P1456:7, 132:1.1
It was with Angamon, the leader of the Stoics, that Jesus had an all-night
talk early during his sojourn in Rome. This man subsequently became a great
friend of Paul and proved to be one of the strong supporters of the Christian
church at Rome. In substance, and restated in modern phraseology, Jesus taught
Angamon:
P1457:1, 132:1.2
The standard of true values must be looked for in the spiritual world and
on divine levels of eternal reality. To an ascending mortal all lower and
material standards must be recognized as transient, partial, and inferior.
The scientist, as such, is limited to the discovery of the relatedness of
material facts. Technically, he has no right to assert that he is either materialist
or idealist, for in so doing he has assumed to forsake the attitude of a true
scientist since any and all such assertions of attitude are the very essence
of philosophy.
P1457:2, 132:1.3
Unless the moral insight and the spiritual attainment of mankind are proportionately
augmented, the unlimited advancement of a purely materialistic culture may
eventually become a menace to civilization. A purely materialistic science
harbors within itself the potential seed of the destruction of all scientific
striving, for this very attitude presages the ultimate collapse of a civilization
which has abandoned its sense of moral values and has repudiated its spiritual
goal of attainment.
P1457:3, 132:1.4
The materialistic scientist and the extreme idealist are destined always to
be at
loggerheads. This is not true of those scientists and idealists who
are in possession of a common standard of high moral values and spiritual
test levels. In every age scientists and religionists must recognize that
they are on trial before the bar of human need. They must eschew all warfare
between themselves while they strive valiantly to justify their continued
survival by enhanced devotion to the service of human progress. If the so-called
science or religion of any age is false, then must it either purify its activities
or pass away before the emergence of a material science or spiritual religion
of a truer and more worthy order.