PAPER 195
- AFTER PENTECOST
THE results of
Peter's preaching on the day of Pentecost were such
as to decide the future policies, and to determine
the plans, of the majority of the apostles in their
efforts to proclaim the gospel of the kingdom. Peter
was the real founder of the Christian church; Paul
carried the Christian message to the gentiles, and
the Greek believers carried it to the whole Roman
Empire.
Although
the tradition-bound and priest-ridden Hebrews, as a
people, refused to accept either Jesus' gospel of
the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man or
Peter's and Paul's proclamation of the resurrection
and ascension of Christ (subsequent Christianity),
the rest of the Roman Empire was found to be
receptive to the evolving Christian teachings.
Western civilization was at this time intellectual,
war weary, and thoroughly skeptical of all existing
religions and universe philosophies. The peoples of
the Western world, the beneficiaries of Greek
culture, had a revered tradition of a great past.
They could contemplate the inheritance of great
accomplishments in philosophy, art, literature, and
political progress. But with all these achievements
they had no soul-satisfying religion. Their
spiritual longings remained unsatisfied.
Upon
such a stage of human society the teachings of
Jesus, embraced in the Christian message, were
suddenly thrust. A new order of living was thus
presented to the hungry hearts of these Western
peoples. This situation meant immediate conflict
between the older religious practices and the new
Christianized version of Jesus' message to the
world. Such a conflict must result in either decided
victory for the new or for the old or in some degree
of compromise. History shows that the
struggle ended in compromise. Christianity presumed
to embrace too much for any one people to assimilate
in one or two generations. It was not a simple
spiritual appeal, such as Jesus had presented to the
souls of men; it early struck a decided attitude on
religious rituals, education, magic, medicine, art,
literature, law, government, morals, sex regulation,
polygamy, and, in limited degree, even slavery.
Christianity came not merely as a new
religion--something all the Roman Empire and all the
Orient were waiting for--but as a new order of
human society. And as such a pretension it
quickly precipitated the social-moral clash of the
ages. The ideals of Jesus, as they were
reinterpreted by Greek philosophy and socialized in
Christianity, now boldly challenged the traditions
of the human race embodied in the ethics, morality,
and religions of Western civilization.
At
first, Christianity won as converts only the lower
social and economic strata. But by the beginning of
the second century the very best of Greco-Roman
culture was increasingly turning to this new order
of Christian belief, this new concept of the purpose
of living and the goal of existence.
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How did
this new message of Jewish origin, which had almost
failed in the land of its birth, so quickly and
effectively capture the very best minds of the Roman
Empire? The triumph of Christianity over the
philosophic religions and the mystery cults was due
to:
1.
Organization. Paul was a great organizer and his
successors kept up the pace he set.
2.
Christianity was thoroughly Hellenized. It embraced
the best in Greek philosophy as well as the cream of
Hebrew theology.
3. But
best of all, it contained a new and great ideal,
the echo of the life bestowal of Jesus and the
reflection of his message of salvation for all
mankind.
4. The
Christian leaders were willing to make such
compromises with Mithraism that the better half of
its adherents were won over to the Antioch cult.
5.
Likewise did the next and later generations of
Christian leaders make such further compromises with
paganism that even the Roman emperor Constantine was
won to the new religion.
But the
Christians made a shrewd bargain with the pagans in
that they adopted the ritualistic pageantry of the
pagan while compelling the pagan to accept the
Hellenized version of Pauline Christianity. They
made a better bargain with the pagans than they did
with the Mithraic cult, but even in that earlier
compromise they came off more than conquerors in
that they succeeded in eliminating the gross
immoralities and also numerous other reprehensible
practices of the Persian mystery.
Wisely
or unwisely, these early leaders of Christianity
deliberately compromised the ideals of Jesus
in an effort to save and further many of his
ideas. And they were eminently successful. But
mistake not! these compromised ideals of the Master
are still latent in his gospel, and they will
eventually assert their full power upon the world.
By this
paganization of Christianity the old order won many
minor victories of a ritualistic nature, but the
Christians gained the ascendancy in that:
1. A new
and enormously higher note in human morals was
struck.
2. A new
and greatly enlarged concept of God was given to the
world.
3. The
hope of immortality became a part of the assurance
of a recognized religion.
4. Jesus
of Nazareth was given to man's hungry soul.
Many of
the great truths taught by Jesus were almost lost in
these early compromises, but they yet slumber in
this religion of paganized Christianity, which was
in turn the Pauline version of the life and
teachings of the Son of Man. And Christianity, even
before it was paganized, was first thoroughly
Hellenized. Christianity owes much, very much, to
the Greeks. It was a Greek, from Egypt, who so
bravely stood up at Nicaea and so fearlessly
challenged this assembly that it dared not so
obscure the concept of the nature of Jesus that the
real truth of his bestowal might have been in danger
of being lost to the world. This Greek's name was
Athanasius, and but for the eloquence and the logic
of this believer, the persuasions of Arius would
have triumphed.
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1.
INFLUENCE OF THE GREEKS
The
Hellenization of Christianity started in earnest on
that eventful day when the Apostle Paul stood before
the council of the Areopagus in Athens and told the
Athenians about "the Unknown God." There, under the
shadow of the Acropolis, this Roman citizen
proclaimed to these Greeks his version of the new
religion which had taken origin in the Jewish land
of Galilee. And there was something strangely alike
in Greek philosophy and many of the teachings of
Jesus. They had a common goal--both aimed at the
emergence of the individual. The Greek, at
social and political emergence; Jesus, at moral and
spiritual emergence. The Greek taught intellectual
liberalism leading to political freedom; Jesus
taught spiritual liberalism leading to religious
liberty. These two ideas put together constituted a
new and mighty charter for human freedom; they
presaged man's social, political, and spiritual
liberty.
Christianity came into existence and triumphed over
all contending religions primarily because of two
things:
1. The
Greek mind was willing to borrow new and good ideas
even from the Jews.
2. Paul
and his successors were willing but shrewd and
sagacious compromisers; they were keen theologic
traders.
At the
time Paul stood up in Athens preaching "Christ and
Him Crucified," the Greeks were spiritually hungry;
they were inquiring, interested, and actually
looking for spiritual truth. Never forget that at
first the Romans fought Christianity, while the
Greeks embraced it, and that it was the Greeks who
literally forced the Romans subsequently to accept
this new religion, as then modified, as a part of
Greek culture.
The
Greek revered beauty, the Jew holiness, but both
peoples loved truth. For centuries the Greek had
seriously thought and earnestly debated about all
human problems--social, economic, political, and
philosophic--except religion. Few Greeks had paid
much attention to religion; they did not take even
their own religion very seriously. For centuries the
Jews had neglected these other fields of thought
while they devoted their minds to religion. They
took their religion very seriously, too seriously.
As illuminated by the content of Jesus' message, the
united product of the centuries of the thought of
these two peoples now became the driving power of a
new order of human society and, to a certain extent,
of a new order of human religious belief and
practice.
The
influence of Greek culture had already penetrated
the lands of the western Mediterranean when
Alexander spread Hellenistic civilization over the
near-Eastern world. The Greeks did very well with
their religion and their politics as long as they
lived in small city-states, but when the Macedonian
king dared to expand Greece into an empire,
stretching from the Adriatic to the Indus, trouble
began. The art and philosophy of Greece were fully
equal to the task of imperial expansion, but not so
with Greek political administration or religion.
After the city-states of Greece had expanded into
empire, their rather parochial gods seemed a little
queer. The Greeks were really searching for one
God, a greater and better God, when the
Christianized version of the older Jewish religion
came to them.
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The
Hellenistic Empire, as such, could not endure. Its
cultural sway continued on, but it endured only
after securing from the West the Roman political
genius for empire administration and after obtaining
from the East a religion whose one God possessed
empire dignity.
In the
first century after Christ, Hellenistic culture had
already attained its highest levels; its
retrogression had begun; learning was advancing but
genius was declining. It was at this very time that
the ideas and ideals of Jesus, which were partially
embodied in Christianity, became a part of the
salvage of Greek culture and learning.
Alexander had charged on the East with the cultural
gift of the civilization of Greece; Paul assaulted
the West with the Christian version of the gospel of
Jesus. And wherever the Greek culture prevailed
throughout the West, there Hellenized Christianity
took root.
The
Eastern version of the message of Jesus,
notwithstanding that it remained more true to his
teachings, continued to follow the uncompromising
attitude of Abner. It never progressed as did the
Hellenized version and was eventually lost in the
Islamic movement.
2. THE
ROMAN INFLUENCE
The
Romans bodily took over Greek culture, putting
representative government in the place of government
by lot. And presently this change favored
Christianity in that Rome brought into the whole
Western world a new tolerance for strange languages,
peoples, and even religions.
Much of
the early persecution of Christians in Rome was due
solely to their unfortunate use of the term
"kingdom" in their preaching. The Romans were
tolerant of any and all religions but very resentful
of anything that savored of political rivalry. And
so, when these early persecutions, due so largely to
misunderstanding, died out, the field for religious
propaganda was wide open. The Roman was interested
in political administration; he cared little for
either art or religion, but he was unusually
tolerant of both.
Oriental
law was stern and arbitrary; Greek law was fluid and
artistic; Roman law was dignified and
respect-breeding. Roman education bred an unheard-of
and stolid loyalty. The early Romans were
politically devoted and sublimely consecrated
individuals. They were honest, zealous, and
dedicated to their ideals, but without a religion
worthy of the name. Small wonder that their Greek
teachers were able to persuade them to accept Paul's
Christianity.
And
these Romans were a great people. They could govern
the Occident because they did govern themselves.
Such unparalleled honesty, devotion, and stalwart
self-control was ideal soil for the reception and
growth of Christianity.
It was
easy for these Greco-Romans to become just as
spiritually devoted to an institutional church as
they were politically devoted to the state. The
Romans fought the church only when they feared it as
a competitor of the state. Rome, having little
national philosophy or native culture, took over
Greek culture for its own and boldly adopted Christ
as its moral philosophy. Christianity became the
moral culture of Rome but hardly its religion in the
sense of being the individual experience in
spiritual growth of those who embraced the new
religion in such a wholesale manner. True, indeed,
many individuals did penetrate beneath the surface
of all this state religion and found for the
nourishment
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of their souls
the real values of the hidden meanings held within
the latent truths of Hellenized and paganized
Christianity.
The
Stoic and his sturdy appeal to "nature and
conscience" had only the better prepared all Rome to
receive Christ, at least in an intellectual sense.
The Roman was by nature and training a lawyer; he
revered even the laws of nature. And now, in
Christianity, he discerned in the laws of nature the
laws of God. A people that could produce Cicero and
Vergil were ripe for Paul's Hellenized Christianity.
And so
did these Romanized Greeks force both Jews and
Christians to philosophize their religion, to
co-ordinate its ideas and systematize its ideals, to
adapt religious practices to the existing current of
life. And all this was enormously helped by
translation of the Hebrew scriptures into Greek and
by the later recording of the New Testament in the
Greek tongue.
The
Greeks, in contrast with the Jews and many other
peoples, had long provisionally believed in
immortality, some sort of survival after death, and
since this was the very heart of Jesus' teaching, it
was certain that Christianity would make a strong
appeal to them.
A
succession of Greek-cultural and Roman-political
victories had consolidated the Mediterranean lands
into one empire, with one language and one culture,
and had made the Western world ready for one God.
Judaism provided this God, but Judaism was not
acceptable as a religion to these Romanized Greeks.
Philo helped some to mitigate their objections, but
Christianity revealed to them an even better concept
of one God, and they embraced it readily.
3. UNDER
THE ROMAN EMPIRE
After
the consolidation of Roman political rule and after
the dissemination of Christianity, the Christians
found themselves with one God, a great religious
concept, but without empire. The Greco-Romans found
themselves with a great empire but without a God to
serve as the suitable religious concept for empire
worship and spiritual unification. The Christians
accepted the empire; the empire adopted
Christianity. The Roman provided a unity of
political rule; the Greek, a unity of culture and
learning; Christianity, a unity of religious thought
and practice.
Rome
overcame the tradition of nationalism by imperial
universalism and for the first time in history made
it possible for different races and nations at least
nominally to accept one religion.
Christianity came into favor in Rome at a time when
there was great contention between the vigorous
teachings of the Stoics and the salvation promises
of the mystery cults. Christianity came with
refreshing comfort and liberating power to a
spiritually hungry people whose language had no word
for "unselfishness."
That
which gave greatest power to Christianity was the
way its believers lived lives of service and even
the way they died for their faith during the earlier
times of drastic persecution.
The
teaching regarding Christ's love for children soon
put an end to the widespread practice of exposing
children to death when they were not wanted,
particularly girl babies.
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The
early plan of Christian worship was largely taken
over from the Jewish synagogue, modified by the
Mithraic ritual; later on, much pagan pageantry was
added. The backbone of the early Christian church
consisted of Christianized Greek proselytes to
Judaism.
The
second century after Christ was the best time in all
the world's history for a good religion to make
progress in the Western world. During the first
century Christianity had prepared itself, by
struggle and compromise, to take root and rapidly
spread. Christianity adopted the emperor; later, he
adopted Christianity. This was a great age for the
spread of a new religion. There was religious
liberty; travel was universal and thought was
untrammeled.
The
spiritual impetus of nominally accepting Hellenized
Christianity came to Rome too late to prevent the
well-started moral decline or to compensate for the
already well-established and increasing racial
deterioration. This new religion was a cultural
necessity for imperial Rome, and it is exceedingly
unfortunate that it did not become a means of
spiritual salvation in a larger sense.
Even a
good religion could not save a great empire from the
sure results of lack of individual participation in
the affairs of government, from overmuch
paternalism, overtaxation and gross collection
abuses, unbalanced trade with the Levant which
drained away the gold, amusement madness, Roman
standardization, the degradation of woman, slavery
and race decadence, physical plagues, and a state
church which became institutionalized nearly to the
point of spiritual barrenness.
Conditions, however, were not so bad at Alexandria.
The early schools continued to hold much of Jesus'
teachings free from compromise. Pantaenus taught
Clement and then went on to follow Nathaniel in
proclaiming Christ in India. While some of the
ideals of Jesus were sacrificed in the building of
Christianity, it should in all fairness be recorded
that, by the end of the second century, practically
all the great minds of the Greco-Roman world had
become Christian. The triumph was approaching
completion.
And this
Roman Empire lasted sufficiently long to insure the
survival of Christianity even after the empire
collapsed. But we have often conjectured what would
have happened in Rome and in the world if it had
been the gospel of the kingdom which had been
accepted in the place of Greek Christianity.
4. THE
EUROPEAN DARK AGES
The
church, being an adjunct to society and the ally of
politics, was doomed to share in the intellectual
and spiritual decline of the so-called European
"dark ages." During this time, religion became more
and more monasticized, asceticized, and legalized.
In a spiritual sense, Christianity was hibernating.
Throughout this period there existed, alongside this
slumbering and secularized religion, a continuous
stream of mysticism, a fantastic spiritual
experience bordering on unreality and
philosophically akin to pantheism.
During
these dark and despairing centuries, religion became
virtually secondhanded again. The individual was
almost lost before the overshadowing authority,
tradition, and dictation of the church. A new
spiritual menace arose in the creation of a galaxy
of "saints" who were assumed to have special
influence at the divine courts, and who, therefore,
if effectively appealed to, would be able to
intercede in man's behalf before the Gods.
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But
Christianity was sufficiently socialized and
paganized that, while it was impotent to stay the
oncoming dark ages, it was the better prepared to
survive this long period of moral darkness and
spiritual stagnation. And it did persist on through
the long night of Western civilization and was still
functioning as a moral influence in the world when
the renaissance dawned. The rehabilitation of
Christianity, following the passing of the dark
ages, resulted in bringing into existence numerous
sects of the Christian teachings, beliefs suited to
special intellectual, emotional, and spiritual types
of human personality. And many of these special
Christian groups, or religious families, still
persist at the time of the making of this
presentation.
Christianity exhibits a history of having originated
out of the unintended transformation of the religion
of Jesus into a religion about Jesus. It further
presents the history of having experienced
Hellenization, paganization, secularization,
institutionalization, intellectual deterioration,
spiritual decadence, moral hibernation, threatened
extinction, later rejuvenation, fragmentation, and
more recent relative rehabilitation. Such a pedigree
is indicative of inherent vitality and the
possession of vast recuperative resources. And this
same Christianity is now present in the civilized
world of Occidental peoples and stands face to face
with a struggle for existence which is even more
ominous than those eventful crises which have
characterized its past battles for dominance.
Religion
is now confronted by the challenge of a new age of
scientific minds and materialistic tendencies. In
this gigantic struggle between the secular and the
spiritual, the religion of Jesus will eventually
triumph.
5. THE
MODERN PROBLEM
The
twentieth century has brought new problems for
Christianity and all other religions to solve. The
higher a civilization climbs, the more necessitous
becomes the duty to "seek first the realities of
heaven" in all of man's efforts to stabilize society
and facilitate the solution of its material
problems.
Truth
often becomes confusing and even misleading when it
is dismembered, segregated, isolated, and too much
analyzed. Living truth teaches the truth seeker
aright only when it is embraced in wholeness and as
a living spiritual reality, not as a fact of
material science or an inspiration of intervening
art.
Religion
is the revelation to man of his divine and eternal
destiny. Religion is a purely personal and spiritual
experience and must forever be distinguished from
man's other high forms of thought, such as:
1. Man's
logical attitude toward the things of material
reality.
2. Man's
aesthetic appreciation of beauty contrasted with
ugliness.
3. Man's
ethical recognition of social obligations and
political duty.
4. Even
man's sense of human morality is not, in and of
itself, religious.
Religion
is designed to find those values in the universe
which call forth faith, trust, and assurance;
religion culminates in worship. Religion discovers
for the soul those supreme values which are in
contrast with the relative values discovered by the
mind. Such superhuman insight can be had only
through genuine religious experience.
A
lasting social system without a morality predicated
on spiritual realities can no more be maintained
than could the solar system without gravity.
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Do not
try to satisfy the curiosity or gratify all the
latent adventure surging within the soul in one
short life in the flesh. Be patient! be not tempted
to indulge in a lawless plunge into cheap and sordid
adventure. Harness your energies and bridle your
passions; be calm while you await the majestic
unfolding of an endless career of progressive
adventure and thrilling discovery.
In
confusion over man's origin, do not lose sight of
his eternal destiny. Forget not that Jesus loved
even little children, and that he forever made clear
the great worth of human personality.
As you
view the world, remember that the black patches of
evil which you see are shown against a white
background of ultimate good. You do not view merely
white patches of good which show up miserably
against a black background of evil.
When
there is so much good truth to publish and proclaim,
why should men dwell so much upon the evil in the
world just because it appears to be a fact? The
beauties of the spiritual values of truth are more
pleasurable and uplifting than is the phenomenon of
evil.
In
religion, Jesus advocated and followed the method of
experience, even as modern science pursues the
technique of experiment. We find God through the
leadings of spiritual insight, but we approach this
insight of the soul through the love of the
beautiful, the pursuit of truth, loyalty to duty,
and the worship of divine goodness. But of all these
values, love is the true guide to real insight.
6.
MATERIALISM
Scientists have unintentionally precipitated mankind
into a materialistic panic; they have started an
unthinking run on the moral bank of the ages, but
this bank of human experience has vast spiritual
resources; it can stand the demands being made upon
it. Only unthinking men become panicky about the
spiritual assets of the human race. When the
materialistic-secular panic is over, the religion of
Jesus will not be found bankrupt. The spiritual bank
of the kingdom of heaven will be paying out faith,
hope, and moral security to all who draw upon it "in
His name."
No
matter what the apparent conflict between
materialism and the teachings of Jesus may be, you
can rest assured that, in the ages to come, the
teachings of the Master will fully triumph. In
reality, true religion cannot become involved in any
controversy with science; it is in no way concerned
with material things. Religion is simply indifferent
to, but sympathetic with, science, while it
supremely concerns itself with the scientist.
The
pursuit of mere knowledge, without the attendant
interpretation of wisdom and the spiritual insight
of religious experience, eventually leads to
pessimism and human despair. A little knowledge is
truly disconcerting.
At the
time of this writing the worst of the materialistic
age is over; the day of a better understanding is
already beginning to dawn. The higher minds of the
scientific world are no longer wholly materialistic
in their philosophy, but the rank and file of the
people still lean in that direction as a result of
former teachings. But this age of physical realism
is only a passing episode in man's life on earth.
Modern science has left true religion--the teachings
of Jesus as translated in the lives of his
believers--untouched. All science has done is to
destroy the childlike illusions of the
misinterpretations of life.
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Science
is a quantitative experience, religion a qualitative
experience, as regards man's life on earth. Science
deals with phenomena; religion, with origins,
values, and goals. To assign causes as an
explanation of physical phenomena is to confess
ignorance of ultimates and in the end only leads the
scientist straight back to the first great
cause--the Universal Father of Paradise.
The
violent swing from an age of miracles to an age of
machines has proved altogether upsetting to man. The
cleverness and dexterity of the false philosophies
of mechanism belie their very mechanistic
contentions. The fatalistic agility of the mind of a
materialist forever disproves his assertions that
the universe is a blind and purposeless energy
phenomenon.
The
mechanistic naturalism of some supposedly educated
men and the thoughtless secularism of the man in the
street are both exclusively concerned with
things; they are barren of all real values,
sanctions, and satisfactions of a spiritual nature,
as well as being devoid of faith, hope, and eternal
assurances. One of the great troubles with modern
life is that man thinks he is too busy to find time
for spiritual meditation and religious devotion.
Materialism reduces man to a soulless automaton and
constitutes him merely an arithmetical symbol
finding a helpless place in the mathematical formula
of an unromantic and mechanistic universe. But
whence comes all this vast universe of mathematics
without a Master Mathematician? Science may
expatiate on the conservation of matter, but
religion validates the conservation of men's
souls--it concerns their experience with spiritual
realities and eternal values.
The
materialistic sociologist of today surveys a
community, makes a report thereon, and leaves the
people as he found them. Nineteen hundred years ago,
unlearned Galileans surveyed Jesus giving his life
as a spiritual contribution to man's inner
experience and then went out and turned the whole
Roman Empire upside down.
But
religious leaders are making a great mistake when
they try to call modern man to spiritual battle with
the trumpet blasts of the Middle Ages. Religion must
provide itself with new and up-to-date slogans.
Neither democracy nor any other political panacea
will take the place of spiritual progress. False
religions may represent an evasion of reality, but
Jesus in his gospel introduced mortal man to the
very entrance upon an eternal reality of spiritual
progression.
To say
that mind "emerged" from matter explains nothing. If
the universe were merely a mechanism and mind were
unapart from matter, we would never have two
differing interpretations of any observed
phenomenon. The concepts of truth, beauty, and
goodness are not inherent in either physics or
chemistry. A machine cannot know, much less
know truth, hunger for righteousness, and cherish
goodness.
Science
may be physical, but the mind of the
truth-discerning scientist is at once supermaterial.
Matter knows not truth, neither can it love mercy
nor delight in spiritual realities. Moral
convictions based on spiritual enlightenment and
rooted in human experience are just as real and
certain as mathematical deductions based on physical
observations, but on another and higher level.
If men
were only machines, they would react more or less
uniformly to a material universe. Individuality,
much less personality, would be nonexistent.
The fact
of the absolute mechanism of Paradise at the center
of the universe of universes, in the presence of the
unqualified volition of the Second Source and
Center, makes forever certain that determiners are
not the exclusive law of the
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cosmos.
Materialism is there, but it is not exclusive;
mechanism is there, but it is not unqualified;
determinism is there, but it is not alone.
The
finite universe of matter would eventually become
uniform and deterministic but for the combined
presence of mind and spirit. The influence of the
cosmic mind constantly injects spontaneity into even
the material worlds.
Freedom
or initiative in any realm of existence is directly
proportional to the degree of spiritual influence
and cosmic-mind control; that is, in human
experience, the degree of the actuality of doing
"the Father's will." And so, when you once start out
to find God, that is the conclusive proof that God
has already found you.
The
sincere pursuit of goodness, beauty, and truth leads
to God. And every scientific discovery demonstrates
the existence of both freedom and uniformity in the
universe. The discoverer was free to make the
discovery. The thing discovered is real and
apparently uniform, or else it could not have become
known as a thing.
7. THE
VULNERABILITY OF MATERIALISM
How
foolish it is for material-minded man to allow such
vulnerable theories as those of a mechanistic
universe to deprive him of the vast spiritual
resources of the personal experience of true
religion. Facts never quarrel with real spiritual
faith; theories may. Better that science should be
devoted to the destruction of superstition rather
than attempting the overthrow of religious
faith--human belief in spiritual realities and
divine values.
Science
should do for man materially what religion does for
him spiritually: extend the horizon of life and
enlarge his personality. True science can have no
lasting quarrel with true religion. The "scientific
method" is merely an intellectual yardstick
wherewith to measure material adventures and
physical achievements. But being material and wholly
intellectual, it is utterly useless in the
evaluation of spiritual realities and religious
experiences.
The
inconsistency of the modern mechanist is: If this
were merely a material universe and man only a
machine, such a man would be wholly unable to
recognize himself as such a machine, and likewise
would such a machine-man be wholly unconscious of
the fact of the existence of such a material
universe. The materialistic dismay and despair of a
mechanistic science has failed to recognize the fact
of the spirit-indwelt mind of the scientist whose
very supermaterial insight formulates these mistaken
and self-contradictory concepts of a
materialistic universe.
Paradise
values of eternity and infinity, of truth, beauty,
and goodness, are concealed within the facts of the
phenomena of the universes of time and space. But it
requires the eye of faith in a spirit-born mortal to
detect and discern these spiritual values.
The
realities and values of spiritual progress are not a
"psychologic projection"--a mere glorified daydream
of the material mind. Such things are the spiritual
forecasts of the indwelling Adjuster, the spirit of
God living in the mind of man. And let not your
dabblings with the faintly glimpsed findings of
"relativity" disturb your concepts of the eternity
and infinity of God. And in all your solicitation
concerning the necessity for self-expression
do not make the mistake of failing to provide for
Adjuster-expression, the manifestation of your
real and better self.
Page 2079
If this
were only a material universe, material man would
never be able to arrive at the concept of the
mechanistic character of such an exclusively
material existence. This very mechanistic concept
of the universe is in itself a nonmaterial
phenomenon of mind, and all mind is of nonmaterial
origin, no matter how thoroughly it may appear to be
materially conditioned and mechanistically
controlled.
The
partially evolved mental mechanism of mortal man is
not overendowed with consistency and wisdom. Man's
conceit often outruns his reason and eludes his
logic.
The very
pessimism of the most pessimistic materialist is, in
and of itself, sufficient proof that the universe of
the pessimist is not wholly material. Both optimism
and pessimism are concept reactions in a mind
conscious of values as well as of facts.
If the universe were truly what the materialist
regards it to be, man as a human machine would then
be devoid of all conscious recognition of that very
fact. Without the consciousness of the
concept of values within the spirit-born
mind, the fact of universe materialism and the
mechanistic phenomena of universe operation would be
wholly unrecognized by man. One machine cannot be
conscious of the nature or value of another machine.
A
mechanistic philosophy of life and the universe
cannot be scientific because science recognizes and
deals only with materials and facts. Philosophy is
inevitably superscientific. Man is a material fact
of nature, but his life is a phenomenon which
transcends the material levels of nature in that it
exhibits the control attributes of mind and the
creative qualities of spirit.
The
sincere effort of man to become a mechanist
represents the tragic phenomenon of that man's
futile effort to commit intellectual and moral
suicide. But he cannot do it.
If the
universe were only material and man only a machine,
there would be no science to embolden the scientist
to postulate this mechanization of the universe.
Machines cannot measure, classify, nor evaluate
themselves. Such a scientific piece of work could be
executed only by some entity of supermachine status.
If
universe reality is only one vast machine, then man
must be outside of the universe and apart from it in
order to recognize such a fact and become
conscious of the insight of such an
evaluation.
If man
is only a machine, by what technique does this man
come to believe or claim to know that
he is only a machine? The experience of
self-conscious evaluation of one's self is never an
attribute of a mere machine. A self-conscious and
avowed mechanist is the best possible answer to
mechanism. If materialism were a fact, there could
be no self-conscious mechanist. It is also true that
one must first be a moral person before one can
perform immoral acts.
The very
claim of materialism implies a supermaterial
consciousness of the mind which presumes to assert
such dogmas. A mechanism might deteriorate, but it
could never progress. Machines do not think, create,
dream, aspire, idealize, hunger for truth, or thirst
for righteousness. They do not motivate their lives
with the passion to serve other machines and to
choose as their goal of eternal progression the
sublime task of finding God and striving to be like
him. Machines are never intellectual, emotional,
aesthetic, ethical, moral, or spiritual.
Art
proves that man is not mechanistic, but it does not
prove that he is spiritually immortal. Art is mortal
morontia, the intervening field between man,
Page 2080
the material, and
man, the spiritual. Poetry is an effort to escape
from material realities to spiritual values.
In a
high civilization, art humanizes science, while in
turn it is spiritualized by true religion--insight
into spiritual and eternal values. Art represents
the human and time-space evaluation of reality.
Religion is the divine embrace of cosmic
values and connotes eternal progression in spiritual
ascension and expansion. The art of time is
dangerous only when it becomes blind to the spirit
standards of the divine patterns which eternity
reflects as the reality shadows of time. True art is
the effective manipulation of the material things of
life; religion is the ennobling transformation of
the material facts of life, and it never ceases in
its spiritual evaluation of art.
How
foolish to presume that an automaton could conceive
a philosophy of automatism, and how ridiculous that
it should presume to form such a concept of other
and fellow automatons!
Any
scientific interpretation of the material universe
is valueless unless it provides due recognition for
the scientist. No appreciation of art is
genuine unless it accords recognition to the
artist. No evaluation of morals is worth while
unless it includes the moralist. No
recognition of philosophy is edifying if it ignores
the philosopher, and religion cannot exist
without the real experience of the religionist
who, in and through this very experience, is seeking
to find God and to know him. Likewise is the
universe of universes without significance apart
from the I AM, the infinite God who made it and
unceasingly manages it.
Mechanists--humanists--tend to drift with the
material currents. Idealists and spiritists dare
to use their oars with intelligence and vigor in
order to modify the apparently purely material
course of the energy streams.
Science
lives by the mathematics of the mind; music
expresses the tempo of the emotions. Religion is the
spiritual rhythm of the soul in time-space harmony
with the higher and eternal melody measurements of
Infinity. Religious experience is something in human
life which is truly supermathematical.
In
language, an alphabet represents the mechanism of
materialism, while the words expressive of the
meaning of a thousand thoughts, grand ideas, and
noble ideals--of love and hate, of cowardice and
courage--represent the performances of mind within
the scope defined by both material and spiritual
law, directed by the assertion of the will of
personality, and limited by the inherent situational
endowment.
The
universe is not like the laws, mechanisms, and the
uniformities which the scientist discovers, and
which he comes to regard as science, but rather like
the curious, thinking, choosing, creative,
combining, and discriminating scientist who
thus observes universe phenomena and classifies the
mathematical facts inherent in the mechanistic
phases of the material side of creation. Neither is
the universe like the art of the artist, but rather
like the striving, dreaming, aspiring, and advancing
artist who seeks to transcend the world of
material things in an effort to achieve a spiritual
goal.
The
scientist, not science, perceives the reality of an
evolving and advancing universe of energy and
matter. The artist, not art, demonstrates the
existence of the transient morontia world
intervening between material existence and spiritual
liberty. The religionist, not religion, proves the
existence of the spirit realities and divine values
which are to be encountered in the progress of
eternity.
Page 2081
8.
SECULAR TOTALITARIANISM
But even
after materialism and mechanism have been more or
less vanquished, the devastating influence of
twentieth-century secularism will still blight the
spiritual experience of millions of unsuspecting
souls.
Modern
secularism has been fostered by two world-wide
influences. The father of secularism was the
narrow-minded and godless attitude of nineteenth-
and twentieth-century so-called science--atheistic
science. The mother of modern secularism was the
totalitarian medieval Christian church. Secularism
had its inception as a rising protest against the
almost complete domination of Western civilization
by the institutionalized Christian church.
At the
time of this revelation, the prevailing intellectual
and philosophical climate of both European and
American life is decidedly secular--humanistic. For
three hundred years Western thinking has been
progressively secularized. Religion has become more
and more a nominal influence, largely a ritualistic
exercise. The majority of professed Christians of
Western civilization are unwittingly actual
secularists.
It
required a great power, a mighty influence, to free
the thinking and living of the Western peoples from
the withering grasp of a totalitarian ecclesiastical
domination. Secularism did break the bonds of church
control, and now in turn it threatens to establish a
new and godless type of mastery over the hearts and
minds of modern man. The tyrannical and dictatorial
political state is the direct offspring of
scientific materialism and philosophic secularism.
Secularism no sooner frees man from the domination
of the institutionalized church than it sells him
into slavish bondage to the totalitarian state.
Secularism frees man from ecclesiastical slavery
only to betray him into the tyranny of political and
economic slavery.
Materialism denies God, secularism simply ignores
him; at least that was the earlier attitude. More
recently, secularism has assumed a more militant
attitude, assuming to take the place of the religion
whose totalitarian bondage it onetime resisted.
Twentieth-century secularism tends to affirm that
man does not need God. But beware! this godless
philosophy of human society will lead only to
unrest, animosity, unhappiness, war, and world-wide
disaster.
Secularism can never bring peace to mankind. Nothing
can take the place of God in human society. But mark
you well! do not be quick to surrender the
beneficent gains of the secular revolt from
ecclesiastical totalitarianism. Western civilization
today enjoys many liberties and satisfactions as a
result of the secular revolt. The great mistake of
secularism was this: In revolting against the almost
total control of life by religious authority, and
after attaining the liberation from such
ecclesiastical tyranny, the secularists went on to
institute a revolt against God himself, sometimes
tacitly and sometimes openly.
To the
secularistic revolt you owe the amazing creativity
of American industrialism and the unprecedented
material progress of Western civilization. And
because the secularistic revolt went too far and
lost sight of God and true religion, there
also followed the unlooked-for harvest of world wars
and international unsettledness.
It is
not necessary to sacrifice faith in God in order to
enjoy the blessings of the modern secularistic
revolt: tolerance, social service, democratic
government,
Page 2082
and civil
liberties. It was not necessary for the secularists
to antagonize true religion in order to promote
science and to advance education.
But
secularism is not the sole parent of all these
recent gains in the enlargement of living. Behind
the gains of the twentieth century are not only
science and secularism but also the unrecognized and
unacknowledged spiritual workings of the life and
teaching of Jesus of Nazareth.
Without
God, without religion, scientific secularism can
never co-ordinate its forces, harmonize its
divergent and rivalrous interests, races, and
nationalisms. This secularistic human society,
notwithstanding its unparalleled materialistic
achievement, is slowly disintegrating. The chief
cohesive force resisting this disintegration of
antagonism is nationalism. And nationalism is the
chief barrier to world peace.
The
inherent weakness of secularism is that it discards
ethics and religion for politics and power. You
simply cannot establish the brotherhood of men while
ignoring or denying the fatherhood of God.
Secular
social and political optimism is an illusion.
Without God, neither freedom and liberty, nor
property and wealth will lead to peace.
The
complete secularization of science, education,
industry, and society can lead only to disaster.
During the first third of the twentieth century
Urantians killed more human beings than were killed
during the whole of the Christian dispensation up to
that time. And this is only the beginning of the
dire harvest of materialism and secularism; still
more terrible destruction is yet to come.
9.
CHRISTIANITY'S PROBLEM
Do not
overlook the value of your spiritual heritage, the
river of truth running down through the centuries,
even to the barren times of a materialistic and
secular age. In all your worthy efforts to rid
yourselves of the superstitious creeds of past ages,
make sure that you hold fast the eternal truth. But
be patient! when the present superstition revolt is
over, the truths of Jesus' gospel will persist
gloriously to illuminate a new and better way.
But
paganized and socialized Christianity stands in need
of new contact with the uncompromised teachings of
Jesus; it languishes for lack of a new vision of the
Master's life on earth. A new and fuller revelation
of the religion of Jesus is destined to conquer an
empire of materialistic secularism and to overthrow
a world sway of mechanistic naturalism. Urantia is
now quivering on the very brink of one of its most
amazing and enthralling epochs of social
readjustment, moral quickening, and spiritual
enlightenment.
The
teachings of Jesus, even though greatly modified,
survived the mystery cults of their birthtime, the
ignorance and superstition of the dark ages, and are
even now slowly triumphing over the materialism,
mechanism, and secularism of the twentieth century.
And such times of great testing and threatened
defeat are always times of great revelation.
Religion
does need new leaders, spiritual men and women who
will dare to depend solely on Jesus and his
incomparable teachings. If Christianity persists in
neglecting its spiritual mission while it continues
to busy itself with social and material problems,
the spiritual renaissance must await the coming of
these new teachers of Jesus' religion who will be
exclusively devoted to the spiritual regeneration of
men. And then will these spirit-born souls quickly
supply the
Page 2083
leadership and
inspiration requisite for the social, moral,
economic, and political reorganization of the world.
The
modern age will refuse to accept a religion which is
inconsistent with facts and out of harmony with its
highest conceptions of truth, beauty, and goodness.
The hour is striking for a rediscovery of the true
and original foundations of present-day distorted
and compromised Christianity--the real life and
teachings of Jesus.
Primitive man lived a life of superstitious bondage
to religious fear. Modern, civilized men dread the
thought of falling under the dominance of strong
religious convictions. Thinking man has always
feared to be held by a religion. When a
strong and moving religion threatens to dominate
him, he invariably tries to rationalize,
traditionalize, and institutionalize it, thereby
hoping to gain control of it. By such procedure,
even a revealed religion becomes man-made and
man-dominated. Modern men and women of intelligence
evade the religion of Jesus because of their fears
of what it will do to them--and with
them. And all such fears are well founded. The
religion of Jesus does, indeed, dominate and
transform its believers, demanding that men dedicate
their lives to seeking for a knowledge of the will
of the Father in heaven and requiring that the
energies of living be consecrated to the unselfish
service of the brotherhood of man.
Selfish
men and women simply will not pay such a price for
even the greatest spiritual treasure ever offered
mortal man. Only when man has become sufficiently
disillusioned by the sorrowful disappointments
attendant upon the foolish and deceptive pursuits of
selfishness, and subsequent to the discovery of the
barrenness of formalized religion, will he be
disposed to turn wholeheartedly to the gospel of the
kingdom, the religion of Jesus of Nazareth.
The
world needs more firsthand religion. Even
Christianity--the best of the religions of the
twentieth century--is not only a religion about
Jesus, but it is so largely one which men experience
secondhand. They take their religion wholly as
handed down by their accepted religious teachers.
What an awakening the world would experience if it
could only see Jesus as he really lived on earth and
know, firsthand, his life-giving teachings!
Descriptive words of things beautiful cannot thrill
like the sight thereof, neither can creedal words
inspire men's souls like the experience of knowing
the presence of God. But expectant faith will ever
keep the hope-door of man's soul open for the
entrance of the eternal spiritual realities of the
divine values of the worlds beyond.
Christianity has dared to lower its ideals before
the challenge of human greed, war-madness, and the
lust for power; but the religion of Jesus stands as
the unsullied and transcendent spiritual summons,
calling to the best there is in man to rise above
all these legacies of animal evolution and, by
grace, attain the moral heights of true human
destiny.
Christianity is threatened by slow death from
formalism, overorganization, intellectualism, and
other nonspiritual trends. The modern Christian
church is not such a brotherhood of dynamic
believers as Jesus commissioned continuously to
effect the spiritual transformation of successive
generations of mankind.
So-called Christianity has become a social and
cultural movement as well as a religious belief and
practice. The stream of modern Christianity drains
many an ancient pagan swamp and many a barbarian
morass; many olden cultural watersheds drain into
this present-day cultural stream as well as the high
Galilean tablelands which are supposed to be its
exclusive source.
Page 2084
10. THE
FUTURE
Christianity has indeed done a great service for
this world, but what is now most needed is Jesus.
The world needs to see Jesus living again on earth
in the experience of spirit-born mortals who
effectively reveal the Master to all men. It is
futile to talk about a revival of primitive
Christianity; you must go forward from where you
find yourselves. Modern culture must become
spiritually baptized with a new revelation of Jesus'
life and illuminated with a new understanding of his
gospel of eternal salvation. And when Jesus becomes
thus lifted up, he will draw all men to himself.
Jesus' disciples should be more than conquerors,
even overflowing sources of inspiration and enhanced
living to all men. Religion is only an exalted
humanism until it is made divine by the discovery of
the reality of the presence of God in personal
experience.
The
beauty and sublimity, the humanity and divinity, the
simplicity and uniqueness, of Jesus' life on earth
present such a striking and appealing picture of
man-saving and God-revealing that the theologians
and philosophers of all time should be effectively
restrained from daring to form creeds or create
theological systems of spiritual bondage out of such
a transcendental bestowal of God in the form of man.
In Jesus the universe produced a mortal man in whom
the spirit of love triumphed over the material
handicaps of time and overcame the fact of physical
origin.
Ever
bear in mind--God and men need each other. They are
mutually necessary to the full and final attainment
of eternal personality experience in the divine
destiny of universe finality.
"The
kingdom of God is within you" was probably the
greatest pronouncement Jesus ever made, next to the
declaration that his Father is a living and loving
spirit.
In
winning souls for the Master, it is not the first
mile of compulsion, duty, or convention that will
transform man and his world, but rather the
second mile of free service and liberty-loving
devotion that betokens the Jesusonian reaching forth
to grasp his brother in love and sweep him on under
spiritual guidance toward the higher and divine goal
of mortal existence. Christianity even now willingly
goes the first mile, but mankind languishes
and stumbles along in moral darkness because there
are so few genuine second-milers--so few professed
followers of Jesus who really live and love as he
taught his disciples to live and love and serve.
The call
to the adventure of building a new and transformed
human society by means of the spiritual rebirth of
Jesus' brotherhood of the kingdom should thrill all
who believe in him as men have not been stirred
since the days when they walked about on earth as
his companions in the flesh.
No
social system or political regime which denies the
reality of God can contribute in any constructive
and lasting manner to the advancement of human
civilization. But Christianity, as it is subdivided
and secularized today, presents the greatest single
obstacle to its further advancement; especially is
this true concerning the Orient.
Ecclesiasticism is at once and forever incompatible
with that living faith, growing spirit, and
firsthand experience of the faith-comrades of Jesus
in the
Page 2085
brotherhood of
man in the spiritual association of the kingdom of
heaven. The praiseworthy desire to preserve
traditions of past achievement often leads to the
defense of outgrown systems of worship. The
well-meant desire to foster ancient thought systems
effectually prevents the sponsoring of new and
adequate means and methods designed to satisfy the
spiritual longings of the expanding and advancing
minds of modern men. Likewise, the Christian
churches of the twentieth century stand as great,
but wholly unconscious, obstacles to the immediate
advance of the real gospel--the teachings of Jesus
of Nazareth.
Many
earnest persons who would gladly yield loyalty to
the Christ of the gospel find it very difficult
enthusiastically to support a church which exhibits
so little of the spirit of his life and teachings,
and which they have been erroneously taught he
founded. Jesus did not found the so-called Christian
church, but he has, in every manner consistent with
his nature, fostered it as the best existent
exponent of his lifework on earth.
If the
Christian church would only dare to espouse the
Master's program, thousands of apparently
indifferent youths would rush forward to enlist in
such a spiritual undertaking, and they would not
hesitate to go all the way through with this great
adventure.
Christianity is seriously confronted with the doom
embodied in one of its own slogans: "A house divided
against itself cannot stand." The non-Christian
world will hardly capitulate to a sect-divided
Christendom. The living Jesus is the only hope of a
possible unification of Christianity. The true
church--the Jesus brotherhood--is invisible,
spiritual, and is characterized by unity, not
necessarily by uniformity. Uniformity is the
earmark of the physical world of mechanistic nature.
Spiritual unity is the fruit of faith union with the
living Jesus. The visible church should refuse
longer to handicap the progress of the invisible and
spiritual brotherhood of the kingdom of God. And
this brotherhood is destined to become a living
organism in contrast to an institutionalized
social organization. It may well utilize such social
organizations, but it must not be supplanted by
them.
But the
Christianity of even the twentieth century must not
be despised. It is the product of the combined moral
genius of the God-knowing men of many races during
many ages, and it has truly been one of the greatest
powers for good on earth, and therefore no man
should lightly regard it, notwithstanding its
inherent and acquired defects. Christianity still
contrives to move the minds of reflective men with
mighty moral emotions.
But
there is no excuse for the involvement of the church
in commerce and politics; such unholy alliances are
a flagrant betrayal of the Master. And the genuine
lovers of truth will be slow to forget that this
powerful institutionalized church has often dared to
smother newborn faith and persecute truth bearers
who chanced to appear in unorthodox raiment.
It is
all too true that such a church would not have
survived unless there had been men in the world who
preferred such a style of worship. Many spiritually
indolent souls crave an ancient and authoritative
religion of ritual and sacred traditions. Human
evolution and spiritual progress are hardly
sufficient to enable all men to dispense with
religious authority. And the invisible brotherhood
of the kingdom may well include these family groups
of various social and temperamental classes if they
are only willing to become truly spirit-led sons of
God. But in this brotherhood of Jesus there is no
place for sectarian rivalry, group bitterness, nor
assertions of moral superiority and spiritual
infallibility.
Page 2086
These
various groupings of Christians may serve to
accommodate numerous different types of would-be
believers among the various peoples of Western
civilization, but such division of Christendom
presents a grave weakness when it attempts to carry
the gospel of Jesus to Oriental peoples. These races
do not yet understand that there is a religion of
Jesus separate, and somewhat apart, from
Christianity, which has more and more become a
religion about Jesus.
The
great hope of Urantia lies in the possibility of a
new revelation of Jesus with a new and enlarged
presentation of his saving message which would
spiritually unite in loving service the numerous
families of his present-day professed followers.
Even
secular education could help in this great spiritual
renaissance if it would pay more attention to the
work of teaching youth how to engage in life
planning and character progression. The purpose of
all education should be to foster and further the
supreme purpose of life, the development of a
majestic and well-balanced personality. There is
great need for the teaching of moral discipline in
the place of so much self-gratification. Upon such a
foundation religion may contribute its spiritual
incentive to the enlargement and enrichment of
mortal life, even to the security and enhancement of
life eternal.
Christianity is an extemporized religion, and
therefore must it operate in low gear. High-gear
spiritual performances must await the new revelation
and the more general acceptance of the real religion
of Jesus. But Christianity is a mighty religion,
seeing that the commonplace disciples of a crucified
carpenter set in motion those teachings which
conquered the Roman world in three hundred years and
then went on to triumph over the barbarians who
overthrew Rome. This same Christianity
conquered--absorbed and exalted--the whole stream of
Hebrew theology and Greek philosophy. And then, when
this Christian religion became comatose for more
than a thousand years as a result of an overdose of
mysteries and paganism, it resurrected itself and
virtually reconquered the whole Western world.
Christianity contains enough of Jesus' teachings to
immortalize it.
If
Christianity could only grasp more of Jesus'
teachings, it could do so much more in helping
modern man to solve his new and increasingly complex
problems.
Christianity suffers under a great handicap because
it has become identified in the minds of all the
world as a part of the social system, the industrial
life, and the moral standards of Western
civilization; and thus has Christianity unwittingly
seemed to sponsor a society which staggers under the
guilt of tolerating science without idealism,
politics without principles, wealth without work,
pleasure without restraint, knowledge without
character, power without conscience, and industry
without morality.
The hope
of modern Christianity is that it should cease to
sponsor the social systems and industrial policies
of Western civilization while it humbly bows itself
before the cross it so valiantly extols, there to
learn anew from Jesus of Nazareth the greatest
truths mortal man can ever hear--the living gospel
of the fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man. |