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The Urantia Book and Christian Fundamentalism
Prepared by The Reverend Meredith J. Sprunger
Grace Evangelical and Reformed Church
215 N. Slate St., Culver, Indiana
1982
Many devout Christians of conservative or fundamentalistic background have read
sections of The Urantia Book and recognized the superb quality of its spiritual
insights, but they have been troubled by the revelatory claim of the book or
positions taken which differ from some of the doctrines of fundamentalism. These
people over the years have written to ask questions, express perplexity, seek
help, or challenge statements.
This paper seeks to speak with constructive understanding to these questions and
spiritual anxieties. In many ways it has been the Christian fundamentalists who
have maintained the vibrant spiritual emphasis of religion in America. Our
intent is not to contend with fundamentalistic beliefs, but rather, to set these
spiritual truths in a larger frame of reference which, hopefully, will enable
those who hold to a conservative theology to recognize that we subscribe to the
same spiritual realities and are brothers/sisters in Christ.
Most people who accept the Bible as revelation do not do so because some one
demanded obedience to this belief. They accept the Bible as the word of God
because they recognize its spiritual truths. Your approach to The Urantia Book
should be made the same way. Before you read The Urantia Book you should not
regard it as revelation. Only after you have read it are you in a position to
begin to consider whether or not it may have been inspired by God. Faith and
conviction must come from honest and sincere inner leading and not from some
authoritarian claim or demand.
How We Got Our Bible
In thinking about the entire question of revelation it may be helpful to know
how we got our Bible. Theological schools devote entire courses to this question
and dozens of books are available on the subject. But you can get a short
summary of the Bible’s origin by going to the Public Library reference shelf and
consulting a copy of Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible. Look up the term
“canon,” which means “officially accepted standards or books,” and read about
how we got our Bible.
You will find the Old Testament evolved in three main stages over thousands of
years of history. It was edited periodically by many scholars. The entire canon
of the Old Testament was not decided until around 90 A. D. at the famous Council
of Jamnia where Hebrew scholars finally determined which books should be
included in the “official” scriptures of Judaism. The process and the decisions
agreed upon were much more complex and extensive than this brief description
might lead you to believe.
The New Testament began in the early Christian Church as a series of papers and
letters written by numerous people. These papers were circulated among
believers, edited, combined, and added to by many early scholars and church
leaders. The names of apostles were often attached to the better papers so that
they would have more authority for church members. From around 144 A. D. to 367
A. D. various scholars and bishops drew up their own lists of books which they
thought should be canonical or officially recognized books. Finally, Athanasius,
bishop of Alexandria, wrote an Easter letter to the churches of his diocese in
the year 367 in which he discusses the books which he considered canonical. This
is the first list which includes all of the twenty-seven books of the New
Testament as we now have it. His list, however, was in a different sequence than
our current New Testament. At various church councils in the years that followed
Athanasius’ list was widely adopted, and in this way we got our New Testament.
In Athanasius’ pastoral letter he wrote with all of the authority of a bishop,
“let no one add to them (his list) or take away aught of them.” Such
authoritarian exhortations were considered necessary to protect the purity of
revelatory teachings; and statements like the admonition in Rev. 22:18-19: “I
warn every one who hears the words of the prophecy of this book...” were common.
In the same way the Urantia Foundation published The Urantia Book under
international copyright protection so that the purity of these teachings can be
safeguarded. These precautions are not meant to imply that God ceases to enlarge
the revelation of himself and spiritual truth to succeeding generations. The
history of the Bible shows that God does progressively reveal larger truths to a
developing world. Early religious leaders used authoritarian warnings and
admonitions frequently to protect the latest prophetic messages.
Once you understand how the content of the Bible was accumulated, edited,
adopted, and officially approved, you realize that revelation is validated by
centuries of experience. Many people recognize revelation immediately because
the indwelling spirit of God confirms what they hear or read, but it takes many
people over a long period of time to establish a social tradition of revelation
such as the Bible. This tradition, along with the authority and prestige of the
institutional church, results in a cultural conditioning which largely
determines how the average person thinks and acts.
Recognizing New Revelation
The Urantia Book, being very new, must be evaluated by the indwelling spirit of
God working in the mind and heart of each individual. You should accept nothing
in The Urantia Book or any other book unless it passes this inner test of truth.
I am confident that a thousand years hence, we will have a solid social
tradition witnessing to the revelatory quality of The Urantia Book.
Revelation is always the product of the action of God in the life of humanity.
God has an infinite number of ways to do this. In Jesus of Nazareth he used both
physical and spiritual means to bring revelation to us in the form of a person.
In the writings of Paul he used spiritual inspiration in the mind of Paul to
bring us revelation in the form of brief letters to churches. In John’s book of
revelation he used a vision to the mind of John to bring us revelation. In The
Urantia Book he used high spirit personalities to bring revelation in the form
of a book. God could use an infinite number of channels and manifestations to
bring revelation to his mortal children. It is God’s wisdom that determines the
time, place, method, and form of revelation. We might speculate on why God uses
certain channels and forms, but this would only be an educated guess. The spirit
of God is always active in the world, and in this sense revelation is
continuous—usually through inner guidance to individuals who share these
prophetic insights with their society. Periodically epochal revelations such as
the coming of Jesus occur. These epochal revelations naturally have a much
greater effect on our world than the continuous forms of evolutionary
revelation. A study of epochal revelations shows that each succeeding one
enlarges and enhances the earlier spiritual understanding.
Revelation must always be given in the language, the forms of knowledge, and the
philosophical concepts that are meaningful to the people who are given this
revelation at the time in which it is given. As human knowledge expands,
revelation uses these more advanced concepts to convey its spiritual message.
This is a never ending process.
The New Fulfills and Enhances the Old
Just as the New Testament fulfills and upsteps the Old Testament, The Urantia
Book confirms and enlarges the truths of the Bible. Most people have a much
greater appreciation of the Bible after reading The Urantia Book. The Bible and
The Urantia Book are companion volumes. Not to recognize this close supportive
relationship is to repeat an ancient error. Early in the Christian Church a
wealthy ship owner by the name of Marcion headed a movement to eliminate the Old
Testament from Christian literature. The church wisely rejected his views. Any
reader of The Urantia Book who took this same attitude toward the Bible, in my
judgment, would be making a similar mistake. There are many people, in fact, who
have not been interested in the Bible until after they have read The Urantia
Book.
Because of the natural suspicion conservative religionists have toward any claim
of new revelation, a rather common reaction that some fundamentalists have
toward The Urantia Book is that it could be a work of Satan. It is also
interesting to recall that this was the same possibility raised in connection
with the message of Jesus. Jesus’ response to this accusation, I think, is as
good as can be made. He said he should be judged by the fruits of his life—”How
can Satan cast out Satan!” The Urantia Book should be judged in the same way.
You will find it supports the mission and message of Jesus and refutes the
intentions and message of Satan! Epochal revelation will probably always meet
the same reception given the message of Jesus. The leaders of traditional
religious institutions are likely to oppose it; but, in time, the common people
will receive it gladly.
The Human and the Divine
A careful study of the life and teachings of Jesus reveals there is no
contradiction between the spiritual teachings regarding Jesus found in The
Urantia Book and the Bible. Certain physical and cosmological facts or
assumptions are corrected, and Jesus’ entire life and teachings are enlarged by
The Urantia Book; but the essential spiritual truths are unchanged.
For instance, Christian theologians generally affirm that Jesus was both a human
and a divine personality, but the majority of scholars in mainline churches have
long recognized that the story of the immaculate conception and the virgin birth
were added by the early church to make his divine nature more believable for the
church members of those times. An interesting observation is that today this
story is frequently a stumbling block to belief in the authenticity of the
Biblical record of the divinity of Jesus. If the virgin birth is a historical
fact, the reverse argument is a much sounder philosophical position: that is,
since God could have used any method he desired to incarnate his son, the fact
of the divinity of Jesus makes the virgin birth a possible option of the divine
plan.
The reason most mainline church theologians do not accept the virgin birth story
is that only two of the four gospels record it and no where else in the New
Testament is it referred to. The earliest gospel, Mark, and the latest gospel,
John, do not mention it. One would expect all of the gospel writers to highlight
such an important event. Secondly, there are many instances of supernatural
conception and virgin birth recorded in the annals of religious history. It was
the characteristic method by which ancient peoples designated the divine origin
of their prophets and leaders. Paradoxically, the Biblical account traces the
lineage of Jesus back to David through the ancestry of Joseph, not Mary.
Finally, modern Christian scholars reject the virgin birth story because it is
observed that God usually uses the natural laws of his creation to work his
purposes in the world.
The spiritual truth regarding the nature of Jesus is that he was both human and
divine.This The Urantia Book strongly affirms. The book does not even mention
the immaculate conception and virgin birth doctrines. It is assumed that the
Father could incarnate his son as a mortal on our world through the natural
process of conception and birth. The ancient legend is quietly ignored while the
spiritual truths regarding the nature of Jesus are substantiated and enhanced.
An Enlarged Spiritual Universe
The writers of the various books of the Bible had a comparatively simplistic
universe cosmology. They visualized a flat earth in the center of creation
encompassed by the vault or “firmament” of heaven. this limited astronomical
knowledge naturally conditioned their interpretation of spiritual realities and
personalities. Basic spiritual truth, therefore, had to be revealed to the
Biblical authors in prescientific frames of reference.
The revelators of The Urantia Book present a view of the universe which,
while in essential agreement with our present astronomical knowledge, goes far
beyond our contemporary science. They also clarify our knowledge of the Paradise
Trinity, the pre-bestowal personality and universe status of Jesus, and the
functional relationships of spiritual beings in general. Although the Bible does
not speak of the Trinity per se, Christian thinkers have developed the doctrine
of the Trinity and naturally assumed, without specific Biblical confirmation,
that the pre-incarnate Christ was the second person of the Trinity. The fact
that the prologue of John speaks of him as the actual creator of our universe
was more or less regarded as a poetic “Logos” doctrine since theologians
regarded God the Father as the creator. The authors of The Urantia Book,
however, tell us this Biblical description (also stated in Col. 1:16 and Heb.
1:2) of the preexistent Christ is literally true. He is both the creator and
savior of our universe.
Each Creator Son of a local universe is a unique creation of the Universal
Father and the Eternal Son and is known as “the only begotten son” in his
universe, and all who go to the Father in this universe go through the ministry
and means established by this Creator-Savior Son. Even though Jesus is not the
second person of the Paradise Trinity, his presence and power are exactly the
same as that of the Eternal Son, the second person of the Trinity, if he were
acting in the place of Christ in our universe. After Jesus’ bestowal on our
confused planet, the Father, as recorded in Matthew, placed “all authority in
heaven and earth” in his hands; and he has promised one day to return to this
world of his incarnation experience. Here, again, we see The Urantia Book, while
correcting assumptions made due to our very limited universe knowledge, confirms
and reinforces the basic spiritual truths of the Bible.
Savior of Humankind
All Christians look to Jesus as the mediator between human beings and God and
regard him as the savior of humankind. It is in the explanation of this
salvation that they differ. Theologians of mainline Christian Churches see
salvation as the gift of God through faith in Jesus emphasizing God’s love for
humanity and the full acceptance of them as his mortal sons and daughters. The
theologians of Christian fundamentalism regard salvation as a gift of God
through faith in Jesus because he gave himself as a blood sacrifice demanded by
God the Father as the price for forgiving the sins of humankind. This is known
as the blood atonement doctrine in which Jesus is seen as the redeemer of
humanity from the condemnation of a just and holy God.
The only Christian belief which the authors of The Urantia Book vigorously
criticize is the blood atonement theory. They do so because this doctrine
distorts the great love which the Universal Father has for his mortal sons and
daughters. It is incompatible with Jesus’ teachings about the nature of God the
Father. God’s love is not subordinate to his righteousness or holiness. Love is
the Universal Father’s primary attitude toward all persons. Jesus is, indeed,
the savior of humankind but not a redeemer or ransomer.
The blood atonement theory has its origin in the conceptual language of Paul.
Coming out of the Jewish tradition and writing with Jewish people in mind, Paul
used the symbolic idea of Jesus as the “final sacrifice” in their sacrificial
system as a missionary approach which made sense to those with a Jewish
background. New Testament scholars today recognize that Paul did not hold a God
concept which would be compatible with a literal blood atonement doctrine. He
used this sacrificial language because it was the only frame of reference that
would be acceptable to the Jews of his day. It was a missionary attempt to
relate to the thought patterns of the Jews.
Most ministers in mainline Christian Churches have long since abandoned this
retributive concept of God. The Bible commentary most widely used in America
today is The Interpreter’s Bible published by Abingdon Press. In volume VIII, p.
510-11, the writer in commenting on John 3:16 says:
Some of the past explanations of the gospel are not overhelpful to us now. Most
of us are not at home in the Jewish sacrificial system; and metaphors drawn from
it can be confusing rather than illuminating. And some of the interpretations,
popular in the Middle Ages, are to us incredible, and even monstrous....So do
many, with the Gospels in their hands, appear to see in them a lesser God giving
himself to save us from the implacable fury and resentment of the great God,
slow and hard to be appeased, and demanding his pound of flesh from someone.
That is hideous heresy; and the blasphemy of blasphemies. It was in the eternal
plan of God the Father that Jesus Christ lived out in fact: ‘God was in Christ,
reconciling the world unto himself’ (II Cor. 5:19), not standing sullenly aside,
and needing himself to be reconciled.
We should recognize that most of those who still accept a literal blood
atonement theory in our day probably do so out of misunderstanding and with no
intent to deny the loving nature of God. To believe that God the Father cannot
or will not love human beings until his innocent son is brutally executed is a
cruel distortion of the loving nature of the Heavenly Father Jesus revealed to
this world. But The Urantia Book does affirm the positive spiritual values
associated with the crucifixion and our salvation which are important to
fundamentalists as well as to other Christians.
It was the Father’s will that Jesus allow the Jewish leaders to dispose of him
as they desired. God does not arbitrarily interfere with the premeditated
intentions of human beings. Jesus’ death on the cross demonstrates the profound
love he and the Father have for humankind even when they were torturing and
executing him. He refused to use divine power to save himself or punish these
misguided evil doers. This great love is the most powerful saving act the Father
and the Son could bestow on self-willed men in this situation to eventually
deliver them from their ignorance, evil, and sin and cause humankind to
recognize God’s transcendent love. Salvation is something that God in Christ
makes possible for every human being. Finite mortals cannot save themselves, but
through faith they may accept this gift of eternal life. Christ is the way by
which all mortals in our universe go to the Father.
On Approaching New Truth
New truth is always challenging and often threatening to traditionalists.
This is both natural and good. The tried and true values of historical
experience cannot and should not be easily replaced by the new and untested.
These historic truths, however, are periodically upstepped by revelation in the
form of prophetic vision. Such growth is usually a traumatic experience for
individuals, the church, and society.
Every prophet in the history of the Old and New Testaments has met with unbelief
and opposition. The priests of society have regularly stoned its prophets. Then
their sons and daughters of another century build monuments to honor the
prophets persecuted by their forefathers. It is good to be cautious and
critical; it is helpful to doubt and carefully evaluate that which is new. We
need, however, to be open and objective enough to allow the spirit to lead us to
larger truth. Jesus told his apostles that he would send the Spirit of Truth
through which he would lead them to greater truths in the future. We must be
sensitive to this Spirit of Truth. We need to learn to recognize truth in its
many forms and varying appearances.
The Urantia Book is such a new appearance of truth. You will find that The
Urantia Book will stand the test of critical examination. It is rooted solidly
in the traditional spiritual truths of the Christian faith that have endured for
centuries. Reading and studying The Urantia Book will give you a deeper and
larger vision of this saving faith and help you become a part of a spiritual
renaissance which is dawning on our world.
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