P1086:4, 99:1.1
Mechanical inventions and the dissemination of knowledge are modifying civilization;
certain economic adjustments and social changes are imperative if cultural
disaster is to be avoided. This new and oncoming social order will not settle
down
complacently for a millennium. The human race must become reconciled
to a procession of changes, adjustments, and readjustments. Mankind is on
the march toward a new and unrevealed planetary destiny.
P1086:5, 99:1.2
Religion must become a forceful influence for moral stability and spiritual
progression functioning dynamically in the midst of these ever-changing conditions
and never-ending economic adjustments.
P1086:6, 99:1.3
Urantia society can never hope to settle down as in past ages. The social
ship has
steamed out of the sheltered bays of established tradition and has
begun its
cruise upon the high seas of evolutionary destiny; and the soul
of man, as never before in the world's history, needs carefully to scrutinize
its charts of morality and painstakingly to observe the compass of religious
guidance. The paramount mission of religion as a social influence is to stabilize
the ideals of mankind during these dangerous times of transition from one
phase of civilization to another, from one level of culture to another.
P1087:1, 99:1.4
Religion has no new duties to perform, but it is urgently called upon to function
as a wise guide and experienced counselor in all of these new and rapidly
changing human situations. Society is becoming more mechanical, more compact,
more complex, and more critically interdependent. Religion must function to
prevent these new and intimate interassociations from becoming mutually
retrogressive
or even destructive. Religion must act as the cosmic salt which prevents the
ferments of progression from destroying the cultural savor of civilization.
These new social relations and economic upheavals can result in lasting brotherhood
only by the ministry of religion.
P1087:2, 99:1.5
A godless humanitarianism is, humanly speaking, a noble gesture, but true
religion is the only power which can lastingly increase the responsiveness
of one social group to the needs and sufferings of other groups. In the past,
institutional religion could remain passive while the upper strata of society
turned a deaf ear to the sufferings and oppression of the helpless lower strata,
but in modern times these lower social orders are no longer so abjectly ignorant
nor so politically helpless.
P1087:3, 99:1.6
Religion must not become organically involved in the secular work of social
reconstruction and economic reorganization. But it must actively keep pace
with all these advances in civilization by making clear-cut and vigorous restatements
of its moral mandates and spiritual precepts, its progressive philosophy of
human living and transcendent survival. The spirit of religion is eternal,
but the form of its expression must be restated every time the
dictionary
of human language is revised.