A Time for Change?

Ken Glasziou, Australia

     The stimulus that prompted this article came from some remarks in a letter front Matthew Block who lead just attended the World Parliament of Religions at Chicago Matthew said "I'm all for secondary works based on tile teachings (of The Urantia Book) and works promoting the book itself we Must diversify, build bridges to many different communities and mind-sets and content ourselves with finding a niche amongst many other movements and groups interested in world progress and spiritual enlightenment. I no longer see the book as necessarily having to supersede all other religions and philosophies. Nor do I see it as the panacea that will change the world after all other philosophies and religions have been tried and found wanting. In my heart I'm convinced that the book is far better and greater than anything else on the planet but finally I'm off my high horse.

    After participating at The Urantia Book booth (in the midst of 100-odd other booths representing other religions movements and service organizations) I realized that what we in
the Urantia movement were really lacking was a sense of footing on the current scene we were always trying to be above everything inhabiting a nebulous no-zone waiting for some imaginary bell to signal that tile world was finally ready for us it was just a great feeling at The Parliament to find ourselves being accepted and welcomed as one of many "

    Is it true that The Urantia Book students tend to set ourselves and our revelation in a zone apart from and above the rest of humanity while we await the signal that they are ready to hear us?

    We are not supposed to indulge ourselves in much introspection but maybe a little will do no harm. I think most of us have at one time or another suffered from the "chosen people" syndrome and made ourselves obnoxious in the same way as the churchgoing community is seen by many outsiders to be obnoxious. I know this happens so let us try to find the reasons. Could it be that we offend by elevating the revelatory status of The Urantia Book to a level never intended by the revelators? Have we unintentionally become close to being as fundamentalist about our revelation as Christian or Islamic fundamentalists are about their holy books?

    Perhaps one of the reasons for the extremely slow progress of our movement is that we have never taken the trouble to understand or explain in just what way The Urantia Book is a "revelation"--and in failing to do so we have deprived multitudes of both Christians and non-Christian from the saving truth contained therein. While we may believe that our
book contains the highest truth available on our planet, have we fallen into the trap of assuming, perhaps unconsciously that our book is also its sole source of truth?

    How many of us are aware that, excepting for its description of the hierarchy of supernatural beings, a great deal of the textual material of The Urantia Book already exists somewhere in the written records of mankind?

       One of the reasons for our problem is the connotation of divine origin that is automatically attributed to the word "revelation." My Oxford dictionary definition is: "Knowledge disclosed to man by divine or supernatural agency; revealing of some fact"--thereby acknowledging that the word can be used in at least two distinct ways. The Urantia Book states: "Truth is always a revelation: autorevelation when it emerges as a result of the work of the indwelling, Adjuster; epochal revelation when it is presented by the function of some other celestial agency, group, or personality." (1109)

   The book has a revealing statement about its use of tile word, truth. "Nothing which human nature has touched can be regarded as infallible. Through the mind of man divine truth may indeed shine forth, but always of relative purity and partial divinity. The creature may crave infallibility, but only the Creators possess it " (1768)

    To continue our examination of the use of the word "revelation" in The Urantia Book, we need to take note of two further snippets of information:

    First, it is a fact that no author listed in the Table of Contents for the Urantia Book was of "Creator" status (who are the only beings possessing infallibility).

    Second, the statement at the conclusion of the "Foreword" (17) tells us that more than one thousand of the highest human concepts have been collated in producing, the first part of the book and, for Part 4, the midwayer responsible for preparing the narrative of the life and teachings of Jesus utilized thought gems and superior concepts assembled from "more than two thousand human beings who have lived on earth from the days of Jesus down to the time of the inditing of these revelations, more correctly restatements
" Other sources were used only when the midwayer could testify that he had failed to find the required conceptual expression in purely human sources. (l 343) I leave it to the reader to figure out the significance of  "...revelations, more correctly restatements."

    When introducing, The Urantia Book to Christians we need to be aware that many believe that
all revelation ceased with the Book of Revelations. The reason for this is to be found in that book's concluding verses which threaten anyone adding or taking away from the book with plagues, and other terrible consequences. It is not widely known that this kind of threat was once very common, a forerunner of what we now know as copyright. Perhaps because

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