth.
8. THE BUDDHIST
FAITH
To become a Buddhist, one
merely made public profession of the faith by reciting the
Refuge: "I take my refuge in the Buddha; I take my refuge in
the Doctrine; I take my refuge in the Brotherhood."
Buddhism took origin in a
historic person, not in a myth. Gautama's followers called
him Sasta, meaning master or teacher. While he made no
superhuman claims for either himself or his teachings, his
disciples early began to call him the enlightened one,
the Buddha; later on, Sakyamuni Buddha.
The original gospel of
Gautama was based on the four noble truths:
1. The noble truths of
suffering.
2. The origins of
suffering.
3. The destruction of
suffering.
4. The way to the
destruction of suffering.
Closely linked to the
doctrine of suffering and the escape therefrom was the
philosophy of the Eightfold Path: right views, aspirations,
speech, conduct, livelihood, effort, mindfulness, and
contemplation. It was not Gautama's intention to attempt to
destroy all effort, desire, and affection in the escape from
suffering; rather was his teaching designed to picture to
mortal man the futility of pinning all hope and aspirations
entirely on temporal goals and material objectives. It was
not so much that love of one's fellows should be shunned as
that the true believer should also look beyond the
associations of this material world to the realities of the
eternal future.
The moral commandments of
Gautama's preachment were five in number:
1. You shall not kill.
2. You shall not steal.
3. You shall not be
unchaste.
4. You shall not lie.
5. You shall not drink
intoxicating liquors.
There were several
additional or secondary commandments, whose observance was
optional with believers.
Siddhartha hardly believed
in the immortality of the human personality; his philosophy
only provided for a sort of functional continuity. He never
clearly
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defined what he meant to
include in the doctrine of Nirvana. The fact that it could
theoretically be experienced during mortal existence would
indicate that it was not viewed as a state of complete
annihilation. It implied a condition of supreme
enlightenment and supernal bliss wherein all fetters binding
man to the material world had been broken; there was freedom
from the desires of mortal life and deliverance from all
danger of ever again experiencing incarnation.
According to the original
teachings of Gautama, salvation is achieved by human effort,
apart from divine help; there is no place for saving faith
or prayers to superhuman powers. Gautama, in his attempt to
minimize the superstitions of India, endeavored to turn men
away from the blatant claims of magical salvation. And in
making this effort, he left the door wide open for his
successors to misinterpret his teaching and to proclaim that
all human striving for attainment is distasteful and
painful. His followers overlooked the fact that the highest
happiness is linked with the intelligent and enthusiastic
pursuit of worthy goals, and that such achievements
constitute true progress in cosmic self-realization.
The great truth of
Siddhartha's teaching was his proclamation of a universe of
absolute justice. He taught the best godless philosophy ever
invented by mortal man; it was the ideal humanism and most
effectively removed all grounds for superstition, magical
rituals, and fear of ghosts or demons.
The great weakness in the
original gospel of Buddhism was that it did not produce a
religion of unselfish social service. The Buddhistic
brotherhood was, for a long time, not a fraternity of
believers but rather a community of student teachers.
Gautama forbade their receiving money and thereby sought to
prevent the growth of hierarchal tendencies. Gautama himself
was highly social; indeed, his life was much greater than
his preachment.
9. THE SPREAD OF
BUDDHISM
Buddhism prospered because
it offered salvation through belief in the Buddha, the
enlightened one. It was more representative of the
Melchizedek truths than any other religious system to be
found throughout eastern Asia. But Buddhism did not become
widespread as a religion until it was espoused in
self-protection by the low-caste monarch Asoka, who, next to
Ikhnaton in Egypt, was one of the most remarkable civil
rulers between Melchizedek and Michael. Asoka built a great
Indian empire through the propaganda of his Buddhist
missionaries. During a period of twenty-five years he
trained and sent forth more than seventeen thousand
missionaries to the farthest frontiers of all the known
world. In one generation he made Buddhism the dominant
religion of one half the world. It soon became established
in Tibet, Kashmir, Ceylon, Burma, Java, Siam, Korea, China,
and Japan. And generally speaking, it was a religion vastly
superior to those which it supplanted or upstepped.
The spread of Buddhism
from its homeland in India to all of Asia is one of the
thrilling stories of the spiritual devotion and missionary
persistence of sincere religionists. The teachers of
Gautama's gospel not only braved the perils of the overland
caravan routes but faced the dangers of the China Seas as
they pursued their mission over the Asiatic continent,
bringing to all peoples the message of their faith. But this
Buddhism was no longer the simple doctrine of Gautama; it
was the miraculized gospel which made him a god. And the
farther Buddhism spread from its highland home in India, the
more unlike the teachings of Gautama it became, and the more
like the religions it supplanted, it grew to be.
Page 1038
Buddhism, later on, was much
affected by Taoism in China, Shinto in Japan, and
Christianity in Tibet. After a thousand years, in India
Buddhism simply withered and expired. It became Brahmanized
and later abjectly surrendered to Islam, while throughout
much of the rest of the Orient it degenerated into a ritual
which Gautama Siddhartha would never have recognized.
In the south the
fundamentalist stereotype of the teachings of Siddhartha
persisted in Ceylon, Burma, and the Indo-China peninsula.
This is the Hinayana division of Buddhism which clings to
the early or asocial doctrine.
But even before the
collapse in India, the Chinese and north Indian groups of
Gautama's followers had begun the development of the
Mahayana teaching of the "Great Road" to salvation in
contrast with the purists of the south who held to the
Hinayana, or "Lesser Road." And these Mahayanists cast loose
from the social limitations inherent in the Buddhist
doctrine, and ever since has this northern division of
Buddhism continued to evolve in China and Japan.
Buddhism is a living,
growing religion today because it succeeds in conserving
many of the highest moral values of its adherents. It
promotes calmness and self-control, augments serenity and
happiness, and does much to prevent sorrow and mourning.
Those who believe this philosophy live better lives than
many who do not.
10. RELIGION IN
TIBET
In Tibet may be found the
strangest association of the Melchizedek teachings combined
with Buddhism, Hinduism, Taoism, and Christianity. When the
Buddhist missionaries entered Tibet, they encountered a
state of primitive savagery very similar to that which the
early Christian missionaries found among the northern tribes
of Europe.
These simple-minded
Tibetans would not wholly give up their ancient magic and
charms. Examination of the religious ceremonials of
present-day Tibetan rituals reveals an overgrown brotherhood
of priests with shaven heads who practice an elaborate
ritual embracing bells, chants, incense, processionals,
rosaries, images, charms, pictures, holy water, gorgeous
vestments, and elaborate choirs. They have rigid dogmas and
crystallized creeds, mystic rites and special fasts. Their
hierarchy embraces monks, nuns, abbots, and the Grand Lama.
They pray to angels, saints, a Holy Mother, and the gods.
They practice confessions and believe in purgatory. Their
monasteries are extensive and their cathedrals magnificent.
They keep up an endless repetition of sacred rituals and
believe that such ceremonials bestow salvation. Prayers are
fastened to a wheel, and with its turning they believe the
petitions become efficacious. Among no other people of
modern times can be found the observance of so much from so
many religions; and it is inevitable that such a cumulative
liturgy would become inordinately cumbersome and intolerably
burdensome.
The Tibetans have
something of all the leading world religions except the
simple teachings of the Jesusonian gospel: sonship with God,
brotherhood with man, and ever-ascending citizenship in the
eternal universe.
11. BUDDHIST
PHILOSOPHY
Buddhism entered China in
the first millennium after Christ, and it fitted well into
the religious customs of the yellow race. In ancestor
worship they had
Page 1039
long prayed to the dead; now
they could also pray for them. Buddhism soon amalgamated
with the lingering ritualistic practices of disintegrating
Taoism. This new synthetic religion with its temples of
worship and definite religious ceremonial soon became the
generally accepted cult of the peoples of China, Korea, and
Japan.
While in some respects it
is unfortunate that Buddhism was not carried to the world
until after Gautama's followers had so perverted the
traditions and teachings of the cult as to make of him a
divine being, nonetheless this myth of his human life,
embellished as it was with a multitude of miracles, proved
very appealing to the auditors of the northern or Mahayana
gospel of Buddhism.
Some of his later
followers taught that Sakyamuni Buddha's spirit returned
periodically to earth as a living Buddha, thus opening the
way for an indefinite perpetuation of Buddha images,
temples, rituals, and impostor "living Buddhas." Thus did
the religion of the great Indian protestant eventually find
itself shackled with those very ceremonial practices and
ritualistic incantations against which he had so fearlessly
fought, and which he had so valiantly denounced.
The great advance made in
Buddhist philosophy consisted in its comprehension of the
relativity of all truth. Through the mechanism of this
hypothesis Buddhists have been able to reconcile and
correlate the divergencies within their own religious
scriptures as well as the differences between their own and
many others. It was taught that the small truth was for
little minds, the large truth for great minds.
This philosophy also held
that the Buddha (divine) nature resided in all men; that
man, through his own endeavors, could attain to the
realization of this inner divinity. And this teaching is one
of the clearest presentations of the truth of the indwelling
Adjusters ever to be made by a Urantian religion.
But a great limitation in
the original gospel of Siddhartha, as it was interpreted by
his followers, was that it attempted the complete liberation
of the human self from all the limitations of the mortal
nature by the technique of isolating the self from objective
reality. True cosmic self-realization results from
identification with cosmic reality and with the finite
cosmos of energy, mind, and spirit, bounded by space and
conditioned by time.
But though the ceremonies
and outward observances of Buddhism became grossly
contaminated with those of the lands to which it traveled,
this degeneration was not altogether the case in the
philosophical life of the great thinkers who, from time to
time, embraced this system of thought and belief. Through
more than two thousand years, many of the best minds of Asia
have concentrated upon the problem of ascertaining absolute
truth and the truth of the Absolute.
The evolution of a high
concept of the Absolute was achieved through many channels
of thought and by devious paths of reasoning. The upward
ascent of this doctrine of infinity was not so clearly
defined as was the evolution of the God concept in Hebrew
theology. Nevertheless, there were certain broad levels
which the minds of the Buddhists reached, tarried upon, and
passed through on their way to the envisioning of the Primal
Source of universes:
1. The Gautama legend.
At the base of the concept was the historic fact of the life
and teachings of Siddhartha, the prophet prince of India.
This legend grew in myth as it traveled through the
centuries and across the broad lands of Asia until it
surpassed the status of the idea of Gautama as the
enlightened one and began to take on additional attributes.
Page 1040
2. The many Buddhas.
It was reasoned that, if Gautama had come to the peoples of
India, then, in the remote past and in the remote future,
the races of mankind must have been, and undoubtedly would
be, blessed with other teachers of truth. This gave rise to
the teaching that there were many Buddhas, an unlimited and
infinite number, even that anyone could aspire to become
one--to attain the divinity of a Buddha.
3. The Absolute Buddha.
By the time the number of Buddhas was approaching infinity,
it became necessary for the minds of those days to reunify
this unwieldy concept. Accordingly it began to be taught
that all Buddhas were but the manifestation of some higher
essence, some Eternal One of infinite and unqualified
existence, some Absolute Source of all reality. From here
on, the Deity concept of Buddhism, in its highest form,
becomes divorced from the human person of Gautama Siddhartha
and casts off from the anthropomorphic limitations which
have held it in leash. This final conception of the Buddha
Eternal can well be identified as the Absolute, sometimes
even as the infinite I AM.
While this idea of
Absolute Deity never found great popular favor with the
peoples of Asia, it did enable the intellectuals of these
lands to unify their philosophy and to harmonize their
cosmology. The concept of the Buddha Absolute is at times
quasi-personal, at times wholly impersonal--even an infinite
creative force. Such concepts, though helpful to philosophy,
are not vital to religious development. Even an
anthropomorphic Yahweh is of greater religious value than an
infinitely remote Absolute of Buddhism or Brahmanism.
At times the Absolute was
even thought of as contained within the infinite I AM. But
these speculations were chill comfort to the hungry
multitudes who craved to hear words of promise, to hear the
simple gospel of Salem, that faith in God would assure
divine favor and eternal survival.
12. THE GOD
CONCEPT OF BUDDHISM
The great weakness in the
cosmology of Buddhism was twofold: its contamination with
many of the superstitions of India and China and its
sublimation of Gautama, first as the enlightened one, and
then as the Eternal Buddha. Just as Christianity has
suffered from the absorption of much erroneous human
philosophy, so does Buddhism bear its human birthmark. But
the teachings of Gautama have continued to evolve during the
past two and one-half millenniums. The concept of Buddha, to
an enlightened Buddhist, is no more the human personality of
Gautama than the concept of Jehovah is identical with the
spirit demon of Horeb to an enlightened Christian. Paucity
of terminology, together with the sentimental retention of
olden nomenclature, is often provocative of the failure to
understand the true significance of the evolution of
religious concepts.
Gradually the concept of
God, as contrasted with the Absolute, began to appear in
Buddhism. Its sources are back in the early days of this
differentiation of the followers of the Lesser Road and the
Greater Road. It was among the latter division of Buddhism
that the dual conception of God and the Absolute finally
matured. Step by step, century by century, the God concept
has evolved until, with the teachings of Ryonin, Honen
Shonin, and Shinran in Japan, this concept finally came to
fruit in the belief in Amida Buddha.
Page 1041
Among these believers it is
taught that the soul, upon experiencing death, may elect to
enjoy a sojourn in Paradise prior to entering Nirvana, the
ultimate of existence. It is proclaimed that this new
salvation is attained by faith in the divine mercies and
loving care of Amida, God of the Paradise in the west. In
their philosophy, the Amidists hold to an Infinite Reality
which is beyond all finite mortal comprehension; in their
religion, they cling to faith in the all-merciful Amida, who
so loves the world that he will not suffer one mortal who
calls on his name in true faith and with a pure heart to
fail in the attainment of the supernal happiness of
Paradise.
The great strength of
Buddhism is that its adherents are free to choose truth from
all religions; such freedom of choice has seldom
characterized a Urantian faith. In this respect the Shin
sect of Japan has become one of the most progressive
religious groups in the world; it has revived the ancient
missionary spirit of Gautama's followers and has begun to
send teachers to other peoples. This willingness to
appropriate truth from any and all sources is indeed a
commendable tendency to appear among religious believers
during the first half of the twentieth century after Christ.
Buddhism itself is
undergoing a twentieth-century renaissance. Through contact
with Christianity the social aspects of Buddhism have been
greatly enhanced. The desire to learn has been rekindled in
the hearts of the monk priests of the brotherhood, and the
spread of education throughout this faith will be certainly
provocative of new advances in religious evolution.
At the time of this
writing, much of Asia rests its hope in Buddhism. Will this
noble faith, that has so valiantly carried on through the
dark ages of the past, once again receive the truth of
expanded cosmic realities even as the disciples of the great
teacher in India once listened to his proclamation of new
truth? Will this ancient faith respond once more to the
invigorating stimulus of the presentation of new concepts of
God and the Absolute for which it has so long searched?
All Urantia is waiting for
the proclamation of the ennobling message of Michael,
unencumbered by the accumulated doctrines and dogmas of
nineteen centuries of contact with the religions of
evolutionary origin. The hour is striking for presenting to
Buddhism, to Christianity, to Hinduism, even to the peoples
of all faiths, not the gospel about Jesus, but the living,
spiritual reality of the gospel of Jesus.
[Presented by a
Melchizedek of Nebadon.] |