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21 Steps to a Spiritual Awakening
by Harry McMullan
Foreword
The concept of 21 Steps had its basis in the author's appreciation of the
12-Step program of Alcoholics Anonymous as a powerful instrument of spiritual
growth. The quotations themselves are from The Urantia Book, a work which has
made a dramatic impact on the author's life. The Urantia Book itself has no
"program," but the immense benefits of Alcoholics Anonymous' step-by-step method
caused the author/compiler to reflect on what such a program from The Urantia
Book might resemble were it to exist. The narrative introducing each step is by
the author, and the arrangement of selections is according to his conception of
the book's cardinal spiritual teachings.
Citations at the end of each quotation refer to Paper:Section.Paragraph in
the Urantia Book.
Step 1: Recognizing Our Needs
We recognized the spiritual emptiness of our lives and admitted our
powerlessness, by our own strength, to correct our personal shortcomings. What
we have is not enough; if it were, we would never seek. The soul has an embedded
hunger which things cannot sate, and which knows its incompleteness apart from
God. The multiform variety and imagined obligations of life offer continual
distraction, and often tragedy alone brings us face to face with our souls'
deepest needs, impelling us to seek help from beyond. Philosophies, goods,
thrills, ambitions, and vanities crowd our minds, all clamoring to be heard, all
saying, "I am what you really need," but whose aftertaste is ashen. Deep within,
we know that we need – Who we need – for when the crowd thins, the inner self
cries, "Is this all?" and we lie alone at night and ponder. The world's
recognition and treasure beckon, but for what? Empty pretension, for the
respectability of our public selves masks an unplumbed pit of manic fears and
half-broke lusts, scarcely hidden beneath the manicured lawns of our colonnaded, facaded mansions. In grief, misfortune, distress, or tribulation, obvious
insufficiency impels us to look beyond ourselves for strength. But why not avoid
that suffering by laying up provisions before the winter storms arrive, when ice
blocks the harbor and hunting is hard? Why not fill our larders with survival
stores, which we need even now? Who has not been prisoner to his own moods? Who
has never felt force-marched, lock-step, down unwelcome paths, driven by dark
lusts and fears to ends he hates? The forbidding cavern yawns – the
smallest misstep sends us careening down its crumbling walls. But few seek help
until convinced they cannot arrive under their ship's own power, feet on the
bridge and hands on the helm. Too often we must first shipwreck, clutching cold
ice while our ship of dreams sinks beneath the numbing waters. It is natural to
want all our personal hopes and dreams fulfilled, but such cannot be. A navy of
a thousand admirals, each with his separate plan, tramples itself and loses the
war. It is better there be One in charge who knows our ways better than we our
own, and in whose destiny we find our highest good. But as long as personal
goals reign supreme, and our own ways seem sufficient, we are not impelled to
seek God's will. Life must then teach us those lessons we refused to learn on
our own. The spiritual path begins when we first seek to make sense of life and
our place in it. God longs to make himself known to us, but he intrudes not
unbidden; we first must tire of emptiness. If circumstances are too comfortable
perhaps only tragedy can shake us loose and make us feel unease with things as
they are, and help us recognize how little we are able, by ourselves, to make
sense of our world.
References:
The Father is not in spiritual hiding, but so many of his creatures have
hidden themselves away in the mists of their own willful decisions and for the
time being have separated themselves from the communion of his spirit and the
spirit of his Son by the choosing of their own perverse ways and by the
indulgence of the self-assertiveness of their intolerant minds and unspiritual
natures. 5:1.10
The keys of the kingdom of heaven are: sincerity, more sincerity, and more
sincerity. All men have these keys. Men use them – advance in spirit status – by
decisions, by more decisions, and by more decisions. 39:4.14
Spiritual progress is predicated on intellectual recognition of spiritual
poverty coupled with the self-consciousness of perfection-hunger, the desire to
know God and be like him, the wholehearted purpose to do the will of the Father
in heaven. Spiritual growth is first an awakening to needs, next a discernment
of meanings, and then a discovery of values. 100:2.1&2
"Ganid, the man was not hungry for truth. He was not dissatisfied with
himself. He was not ready to ask for help, and the eyes of his mind were not
open to receive light for the soul. That man was not ripe for the harvest of
salvation; he must be allowed more time for the trials and difficulties of life
to prepare him for the reception of wisdom and higher learning." 132:7.2
Only those who feel poor in spirit will ever hunger for righteousness. Only
the humble seek for divine strength and crave spiritual power. 140:5.8
"[Job] ascended to those spiritual heights where he could sincerely say, 'I
abhor myself'; then was there granted him the salvation of a vision of God."
148:6.3
Never hesitate to admit failure. Make no attempt to hide failure under
deceptive smiles and beaming optimism. It sounds well always to claim success,
but the end results are appalling. Such a technique leads directly to the
creation of a world of unreality and to the inevitable crash of ultimate
disillusionment. Success may generate courage and promote confidence, but wisdom
comes only from the experiences of adjustment to the results of one's failures.
Men who prefer optimistic illusions to reality can never become wise. Only those
who face facts and adjust them to ideals can achieve wisdom. . . . Those timid
souls who can only keep up the struggle of life by the aid of continuous false
illusions of success are doomed to suffer failure and experience defeat as they
ultimately awaken from the dream world of their own imaginations. 160:4.7&8
"What I am telling you is well illustrated by two men who went into the
temple to pray, the one a Pharisee and the other a publican. The Pharisee stood
and prayed to himself: 'O God, I thank you that I am not like the rest of men, extortioners, unlearned, unjust, adulterers, or even like this publican. I fast
twice a week; I give tithes of all that I get.' But the publican, standing afar
off, would not so much as lift his eyes to heaven but smote his breast, saying,
'God be merciful to me a sinner.'" 167:5.1
Selfish men and women simply will not pay such a price for even the greatest
spiritual treasure ever offered mortal man. Only when man has become
sufficiently disillusioned by the sorrowful disappointments attendant upon the
foolish and deceptive pursuits of selfishness, and subsequent to the discovery
of the barrenness of formalized religion, will he be disposed to turn
wholeheartedly to the gospel of the kingdom, the religion of Jesus of Nazareth.
195:9.7
Step 2: Believing in God
We came to believe in God, and that he indwells us as spiritual Father and
loving Friend. Without God in heaven the earth is meaningless, and all that
lives hereon. But where is he, that we might believe? Where were you, Father,
all those years of unknowing, when we sought but found you not? Were our hearts
too sticky with life's inanities that we failed to seek in earnest? Did you wait
until our doubts ebbed, until the turbulence of our self-centered thoughts
stilled to reveal the place you'd always been? We find you in our hearts once we
believe in you and your love. You ride above the clouds; you know the way we
take and why, and long to talk with us, your children. We feel your presence
beside us as we walk along a mountain trail, but know you truly only in the
silence of our souls. Our moment of knowing may have been as sudden as lightning
striking a lonely oak on a windswept hill, or it might have grown gradually,
like fog burning off a mountain lake. God spoke to Paul through light and
blindness, to others as gently as autumn's last leaf drifts down onto new snow.
God's presence is in the air we breathe and in every star's reflected rays, but
until we find him in our souls, nature's messengers bear scant meaning. The God
of universes lives in unfathomable glory, but his second home is in the humble
heart. Until we know him, the Father dwells where darkness covers the unaware,
unheard as doves' wings above a forgotten field. But look! His presence – in the
shadow of our approach, behind the door, away from life's confusion, available
anytime, anywhere, to those who seek. In the stilled, attentive mind we sense
his spirit, which ever works by love. His arms comfort us against the terrors of
the night, and his lips brush our cheeks with a morning kiss. His love song
floats down with the morning's sunlight and cheers us for the approaching day.
Believing in God opens pathways of faith through which universal energy courses
down to heal our emotions, rekindle our hopes, and nourish our souls. Power from
beyond infuses our lives: lush, overflowing power which before was only dimly
suspected. Life's hues register new texture, brilliance, and significance as
patterns of eternal purpose reveal themselves in the commonplace. Events which
before tumbled forth like random noise and chance now suggest the coordinated
intercession of a loving Father's hand. We are learning to act on our spiritual
beliefs and enjoy doing what is right, for as we do, truth is revealed and we
see the face of God. Within our hearts grows the conviction that God has work
for us to do, important work, a unique role in a universal drama which will
uplift every weary heart in the vast creation. We crave to be at this work, to
hear and heed the cues of the Supreme Director. We know our bumbling flaws and
lethargy all too well, but also, we know Who is all-powerful and whose greatness
swallows up all we lack. Creator, make us more responsive to your gracious
leadings.
References:
The love of the Father absolutely individualizes each personality as a unique
child of the Universal Father, a child without duplicate in infinity, a will
creature irreplaceable in all eternity. The Father's love glorifies each child
of God, illuminating each member of the celestial family, sharply silhouetting
the unique nature of each personal being against the impersonal levels that lie
outside the fraternal circuit of the Father of all. 12:7.9
But you cannot become so absolutely certain of a fellow being's reality as
you can of the reality of the presence of God that lives within you. 16:9.4
Thus it may be seen that religious longings and spiritual urges are not of
such a nature as would merely lead men to want to believe in God, but rather are
they of such nature and power that men are profoundly impressed with the
conviction that they ought to believe in God. The sense of evolutionary duty and
the obligations consequent upon the illumination of revelation make such a
profound impression upon man's moral nature that he finally reaches that
position of mind and that attitude of soul where he concludes that he has no
right not to believe in God. The higher and superphilosophic wisdom of such
enlightened and disciplined individuals ultimately instructs them that to doubt
God or distrust his goodness would be to prove untrue to the realest and deepest
thing within the human mind and soul – the divine Adjuster. 101:1.7
God is so all real and absolute that no material sign of proof or no
demonstration of so-called miracle may be offered in testimony of his reality.
Always will we know him because we trust him, and our belief in him is wholly
based on our personal participation in the divine manifestations of his infinite
reality. The indwelling Thought Adjuster unfailingly arouses in man's soul a
true and searching hunger for perfection together with a farreaching curiosity
which can be adequately satisfied only by communion with God, the divine source
of that Adjuster. The hungry soul of man refuses to be satisfied with anything
less than the personal realization of the living God. 102:1.5&6
Of God, the most inescapable of all presences, the most real of all facts,
the most living of all truths, the most loving of all friends, and the most
divine of all values, we have the right to be the most certain of all universe
experiences. 102:7.10
Men all too often forget that God is the greatest experience in human
existence. Other experiences are limited in their nature and content, but the
experience of God has no limits save those of the creature's comprehension
capacity, and this very experience is in itself capacity enlarging. When men
search for God, they are searching for everything. When they find God, they have
found everything. 117:6.9
While sojourning at Amathus, Jesus spent much time with the apostles
instructing them in the new concept of God; again and again did he impress upon
them that God is a Father, not a great and supreme bookkeeper who is chiefly
engaged in making damaging entries against his erring children on earth,
recordings of sin and evil to be used against them when he subsequently sits in
judgment upon them as the just Judge of all creation. 141:4.1
"And you, Thomas, who said you would not believe unless you could see me and
put your finger in the nail marks of my hands . . . what will you say to your
brethren? You will acknowledge the truth, for already in your heart you had
begun to believe even when you so stoutly asserted your unbelief. Your doubts,
Thomas, always most stubbornly assert themselves just as they are about to
crumble. Thomas, I bid you be not faithless but believing – and I know you will
believe, even with a whole heart." 191:5.4
Step 3: Accepting God's Grace
We recognized that we cannot produce spiritual reactions to life in the
absence of divine power and saw that all spiritual qualities are gifts of God
which we cannot earn, but may freely accept. God's grace might seem a wind that
blows whithersoever it wills, but its source is no secret. All good things
descend from the Father of mercy, and until we realize that, we struggle against
life with shortened sword and battered helmet. We cannot achieve spiritual goals
by unaided human power – God alone carries us beyond our limitations into
self-realization. We find fulfillment in the relationship, and God finds another
child as we accept the divine spirit he has given to indwell our minds. God's
grace is the storehouse of our possibilities, from which awaken gifts and
talents that exceed our human capacities. His healing balm overcomes our mental,
emotional, and spiritual handicaps; his mountain-moving power hacks out new
paths of achievement in the confused jungle of our lives. Through grace we find
the Source of life; through grace we are emboldened to achieve; through grace we
learn to love. Grace persuades us that an all-wise and all-powerful Deity has
assumed responsibility for our personal well-being, the security of those we
love, and the success of work we undertake in faith. God enables our actions in
faith to be massive and decisive, undergirded as they are by confidence in his
sovereignty. In our human capacities we are weak, hesitant, and fearful,
painfully aware how tenuous and defective are our pitiful stores of courage and
wisdom, but grace has commissioned us to go forth, agents of a Being with
unlimited power to act in and through us. The Father guides our steps, and even
if we misunderstand his directions – provided we have done so in faith –
he reconfigures those partial errors into experiences which profit all involved.
Our new spiritual leadings are unfailingly consistent with what, deep within,
we've always known is true. Living truth, welling up from within, has freed us
from slavish conformity to conventional patterns of thought and action. We are
bound by God's spirit, not by the outward forms or practices of humanity. Our
new life is a gift from God, not bought with human coin or earned through
selfsacrifice, self-help, or positive thinking. Commitment, acted upon, becomes
faith, down whose channels God pours that inner peace which alone makes life
worth living. Grace supports us in every trial; grace gives us power when we are
weak; grace comforts us when we are downcast. Grace issues from the Master
Builder whose eternal design encompasses all that we might do or be, every
possibility for our future achievement. God has supplied us with life itself,
and apart from him we are bereft, abandoned, and useless. God knows our names
and the way we tread and leads us by the hand through the soil of human
existence. We thank you, Father, for giving us our lives, for all the varied
circumstances which constitute this earthly environment, and for the eternal
fitness of its arrangement. Give us courage to act on your grace, that our lives
profit both ourselves and our world.
References:
The consciousness of a victorious human life on earth is born of that
creature faith which dares to challenge each recurring episode of existence when
confronted with the awful spectacle of human limitations, by the unfailing
declaration: Even if I cannot do this, there lives in me one who can and will do
it, a part of the Father- Absolute of the universe of universes. And that is
"the victory which overcomes the world, even your faith." 4:4.9
This covenant of Melchizedek with Abraham represents the great Urantian
agreement between divinity and humanity whereby God agrees to do everything; man
only agrees to believe God's promises and follow his instructions. 93:6.4
Man's sole contribution to growth is the mobilization of the total powers of
his personality – living faith. 100:3.7
Among other things, the Adjuster pleaded "that he more faithfully give me his
sincere co-operation, more cheerfully endure the tasks of my emplacement, more
faithfully carry out the program of my arrangement, more patiently go through
the trials of my selection, more persistently and cheerfully tread the path of
my choosing, more humbly receive credit that may accrue as a result of my
ceaseless endeavors – thus transmit my admonition to the man of my indwelling."
110:7.10
"By the old way you seek to suppress, obey, and conform to the rules of
living; by the new way you are first transformed by the Spirit of Truth and
thereby strengthened in your inner soul by the constant spiritual renewing of
your mind, and so are you endowed with the power of the certain and joyous
performance of the gracious, acceptable, and perfect will of God. Forget not –
it is your personal faith in the exceedingly great and precious promises of God
that ensures your becoming partakers of the divine nature." 143:2.4
"It is the very goodness of God that leads men into true and genuine
repentance. Your secret of the mastery of self is bound up with your faith in
the indwelling spirit, which ever works by love. Even this saving faith you have
not of yourselves; it also is the gift of God." 143:2.7
In all praying, remember that sonship is a gift. No child has aught to do
with earning the status of son or daughter. The earth child comes into being by
the will of its parents. Even so, the child of God comes into grace and the new
life of the spirit by the will of the Father in heaven. Therefore must the
kingdom of heaven – divine sonship – be received as by a little child. 144:4.3
"Salvation is the gift of the Father and is revealed by his Sons. Acceptance
by faith on your part makes you a partaker of the divine nature, a son or a
daughter of God. By faith you are justified; by faith are you saved; and by this
same faith are you eternally advanced in the way of progressive and divine
perfection." 150:5.3
"You cannot buy salvation; you cannot earn righteousness. Salvation is the
gift of God, and righteousness is the natural fruit of the spirit-born life of sonship in the kingdom." 150:5.5
"You see, then, that the Father gives salvation to the children of men, and
this salvation is a free gift to all who have the faith to receive sonship in
the divine family. There is nothing man can do to earn this salvation. Works of
self-righteousness cannot buy the favor of God, and much praying in public will
not atone for lack of living faith in the heart." 167:5.1
"It is your faith that saves your souls. Salvation is the gift of God to all
who believe they are his sons. But be not deceived; while salvation is the free
gift of God and is bestowed upon all who accept it by faith, there follows the
experience of bearing the fruits of this spirit life as it is lived in the
flesh." 193:1.2
Step 4: Admitting Our Shortcomings
We acknowledged and sincerely repented our
misdeeds, confessed these wrongs to God and confided in a trusted friend.
Without the opportunity to err, higher loyalties could never grow. "Yes, I will"
would be meaningless if one could not have said, "No, I will not." The freedom
God has given us to live and act in the world ensures that we will make
mistakes, otherwise what appears to be seas of freedom would be desert mirage.
But at the same time these inevitable mistakes of immature choosing neutralize
and burden us with guilt and self-doubt, make us prisoners of the past, and
accuse us before our Maker. God's design for life in this world makes full
allowance for our errors; in this environment of freedom, our immaturity admits
of no possibility for any other outcome. Through spiritual attainment, however,
the Father provides us certain means to triumph over the shadows of unreality,
to grow through the problems borne of our uneven responses to life's challenges,
by means of which we gain the strength, conviction, and humility which result
from personally experiencing life in all its reality and sometimes harshness.
Sin, never accidental, requires our premeditated decision to violate what we
know is right, and apart from such willful thought or action, there is no sin.
Our consciences may accuse us before society's mores, but sin requires
deliberate disloyalty to what is highest and truest in the human heart and soul,
God himself. Sin separates us from the happy and stabilizing consciousness of
God's presence and disrupts our relationships with our fellows. We feel guilty,
disappointed with ourselves, cut off from the world, at a loss to know how to
make things right, and in doubt about our courage or ability to extract
ourselves from the tangled troubles of our own reckless devising. Once
committed, more is required to be shed of our complex webs of deceit than merely
wishing them away or, more insidiously, repressing their memories deep into
mental crevices, there to fester and noxiously burst forth at some moment of
future stress. The solution is simple honesty. Freedom from the tyranny of sin
and guilt requires our courage to confront and confess every wrong we have
committed: against God, ourselves, or others, by thought, word or deed, without
excuse or attenuation. We must lay it all out, once and for all, sins that seem
inconsequential as well as major, that we be no longer burdened by the dead
weight of their accusing memory. Those sins we are most uncomfortable
acknowledging are precisely the ones posing maximum danger, and partial
confession will not produce the end we most desire: freedom from the errors of
our pasts and hearts God has made pure. We therefore sorrowfully confess to God
our wrongdoings in all their particulars, not that he was unaware of them, but
rather to define the issues before the full light of our own consciousness. We
tell the Father of our sincere determination never to fall into such traps
again, and ask God's forgiveness for every one of these sins, that their
debilitating presence be cleansed from every recess of our minds and memories.
Next, we summon the courage to repeat all we have told our Father to a carefully
chosen friend or counselor, one who would never betray our trust. At the
appointed time, we set forth the story in the light least favorable to
ourselves, avoiding any temptation to invalidate the confession of our
reprehensible conduct by extenuating excuses. Our goal is freedom and
righteousness, and this can only be won by making a clean sweep of all the
missteps of our pasts. Stripped bare of pretense, our pasts have been offered to
God, and now we humble ourselves before the world as represented by the friend
or counselor to whom we tell our story. We serve up these unfortunate aspects of
our pasts without pleasure, like a diligent housekeeper scouring out hidden
corners for dirt and clutter. It is with immense pain that we recite these past
sins, but full disclosure eviscerates their dark hegemony. Unearthed and
exposed, stripped of their pretense to sovereignty, they dissolve into shadow
phantasms of nothingness. Apart from making amends to those our actions have
harmed, we must reflect no more on these past sins, for to do so only resurrects
their pernicious power, weakening us by calling into question God's mercy and
forgiveness. We have confessed our sins and they are forgiven; continued
attention to their moldering corpses only taints us with their cloying odor. In
the past, concealing these sins doubled their horrid fascination. Exposed to
sunlight, their hold over us resolves harmlessly, if only we avoid the
temptation to reminisce over those regrettable experiences which caused us and
others so much pain. When we make peace with ourselves, we experience peace with
the world. In confession we cast off that false pride which emotionally
constricted us, preventing us from forgiving others or accepting ourselves.
Confession gave birth to new self-respect based on a reestablished relationship
with God. Setting things right with God, we became right with ourselves and the
world. From time to time we will do things which make us unhappy with ourselves,
but through it all the Father continues to love us and give us the power to
overcome these reminders that we have not ceased to be human. Confession purges
these missteps, strips their power, removes every blemish from our souls, and
makes us clean, whole, restored, revived, pure in heart, and free to live the
lives God has planned for us.
References:
Never, in all your ascent to Paradise, will you gain anything by impatiently
attempting to circumvent the established and divine plan by short cuts, personal
inventions, or other devices for improving on the way of perfection, to
perfection, and for eternal perfection. 75:8.5
Sin must be redefined as deliberate disloyalty to Deity. There are degrees of
disloyalty: the partial loyalty of indecision; the divided loyalty of
confliction; the dying loyalty of indifference; and the death of loyalty
exhibited in devotion to godless ideals. 89:10.2
The confession of sin is a manful repudiation of disloyalty, but it in no
wise mitigates the time-space consequences of such disloyalty. But confession –
sincere recognition of the nature of sin- -is essential to religious growth and
spiritual progress. 89:10.5
The endowment of imperfect beings with freedom entails inevitable tragedy,
and it is the nature of the perfect ancestral Deity to universally and
affectionately share these sufferings in loving companionship. 110:0.1
"And have you not also read in the Scriptures where it says: 'He looks down
upon men, and if any will say: I have sinned and perverted that which was right,
and it profited me not, then will God deliver that man's soul from darkness, and
he shall see the light'?" 130:8.2
"Make an end of your misery by loathing sin. When you look up to the Noble
One, turn away from sin with a whole heart. Make no apology for evil; make no
excuse for sin. By your efforts to make amends for past sins you acquire
strength to resist future tendencies thereto. Restraint is born of repentance.
Leave no fault unconfessed to the Noble One." 131:3.3
"If a man recognizes the evil of his ways and repents of sin from the heart,
then may he seek forgiveness; he may escape the penalty; he may change calamity
into blessing." 131:8.5
"Our Father even loves the wicked and is always kind to the ungrateful. If
more human beings could only know about the goodness of God, they would
certainly be led to repent of their evil ways and forsake all known sin."
131:10.4
And all such true faith is predicated on profound reflection, sincere
self-criticism, and uncompromising moral consciousness. 132:3.5
"Many times, when you have done evil, you have thought to charge up your acts
to the influence of the evil one when in reality you have but been led astray by
your own natural tendencies. Did not the Prophet Jeremiah long ago tell you that
the human heart is deceitful above all things and sometimes even desperately
wicked? How easy for you to become self-deceived and thereby fall into foolish
fears, divers lusts, enslaving pleasures, malice, envy, and even vengeful
hatred!" 143:2.5
"When men believe this gospel, which is a revelation of the goodness of God,
they will be led to voluntary repentance of all known sin. Realization of sonship is incompatible with the desire to sin." 150:5.5
The first step in the solution of any problem is to locate the difficulty, to
isolate the problem, and frankly to recognize its nature and gravity. The great
mistake is that, when life problems excite our profound fears, we refuse to
recognize them. Likewise, when the acknowledgment of our difficulties entails
the reduction of our long-cherished conceit, the admission of envy, or the
abandonment of deep-seated prejudices, the average person prefers to cling to
the old illusions of safety and to the longcherished false feelings of security.
Only a brave person is willing honestly to admit, and fearlessly to face, what a
sincere and logical mind discovers. 160:1.7
Devotion, to the Pharisee, was a means of inducing selfrighteous inactivity
and the assurance of false spiritual security; devotion, to the publican, was a
means of stirring up his soul to the realization of the need for repentance,
confession, and the acceptance, by faith, of merciful forgiveness. 167:5.2
Not until the cock crowed did it occur to Peter that he had denied his
Master. Not until Jesus looked upon him, did he realize that he had failed to
live up to his privileges as an ambassador of the kingdom. Having taken the
first step along the path of compromise and least resistance, there was nothing
apparent to Peter but to go on with the course of conduct decided upon. It
requires a great and noble character, having started out wrong, to turn about
and go right. All too often one's own mind tends to justify continuance in the
path of error when once it is entered upon. 184:2.11&12
As we look back upon this tragedy, we conceive that Judas went wrong,
primarily, because he was very markedly an isolated personality, a personality
shut in and away from ordinary social contacts. He persistently refused to
confide in, or freely fraternize with, his fellow apostles. 193:4.2
Judas persistently refused to confide in his brethren. When he was impelled,
by the accumulation of his emotional conflicts, to seek relief in
self-expression, he invariably sought the advice and received the unwise
consolation of his unspiritual relatives or those chance acquaintances who were
either indifferent, or actually hostile, to the welfare and progress of the
spiritual realities of the heavenly kingdom, of which he was one of the twelve
consecrated ambassadors on earth. 193:4.3
[Judas] disliked to discuss his personal problems with his immediate
associates; he refused to talk over his difficulties with his real friends and
those who truly loved him. In all the years of their association he never once
went to the Master with a purely personal problem. 193:4.10
Step 5: Forgiving Others
With God's help we forgave every person who ever
wronged us. Imagine the bitterness of a world in which no one forgave. In olden
times, determination to seek revenge dominated men's lives, and imagined slights
led to feuds lasting generations. Ethnic and religious hatreds yet plague our
world, leading to senseless wars in which all parties lose. Misguided pride,
often blasphemously attributed to religious duty, causes men to act wholly
contrary to the spirit of the religion in whose name their atrocities are
perpetrated. Now is our opportunity to break these bitter cycles and free our
brothers from their burdens of guilt with the same forgiveness by which God gave
us new beginnings. Forgiveness is a contagious power which can instantantly heal
long-festered wounds in those with whom we are estranged. When the wrong done us
cuts too deep, it may not appear humanly possible to forgive, but even then,
God's grace makes all things possible. In such a case, we simply forgive to the
extent we are able, and ask the Father to complete the process later. That we
forgive is essential to our own spiritual health. If we wish to know the
fullness of God's forgiveness, we must forgive those who have wronged us. The
two actions are inseparable, because harbored resentment silts off the channel
through which God's forgiveness flows. Heartfelt forgiveness releases divine
energy which unshackles our souls from evil moorings. It is rain on a barren
hill which makes dormant flowers bloom; it uproots dark thorns and heals
devouring cancers in our resentful hearts. Forgiveness breaks the bonds which
held us to our adversaries in unwilling embrace, the forged chains which lashed
us to those we hated most. Even if our brothers cannot immediately reciprocate,
forgiveness frees us from the emotional prison of poisonous feelings toward
them, and we can go our way in peace. To forgive injury takes less than some
might imagine; hate and resentment are but attitudes, not blood or bone.
Forgiveness is within our easy reach, and only stubbornness or pride can hold us
back from enjoying its quick fruits of spiritual attainment. How can we hesitate
to forgive our brothers when God has dealt so generously with us, and when all
logic tells us we are better off so doing? What morbid pleasure is there in
nursing grudges which harm us with their every reference and rob us of the joy
which is our birthright? By love God has forgiven us, and in this new
relationship we find power to forgive others. In forgiving, we restore our
brothers and become ourselves restored by the surging Source of all restoration.
We know the Father's will, and what we must do. We know revenge by its fruits,
and forgiveness as well. We must fully forgive our every brother, that
resentments stalk not our dreams this night, that guilt be relieved, friendships
restored, and God returned to our relationships. This is the day God has given
us to cast off every debilitating cycle of revenge and anger, and as we take the
initiative to forgive, his spirit rests gently upon our souls. In forgiveness,
the Father reveals his name, which is Love. We release our brothers their
burdens, and in so doing release ourselves. We throw off the clammy grip of
perverse attitudes and enter our Father's heavenly kingdom, where all worthwhile
things reside. The liberty of spirit we experience in forgiving propels us where
eye has not seen, nor ear heard, all that our Father has prepared for those who
love him and dare follow his gracious bidding. Heaven and earth are yours,
gracious Father. Help us this day to set our affairs in order, that we may be
free to pursue yours. Give us the courage to do your will, this very day.
References:
"I say to you: Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those
who curse you, and pray for those who despitefully use you. And whatsoever you
believe that I would do to men, do you also to them. "Your Father in heaven
makes the sun to shine on the evil as well as upon the good; likewise he sends
rain on the just and the unjust. You are the sons of God; even more, you are now
the ambassadors of my Father's kingdom. Be merciful, even as God is merciful,
and in the eternal future of the kingdom you shall be perfect, even as your
heavenly Father is perfect. "You are commissioned to save men, not to judge
them. At the end of your earth life you will all expect mercy; therefore do I
require of you during your mortal life that you show mercy to all of your
brethren in the flesh." 140:3.15-17
By showing mercy, he meant to portray spiritual deliverance from all grudges,
grievances, anger, and the lust for selfish power and revenge. And when he said,
"Resist not evil," he later explained that he did not mean to condone sin or to
counsel fraternity with iniquity. He intended the more to teach forgiveness, to
"resist not evil treatment of one's personality, evil injury to one's feelings
of personal dignity." 141:3.8
Even the forgiveness of sin operates in this same unerring fashion. The
Father in heaven has forgiven you even before you have thought to ask him, but
such forgiveness is not available in your personal religious experience until
such a time as you forgive your fellow men. 146:2.4
"Lord, how often shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? Until
seven times?" And Jesus answered Peter: "Not only seven times but even to
seventy times and seven. Therefore may the kingdom of heaven be likened to a
certain king who ordered a financial reckoning with his stewards. And when they
had begun to conduct this examination of accounts, one of his chief retainers
was brought before him confessing that he owed his king ten thousand talents.
Now this officer of the king's court pleaded that hard times had come upon him,
and that he did not have wherewith to pay this obligation. And so the king
commanded that his property be confiscated, and that his children be sold to pay
his debt. When this chief steward heard this stern decree, he fell down on his
face before the king and implored him to have mercy and grant him more time,
saying, 'Lord, have a little more patience with me, and I will pay you all.' And
when the king looked upon this negligent servant and his family, he was moved
with compassion. He ordered that he should be released, and that the loan should
be wholly forgiven. "And this chief steward, having thus received mercy and
forgiveness at the hands of the king, went about his business, and finding one
of his subordinate stewards who owed him a mere hundred denarii, he laid hold
upon him and, taking him by the throat, said, 'Pay me all you owe.' And then did
this fellow steward fall down before the chief steward and, beseeching him,
said: 'Only have patience with me, and I will presently be able to pay you.' But
the chief steward would not show mercy to his fellow steward but rather had him
cast in prison until he should pay his debt. When his fellow servants saw what
had happened, they were so distressed that they went and told their lord and
master, the king. When the king heard of the doings of his chief steward, he
called this ungrateful and unforgiving man before him and said: 'You are a
wicked and unworthy steward. When you sought for compassion, I freely forgave
you your entire debt. Why did you not also show mercy to your fellow steward,
even as I showed mercy to you?' And the king was so very angry that he delivered
his ungrateful chief steward to the jailers that they might hold him until he
had paid all that was due. And even so shall my heavenly Father show the more
abundant mercy to those who freely show mercy to their fellows. How can you come
to God asking consideration for your shortcomings when you are wont to chastise
your brethren for being guilty of these same human frailties? I say to all of
you: Freely you have received the good things of the kingdom; therefore freely
give to your fellows on earth." 159:1.4&5
Jesus taught that sin is not the child of a defective nature but rather the
offspring of a knowing mind dominated by an unsubmissive will. Regarding sin, he
taught that God has forgiven; that we make such forgiveness personally available
by the act of forgiving our fellows. When you forgive your brother in the flesh,
you thereby create the capacity in your own soul for the reception of the
reality of God's forgiveness of your own misdeeds. 170:2.19
"When a wise man understands the inner impulses of his fellows, he will love
them. And when you love your brother, you have already forgiven him. This
capacity to understand man's nature and forgive his apparent wrongdoing is
Godlike. "Your inability or unwillingness to forgive your fellows is the measure
of your immaturity, your failure to attain adult sympathy, understanding, and
love. You hold grudges and nurse vengefulness in direct proportion to your
ignorance of the inner nature and true longings of your children and your fellow
beings. Love is the outworking of the divine and inner urge of life." 174:1.4&5
Step 6: Asking Others' Forgiveness
Without consideration of the emotional or
financial cost involved, we asked forgiveness of all those we have wronged and
did our best to make full amends to each of them, except where to have done so
might have further injured them. Only seldom is it enough to admit to a trusted
friend or counselor, or even to God himself, that we have harmed someone, and
stop there. Almost always, we must approach the person we wronged, acknowledge
what we did, tell him how sorry we are, and try to set the situation right –
return him to his prior position. Unless we rectify the situation to the extent
of our power to do so, we deceive ourselves in imagining our repentance to be
genuine. To ask God's forgiveness and stop there is to ignore the very real
consequences of our regrettable actions – the stolen money, the malicious injury
to another's reputation, whatever harm we caused. This material world exists in
an unbroken continuum with the spiritual world; therefore, our actions must
validate the spiritual estate to which we aspire. Our heavenly profession is
less than sincere if we neglect or avoid our earthly obligations to the brothers
we have harmed. Expressing our sorrow may become more awkward as the event
recedes in time and memory, yet the necessity to do so is undiminished. Asking
forgiveness is a humbling act, an acknowledgment that we were weak, fallible,
mean-spirited, or thoughtless. Asking forgiveness clears our consciences before
God, removes an obstacle to the inner peace we seek, and restores our
relationship with the person we wronged. Whether the individual we harmed will
accept our apology is beyond our control. God does not require that we
repeatedly plead for our apology to be accepted, only that we sincerely ask
forgiveness and attempt to make amends. Beyond that, nothing more can be done.
In making amends we should give every benefit of doubt to the person we harmed.
For example, if we deprived someone of money rightfully his, fairness requires
its return with interest, and if it is impossible to give the money back right
away, we should make regular payments, not based on our convenience, but
consisting of all that becomes available, holding back only what is necessary to
maintain ourselves in order to complete the repayment. In some situations,
however, apologizing and making amends is likely to only worsen matters. A
husband or wife confessing to infidelity might sear his spouse's memory with
images which render continuance in the marriage difficult or impossible, and
where felonies have been committed, legal counsel may be appropriate. With God's
help, however, all such wrongs can be dealt with in a fair and fitting way, one
which will produce the greatest good and spiritual freedom, regardless of the
earthly consequences which normally follow in the train of unfortunate actions.
The spiritual effort involved in making amends never fails to produce immediate
rewards. As we shuck off old fears, exhaustively confront, and finally disown
and forget the evils of our pasts, hitherto unknown liberty sweeps down from
above. The fetters of past sin lose their hold and we become spiritually and
emotionally free from all that has bound us and able to move confidently into
the future. Past mistakes cease to threaten us, because they no longer pertain
to our real selves, only what we used to be. God transforms us; our pasts are
laid to rest as we move boldly into our new lives in the kingdom. We have shown
our dedication to the kingdom by making things right with all those we harmed.
The more doing so has cost us money we could ill afford or cracked the brittle
veneer of a fictitious reputation, the more we have proven the depth of our
commitment to the new life to which God has called us and our determination to
let nothing stand between us and the spirit Father. Life in the kingdom cannot
be priced with money. The Master asked: "What would a man give in exchange for
his soul?" In making amends, we are guided by higher and universal Law, and in
the process we experience a deeper relationship with God, who makes all things
new.
References:
But Cain knew that, since he bore no tribal mark, he would be killed by the
first neighboring tribesmen who might chance to meet him. Fear, and some
remorse, led him to repent. Cain had never been indwelt by an Adjuster, had
always been defiant of the family discipline and disdainful of his father's
religion. But he now went to Eve, his mother, and asked for spiritual help and
guidance, and when he honestly sought divine assistance, an Adjuster indwelt
him. 76:2.8
"We crave forgiveness from the Lord for all of our trespasses against our
fellows; and we would release our friend from the wrong he has done us." 131:4.5
"When you find yourself in the wrong, do not hesitate to confess your error
and be quick to make amends." 131:9.3
"No mortal who knows God and seeks to do the divine will can stoop to engage
in the oppressions of wealth. . . . All such wealth should be restored to those
who have thus been robbed or to their children and their children's children."
132:5.8
"If any portion of your fortune has been knowingly derived from fraud; if
aught of your wealth has been accumulated by dishonest practices or unfair
methods; if your riches are the product of unjust dealings with your fellows,
make haste to restore all these ill-gotten gains to the rightful owners. Make
full amends and thus cleanse your fortune of all dishonest riches." 132:5.12
"And whatever it shall cost you in the things of the world, no matter what
price you may pay to enter the kingdom of heaven, you shall receive manyfold
more of joy and spiritual progress in this world, and in the age to come eternal
life." 137:8.14
"And after they had thus met, the son looked up into his father's tearful
face and said: 'Father, I have sinned against heaven and in your sight; I am no
longer worthy to be called a son' – but the lad did not find opportunity to
complete his confession because the overjoyed father said to the servants who
had by this time come running up: 'Bring quickly his best robe, the one I saved,
and put it on him and put the son's ring on his hand and fetch sandals for his
feet.'" 169:1.9
Then Zaccheus stood upon a stool and said: "Men of Jericho, hear me! I may be
a publican and a sinner, but the great Teacher has come to abide in my house;
and before he goes in, I tell you that I am going to bestow one half of all my
goods upon the poor, and beginning tomorrow, if I have wrongfully exacted aught
from any man, I will restore fourfold. I am going to seek salvation with all my
heart and learn to do righteousness in the sight of God." 171:6.2
"You should learn that the expression of even a good thought must be
modulated in accordance with the intellectual status and spiritual development
of the hearer." 181:2.21
Step 7: Accepting God's Forgiveness
We accepted the fullness of God's
forgiveness and his spiritual eradication of all our misdeeds and shortcomings.
Once we have confronted our mistakes and misdeeds, confessed them to God and to
a trusted friend, forgiven all who have wronged us, asked forgiveness of those
we have wronged, and made our amends, we are entitled to experience the fullness
of God's forgiveness and confidently take our places in the Father's universal
family. With God's help, we have faced down our fears, disowned false pride by
acknowledging before another what we have done, apologized to those we harmed,
and to the best of our ability, set right the mistakes of our pasts. Now comes a
crucial act of faith: we must hand over all of these matters to our Father, and
allow him to remove even their memory. We have dealt with these past mistakes to
the best of our ability and are entitled to be free of their dead weight. We
must now cease any further consideration of these errors, leaving them abandoned
and forgotten while we move forward into the future God has prepared for us. Bad
memories become unreal as nightmares upon awakening as God heals our souls. We
have shown mercy to those who have wronged us and should not imagine that our
Father will be less merciful towards us. The Father understood us from the
beginning, our errors and how we came to make them; he looked upon our frailties
with a parent's merciful eye. God forgave our mistakes even before we asked,
because his forgiveness was not conditioned on anything we did, but existed
naturally as a parent's love. God had already forgiven, even though our
experience of that forgiveness was unavailable until we had forgiven, asked
forgiveness, and made amends. Accepting God's forgiveness requires us to turn
over to him every aspect of our past mistakes. To wallow further in past errors
would only pull us down into a degenerative, self-defeating cycle of guilt and
self-accusation. It is over; God has forgiven; the new life beckons beyond the
hill. The forgiveness steps free us from the past's hold; we can move on
unencumbered into our new life in the spirit. Our amends were not acts of
contrition, as if a stern God required us to go through ritual penance, but were
undertaken because they were the right, proper, and responsible response to the
situation of our creation. The Father only wanted us to be humbled that we might
thereby become free. The mistakes of our pasts, beyond our power to undo, are
receding into the dimness of oblivion as forgiveness dilutes and destroys any
residual power they yet hold over us in the present. We are throwing off every
chain of destructive behavior and learning more deeply to do the Father's will.
We find the Father in the renewed smile of a once-estranged friend and feel the
warmth which results from being in tune with the universe – our universe. We are
at peace with all that has gone before, even the wrongs, and trust that God will
bring good out of every one of these unfortunate episodes. We have experienced
the truth and could never turn back to sin. Now we can live our new lives with
enthusiasm and power.
References:
God is divinely kind to sinners. When rebels return to righteousness, they
are mercifully received, "for our God will abundantly pardon." "I am he who
blots out your transgressions for my own sake, and I will not remember your
sins." 2:5.4
The forgiveness of sin by Deity is the renewal of loyalty relations following
a period of the human consciousness of the lapse of such relations as the
consequence of conscious rebellion. The forgiveness does not have to be sought,
only received as the consciousness of re-establishment of loyalty relations
between the creature and the Creator. 89:10.6
"Every one who is called by my name I have created for my glory, and they
shall show forth my praise. I, even I, am he who blots out their transgressions
for my own sake, and I will not remember their sins." 97:7.10
"'Come now, let us reason together,' says the Lord, 'Though your sins be as
scarlet, they shall be as white as snow. Though they be red like crimson, they
shall be as wool.'" 131:2.10
"Let the wicked forsake his evil way and the unrighteous man his rebellious
thoughts. Says the Lord: 'Let them return to me, and I will have mercy on them;
I will abundantly pardon.'" 131:2.11
"And this is the sum of duty: Let no man do to another what would be
repugnant to himself; cherish no malice, smite not him who smites you, conquer
anger with mercy, and vanquish hate by benevolence. And all this we should do
because God is a kind friend and a gracious father who remits all our earthly
offenses." 131:4.6
"This religion of the Wise One cleanses the believer from every evil thought
and sinful deed. I bow before the God of heaven in repentance if I have offended
in thought, word, or act – intentionally or unintentionally – and I offer
prayers for mercy and praise for forgiveness. I know when I make confession, if
I purpose not to do again the evil thing, that sin will be removed from my soul.
I know that forgiveness takes away the bonds of sin." 131:5.5
"When men and women ask what shall we do to be saved, you shall answer,
Believe this gospel of the kingdom; accept divine forgiveness." 150:5.2
"I admonish you to fear none, in heaven or on earth, but to rejoice in the
knowledge of him who has power to deliver you from all unrighteousness and to
present you blameless before the judgment seat of a universe." 165:3.3
"Divine forgiveness is inevitable; it is inherent and inalienable in God's
infinite understanding, in his perfect knowledge of all that concerns the
mistaken judgment and erroneous choosing of the child." 174:1.3
The cross forever shows that the attitude of Jesus toward sinners was neither
condemnation nor condonation, but rather eternal and loving salvation. Jesus is
truly a savior in the sense that his life and death do win men over to goodness
and righteous survival. Jesus loves men so much that his love awakens the
response of love in the human heart. Love is truly contagious and eternally
creative. Jesus' death on the cross exemplifies a love which is sufficiently
strong and divine to forgive sin and swallow up all evil-doing. Jesus disclosed
to this world a higher quality of righteousness than justice – mere technical
right and wrong. Divine love does not merely forgive wrongs; it absorbs and
actually destroys them. The forgiveness of love utterly transcends the
forgiveness of mercy. Mercy sets the guilt of evil-doing to one side; but love
destroys forever the sin and all weakness resulting therefrom. Jesus brought a
new method of living to Urantia. He taught us not to resist evil but to find
through him a goodness which effectually destroys evil. The forgiveness of Jesus
is not condonation; it is salvation from condemnation. Salvation does not slight
wrongs; it makes them right. True love does not compromise nor condone hate; it
destroys it. The love of Jesus is never satisfied with mere forgiveness. The
Master's love implies rehabilitation, eternal survival. It is altogether proper
to speak of salvation as redemption if you mean this eternal rehabilitation.
Jesus, by the power of his personal love for men, could break the hold of sin
and evil. He thereby set men free to choose better ways of living. Jesus
portrayed a deliverance from the past which in itself promised a triumph for the
future. Forgiveness thus provided salvation. The beauty of divine love, once
fully admitted to the human heart, forever destroys the charm of sin and the
power of evil. 188:5.2&3
Step 8: Living New Lives
We resolved to live new lives, abandoning anger,
anxiety, impatience, pride, and fear, refusing to cling to or nurture these
relics of our pasts. We are promptly admitting our wrongs and refusing to harbor
feelings of guilt. In every heart there is a kingdom which the believer is
called to enter. It is a kingdom of peace, joy, love, and unfathomable freedom.
This kingdom has always been there, but few have trusted enough to enter,
despite the still, small voice whispering from within, telling us of the
Father's love. To those who live for his purposes and rejoice in his love, God's
kingdom is a river which washes souls clean and makes hearts whole. This river,
foretold by the prophets and confirmed by the saints, courses down through the
ages and across the universes and is intended to flow through our hearts as
well. The kingdom is not just a state of mind; it is also a real place. What if
a sick and homeless man, alone in a strange city on an icy day, the bitter wind
ripping through his torn and greasy overcoat, found that he could be transported
instantly to the tropical island of his dreams and sit barefoot on the sand
beside someone he loved, listening to the surf gently ruffle the shell-strewn
beach? In fact, our Father enables us to continually experience even a greater
paradise within – the personal peace and happiness we all crave – as we go about
our normal business of life. Think how much more effective we will be when we
consistently operate out of this kingdom: our spirits unassailable citadels; our
communications with others thoughtful, creative, and encouraging; our minds at
peace, no longer troubled by emotional crosscurrents or torn by contradictory
goals and purposes; our bodies healthier; our lives simpler and more effective.
In this new life we have found freedom from the curse of guilt because we asked
for and experienced forgiveness for every error of our pasts; all that has been
turned over to our Father, and we have made peace with our fellows. We live and
act with the confidence of men and women who know why they are here, what they
are doing, and where they are going. Barriers no longer seem insurmountable,
obstacles only interesting features in life's landscape. Our hearts overflow
with the love of the Sovereign of the universes who directs our ways.
Self-interest largely motivated our old lives. As our dedication to higher
values strengthened, we tried to become better people, but failed because we
attempted to improve ourselves using unaided willpower. This effort to change
ourselves was frustrating, exhausting, and ultimately unsuccessful, because our
egos were no more capable of transforming themselves than water can turn itself
to wine. Only by submitting ourselves to a Higher Power can we legitimately
expect transformation, for God is pleased to do for us what we ourselves cannot.
Faith opens the door to our inner selves, nourishes us with true spiritual
forces, and aligns us with the ascending currents of the universe. This new life
is different, not just a variation on what we've known before, but something
altogether new. A high-jumper raises his pole clearance by patient training,
every slight improvement requiring hard work. The life in the kingdom is not
like that, being instead a realm of inner peace, joy, beauty, and productivity
which cannot be attained by character building or positive thinking, even if
those techniques be otherwise valuable. The kingdom of heaven is where we have
always wanted to live, and where, by faith, we can go this very hour. It is the
place dreamed of by the prophets and sought after by all who love God. In the
kingdom, God's spirit is our daily companion as we live, love, and achieve
through the power which flows down from the Source of eternal love on Paradise.
The kingdom of heaven takes us beyond the clinging vines of our pasts which have
tied our souls to earth with their accusations of guilt and sin. The past has
forever lost its power over us, because we know the Father has forgiven our
missteps and mistakes. We have a fresh start, and nothing but our own
fearfulness and doubt can hold us back now. This new life does not deliver us
from future shortcomings but reveals a process whereby such mistakes can be
abbreviated and transcended. The new life makes righteous living a joy instead
of a burden, because we live under God's guidance and share every hour with him.
As the Father directs his river of love toward our hearts, the faith it inspires
sweeps away every blockage of selfishness and doubt. We live in our Father's
world and know ourselves to be his children. We gain this new life through
surrender to God's transforming power and by our commitment to live according to
what we know is true, best, and right. We disown every hindrance and move
forward with confidence in God's will as he reveals it. We have the power to
follow our Father's will, and we will succeed in so doing. With God's help we
are bigger than the things which have held us back, those pet evils that seemed
so addictive we doubted our ability to shake free. Their surface attractiveness
no longer allures now that we have learned of the better way. In family
difficulties, personal dissatisfaction, and emotional anguish, the cost of
remaining outside the Father's kingdom is too high. The fetters of fear and
doubt which tether us like animals melt away, evaporating before the rays of our
Father's love. We no longer doubt the kingdom or weigh the pluses and minuses of
its relative costs and benefits. We are wholeheartedly entering that which has
always been available, but which only recently became real to us. We anticipate
every arriving hour in the Father's kingdom, knowing not what it will bring,
only that the Father will make it good. All things are becoming new.
References:
You must surrender every wish of mind and every craving of soul to the
transforming embrace of spiritual growth. 91:9.4
Of all the dangers which beset man's mortal nature and jeopardize his
spiritual integrity, pride is the greatest. Courage is valorous, but egotism is
vainglorious and suicidal. Pride is deceitful, intoxicating, and sin-breeding
whether found in an individual, a group, a race, or a nation. It is literally
true, "Pride goes before a fall." 111:6.9&10
"Be reminded that a wise tailor does not sew a piece of new and unshrunk
cloth upon an old garment, lest, when it is wet, it shrink and produce a worse
rent. Neither do men put new wine into old wine skins, lest the new wine burst
the skins so that both the wine and the skins perish. The wise man puts the new
wine into fresh wine skins. Therefore do my disciples show wisdom in that they
do not bring too much of the old order over into the new teaching of the gospel
of the kingdom." 147:7.2
Jesus fully understood how difficult it is for men to break with their past.
He knew how human beings are swayed by the preacher's eloquence, and how the
conscience responds to emotional appeal as the mind does to logic and reason,
but he also knew how far more difficult it is to persuade men to disown the
past. 154:6.8
The theme of Jesus' instructions during the sojourn at Sidon was spiritual
progression. He told them they could not stand still; they must go forward in
righteousness or retrogress into evil and sin. He admonished them to "forget
those things which are in the past while you push forward to embrace the greater
realities of the kingdom." . . . Said Jesus: "My disciples must not only cease
to do evil but learn to do well; you must not only be cleansed from all
conscious sin, but you must refuse to harbor even the feelings of guilt. If you
confess your sins, they are forgiven; therefore must you maintain a conscience
void of offense." 156:2.6&7
"But whosoever causes one of these little ones to stumble, it would be better
for him if a millstone were hanged about his neck and he were cast into the sea.
If the things you do with your hands, or the things you see with your eyes give
offense in the progress of the kingdom, sacrifice these cherished idols, for it
is better to enter the kingdom minus many of the beloved things of life rather
than to cling to these idols and find yourself shut out of the kingdom." 158:8.1
I see in the teachings of Jesus, religion at its best. This gospel enables us
to seek for the true God and to find him. But are we willing to pay the price of
this entrance into the kingdom of heaven? Are we willing to be born again? to be
remade? Are we willing to be subject to this terrible and testing process of
selfdestruction and soul reconstruction? Has not the Master said: "Whoso would
save his life must lose it. Think not that I have come to bring peace but rather
a soul struggle"? True, after we pay the price of dedication to the Father's
will, we do experience great peace provided we continue to walk in these
spiritual paths of consecrated living. Now are we truly forsaking the lures of
the known order of existence while we unreservedly dedicate our quest to the
lures of the unknown and unexplored order of the existence of a future life of
adventure in the spirit worlds of the higher idealism of divine reality.
160:5.10&11
Step 9: Committing Ourselves
We counted the cost and determined that the only
life worth living is one based on truth and dedicated to our loving heavenly
Father. We wholeheartedly committed every aspect of our lives to God and to
doing his will. Primitive man's native belligerence, suspicion, and cunning kept
him alive in a hostile world, and these instincts of selfpreservation still
serve us, but complicate spiritual progress because we are programmed down deep
not to trust. But to enter the kingdom, that is exactly what we must do. Life in
the spirit is an evolving relationship of willing communication between our
souls and their Maker. Attentive to God's spirit, we commit ourselves in advance
to do whatever God wants us to do, instantly and exactly, regardless of the cost
or apparent consequences. Kingdom progress is a subjective and subtle process,
and preset formulas for its achievement may deceive some who misunderstand its
inner spirit, possibly even inoculating them against the real thing. Life in the
kingdom is a process of liberation which requires that we wholeheartedly and
unreservedly enter a narrow and demanding way, certain that on the far shore we
will find peace, joy, and eternal life. Entering the kingdom requires us to lay
aside every thing, activity, or relationship which stands between ourselves and
the divine life. If our commitment to God is other than unconditional, if we
hold back even a little, our spiritual commitment is partial because we remain
in charge. If we obey our Father ninety-nine times out of one hundred, we are
holding back from unquestioning obedience, because each new situation requires a
fresh calculation as to whether or not, this time, we will follow the divine
leading. Outward behavior notwithstanding, there is little spiritual difference
between obeying God ninety-nine percent of the time and one percent of the time,
the difference being merely of degree. Only in the lives of those who have
decided, in advance, to follow his will no matter what the cost or consequences,
can the Father express himself fully. What if we could live that way, even for
an hour? If problems which have burdened us for years could suddenly fall away,
never to return? If we could see the angels who walk beside us, supporting us in
each of life's battles? If we could be absolutely certain that the events of our
daily lives were part of a farreaching plan designed by an all-wise Being? What
sets all this in motion? From the place we now find ourselves, how can we enter
this marvelous kingdom? Trying to find God, ascetics have mortified their flesh:
have sat in cold water, climbed mountains, and endured the harshest deprivation
and suffering in the hope of gaining the favor of a stern, withdrawn God.
Attempting to reduce those distractions which are a natural part of the world
God created for us to live in, monks have maintained years of strict silence or
filled their days reciting set prayers until their tongues move hypnotized by
monotonous repetition. Others vainly seek to control the secrets of the universe
and attain the heavenly estate by learning more about the Universal Upholder,
seeking to find God by knowledge. But none of these extreme paths, well-meant as
they might be, bring souls into the kingdom, rather, lives lived by faith in
vigorous contact with the world God has given us. Trying to make ourselves
'better' through subduing our bodies or educating our minds fails as a means of
finding God, for both techniques leave the individual in control, and the
essence of kingdom life is our submission to God's control. We seek the kingdom
not to bend the world to our bidding, but, through faith, to become effective
instruments in doing our heavenly Father's will. If this prize is worth the
price, don't hesitate; go off by yourself and talk with the Father. Tell him
what you want in life, your longings and hopes, as well as your problems and
fears. Summon the courage to tell him that from this time on you want to live
his way, no matter what the apparent cost in the things and relationships of
this world. Tell the Father that you trust him totally, that your life is his,
and that your deepest desire is to obey him in even the smallest matters. Then
remain in silence and listen for his response to your soul, his welcome into the
spiritual kingdom. The Father bleaches out the stains which blemish our inner
selves, making clean our hearts. As God lives in and through us, we become more
effective and less subject to normal human constraints; as agents of him who
controls the circumstances of the whirling worlds of space, we accomplish more.
In working with God, God works through us. Entering this mysterious kingdom
brightens the hues and shades of the world around us; the leaves on every oak
seem to vibrate with thankfulness for the gift of life. We sense the limitless
adventure God stretches before us, our small part of his never-ending story of
mercy and provision.
References:
Even to approach the knowing of a divine personality, all of man's
personality endowments must be wholly consecrated to the effort; halfhearted,
partial devotion will be unavailing. 1:6.5
To isolate part of life and call it religion is to disintegrate life and to
distort religion. And this is just why the God of worship claims all allegiance
or none. 102:6.1
The secret of survival is wrapped up in the supreme human desire to be
Godlike and in the associated willingness to do and be any and all things which
are essential to the final attainment of that overmastering desire. 110:3.2
When man consecrates his will to the doing of the Father's will, when man
gives God all that he has, then does God make that man more than he is. 117:4.14
That which the lad wanted most to do he was unconsciously actually doing. And
it was, and is, ever thus. That which the enlightened and reflective human
imagination of spiritual teaching and leading wholeheartedly and unselfishly
wants to do and be, becomes measurably creative in accordance with the degree of
mortal dedication to the divine doing of the Father's will. When man goes in
partnership with God, great things may, and do, happen. 132:7.9
"Those who first seek to enter the kingdom, thus beginning to strive for a
nobility of character like that of my Father, shall presently possess all else
that is needful. But I say to you in all sincerity: Unless you seek entrance
into the kingdom with the faith and trusting dependence of a little child, you
shall in no wise gain admission." 137:8.8
The right to enter the kingdom is conditioned by faith, personal belief. The
cost of remaining in the progressive ascent of the kingdom is the pearl of great
price, in order to possess which a man sells all that he has. 140:8.28
"The heathen strike directly for their objectives; you are guilty of too much
chronic yearning. If you desire to enter the kingdom, why do you not take it by
spiritual assault even as the heathen take a city they lay siege to? You are
hardly worthy of the kingdom when your service consists so largely in an
attitude of regretting the past, whining over the present, and vainly hoping for
the future." 155:1.3
Almost every human being has some one thing which is held on to as a pet
evil, and which the entrance into the kingdom of heaven requires as a part of
the price of admission. 163:2.7
"But the Father requires that the affections of his children be pure and
undivided. Whatever thing or person comes between you and the love of the truths
of the kingdom, must be surrendered." 163:3.3
Jesus taught that, by faith, the believer enters the kingdom now. In the
various discourses he taught that two things are essential to faith-entrance
into the kingdom: ? 1. Faith, sincerity. To come as a little child, to receive
the bestowal of sonship as a gift; to submit to the doing of the Father's will
without questioning and in the full confidence and genuine trustfulness of the
Father's wisdom; to come into the kingdom free from prejudice and preconception;
to be open-minded and teachable like an unspoiled child. ? 2. Truth hunger. The
thirst for righteousness, a change of mind, the acquirement of the motive to be
like God and to find God. 170:2.18
"You who would follow after me from this time on, must be willing to pay the
price of wholehearted dedication to the doing of my Father's will. If you would
be my disciples, you must be willing to forsake father, mother, wife, children,
brothers, and sisters. If any one of you would now be my disciple, you must be
willing to give up even your life just as the Son of Man is about to offer up
his life for the completion of the mission of doing the Father's will on earth
and in the flesh." 171:2.2
"Now, then, must each of you sit down and count the cost of being my
disciple. From now on you will not be able to follow after us, listening to the
teaching and beholding the works; you will be required to face bitter
persecutions and to bear witness for this gospel in the face of crushing
disappointment. If you are unwilling to renounce all that you are and to
dedicate all that you have, then are you unworthy to be my disciple." 171:2.4
Step 10: Praying
Through prayer, meditation, worship, and spiritual communion
we are improving our conscious contact with God and sharing our inner lives with
him. The committing of our lives to God is the spiritual foundation for prayer,
the process by which we come to know our heavenly Father. God, being God, can
communicate with us any way he chooses. If he rarely does so audibly, it is due
to the importance he attaches to our growth in faith. If seeking spiritual
guidance consisted of no more than listening to a voice or consulting
handwriting on a chalkboard, what point would there be to living by faith? God's
plan requires that we rely on our highest convictions when the way is unclear,
for wrestling with the uncertainties of inner guidance exercises our faith. A
parent is less concerned with whether his child understands a particular passage
than with whether the child is learning to read; similarly, the important thing
in God's sight is not whether we perfectly understand a particular answer to
prayer, but the process of growth associated with seeking his will. The latter
pertains to our relationship with him; the former addresses only details. The
vital thing is that we listen to the Father's still, small voice within our
souls, a practice which requires concentration to catch the delicate tones to
which our material ears are altogether deaf. The soul has this faculty
naturally, but it requires persistence to enable us to separate God's leading
from the cacophony of our own randomly arising thoughts, just as it requires
practice for an outdoorsman to separate the songs of individual birds from the
background noises of the forest. The Father has much to tell us, and our
spiritual well being depends on taking the time to listen. Prayer cannot be
learned from books, only by experience. Prayer is communication with one's
Maker, not a rhetorical skill whereby our flowery language supposedly impresses
him whose mind encompasses the galaxies. The time, place, and form of our
prayers are not significant, only their sincerity and our willingness to listen
for God's answers. We become friends with our Father in heaven the same way we
do with anyone else, by spending time with him – talking, listening, and sharing
our lives. We share with God those daily matters which occupy our minds, for
anything we are concerned about, he is as well. But our prayers should not
degenerate into a continuous selfish whining over personal problems; we should
not neglect others' needs, which usually far surpass our own. Also, our prayers
must never devolve into requests that God make our lives easier, or give us
preference over others. To place our own difficulties in truer perspective, we
must cultivate an attitude of gratefulness and appreciation, remembering to
thank the Father for the good things he gives us each day. Our prayer life
connects us with the real spirit world, equipping us to face our challenges and
difficulties as they actually exist, not as we might wish them to be in some
dream world of unreality. When we have problems, prayer leads us to examine the
exact position in which we find ourselves, how it came to be that we are in such
a fix, and where we will likely end up absent action to change the dynamics of
the situation. Prayer is a stimulus for action, not a substitute. The Father put
us on this world to participate in life and build strong characters through
overcoming its inevitable vicissitudes. That purpose would be defeated and
indolence rewarded were God to grant our requests for things which are within
our human ability to achieve, obtain, or attain. God designed this world so that
effort is required to attain goals, and while we always ask the Father for
strength to accomplish our goals, we should never expect him to do for us what
he has already given us power to accomplish. For our prayers to be effective,
they should be focused and specific. Exactly how do we want the situation to
turn out? Usually, just thinking that question through discloses the obvious
answer and permits us to redirect our human energies to its realization. Our
overall attitude toward life is, "Father, your will be done," but in prayer,
generalities dissipate like water poured from a bucket. Having thought the
situation through to the best of our ability and arrived at a sincere belief as
to the best outcome for all concerned, we unhesitatingly ask the Father to help
us bring it about. Our faith attitude takes for granted that God will solve the
problem in the very best way, whether or not it is by means of any alternative
we have foreseen. But good prayer results don't come from wishy-washy, vague, or
indefinite attitudes, because God desires us forcefully to attack, and
creatively to solve, the problems of life. We should pray hard over our
difficulties and work equally hard to overcome them. Our prayers are not
hesitant, timid or mushy, but rather bold assertions of the triumph of what is
right and best. We come before God as to a good earthly father, set out the
exact situation or problem, explain our thought processes in arriving at the
outcome or solution we envision as best, and recapitulate what we have done thus
far to solve the problem. If there is nothing further we are able to do to
improve the situation, we are entitled in complete confidence to ask God to
bring about the result we are convinced is best. If God appears not to have
answered our prayers, it is not because he hasn't heard, doesn't care, or is too
busy. An apparently unanswered prayer could signify several things: that we have
not yet exhausted our human remedies to the problem; that, for reasons we do not
understand, it would be harmful for us to receive that which we seek, at least
in the way we envision; that answering our prayer would abridge another's free
will; that the time is not yet ripe; or even, unbeknownst to us, that the prayer
has already been answered. Except for these self-evident exceptions, we should
live in the certainty that God answers every one of our prayers. Prayer, faith,
and action are spiritually bound together. Prayer generates faith, faith leads
us to pray, and both lead us to act decisively according to our Father's
leading. Acting on spiritual guidance in turn gives us more faith and upsteps
our prayer life as we experience the satisfactions of a victorious spiritual
life. Prayer is real and should be used to overcome barriers like ancient armies
used battering rams to sunder the gates of enemy cities. Prayer, joined by faith
and action, collapses intractable problems, surmounts difficulties, and brings
the reign of God more fully to our troubled planet.
References:
If you would engage in effective praying, you should bear in mind the laws of
prevailing petitions: ? 1. You must qualify as a potent prayer by sincerely and
courageously facing the problems of universe reality. You must possess cosmic
stamina. ? 2. You must have honestly exhausted the human capacity for human
adjustment. You must have been industrious. ? 3. You must surrender every wish
of mind and every craving of soul to the transforming embrace of spiritual
growth. You must have experienced an enhancement of meanings and an elevation of
values. ? 4. You must make a wholehearted choice of the divine will. You must
obliterate the dead center of indecision. ? 5. You not only recognize the
Father's will and choose to do it, but you have effected an unqualified
consecration, and a dynamic dedication, to the actual doing of the Father's
will. ? 6. Your prayer will be directed exclusively for divine wisdom to solve
the specific human problems encountered in the Paradise ascension – the
attainment of divine perfection. ? 7. And you must have faith – living faith.
91:9.1-8
The doing of the will of God is nothing more or less than an exhibition of
creature willingness to share the inner life with God – with the very God
who has made such a creature life of inner meaning-value possible. Sharing is
Godlike – divine. 111:5.1
Worship is the act of a part identifying itself with the Whole; the finite
with the Infinite; the son with the Father; time in the act of striking step
with eternity. Worship is the act of the son's personal communion with the
divine Father, the assumption of refreshing, creative, fraternal, and romantic
attitudes by the human soul-spirit. 143:7.8
"But when you pray, you exercise so little faith. Genuine faith will remove
mountains of material difficulty which may chance to lie in the path of soul
expansion and spiritual progress." 144:2.6
Jesus taught that effective prayer must be: ? 1. Unselfish – not alone for
oneself. ? 2. Believing – according to faith. ? 3. Sincere – honest of heart. ?
4. Intelligent – according to light. ? 5. Trustful – in submission to the
Father's all-wise will. 144:3.8
When you have become wholly dedicated to the doing of the will of the Father
in heaven, the answer to all your petitions will be forthcoming because your
prayers will be in full accordance with the Father's will, and the Father's will
is ever manifest throughout his vast universe. What the true son desires and the
infinite Father wills IS. Such a prayer cannot remain unanswered, and no other
sort of petition can possibly be fully answered. 146:2.7
"I have come forth from the Father; if, therefore, you are ever in doubt as
to what you would ask of the Father, ask in my name, and I will present your
petition in accordance with your real needs and desires and in accordance with
my Father's will." 146:2.10
Even the apostles were unable fully to comprehend his teaching as to the
necessity for using spiritual force for the purpose of breaking through all
material resistance and for surmounting every earthly obstacle which might
chance to stand in the way of grasping the all-important spiritual values of the
new life in the spirit as the liberated sons of God. 166:3.8
When a prayer is apparently unanswered, the delay often betokens a better
answer, although one which is for some good reason greatly delayed. . . . No
sincere prayer is denied an answer except when the superior viewpoint of the
spiritual world has devised a better answer, an answer which meets the petition
of the spirit of man as contrasted with the prayer of the mere mind of man.
168:4.5
How long will it take the world of believers to understand that prayer is not
a process of getting your way but rather a program of taking God's way, an
experience of learning how to recognize and execute the Father's will? It is
entirely true that, when your will has been truly aligned with his, you can ask
anything conceived by that will-union, and it will be granted. And such a
will-union is effected by and through Jesus even as the life of the vine flows
into and through the living branches. 180:2.4
Step 11: Balancing Physical With Spiritual
We passed through conflict as God
empowered us to exchange material for spiritual goals. We are better balancing
our human needs with our lives in the spirit. This step concerns the
reconciliation of total inner commitment with the exigencies of daily existence,
balancing what is good for us with what is good for others. Is it possible to
live in this world and yet, as Jesus said, not be of this world? How can we act
spiritually when we are every second hostage to flesh and blood? How can we
resist experiencing anger, lust, greed, and selfishness when the survival
instincts programmed into us by the Creator compel us to react that very way? Is
the Master's selfless way compatible with life's practicalities, to say nothing
of achieving success in its undertakings? Our instinctual drives perpetuate the
species and keep us alive in an often cruel world, but how do we reconcile these
inborn urges with their opposites: Jesus' admonitions to give away our cloaks,
walk the second mile, and save our lives by losing them? In God's eyes we have
rights as individuals; he does not intend that our fellows exercise a total
claim on our time and energies. The Father created us as we are, and so long as
we do not compromise our spiritual loyalties, he supports our desire for human
success and fulfillment. God gave us our commonplace physical appetites and
desires, and just as there is nothing wrong with water so long as one does not
drown in it, nothing is inherently wrong or evil about any of our human urges,
even if they must often be restrained out of higher ethical considerations. The
new life is lived on the same world as the old one, and spiritual seekers do not
escape making the manifold daily adjustments which life requires. If we ignored
our own welfare, without a keeper we would quickly die of starvation or
exposure. If we continue to live solely for ourselves as we did in the old life,
what difference has our rebirth made? As spiritually newborn sons and daughters
we should take neither extreme, but rather be guided by our God-given attributes
of common sense and balance. God does not require or expect us to ignore our
personal welfare; his desire is that we unselfishly subordinate our interests to
the service of others, remembering that he knows our personal needs, and
trusting him to supply them. Our Father is well aware of the difficult
transition all must pass through adapting to the new life in the spirit, and he
will safely guide every soul committed to his keeping. God can balance the needs
of our bodies with the desires of our souls and requires only our cooperation
for the transition to be positive and productive. Once inside the kingdom's
gates the critical battle has been won, but only with common sense and balance
do we avoid rear-guard actions from the emotional extremes of materialistic self-centeredness and fanatical, immature pseudo-spirituality. We should not be
discouraged when the unwelcome guests of vengefulness, anger, lust, or jealousy
insinuate their unwanted presences into our minds. Only time can erase some
deep-seated mental poisons, but now that God's spirit is enthroned in our
hearts, we can be patient while he transforms us into his likeness. Delivery
from emotional distress may or may not come quickly, but anxiety regarding the
state of our souls only irritates the scab on the healing wound. The spiritual
world is real and important, and this physical world is real and important,
offering as it does learning experiences we will never again encounter in our
upward ascent through the many mansions of the Father's universe. The body's
need for food, shelter, and clothing is no less real than the soul's need for
faith, hope, and love. We live out our ideals on the stage of this physical
world which contains the intermeshed and often incongruously associated
circumstances of people and things in which we find ourselves. The insistent
demands of this physical world provide an ongoing check of our spiritual
intentions, preventing them from becoming mere abstractions or fantasies. In
this world we must compromise, balance, and reconcile the multiform competing
forces and interests as best we can, and rarely will our triaged responses to
these complex problems afford the satisfaction of a perfect solution. Perfection
is our goal, but it is not attainable in this world. The Father takes all this
into account, and we should not hinder his work in us by self-recrimination or
thoughts of failure. Our ship has been launched onto the uncharted waters of an
eternal career, and the Power which set the universe in motion can and will do
for us what humanly would be impossible.
References:
Those God-knowing men and women who have been born of the Spirit experience
no more conflict with their mortal natures than do the inhabitants of the most
normal of worlds, planets which have never been tainted with sin nor touched by
rebellion. Faith sons work on intellectual levels and live on spiritual planes
far above the conflicts produced by unrestrained or unnatural physical desires.
The normal urges of animal beings and the natural appetites and impulses of the
physical nature are not in conflict with even the highest spiritual attainment
except in the minds of ignorant, mistaught, or unfortunately overconscientious
persons. Having started out on the way of life everlasting, having accepted the
assignment and received your orders to advance, do not fear the dangers of human
forgetfulness and mortal inconstancy, do not be troubled with doubts of failure
or by perplexing confusion, do not falter and question your status and standing,
for in every dark hour, at every crossroad in the forward struggle, the Spirit
of Truth will always speak, saying, "This is the way." 34:7.7&8
When it comes to the sharp and well-defined conflicts between the higher and
lower tendencies of the races, between what really is right or wrong (not merely
what you may call right and wrong), you can depend upon it that the Adjuster
will always participate in some definite and active manner in such experiences.
The fact that such Adjuster activity may be unconscious to the human partner
does not in the least detract from its value and reality. 108:5.9
The great problem of life is the adjustment of the ancestral tendencies of
living to the demands of the spiritual urges initiated by the divine presence of
the Mystery Monitor. While in the universe and superuniverse careers no man can
serve two masters, in the life you now live on Urantia every man must perforce
serve two masters. He must become adept in the art of a continuous human
temporal compromise while he yields spiritual allegiance to but one master; and
this is why so many falter and fail, grow weary and succumb to the stress of the
evolutionary struggle. 109:5.4
The human mind does not well stand the conflict of double allegiance. It is a
severe strain on the soul to undergo the experience of an effort to serve both
good and evil. The supremely happy and efficiently unified mind is the one
wholly dedicated to the doing of the will of the Father in heaven. Unresolved
conflicts destroy unity and may terminate in mind disruption. But the survival
character of a soul is not fostered by attempting to secure peace of mind at any
price, by the surrender of noble aspirations, and by the compromise of spiritual
ideals; rather is such peace attained by the stalwart assertion of the triumph
of that which is true, and this victory is achieved in the overcoming of evil
with the potent force of good. 133:7.12
"While you will experience great joy in the service of my Father, you should
also be prepared for trouble, for I warn you that it will be only through much
tribulation that many will enter the kingdom. But those who have found the
kingdom, their joy will be full, and they shall be called the blest of all the
earth." 137:6.5
It requires time for men and women to effect radical and extensive changes in
their basic and fundamental concepts of social conduct, philosophic attitudes,
and religious convictions. 152:6.1
"You know that men are all too often led into temptation by the urge of their
own selfishness and by the impulses of their animal natures. When you are in
this way tempted, I admonish you that, while you recognize temptation honestly
and sincerely for just what it is, you intelligently redirect the energies of
spirit, mind, and body, which are seeking expression, into higher channels and
toward more idealistic goals. In this way may you transform your temptations
into the highest types of uplifting mortal ministry while you almost wholly
avoid these wasteful and weakening conflicts between the animal and spiritual
natures." 156:5.4
Forewarn all believers regarding the fringe of conflict which must be
traversed by all who pass from the life as it is lived in the flesh to the
higher life as it is lived in the spirit. To those who live quite wholly within
either realm, there is little conflict or confusion, but all are doomed to
experience more or less uncertainty during the times of transition between the
two levels of living. In entering the kingdom, you cannot escape its
responsibilities or avoid its obligations, but remember: The gospel yoke is easy
and the burden of truth is light. 159:3.7
Teach all believers that those who enter the kingdom are not thereby rendered
immune to the accidents of time or to the ordinary catastrophes of nature.
Believing the gospel will not prevent getting into trouble, but it will insure
that you shall be unafraid when trouble does overtake you. If you dare to
believe in me and wholeheartedly proceed to follow after me, you shall most
certainly by so doing enter upon the sure pathway to trouble. I do not promise
to deliver you from the waters of adversity, but I do promise to go with you
through all of them. 159:3.13
Step 12: Persisting In Our Search
We are persisting in our search and
trusting in God's schedule for our spiritual enlightenment. We are seeking the
wisdom to know and the patience to wait on God's will in all things.
Ecclesiastes tells us that for every thing there is a season. Apples do not
ripen after the first frost because we want them to, but because their time has
come. Where others are concerned, what we want only rarely happens according to
the schedule we desire, if at all. The consequences of our actions mock our
control, affected as they are by unknowable factors beyond our horizon, and
short-term failures and reversals allow us to grow in faith while we await the
final outcome of events. Visible results may be long delayed or may never attend
our actions, presenting us with situations in which the exercise of patience
teaches us to do what is good and right for its own sake. If immediate
recompense attended helping another, such service might become no more than
selfish calculation, unacceptable to God, who requires that we serve others out
of love, with no desire for, or expectation of, personal reward. God has a
perfect schedule for our spiritual enlightenment, and knowing all things,
somehow weaves all of life's seemingly fortuitous circumstances, attitudes, and
actions into personal tapestries of rich yet uniquely individual symmetries. The
Father controls the interassociations of all circumstance and engenders our
growth when the time is right. We might intensely desire an event to transpire,
but our wishes have little or no bearing on whether it is divinely possible for
the circumstances and personalities involved to conform themselves to our
vision. The timing of events eludes our fragile control; opportunities dart like
trout from behind river boulders and never reappear, no matter how patiently we
cast our line. We should never expect to get everything we want right now,
knowing that life simply doesn't work that way and that the fruit of impatience
is frustration and bitterness. Daily living proves how often it is necessary to
bear with disagreeable situations, even for extended periods. Faith teaches us
likewise, but in addition, helps us understand the appropriateness of
forbearance. Before, what patience we could summon arose out of the absence of a
viable alternative; now, we see the greater good in waiting on God's schedule.
The Father has given us new insight into the working of his universe, and we
agree with its rightness. Persistence is especially important in our prayers.
Most of the problems about which we pray admit of no easy solution, but we must
keep heart. We will receive answers, delayed, perhaps, because a better answer
than any we had contemplated is in prospect. No matter what, we must hang on and
never give up, maintaining unshakable confidence in our Father's good will and
mercy and in his intention to give us the righteous desires of our hearts.
Patience serves us well in every aspect of our lives. We wait on God's word,
recognizing that he is in charge, not us. Understanding that our lives and
careers are secure in our Father's loving and all-powerful hands, we find
emotional contentment and inner peace. We have abandoned the futile and
frustrating exercise of trying to force events through the preconceived filter
of our personal expectations or trying to make others conform to our personal
vision for their lives. Whatever the situation is, it simply is. Our duty is to
work hard according to our sense of God's leading, accepting the world as it is
and disowning every counterproductive temptation to project our favored outcomes
onto the inexorable procession of effects following causes or the free-will
actions of others. Patience is a noble but passive trait. True persistence
encompasses patience but further demands that we forcefully assert ourselves
toward accomplishing what we believe God would have us do, ignoring any possible
resistance, never giving in. Nothing, absolutely nothing, can stop a soul wholly
dedicated to the Father's will. We brush aside discouragement, continuing on,
totally confident in the ultimate victory of righteousness in ourselves and in
the world.
References:
To every spirit being and to every mortal creature in every sphere and on
every world of the universe of universes, the Universal Father reveals all of
his gracious and divine self that can be discerned or comprehended by such
spirit beings and by such mortal creatures. 1:4.6
That, then, is the primary or elementary course which confronts the
faith-tested and much-traveled pilgrims of space. But long before reaching
Havona, these ascendant children of time have learned to feast upon uncertainty,
to fatten upon disappointment, to enthuse over apparent defeat, to invigorate in
the presence of difficulties, to exhibit indomitable courage in the face of
immensity, and to exercise unconquerable faith when confronted with the
challenge of the inexplicable. Long since, the battle cry of these pilgrims
became: "In liaison with God, nothing- -absolutely nothing – is impossible."
26:5.3
May I admonish you to heed the distant echo of the Adjuster's faithful call
to your soul? The indwelling Adjuster cannot stop or even materially alter your
career struggle of time; the Adjuster cannot lessen the hardships of life as you
journey on through this world of toil. The divine indweller can only patiently
forbear while you fight the battle of life as it is lived on your planet; but
you could, if you only would – as you work and worry, as you fight and toil –
permit the valiant Adjuster to fight with you and for you. You could be so
comforted and inspired, so enthralled and intrigued, if you would only allow the
Adjuster constantly to bring forth the pictures of the real motive, the final
aim, and the eternal purpose of all this difficult, uphill struggle with the
commonplace problems of your present material world. 111:7.2
One day when Ganid asked Jesus why he had not devoted himself to the work of
a public teacher, he said: "My son, everything must await the coming of its
time. You are born into the world, but no amount of anxiety and no manifestation
of impatience will help you to grow up. You must, in all such matters, wait upon
time. Time alone will ripen the green fruit upon the tree. Season follows season
and sundown follows sunrise only with the passing of time. I am now on the way
to Rome with you and your father, and that is sufficient for today. My tomorrow
is wholly in the hands of my Father in heaven." 130:5.3
"Prayer is the breath of the soul and should lead you to be persistent in
your attempt to ascertain the Father's will. If any one of you has a neighbor,
and you go to him at midnight and say: 'Friend, lend me three loaves, for a
friend of mine on a journey has come to see me, and I have nothing to set before
him'; and if your neighbor answers, 'Trouble me not, for the door is now shut
and the children and I are in bed; therefore I cannot rise and give you bread,'
you will persist, explaining that your friend hungers, and that you have no food
to offer him. I say to you, though your neighbor will not rise and give you
bread because he is your friend, yet because of your importunity he will get up
and give you as many loaves as you need. If, then, persistence will win favors
even from mortal man, how much more will your persistence in the spirit win the
bread of life for you from the willing hands of the Father in heaven. Again I
say to you: Ask and it shall be given you; seek and you shall find; knock and it
shall be opened to you. For every one who asks receives; he who seeks finds; and
to him who knocks the door of salvation will be opened." 144:2.3
That same evening Jesus made the long-to-be-remembered address to the
apostles regarding the relative value of status with God and progress in the
eternal ascent to Paradise. Said Jesus: "My children, if there exists a true and
living connection between the child and the Father, the child is certain to
progress continuously toward the Father's ideals. True, the child may at first
make slow progress, but the progress is none the less sure. The important thing
is not the rapidity of your progress but rather its certainty. Your actual
achievement is not so important as the fact that the direction of your progress
is Godward. What you are becoming day by day is of infinitely more importance
than what you are today. 147:5.7
Step 13: Gaining Perspective
We are coming to appreciate the inevitabilities
and compensations of life as we begin our endless exploration of God's creation.
From the human perspective, much in life seems unfair or tragic. An automobile
accident, an unexpected letter – the slightest twist of the kaleidoscope and all
is changed. Spiritual perspective is the broadened horizon which recognizes
God's absolute control over the invisible world which underlies and supports
physical creation. God's ways seem mysterious only because the limitations of
our perspective prevent us from understanding the true nature of events. The
day-to-day events of our lives are easier to accept once we understand that
God's hand either causes, or permits, all that happens. Such a perspective gives
us comfort in the crush of sorrow when we come to understand that our Father can
turn even heart-wrenching pain into actual good. God gives us what is good,
while what is hard he permits only when his plans require the removal of a
thing, situation, or relationship which stands in the way of our soul's
expansion, or when such events will help build in us the tempered steel of real
character. Our Father does not rescue us from pain, but endures it with us in
loving companionship. God never wants any of his children to be hurt, but he
permits painful things to happen when they are necessary for us to learn the
lessons of life, and even then he transforms the pain we experience into
education which enriches our souls. With our cooperation, he transmutes even our
regrettable experiences into ultimate good by infusing them with spiritual
value, weaving our errors and neglect into his all-encompassing plan for the
evolution of the universes. Some of life's tragedies are caused by physical
circumstances inseparable from life on a planet governed by dependable physical
laws, such as when an avalanche crushes an unprepared mountain climber. The
rocks tumbled down because gravity, a physical law of God's ordaining, always
pulls down unbalanced and unsupported objects. The climber's death is a tragedy
to him and those who loved or depended on him, but it would be a far greater
tragedy were gravity to become some whimsical force which could not be depended
upon to work consistently. From another perspective, free will requires that the
mountaineer not be prevented from climbing the dangerous route of his choosing,
because God's plan for our education and advancement requires us to be in uncushioned contact with reality and exercise relatively complete freedom of
action if we are to grow. Other tragedies are caused by the malice or neglect of
people towards others. God permits such harm because his respect for our free
will applies to the evil as well as to the good, and authentic free will must
embrace the freedom to act wrongly. Our Father wishes his sons and daughters to
love and serve others voluntarily, from heartfelt desire, and this requires the
liberty to do otherwise. But when harm touches those whose lives are dedicated
to him, whether caused by physical forces or the agency of others, the Father
reconfigures the outcome of such painful events or evil actions into ultimate
good for all concerned. Who can fathom the Creator's majesty or second-guess his
foreknowledge or wisdom? Who could have more perfectly designed his own life?
Who believes his judgment more trustworthy or responsible, or his motivation
higher? Whose intelligence better comprehends the consequences of events
spanning galaxies and ages? The Father of lights lives astride creation in the
timeless present, upholding and sustaining the existence of every thing and
being through the unsearchable wisdom of his infinite mind. To see life as the
Father does is to see it in truer perspective, wherein we detect his purposes
through the variegated chatter of daily life and gain strength living as if
seeing him who is invisible. Sitting on a rocky cliff, we overlook the city as
the sun sets behind us. Street lamps gradually alight in random stripes, and we
watch bunched cars thread their ways home from work. We ponder the disparate
lives and problems represented by all those headlights – the jobs they are
leaving and the families, friends, or loneliness to which they return. How the
Father is able to personally relate to each of them surpasses human
understanding, we only know that he does. God lives transcendent on Paradise,
but also in every heart. His love-call echoes down lonely corridors, and his
arms bear up the wounded. His majesty shakes mighty mountains, and his eyes miss
nothing. He reaches across the ages to find us where and as we are, and invites
us to take our intended place in the endless expansion of the universes of his
making. As our spiritual walk continues, we learn more of God's eternal
purposes, a little here, a little there, and increasingly we accrue a sustaining
cosmic perspective. We experience our Father's love and become ever more certain
that he is with us always.
References:
The confusion and turmoil of Urantia do not signify that the Paradise Rulers
lack either interest or ability to manage affairs differently. The Creators are
possessed of full power to make Urantia a veritable paradise, but such an Eden
would not contribute to the development of those strong, noble, and experienced
characters which the Gods are so surely forging out on your world between the
anvils of necessity and the hammers of anguish. Your anxieties and sorrows, your
trials and disappointments, are just as much a part of the divine plan on your
sphere as are the exquisite perfection and infinite adaptation of all things to
their supreme purpose on the worlds of the central and perfect universe. 23:2.5
But inherent in this capacity for achievement is the responsibility of
ethics, the necessity for recognizing that the world and the universe are filled
with a multitude of differing types of beings. All of this magnificent creation,
including yourself, was not made just for you. This is not an egocentric
universe. The Gods have decreed, "It is more blessed to give than to receive,"
and said your Master Son, "He who would be greatest among you let him be server
of all." 28:6.18
The universe of universes, including this small world called Urantia, is not
being managed merely to meet our approval nor just to suit our convenience, much
less to gratify our whims and satisfy our curiosity. The wise and all-powerful
beings who are responsible for universe management undoubtedly know exactly what
they are about; and so it becomes Life Carriers and behooves mortal minds to
enlist in patient waiting and hearty cooperation with the rule of wisdom, the
reign of power, and the march of progress. 65:5.3
You humans have begun an endless unfolding of an almost infinite panorama, a
limitless expanding of never-ending, everwidening spheres of opportunity for
exhilarating service, matchless adventure, sublime uncertainty, and boundless
attainment. When the clouds gather overhead, your faith should accept the fact
of the presence of the indwelling Adjuster, and thus you should be able to look
beyond the mists of mortal uncertainty into the clear shining of the sun of
eternal righteousness on the beckoning heights of the mansion worlds. . . .
108:6.8
Patience is exercised by those mortals whose time units are short; true
maturity transcends patience by a forbearance born of real understanding. To
become mature is to live more intensely in the present, at the same time
escaping from the limitations of the present. The plans of maturity, founded on
past experience, are coming into being in the present in such manner as to
enhance the values of the future. The time unit of immaturity concentrates
meaning-value into the present moment in such a way as to divorce the present of
its true relationship to the not-present – the past-future. The time unit of
maturity is proportioned so to reveal the co-ordinate relationship of
past-present-future that the self begins to gain insight into the wholeness of
events, begins to view the landscape of time from the panoramic perspective of
broadened horizons, begins perhaps to suspect the nonbeginning, nonending
eternal continuum, the fragments of which are called time. 118:1.6-8
Do not become discouraged by the discovery that you are human. Human nature
may tend toward evil, but it is not inherently sinful. Be not downcast by your
failure wholly to forget some of your regrettable experiences. The mistakes
which you fail to forget in time will be forgotten in eternity. Lighten your
burdens of soul by speedily acquiring a long-distance view of your destiny, a
universe expansion of your career. 156:5.8
Human beings unfailingly become discouraged when they view only the
transitory transactions of time. The present, when divorced from the past and
the future, becomes exasperatingly trivial. Only a glimpse of the circle of
eternity can inspire man to do his best and can challenge the best in him to do
its utmost. 160:2.9
"Let not your hearts be troubled; all things will work together for the glory
of God and the salvation of men." 182:2.1
He taught men to place a high value upon themselves in time and in eternity.
Because of this high estimate which Jesus placed upon men, he was willing to
spend himself in the unremitting service of humankind. And it was this infinite
worth of the finite that made the golden rule a vital factor in his religion.
What mortal can fail to be uplifted by the extraordinary faith Jesus has in him?
196:2.10
Step 14: Gaining Faith
We are gaining faith that God's plan for us is
incomparably better than any of our own devising, and that our highest happiness
consists in doing his will. We are experiencing the spiritual liberty of
accepting our Father's responsibility for the outcome of events we undertake in
faith. Faith is an expression of universal law based on wholehearted reliance on
the Sovereign of the universes and his ability to accomplish his will on earth
and in our lives without limit or hindrance. But how can we know our Father's
will as life's paths and opportunities appear and move on before us? How can we
know more certainly whether we are doing his will as we attempt to respond to
the divine leadings within our souls? On this world there are few things of
which anyone can be truly sure; the fork in the road is often upon us before we
are ready to choose our path, and to delay may jeopardize the opportunity. In
such a case we must simply act, trusting in our Father's guidance. If we have
prayed for a knowledge of God's will in a particular situation, once decision
time arrives, to avoid action paralyzed by fear that we might err makes erring a
virtual certainty. When we are doing our best to live the Father's will, we are
entitled to act decisively on faith even when the issue is clouded and we are
confused. Hesitation, timidity, and half-measures poison faith and doom to
failure even an otherwise correct choice. When decision time arrives we should
be able to say, "Father, this is the course I believe you wish me to take, and
unless you tell me otherwise, I'm going to move forward in that direction."
Nations build navies so that, in times of war, they may engage the enemy, not
sit safely in port. Likewise, God placed us on earth to participate in life, and
therefore grieves to see us cravenly moored for fear of what the high seas of
life may hold in store, afraid to experience that for which he placed us here.
He desires that we launch forth, confident that he can and will shape our
courses along the paths charted by infinite wisdom. Faith-actions must be
undertaken in total confidence, otherwise, where is the faith? In such a
situation, even if we err, God will make our choice right and bring about a good
outcome in spite of our mistakes. When our course comports with the highest
truth, goodness, and love, and we carry it out in accordance with God's leading
to the best of our ability, he makes that course right, even if the decision
itself might have been to some extent defective. The Father knows the
limitations of our minds and natures, accepts us as we are, and adjusts his
plans of perfection to fit the circumstances of his children here on earth, thus
allowing us to be partners with him in the achievement of our eternal destiny.
The acts of faith are always consistent with truth, beauty, goodness, and love,
and when we are confused as to the Father's leading, those values will suggest
his will, for it is inconceivable that God would ever lead us to do anything
untrue, ugly, or unloving. Most day-to-day problems lack an obvious spiritual
dimension, however, and we must make our choices based on ordinary common sense
supported by the sound advice of friends. Even in those situations we must not
neglect a sense of God's leading, for, like any good parent, he is concerned
about the details of our daily existence, that we live happy and productive
lives, but especially that our souls prosper. Faith injects the power of God
into the affairs of our workaday world, infusing them with divine purpose. Faith
is not simply the conviction that God exists, but that he is active and powerful
in helping us win the battles of life. Faith unleashes energy from within to
break down every barrier, win over every enemy, vanquish every addiction,
conquer every disability, and still every fear. Faith plants our feet on the
eternal highway, the end of which is Paradise and God himself. Faith links our
hearts to the Sovereign of the universes and discloses goals, purposes, and
visions which empower us to run the final stretch after all things earthly
crash. The Father of lights walks beside the chariot of our dreams, clearing the
way before the pure in heart. God grants inner peace to those whose faith is
anchored to the rock of his sovereignty, to those who understand that he does
all things well. Whether life is long or short, faith sustains great human
achievement and propels our souls into life eternal where even greater
accomplishments beckon the sons and daughters of God. Faith is the process by
which we come to know our Maker. Faith solves mysteries, opens prison doors,
explores cavernous depths, and saves souls trapped in hopelessness or depravity.
Faith tutors the young student of the spirit; its net brings all good things to
us when we cast it out boldly. Faith opens eyes theretofore blinded by the
distractions of a materialistic age, but never shows us quite all we would see,
for the infinite Creator on whom our faith is focused resides in unfathomable
mystery. By means of our faith, the Father stills our distracted thoughts,
comforts our souls, and illumines the pathways of righteous living into the
spirit kingdom where God has prepared our eternal home. Faith comforts the
troubled soul of modern man and stills his mind amid the tensions and stresses
of outward existence. Faith opens our souls to God, whose love envelops us,
disclosing that which is most worthwhile in human existence. God gathers the
crumbs of our faith and multiplies them into basketfuls. He takes us as confused
children and gives back mature saints. God tends the garden of our faith with
sharpened tools, a watchful eye, and a lover's touch. He turns the world that
sunshine may nourish our leaves and pushes clouds to do us service. He searches
out the shallow-rooted, vulnerable saplings of our faith, chops away the choking
weeds, and trims our errant branches, that we might in time become mature trees.
Farther along our journey, that which once was only believed becomes known. But
faith's object moves ever higher, from that which our minds possess in fullness
to that which is still unfocused: the hill across the range, still hazy to the
trekking pilgrim, a challenge to his strengthening feet. The source of faith is
God alone, who is as well the homeward destination toward which we travel, and
whom we see ever clearer as Father.
References:
The providence of God consists in the interlocking activities of the
celestial beings and the divine spirits who, in accordance with cosmic law,
unceasingly labor for the honor of God and for the spiritual advancement of his
universe children. 4:1.1
Man is spiritually indwelt by a surviving Thought Adjuster. If such a human
mind is sincerely and spiritually motivated, if such a human soul desires to
know God and become like him, honestly wants to do the Father's will, there
exists no negative influence of mortal deprivation nor positive power of
possible interference which can prevent such a divinely motivated soul from
securely ascending to the portals of Paradise. 5:1.7
The mortal mind can immediately think of a thousand and one things –
catastrophic physical events, appalling accidents, horrific disasters, painful
illnesses, and world-wide scourges – and ask whether such visitations are
correlated in the unknown maneuvering of this probable functioning of the
Supreme Being. Frankly, we do not know; we are not really sure. But we do
observe that, as time passes, all these difficult and more or less mysterious
situations always work out for the welfare and progress of the universes. 10:7.5
There is a great and glorious purpose in the march of the universes through
space. All of your mortal struggling is not in vain. We are all part of an
immense plan, a gigantic enterprise, and it is the vastness of the undertaking
that renders it impossible to see very much of it at any one time and during any
one life. We are all a part of an eternal project which the Gods are supervising
and outworking. The whole marvelous and universal mechanism moves on
majestically through space to the music of the meter of the infinite thought and
the eternal purpose of the First Great Source and Center. The eternal purpose of
the eternal God is a high spiritual ideal. The events of time and the struggles
of material existence are but the transient scaffolding which bridges over to
the other side, to the promised land of spiritual reality and supernal
existence. 32:5.1&2
There is in the mind of God a plan which embraces every creature of all his
vast domains, and this plan is an eternal purpose of boundless opportunity,
unlimited progress, and endless life. And the infinite treasures of such a
matchless career are yours for the striving! The goal of eternity is ahead! The
adventure of divinity attainment lies before you! The race for perfection is on!
whosoever will may enter, and certain victory will crown the efforts of every
human being who will run the race of faith and trust, depending every step of
the way on the leading of the indwelling Adjuster and on the guidance of that
good spirit of the Universe Son, which so freely has been poured out upon all
flesh. 32:5.7&8
While it is all too true that good cannot come of evil to the one who
contemplates and performs evil, it is equally true that all things (including
evil, potential and manifest) work together for good to all beings who know God,
love to do his will, and are ascending Paradiseward according to his eternal
plan and divine purpose. 54:4.7
When Thought Adjusters indwell human minds, they bring with them the model
careers, the ideal lives, as determined and foreordained by themselves and the
Personalized Adjusters of Divinington, which have been certified by the
Personalized Adjuster of Urantia. Thus they begin work with a definite and
predetermined plan for the intellectual and spiritual development of their human
subjects, but it is not incumbent upon any human being to accept this plan. You
are all subjects of predestination, but it is not foreordained that you must
accept this divine predestination; you are at full liberty to reject any part or
all of the Thought Adjusters' program. 110:2.1
"The act is ours, the consequences God's." 117:5.5
"Ganid, I have absolute confidence in my heavenly Father's overcare; I am
consecrated to doing the will of my Father in heaven. I do not believe that real
harm can befall me; I do not believe that my lifework can really be jeopardized
by anything my enemies might wish to visit upon me, and surely we have no
violence to fear from our friends. I am absolutely assured that the entire
universe is friendly to me – this all-powerful truth I insist on believing with
a wholehearted trust in spite of all appearances to the contrary." 133:1.4
When the mourners saw that Mary had gone to greet Jesus, they withdrew for a
short distance while both Martha and Mary talked with the Master and received
further words of comfort and exhortation to maintain strong faith in the Father
and complete resignation to the divine will. 168:0.11
Step 15: Experiencing Assurance
We better appreciate God's ceaseless
fostering of our spiritual growth. We are becoming more fully assured of our
Father's unconditional love and have begun to experience that inner peace which
passes understanding. The depletion of our inner resources shows through, and
our shoulders slump as if bearing hods of mud. When fear or guilt burdens our
minds we cannot act effectively or decisively, but when our inner state is in
harmony with the universe, little stops us: roads straighten beneath our feet,
invisible armies support us in battle, big problems shrink, small problems
disappear, inner phantoms flee, and our minds clear for effective action. God's
love is unconditional, and his assurance of that love has always been available.
Like a farmer casting seed corn onto indifferent ground, the Father continually
offers spiritual seeds of faith and love to our unreceptive minds, hoping at
least some will take root. He knows our times and seasons, when to water and
when to fertilize, always making the most of what we give him. The comfort and
assurance we increasingly experience show that at least a few of these seeds
have begun to grow. We know this spiritual peace when we have it, but even more
vividly, feel bereft and deprived when it seems temporarily beyond our reach.
There is a rhythm in human life and affairs; deep abiding peace is not always
attainable. Emotions born of circumstance crest and ebb, and we feel as if we go
in and out of synchrony with our Maker. Nevertheless, God doesn't want us to
withdraw into seclusion to avoid the disturbance and confusion inseparable from
an active life, but rather he desires that we carry his assurance with us, a
shimmering curtain of sanity to wrap around the problems of this strife-torn
world, that we see them anew in peace and perspective. Our work's outcome is
uncertain, but our goals are not. We perceive our world through a glass, darkly,
but peace permeates and suffuses our souls with confidence. We know not where
leads the road, only that God's love rests upon us, giving us the reward of the
ages; we are grime-smeared from daily living, but clean within. All seems well
when suddenly the day grows dark and approaching thunder shakes the earth like
an artillery barrage. Lightning dances amongst boiling black clouds, searing the
sky. A shower of hailstones announces the edge of the front, and then the whole
power of the storm is upon us – trees split, exploding as fiery bolts seek the
earth; shards of fractured glass from blownout windows explode onto our huddled
family; winds assault the house's eaves, its frame groans; siding and shingles
rip away and bounce like tumbleweed across the field. We hold our frightened
children tightly and pray that God will protect them, but for ourselves fret not
injury or even death, for we have committed the consequences of events beyond
our control to God's hands and rest secure in his love and power. When a vicious
rabble storms our city's gates; when the teeth of a thousand gears grind our
plans into failure; when storm waves swamp our shallow gunnels; when kin disown,
friends abandon, and enemies gloat; when bills pour in beyond our bankrupt
means; when the phone brings naught but news we hate and all things earthly
teeter – there is yet a place where we are safe; there is One who comforts our
souls in darkest night. Father, we love you for who you are and all you do for
us. We need your help when we hurt, and know that you respond before we even
ask. You give us our lives and the grace to endure. We crave to know more fully
your spirit's presence. You answer our souls' prayers and tell us the secrets of
the spheres before words, and after sounds. Others shout, but you whisper,
bathing our souls in light eternal. You speak the language of our hearts,
extending the edges of the unfathomable beyond human knowledge. You taught the
seagull to fly, fashioned the aspen and the willow, and created every weed and
crystal. Above all and before all, we worship you, Source of life.
References:
Mortal man cannot possibly know the infinitude of the heavenly Father. Finite
mind cannot think through such an absolute truth or fact. But this same finite
human being can actually feel – literally experience – the full and undiminished
impact of such an infinite Father's LOVE. 3:4.6
If mortal man is wholeheartedly spiritually motivated, unreservedly
consecrated to the doing of the Father's will, then, since he is so certainly
and so effectively spiritually endowed by the indwelling and divine Adjuster,
there cannot fail to materialize in that individual's experience the sublime
consciousness of knowing God and the supernal assurance of surviving for the
purpose of finding God by the progressive experience of becoming more and more
like him. 5:1.6
And when such a life of spirit guidance is freely and intelligently accepted,
there gradually develops within the human mind a positive consciousness of
divine contact and assurance of spirit communion; sooner or later "the Spirit
bears witness with your spirit (the Adjuster) that you are a child of God." . .
. The consciousness of the spirit domination of a human life is presently
attended by an increasing exhibition of the characteristics of the Spirit in the
life reactions of such a spirit-led mortal, "for the fruits of the spirit are
love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, and
temperance." Such spirit-guided and divinely illuminated mortals, while they yet
tread the lowly paths of toil and in human faithfulness perform the duties of
their earthly assignments, have already begun to discern the lights of eternal
life as they glimmer on the faraway shores of another world; already have they
begun to comprehend the reality of that inspiring and comforting truth, "The
kingdom of God is not meat and drink but righteousness, peace, and joy in the
Holy Spirit." And throughout every trial and in the presence of every hardship,
spirit-born souls are sustained by that hope which transcends all fear because
the love of God is shed abroad in all hearts by the presence of the divine
Spirit. 34:6.12&13
Jesus portrayed the profound surety of the God-knowing mortal when he said:
"To a God-knowing kingdom believer, what does it matter if all things earthly
crash?" Temporal securities are vulnerable, but spiritual sureties are
impregnable. When the flood tides of human adversity, selfishness, cruelty,
hate, malice, and jealousy beat about the mortal soul, you may rest in the
assurance that there is one inner bastion, the citadel of the spirit, which is
absolutely unassailable; at least this is true of every human being who has
dedicated the keeping of his soul to the indwelling spirit of the eternal God.
100:2.7
"Concerning the kingdom and your assurance of acceptance by the heavenly
Father, let me ask what father among you who is a worthy and kindhearted father
would keep his son in anxiety or suspense regarding his status in the family or
his place of security in the affections of his father's heart? Do you earth
fathers take pleasure in torturing your children with uncertainty about their
place of abiding love in your human hearts? Neither does your Father in heaven
leave his faith children of the spirit in doubtful uncertainty as to their
position in the kingdom. If you receive God as your Father, then indeed and in
truth are you the sons of God. And if you are sons, then are you secure in the
position and standing of all that concerns eternal and divine sonship." 142:5.2
"Come, therefore, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and you shall find
rest for your souls. Take upon you the divine yoke, and you will experience the
peace of God, which passes all understanding." 144:8.8
When my children once become self-conscious of the assurance of the divine
presence, such a faith will expand the mind, ennoble the soul, reinforce the
personality, augment the happiness, deepen the spirit perception, and enhance
the power to love and be loved. 159:3.12
"If my words abide in you and you are minded to do the will of my Father,
then are you truly my disciples. You shall know the truth, and the truth shall
make you free." 162:7.2
Step 16: Deepening Fellowship
We are sharing our spiritual lives more fully with each other and growing
more unified in friendship. We increasingly appreciate, respect, trust, and rely
on each other. For human friendships to flourish, trust must grow, which only
comes through increasing disclosure of our inner selves. Until we become willing
to open ourselves to our friends, they cannot learn who we are and what we truly
care about. Some guard their inner selves like rivet-studded vaults, airtight
and impregnable, lest others see the isolation and fears that dwell therein.
Bats fly in search of an exit, and finding none, return to brood in darkness.
Secrecy cultures the fungus of pretense, but the sunshine of a friend's counsel
returns us to healthy reality as we laugh into perspective our recurring foibles
and failings. When we hide aspects of our lives from those we love most, living
a lie of who we are not, we rob ourselves of health, sanity, and happiness.
Confiding in friends helps us resolve unbearable contradictions which have rent
our personalities almost to disruption, provided we do not shrink from sharing
with them our most intimate thoughts. Their understanding words end our
isolation, turn embarrassment into relief, and give us the courage no more to
pretend. Their unconditional love gives such friends license to be altogether
blunt in their advice, since we know they have no motive but our own welfare,
and nothing we might do could lessen their affection. Shall we leave such a
friend outside the circle of our confidence and face alone the terrors of the
night, when baring our souls, embarrassment ignored, will reap the harvest of
life's promises? Shall shame over past treacheries deprive us of that which
alone will cure their curse? Our friend, held aloof, sees the locked chest of
our experience and wonders what within its rusty hasps and bands of beaten iron
there lies. What we hate most about ourselves, our darkest secrets, when shared
in confidence, open new worlds in which to dwell. Perhaps the odd rock from our
stream will complete our friend's garden path, or his silt may make our flowers
bloom. Friends sustain us when we know not the way and our sky is leaden with
the ashes of broken dreams. When the evening comes too late and the morrow too
soon, when sparrows desert their young to the eagle's claw, a friend's presence
settles fear like rain a dusty road. Our friends stay with us in trouble, save
us from loneliness, surround us with love, share our joys, and strengthen us to
fight life's battles. We are safer and stronger when they are near, for if the
enemy breaks through the walls, we fight together, side by side. Isolation is
painful, no matter how close our relationship with God. Fleeing loneliness in
shallow relationships, it becomes more real. Without friends, even in a crowded
room we are hopeless, helpless, and miserable. The Father's kingdom is one in
which we serve together; it is never a solitary experience. We derive strength
from knowing that our friends care for us and would never betray our trust. We
share life's roads and work together to achieve life's ends. Careening boulders
fill the narrow gorges of our minds, shaken loose by tremors from the deep; dust
billows, and the sky darkens with impending death. A crevice in the rock – a way
of escape? The passage leads deep within. Terrors stack high, no way back, we
feel our way into the unknown darkness. Shins bruised, we grope blindly through
the cave toward the sound of falling water, which, ever louder, greets us with
its spray. Chest deep in the pool, a faint current pushes us toward a weak
refracted glow. Content to live or die together, one last breath and we go
under, fast now, pulled towards the light, banging through the chute, bunched
fetus-like, no air left when – salvation – the stream breaks out and falls into
a hidden mountain lake. A stone path leads through fields of columbines up the
verdant valley. We know not the way, but keep going, until finally, sunlit
fields, a protective moat, crystal ramparts before the city of our dreams, home
at last. The drawbridge lowers on glistening chains, and we enter, home, safe
from fright. The Master sent his followers forth two and two, that they not
become discouraged by loneliness. The best friendships are among those who love
God, who are dedicated to purposes beyond the skies, who are willing to be
wave-tossed in pursuit of dreams. Two and two we are stronger by the square,
shirts starched against life's acid vapors. Two and two we do God's will and
find his house past the far field's brambles. We need each other to know the
Father, for he lives not only in our hearts, but in our brother's glance.
Earthly friendship reveals both God and life on the heavenly worlds.
References:
These are the angels who seek to divest the associations of intelligent
beings of all artificiality while endeavoring to facilitate the interassociation
of will creatures on a basis of real self-understanding and genuine mutual
appreciation. 39:3.4
Intellectually, socially, and spiritually two moral creatures do not merely
double their personal potentials of universe achievement by partnership
technique; they more nearly quadruple their attainment and accomplishment
possibilities. 43:8.11
And of all forms of evil, none are more destructive of personality status
than betrayal of trust and disloyalty to one's confiding friends. In committing
this deliberate sin, Caligastia so completely distorted his personality that his
mind has never since been able fully to regain its equilibrium. 67:1.3
Spiritual growth is mutually stimulated by intimate association with other
religionists. 100:0.2
Happiness and joy take origin in the inner life. You cannot experience real
joy all by yourself. A solitary life is fatal to happiness. Even families and
nations will enjoy life more if they share it with others. 111:4.7
Personality cannot very well perform in isolation. Man is innately a social
creature; he is dominated by the craving of belongingness. It is literally true,
"No man lives unto himself." 112:1.16
Sometimes Thomas would get permission from Andrew to go off by himself for a
day or two. But he soon learned that such a course was not wise; he early found
that it was best, when he was downhearted, to stick close to his work and to
remain near his associates. 139:8.11
Many noble human impulses die because there is no one to hear their
expression. Truly, it is not good for man to be alone. Some degree of
recognition and a certain amount of appreciation are essential to the
development of human character. Without the genuine love of a home, no child can
achieve the full development of normal character. Character is something more
than mere mind and morals. Of all social relations calculated to develop
character, the most effective and ideal is the affectionate and understanding
friendship of man and woman in the mutual embrace of intelligent wedlock.
160:2.6
Every human being sooner or later acquires a certain concept of this world
and a certain vision of the next. Now it is possible, through personality
association, to unite these views of temporal existence and eternal prospects.
Thus does the mind of one augment its spiritual values by gaining much of the
insight of the other. In this way men enrich the soul by pooling their
respective spiritual possessions. Likewise, in this same way, man is enabled to
avoid that ever-present tendency to fall victim to distortion of vision,
prejudice of viewpoint, and narrowness of judgment. Fear, envy, and conceit can
be prevented only by intimate contact with other minds. 160:2.7
Isolation tends to exhaust the energy charge of the soul. Association with
one's fellows is essential to the renewal of the zest for life and is
indispensable to the maintenance of the courage to fight those battles
consequent upon the ascent to the higher levels of human living. Friendship
enhances the joys and glorifies the triumphs of life. Loving and intimate human
associations tend to rob suffering of its sorrow and hardship of much of its
bitterness. The presence of a friend enhances all beauty and exalts every
goodness. 160:2.8
Personality association and mutual affection is an efficient insurance
against evil. Difficulties, sorrow, disappointment, and defeat are more painful
and disheartening when borne alone. Association does not transmute evil into
righteousness, but it does aid in greatly lessening the sting. Said your Master,
"Happy are they who mourn" – if a friend is at hand to comfort. There is
positive strength in the knowledge that you live for the welfare of others, and
that these others likewise live for your welfare and advancement. Man languishes
in isolation. 160:2.9
"Judas is no more with you because his love grew cold, and because he refused
to trust you, his loyal brethren. Have you not read in the Scripture where it is
written: 'It is not good for man to be alone. No man lives to himself'? And also
where it says: 'He who would have friends must show himself friendly'? And did I
not even send you out to teach, two and two, that you might not become lonely
and fall into the mischief and miseries of isolation? You also well know that,
when I was in the flesh, I did not permit myself to be alone for long periods.
From the very beginning of our associations I always had two or three of you
constantly by my side or else very near at hand even when I communed with the
Father. Trust, therefore, and confide in one another." 193:3.2
Step 17: Serving Others
We are working together with greater initiative and
enthusiasm to serve our fellows in lasting ways, recognizing that we thus serve
and honor our Father in heaven. Faith is the foundation of our spiritual lives,
but service to others is its expression. Through God's leading, every day can
open hearts, inspire minds, and leave others better by our presence. That we
live in God's peace never numbs us to everyday responsibilities or makes us
indifferent to need or suffering. We hurt with the wounded sparrow as it flops
across the yard, every wing-beat an agony. We feel the wind-driven sleet against
the lobsterman's chapped cheeks and hear the snow crunch with every step of the
soldier's blood-stained boots. Our skin peels with the leper, and our hearts
ache with the high plains farmer as his wheat withers from wind and drought.
That we can help so few of these brothers and sisters does not discourage us,
however, because we see their needs as part of a limitless landscape of eternal
significance in which God, who knows all, is ultimately responsible for all. We
take not all of struggling humanity's burdens upon ourselves, for we could not,
but we know there is One whose wisdom and power are sufficient for any problem
and by whose grace we are saved. That we are not personally accountable for
others' welfare does not lead us to indifference or resignation over their
plight, it rather frees our minds from futile worry and we work all the harder,
sustained by faith in the God of surging seas and circumstance, who lets even
souls like ourselves work to build his kingdom. For whom should we live, if not
for others? Is life's purpose but to lay up redundant treasures for profligate
heirs to squander? Only what we do for others lasts, the rest is dust and ashes,
temples to be ravaged by looters or buried in desert sand. The bridge we build –
for what purpose if no one crosses? Our only lasting possessions, our treasures
in heaven, are those things we do for others. To those without curtain ropes to
pull, pages to turn, or lines to speak, life's stage is without purpose. With
never a part, we cloy as spectators, for giving of ourselves is what makes us
whole. The time to work is nigh: no longer should we sit and wonder when might
come the call, for the Father will speak to each of us and tell how best to
serve his kingdom. Earth's billions languish in weary distress, waiting for
someone to quench their discontent, salve their wounds, and be a brother. The
needs of the stricken touch the tenderhearted, who answer their cry with wise
and lasting help which gives them strength to rise and help themselves, and such
service endures to cheer thousands through its outspreading ripples. We can only
truly serve by love, for without love our gestures are empty, paisley rags cast
by the stream side. To find our service we must ask the Father to show us our
part in his plans, for he has designed each of us to fulfill a particular work
which he may disclose in an intuition of deep calling or perhaps in the
unfolding of opportunities. Until opened, the door to our service may look like
many others, but the Father's hand will guide us to that which we may make our
own and to that which can become our destiny. Service is faith's expression, and
faith is service's fuel. The stronger our faith, the greater our desire to carry
out this service in effective and lasting ways.
References:
One of the most important lessons to be learned during your mortal career is
teamwork. . . . Few are the duties in the universe for the lone servant. The
higher you ascend, the more lonely you become when temporarily without the
association of your fellows. 28:5.14
Service – purposeful service, not slavery – is productive of the highest
satisfaction and is expressive of the divinest dignity. Service – more service,
increased service, difficult service, adventurous service, and at last divine
and perfect service – is the goal of time and the destination of space. But ever
will the play cycles of time alternate with the service cycles of progress.
28:6.17
When the spiritual tests of greatness are applied, the moral elements are not
disregarded, but the quality of unselfishness revealed in disinterested labor
for the welfare of one's earthly fellows, particularly worthy beings in need and
in distress, that is the real measure of planetary greatness. 28:6.20
You will learn that you increase your burdens and decrease the likelihood of
success by taking yourself too seriously. Nothing can take precedence over the
work of your status sphere – this world or the next. Very important is the work
of preparation for the next higher sphere, but nothing equals the importance of
the work of the world in which you are actually living. But though the work is
important, the self is not. When you feel important, you lose energy to the wear
and tear of ego dignity so that there is little energy left to do the work.
Self-importance, not workimportance, exhausts immature creatures; it is the self
element that exhausts, not the effort to achieve. You can do important work if
you do not become self-important; you can do several things as easily as one if
you leave yourself out. 48:6.26
And when a human being does find God, there is experienced within the soul of
that being such an indescribable restlessness of triumph in discovery that he is
impelled to seek loving servicecontact with his less illuminated fellows, not to
disclose that he has found God, but rather to allow the overflow of the
welling-up of eternal goodness within his own soul to refresh and ennoble his
fellows. Real religion leads to increased social service. 102:3.4
"Always remember that God does not reward man for what he does but for what
he is; therefore should you extend help to your fellows without the thought of
rewards. Do good without thought of benefit to the self." 131:8.5
When Jesus heard this, he said: "Be willing, then, to take up your
responsibilities and follow me. Do your good deeds in secret; when you give
alms, let not the left hand know what the right hand does." 140:6.11
The Master fully realized that certain social results would appear in the
world as a consequence of the spread of the gospel of the kingdom; but he
intended that all such desirable social manifestations should appear as
unconscious and inevitable outgrowths, or natural fruits, of this inner personal
experience of individual believers, this purely spiritual fellowship and
communion with the divine spirit which indwells and activates all such
believers. 170:5.12
"To every one who has, more shall be given, and he shall have abundance; but
from him who has not, even that which he has shall be taken away. You cannot
stand still in the affairs of the eternal kingdom. My Father requires all his
children to grow in grace and in a knowledge of the truth. You who know these
truths must yield the increase of the fruits of the spirit and manifest a
growing devotion to the unselfish service of your fellow servants. And remember
that, inasmuch as you minister to one of the least of my brethren, you have done
this service to me." 176:3.5
Jesus taught that service to one's fellows is the highest concept of the
brotherhood of spirit believers. Salvation should be taken for granted by those
who believe in the fatherhood of God. The believer's chief concern should not be
the selfish desire for personal salvation but rather the unselfish urge to love
and, therefore, serve one's fellows even as Jesus loved and served mortal men.
188:4.9
In winning souls for the Master, it is not the first mile of compulsion,
duty, or convention that will transform man and his world, but rather the second
mile of free service and liberty-loving devotion that betokens the Jesusonian
reaching forth to grasp his brother in love and sweep him on under spiritual
guidance toward the higher and divine goal of mortal existence. Christianity
even now willingly goes the first mile, but mankind languishes and stumbles
along in moral darkness because there are so few genuine second-milers – so few
professed followers of Jesus who really live and love as he taught his disciples
to live and love and serve. The call to the adventure of building a new and
transformed human society by means of the spiritual rebirth of Jesus'
brotherhood of the kingdom should thrill all who believe in him as men have not
been stirred since the days when they walked about on earth as his companions in
the flesh. 195:10.5&6
Step 18: Sharing Our Spiritual Experience
We more willingly accept our
obligation and privilege to help share the good news and are striving to carry
this knowledge of God's love to our fellows. Now that we know who we are, we
must help others know the same. We who know live on a promontory of grace above
a choppy sea from which we can rescue the shipwrecked and the asleep. But
shouted-down directions are not enough: a thrown rope they will seldom accept,
for those drowning resist deliverance from familiar waters. First we must tell
them of their worth to the Father, for most lack not a vision of God but of
themselves as his beloved sons and daughters. Those resisting have laid down
tightly-fitted stones across the pathways to their souls which shed the water of
life like sidewalks do rain. The willing soul beneath senses but is shut off
from the life above. Beaten, the stones only seat more firmly, but one with the
patience to observe can usually find some loose cobble through which the spirit
may channel life to the parched soul beneath. The Father's love rains down from
above, and with but the slightest access to the deserts of the soul, God reveals
himself directly and sets onto the eternal adventure a reborn son or daughter.
It's not possible to completely shut out God's spirit, whose radiating glow
warms the bleakest wall. Neither hurt nor hate can entirely negate the action of
the indwelling spirit, for its powerful currents move on levels far deeper than
the emotional surfaces which occupy our everyday attention. But how do we help
those who only know to live as they always have, unaware of God's purposes? What
key opens the gate house to the mansion of their destiny? Can we be master
carvers and lure out the secret figure trapped within the gnarly bough? Not
knowing how flowed the sap to form its tortured bole, can we free each gesture
and swirl of hair when we carve in twilight and our knife is dull? Who will
guide our hands that we sculpt not where wood should rest? A voice deep within
knows the times and seasons of our brothers' moods, when and when not to speak.
Our spirit speaks with his, and if we share in love, his weary eyes may unmask
in remembered echo that place of which we speak. The language of our sharing is
less in words than in our daily walk with God. Love is most clearly seen in the
unspoken actions of daily life, proving that of which tongues only speak. Words
alone are unconvincing, for we show our love in what we do; true affection
surges forth in the way we live. The season will pass in which we can share with
our brother what we have learned. Our earthly times are short and are quickly
over, so we must act while we can, for each day is one less remaining. We cannot
speak with each brother who passes by, but when the inner spirit leads, we must
not hesitate. Then God can nurse the tender spark of passing interest into a
blaze fatal to the life of self, opening vistas of the heavenly worlds. Our
Father, we thank you that we may share in your work and pass along what you have
given us. We know but little of you, heavenly Father, but we know that you are
first in love, and that all good things are done by your spirit. We know that
you love all your children and long to commune with each of them as you do with
us. Guide us in helping bring your kingdom here to earth. Lead us to serve our
brothers in effective and lasting ways, that we fail you not. Open up pathways
of spirit, that what we say may be honest, loving, and helpful. We love you,
righteous Father. Be with us as we share you with those who know you less.
References:
Spiritual development depends, first, on the maintenance of a living
spiritual connection with true spiritual forces and, second, on the continuous
bearing of spiritual fruit: yielding the ministry to one's fellows of that which
has been received from one's spiritual benefactors. 100:2.1
"Let me emphatically state this eternal truth: If you, by truth
co-ordination, learn to exemplify in your lives this beautiful wholeness of
righteousness, your fellow men will then seek after you that they may gain what
you have so acquired. The measure wherewith truth seekers are drawn to you
represents the measure of your truth endowment, your righteousness. The extent
to which you have to go with your message to the people is, in a way, the
measure of your failure to live the whole or righteous life, the
truth-co-ordinated life." 155:1.5
"Are you fearful, soft, and ease-seeking? Are you afraid to trust your future
in the hands of the God of truth, whose sons you are? Are you distrustful of the
Father, whose children you are? Will you go back to the easy path of the
certainty and intellectual settledness of the religion of traditional authority,
or will you gird yourselves to go forward with me into that uncertain and
troublous future of proclaiming the new truths of the religion of the spirit,
the kingdom of heaven in the hearts of men?" 155:5.13
"If any man would come after me, let him disregard himself, take up his
responsibilities daily, and follow me. For whosoever would save his life
selfishly, shall lose it, but whosoever loses his life for my sake and the
gospel's, shall save it. What does it profit a man to gain the whole world and
lose his own soul? What would a man give in exchange for eternal life? Be not
ashamed of me and my words in this sinful and hypocritical generation, even as I
will not be ashamed to acknowledge you when in glory I appear before my Father
in the presence of all the celestial hosts." 158:7.5
Remember that you are commissioned to preach this gospel of the kingdom – the
supreme desire to do the Father's will coupled with the supreme joy of the faith
realization of sonship with God – and you must not allow anything to
divert your devotion to this one duty. Let all mankind benefit from the overflow
of your loving spiritual ministry, enlightening intellectual communion, and
uplifting social service; but none of these humanitarian labors, nor all of
them, should be permitted to take the place of proclaiming the gospel. These
mighty ministrations are the social by-products of the still more mighty and
sublime ministrations and transformations wrought in the heart of the kingdom
believer by the living Spirit of Truth and by the personal realization that the
faith of a spirit-born man confers the assurance of living fellowship with the
eternal God. 178:1.11
You are not to be passive mystics or colorless ascetics; you should not
become dreamers and drifters, supinely trusting in a fictitious Providence to
provide even the necessities of life. You are indeed to be gentle in your
dealings with erring mortals, patient in your intercourse with ignorant men, and
forbearing under provocation; but you are also to be valiant in defense of
righteousness, mighty in the promulgation of truth, and aggressive in the
preaching of this gospel of the kingdom, even to the ends of the earth. 178:1.14
Do not forget that you are commissioned to go forth preaching only the good
news. You are not to attack the old ways; you are skillfully to put the leaven
of new truth in the midst of the old beliefs. Let the Spirit of Truth do his own
work. Let controversy come only when they who despise the truth force it upon
you. But when the willful unbeliever attacks you, do not hesitate to stand in
vigorous defense of the truth which has saved and sanctified you. 178:1.16
"Go, then, into all the world proclaiming this gospel of the fatherhood of
God and the brotherhood of men to all nations and races and ever be wise in your
choice of methods for presenting the good news to the different races and tribes
of mankind. Freely you have received this gospel of the kingdom, and you will
freely give the good news to all nations. Fear not the resistance of evil, for I
am with you always, even to the end of the ages. And my peace I leave with you."
191:4.4
To Philip he said, "Philip, do you obey me?" Philip answered, "Yes, Lord, I
will obey you even with my life." Then said Jesus: "If you would obey me, go
then into the lands of the gentiles and proclaim this gospel. The prophets have
told you that to obey is better than to sacrifice. By faith have you become a
God-knowing kingdom son. There is but one law to obey – that is the command to
go forth proclaiming the gospel of the kingdom. Cease to fear men; be unafraid
to preach the good news of eternal life to your fellows who languish in darkness
and hunger for the light of truth." 192:2.11
Step 19: Loving Each Other
We increasingly value others as beloved sons and
daughters of God and strive to love each of them as does our Father in heaven.
Our hearts long to love our fellows, and this yearning cannot be quenched, for
the soul of hungry man was made to love and is satisfied with nothing less. The
roads of love often loop and sometimes fail, but the urge is irrepressible,
unstoppable even by vilest hate or cruelest circumstance. Unexplainable,
unconcerned with place, position, status, or merit, love looks upward, existing
in a state of becoming. How to love is the ages' question, the grail of
prophets' search: how to love as parents love their children, how to love others
as our Father loves us. How do we begin to love, and how can we make love last?
It begins in mystery, from an unknown place deep within, for unknown reasons. We
understand not why we love, only that we do, for love's ether resists analysis
by itself or others. True love calculates no cost, effort, or reward, but simply
exists in a spirit of defenseless kindness. How can we capture such a spirit in
the larger world, toward the unlovely, the unkempt, the cruel, and the
unfaithful? Can we look at our brothers and sisters through our Father's eyes
and see what he sees, without judging? We are known by who and what we love.
Some love houses and goods, some appearances, and some even love deceit as a way
of life, delighting to prove themselves more clever than the gullible. Some love
money, power, or fame; others love humbler things, and it is to them our Master
promised the kingdom. Our loves leave a path behind us, contrails in the sky or
muddy tracks across the floor. The garments of love are made from the Father's
cloth. We draw the stuff of love from his storehouse and fashion it to clothe
the naked. Acting out love precipitates true love; we love by loving. Acting as
if we love ignites love itself, for the more loving we are toward others, the
more that love reflects back, amplified in the mutual experience, creating in
its object the compulsion to reciprocate. The universes were born in love, not
by fire alone. Love is the inner urge of life, and when we love, that mighty
force resonates with universal power from on high, promising new life and a
renewed self. By its light we see. The cloud of unknowing parts, and golden rays
bathe the giver and receiver of love as the Lord of the universe reveals himself
and finds expression. The absence of love is indifference or hate, and apart
from love, all relationships are meaningless, futile, and deceptive. But in the
Father's love we are complete, our powers are restored, ancient swamps are
drained, shrouds are lifted, and we see into the heart of God at the moment of
creation. Those who doubt the power of love know not the joy of life. Those who
place things above love are prisoners of illusion, for no possession or position
is worth the loss of love, which endures when the heaps of things we gather rust
or go to others. Love outlasts things and is sweeter. Love seines out the good
in experience, enduring when all else fails. Love soothes our fevered foreheads
and stays the executioner's hand. Love alone makes our lives worthwhile and God
more real, not solitary prayers by cloister walls. Love bridges the chasm
between what we are and what we can become; it gives us all we have and are, and
without it we are empty, trapped in a debtor's prison of negativity and despair.
References:
These high levels of human living are attained in the supreme love of God and
in the unselfish love of man. If you love your fellow men, you must have
discovered their values. Jesus loved men so much because he placed such a high
value upon them. You can best discover values in your associates by discovering
their motivation. If someone irritates you, causes feelings of resentment, you
should sympathetically seek to discern his viewpoint, his reasons for such
objectionable conduct. If once you understand your neighbor, you will become
tolerant, and this tolerance will grow into friendship and ripen into love.
100:4.4
If you could only fathom the motives of your associates, how much better you
would understand them. If you could only know your fellows, you would eventually
fall in love with them. You cannot truly love your fellows by a mere act of the
will. Love is only born of thoroughgoing understanding of your neighbor's
motives and sentiments. It is not so important to love all men today as it is
that each day you learn to love one more human being. If each day or each week
you achieve an understanding of one more of your fellows, and if this is the
limit of your ability, then you are certainly socializing and truly
spiritualizing your personality. Love is infectious, and when human devotion is
intelligent and wise, love is more catching than hate. But only genuine and
unselfish love is truly contagious. If each mortal could only become a focus of
dynamic affection, this benign virus of love would soon pervade the sentimental
emotion-stream of humanity to such an extent that all civilization would be
encompassed by love, and that would be the realization of the brotherhood of
man. 100:4.5&6
In the true meaning of the word, love connotes mutual regard of whole
personalities, whether human or divine or human and divine. . . . Everything
nonspiritual in human experience, excepting personality, is a means to an end.
Every true relationship of mortal man with other persons – human or divine –
is an end in itself. 112:2.3&4
Jesus naturally loved his people; he loved his family, and this natural
affection had been tremendously augmented by his extraordinary devotion to them.
The more fully we bestow ourselves upon our fellows, the more we come to love
them; and since Jesus had given himself so fully to his family, he loved them
with a great and fervent affection. 129:0.2
The disciples early learned that the Master had a profound respect and
sympathetic regard for every human being he met, and they were tremendously
impressed by this uniform and unvarying consideration which he so consistently
gave to all sorts of men, women, and children. He would pause in the midst of a
profound discourse that he might go out in the road to speak good cheer to a
passing woman laden with her burden of body and soul. He would interrupt a
serious conference with his apostles to fraternize with an intruding child.
Nothing ever seemed so important to Jesus as the individual human who chanced to
be in his immediate presence. 138:8.9
From the Sermon on the Mount to the discourse of the Last Supper, Jesus
taught his followers to manifest fatherly love rather than brotherly love.
Brotherly love would love your neighbor as you love yourself, and that would be
adequate fulfillment of the "golden rule." But fatherly affection would require
that you should love your fellow mortals as Jesus loves you. 140:5.1
"You well know the commandment which directs that you love one another; that
you love your neighbor even as yourself. But I am not wholly satisfied with even
that sincere devotion on the part of my children. I would have you perform still
greater acts of love in the kingdom of the believing brotherhood. And so I give
you this new commandment: That you love one another even as I have loved you.
And by this will all men know that you are my disciples if you thus love one
another." 180:1.1
In the kingdom of the believing brotherhood of God-knowing truth lovers, this
golden rule takes on living qualities of spiritual realization on those higher
levels of interpretation which cause the mortal sons of God to view this
injunction of the Master as requiring them so to relate themselves to their
fellows that they will receive the highest possible good as a result of the
believer's contact with them. This is the essence of true religion: that you
love your neighbor as yourself. 180:5.7
Step 20: Loving Jesus
We are coming to know and love Jesus, and friendship
with him is giving enthusiasm and purpose to our lives. They say two thousand
years ago was born a child, announced by angels, to modest Jews who made their
home in Nazareth. They say his father died while he was yet a youth, and with
his hands he worked to support his father's family along the hills and shores of
Galilee. Then he traveled for a time, learning of the Roman world while sharing
the love of God, spreading good cheer to hundreds in his path. They say he was
tested in all the ways of life and in partnership with God overcame life's
temptations, difficulties, and crises with faith and steadfast devotion.
Unsheltered from life's agonies, he was faithful to the greater vision of God's
purpose he had known before the worlds began. When his time had come, they say
he chose apostles who left their homes and families to share his life, to walk
the dusty roads of Palestine and call their people to God's service. They say
that when he looked upon a man, he saw into his very soul, and that person
thought he glimpsed the heart of God. They say he was a man among men; rugged
Galilean fishermen called him Master. They say he healed the sick, made the
blind to see, forgave sin, and raised the dead; that he offered abundant springs
of living water, strength for the weak, comfort for the brokenhearted,
encouragement for the downcast, understanding for babes, something for all who
knew they lacked. The healing rays of God's love he focused on every secret
place in the hearts of men and made whole those whose lives were torn. They say
the common people heard him gladly and craved his presence – friends
lowered a paralytic through a roof just to be near him, and a prostitute washed
his feet with her tears. He said there was none good but God, and told those
healed their faith had made them whole. He taught simple friendship with God and
service of man, about the heavenly kingdom, righteousness, the peace of God, and
eternal life. The high priests saw of course the dangers in his self-forgetful
teaching, that man could relate directly with God in heaven; if so, what need
for all their priests and ritual? Failing to still his fearless voice, they
forced the weakling Roman governor to slay one who, having saved others, refused
to save himself. They say that on the third day the great stone wheel which
blocked his sepulcher rolled open and he arose and for forty days appeared to
those who shared his love. On Pentecost they say he rose to heaven, but sent his
spirit to be with those who loved the truth; it filled their souls with power
and made all things new. His followers could not be cowed and spread the story
of his life throughout the Roman world, honored to die for the one they called
the Christ. This man, about whom more books have been written than any other,
existed before the worlds began in unimaginable majesty and came to earth to
reveal his Father's love. His life became the mystery of man in God and God in
man, one forever. Once we truly know him our lives change, for in him reposes
what we can be if we will but live the life of faith. The secret of our
spiritual lives, he is our faith's fulcrum, embodying all of God we can know.
Beyond him, anything we think we know is mere abstraction. We are branches of
his true vine and accomplish nothing apart from him. He knows the ways we take
and why. He gives us his own life, entering our minds to make them clean and
strong. Help us to love you, gracious Lord. Help us to understand your words of
goodness and life. Live anew in us, for we know that every good thing comes
through you, and without you we are powerless. When our lives are convoluted and
we have no idea for what to pray, translate our heartfelt desires and bring your
peace and wisdom to our confused minds. We depend on you to make our lives
worthwhile, a credit to your name. Root out every shadow of evil and darkness;
break us, if need be, to bring us fully into your kingdom's service. We crave
your daily companionship and approval; we crave to bask in the brightness of
your smile. You promised to prepare a place above for those who love to do your
will; prepare one here as well, that your presence overflow in our hearts and
lives.
References:
To our universe and all its inhabited worlds the Sovereign Son is, to all
practical intents and purposes, God. 33:1.4
Though the Spirit of Truth is poured out upon all flesh, this spirit of the
Son is almost wholly limited in function and power by man's personal reception
of that which constitutes the sum and substance of the mission of the bestowal
Son. 34:5.5
Even on Urantia, these seraphim teach the everlasting truth: If your own mind
does not serve you well, you can exchange it for the mind of Jesus of Nazareth,
who always serves you well. 48:6.15
Jesus was the perfectly unified human personality. And today, as in Galilee,
he continues to unify mortal experience and to coordinate human endeavors. He
unifies life, ennobles character, and simplifies experience. He enters the human
mind to elevate, transform, and transfigure it. It is literally true: "If any
man has Christ Jesus within him, he is a new creature; old things are passing
away; behold, all things are becoming new." 100:7.18
Jesus was and is the new and living way whereby man can come into the divine
inheritance which the Father has decreed shall be his for but the asking.
101:6.10
Jesus made it plain that he had come to establish personal and eternal
relations with men which should forever take precedence over all other human
relationships. 141:7.5
On both friends and foes he exercised a strong and peculiarly fascinating
influence. Multitudes would follow him for weeks, just to hear his gracious
words and behold his simple life. Devoted men and women loved Jesus with a
well-nigh superhuman affection. And the better they knew him the more they loved
him. And all this is still true; even today and in all future ages, the more man
comes to know this God-man, the more he will love and follow after him. 149:2.14
These gentiles were not afraid of Jesus; they dared to accept his message.
All down through the ages men have not been unable to comprehend Jesus; they
have been afraid to. 156:2.4
You learn about God from Jesus by observing the divinity of his life, not by
depending on his teachings. From the life of the Master you may each assimilate
that concept of God which represents the measure of your capacity to perceive
realities spiritual and divine, truths real and eternal. The finite can never
hope to comprehend the Infinite except as the Infinite was focalized in the
time-space personality of the finite experience of the human life of Jesus of
Nazareth. Jesus well knew that God can be known only by the realities of
experience; never can he be understood by the mere teaching of the mind. Jesus
taught his apostles that, while they never could fully understand God, they
could most certainly know him, even as they had known the Son of Man. You can
know God, not by understanding what Jesus said, but by knowing what Jesus was.
Jesus was a revelation of God. 169:4.3&4
Jesus is the spiritual lens in human likeness which makes visible to the
material creature Him who is invisible. He is your elder brother who, in the
flesh, makes known to you a Being of infinite attributes whom not even the
celestial hosts can presume fully to understand. 169:4.13
"You must abide in me, and I in you; the branch will die if it is separated
from the vine. As the branch cannot bear fruit except it abides in the vine, so
neither can you yield the fruits of loving service except you abide in me.
Remember: I am the real vine, and you are the living branches. He who lives in
me, and I in him, will bear much fruit of the spirit and experience the supreme
joy of yielding this spiritual harvest. If you will maintain this living
spiritual connection with me, you will bear abundant fruit. If you abide in me
and my words live in you, you will be able to commune freely with me, and then
can my living spirit so infuse you that you may ask whatsoever my spirit wills
and do all this with the assurance that the Father will grant us our petition."
180:2.1
Christianity has indeed done a great service for this world, but what is now
most needed is Jesus. The world needs to see Jesus living again on earth in the
experience of spirit-born mortals who effectively reveal the Master to all men.
It is futile to talk about a revival of primitive Christianity; you must go
forward from where you find yourselves. Modern culture must become spiritually
baptized with a new revelation of Jesus' life and illuminated with a new
understanding of his gospel of eternal salvation. And when Jesus becomes thus
lifted up, he will draw all men to himself. Jesus' disciples should be more than
conquerors, even overflowing sources of inspiration and enhanced living to all
men. 195:10.1
To "follow Jesus" means to personally share his religious faith and to enter
into the spirit of the Master's life of unselfish service for man. One of the
most important things in human living is to find out what Jesus believed, to
discover his ideals, and to strive for the achievement of his exalted life
purpose. Of all human knowledge, that which is of greatest value is to know the
religious life of Jesus and how he lived it. 196:1.3
Step 21: Loving God
We are growing in our knowledge, love, and worship of the
heavenly Father, the source of that infinite love which created and sustains us.
Mankind roils as a choppy sea, delighting in its frailties; the earth groans
beneath baroque invention, distressed by abuse. Fissures yawn to swallow us up,
thieves eye hungrily our meager treasure, and when we think of life's
approaching end, we quiver. But heavenly Father, you know our names and all our
ways. Take us fully into your kingdom and give us the peace our hearts crave.
Help us dip our battered spoons into the ocean of your love, to disappear into
your infinity, that we emerge reconstructed. We love you, Father, and long to
love you more. You are the beginning and the end; you control the comings and
goings of all things. Give us your peace, heavenly Father, that we may feel
secure as we strive to do your will in the turmoil of life. Help us follow you
in happy times as we know we must in the blast of the storm. Help us thank you
in joy with no less conviction than we plead to you in despair. Our souls'
desires are concealed in you; clarify our weak and disorderly minds. Come in
power to the children of your spirit quest! The heavens reveal your sovereign
power, and your spirit descends to inspire all who seek. With eyes of spirit we
perceive beauty in the ordinary, flecks of gold in river silt. We see the
excellence of your plan and the wisdom of your calling. Your peace rests upon
us, and we are learning your will. The bands which held us back are melting; the
sun rises to warm the mountain face. That which trapped us has lost its power,
and we stand free to live the destiny you have laid out for us. We could not
choose another way, dear Father, because you have shown us truth in all of its
beauty and eternal goodness. We joy in the commonplace, knowing it was fashioned
by your hands; we see beyond disharmony and disease to meadows of rest and
fulfillment. We see you in the shadows, behind the door, and ride with your love
upon the wind. We will follow you forever and beyond, until evil and sin
collapse into nothingness. You comfort our hearts, share our joys, and fight
with us in every forward struggle. You are the only true God; you know us well
and keep us safe. Loving the Creator is the beginning of life itself. In loving
God we come to know him, and ourselves as his sons and daughters. Worshipping
our Maker lifts us from earth's tribulations to the shores of Paradise – in
spirit, now; in reality, later. In worshipping God we join our hungry hearts to
the infinite Source of all things, and in that communion both find fulfillment.
Our Father is gracious and majestic, infinitely wise, powerful, and all-knowing.
He sees behind the curtain and knows the end from the beginning. What we see of
life is the merest prelude, a glimpsed preview of our eternal careers, which, as
experiences accumulate, fill in from seeming randomness to a crystal's matrix
precision. God's eternal plan includes a specific place for each of us, and we
find our highest usefulness and joy in fulfilling the purposes for us set out
before the world began. In the fullness of time, the joint witness of all who
survive these initial lives on the whirling spheres of space will express the
Supreme whole of God's evolutionary plan. We love God not only because of his
nature, but because he cared enough to create and sustain us. He answers our
prayers, looks after us in hardship, and provides us worlds on which to live
after our time on earth is over. God reassures our doubting human hearts as the
currents of his love nourish our spirits. He shelters us from the terrors of the
night and encourages us when our shoulders droop. He knows our ways and names
and is the perfect Father. His divine plan provides for our every present need
as well as every possibility for the future, for in him we live, move, and have
our being. The Lord of lights is a moving force, a divine flame who sweeps
before him all who stand stiff-legged, but who gathers up the meek and the
humble. We sleep cradled in his love, and imbued with power from on high go
forth to do his gracious bidding. His image inspires our minds as we taste the
purpose of all our striving. Reborn, by day we see the face of God in every
flower, and at night we rest in the knowledge of his affection. When all else
earthly fails, we follow his path across the trackless desert dunes. His house
is near, and we have the key. The Eternal's name is written on our hearts,
lifted by a thought, and powerful to save. Help us hear your words and follow
your spirit, our Father. Show us the mysteries of life that we may fathom the
depths of your love. Give us more of your very own self, and carry us along when
the way is dark. We worship you past the barriers of time and space, and in your
presence taste Paradise while yet on earth. We praise you for saving us from all
that has held us back. You are the Source of life and laughter, of all things
good, beautiful and true, and we will serve you to the end, and beyond.
References:
The enlightened worlds all recognize and worship the Universal Father, the
eternal maker and infinite upholder of all creation. The will creatures of
universe upon universe have embarked upon the long, long Paradise journey, the
fascinating struggle of the eternal adventure of attaining God the Father. The
transcendent goal of the children of time is to find the eternal God, to
comprehend the divine nature, to recognize the Universal Father. God-knowing
creatures have only one supreme ambition, just one consuming desire, and that is
to become, as they are in their spheres, like him as he is in his Paradise
perfection of personality and in his universal sphere of righteous supremacy.
From the Universal Father who inhabits eternity there has gone forth the supreme
mandate, "Be you perfect, even as I am perfect." In love and mercy the
messengers of Paradise have carried this divine exhortation down through the
ages and out through the universes, even to such lowly animal-origin creatures
as the human races of Urantia. 1:0.3
The Universal Father never imposes any form of arbitrary recognition, formal
worship, or slavish service upon the intelligent will creatures of the
universes. The evolutionary inhabitants of the worlds of time and space must of
themselves – in their own hearts – recognize, love, and voluntarily
worship him. The Creator refuses to coerce or compel the submission of the
spiritual free wills of his material creatures. The affectionate dedication of
the human will to the doing of the Father's will is man's choicest gift to God;
in fact, such a consecration of creature will constitutes man's only possible
gift of true value to the Paradise Father. In God, man lives, moves, and has his
being; there is nothing which man can give to God except this choosing to abide
by the Father's will, and such decisions, effected by the intelligent will
creatures of the universes, constitute the reality of that true worship which is
so satisfying to the love-dominated nature of the Creator Father. 1:1.2
Notwithstanding that God is an eternal power, a majestic presence, a
transcendent ideal, and a glorious spirit, though he is all these and infinitely
more, nonetheless, he is truly and everlastingly a perfect Creator personality,
a person who can "know and be known," who can "love and be loved," and one who
can befriend us; while you can be known, as other humans have been known, as the
friend of God. 1:5.8
After all, the greatest evidence of the goodness of God and the supreme
reason for loving him is the indwelling gift of the Father – the Adjuster
who so patiently awaits the hour when you both shall be eternally made one.
Though you cannot find God by searching, if you will submit to the leading of
the indwelling spirit, you will be unerringly guided, step by step, life by
life, through universe upon universe, and age by age, until you finally stand in
the presence of the Paradise personality of the Universal Father. 2:5.5
Our Father is not in hiding; he is not in arbitrary seclusion. He has
mobilized the resources of divine wisdom in a never-ending effort to reveal
himself to the children of his universal domains. There is an infinite grandeur
and an inexpressible generosity connected with the majesty of his love which
causes him to yearn for the association of every created being who can
comprehend, love, or approach him; and it is, therefore, the limitations
inherent in you, inseparable from your finite personality and material
existence, that determine the time and place and circumstances in which you may
achieve the goal of the journey of mortal ascension and stand in the presence of
the Father at the center of all things. 5:1.2
The Father desires all his creatures to be in personal communion with him. He
has on Paradise a place to receive all those whose survival status and spiritual
nature make possible such attainment. Therefore settle in your philosophy now
and forever: To each of you and to all of us, God is approachable, the Father is
attainable, the way is open; the forces of divine love and the ways and means of
divine administration are all interlocked in an effort to facilitate the
advancement of every worthy intelligence of every universe to the Paradise
presence of the Universal Father. 5:1.8
There is absolutely no self-request or other element of personal interest in
true worship; we simply worship God for what we comprehend him to be. Worship
asks nothing and expects nothing for the worshiper. We do not worship the Father
because of anything we may derive from such veneration; we render such devotion
and engage in such worship as a natural and spontaneous reaction to the
recognition of the Father's matchless personality and because of his lovable
nature and adorable attributes. 5:3.3
And all these things are a part of the Universal Father. The Father is living
love, and this life of the Father is in his Sons. And the spirit of the Father
is in his Sons' sons – mortal men. When all is said and done, the Father idea is
still the highest human concept of God. 196:3.32
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