P1043:7, 95:2.1
The original Melchizedek teachings really took their deepest root in Egypt,
from where they subsequently spread to Europe. The evolutionary religion of
the Nile valley was periodically augmented by the arrival of superior strains
of Nodite, Adamite, and later Andite peoples of the Euphrates valley. From
time to time, many of the Egyptian civil administrators were Sumerians. As
India in these days harbored the highest mixture of the world races, so Egypt
fostered the most thoroughly blended type of religious philosophy to be found
on Urantia, and from the Nile valley it spread to many parts of the world.
The Jews received much of their idea of the creation of the world from the
Babylonians, but they derived the concept of divine Providence from the Egyptians.
P1044:1, 95:2.2
It was political and moral, rather than philosophic or religious, tendencies
that rendered Egypt more favorable to the Salem teaching than Mesopotamia.
Each tribal leader in Egypt, after fighting his way to the throne, sought
to perpetuate his dynasty by proclaiming his tribal god the original deity
and creator of all other gods. In this way the Egyptians gradually got used
to the idea of a supergod, a steppingstone to the later doctrine of a universal
creator Deity. The idea of monotheism wavered back and forth in Egypt for
many centuries, the belief in one God always gaining ground but never quite
dominating the evolving concepts of polytheism.
P1044:2, 95:2.3
For ages the Egyptian peoples had been given to the worship of nature gods;
more particularly did each of the twoscore separate tribes have a special
group god, one worshiping the bull, another the lion, a third the ram, and
so on. Still earlier they had been totem tribes, very much like the Amerinds.
P1044:3, 95:2.4
In time the Egyptians observed that dead bodies placed in
brickless graves
were preserved -- embalmed -- by the action of the
soda-impregnated sand,
while those buried in brick vaults
decayed. These observations led to those
experiments which resulted in the later practice of embalming the dead. The
Egyptians believed that preservation of the body facilitated one's passage
through the future life. That the individual might properly be identified
in the distant future after the decay of the body, they placed a burial statue
in the tomb along with the corpse,
carving a likeness on the coffin. The making
of these burial statues led to great improvement in Egyptian art.
P1044:4, 95:2.5
For centuries the Egyptians placed their faith in tombs as the safeguard of
the body and of consequent pleasurable survival after death. The later evolution
of magical practices, while burdensome to life from the cradle to the grave,
most effectually delivered them from the religion of the tombs. The priests
would inscribe the
coffins with charm texts which were believed to be protection
against a "man's having his heart taken away from him in the nether world."
Presently a diverse assortment of these magical texts was collected and preserved
as The Book of the Dead. But in the Nile valley magical ritual early became
involved with the realms of conscience and character to a degree not often
attained by the rituals of those days. And subsequently these ethical and
moral ideals, rather than elaborate tombs, were depended upon for salvation.
P1044:5, 95:2.6
The superstitions of these times are well illustrated by the general belief
in the efficacy of spittle as a healing agent, an idea which had its origin
in Egypt and spread therefrom to Arabia and Mesopotamia. In the
legendary
battle of
Horus with Set the young god lost his eye, but after Set was vanquished,
this eye was restored by the wise god
Thoth, who spat upon the wound and healed
it.
P1044:6, 95:2.7
The Egyptians long believed that the stars
twinkling in the night sky represented
the survival of the souls of the worthy dead; other survivors they thought
were absorbed into the sun. During a certain period, solar veneration became
a species of ancestor worship. The
sloping entrance passage of the great pyramid
pointed directly toward the Pole Star so that the soul of the king, when emerging
from the tomb, could go straight to the stationary and established constellations
of the fixed stars, the supposed abode of the kings.
P1045:1, 95:2.8
When the oblique rays of the sun were observed penetrating earthward through
an
aperture in the clouds, it was believed that they betokened the letting
down of a celestial stairway whereon the king and other righteous souls might
ascend. "King
Pepi has put down his radiance as a stairway under his
feet whereon to ascend to his mother."
P1045:2, 95:2.9
When Melchizedek appeared in the flesh, the Egyptians had a religion far above
that of the surrounding peoples. They believed that a disembodied soul, if
properly armed with magic formulas, could evade the intervening evil spirits
and make its way to the judgment hall of Osiris, where, if innocent of "murder,
robbery, falsehood, adultery, theft, and selfishness," it would be admitted
to the realms of bliss. If this soul were weighed in the balances and found
wanting, it would be consigned to hell, to the
Devouress. And this was, relatively,
an advanced concept of a future life in comparison with the beliefs of many
surrounding peoples.
P1045:3, 95:2.10
The concept of judgment in the hereafter for the sins of one's life in the
flesh on earth was carried over into Hebrew theology from Egypt. The word
judgment appears only once in the entire Book of Hebrew Psalms, and that particular
psalm was written by an Egyptian.