The Urantia Book -- Part IV. The Life And
Teachings Of Jesus
PAPER 160: Section 3.
The Lures Of Maturity
P1777:2, 160:3.1
The effort toward maturity necessitates work, and work requires energy. Whence
the power to accomplish all this? The physical things can be taken for granted,
but the Master has well said, "Man cannot live by bread alone." Granted the
possession of a normal body and reasonably good health, we must next look for
those lures which will act as a stimulus to call forth man's slumbering spiritual
forces. Jesus has taught us that God lives in man; then how can we induce man
to release these
soul-bound powers of divinity and infinity? How shall we induce
men to let go of God that he may spring forth to the refreshment of our own
souls while in transit outward and then to serve the purpose of enlightening,
uplifting, and blessing countless other souls? How best can I awaken these latent
powers for good which lie dormant in your souls? One thing I am sure of: Emotional
excitement is not the ideal spiritual stimulus. Excitement does not augment
energy; it rather exhausts the powers of both mind and body. Whence then comes
the energy to do these great things? Look to your Master. Even now he is out
in the hills taking in power while we are here giving out energy. The secret
of all this problem is wrapped up in spiritual communion, in worship. From the
human standpoint it is a question of combined meditation and relaxation. Meditation
makes the contact of mind with spirit; relaxation determines the capacity for
spiritual receptivity. And this interchange of strength for weakness, courage
for fear, the will of God for the mind of self, constitutes worship. At least,
that is the way the philosopher views it.
P1777:3, 160:3.2
When these experiences are frequently repeated, they crystallize into habits,
strength-giving and worshipful habits, and such habits eventually formulate
themselves into a spiritual character, and such a character is finally recognized
by one's fellows as a mature personality. These practices are difficult
and
time-consuming at first, but when they become habitual, they are at once
restful and timesaving. The more complex society becomes, and the more the lures
of civilization multiply, the more urgent will become the necessity for God-knowing
individuals to form such protective habitual practices designed to conserve
and augment their spiritual energies.
P1778:1, 160:3.3
Another requirement for the attainment of maturity is the co-operative adjustment
of social groups to an ever-changing environment. The immature individual arouses
the antagonisms of his fellows; the mature man wins the hearty co-operation
of his associates, thereby many times multiplying the fruits of his life efforts.
P1778:2, 160:3.4
My philosophy tells me that there are times when I must fight, if need be, for
the defense of my concept of righteousness, but I doubt not that the Master,
with a more mature type of personality, would easily and gracefully gain an
equal victory by his superior and
winsome technique of tact and tolerance. All
too often, when we battle for the right, it turns out that both the victor and
the vanquished have sustained defeat. I heard the Master say only yesterday
that the "wise man, when seeking entrance through the locked door, would not
destroy the door but rather would seek for the key wherewith to unlock it."
Too often we engage in a fight merely to convince ourselves that we are not
afraid.
P1778:3, 160:3.5
This new gospel of the kingdom renders a great service to the art of living
in that it supplies a new and richer incentive for higher living. It presents
a new and exalted goal of destiny, a supreme life purpose. And these new concepts
of the eternal and divine goal of existence are in themselves transcendent stimuli,
calling forth the reaction of the very best that is resident in man's higher
nature. On every
mountaintop of intellectual thought are to be found relaxation
for the mind, strength for the soul, and communion for the spirit. From such
vantage points of high living, man is able to transcend the material irritations
of the lower levels of thinking -- worry, jealousy, envy, revenge, and the pride
of immature personality. These
high-climbing souls deliver themselves from a
multitude of the crosscurrent conflicts of the trifles of living, thus becoming
free to attain consciousness of the higher currents of spirit concept and celestial
communication. But the life purpose must be jealously guarded from the temptation
to seek for easy and transient attainment; likewise must it be so fostered as
to become immune to the disastrous threats of fanaticism.
