P1104:4, 101:1.1
True religion is not a system of philosophic belief which can be reasoned
out and substantiated by natural proofs, neither is it a fantastic and mystic
experience of indescribable feelings of ecstasy which can be enjoyed only
by the romantic devotees of mysticism. Religion is not the product of reason,
but viewed from within, it is altogether reasonable. Religion is not derived
from the logic of human philosophy, but as a mortal experience it is altogether
logical. Religion is the experiencing of divinity in the consciousness of
a moral being of evolutionary origin; it represents true experience with eternal
realities in time, the realization of spiritual satisfactions while yet in
the flesh.
P1104:5, 101:1.2
The Thought Adjuster has no special mechanism through which to gain self-expression;
there is no mystic religious faculty for the reception or expression of religious
emotions. These experiences are made available through the naturally ordained
mechanism of mortal mind. And therein lies one explanation of the Adjuster's
difficulty in engaging in direct communication with the material mind of its
constant indwelling.
P1104:6, 101:1.3
The divine spirit makes contact with mortal man, not by feelings or emotions,
but in the realm of the highest and most spiritualized thinking. It is your
thoughts, not your feelings, that lead you Godward. The divine nature
may be perceived only with the eyes of the mind. But the mind that really
discerns God, hears the indwelling Adjuster, is the pure mind. "Without holiness
no man may see the Lord." All such inner and spiritual communion is termed
spiritual insight. Such religious experiences result from the impress made
upon the mind of man by the combined operations of the Adjuster and the Spirit
of Truth as they function amid and upon the ideas, ideals, insights, and spirit
strivings of the evolving sons of God.
P1105:1, 101:1.4
Religion lives and prospers, then, not by sight and feeling, but rather by
faith and insight. It consists not in the discovery of new facts or in the
finding of a unique experience, but rather in the discovery of new and spiritual
meanings in facts already well known to mankind. The highest religious
experience is not dependent on prior acts of belief, tradition, and authority;
neither is religion the offspring of sublime feelings and purely mystical
emotions. It is, rather, a profoundly deep and actual experience of spiritual
communion with the spirit influences resident within the human mind, and as
far as such an experience is definable in terms of psychology, it is simply
the experience of experiencing the reality of believing in God as the reality
of such a purely personal experience.
P1105:2, 101:1.5
While religion is not the product of the rationalistic speculations of a material
cosmology, it is, nonetheless, the creation of a wholly rational insight which
originates in man's mind-experience. Religion is born neither of mystic meditations
nor of isolated
contemplations, albeit it is ever more or less mysterious
and always
indefinable and inexplicable in terms of purely intellectual reason
and philosophic logic. The
germs of true religion originate in the domain
of man's moral consciousness, and they are revealed in the growth of man's
spiritual insight, that faculty of human personality which
accrues as a consequence
of the presence of the God-revealing Thought Adjuster in the
God-hungry mortal
mind.
P1105:3, 101:1.6
Faith unites moral insight with conscientious discriminations of values, and
the pre-existent evolutionary sense of duty completes the ancestry of true
religion. The experience of religion eventually results in the certain consciousness
of God and in the undoubted assurance of the survival of the believing personality.
P1105:4, 101:1.7
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.