P1089:9, 99:4.1
Genuine religion renders the religionist socially fragrant and creates insights
into human fellowship. But the
formalization of religious groups many times
destroys the very values for the promotion of which the group was organized.
Human friendship and divine religion are mutually helpful and significantly
illuminating if the growth in each is equalized and harmonized. Religion puts
new meaning into all group associations -- families, schools, and clubs. It
imparts new values to play and exalts all true humor.
P1089:10, 99:4.2
Social leadership is transformed by spiritual insight; religion prevents all
collective movements from losing sight of their true objectives. Together
with children, religion is the great unifier of family life, provided it is
a living and growing faith. Family life cannot be had without children; it
can be lived without religion, but such a handicap enormously
multiplies the
difficulties of this intimate human association. During the early decades
of the twentieth century, family life, next to personal religious experience,
suffers most from the decadence consequent upon the transition from old religious
loyalties to the emerging new meanings and values.
P1089:11, 99:4.3
True religion is a meaningful way of living dynamically face to face with
the commonplace realities of everyday life. But if religion is to stimulate
individual development of character and augment integration of personality,
it must not be standardized. If it is to stimulate evaluation of experience
and serve as a
value-lure, it must not be stereotyped. If religion is to promote
supreme loyalties, it must not be formalized.
P1089:12, 99:4.4
No matter what upheavals may attend the social and economic growth of civilization,
religion is genuine and worth while if it fosters in the individual an experience
in which the sovereignty of truth, beauty, and goodness prevails, for such
is the true spiritual concept of supreme reality. And through love and worship
this becomes meaningful as fellowship with man and sonship with God.
P1090:1, 99:4.5
After all, it is what one believes rather than what one knows that determines
conduct and dominates personal performances. Purely factual knowledge exerts
very little influence upon the average man unless it becomes emotionally activated.
But the activation of religion is
superemotional, unifying the entire human
experience on transcendent levels through contact with, and release of, spiritual
energies in the mortal life.
P1090:2, 99:4.6
During the
psychologically unsettled times of the twentieth century, amid
the economic upheavals, the moral crosscurrents, and the sociologic rip tides
of the
cyclonic transitions of a scientific era, thousands upon thousands
of men and women have become humanly dislocated; they are anxious, restless,
fearful, uncertain, and unsettled; as never before in the world's history
they need the consolation and stabilization of sound religion. In the face
of unprecedented scientific achievement and mechanical development there is
spiritual stagnation and philosophic chaos.
P1090:3, 99:4.7
There is no danger in religion's becoming more and more of a private matter
-- a personal experience -- provided it does not lose its motivation for unselfish
and loving social service. Religion has suffered from many secondary influences:
sudden mixing of cultures, intermingling of creeds, diminution of ecclesiastical
authority, changing of family life, together with urbanization and mechanization.
P1090:4, 99:4.8
Man's greatest spiritual jeopardy consists in partial progress, the predicament
of unfinished growth: forsaking the evolutionary religions of fear without
immediately grasping the revelatory religion of love. Modern science, particularly
psychology, has weakened only those religions which are so largely dependent
upon fear, superstition, and emotion.
P1090:5, 99:4.9
Transition is always accompanied by confusion, and there will be little tranquillity
in the religious world until the great struggle between the three contending
philosophies of religion is ended: