PAPER 196
- THE FAITH OF JESUS
JESUS enjoyed a
sublime and wholehearted faith in God. He
experienced the ordinary ups and downs of mortal
existence, but he never religiously doubted the
certainty of God's watchcare and guidance. His faith
was the outgrowth of the insight born of the
activity of the divine presence, his indwelling
Adjuster. His faith was neither traditional nor
merely intellectual; it was wholly personal and
purely spiritual.
The
human Jesus saw God as being holy, just, and great,
as well as being true, beautiful, and good. All
these attributes of divinity he focused in his mind
as the "will of the Father in heaven." Jesus' God
was at one and the same time "The Holy One of
Israel" and "The living and loving Father in
heaven." The concept of God as a Father was not
original with Jesus, but he exalted and elevated the
idea into a sublime experience by achieving a new
revelation of God and by proclaiming that every
mortal creature is a child of this Father of love, a
son of God.
Jesus
did not cling to faith in God as would a struggling
soul at war with the universe and at death grips
with a hostile and sinful world; he did not resort
to faith merely as a consolation in the midst of
difficulties or as a comfort in threatened despair;
faith was not just an illusory compensation for the
unpleasant realities and the sorrows of living. In
the very face of all the natural difficulties and
the temporal contradictions of mortal existence, he
experienced the tranquillity of supreme and
unquestioned trust in God and felt the tremendous
thrill of living, by faith, in the very presence of
the heavenly Father. And this triumphant faith was a
living experience of actual spirit attainment.
Jesus' great contribution to the values of human
experience was not that he revealed so many new
ideas about the Father in heaven, but rather that he
so magnificently and humanly demonstrated a new and
higher type of living faith in God. Never on
all the worlds of this universe, in the life of any
one mortal, did God ever become such a living
reality as in the human experience of Jesus of
Nazareth.
In the
Master's life on Urantia, this and all other worlds
of the local creation discover a new and higher type
of religion, religion based on personal spiritual
relations with the Universal Father and wholly
validated by the supreme authority of genuine
personal experience. This living faith of Jesus was
more than an intellectual reflection, and it was not
a mystic meditation.
Theology
may fix, formulate, define, and dogmatize faith, but
in the human life of Jesus faith was personal,
living, original, spontaneous, and purely spiritual.
This faith was not reverence for tradition nor a
mere intellectual belief which he held as a sacred
creed, but rather a sublime experience and a
profound conviction which securely held him.
His faith was so real and all-encompassing that it
Page 2088
absolutely swept
away any spiritual doubts and effectively destroyed
every conflicting desire. Nothing was able to tear
him away from the spiritual anchorage of this
fervent, sublime, and undaunted faith. Even in the
face of apparent defeat or in the throes of
disappointment and threatening despair, he calmly
stood in the divine presence free from fear and
fully conscious of spiritual invincibility. Jesus
enjoyed the invigorating assurance of the possession
of unflinching faith, and in each of life's trying
situations he unfailingly exhibited an unquestioning
loyalty to the Father's will. And this superb faith
was undaunted even by the cruel and crushing threat
of an ignominious death.
In a
religious genius, strong spiritual faith so many
times leads directly to disastrous fanaticism, to
exaggeration of the religious ego, but it was not so
with Jesus. He was not unfavorably affected in his
practical life by his extraordinary faith and spirit
attainment because this spiritual exaltation was a
wholly unconscious and spontaneous soul expression
of his personal experience with God.
The
all-consuming and indomitable spiritual faith of
Jesus never became fanatical, for it never attempted
to run away with his well-balanced intellectual
judgments concerning the proportional values of
practical and commonplace social, economic, and
moral life situations. The Son of Man was a
splendidly unified human personality; he was a
perfectly endowed divine being; he was also
magnificently co-ordinated as a combined human and
divine being functioning on earth as a single
personality. Always did the Master co-ordinate the
faith of the soul with the wisdom-appraisals of
seasoned experience. Personal faith, spiritual hope,
and moral devotion were always correlated in a
matchless religious unity of harmonious association
with the keen realization of the reality and
sacredness of all human loyalties--personal honor,
family love, religious obligation, social duty, and
economic necessity.
The
faith of Jesus visualized all spirit values as being
found in the kingdom of God; therefore he said,
"Seek first the kingdom of heaven." Jesus saw in the
advanced and ideal fellowship of the kingdom the
achievement and fulfillment of the "will of God."
The very heart of the prayer which he taught his
disciples was, "Your kingdom come; your will be
done." Having thus conceived of the kingdom as
comprising the will of God, he devoted himself to
the cause of its realization with amazing
self-forgetfulness and unbounded enthusiasm. But in
all his intense mission and throughout his
extraordinary life there never appeared the fury of
the fanatic nor the superficial frothiness of the
religious egotist.
The
Master's entire life was consistently conditioned by
this living faith, this sublime religious
experience. This spiritual attitude wholly dominated
his thinking and feeling, his believing and praying,
his teaching and preaching. This personal faith of a
son in the certainty and security of the guidance
and protection of the heavenly Father imparted to
his unique life a profound endowment of spiritual
reality. And yet, despite this very deep
consciousness of close relationship with divinity,
this Galilean, God's Galilean, when addressed as
Good Teacher, instantly replied, "Why do you call me
good?" When we stand confronted by such splendid
self-forgetfulness, we begin to understand how the
Universal Father found it possible so fully to
manifest himself to him and reveal himself through
him to the mortals of the realms.
Jesus
brought to God, as a man of the realm, the greatest
of all offerings: the consecration and dedication of
his own will to the majestic service of doing the
divine will. Jesus always and consistently
interpreted religion wholly in terms of the Father's
will. When you study the career of the Master, as
concerns prayer
Page 2089
or any other
feature of the religious life, look not so much for
what he taught as for what he did. Jesus never
prayed as a religious duty. To him prayer was a
sincere expression of spiritual attitude, a
declaration of soul loyalty, a recital of personal
devotion, an expression of thanksgiving, an
avoidance of emotional tension, a prevention of
conflict, an exaltation of intellection, an
ennoblement of desire, a vindication of moral
decision, an enrichment of thought, an invigoration
of higher inclinations, a consecration of impulse, a
clarification of viewpoint, a declaration of faith,
a transcendental surrender of will, a sublime
assertion of confidence, a revelation of courage,
the proclamation of discovery, a confession of
supreme devotion, the validation of consecration, a
technique for the adjustment of difficulties, and
the mighty mobilization of the combined soul powers
to withstand all human tendencies toward
selfishness, evil, and sin. He lived just such a
life of prayerful consecration to the doing of his
Father's will and ended his life triumphantly with
just such a prayer. The secret of his unparalleled
religious life was this consciousness of the
presence of God; and he attained it by intelligent
prayer and sincere worship--unbroken communion with
God--and not by leadings, voices, visions, or
extraordinary religious practices.
In the
earthly life of Jesus, religion was a living
experience, a direct and personal movement from
spiritual reverence to practical righteousness. The
faith of Jesus bore the transcendent fruits of the
divine spirit. His faith was not immature and
credulous like that of a child, but in many ways it
did resemble the unsuspecting trust of the child
mind. Jesus trusted God much as the child trusts a
parent. He had a profound confidence in the
universe--just such a trust as the child has in its
parental environment. Jesus' wholehearted faith in
the fundamental goodness of the universe very much
resembled the child's trust in the security of its
earthly surroundings. He depended on the heavenly
Father as a child leans upon its earthly parent, and
his fervent faith never for one moment doubted the
certainty of the heavenly Father's overcare. He was
not disturbed seriously by fears, doubts, and
skepticism. Unbelief did not inhibit the free and
original expression of his life. He combined the
stalwart and intelligent courage of a full-grown man
with the sincere and trusting optimism of a
believing child. His faith grew to such heights of
trust that it was devoid of fear.
The
faith of Jesus attained the purity of a child's
trust. His faith was so absolute and undoubting that
it responded to the charm of the contact of fellow
beings and to the wonders of the universe. His sense
of dependence on the divine was so complete and so
confident that it yielded the joy and the assurance
of absolute personal security. There was no
hesitating pretense in his religious experience. In
this giant intellect of the full-grown man the faith
of the child reigned supreme in all matters relating
to the religious consciousness. It is not strange
that he once said, "Except you become as a little
child, you shall not enter the kingdom."
Notwithstanding that Jesus' faith was childlike,
it was in no sense childish.
Jesus
does not require his disciples to believe in him but
rather to believe with him, believe in the
reality of the love of God and in full confidence
accept the security of the assurance of sonship with
the heavenly Father. The Master desires that all his
followers should fully share his transcendent faith.
Jesus most touchingly challenged his followers, not
only to believe what he believed, but also to
believe as he believed. This is the full
significance of his one supreme requirement, "Follow
me."
Page 2090
Jesus'
earthly life was devoted to one great purpose--doing
the Father's will, living the human life religiously
and by faith. The faith of Jesus was trusting, like
that of a child, but it was wholly free from
presumption. He made robust and manly decisions,
courageously faced manifold disappointments,
resolutely surmounted extraordinary difficulties,
and unflinchingly confronted the stern requirements
of duty. It required a strong will and an unfailing
confidence to believe what Jesus believed and as
he believed.
1.
JESUS--THE MAN
Jesus'
devotion to the Father's will and the service of man
was even more than mortal decision and human
determination; it was a wholehearted consecration of
himself to such an unreserved bestowal of love. No
matter how great the fact of the sovereignty of
Michael, you must not take the human Jesus away from
men. The Master has ascended on high as a man, as
well as God; he belongs to men; men belong to him.
How unfortunate that religion itself should be so
misinterpreted as to take the human Jesus away from
struggling mortals! Let not the discussions of the
humanity or the divinity of the Christ obscure the
saving truth that Jesus of Nazareth was a religious
man who, by faith, achieved the knowing and the
doing of the will of God; he was the most truly
religious man who has ever lived on Urantia.
The time
is ripe to witness the figurative resurrection of
the human Jesus from his burial tomb amidst the
theological traditions and the religious dogmas of
nineteen centuries. Jesus of Nazareth must not be
longer sacrificed to even the splendid concept of
the glorified Christ. What a transcendent service
if, through this revelation, the Son of Man should
be recovered from the tomb of traditional theology
and be presented as the living Jesus to the church
that bears his name, and to all other religions!
Surely the Christian fellowship of believers will
not hesitate to make such adjustments of faith and
of practices of living as will enable it to "follow
after" the Master in the demonstration of his real
life of religious devotion to the doing of his
Father's will and of consecration to the unselfish
service of man. Do professed Christians fear the
exposure of a self-sufficient and unconsecrated
fellowship of social respectability and selfish
economic maladjustment? Does institutional
Christianity fear the possible jeopardy, or even the
overthrow, of traditional ecclesiastical authority
if the Jesus of Galilee is reinstated in the minds
and souls of mortal men as the ideal of personal
religious living? Indeed, the social readjustments,
the economic transformations, the moral
rejuvenations, and the religious revisions of
Christian civilization would be drastic and
revolutionary if the living religion of Jesus should
suddenly supplant the theologic religion about
Jesus.
To
"follow Jesus" means to personally share his
religious faith and to enter into the spirit of the
Master's life of unselfish service for man. One of
the most important things in human living is to find
out what Jesus believed, to discover his ideals, and
to strive for the achievement of his exalted life
purpose. Of all human knowledge, that which is of
greatest value is to know the religious life of
Jesus and how he lived it.
The
common people heard Jesus gladly, and they will
again respond to the presentation of his sincere
human life of consecrated religious motivation if
such truths shall again be proclaimed to the world.
The people heard him gladly because
Page 2091
he was one of
them, an unpretentious layman; the world's greatest
religious teacher was indeed a layman.
It
should not be the aim of kingdom believers literally
to imitate the outward life of Jesus in the flesh
but rather to share his faith; to trust God as he
trusted God and to believe in men as he believed in
men. Jesus never argued about either the fatherhood
of God or the brotherhood of men; he was a living
illustration of the one and a profound demonstration
of the other.
Just as
men must progress from the consciousness of the
human to the realization of the divine, so did Jesus
ascend from the nature of man to the consciousness
of the nature of God. And the Master made this great
ascent from the human to the divine by the conjoint
achievement of the faith of his mortal intellect and
the acts of his indwelling Adjuster. The
fact-realization of the attainment of totality of
divinity (all the while fully conscious of the
reality of humanity) was attended by seven stages of
faith consciousness of progressive divinization.
These stages of progressive self-realization were
marked off by the following extraordinary events in
the Master's bestowal experience:
1. The
arrival of the Thought Adjuster.
2. The
messenger of Immanuel who appeared to him at
Jerusalem when he was about twelve years old.
3. The
manifestations attendant upon his baptism.
4. The
experiences on the Mount of Transfiguration.
5. The
morontia resurrection.
6. The
spirit ascension.
7. The
final embrace of the Paradise Father, conferring
unlimited sovereignty of his universe.
2. THE
RELIGION OF JESUS
Some day
a reformation in the Christian church may strike
deep enough to get back to the unadulterated
religious teachings of Jesus, the author and
finisher of our faith. You may preach a
religion about Jesus, but, perforce, you must
live the religion of Jesus. In the
enthusiasm of Pentecost, Peter unintentionally
inaugurated a new religion, the religion of the
risen and glorified Christ. The Apostle Paul later
on transformed this new gospel into Christianity, a
religion embodying his own theologic views and
portraying his own personal experience with
the Jesus of the Damascus road. The gospel of the
kingdom is founded on the personal religious
experience of the Jesus of Galilee; Christianity is
founded almost exclusively on the personal religious
experience of the Apostle Paul. Almost the whole of
the New Testament is devoted, not to the portrayal
of the significant and inspiring religious life of
Jesus, but to a discussion of Paul's religious
experience and to a portrayal of his personal
religious convictions. The only notable exceptions
to this statement, aside from certain parts of
Matthew, Mark, and Luke, are the Book of Hebrews and
the Epistle of James. Even Peter, in his writing,
only once reverted to the personal religious life of
his Master. The New Testament is a superb Christian
document, but it is only meagerly Jesusonian.
Jesus'
life in the flesh portrays a transcendent religious
growth from the early ideas of primitive awe and
human reverence up through years of personal
spiritual
Page 2092
communion until
he finally arrived at that advanced and exalted
status of the consciousness of his oneness with the
Father. And thus, in one short life, did Jesus
traverse that experience of religious spiritual
progression which man begins on earth and ordinarily
achieves only at the conclusion of his long sojourn
in the spirit training schools of the successive
levels of the pre-Paradise career. Jesus progressed
from a purely human consciousness of the faith
certainties of personal religious experience to the
sublime spiritual heights of the positive
realization of his divine nature and to the
consciousness of his close association with the
Universal Father in the management of a universe. He
progressed from the humble status of mortal
dependence which prompted him spontaneously to say
to the one who called him Good Teacher, "Why do you
call me good? None is good but God," to that sublime
consciousness of achieved divinity which led him to
exclaim, "Which one of you convicts me of sin?" And
this progressing ascent from the human to the divine
was an exclusively mortal achievement. And when he
had thus attained divinity, he was still the same
human Jesus, the Son of Man as well as the Son of
God.
Mark,
Matthew, and Luke retain something of the picture of
the human Jesus as he engaged in the superb struggle
to ascertain the divine will and to do that will.
John presents a picture of the triumphant Jesus as
he walked on earth in the full consciousness of
divinity. The great mistake that has been made by
those who have studied the Master's life is that
some have conceived of him as entirely human, while
others have thought of him as only divine.
Throughout his entire experience he was truly both
human and divine, even as he yet is.
But the
greatest mistake was made in that, while the human
Jesus was recognized as having a religion,
the divine Jesus (Christ) almost overnight became a
religion. Paul's Christianity made sure of the
adoration of the divine Christ, but it almost wholly
lost sight of the struggling and valiant human Jesus
of Galilee, who, by the valor of his personal
religious faith and the heroism of his indwelling
Adjuster, ascended from the lowly levels of humanity
to become one with divinity, thus becoming the new
and living way whereby all mortals may so ascend
from humanity to divinity. Mortals in all stages of
spirituality and on all worlds may find in the
personal life of Jesus that which will strengthen
and inspire them as they progress from the lowest
spirit levels up to the highest divine values, from
the beginning to the end of all personal religious
experience.
At the
time of the writing of the New Testament, the
authors not only most profoundly believed in the
divinity of the risen Christ, but they also
devotedly and sincerely believed in his immediate
return to earth to consummate the heavenly kingdom.
This strong faith in the Lord's immediate return had
much to do with the tendency to omit from the record
those references which portrayed the purely human
experiences and attributes of the Master. The whole
Christian movement tended away from the human
picture of Jesus of Nazareth toward the exaltation
of the risen Christ, the glorified and
soon-returning Lord Jesus Christ.
Jesus
founded the religion of personal experience in doing
the will of God and serving the human brotherhood;
Paul founded a religion in which the glorified Jesus
became the object of worship and the brotherhood
consisted of fellow believers in the divine Christ.
In the bestowal of Jesus these two concepts were
potential in his divine-human life, and it is indeed
a pity that his followers failed to create a unified
religion which might have given proper recognition
to both
Page 2093
the human and the
divine natures of the Master as they were
inseparably bound up in his earth life and so
gloriously set forth in the original gospel of the
kingdom.
You
would be neither shocked nor disturbed by some of
Jesus' strong pronouncements if you would only
remember that he was the world's most wholehearted
and devoted religionist. He was a wholly consecrated
mortal, unreservedly dedicated to doing his Father's
will. Many of his apparently hard sayings were more
of a personal confession of faith and a pledge of
devotion than commands to his followers. And it was
this very singleness of purpose and unselfish
devotion that enabled him to effect such
extraordinary progress in the conquest of the human
mind in one short life. Many of his declarations
should be considered as a confession of what he
demanded of himself rather than what he required of
all his followers. In his devotion to the cause of
the kingdom, Jesus burned all bridges behind him; he
sacrificed all hindrances to the doing of his
Father's will.
Jesus
blessed the poor because they were usually sincere
and pious; he condemned the rich because they were
usually wanton and irreligious. He would equally
condemn the irreligious pauper and commend the
consecrated and worshipful man of wealth.
Jesus
led men to feel at home in the world; he delivered
them from the slavery of taboo and taught them that
the world was not fundamentally evil. He did not
long to escape from his earthly life; he mastered a
technique of acceptably doing the Father's will
while in the flesh. He attained an idealistic
religious life in the very midst of a realistic
world. Jesus did not share Paul's pessimistic view
of humankind. The Master looked upon men as the sons
of God and foresaw a magnificent and eternal future
for those who chose survival. He was not a moral
skeptic; he viewed man positively, not negatively.
He saw most men as weak rather than wicked, more
distraught than depraved. But no matter what their
status, they were all God's children and his
brethren.
He
taught men to place a high value upon themselves in
time and in eternity. Because of this high estimate
which Jesus placed upon men, he was willing to spend
himself in the unremitting service of humankind. And
it was this infinite worth of the finite that made
the golden rule a vital factor in his religion. What
mortal can fail to be uplifted by the extraordinary
faith Jesus has in him?
Jesus
offered no rules for social advancement; his was a
religious mission, and religion is an exclusively
individual experience. The ultimate goal of
society's most advanced achievement can never hope
to transcend Jesus' brotherhood of men based on the
recognition of the fatherhood of God. The ideal of
all social attainment can be realized only in the
coming of this divine kingdom.
3. THE
SUPREMACY OF RELIGION
Personal, spiritual religious experience is an
efficient solvent for most mortal difficulties; it
is an effective sorter, evaluator, and adjuster of
all human problems. Religion does not remove or
destroy human troubles, but it does dissolve,
absorb, illuminate, and transcend them. True
religion unifies the personality for effective
adjustment to all mortal requirements. Religious
faith--the positive leading of the indwelling divine
presence--unfailingly enables the God-knowing man to
bridge that gulf existing between the intellectual
logic which recognizes the Universal First Cause as
It and those positive affirmations of the
soul which
Page 2094
aver this First
Cause is He, the heavenly Father of Jesus'
gospel, the personal God of human salvation.
There are just
three elements in universal reality: fact, idea, and
relation. The religious consciousness identifies
these realities as science, philosophy, and truth.
Philosophy would be inclined to view these
activities as reason, wisdom, and faith--physical
reality, intellectual reality, and spiritual
reality. We are in the habit of designating these
realities as thing, meaning, and value.
The
progressive comprehension of reality is the
equivalent of approaching God. The finding of God,
the consciousness of identity with reality, is the
equivalent of the experiencing of
self-completion--self-entirety, self-totality. The
experiencing of total reality is the full
realization of God, the finality of the God-knowing
experience.
The full
summation of human life is the knowledge that man is
educated by fact, ennobled by wisdom, and
saved--justified--by religious faith.
Physical
certainty consists in the logic of science; moral
certainty, in the wisdom of philosophy; spiritual
certainty, in the truth of genuine religious
experience.
The mind
of man can attain high levels of spiritual insight
and corresponding spheres of divinity of values
because it is not wholly material. There is a spirit
nucleus in the mind of man--the Adjuster of the
divine presence. There are three separate evidences
of this spirit indwelling of the human mind:
1.
Humanitarian fellowship--love. The purely animal
mind may be gregarious for self-protection, but only
the spirit-indwelt intellect is unselfishly
altruistic and unconditionally loving.
2.
Interpretation of the universe--wisdom. Only the
spirit-indwelt mind can comprehend that the universe
is friendly to the individual.
3.
Spiritual evaluation of life--worship. Only the
spirit-indwelt man can realize the divine presence
and seek to attain a fuller experience in and with
this foretaste of divinity.
The
human mind does not create real values; human
experience does not yield universe insight.
Concerning insight, the recognition of moral values
and the discernment of spiritual meanings, all that
the human mind can do is to discover, recognize,
interpret, and choose.
The
moral values of the universe become intellectual
possessions by the exercise of the three basic
judgments, or choices, of the mortal mind:
1.
Self-judgment--moral choice.
2.
Social-judgment--ethical choice.
3.
God-judgment--religious choice.
Thus it
appears that all human progress is effected by a
technique of conjoint revelational evolution.
Unless a
divine lover lived in man, he could not unselfishly
and spiritually love. Unless an interpreter lived in
the mind, man could not truly realize the unity of
the universe. Unless an evaluator dwelt with man, he
could not possibly appraise moral values and
recognize spiritual meanings. And this lover hails
from the very source of infinite love; this
interpreter is a part of Universal Unity; this
evaluator is the child of the Center and Source of
all absolute values of divine and eternal reality.
Page 2095
Moral
evaluation with a religious meaning--spiritual
insight--connotes the individual's choice between
good and evil, truth and error, material and
spiritual, human and divine, time and eternity.
Human survival is in great measure dependent on
consecrating the human will to the choosing of those
values selected by this spirit-value sorter--the
indwelling interpreter and unifier. Personal
religious experience consists in two phases:
discovery in the human mind and revelation by the
indwelling divine spirit. Through oversophistication
or as a result of the irreligious conduct of
professed religionists, a man, or even a generation
of men, may elect to suspend their efforts to
discover the God who indwells them; they may fail to
progress in and attain the divine revelation. But
such attitudes of spiritual nonprogression cannot
long persist because of the presence and influence
of the indwelling Thought Adjusters.
This
profound experience of the reality of the divine
indwelling forever transcends the crude
materialistic technique of the physical sciences.
You cannot put spiritual joy under a microscope; you
cannot weigh love in a balance; you cannot measure
moral values; neither can you estimate the quality
of spiritual worship.
The
Hebrews had a religion of moral sublimity; the
Greeks evolved a religion of beauty; Paul and his
conferees founded a religion of faith, hope, and
charity. Jesus revealed and exemplified a religion
of love: security in the Father's love, with joy and
satisfaction consequent upon sharing this love in
the service of the human brotherhood.
Every
time man makes a reflective moral choice, he
immediately experiences a new divine invasion of his
soul. Moral choosing constitutes religion as the
motive of inner response to outer conditions. But
such a real religion is not a purely subjective
experience. It signifies the whole of the
subjectivity of the individual engaged in a
meaningful and intelligent response to total
objectivity--the universe and its Maker.
The
exquisite and transcendent experience of loving and
being loved is not just a psychic illusion because
it is so purely subjective. The one truly divine and
objective reality that is associated with mortal
beings, the Thought Adjuster, functions to human
observation apparently as an exclusively subjective
phenomenon. Man's contact with the highest objective
reality, God, is only through the purely subjective
experience of knowing him, of worshiping him, of
realizing sonship with him.
True
religious worship is not a futile monologue of
self-deception. Worship is a personal communion with
that which is divinely real, with that which is the
very source of reality. Man aspires by worship to be
better and thereby eventually attains the best.
The
idealization and attempted service of truth, beauty,
and goodness is not a substitute for genuine
religious experience--spiritual reality. Psychology
and idealism are not the equivalent of religious
reality. The projections of the human intellect may
indeed originate false gods--gods in man's
image--but the true God-consciousness does not have
such an origin. The God-consciousness is resident in
the indwelling spirit. Many of the religious systems
of man come from the formulations of the human
intellect, but the God-consciousness is not
necessarily a part of these grotesque systems of
religious slavery.
God is
not the mere invention of man's idealism; he is the
very source of all such superanimal insights and
values. God is not a hypothesis formulated to unify
the human concepts of truth, beauty,
Page 2096
and goodness; he
is the personality of love from whom all of these
universe manifestations are derived. The truth,
beauty, and goodness of man's world are unified by
the increasing spirituality of the experience of
mortals ascending toward Paradise realities. The
unity of truth, beauty, and goodness can only be
realized in the spiritual experience of the
God-knowing personality.
Morality
is the essential pre-existent soil of personal
God-consciousness, the personal realization of the
Adjuster's inner presence, but such morality is not
the source of religious experience and the resultant
spiritual insight. The moral nature is superanimal
but subspiritual. Morality is equivalent to the
recognition of duty, the realization of the
existence of right and wrong. The moral zone
intervenes between the animal and the human types of
mind as morontia functions between the material and
the spiritual spheres of personality attainment.
The
evolutionary mind is able to discover law, morals,
and ethics; but the bestowed spirit, the indwelling
Adjuster, reveals to the evolving human mind the
lawgiver, the Father-source of all that is true,
beautiful, and good; and such an illuminated man has
a religion and is spiritually equipped to begin the
long and adventurous search for God.
Morality
is not necessarily spiritual; it may be wholly and
purely human, albeit real religion enhances all
moral values, makes them more meaningful. Morality
without religion fails to reveal ultimate goodness,
and it also fails to provide for the survival of
even its own moral values. Religion provides for the
enhancement, glorification, and assured survival of
everything morality recognizes and approves.
Religion
stands above science, art, philosophy, ethics, and
morals, but not independent of them. They are all
indissolubly interrelated in human experience,
personal and social. Religion is man's supreme
experience in the mortal nature, but finite language
makes it forever impossible for theology ever
adequately to depict real religious experience.
Religious insight possesses the power of turning
defeat into higher desires and new determinations.
Love is the highest motivation which man may utilize
in his universe ascent. But love, divested of truth,
beauty, and goodness, is only a sentiment, a
philosophic distortion, a psychic illusion, a
spiritual deception. Love must always be redefined
on successive levels of morontia and spirit
progression.
Art
results from man's attempt to escape from the lack
of beauty in his material environment; it is a
gesture toward the morontia level. Science is man's
effort to solve the apparent riddles of the material
universe. Philosophy is man's attempt at the
unification of human experience. Religion is man's
supreme gesture, his magnificent reach for final
reality, his determination to find God and to be
like him.
In the
realm of religious experience, spiritual possibility
is potential reality. Man's forward spiritual urge
is not a psychic illusion. All of man's universe
romancing may not be fact, but much, very much, is
truth.
Some
men's lives are too great and noble to descend to
the low level of being merely successful. The animal
must adapt itself to the environment, but the
religious man transcends his environment and in this
way escapes the limitations of the present material
world through this insight of divine love. This
concept of love generates in the soul of man that
superanimal effort to find truth, beauty, and
goodness; and when he does find them, he is
glorified in their embrace; he is consumed with the
desire to live them, to do righteousness.
Page 2097
Be not
discouraged; human evolution is still in progress,
and the revelation of God to the world, in and
through Jesus, shall not fail.
The
great challenge to modern man is to achieve better
communication with the divine Monitor that dwells
within the human mind. Man's greatest adventure in
the flesh consists in the well-balanced and sane
effort to advance the borders of self-consciousness
out through the dim realms of embryonic
soul-consciousness in a wholehearted effort to reach
the borderland of spirit-consciousness--contact with
the divine presence. Such an experience constitutes
God-consciousness, an experience mightily
confirmative of the pre-existent truth of the
religious experience of knowing God. Such
spirit-consciousness is the equivalent of the
knowledge of the actuality of sonship with God.
Otherwise, the assurance of sonship is the
experience of faith.
And
God-consciousness is equivalent to the integration
of the self with the universe, and on its highest
levels of spiritual reality. Only the spirit content
of any value is imperishable. Even that which is
true, beautiful, and good may not perish in human
experience. If man does not choose to survive, then
does the surviving Adjuster conserve those realities
born of love and nurtured in service. And all these
things are a part of the Universal Father. The
Father is living love, and this life of the Father
is in his Sons. And the spirit of the Father is in
his Sons' sons--mortal men. When all is said and
done, the Father idea is still the highest human
concept of God. |