P950:3, 86:1.1
Aside from the natural worship urge, early evolutionary religion had its roots
of origin in the human experiences of chance -- so-called luck, commonplace
happenings. Primitive man was a food hunter. The results of hunting must ever
vary, and this gives certain origin to those experiences which man interprets
as good luck and bad luck. Mischance was a great factor in the
lives of men and women who lived constantly on the ragged edge of a precarious
and harassed existence.
P950:4, 86:1.2
The limited intellectual horizon of the savage so concentrates the attention
upon chance that luck becomes a constant factor in his life. Primitive Urantians
struggled for existence, not for a standard of living; they lived lives of
peril in which chance played an important role. The constant dread of unknown
and unseen calamity hung over these savages as a cloud of despair which effectively
eclipsed every pleasure; they lived in constant dread of doing something that
would bring bad luck. Superstitious savages always feared a run of good luck;
they viewed such good fortune as a certain harbinger of calamity.
P950:5, 86:1.3
This ever-present dread of bad luck was paralyzing. Why work hard and reap
bad luck -- nothing for something -- when one might drift along and encounter
good luck -- something for nothing? Unthinking men forget good luck -- take
it for granted -- but they painfully remember bad luck.
P950:6, 86:1.4
Early man lived in uncertainty and in constant fear of chance -- bad luck.
Life was an
exciting game of chance; existence was a gamble. It is no wonder
that partially civilized people still believe in chance and evince lingering
predispositions to gambling. Primitive man alternated between two potent interests:
the passion of getting something for nothing and the fear of getting nothing
for something. And this gamble of existence was the main interest and the
supreme fascination of the early savage mind.
P951:1, 86:1.5
The later herders held the same views of chance and luck, while the still
later agriculturists were increasingly conscious that crops were immediately
influenced by many things over which man had little or no control. The farmer
found himself the victim of drought, floods, hail, storms,
pests, and plant
diseases, as well as heat and cold. And as all of these natural influences
affected individual prosperity, they were regarded as good luck or bad luck.
P951:2, 86:1.6
This notion of chance and luck strongly pervaded the philosophy of all ancient
peoples. Even in recent times in the Wisdom of Solomon it is said: "I returned
and saw that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, neither
bread to the wise, nor riches to men of understanding, nor favor to men of
skill; but fate and chance befall them all. For man knows not his fate; as
fishes are taken in an evil net, and as birds are caught in a snare, so are
the sons of men snared in an evil time when it falls suddenly upon them."