P1105:5, 101:2.1
The fact of religion consists wholly in the religious experience of rational
and average human beings. And this is the only sense in which religion can
ever be regarded as scientific or even psychological. The proof that revelation
is revelation is this same fact of human experience: the fact that revelation
does synthesize the apparently divergent sciences of nature and the theology
of religion into a consistent and logical universe philosophy, a co-ordinated
and unbroken explanation of both science and religion, thus creating a harmony
of mind and satisfaction of spirit which answers in human experience those
questionings of the mortal mind which craves to know how the Infinite
works out his will and plans in matter, with minds, and on spirit.
P1106:1, 101:2.2
Reason is the method of science; faith is the method of religion; logic is
the attempted technique of philosophy. Revelation compensates for the absence
of the morontia viewpoint by providing a technique for achieving unity in
the comprehension of the reality and relationships of matter and spirit by
the mediation of mind. And true revelation never renders science unnatural,
religion unreasonable, or philosophy illogical.
P1106:2, 101:2.3
Reason, through the study of science, may lead back through nature to a First
Cause, but it requires religious faith to transform the First Cause of science
into a God of salvation; and revelation is further required for the validation
of such a faith, such spiritual insight.
P1106:3, 101:2.4
There are two basic reasons for believing in a God who fosters human survival:
P1106:8, 101:2.7
The contemplation of nature can only reveal a God of nature, a God of motion.
Nature exhibits only matter, motion, and animation -- life. Matter plus energy,
under certain conditions, is manifested in living forms, but while natural
life is thus relatively continuous as a phenomenon, it is wholly transient
as to
individualities. Nature does not afford ground for logical belief in
human-personality survival. The religious man who finds God in nature has
already and first found this same personal God in his own soul.
P1106:9, 101:2.8
Faith reveals God in the soul. Revelation, the substitute for morontia insight
on an evolutionary world, enables man to see the same God in nature that faith
exhibits in his soul. Thus does revelation successfully bridge the gulf between
the material and the spiritual, even between the creature and the Creator,
between man and God.
P1107:1, 101:2.9
The contemplation of nature does logically point in the direction of intelligent
guidance, even living supervision, but it does not in any satisfactory manner
reveal a personal God. On the other hand, nature discloses nothing which would
preclude the universe from being looked upon as the handiwork of the God of
religion. God cannot be found through nature alone, but man having otherwise
found him, the study of nature becomes wholly consistent with a higher and
more spiritual interpretation of the universe.
P1107:2, 101:2.10
Revelation as an epochal phenomenon is periodic; as a personal human experience
it is continuous. Divinity functions in mortal personality as the Adjuster
gift of the Father, as the Spirit of Truth of the Son, and as the Holy Spirit
of the Universe Spirit, while these three supermortal endowments are unified
in human experiential evolution as the ministry of the Supreme.
P1107:3, 101:2.11
True religion is an insight into reality, the
faith-child of the moral consciousness,
and not a mere intellectual assent to any body of dogmatic doctrines. True
religion consists in the experience that "the Spirit itself bears witness
with our spirit that we are the children of God." Religion consists not in
theologic propositions but in spiritual insight and the sublimity of the soul's
trust.
P1107:4, 101:2.12
Your deepest nature -- the divine Adjuster -- creates within you a hunger
and thirst for righteousness, a certain craving for divine perfection. Religion
is the faith act of the recognition of this inner urge to divine attainment;
and thus is brought about that soul trust and assurance of which you become
conscious as the way of salvation, the technique of the survival of personality
and all those values which you have come to look upon as being true and good.
P1107:5, 101:2.13
The realization of religion never has been, and never will be, dependent on
great learning or clever logic. It is spiritual insight, and that is just
the reason why some of the world's greatest religious teachers, even the prophets,
have sometimes possessed so little of the wisdom of the world. Religious faith
is available alike to the learned and the unlearned.
P1107:6, 101:2.14
Religion must ever be its own critic and judge; it can never be observed,
much less understood, from the outside. Your only assurance of a personal
God consists in your own insight as to your belief in, and experience with,
things spiritual. To all of your fellows who have had a similar experience,
no argument about the personality or reality of God is necessary, while to
all other men who are not thus sure of God no possible argument could ever
be truly convincing.
P1107:7, 101:2.15
Psychology may indeed attempt to study the phenomena of religious reactions
to the social environment, but never can it hope to penetrate to the real
and inner motives and workings of religion. Only theology, the province of
faith and the technique of revelation, can afford any sort of intelligent
account of the nature and content of religious experience.
A service of
The Urantia Book Fellowship
Serving the Readership since 1955