P1012:2, 92:7.1
Religion can never become a scientific fact. Philosophy may, indeed, rest
on a scientific basis, but religion will ever remain either evolutionary or
revelatory, or a possible combination of both, as it is in the world today.
P1012:3, 92:7.2
New religions cannot be invented; they are either evolved, or else they are
suddenly revealed. All new evolutionary religions are merely advancing
expressions of the old beliefs, new adaptations and adjustments. The old does
not cease to exist; it is merged with the new, even as Sikhism
budded and
blossomed out of the soil and forms of Hinduism, Buddhism, Islam, and other
contemporary cults. Primitive religion was very democratic; the savage was
quick to borrow or lend. Only with revealed religion did autocratic and intolerant
theologic egotism appear.
P1012:4, 92:7.3
The many religions of Urantia are all good to the extent that they bring man
to God and bring the realization of the Father to man. It is a fallacy for
any group of religionists to conceive of their creed as The Truth; such
attitudes bespeak more of theological arrogance than of certainty of faith.
There is not a Urantia religion that could not profitably study and assimilate
the best of the truths contained in every other faith, for all contain truth.
Religionists would do better to borrow the best in their neighbors' living
spiritual faith rather than to denounce the worst in their lingering superstitions
and outworn rituals.
P1012:5, 92:7.4
All these religions have arisen as a result of man's variable intellectual
response to his identical spiritual leading. They can never hope to attain
a uniformity of creeds, dogmas, and rituals -- these are intellectual; but
they can, and some day will, realize a unity in true worship of the Father
of all, for this is spiritual, and it is forever true, in the spirit all men
are equal.
P1012:6, 92:7.5
Primitive religion was largely a
material-value consciousness, but civilization
elevates religious values, for true religion is the devotion of the self to
the service of meaningful and supreme values. As religion evolves, ethics
becomes the philosophy of morals, and morality becomes the discipline of self
by the standards of highest meanings and supreme values -- divine and spiritual
ideals. And thus religion becomes a spontaneous and exquisite devotion, the
living experience of the loyalty of love.
P1013:1, 92:7.6
The quality of a religion is indicated by:
P1013:6, 92:7.7
Religious meanings progress in self-consciousness when the child transfers
his ideas of omnipotence from his parents to God. And the entire religious
experience of such a child is largely dependent on whether fear or love has
dominated the parent-child relationship. Slaves have always experienced great
difficulty in transferring their
master-fear into concepts of God-love. Civilization,
science, and advanced religions must deliver mankind from those fears born
of the dread of natural phenomena. And so should greater enlightenment deliver
educated mortals from all dependence on intermediaries in communion with Deity.
P1013:7, 92:7.8
These intermediate stages of idolatrous hesitation in the transfer of veneration
from the human and the visible to the divine and invisible are inevitable,
but they should be shortened by the consciousness of the facilitating ministry
of the indwelling divine spirit. Nevertheless, man has been profoundly influenced,
not only by his concepts of Deity, but also by the character of the heroes
whom he has chosen to honor. It is most unfortunate that those who have come
to venerate the divine and risen Christ should have overlooked the man --
the valiant and courageous hero -- Joshua ben Joseph.
P1013:8, 92:7.9
Modern man is adequately self-conscious of religion, but his worshipful customs
are confused and discredited by his accelerated social metamorphosis and unprecedented
scientific developments. Thinking men and women want religion redefined, and
this demand will compel religion to
re-evaluate itself.
P1013:9, 92:7.10
Modern man is confronted with the task of making more readjustments of human
values in one generation than have been made in two thousand years. And this
all influences the social attitude toward religion, for religion is a way
of living as well as a technique of thinking.
P1013:10, 92:7.11
True religion must ever be, at one and the same time, the eternal foundation
and the guiding star of all enduring civilizations.
P1013:11, 92:7.12
[Presented by a Melchizedek of Nebadon.]