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The
Story of Everything
An
abridged edition of The Urantia Book
Paper
90: Shaminism--Medicine Men and Priests
As rituals
became increasingly complex, people came to believe that only medicine
men and shamans could communicate with the spirit world, and religion
became a second-hand experience. Since abnormal human behavior was
attributed to spirit possession, qualification for religious leadership
included such things as epilepsy, hysteria, and paranoia. Some shamans
were deliberate frauds, but many truly believed that they were possessed
by spirits.
Shamans helped
people control the hazards of their lives. They also specialized in
rainmaking, healing, and crime detection. Shamans were great believers
in chance as a revelatory tool. They frequently cast lots to arrive
at decisions; evidence of this practice survives into modern times
in children's rhymes. Other tools of a shaman's trade were astrology,
interpretation of dreams, communicating with the dead, and fortune-telling.
Shamans were
the original aristocracy, exempt from all tribal restrictions. They
often functioned as doctors and surgeons. Injuries and illnesses that
could not be attributed to obvious causes were thought to be caused
by ghosts, magic, or a violation of the taboos. People greatly feared
the sick, believing that ghosts had become displeased with the sufferer.
Remedies for illness included chanting, howling, laying on of hands,
breathing on the patient, massage, bloodletting, vapor baths, drumming,
fasting, dieting, and purging.
Superstitious
fears of the unknown and dread of the unseen were scaffolding for
human concepts of God. Shamans eventually evolved into modern‑day
priests. Priests have done much to delay scientific development, but
have also contributed to the stabilization of civilization and have
sometimes been invaluable in pointing the way to higher realities.
Read the complete
unabridged version of Paper 90
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