PAPER 160
- RODAN OF ALEXANDRIA
On Sunday morning,
September 18, Andrew announced that no work would be
planned for the coming week. All of the apostles,
except Nathaniel and Thomas, went home to visit
their families or to sojourn with friends. This week
Jesus enjoyed a period of almost complete rest, but
Nathaniel and Thomas were very busy with their
discussions with a certain Greek philosopher from
Alexandria named Rodan. This Greek had recently
become a disciple of Jesus through the teaching of
one of Abner's associates who had conducted a
mission at Alexandria. Rodan was now earnestly
engaged in the task of harmonizing his philosophy of
life with Jesus' new religious teachings, and he had
come to Magadan hoping that the Master would talk
these problems over with him. He also desired to
secure a firsthand and authoritative version of the
gospel from either Jesus or one of his apostles.
Though the Master declined to enter into such a
conference with Rodan, he did receive him graciously
and immediately directed that Nathaniel and Thomas
should listen to all he had to say and tell him
about the gospel in return.
1.
RODAN'S GREEK PHILOSOPHY
Early Monday
morning, Rodan began a series of ten addresses to
Nathaniel, Thomas, and a group of some two dozen
believers who chanced to be at Magadan. These talks,
condensed, combined, and restated in modern
phraseology, present the following thoughts for
consideration:
Human life
consists in three great drives--urges, desires, and
lures. Strong character, commanding personality, is
only acquired by converting the natural urge of life
into the social art of living, by transforming
present desires into those higher longings which are
capable of lasting attainment, while the commonplace
lure of existence must be transferred from one's
conventional and established ideas to the higher
realms of unexplored ideas and undiscovered ideals.
The more complex
civilization becomes, the more difficult will become
the art of living. The more rapid the changes in
social usage, the more complicated will become the
task of character development. Every ten generations
mankind must learn anew the art of living if
progress is to continue. And if man becomes so
ingenious that he more rapidly adds to the
complexities of society, the art of living will need
to be remastered in less time, perhaps every single
generation. If the evolution of the art of living
fails to keep pace with the technique of existence,
humanity will quickly revert to the simple urge of
living--the attainment of the satisfaction of
present desires. Thus will humanity remain immature;
society will fail in growing up to full maturity.
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Social maturity
is equivalent to the degree to which man is willing
to surrender the gratification of mere transient and
present desires for the entertainment of those
superior longings the striving for whose attainment
affords the more abundant satisfactions of
progressive advancement toward permanent goals. But
the true badge of social maturity is the willingness
of a people to surrender the right to live peaceably
and contentedly under the ease-promoting standards
of the lure of established beliefs and conventional
ideas for the disquieting and energy-requiring lure
of the pursuit of the unexplored possibilities of
the attainment of undiscovered goals of idealistic
spiritual realities.
Animals respond
nobly to the urge of life, but only man can attain
the art of living, albeit the majority of mankind
only experience the animal urge to live. Animals
know only this blind and instinctive urge; man is
capable of transcending this urge to natural
function. Man may elect to live upon the high plane
of intelligent art, even that of celestial joy and
spiritual ecstasy. Animals make no inquiry into the
purposes of life; therefore they never worry,
neither do they commit suicide. Suicide among men
testifies that such beings have emerged from the
purely animal stage of existence, and to the further
fact that the exploratory efforts of such human
beings have failed to attain the artistic levels of
mortal experience. Animals know not the meaning of
life; man not only possesses capacity for the
recognition of values and the comprehension of
meanings, but he also is conscious of the meaning of
meanings--he is self-conscious of insight.
When men dare to
forsake a life of natural craving for one of
adventurous art and uncertain logic, they must
expect to suffer the consequent hazards of emotional
casualties--conflicts, unhappiness, and
uncertainties--at least until the time of their
attainment of some degree of intellectual and
emotional maturity. Discouragement, worry, and
indolence are positive evidence of moral immaturity.
Human society is confronted with two problems:
attainment of the maturity of the individual and
attainment of the maturity of the race. The mature
human being soon begins to look upon all other
mortals with feelings of tenderness and with
emotions of tolerance. Mature men view immature
folks with the love and consideration that parents
bear their children.
Successful living
is nothing more or less than the art of the mastery
of dependable techniques for solving common
problems. The first step in the solution of any
problem is to locate the difficulty, to isolate the
problem, and frankly to recognize its nature and
gravity. The great mistake is that, when life
problems excite our profound fears, we refuse to
recognize them. Likewise, when the acknowledgment of
our difficulties entails the reduction of our
long-cherished conceit, the admission of envy, or
the abandonment of deep-seated prejudices, the
average person prefers to cling to the old illusions
of safety and to the long-cherished false feelings
of security. Only a brave person is willing honestly
to admit, and fearlessly to face, what a sincere and
logical mind discovers.
The wise and
effective solution of any problem demands that the
mind shall be free from bias, passion, and all other
purely personal prejudices which might interfere
with the disinterested survey of the actual factors
that go to make up the problem presenting itself for
solution. The solution of life problems requires
courage and sincerity. Only honest and brave
individuals are able to follow valiantly through the
perplexing and confusing maze of living to where the
logic of a fearless mind may lead. And this
emancipation of the mind and soul can never be
effected without the driving power of an intelligent
enthusiasm which borders on religious zeal. It
requires the lure of a great ideal to drive man on
in
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the pursuit of a
goal which is beset with difficult material problems
and manifold intellectual hazards.
Even though you
are effectively armed to meet the difficult
situations of life, you can hardly expect success
unless you are equipped with that wisdom of mind and
charm of personality which enable you to win the
hearty support and co-operation of your fellows. You
cannot hope for a large measure of success in either
secular or religious work unless you can learn how
to persuade your fellows, to prevail with men. You
simply must have tact and tolerance.
But the greatest
of all methods of problem solving I have learned
from Jesus, your Master. I refer to that which he so
consistently practices, and which he has so
faithfully taught you, the isolation of worshipful
meditation. In this habit of Jesus' going off so
frequently by himself to commune with the Father in
heaven is to be found the technique, not only of
gathering strength and wisdom for the ordinary
conflicts of living, but also of appropriating the
energy for the solution of the higher problems of a
moral and spiritual nature. But even correct methods
of solving problems will not compensate for inherent
defects of personality or atone for the absence of
the hunger and thirst for true righteousness.
I am deeply
impressed with the custom of Jesus in going apart by
himself to engage in these seasons of solitary
survey of the problems of living; to seek for new
stores of wisdom and energy for meeting the manifold
demands of social service; to quicken and deepen the
supreme purpose of living by actually subjecting the
total personality to the consciousness of contacting
with divinity; to grasp for possession of new and
better methods of adjusting oneself to the
ever-changing situations of living existence; to
effect those vital reconstructions and readjustments
of one's personal attitudes which are so essential
to enhanced insight into everything worth while and
real; and to do all of this with an eye single to
the glory of God--to breathe in sincerity your
Master's favorite prayer, "Not my will, but yours,
be done."
This worshipful
practice of your Master brings that relaxation which
renews the mind; that illumination which inspires
the soul; that courage which enables one bravely to
face one's problems; that self-understanding which
obliterates debilitating fear; and that
consciousness of union with divinity which equips
man with the assurance that enables him to dare to
be Godlike. The relaxation of worship, or spiritual
communion as practiced by the Master, relieves
tension, removes conflicts, and mightily augments
the total resources of the personality. And all this
philosophy, plus the gospel of the kingdom,
constitutes the new religion as I understand it.
Prejudice blinds
the soul to the recognition of truth, and prejudice
can be removed only by the sincere devotion of the
soul to the adoration of a cause that is
all-embracing and all-inclusive of one's fellow men.
Prejudice is inseparably linked to selfishness.
Prejudice can be eliminated only by the abandonment
of self-seeking and by substituting therefor the
quest of the satisfaction of the service of a cause
that is not only greater than self, but one that is
even greater than all humanity--the search for God,
the attainment of divinity. The evidence of maturity
of personality consists in the transformation of
human desire so that it constantly seeks for the
realization of those values which are highest and
most divinely real.
In a continually
changing world, in the midst of an evolving social
order, it is impossible to maintain settled and
established goals of destiny. Stability of
personality
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can be
experienced only by those who have discovered and
embraced the living God as the eternal goal of
infinite attainment. And thus to transfer one's goal
from time to eternity, from earth to Paradise, from
the human to the divine, requires that man shall
become regenerated, converted, be born again; that
he shall become the re-created child of the divine
spirit; that he shall gain entrance into the
brotherhood of the kingdom of heaven. All
philosophies and religions which fall short of these
ideals are immature. The philosophy which I teach,
linked with the gospel which you preach, represents
the new religion of maturity, the ideal of all
future generations. And this is true because our
ideal is final, infallible, eternal, universal,
absolute, and infinite.
My philosophy gave
me the urge to search for the realities of true
attainment, the goal of maturity. But my urge was
impotent; my search lacked driving power; my quest
suffered from the absence of certainty of
directionization. And these deficiencies have been
abundantly supplied by this new gospel of Jesus,
with its enhancement of insights, elevation of
ideals, and settledness of goals. Without doubts and
misgivings I can now wholeheartedly enter upon the
eternal venture.
2. THE
ART OF LIVING
There are just two
ways in which mortals may live together: the
material or animal way and the spiritual or human
way. By the use of signals and sounds animals are
able to communicate with each other in a limited
way. But such forms of communication do not convey
meanings, values, or ideas. The one distinction
between man and the animal is that man can
communicate with his fellows by means of symbols
which most certainly designate and identify
meanings, values, ideas, and even ideals.
Since animals
cannot communicate ideas to each other, they cannot
develop personality. Man develops personality
because he can thus communicate with his fellows
concerning both ideas and ideals.
It is this ability
to communicate and share meanings that constitutes
human culture and enables man, through social
associations, to build civilizations. Knowledge and
wisdom become cumulative because of man's ability to
communicate these possessions to succeeding
generations. And thereby arise the cultural
activities of the race: art, science, religion, and
philosophy.
Symbolic
communication between human beings predetermines the
bringing into existence of social groups. The most
effective of all social groups is the family, more
particularly the two parents. Personal
affection is the spiritual bond which holds together
these material associations. Such an effective
relationship is also possible between two persons of
the same sex, as is so abundantly illustrated in the
devotions of genuine friendships.
These associations
of friendship and mutual affection are socializing
and ennobling because they encourage and facilitate
the following essential factors of the higher levels
of the art of living:
1. Mutual
self-expression and self-understanding. Many
noble human impulses die because there is no one to
hear their expression. Truly, it is not good for man
to be alone. Some degree of recognition and a
certain amount of appreciation are essential to the
development of human character. Without the genuine
love of a home, no child can achieve the full
development of normal
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character.
Character is something more than mere mind and
morals. Of all social relations calculated to
develop character, the most effective and ideal is
the affectionate and understanding friendship of man
and woman in the mutual embrace of intelligent
wedlock. Marriage, with its manifold relations, is
best designed to draw forth those precious impulses
and those higher motives which are indispensable to
the development of a strong character. I do not
hesitate thus to glorify family life, for your
Master has wisely chosen the father-child
relationship as the very cornerstone of this new
gospel of the kingdom. And such a matchless
community of relationship, man and woman in the fond
embrace of the highest ideals of time, is so
valuable and satisfying an experience that it is
worth any price, any sacrifice, requisite for its
possession.
2. Union of
souls--the mobilization of wisdom. Every human
being sooner or later acquires a certain concept of
this world and a certain vision of the next. Now it
is possible, through personality association, to
unite these views of temporal existence and eternal
prospects. Thus does the mind of one augment its
spiritual values by gaining much of the insight of
the other. In this way men enrich the soul by
pooling their respective spiritual possessions.
Likewise, in this same way, man is enabled to avoid
that ever-present tendency to fall victim to
distortion of vision, prejudice of viewpoint, and
narrowness of judgment. Fear, envy, and conceit can
be prevented only by intimate contact with other
minds. I call your attention to the fact that the
Master never sends you out alone to labor for the
extension of the kingdom; he always sends you out
two and two. And since wisdom is superknowledge, it
follows that, in the union of wisdom, the social
group, small or large, mutually shares all
knowledge.
3. The
enthusiasm for living. Isolation tends to
exhaust the energy charge of the soul. Association
with one's fellows is essential to the renewal of
the zest for life and is indispensable to the
maintenance of the courage to fight those battles
consequent upon the ascent to the higher levels of
human living. Friendship enhances the joys and
glorifies the triumphs of life. Loving and intimate
human associations tend to rob suffering of its
sorrow and hardship of much of its bitterness. The
presence of a friend enhances all beauty and exalts
every goodness. By intelligent symbols man is able
to quicken and enlarge the appreciative capacities
of his friends. One of the crowning glories of human
friendship is this power and possibility of the
mutual stimulation of the imagination. Great
spiritual power is inherent in the consciousness of
wholehearted devotion to a common cause, mutual
loyalty to a cosmic Deity.
4. The enhanced
defense against all evil. Personality
association and mutual affection is an efficient
insurance against evil. Difficulties, sorrow,
disappointment, and defeat are more painful and
disheartening when borne alone. Association does not
transmute evil into righteousness, but it does aid
in greatly lessening the sting. Said your Master,
"Happy are they who mourn"--if a friend is at hand
to comfort. There is positive strength in the
knowledge that you live for the welfare of others,
and that these others likewise live for your welfare
and advancement. Man languishes in isolation. Human
beings unfailingly become discouraged when they view
only the transitory transactions of time. The
present, when divorced from the past and the future,
becomes exasperatingly trivial. Only a glimpse of
the circle of eternity can inspire man to do his
best and
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can challenge the
best in him to do its utmost. And when man is thus
at his best, he lives most unselfishly for the good
of others, his fellow sojourners in time and
eternity.
I repeat, such
inspiring and ennobling association finds its ideal
possibilities in the human marriage relation. True,
much is attained out of marriage, and many, many
marriages utterly fail to produce these moral and
spiritual fruits. Too many times marriage is entered
by those who seek other values which are lower than
these superior accompaniments of human maturity.
Ideal marriage must be founded on something more
stable than the fluctuations of sentiment and the
fickleness of mere sex attraction; it must be based
on genuine and mutual personal devotion. And thus,
if you can build up such trustworthy and effective
small units of human association, when these are
assembled in the aggregate, the world will behold a
great and glorified social structure, the
civilization of mortal maturity. Such a race might
begin to realize something of your Master's ideal of
"peace on earth and good will among men." While such
a society would not be perfect or entirely free from
evil, it would at least approach the stabilization
of maturity.
3. THE
LURES OF MATURITY
The effort toward
maturity necessitates work, and work requires
energy. Whence the power to accomplish all this? The
physical things can be taken for granted, but the
Master has well said, "Man cannot live by bread
alone." Granted the possession of a normal body and
reasonably good health, we must next look for those
lures which will act as a stimulus to call forth
man's slumbering spiritual forces. Jesus has taught
us that God lives in man; then how can we induce man
to release these soul-bound powers of divinity and
infinity? How shall we induce men to let go of God
that he may spring forth to the refreshment of our
own souls while in transit outward and then to serve
the purpose of enlightening, uplifting, and blessing
countless other souls? How best can I awaken these
latent powers for good which lie dormant in your
souls? One thing I am sure of: Emotional excitement
is not the ideal spiritual stimulus. Excitement does
not augment energy; it rather exhausts the powers of
both mind and body. Whence then comes the energy to
do these great things? Look to your Master. Even now
he is out in the hills taking in power while we are
here giving out energy. The secret of all this
problem is wrapped up in spiritual communion, in
worship. From the human standpoint it is a question
of combined meditation and relaxation. Meditation
makes the contact of mind with spirit; relaxation
determines the capacity for spiritual receptivity.
And this interchange of strength for weakness,
courage for fear, the will of God for the mind of
self, constitutes worship. At least, that is the way
the philosopher views it.
When these
experiences are frequently repeated, they
crystallize into habits, strength-giving and
worshipful habits, and such habits eventually
formulate themselves into a spiritual character, and
such a character is finally recognized by one's
fellows as a mature personality. These
practices are difficult and time-consuming at first,
but when they become habitual, they are at once
restful and time-saving. The more complex society
becomes, and the more the lures of civilization
multiply, the more urgent will become the necessity
for God-knowing individuals to form such protective
habitual practices designed to conserve and augment
their spiritual energies.
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Another
requirement for the attainment of maturity is the
co-operative adjustment of social groups to an
ever-changing environment. The immature individual
arouses the antagonisms of his fellows; the mature
man wins the hearty co-operation of his associates,
thereby many times multiplying the fruits of his
life efforts.
My philosophy
tells me that there are times when I must fight, if
need be, for the defense of my concept of
righteousness, but I doubt not that the Master, with
a more mature type of personality, would easily and
gracefully gain an equal victory by his superior and
winsome technique of tact and tolerance. All too
often, when we battle for the right, it turns out
that both the victor and the vanquished have
sustained defeat. I heard the Master say only
yesterday that the "wise man, when seeking entrance
through the locked door, would not destroy the door
but rather would seek for the key wherewith to
unlock it." Too often we engage in a fight merely to
convince ourselves that we are not afraid.
This new gospel of
the kingdom renders a great service to the art of
living in that it supplies a new and richer
incentive for higher living. It presents a new and
exalted goal of destiny, a supreme life purpose. And
these new concepts of the eternal and divine goal of
existence are in themselves transcendent stimuli,
calling forth the reaction of the very best that is
resident in man's higher nature. On every
mountaintop of intellectual thought are to be found
relaxation for the mind, strength for the soul, and
communion for the spirit. From such vantage points
of high living, man is able to transcend the
material irritations of the lower levels of
thinking--worry, jealousy, envy, revenge, and the
pride of immature personality. These high-climbing
souls deliver themselves from a multitude of the
crosscurrent conflicts of the trifles of living,
thus becoming free to attain consciousness of the
higher currents of spirit concept and celestial
communication. But the life purpose must be
jealously guarded from the temptation to seek for
easy and transient attainment; likewise must it be
so fostered as to become immune to the disastrous
threats of fanaticism.
4. THE
BALANCE OF MATURITY
While you have an
eye single to the attainment of eternal realities,
you must also make provision for the necessities of
temporal living. While the spirit is our goal, the
flesh is a fact. Occasionally the necessities of
living may fall into our hands by accident, but in
general, we must intelligently work for them. The
two major problems of life are: making a temporal
living and the achievement of eternal survival. And
even the problem of making a living requires
religion for its ideal solution. These are both
highly personal problems. True religion, in fact,
does not function apart from the individual.
The essentials of
the temporal life, as I see them, are:
1. Good physical
health.
2. Clear and clean
thinking.
3. Ability and
skill.
4. Wealth--the
goods of life.
5. Ability to
withstand defeat.
6.
Culture--education and wisdom.
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Even the physical
problems of bodily health and efficiency are best
solved when they are viewed from the religious
standpoint of our Master's teaching: That the body
and mind of man are the dwelling place of the gift
of the Gods, the spirit of God becoming the spirit
of man. The mind of man thus becomes the mediator
between material things and spiritual realities.
It requires
intelligence to secure one's share of the desirable
things of life. It is wholly erroneous to suppose
that faithfulness in doing one's daily work will
insure the rewards of wealth. Barring the occasional
and accidental acquirement of wealth, the material
rewards of the temporal life are found to flow in
certain well-organized channels, and only those who
have access to these channels may expect to be well
rewarded for their temporal efforts. Poverty must
ever be the lot of all men who seek for wealth in
isolated and individual channels. Wise planning,
therefore, becomes the one thing essential to
worldly prosperity. Success requires not only
devotion to one's work but also that one should
function as a part of some one of the channels of
material wealth. If you are unwise, you can bestow a
devoted life upon your generation without material
reward; if you are an accidental beneficiary of the
flow of wealth, you may roll in luxury even though
you have done nothing worth while for your fellow
men.
Ability is that
which you inherit, while skill is what you acquire.
Life is not real to one who cannot do some one thing
well, expertly. Skill is one of the real sources of
the satisfaction of living. Ability implies the gift
of foresight, farseeing vision. Be not deceived by
the tempting rewards of dishonest achievement; be
willing to toil for the later returns inherent in
honest endeavor. The wise man is able to distinguish
between means and ends; otherwise, sometimes
overplanning for the future defeats its own high
purpose. As a pleasure seeker you should aim always
to be a producer as well as a consumer.
Train your memory
to hold in sacred trust the strength-giving and
worth-while episodes of life, which you can recall
at will for your pleasure and edification. Thus
build up for yourself and in yourself reserve
galleries of beauty, goodness, and artistic
grandeur. But the noblest of all memories are the
treasured recollections of the great moments of a
superb friendship. And all of these memory treasures
radiate their most precious and exalting influences
under the releasing touch of spiritual worship.
But life will
become a burden of existence unless you learn how to
fail gracefully. There is an art in defeat which
noble souls always acquire; you must know how to
lose cheerfully; you must be fearless of
disappointment. Never hesitate to admit failure.
Make no attempt to hide failure under deceptive
smiles and beaming optimism. It sounds well always
to claim success, but the end results are appalling.
Such a technique leads directly to the creation of a
world of unreality and to the inevitable crash of
ultimate disillusionment.
Success may
generate courage and promote confidence, but wisdom
comes only from the experiences of adjustment to the
results of one's failures. Men who prefer optimistic
illusions to reality can never become wise. Only
those who face facts and adjust them to ideals can
achieve wisdom. Wisdom embraces both the fact and
the ideal and therefore saves its devotees from both
of those barren extremes of philosophy--the man
whose idealism excludes facts and the materialist
who is devoid of spiritual outlook. Those timid
souls who can only keep up the struggle of life by
the aid of continuous false illusions of success
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are doomed to
suffer failure and experience defeat as they
ultimately awaken from the dream world of their own
imaginations.
And it is in this
business of facing failure and adjusting to defeat
that the far-reaching vision of religion exerts its
supreme influence. Failure is simply an educational
episode--a cultural experiment in the acquirement of
wisdom--in the experience of the God-seeking man who
has embarked on the eternal adventure of the
exploration of a universe. To such men defeat is but
a new tool for the achievement of higher levels of
universe reality.
The career of a
God-seeking man may prove to be a great success in
the light of eternity, even though the whole
temporal-life enterprise may appear as an
overwhelming failure, provided each life failure
yielded the culture of wisdom and spirit
achievement. Do not make the mistake of confusing
knowledge, culture, and wisdom. They are related in
life, but they represent vastly differing spirit
values; wisdom ever dominates knowledge and always
glorifies culture.
5. THE
RELIGION OF THE IDEAL
You have told me
that your Master regards genuine human religion as
the individual's experience with spiritual
realities. I have regarded religion as man's
experience of reacting to something which he regards
as being worthy of the homage and devotion of all
mankind. In this sense, religion symbolizes our
supreme devotion to that which represents our
highest concept of the ideals of reality and the
farthest reach of our minds toward eternal
possibilities of spiritual attainment.
When men react to
religion in the tribal, national, or racial sense,
it is because they look upon those without their
group as not being truly human. We always look upon
the object of our religious loyalty as being worthy
of the reverence of all men. Religion can never be a
matter of mere intellectual belief or philosophic
reasoning; religion is always and forever a mode of
reacting to the situations of life; it is a species
of conduct. Religion embraces thinking, feeling, and
acting reverently toward some reality which we deem
worthy of universal adoration.
If something has
become a religion in your experience, it is
self-evident that you already have become an active
evangel of that religion since you deem the supreme
concept of your religion as being worthy of the
worship of all mankind, all universe intelligences.
If you are not a positive and missionary evangel of
your religion, you are self-deceived in that what
you call a religion is only a traditional belief or
a mere system of intellectual philosophy. If your
religion is a spiritual experience, your object of
worship must be the universal spirit reality and
ideal of all your spiritualized concepts. All
religions based on fear, emotion, tradition, and
philosophy I term the intellectual religions, while
those based on true spirit experience I would term
the true religions. The object of religious devotion
may be material or spiritual, true or false, real or
unreal, human or divine. Religions can therefore be
either good or evil.
Morality and
religion are not necessarily the same. A system of
morals, by grasping an object of worship, may become
a religion. A religion, by losing its universal
appeal to loyalty and supreme devotion, may evolve
into a system of philosophy or a code of morals.
This thing, being, state, or order of existence, or
possibility of attainment which constitutes the
supreme ideal of religious
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loyalty, and
which is the recipient of the religious devotion of
those who worship, is God. Regardless of the name
applied to this ideal of spirit reality, it is God.
The social
characteristics of a true religion consist in the
fact that it invariably seeks to convert the
individual and to transform the world. Religion
implies the existence of undiscovered ideals which
far transcend the known standards of ethics and
morality embodied in even the highest social usages
of the most mature institutions of civilization.
Religion reaches out for undiscovered ideals,
unexplored realities, superhuman values, divine
wisdom, and true spirit attainment. True religion
does all of this; all other beliefs are not worthy
of the name. You cannot have a genuine spiritual
religion without the supreme and supernal ideal of
an eternal God. A religion without this God is an
invention of man, a human institution of lifeless
intellectual beliefs and meaningless emotional
ceremonies. A religion might claim as the object of
its devotion a great ideal. But such ideals of
unreality are not attainable; such a concept is
illusionary. The only ideals susceptible of human
attainment are the divine realities of the infinite
values resident in the spiritual fact of the eternal
God.
The word God, the
idea of God as contrasted with the ideal
of God, can become a part of any religion, no matter
how puerile or false that religion may chance to be.
And this idea of God can become anything which those
who entertain it may choose to make it. The lower
religions shape their ideas of God to meet the
natural state of the human heart; the higher
religions demand that the human heart shall be
changed to meet the demands of the ideals of true
religion.
The religion of
Jesus transcends all our former concepts of the idea
of worship in that he not only portrays his Father
as the ideal of infinite reality but positively
declares that this divine source of values and the
eternal center of the universe is truly and
personally attainable by every mortal creature who
chooses to enter the kingdom of heaven on earth,
thereby acknowledging the acceptance of sonship with
God and brotherhood with man. That, I submit, is the
highest concept of religion the world has ever
known, and I pronounce that there can never be a
higher since this gospel embraces the infinity of
realities, the divinity of values, and the eternity
of universal attainments. Such a concept constitutes
the achievement of the experience of the idealism of
the supreme and the ultimate.
I am not only
intrigued by the consummate ideals of this religion
of your Master, but I am mightily moved to profess
my belief in his announcement that these ideals of
spirit realities are attainable; that you and I can
enter upon this long and eternal adventure with his
assurance of the certainty of our ultimate arrival
at the portals of Paradise. My brethren, I am a
believer, I have embarked; I am on my way with you
in this eternal venture. The Master says he came
from the Father, and that he will show us the way. I
am fully persuaded he speaks the truth. I am finally
convinced that there are no attainable ideals of
reality or values of perfection apart from the
eternal and Universal Father.
I come, then, to
worship, not merely the God of existences, but the
God of the possibility of all future existences.
Therefore must your devotion to a supreme ideal, if
that ideal is real, be devotion to this God of past,
present, and future universes of things and beings.
And there is no other God, for there cannot possibly
be any other God. All other gods are figments of the
imagination, illusions of mortal mind, distortions
of false logic, and the self-deceptive idols of
those who create them. Yes, you can have a religion
without this God, but it
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does not mean
anything. And if you seek to substitute the word God
for the reality of this ideal of the living God, you
have only deluded yourself by putting an idea in the
place of an ideal, a divine reality. Such beliefs
are merely religions of wishful fancy.
I see in the
teachings of Jesus, religion at its best. This
gospel enables us to seek for the true God and to
find him. But are we willing to pay the price of
this entrance into the kingdom of heaven? Are we
willing to be born again? to be remade? Are we
willing to be subject to this terrible and testing
process of self-destruction and soul reconstruction?
Has not the Master said: "Whoso would save his life
must lose it. Think not that I have come to bring
peace but rather a soul struggle"? True, after we
pay the price of dedication to the Father's will, we
do experience great peace provided we continue to
walk in these spiritual paths of consecrated living.
Now are we truly
forsaking the lures of the known order of existence
while we unreservedly dedicate our quest to the
lures of the unknown and unexplored order of the
existence of a future life of adventure in the
spirit worlds of the higher idealism of divine
reality. And we seek for those symbols of meaning
wherewith to convey to our fellow men these concepts
of the reality of the idealism of the religion of
Jesus, and we will not cease to pray for that day
when all mankind shall be thrilled by the communal
vision of this supreme truth. Just now, our
focalized concept of the Father, as held in our
hearts, is that God is spirit; as conveyed to our
fellows, that God is love.
The religion of
Jesus demands living and spiritual experience. Other
religions may consist in traditional beliefs,
emotional feelings, philosophic consciousness, and
all of that, but the teaching of the Master requires
the attainment of actual levels of real spirit
progression.
The consciousness
of the impulse to be like God is not true religion.
The feelings of the emotion to worship God are not
true religion. The knowledge of the conviction to
forsake self and serve God is not true religion. The
wisdom of the reasoning that this religion is the
best of all is not religion as a personal and
spiritual experience. True religion has reference to
destiny and reality of attainment as well as to the
reality and idealism of that which is wholeheartedly
faith-accepted. And all of this must be made
personal to us by the revelation of the Spirit of
Truth.
And thus ended the
dissertations of the Greek philosopher, one of the
greatest of his race, who had become a believer in
the gospel of Jesus. |