P1126:3, 102:7.3 Those who would invent a religion without God are like those who would gather fruit without trees, have children without parents.
You cannot have effects without causes; only the I AM is
causeless.
The fact of religious experience implies God, and such a God of personal experience must be a personal Deity.
You cannot pray to a chemical formula,
supplicate a mathematical equation, worship a hypothesis, confide in a postulate, commune with a process, serve an abstraction, or hold loving fellowship with a law.
P1126:4, 102:7.4 True, many apparently religious traits can grow out of nonreligious roots.
Man can, intellectually, deny God and yet be morally good, loyal, filial, honest, and even idealistic.
Man may graft many purely humanistic branches onto his basic spiritual nature and thus apparently prove his contentions in behalf of a godless religion, but such an experience is devoid of survival values, God-knowingness and
God-ascension.
In such a mortal experience only social fruits are forthcoming, not spiritual.
The graft determines the nature of the fruit, notwithstanding that the living sustenance is drawn from the roots of original divine endowment of both mind and spirit.
P1126:5, 102:7.5 The intellectual earmark of religion is certainty; the philosophical characteristic is consistency; the social fruits are love and service.
P1126:6, 102:7.6 The God-knowing individual is not one who is blind to the difficulties or unmindful of the obstacles which stand in the way of finding God in the maze of superstition, tradition, and materialistic tendencies of modern times.
He has encountered all these
deterrents and triumphed over them, surmounted them by living faith, and attained the highlands of spiritual experience in spite of them.
But it is true that many who are inwardly sure about God fear to assert such feelings of certainty because of the multiplicity and cleverness of those who assemble objections and magnify difficulties about believing in God.
It requires no great depth of intellect to pick flaws, ask questions, or raise objections.
But it does require brilliance of mind to answer these questions and solve these difficulties; faith certainty is the greatest technique for dealing with all such superficial contentions.
P1127:1, 102:7.7 If science, philosophy, or sociology dares to become dogmatic in contending with the prophets of true religion, then should God-knowing men reply to such unwarranted dogmatism with that more farseeing dogmatism of the certainty of personal spiritual experience, "I know what I have experienced because I am a son of I AM."
If the personal experience of a faither is to be challenged by dogma, then this
faith-born son of the experiencible Father may reply with that unchallengeable dogma, the statement of his actual sonship with the Universal Father.
P1127:2, 102:7.8 Only an unqualified reality, an absolute, could dare consistently to be dogmatic.
Those who assume to be dogmatic must, if consistent, sooner or later be driven into the arms of the Absolute of energy, the Universal of truth, and the Infinite of love.
P1127:3, 102:7.9 If the nonreligious approaches to cosmic reality presume to challenge the certainty of faith on the grounds of its unproved status, then the spirit
experiencer can likewise resort to the dogmatic challenge of the facts of science and the beliefs of philosophy on the grounds that they are likewise unproved; they are likewise experiences in the consciousness of the scientist or the philosopher.
P1127:4, 102:7.10 Of God, the most inescapable of all presences, the most real of all facts, the most living of all truths, the most loving of all friends, and the most divine of all values, we have the right to be the most certain of all universe experiences.