P1730:6, 155:6.2
You have come out from among those of your fellows who choose to remain satisfied
with a religion of mind, who crave security and prefer conformity. You have
elected to exchange your feelings of authoritative certainty for the assurances
of the spirit of adventurous and progressive faith. You have dared to protest
against the grueling bondage of institutional religion and to reject the authority
of the traditions of record which are now regarded as the word of God. Our
Father did indeed speak through Moses, Elijah, Isaiah, Amos, and Hosea, but
he did not cease to minister words of truth to the world when these prophets
of old made an end of their utterances. My Father is no respecter of races
or generations in that the word of truth is vouchsafed one age and withheld
from another. Commit not the folly of calling that divine which is wholly
human, and fail not to discern the words of truth which come not through the
traditional oracles of supposed inspiration.
P1731:1, 155:6.3
I have called upon you to be born again, to be born of the spirit. I have
called you out of the darkness of authority and the
lethargy of tradition
into the transcendent light of the realization of the possibility of making
for yourselves the greatest discovery possible for the human soul to make
-- the supernal experience of finding God for yourself, in yourself, and of
yourself, and of doing all this as a fact in your own personal experience.
And so may you pass from death to life, from the authority of tradition to
the experience of knowing God; thus will you pass from darkness to light,
from a racial faith inherited to a personal faith achieved by actual experience;
and thereby will you progress from a theology of mind handed down by your
ancestors to a true religion of spirit which shall be built up in your souls
as an eternal endowment.
P1731:2, 155:6.4
Your religion shall change from the mere intellectual belief in traditional
authority to the actual experience of that living faith which is able to grasp
the reality of God and all that relates to the divine spirit of the Father.
The religion of the mind ties you hopelessly to the past; the religion of
the spirit consists in progressive revelation and ever beckons you on toward
higher and holier achievements in spiritual ideals and eternal realities.
P1731:3, 155:6.5
While the religion of authority may impart a present feeling of settled security,
you pay for such a transient satisfaction the price of the loss of your spiritual
freedom and religious liberty. My Father does not require of you as the price
of entering the kingdom of heaven that you should force yourself to subscribe
to a belief in things which are spiritually repugnant, unholy, and
untruthful.
It is not required of you that your own sense of mercy, justice, and truth
should be outraged by submission to an outworn system of religious forms and
ceremonies. The religion of the spirit leaves you forever free to follow the
truth wherever the leadings of the spirit may take you. And who can judge
-- perhaps this spirit may have something to impart to this generation which
other generations have refused to hear?
P1731:4, 155:6.6
Shame on those false religious teachers who would drag hungry souls back into
the dim and distant past and there leave them! And so are these unfortunate
persons doomed to become frightened by every new discovery, while they are
discomfited by every new revelation of truth. The prophet who said, "He will
be kept in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on God," was not a mere intellectual
believer in authoritative theology. This
truth-knowing human had discovered
God; he was not merely talking about God.
P1731:5, 155:6.7
I admonish you to give up the practice of always quoting the prophets of old
and praising the heroes of Israel, and instead aspire to become living prophets
of the Most High and spiritual heroes of the coming kingdom. To honor the
God-knowing leaders of the past may indeed be worth while, but why, in so
doing, should you sacrifice the supreme experience of human existence: finding
God for yourselves and knowing him in your own souls?
P1732:1, 155:6.8
Every race of mankind has its own mental outlook upon human existence; therefore
must the religion of the mind ever run true to these various racial viewpoints.
Never can the religions of authority come to unification. Human unity and
mortal brotherhood can be achieved only by and through the
superendowment
of the religion of the spirit. Racial minds may differ, but all mankind is
indwelt by the same divine and eternal spirit. The hope of human brotherhood
can only be realized when, and as, the divergent mind religions of authority
become impregnated with, and overshadowed by, the unifying and ennobling religion
of the spirit -- the religion of personal spiritual experience.
P1732:2, 155:6.9
The religions of authority can only divide men and set them in conscientious
array against each other; the religion of the spirit will progressively draw
men together and cause them to become understandingly sympathetic with one
another. The religions of authority require of men uniformity in belief, but
this is impossible of realization in the present state of the world. The religion
of the spirit requires only unity of experience -- uniformity of destiny --
making full allowance for diversity of belief. The religion of the spirit
requires only uniformity of insight, not uniformity of viewpoint and outlook.
The religion of the spirit does not demand uniformity of intellectual views,
only unity of spirit feeling. The religions of authority crystallize into
lifeless creeds; the religion of the spirit grows into the increasing joy
and liberty of ennobling deeds of loving service and merciful ministration.
P1732:3, 155:6.10
But watch, lest any of you look with disdain upon the children of Abraham
because they have fallen on these evil days of traditional barrenness. Our
forefathers gave themselves up to the persistent and passionate search for
God, and they found him as no other whole race of men have ever known him
since the times of Adam, who knew much of this as he was himself a Son of
God. My Father has not failed to mark the long and untiring struggle of Israel,
ever since the days of Moses, to find God and to know God. For weary generations
the Jews have not ceased to toil, sweat, groan, travail, and endure the sufferings
and experience the sorrows of a misunderstood and despised people, all in
order that they might come a little nearer the discovery of the truth about
God. And, notwithstanding all the failures and
falterings of Israel, our fathers
progressively, from Moses to the times of Amos and Hosea, did reveal increasingly
to the whole world an ever clearer and more truthful picture of the eternal
God. And so was the way prepared for the still greater revelation of the Father
which you have been called to share.
P1732:4, 155:6.11
Never forget there is only one adventure which is more satisfying and thrilling
than the attempt to discover the will of the living God, and that is the supreme
experience of honestly trying to do that divine will. And fail not to remember
that the will of God can be done in any earthly occupation. Some callings
are not holy and others secular. All things are sacred in the lives of those
who are spirit led; that is, subordinated to truth, ennobled by love, dominated
by mercy, and restrained by fairness -- justice. The spirit which my Father
and I shall send into the world is not only the Spirit of Truth but also the
spirit of idealistic beauty.
P1732:5, 155:6.12
You must cease to seek for the word of God only on the pages of the olden
records of theologic authority. Those who are born of the spirit of God shall
henceforth discern the word of God regardless of whence it appears to take
origin. Divine truth must not be discounted because the channel of its bestowal
is apparently human. Many of your brethren have minds which accept the theory
of God while they spiritually fail to realize the presence of God. And that
is just the reason why I have so often taught you that the kingdom of heaven
can best be realized by acquiring the spiritual attitude of a sincere child.
It is not the mental immaturity of the child that I commend to you but rather
the spiritual simplicity of such an
easy-believing and
fully-trusting
little one. It is not so important that you should know about the fact of
God as that you should increasingly grow in the ability to feel the presence
of God.
P1733:1, 155:6.13
When you once begin to find God in your soul, presently you will begin to
discover him in other men's souls and eventually in all the creatures and
creations of a mighty universe. But what chance does the Father have to appear
as a God of supreme loyalties and divine ideals in the souls of men who give
little or no time to the thoughtful contemplation of such eternal realities?
While the mind is not the seat of the spiritual nature, it is indeed the gateway
thereto.
P1733:2, 155:6.14
But do not make the mistake of trying to prove to other men that you have
found God; you cannot consciously produce such valid proof, albeit there are
two positive and powerful demonstrations of the fact that you are God-knowing,
and they are:
P1733:3, 155:6.15
1. The fruits of the spirit of God showing forth in your daily routine life.
P1733:4, 155:6.16
2. The fact that your entire life plan
furnishes positive proof that you have
unreservedly
risked everything you are and have on the adventure of survival
after death in the pursuit of the hope of finding the God of eternity, whose
presence you have
foretasted in time.
P1733:5, 155:6.17
Now, mistake not, my Father will ever respond to the
faintest flicker of faith.
He takes note of the physical and superstitious emotions of the primitive
man. And with those honest but fearful souls whose faith is so weak that it
amounts to little more than an intellectual conformity to a passive attitude
of assent to religions of authority, the Father is ever alert to honor and
foster even all such feeble attempts to reach out for him. But you who have
been called out of darkness into the light are expected to believe with a
whole heart; your faith shall dominate the combined attitudes of body, mind,
and spirit.
P1733:6, 155:6.18
You are my apostles, and to you religion shall not become a theologic shelter
to which you may flee in fear of facing the rugged realities of spiritual
progress and idealistic adventure; but rather shall your religion become the
fact of real experience which testifies that God has found you, idealized,
ennobled, and spiritualized you, and that you have enlisted in the eternal
adventure of finding the God who has thus found and
sonshipped you.
P1733:7, 155:6.19
And when Jesus had finished speaking, he beckoned to Andrew and, pointing
to the west toward Phoenicia, said: "Let us be on our way."