P986:1, 90:0.1
The evolution of religious observances progressed from placation, avoidance,
exorcism, coercion, conciliation, and propitiation to sacrifice, atonement,
and redemption. The technique of religious ritual passed from the forms of
the primitive cult through fetishes to magic and miracles; and as ritual became
more complex in response to man's increasingly complex concept of the supermaterial
realms, it was inevitably dominated by medicine men, shamans, and priests.
P986:2, 90:0.2
In the advancing concepts of primitive man the spirit world was eventually
regarded as being unresponsive to the ordinary mortal. Only the exceptional
among humans could catch the ear of the gods; only the extraordinary man or
woman would be heard by the spirits. Religion thus enters upon a new phase,
a stage wherein it gradually becomes secondhanded; always does a medicine
man, a shaman, or a priest intervene between the religionist and the object
of worship. And today most Urantia systems of organized religious belief are
passing through this level of evolutionary development.
P986:3, 90:0.3
Evolutionary religion is born of a simple and all-powerful fear, the fear
which
surges through the human mind when confronted with the unknown, the
inexplicable, and the incomprehensible. Religion eventually achieves the profoundly
simple realization of an all-powerful love, the love which sweeps
irresistibly
through the human soul when awakened to the conception of the limitless affection
of the Universal Father for the sons of the universe. But in between the beginning
and the consummation of religious evolution, there intervene the long ages
of the shamans, who presume to stand between man and God as intermediaries,
interpreters, and
intercessors.