THE URANTIA BOOK: A Guide to the Future and Beyond
by Robert W. Hunt
NOTE: Quotation marks followed by a page reference are from The Urantia
Book published in 1955 by the Urantia Foundation.
Contemplation of the future can be an exciting and adventurous part of life,
an activity that is as useful as it is natural, useful in making decisions
and natural in attempting to satisfy curiosity. Also, futuristic thinking,
in the broadest and highest sense, is a unique pursuit of human personality.
In making a decision, an animal's selective response is limited to the motor
level of behavior. However, "man is able to exercise scientific, moral,
and spiritual insight prior to all exploration or experimentation. Only
a personality can know that it is doing before it does it; only personalities
possess insight in advance of experience. A personality can look before
it leaps and can therefore learn from looking as well as from leaping."
[page 1931]
In striving for some understanding about our origin, nature, and destiny,
we attempt to evaluate the past and to forecast the future. Utilization
of the mind to probe the mysteries of future time and space certainly seems
appropriate. However, my own experience has led me to be aware of some distinctions
between contemplation and anticipation. Actions based upon overly serious
anticipation or misdirected expectations may impede a natural flow of events
and affect the future adversely. By contrast, careful contemplation may
lead to some degree of wisdom concerning dynamic growth and the potentialities
for expanding knowledge and truth. I am persuaded that life and evolution
are progressive rather than cyclic and that some near-future transitions
are more likely to be quantum jumps than gradual developments. We should
manifest an openness that permits us to gracefully incorporate changes as
they occur rather than always attempting to anticipate and manipulate them.
As truth-seekers investigating both traditional and nontraditional sources,
we should not overlook the possibility of divine revelation. Actually, I
believe that such revelation as a personal human experience is occurring
continuously. Further, on a broader scale, "Revelation as an epochal
phenomenon is periodic." [page 1107] However, for either the individual
insight or the major breakthrough of expanding truth, certain levels of
awareness and cosmic consciousness are required. Unfortunately, it is more
often the case that "error is so great that its rectification by revelation
would be fatal to those slowly emerging truths which are essential to its
experiential overthrow." [pages 554, 555] In other words, our revelations
will ever await our preparation. Perhaps we should, both individually and
collectively, develop some patterns of future thought consistent with these
realizations.
I observe that some of the most crucial as well as fertile areas of exploration
along these lines are lying dormant and almost unrecognized. It seems appropriate
to issue a challenge, a call to all who can hear, to devote time and energy
to matters of an eternal and consistent nature; to values and meanings;
to ideals concerned with the unification of body, mind, and spirit; and
to the integration of science, philosophy, and religion in the highest and
purest sense. In particular, "the overstressed and isolated morality
of modern religion, which fails to hold the devotion and loyalty of many
twentieth century men, would rehabilitate itself if, in addition to its
moral mandates, it would give equal consideration to the truths of science,
philosophy, and spiritual experience, and to the beauties of the physical
creation, the charm of intellectual art, and the grandeur of genuine character
achievement." [page 43]
Rather than becoming stalled on philosophical and theological debates over
the existence of God and of a creative scheme of life and cosmology, all
persons of intelligence and good will should consider assuming these basic
matters and proceed to study the consequences of their assumptions. Further,
these investigations must break free of the constraints that have plagued
religionists throughout history. "The religious challenge of this age
is to those farseeing and forward-looking men and women of spiritual insight
who will dare to construct a new and appealing philosophy of living out
of the enlarged and exquisitely integrated modern concepts of cosmic truth,
universe beauty and divine goodness. Such a new and righteous vision of
morality will attract all that is good in the mind of man and challenge
that which is best in the human soul.": [page 43]
I am convinced that there are scientific, philosophic, and religious unifications
in almost endless profusion simply awaiting discovery. These discoveries
have the power to alter the course of history and the nature of life for
every human being on the face of the earth. For a variety of reasons, this
planet has long been in a state of quarantine. But there are signs of a
gradual lifting of this curtain of forced isolation, and the glimpses afford
majestic patterns and living truths heretofore only approximated by shadowy
visions. Furthermore, these potentialities of which I speak transcend even
the time-fettered concept of the future and contain sequentiality as only
a useful but limited aspect of expanded reality. The domain of time and
space, together with the finite nature of our earth-bound capabilities,
provide the setting within which we must live and grow and work; but any
investigations of deity, divinity, and eternal life cannot accept such boundary
conditions. Also, we must recognize that "religious experience, being
essentially spiritual, can never be fully understood by the material mind."
[page 69] "The difficulties and paradoxes of religion are inherent
in the fact that the realities of religion are utterly beyond the mortal
capacity for intellectual comprehension." [page 69] Nevertheless, within
the confines of these realizations, there is still much to be discovered,
both intellectually and experientially; and, in fact, there are no ultimate
limitations except our own self-imposed timidity.
Suppose that, by some technique, the very highest, most perceptive and truthful
human insights could be collected and then formulated into a consistent
rendition for study and analysis. The source of each gem of wisdom would
be relatively unimportant; each would find its proper place in the whole
by withstanding the tests of beauty, truth, and goodness on as many levels
of reality as the current evolving consciousness of man has experience for
evaluation. Suppose, further, that some new information is made available
for transition, for completion of partial concepts, and for extensions within
the grasp of human understanding. Would the populace of this beleaguered
little planet be able to adjust to the new levels of both understanding
and responsibility? I regard both the supposition and the question as being
of the utmost importance because, incredibly, what I am describing has occurred!
However, before I explain, I must digress by almost two thousand years and
point out that the life and teachings of Jesus exhibited essentially the
characteristics of the supposition. Jesus was familiar with the very frontiers
of knowledge and understanding in the realms of science, philosophy, and
religion; his insights and utterances reflected the most profound and truthful
aspects of these conceptualizations. Further, Jesus clarified and expanded
meanings and values into a dynamic pattern for progressive living and cosmic
awareness. His insights and teachings have at least partially survived even
amidst the harshest possible distortions, extremely misguided fanaticism,
extraneous ideas, and mistaken concepts. I am quite certain that the life
and teachings of Jesus constitute a revelation of epochal significance intended
to benefit all mortal beings participating in the evolutionary development
of life on earth. I am also persuaded that other revelations of such significance
occurred prior to the time of Jesus; but the details of these have been
all but lost and buried in antiquity. Each of these occurred due to a great
and cumulative need for redirection of human understanding and reconsideration
of human values, a need best met by a sifting of truth from error and a
concurrent revelation, the latter occurring when necessary and to an extent
commensurate with the current evolutionary state. Thus, such an occurrence
of epochal significance must be both subtle and profound, both gentle and
strong, both acceptable and incredible.
Now, if these observations expressed only my own combined perceptions and
faith, there would be little else to add. I might urge others to seek personal
and spiritual experience as the most reliable guide not only to the future
but beyond to the ultimate potential of eternal life. To say anything more
could be at worst counterproductive or at best ineffectual since the seeking
and finding are necessarily matters of personal experience that can only
be assisted but not completed through physical and intellectual efforts
alone. However, at this particular time in the history of our planetary
evolution and with a calculated absence of fanfare, a revelation of epochal
significance has occurred. It is available to anyone willing to suspend
disbelief, approach it with an open mind, and ultimately realize the extraordinary
significance of the discovery.
I am speaking of The Urantia Book, an unprecedented, altogether astounding
and totally unique work that will one day be recognized as the most important
document ever to appear in the history on mankind on this planet. Beyond
this, I will refrain from further exclamatory adjectives or praise for this
treatise as it can stand on its own merits without need of supporting rhetoric.
It must be read, studied, and ultimately experienced in order to be grasped
on any but the most superficial levels. The magnitude and grandeur of this
work encompass an expensive proposition for the reader, the cost including
a genuine openness, a sincere attitude, an increasing dedication, a growing
faith, and acceptance of an expanding reality. Many persons encounter The
Urantia Book only briefly and are not drawn further; others tarry a while
and then move away; others experience an overpowering realization of its
importance and significance. The latter group is instilled with a deep feeling
of commitment to a way of living that is consistent with the primary theme
of the book which is the concept of the Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood
of Man.
The Urantia Book was published and copyrighted in 1955 by the Urantia Foundation
in Chicago, Illinois. Prior to its publication, it was referred to as the
"Urantia Papers" due the fact that the book consists of one hundred
ninety-six separate papers, or chapters. Beginning in the year 1935, the
papers were in the possession of a doctor named William S. Sadler and his
wife, Lena K. Sadler. A group of friends of the Sadler's read and discussed
the papers before funds were raised to underwrite the publication of the
book. The authorship is attributed to a group of superhuman beings charged
with the responsibility by celestial authorities of formulating this revelation
of epochal significance to our world, which is known to these beings as
Urantia. Very little has been communicated about how the papers came into
being; an unidentified man, a patient of Dr. Sadler's, was involved in the
transmission of the content of the book in some unspecified way. This meager
information is bound to fail to satisfy the scientific mind. However,
after twenty years of experience reading and studying The Urantia Book,
my conclusions concerning the issues of validity and credibility are as
follows.
The logistics of the communication of The Urantia Book become irrelevant
upon discovering the dynamic, flawless and completely consistent nature
of the Urantia Papers. Accompanying the recognition of these characteristics
of this work is the dawning realization that no mortal earth-bound being
or group of beings would be capable of authorship. While the notion of extra-terrestrial
authors may be difficult, I urge the sincere seeker to read The Urantia
Book with an open mind on this issue. If, as I have observed in the experience
of every one of my acquaintances who has read the book, one finds a transforming
power along with an awesome treasure-trove of information and insight about
the most important questions relating to human existence, the issues of
transmission and authorship seem secondary.
In this commentary, I wish to introduce some basic information conveyed
in The Urantia Book. Our world, Urantia, is one of about ten million inhabited
or inhabitable planets, currently at various stages of evolutionary development
and progress, composing what is known as a local universe. Our local universe,
Nebadon, is the creative work of Michael, a celestial being belonging to
a class known as Creator Sons. Michael, according to plan, culminated his
creative act by living a relatively ordinary life as one of the time-space-planet-bound
beings on a selected world at a certain stage of evolution. The chosen planet
for this bestowal was Urantia; and Michael lived and died here as Jesus
of Nazareth.
Approximately one hundred thousand local universes comprise a superuniverse
of which there are seven. This represents about seven trillion inhabited
or inhabitable planets on which dwell an extraordinary variety of different
types of beings with the common characteristic of being of one family, the
family of God, the Universal Father. The Urantia Book describes a vast array
of cosmological data while at the same time presenting a consistent, highly
intelligent and insightful, philosophy of life and reality that covers and
unifies the highest and best concepts of material existence (science), intellectual
potential (philosophy), and spiritual realization (religion). The book is
in four major parts beginning with Part One, consisting of thirty-one papers,
and entitled "The Central and Superuniverses". Part Two, consisting
of twenty-five papers, is entitled "The Local Universe"; Part
Three, consisting of sixty-three papers, is entitled "The History of
Urantia"; and Part Four, consisting of seventy-seven papers, is entitled
"The Life and Teachings of Jesus". Included are papers dealing
with such matters as the nature and attributes of God, God's relation to
the individual, the evolution of the local universes, the establishment
of life on Urantia, the nature of life and government on a neighboring planet,
the growth and development of evolutionary religion, the four revelations
of epochal significance preceding the Creator Son bestowal, and the purpose
and nature of Michael's sojourn here.
The span of The Urantia Book is far too vast and comprehensive to consider
in an introductory commentary. One vital thread concerns not only the origin
and nature of mortal, planetary beings but also their potential ascendant
destiny. There is every assurance that each unique human personality has
the capacity to survive physical death and to exist on successfully higher
awareness and reality levels, growing as an immortal soul, formed by human
and divine partnership, to a fully realized spirit. Thus, Jesus' teachings
of eternal life achieve new dimensions of literal truth by this expanded
message.
There are many references in The Urantia Book to the background and nature
of a revelation such as this. In paper 92, entitled "The Later Evolution
of Religion", a section dealing with revelation offers this information:
"Revelation is evolutionary but always progressive. Down through the
ages of a world's history, the revelations of religion are ever-expanding
and successively more enlightening. It is the mission of revelation to sort
and censor the successive religions of evolution. But if revelation is to
exalt and upstep the religions of evolution, then must such divine visitations
portray teachings which are not too far removed from the thought and reactions
of the age in which they are presented. Thus must and does revelation always
keep in touch with evolution. Always must the religion of revelation be
limited by man's capacity of receptivity. But regardless of apparent connection
or derivation, the religions of revelation are always characterized by a
belief in some Deity of final value and in some concept of the survival
of personality identity after death. Evolutionary religion is sentimental,
not logical. It is man's reaction to belief in a hypothetical ghost-spirit
world - the human belief-reflex, excited by the realization and fear of
the unknown. Revelatory religion is propounded by the real spiritual world;
it is the response of the superintellectual cosmos to the mortal hunger
to believe in, and depend upon, the universe Deities. Evolutionary religion
pictures the circuitous gropings of humanity in quest of truth; revelatory
religion is that very truth". [page 1007]
In reference to the Urantia Papers, Paper 92 also contains this fascinating
statement: "The papers, of which this is one, constitute the most recent
presentation of truth to the mortals of Urantia. These papers differ from
all previous revelations, for they are not the work of a single universe
personality but a composite presentation my many beings. But no revelation
short of the attainment of the Universal Father can ever be complete. All
other celestial ministrations are no more than partial, transient, and practically
adapted to local conditions of time and space. While such admissions as
this may possibly detract from the immediate force and authority of all
revelations, the time has arrived on Urantia when it is advisable to make
such frank statements, even at the risk of weakening the future influence
and authority of this, the most recent of the revelations of truth to the
mortal races of Urantia." [page 1008]
I wish to include a few additional brief quotations from The Urantia Book
although selecting these is frustrating because of the vast choice of topics.
I am using quotations because it is difficult to adequately paraphrase or
to improve on the precise language and economy of statement characteristic
of the book's prose. In choosing these readings, I am attempting to convey
an idea of the scope of the book, the quality of its exposition, and the
presentation of futuristic concepts.
Paper 41 is entitled "Physical Aspects of the Local Universe".
One section includes the following: "In deciphering spectral phenomena,
it should be remembered that space is not empty; that light, in traversing
space, is sometimes slightly modified by the various forms of energy and
matter which circulate in all organized space. Some of the lines indicating
unknown matter which appear in the spectra of your sun are due to modifications
of well-known elements which are floating throughout space in shattered
form, the atomic casualties of the fierce encounters of the solar elemental
battles. Space is pervaded by these wandering derelicts, especially sodium
and calcium. As your physicists have suspected, these mutilated remnants
of solar calcium literally ride the light beams for varied distances, and
their widespread dissemination throughout space is tremendously facilitated.
Of all the solar elements, calcium, notwithstanding its comparative bulk
- containing as it does twenty revolving electrons - is the most successful
in escaping from the solar interior to the realms of space. This explains
why there is a calcium layer, a gaseous stone surface, in the sun six thousand
miles thick; and this despite the fact that nineteen lighter elements, and
numerous heavier one, are underneath." {pages 461, 462] It is interesting
to point out that the sun presence of Calcium 19 was discovered in 1964!
The next paper in sequence, Paper 42, is "Energy - Mind and Matter".
A sample quotation reads: "There is innate in matter and present in
universal space a form of energy not known on Urantia. When this discovery
is finally made, then will physicists feel that they have solved, almost
at least, the mystery of matter. And so will they have approached one step
nearer the Creator; so will they have mastered one more phase of the divine
technique; but in no sense will they have found God, neither will they have
established the existence of matter of the operation of natural laws apart
from the cosmic technique of Paradise and the motivating purpose of the
Universal Father.
"Subsequent to even still greater progress and further discoveries,
after Urantia has advanced immeasurably in comparison with present knowledge,
though you should gain control of the energy revolutions of the electrical
units of matter to the extent of modifying their physical manifestations
- even after all such possible progress, forever will scientists be powerless
to create one atom of matter or to originate one flash of energy or ever
to add to matter that which we call life." [pages 467-468]
The evolutionary destiny of a world of time and space is a planetary age
designated the "age of light and life". Paper 55 is entitled "The
Spheres of Light and Life"; and Section 5, "The Acme of Material
Development", offers this information. "The advanced stages of
a world settled in light and life represent the acme of evolutionary material
development. On these cultured worlds, gone are the idleness and friction
of the earlier primitive ages. Poverty and social inequality have all but
vanished, degeneracy has disappeared, and delinquency is rarely observed.
Insanity has practically ceased to exist, and feeble-mindedness is a rarity.
"The economic, social, and administrative status of these worlds is
of a high and perfected order. Science, art, and industry flourish, and
society is a smoothly working mechanism of high material, intellectual,
and cultural achievement. Industry has been largely diverted to serving
the higher aims of such a superb civilization. The economic life of such
a world has become ethical.
"War has become a matter of history, and there are no more armies or
police forces. Government is gradually disappearing. Self-control is slowly
rendering laws of human enactment obsolete. The extent of civil government
and statutory regulation, in an intermediate state of advancing civilization,
is in inverse proportion to the morality and spirituality of the citizenship.
"Schools are vastly improved and are devoted to the training of mind
and expansion of soul. The art centers are exquisite and the musical organizations
superb. The temples of worship with their associated schools of philosophy
and experiential religion are creations of beauty and grandeur. The open-air
arenas of worship assembly are equally sublime in the simplicity of their
artistic appointment.
"The provisions for competitive play, humor, and other phases of personal
and group achievement are ample and appropriate. A special feature of the
competitive activities on such a highly cultured world concerns the efforts
of individuals and groups to excel in the sciences and philosophies of cosmology.
Literature and oratory flourish, and language is so improved as to be symbolic
of concepts as well as to be expressive of ideas. Life is refreshingly simple;
man has at last coordinated a high state of mechanical development with
an inspiring intellectual attainment and has overshadowed both with an exquisite
spiritual achievement. The pursuit of happiness is an experience of joy
and satisfaction." [pages 629-630]
The entirety of Part IV, "The Life and Teachings of Jesus", is
very much in keeping with the other portions of The Urantia Book - consistent,
intelligent, and altogether fascinating. Events are described in a most
straightforward fashion and annotated by a most enlightened commentary.
As an interesting example, in referring to the biblically well-documented
wedding at Cana, the exposition includes not only what occurred but also
what was in the minds of Jesus and Mary and many other participants. An
excerpt reads as follows: "Near at hand stood six waterpots of stone,
filled with water, holding about twenty gallons apiece. This water was intended
for subsequent use in the final purification ceremonies of the wedding celebration.
the commotion of the servants about these huge stone vessels, under the
busy direction of his mother, attracted Jesus' attention, and going over,
he observed that they were drawing wine out of them by the pitcherful.
"It was gradually dawning upon Jesus what had happened. Of all the
persons present at the marriage feast of Cana, Jesus was the most surprised.
Others had expected him to work a wonder, but that was just what he had
purposed not to do." [However] "in the face of the expressed wish
of the Universe Creator Sovereign, there was no escaping the instantaneous
appearance of wine."
"But this was in no sense a miracle. No law of nature was modified,
abrogated, or even transcended. Nothing happened but the abrogation of time
in association with the celestial assembly of the chemical elements requisite
for the elaboration of the wine. At Cana on this occasion the agents of
the Creator made wine just as they do by the ordinary natural processes
except that they did it independently of time and with the intervention
of superhuman agencies in the matter of the space assembly of the necessary
chemical ingredients." [page 1530]
Many of Jesus' discourses to his twelve chosen apostles and to various individuals
and groups, heretofore completely unreported in biblical sources, are presented
in modern terms. On various occasions, Jesus spoke on such matters as time
and space, the nature of reality, spiritual freedom, and interpersonal relationships
as well as the more familiar topics such as justice and ;mercy, worship,
prayer, and the Kingdom of God.
As an example, The Urantia Book relates some ideas that Jesus communicated
to a friend; it states that "in substance and modern phraseology",
Jesus had this to say about knowledge and truth: "Knowledge is the
sphere of the material or fact-discerning mind. Truth is the domain of the
spiritually endowed intellect that is conscious of knowing God. Knowledge
is demonstrable; truth is experienced. Knowledge is a possession of the
mind; truth is an experience of the soul, the progressing self. Knowledge
is a function of the nonspiritual level; truth is a phase of the mind-spirit
level of the universes. The eye of the material mind perceives a world of
factual knowledge; the eye of the spiritualized intellect discerns a world
of true values. These two views, synchronized and harmonized, reveal the
world of reality, wherein wisdom interprets the phenomena of the universe
in terms of progressive personal experience." [page 1435]
I sincerely urge you to consider a careful investigation of The Urantia
Book. There are many facets to explore, consider, and return to - regardless
of how you categorize or evaluate the book. Treat it not with awe, but with
respect - if only for the advanced cosmology and compelling religiosity
that it presents. I think you will be enlightened by the experience. I am
completely persuaded that the concepts of The Urantia Book are on the frontier
of the highest, deepest, and best of human thought in the history of man
on this planet. Furthermore, the book has a subtle growth potential in that
some parts of it are consistent with the knowledge of each of the past four
decades; and there is a time-blossoming of new levels inherent in the exposition.
This is the nature of its cumulative futuristic aspect and it is both original
and compelling. The future destiny of the planet is hopeful; but a positive
future depends directly upon the quality of integration of body, mind and
spirit on the part of the mortal inhabitants, and upon the conceptual realization
and implementation of the Fatherhood of God and the Brotherhood of Man.
The Urantia Book states that "We cannot judge religion by the status
of its accompanying civilization; we had better estimate the real nature
of a civilization by the purity and nobility of its religion." [page
1127] Also, "An ideal social order is that in which every man loves
his neighbor as he loves himself." [page 1087] This is more than a
graceful and attractive ideal. It can occur; it has occurred on other worlds
not unlike our own. Furthermore, on a personal level, this concept is at
the very basis of life's purpose; and it provides the key to survival, to
happiness, and to eternal life! The Urantia Book offers some powerful and
convincing arguments. It is truly a guide to the future - and beyond.