Paganism and the Evolution of Religion

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  • #53903
    Bradly
    Bradly
    Participant

    This section delivers a very interesting irony to UB students. The authors of the Papers warn us about the human tendency to make sacred objects out of so many things. Anything really. Even words and books. We like to convert that which may or may not be human expressions of personal inspiration into “the word of God”. Scriptures and holy books and writings of people which are given sacred status.

    The authors of the UB clearly do not claim the text to be the word or words of God. They also claim it is not an inspired work or book written by any human(s). But they do claim the information provided is factual and truthful and deliberate and intentional and literal and that the Papers are given to us to reduce confusion and eliminate error regarding universe realities, origins, destinies, histories, and relationships. Some of us have come, eventually, to believe these claims. Which belief is of no great advantage in the struggle to be and to become!

    :wink:

    88:2.6 (969.4) Words eventually became fetishes, more especially those which were regarded as God’s words; in this way the sacred books of many religions have become fetishistic prisons incarcerating the spiritual imagination of man. Moses’ very effort against fetishes became a supreme fetish; his commandment was later used to stultify art and to retard the enjoyment and adoration of the beautiful.

    88:2.7 (969.5) In olden times the fetish word of authority was a fear-inspiring doctrine, the most terrible of all tyrants which enslave men. A doctrinal fetish will lead mortal man to betray himself into the clutches of bigotry, fanaticism, superstition, intolerance, and the most atrocious of barbarous cruelties. Modern respect for wisdom and truth is but the recent escape from the fetish-making tendency up to the higher levels of thinking and reasoning. Concerning the accumulated fetish writings which various religionists hold as sacred books, it is not only believed that what is in the book is true, but also that every truth is contained in the book. If one of these sacred books happens to speak of the earth as being flat, then, for long generations, otherwise sane men and women will refuse to accept positive evidence that the planet is round.

    88:2.8 (969.6) The practice of opening one of these sacred books to let the eye chance upon a passage, the following of which may determine important life decisions or projects, is nothing more nor less than arrant fetishism. To take an oath on a “holy book” or to swear by some object of supreme veneration is a form of refined fetishism.

    88:2.9 (969.7) But it does represent real evolutionary progress to advance from the fetish fear of a savage chief’s fingernail trimmings to the adoration of a superb collection of letters, laws, legends, allegories, myths, poems, and chronicles which, after all, reflect the winnowed moral wisdom of many centuries, at least up to the time and event of their being assembled as a “sacred book.”

    88:2.10 (970.1) To become fetishes, words had to be considered inspired, and the invocation of supposed divinely inspired writings led directly to the establishment of the authority of the church, while the evolution of civil forms led to the fruition of the authority of the state.

    #53904
    Bradly
    Bradly
    Participant

    The UB itself holds no powers or magic of any value to anyone, but sufficient study may help us come to understand the teachings of the Papers which should indeed change one’s perspective of universe realities and our philosophy of living in profound ways which should affect our motivations, intentions, priorities, and choices….and outcomes.

    But such is not due to the UB or any book or writing or any totem or fetish. All personal progress is due to experiential wisdom resulting from connection to the Spirit within and the faith and truth experience realized by insight, inspiration, revelation, prayer, worship, discernment, and the illumination of the personal religious experience.

    There are no magical shortcuts to enlightenment or wisdom or spirituality. None. We must find faith and seek truth and embrace the realities of our spiritual nature and Spirit connection. Faith is only expressed and truth realized by our choosing and living according to the assurances and insights gained thereby. Faith is far more than belief. Faith in God delivers our spiritization and the eternal adventure only by our personal decisions and priorities in life.

    The teachings in the UB have been a great guide to the terrain of living and a light upon the path through the terrain of living for me and for many others, but the book itself is neither the terrain or the journey through the terrain of life!! No book or words can be either of those.

    Best wishes on your own journey through the terrain in the adventures of being and becoming and the ascendent experience of living.

    :good:

    #53916
    Bradly
    Bradly
    Participant

    3. Totemism

    88:3.1 (970.2) Fetishism ran through all the primitive cults from the earliest belief in sacred stones, through idolatry, cannibalism, and nature worship, to totemism.

    88:3.2 (970.3) Totemism is a combination of social and religious observances. Originally it was thought that respect for the totem animal of supposed biologic origin insured the food supply. Totems were at one and the same time symbols of the group and their god. Such a god was the clan personified. Totemism was one phase of the attempted socialization of otherwise personal religion. The totem eventually evolved into the flag, or national symbol, of the various modern peoples.

    88:3.3 (970.4) A fetish bag, a medicine bag, was a pouch containing a reputable assortment of ghost-impregnated articles, and the medicine man of old never allowed his bag, the symbol of his power, to touch the ground. Civilized peoples in the twentieth century see to it that their flags, emblems of national consciousness, likewise never touch the ground.

    88:3.4 (970.5) The insignia of priestly and kingly office were eventually regarded as fetishes, and the fetish of the state supreme has passed through many stages of development, from clans to tribes, from suzerainty to sovereignty, from totems to flags. Fetish kings have ruled by “divine right,” and many other forms of government have obtained. Men have also made a fetish of democracy, the exaltation and adoration of the common man’s ideas when collectively called “public opinion.” One man’s opinion, when taken by itself, is not regarded as worth much, but when many men are collectively functioning as a democracy, this same mediocre judgment is held to be the arbiter of justice and the standard of righteousness.

    #53917
    Bradly
    Bradly
    Participant

    We are taught that mind has an inherent urge to discover and understand and explain…this is a normal function of mind – curiosity. Things, causes, and effects we do not understand, we will invent explanations for those.

    This is how both religion and science are initiated, perpetuated, and evolve over time, slowly gaining knowledge and experience and wisdom related to both pursuits for explaining reality…the seen and the unseen, the natural and supernatural….science and religion.

    They begin as one…then diverge…slowly do they and will they remerge as valid pursuits of the same reality.

    4. Magic

    88:4.1 (970.6) Civilized man attacks the problems of a real environment through his science; savage man attempted to solve the real problems of an illusory ghost environment by magic. Magic was the technique of manipulating the conjectured spirit environment whose machinations endlessly explained the inexplicable; it was the art of obtaining voluntary spirit co-operation and of coercing involuntary spirit aid through the use of fetishes or other and more powerful spirits.

    88:4.2 (970.7) The object of magic, sorcery, and necromancy was twofold:

    88:4.3 (970.8) 1. To secure insight into the future.

    88:4.4 (970.9) 2. Favorably to influence environment.

    88:4.5 (970.10) The objects of science are identical with those of magic. Mankind is progressing from magic to science, not by meditation and reason, but rather through long experience, gradually and painfully. Man is gradually backing into the truth, beginning in error, progressing in error, and finally attaining the threshold of truth. Only with the arrival of the scientific method has he faced forward. But primitive man had to experiment or perish.

    88:4.6 (970.11) The fascination of early superstition was the mother of the later scientific curiosity. There was progressive dynamic emotion—fear plus curiosity—in these primitive superstitions; there was progressive driving power in the olden magic. These superstitions represented the emergence of the human desire to know and to control planetary environment.

    88:4.7 (971.1) Magic gained such a strong hold upon the savage because he could not grasp the concept of natural death. The later idea of original sin helped much to weaken the grip of magic on the race in that it accounted for natural death. It was at one time not at all uncommon for ten innocent persons to be put to death because of supposed responsibility for one natural death. This is one reason why ancient peoples did not increase faster, and it is still true of some African tribes. The accused individual usually confessed guilt, even when facing death.

    88:4.8 (971.2) Magic is natural to a savage. He believes that an enemy can actually be killed by practicing sorcery on his shingled hair or fingernail trimmings. The fatality of snake bites was attributed to the magic of the sorcerer. The difficulty in combating magic arises from the fact that fear can kill. Primitive peoples so feared magic that it did actually kill, and such results were sufficient to substantiate this erroneous belief. In case of failure there was always some plausible explanation; the cure for defective magic was more magic.

    #53918
    Bradly
    Bradly
    Participant

    We can easily recognize the lingering cultural influences of these ancient superstitions which still shape our lives and thinking today in so many ways. Our infatuation with miracles, signs, and wonders and good luck and bad and fate all reveal our intellectual dependence on such primitive forms of belief and our fictional reality-constructs….or primitive metaphysics…false and invented explanations for the misunderstood.

    These human inventions of reality explanation are displaced very slowly and incrementally, generation after generation. Neither science or epochal revelation can easily or quickly overcome such superstition…that takes a very long time indeed. Voodoo and magic and spells and potions and the like linger still and shape human beliefs and rituals in many cultures around the world today.

    Remember two things though: first, we can have true religious experience and faith assurance and the Divine Spirit connection and give birth to soul and become spiritized even with false beliefs and primitive superstitions. Second, all such superstitions and false beliefs and inaccurate metaphysics originate in and are perpetuated by the human experience WITH the inner realities of other-awareness and the Spirit connection and the true beliefs in the factual existence and reality of the Spirit and humanity’s dual nature.

    The primitive religious experience is real and valid and delivers both meaning and value to those who embrace the Spirit as tge source of all reality. Indeed, many primitives have far deeper and more transcendent religious experiences than more educated and more modern people who think science somehow proves materialism is the origin of reality.

    Now who’s the more primitive and uninformed? Hahaha!

    :wink:

    101:9.2 (1115.3) When you presume to sit in critical judgment on the primitive religion of man (or on the religion of primitive man), you should remember to judge such savages and to evaluate their religious experience in accordance with their enlightenment and status of conscience. Do not make the mistake of judging another’s religion by your own standards of knowledge and truth.

    101:9.3 (1115.4) True religion is that sublime and profound conviction within the soul which compellingly admonishes man that it would be wrong for him not to believe in those morontial realities which constitute his highest ethical and moral concepts, his highest interpretation of life’s greatest values and the universe’s deepest realities. And such a religion is simply the experience of yielding intellectual loyalty to the highest dictates of spiritual consciousness.

    :good:

    5. Magical Charms

    88:5.1 (971.3) Since anything connected with the body could become a fetish, the earliest magic had to do with hair and nails. Secrecy attendant upon body elimination grew up out of fear that an enemy might get possession of something derived from the body and employ it in detrimental magic; all excreta of the body were therefore carefully buried. Public spitting was refrained from because of the fear that saliva would be used in deleterious magic; spittle was always covered. Even food remnants, clothing, and ornaments could become instruments of magic. The savage never left any remnants of his meal on the table. And all this was done through fear that one’s enemies might use these things in magical rites, not from any appreciation of the hygienic value of such practices.

    88:5.2 (971.4) Magical charms were concocted from a great variety of things: human flesh, tiger claws, crocodile teeth, poison plant seeds, snake venom, and human hair. The bones of the dead were very magical. Even the dust from footprints could be used in magic. The ancients were great believers in love charms. Blood and other forms of bodily secretions were able to insure the magic influence of love.

    88:5.3 (971.5) Images were supposed to be effective in magic. Effigies were made, and when treated ill or well, the same effects were believed to rest upon the real person. When making purchases, superstitious persons would chew a bit of hard wood in order to soften the heart of the seller.

    88:5.4 (971.6) The milk of a black cow was highly magical; so also were black cats. The staff or wand was magical, along with drums, bells, and knots. All ancient objects were magical charms. The practices of a new or higher civilization were looked upon with disfavor because of their supposedly evil magical nature. Writing, printing, and pictures were long so regarded.

    88:5.5 (971.7) Primitive man believed that names must be treated with respect, especially names of the gods. The name was regarded as an entity, an influence distinct from the physical personality; it was esteemed equally with the soul and the shadow. Names were pawned for loans; a man could not use his name until it had been redeemed by payment of the loan. Nowadays one signs his name to a note. An individual’s name soon became important in magic. The savage had two names; the important one was regarded as too sacred to use on ordinary occasions, hence the second or everyday name—a nickname. He never told his real name to strangers. Any experience of an unusual nature caused him to change his name; sometimes it was in an effort to cure disease or to stop bad luck. The savage could get a new name by buying it from the tribal chief; men still invest in titles and degrees. But among the most primitive tribes, such as the African Bushmen, individual names do not exist.

    6. The Practice of Magic

    88:6.1 (972.1) Magic was practiced through the use of wands, “medicine” ritual, and incantations, and it was customary for the practitioner to work unclothed. Women outnumbered the men among primitive magicians. In magic, “medicine” means mystery, not treatment. The savage never doctored himself; he never used medicines except on the advice of the specialists in magic. And the voodoo doctors of the twentieth century are typical of the magicians of old.

    88:6.2 (972.2) There was both a public and a private phase to magic. That performed by the medicine man, shaman, or priest was supposed to be for the good of the whole tribe. Witches, sorcerers, and wizards dispensed private magic, personal and selfish magic which was employed as a coercive method of bringing evil on one’s enemies. The concept of dual spiritism, good and bad spirits, gave rise to the later beliefs in white and black magic. And as religion evolved, magic was the term applied to spirit operations outside one’s own cult, and it also referred to older ghost beliefs.

    88:6.3 (972.3) Word combinations, the ritual of chants and incantations, were highly magical. Some early incantations finally evolved into prayers. Presently, imitative magic was practiced; prayers were acted out; magical dances were nothing but dramatic prayers. Prayer gradually displaced magic as the associate of sacrifice.

    88:6.4 (972.4) Gesture, being older than speech, was the more holy and magical, and mimicry was believed to have strong magical power. The red men often staged a buffalo dance in which one of their number would play the part of a buffalo and, in being caught, would insure the success of the impending hunt. The sex festivities of May Day were simply imitative magic, a suggestive appeal to the sex passions of the plant world. The doll was first employed as a magic talisman by the barren wife.

    88:6.5 (972.5) Magic was the branch off the evolutionary religious tree which eventually bore the fruit of a scientific age. Belief in astrology led to the development of astronomy; belief in a philosopher’s stone led to the mastery of metals, while belief in magic numbers founded the science of mathematics.

    88:6.6 (972.6) But a world so filled with charms did much to destroy all personal ambition and initiative. The fruits of extra labor or of diligence were looked upon as magical. If a man had more grain in his field than his neighbor, he might be haled before the chief and charged with enticing this extra grain from the indolent neighbor’s field. Indeed, in the days of barbarism it was dangerous to know very much; there was always the chance of being executed as a black artist.

    #53919
    Bradly
    Bradly
    Participant

    The mortal epochs of time deliver evolutionary progress to the material worlds very slowly. But progress does have points of inflection where there are acceleration and even leaps forward in progressive thinking. The most enlightened people unify and harmonize the spiritual and material perspectives and come to realize that both science and religion seek understanding of the same reality. It is no more primitive to believe in ghosts than it is to believe the universe is mechanistic. It is no more enlightened to believe science explains everything than to rely upon superstition to answer all questions.

    Both fail to achieve any reality perspective. Science is real and is a tool of Deity to create and operate time and space! But there is no science without Deity! But there is Deity without science…or the physics of the material universes of time and space. Deity is not a material construction of physics. Physics is a material construction of Deity…it is the relationship of matter and energy created and upheld by Deity.

    Not only are science and spirit NOT oppositional, but the scientific evidence is clear and becoming clearer that without thoughtful creationism and management, the material universes of time make no sense and cannot be explained by origin or function or destiny. And neither can love or duty or experiential wisdom or math or even water or life itself be explained by science. Science is very good at the observation, measurement, and perspective-explanation of material relationships and function. But not origins or causes or responsive equilibriums and the actual management of energy and matter and its cohesive nature.

    The material world and universe is not explained by science…it is merely described by science. To be explained and understood requires the fact and function of Spirit and Deity….and all the many agents and agencies of creation and control that apply great skill and wisdom and experience in the application and integration of the creative control of all levels of reality.

    So….reliance on science to make religion irrelevant is simply another form of superstition!!

    :good:

    88:6.7 (972.7) Gradually science is removing the gambling element from life. But if modern methods of education should fail, there would be an almost immediate reversion to the primitive beliefs in magic. These superstitions still linger in the minds of many so-called civilized people. Language contains many fossils which testify that the race has long been steeped in magical superstition, such words as spellbound, ill-starred, possessions, inspiration, spirit away, ingenuity, entrancing, thunderstruck, and astonished. And intelligent human beings still believe in good luck, the evil eye, and astrology.

    88:6.8 (973.1) Ancient magic was the cocoon of modern science, indispensable in its time but now no longer useful. And so the phantasms of ignorant superstition agitated the primitive minds of men until the concepts of science could be born. Today, Urantia is in the twilight zone of this intellectual evolution. One half the world is grasping eagerly for the light of truth and the facts of scientific discovery, while the other half languishes in the arms of ancient superstition and but thinly disguised magic.

    #53920
    Bradly
    Bradly
    Participant

    Now does humanity begin to look upon the gods as the bestowers of fortune and those who inflict punishment for wrong doing who require appeasement and atonement for the inherent evil nature of mankind. So many of today’s religious beliefs and ceremonies and doctrines not only originate in these times but still practice these very ancient superstitions. Still does the world cling to our fear based relationship with the gods!!

    Paper 89

    Sin, Sacrifice, and Atonement

    89:0.1 (974.1) PRIMITIVE man regarded himself as being in debt to the spirits, as standing in need of redemption. As the savages looked at it, in justice the spirits might have visited much more bad luck upon them. As time passed, this concept developed into the doctrine of sin and salvation. The soul was looked upon as coming into the world under forfeit—original sin. The soul must be ransomed; a scapegoat must be provided. The head-hunter, in addition to practicing the cult of skull worship, was able to provide a substitute for his own life, a scapeman.

    89:0.2 (974.2) The savage was early possessed with the notion that spirits derive supreme satisfaction from the sight of human misery, suffering, and humiliation. At first, man was only concerned with sins of commission, but later he became exercised over sins of omission. And the whole subsequent sacrificial system grew up around these two ideas. This new ritual had to do with the observance of the propitiation ceremonies of sacrifice. Primitive man believed that something special must be done to win the favor of the gods; only advanced civilization recognizes a consistently even-tempered and benevolent God. Propitiation was insurance against immediate ill luck rather than investment in future bliss. And the rituals of avoidance, exorcism, coercion, and propitiation all merge into one another.

    #53921
    Bradly
    Bradly
    Participant

    Evolutionary religion develops and progresses very slowly over very long, even epochal, periods of time. Progress comes by incremental layering of beliefs and practices embraced by thousands of generations spanning hundreds of thousands of years which can linger indefinitely in one form or another. Many ancient and primitive superstitions are still practiced today.

    1. The Taboo

    89:1.1 (974.3) Observance of a taboo was man’s effort to dodge ill luck, to keep from offending the spirit ghosts by the avoidance of something. The taboos were at first nonreligious, but they early acquired ghost or spirit sanction, and when thus reinforced, they became lawmakers and institution builders. The taboo is the source of ceremonial standards and the ancestor of primitive self-control. It was the earliest form of societal regulation and for a long time the only one; it is still a basic unit of the social regulative structure.

    89:1.2 (974.4) The respect which these prohibitions commanded in the mind of the savage exactly equaled his fear of the powers who were supposed to enforce them. Taboos first arose because of chance experience with ill luck; later they were proposed by chiefs and shamans—fetish men who were thought to be directed by a spirit ghost, even by a god. The fear of spirit retribution is so great in the mind of a primitive that he sometimes dies of fright when he has violated a taboo, and this dramatic episode enormously strengthens the hold of the taboo on the minds of the survivors.

    89:1.3 (974.5) Among the earliest prohibitions were restrictions on the appropriation of women and other property. As religion began to play a larger part in the evolution of the taboo, the article resting under ban was regarded as unclean, subsequently as unholy. The records of the Hebrews are full of the mention of things clean and unclean, holy and unholy, but their beliefs along these lines were far less cumbersome and extensive than were those of many other peoples.

    89:1.4 (975.1) The seven commandments of Dalamatia and Eden, as well as the ten injunctions of the Hebrews, were definite taboos, all expressed in the same negative form as were the most ancient prohibitions. But these newer codes were truly emancipating in that they took the place of thousands of pre-existent taboos. And more than this, these later commandments definitely promised something in return for obedience.

    #53922
    Bradly
    Bradly
    Participant

    The text 89:1.2 above seems to me to say that the more taboo driven the more spirit oriented the person and tribe. Prohibition is the source of mores and morals and traditions and determines, still today, much that we call culture and civilization, but especially religious creeds and ceremonies and beliefs.

    Every evolutionary religion today appears to be defined by taboos and punishment for violating the taboos.

    89:1.5 (975.2) The early food taboos originated in fetishism and totemism. The swine was sacred to the Phoenicians, the cow to the Hindus. The Egyptian taboo on pork has been perpetuated by the Hebraic and Islamic faiths. A variant of the food taboo was the belief that a pregnant woman could think so much about a certain food that the child, when born, would be the echo of that food. Such viands would be taboo to the child.

    89:1.6 (975.3) Methods of eating soon became taboo, and so originated ancient and modern table etiquette. Caste systems and social levels are vestigial remnants of olden prohibitions. The taboos were highly effective in organizing society, but they were terribly burdensome; the negative-ban system not only maintained useful and constructive regulations but also obsolete, outworn, and useless taboos.

    89:1.7 (975.4) There would, however, be no civilized society to sit in criticism upon primitive man except for these far-flung and multifarious taboos, and the taboo would never have endured but for the upholding sanctions of primitive religion. Many of the essential factors in man’s evolution have been highly expensive, have cost vast treasure in effort, sacrifice, and self-denial, but these achievements of self-control were the real rungs on which man climbed civilization’s ascending ladder.

    #53926
    Bradly
    Bradly
    Participant

    The long, evolutionary, and inevitable road from the superstitions of barabarians and primitives to the superstitions of so called “modern” Christians. Amazing how little is left behind and how much is merely carried forward into more complexity!! Nonetheless progress over the Mortal Epochs of Time!

    2. The Concept of Sin

    89:2.1 (975.5) The fear of chance and the dread of bad luck literally drove man into the invention of primitive religion as supposed insurance against these calamities. From magic and ghosts, religion evolved through spirits and fetishes to taboos. Every primitive tribe had its tree of forbidden fruit, literally the apple but figuratively consisting of a thousand branches hanging heavy with all sorts of taboos. And the forbidden tree always said, “Thou shalt not.”

    89:2.2 (975.6) As the savage mind evolved to that point where it envisaged both good and bad spirits, and when the taboo received the solemn sanction of evolving religion, the stage was all set for the appearance of the new conception of sin. The idea of sin was universally established in the world before revealed religion ever made its entry. It was only by the concept of sin that natural death became logical to the primitive mind. Sin was the transgression of taboo, and death was the penalty of sin.

    89:2.3 (975.7) Sin was ritual, not rational; an act, not a thought. And this entire concept of sin was fostered by the lingering traditions of Dilmun and the days of a little paradise on earth. The tradition of Adam and the Garden of Eden also lent substance to the dream of a onetime “golden age” of the dawn of the races. And all this confirmed the ideas later expressed in the belief that man had his origin in a special creation, that he started his career in perfection, and that transgression of the taboos—sin—brought him down to his later sorry plight.

    89:2.4 (976.1) The habitual violation of a taboo became a vice; primitive law made vice a crime; religion made it a sin. Among the early tribes the violation of a taboo was a combined crime and sin. Community calamity was always regarded as punishment for tribal sin. To those who believed that prosperity and righteousness went together, the apparent prosperity of the wicked occasioned so much worry that it was necessary to invent hells for the punishment of taboo violators; the numbers of these places of future punishment have varied from one to five.

    89:2.5 (976.2) The idea of confession and forgiveness early appeared in primitive religion. Men would ask forgiveness at a public meeting for sins they intended to commit the following week. Confession was merely a rite of remission, also a public notification of defilement, a ritual of crying “unclean, unclean!” Then followed all the ritualistic schemes of purification. All ancient peoples practiced these meaningless ceremonies. Many apparently hygienic customs of the early tribes were largely ceremonial.

    #53927
    Bradly
    Bradly
    Participant

    So….the process of evolutionary religion is the aggregation and integration of an inevitable and progressive series of elaborations and reiterations of prior beliefs and superstitions which are slowly adjusted and reoriented by personal and epochal revelation and the discernment of reason and results due to insight and inspiration.

    While slow, by mortal standards of time, this evolutionary process is not chaotic or random or haphazard. It is a well managed process with inevitable outcomes with very specific progress steps and markers which include certain historical inflection points whereby progress may be stalled or reversed or accelerated…but never terminated. The Most Highs do indeed rule each evolutionary world and determine the form and timing of planetary ministry to ensure the inevitable success of all 7 trillion such worlds.

    Every world’s evolutionary path is unique and certainly unpredictable in its process of timing and progress being always affected by the freewill choices of its mortal populations and the wisdom and response abilities of all the celestial agents of the Most Highs. The ultimate result is inevitable but certainly the adventure of evolution is always unique and uncertain and unpredictable. Experiential wisdom is not uniform and is a function of personalized experience and expressions of its own evolutionary progress by celestial beings.

    Our world is certainly proof that the failures of the celestial agents of the Most Highs do not and cannot prevent the evolutionary forces of time and ministry from inevitable progress. Even deliberate and locally catastrophic rebellion by such high agents as Planetary Princes and System Sovereigns or the failure and default of the planetary Adam and Eve or any other failure or iniquity or foolishness or immaturity by any celestial agents cannot stop evolutionary progress. Such teaching offers great comfort and generates great trust in those believers who have sufficient faith in God.

    Before the 7 Adjutants are functional on any world, the Life Carriers and 5 lower Adjutants Spirits are the agents of planetary evolutionary progress. Again is each world of 7 trillion a unique evolutionary story which share traits and patterns and limits and potentials but no 2 have identical outcomes. This is also true once the work of the Life Carriers and the Adjutants achieve the planetary status of ” inhabited”.

    The evolutionary process is similar in form and function one world to another but the results are unique to each adventure in evolution.

    It is fascinating to consider that the same is true for every single personality and mind in time, both mortal and celestial!!!! Each freewill being has a totally unique and personalized experience. This is nearly incomprehensible to me. God has a direct connection and relationship with a countless number of minded and spiritizing personalities who each are having a very personal adventure in time and/or eternity.

    The evolutionary adventure of experiential wisdom and progressive perfecting of BEING is the story we discover in the Papers. That discovery is itself a wondrous adventure. Or so I have found it to be.

    ;-)   Bradly

    3. Renunciation and Humiliation

    89:3.1 (976.3) Renunciation came as the next step in religious evolution; fasting was a common practice. Soon it became the custom to forgo many forms of physical pleasure, especially of a sexual nature. The ritual of the fast was deeply rooted in many ancient religions and has been handed down to practically all modern theologic systems of thought.

    89:3.2 (976.4) Just about the time barbarian man was recovering from the wasteful practice of burning and burying property with the dead, just as the economic structure of the races was beginning to take shape, this new religious doctrine of renunciation appeared, and tens of thousands of earnest souls began to court poverty. Property was regarded as a spiritual handicap. These notions of the spiritual dangers of material possession were widespreadly entertained in the times of Philo and Paul, and they have markedly influenced European philosophy ever since.

    89:3.3 (976.5) Poverty was just a part of the ritual of the mortification of the flesh which, unfortunately, became incorporated into the writings and teachings of many religions, notably Christianity. Penance is the negative form of this ofttimes foolish ritual of renunciation. But all this taught the savage self-control, and that was a worth-while advancement in social evolution. Self-denial and self-control were two of the greatest social gains from early evolutionary religion. Self-control gave man a new philosophy of life; it taught him the art of augmenting life’s fraction by lowering the denominator of personal demands instead of always attempting to increase the numerator of selfish gratification.

    89:3.4 (976.6) These olden ideas of self-discipline embraced flogging and all sorts of physical torture. The priests of the mother cult were especially active in teaching the virtue of physical suffering, setting the example by submitting themselves to castration. The Hebrews, Hindus, and Buddhists were earnest devotees of this doctrine of physical humiliation.

    #53928
    Bradly
    Bradly
    Participant

    Christianity was based upon and still perpetuates primitive superstitions that are barbaric and from very ancient times hundreds of thousands of years ago.

    Evolutionary progress is slow to surrender its past, carried forward by so many generations. Christianity is basically a pagan cult based on sacrificial bribes, atonement, fear based redemptions and appeasement of angry gods and demons who reward and punish based on human obedience to creeds and rituals designed to manipulate the gods in our favor.

    Many still believe that misfortunes and good outcomes both are at the hands of Deity….rather than the results of freewill choices and the wisdom content of those choices.

    89:3.5 (976.7) All through the olden times men sought in these ways for extra credits on the self-denial ledgers of their gods. It was once customary, when under some emotional stress, to make vows of self-denial and self-torture. In time these vows assumed the form of contracts with the gods and, in that sense, represented true evolutionary progress in that the gods were supposed to do something definite in return for this self-torture and mortification of the flesh. Vows were both negative and positive. Pledges of this harmful and extreme nature are best observed today among certain groups in India.

    89:3.6 (977.1) It was only natural that the cult of renunciation and humiliation should have paid attention to sexual gratification. The continence cult originated as a ritual among soldiers prior to engaging in battle; in later days it became the practice of “saints.” This cult tolerated marriage only as an evil lesser than fornication. Many of the world’s great religions have been adversely influenced by this ancient cult, but none more markedly than Christianity. The Apostle Paul was a devotee of this cult, and his personal views are reflected in the teachings which he fastened onto Christian theology: “It is good for a man not to touch a woman.” “I would that all men were even as I myself.” “I say, therefore, to the unmarried and widows, it is good for them to abide even as I.” Paul well knew that such teachings were not a part of Jesus’ gospel, and his acknowledgment of this is illustrated by his statement, “I speak this by permission and not by commandment.” But this cult led Paul to look down upon women. And the pity of it all is that his personal opinions have long influenced the teachings of a great world religion. If the advice of the tentmaker-teacher were to be literally and universally obeyed, then would the human race come to a sudden and inglorious end. Furthermore, the involvement of a religion with the ancient continence cult leads directly to a war against marriage and the home, society’s veritable foundation and the basic institution of human progress. And it is not to be wondered at that all such beliefs fostered the formation of celibate priesthoods in the many religions of various peoples.

    89:3.7 (977.2) Someday man should learn how to enjoy liberty without license, nourishment without gluttony, and pleasure without debauchery. Self-control is a better human policy of behavior regulation than is extreme self-denial. Nor did Jesus ever teach these unreasonable views to his followers.

    #53929
    Bradly
    Bradly
    Participant

    It is simply amazing to me how one million years of evolutionary-religion transitions have resulted in defining so called “modern” traditions and beliefs.

    4. Origins of Sacrifice

    89:4.1 (977.3) Sacrifice as a part of religious devotions, like many other worshipful rituals, did not have a simple and single origin. The tendency to bow down before power and to prostrate oneself in worshipful adoration in the presence of mystery is foreshadowed in the fawning of the dog before its master. It is but one step from the impulse of worship to the act of sacrifice. Primitive man gauged the value of his sacrifice by the pain which he suffered. When the idea of sacrifice first attached itself to religious ceremonial, no offering was contemplated which was not productive of pain. The first sacrifices were such acts as plucking hair, cutting the flesh, mutilations, knocking out teeth, and cutting off fingers. As civilization advanced, these crude concepts of sacrifice were elevated to the level of the rituals of self-abnegation, asceticism, fasting, deprivation, and the later Christian doctrine of sanctification through sorrow, suffering, and the mortification of the flesh.

    89:4.2 (977.4) Early in the evolution of religion there existed two conceptions of the sacrifice: the idea of the gift sacrifice, which connoted the attitude of thanksgiving, and the debt sacrifice, which embraced the idea of redemption. Later there developed the notion of substitution.

    89:4.3 (977.5) Man still later conceived that his sacrifice of whatever nature might function as a message bearer to the gods; it might be as a sweet savor in the nostrils of deity. This brought incense and other aesthetic features of sacrificial rituals which developed into sacrificial feasting, in time becoming increasingly elaborate and ornate.

    89:4.4 (978.1) As religion evolved, the sacrificial rites of conciliation and propitiation replaced the older methods of avoidance, placation, and exorcism.

    89:4.5 (978.2) The earliest idea of the sacrifice was that of a neutrality assessment levied by ancestral spirits; only later did the idea of atonement develop. As man got away from the notion of the evolutionary origin of the race, as the traditions of the days of the Planetary Prince and the sojourn of Adam filtered down through time, the concept of sin and of original sin became widespread, so that sacrifice for accidental and personal sin evolved into the doctrine of sacrifice for the atonement of racial sin. The atonement of the sacrifice was a blanket insurance device which covered even the resentment and jealousy of an unknown god.

    #53958
    Bradly
    Bradly
    Participant

    Creditor deities…planetary, human, and personal indebtedness …redemption and atonement …the altars of sacrifice …holy meals and sanctified offerings …all originate with barbarians and cannibals …yet still persist today. BEWARE the “modern” fearmongering priests and preachers who still spread such lies.

    89:4.6 (978.3) Surrounded by so many sensitive spirits and grasping gods, primitive man was face to face with such a host of creditor deities that it required all the priests, ritual, and sacrifices throughout an entire lifetime to get him out of spiritual debt. The doctrine of original sin, or racial guilt, started every person out in serious debt to the spirit powers.

    89:4.7 (978.4) Gifts and bribes are given to men; but when tendered to the gods, they are described as being dedicated, made sacred, or are called sacrifices. Renunciation was the negative form of propitiation; sacrifice became the positive form. The act of propitiation included praise, glorification, flattery, and even entertainment. And it is the remnants of these positive practices of the olden propitiation cult that constitute the modern forms of divine worship. Present-day forms of worship are simply the ritualization of these ancient sacrificial techniques of positive propitiation.

    89:4.8 (978.5) Animal sacrifice meant much more to primitive man than it could ever mean to modern races. These barbarians regarded the animals as their actual and near kin. As time passed, man became shrewd in his sacrificing, ceasing to offer up his work animals. At first he sacrificed the best of everything, including his domesticated animals.

    89:4.9 (978.6) It was no empty boast that a certain Egyptian ruler made when he stated that he had sacrificed: 113,433 slaves, 493,386 head of cattle, 88 boats, 2,756 golden images, 331,702 jars of honey and oil, 228,380 jars of wine, 680,714 geese, 6,744,428 loaves of bread, and 5,740,352 sacks of corn. And in order to do this he must needs have sorely taxed his toiling subjects.

    89:4.10 (978.7) Sheer necessity eventually drove these semisavages to eat the material part of their sacrifices, the gods having enjoyed the soul thereof. And this custom found justification under the pretense of the ancient sacred meal, a communion service according to modern usage.

    #53959
    Bradly
    Bradly
    Participant

    It is hard to believe how gruesome and barbaric is the history of humanity’s rise from animal to modern times. But we have so far still to go to experience the brotherhood of humanity and the planetary destiny of Light and Life to come. We are still considered to be quite primitive and very reliant upon superstition. We are so slow to change. Things are accelerating according to science and technology and barriers of nationalism appear to be fracturing as the world must now deal more collectively with so many issues.

    But still is evolution a slow process for progress. If we move too fast we lose progress gained to retrogression. There are those who pioneer and lead us forward and those who hold us back and retard collective progress. Both contribute to the results of evolution!!

    5. Sacrifices and Cannibalism
    89:5.1 (978.8) Modern ideas of early cannibalism are entirely wrong; it was a part of the mores of early society. While cannibalism is traditionally horrible to modern civilization, it was a part of the social and religious structure of primitive society. Group interests dictated the practice of cannibalism. It grew up through the urge of necessity and persisted because of the slavery of superstition and ignorance. It was a social, economic, religious, and military custom.

    89:5.2 (979.1) Early man was a cannibal; he enjoyed human flesh, and therefore he offered it as a food gift to the spirits and his primitive gods. Since ghost spirits were merely modified men, and since food was man’s greatest need, then food must likewise be a spirit’s greatest need.

    89:5.3 (979.2) Cannibalism was once well-nigh universal among the evolving races. The Sangiks were all cannibalistic, but originally the Andonites were not, nor were the Nodites and Adamites; neither were the Andites until after they had become grossly admixed with the evolutionary races.

    89:5.4 (979.3) The taste for human flesh grows. Having been started through hunger, friendship, revenge, or religious ritual, the eating of human flesh goes on to habitual cannibalism. Man-eating has arisen through food scarcity, though this has seldom been the underlying reason. The Eskimos and early Andonites, however, seldom were cannibalistic except in times of famine. The red men, especially in Central America, were cannibals. It was once a general practice for primitive mothers to kill and eat their own children in order to renew the strength lost in childbearing, and in Queensland the first child is still frequently thus killed and devoured. In recent times cannibalism has been deliberately resorted to by many African tribes as a war measure, a sort of frightfulness with which to terrorize their neighbors.

    89:5.5 (979.4) Some cannibalism resulted from the degeneration of once superior stocks, but it was mostly prevalent among the evolutionary races. Man-eating came on at a time when men experienced intense and bitter emotions regarding their enemies. Eating human flesh became part of a solemn ceremony of revenge; it was believed that an enemy’s ghost could, in this way, be destroyed or fused with that of the eater. It was once a widespread belief that wizards attained their powers by eating human flesh.

    89:5.6 (979.5) Certain groups of man-eaters would consume only members of their own tribes, a pseudospiritual inbreeding which was supposed to accentuate tribal solidarity. But they also ate enemies for revenge with the idea of appropriating their strength. It was considered an honor to the soul of a friend or fellow tribesman if his body were eaten, while it was no more than just punishment to an enemy thus to devour him. The savage mind made no pretensions to being consistent.

    89:5.7 (979.6) Among some tribes aged parents would seek to be eaten by their children; among others it was customary to refrain from eating near relations; their bodies were sold or exchanged for those of strangers. There was considerable commerce in women and children who had been fattened for slaughter. When disease or war failed to control population, the surplus was unceremoniously eaten.

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