P2016:6, 188:4.1
Although Jesus did not die this death on the cross to atone for the racial
guilt of mortal man nor to provide some sort of effective approach to an otherwise
offended and unforgiving God; even though the Son of Man did not offer himself
as a sacrifice to appease the wrath of God and to open the way for sinful
man to obtain salvation; notwithstanding that these ideas of atonement and
propitiation are erroneous, nonetheless, there are significances attached
to this death of Jesus on the cross which should not be overlooked. It is
a fact that Urantia has become known among other neighboring inhabited planets
as the "World of the Cross."
P2016:7, 188:4.2
Jesus desired to live a full mortal life in the flesh on Urantia. Death is,
ordinarily, a part of life. Death is the last act in the mortal drama. In
your well-meant efforts to escape the superstitious errors of the false interpretation
of the meaning of the death on the cross, you should be careful not to make
the great mistake of failing to perceive the true significance and the genuine
import of the Master's death.
P2016:8, 188:4.3
Mortal man was never the property of the
archdeceivers. Jesus did not die
to ransom man from the clutch of the apostate rulers and fallen princes of
the spheres. The Father in heaven never conceived of such
crass injustice
as
damning a mortal soul because of the evil-doing of his ancestors. Neither
was the Master's death on the cross a sacrifice which consisted in an effort
to pay God a debt which the race of mankind had come to owe him.
P2016:9, 188:4.4
Before Jesus lived on earth, you might possibly have been justified in believing
in such a God, but not since the Master lived and died among your fellow mortals.
Moses taught the dignity and justice of a Creator God; but Jesus portrayed
the love and mercy of a heavenly Father.
P2016:10, 188:4.5
The animal nature -- the tendency toward evil-doing -- may be hereditary,
but sin is not transmitted from parent to child. Sin is the act of conscious
and deliberate rebellion against the Father's will and the Sons' laws by an
individual will creature.
P2017:1, 188:4.6
Jesus lived and died for a whole universe, not just for the races of this
one world. While the mortals of the realms had salvation even before Jesus
lived and died on Urantia, it is nevertheless a fact that his bestowal on
this world greatly illuminated the way of salvation; his death did much to
make forever plain the certainty of mortal survival after death in the flesh.
P2017:2, 188:4.7
Though it is hardly proper to speak of Jesus as a sacrificer, a
ransomer,
or a redeemer, it is wholly correct to refer to him as a savior. He
forever made the way of salvation (survival) more clear and certain; he did
better and more surely show the way of salvation for all the mortals of all
the worlds of the universe of Nebadon.
P2017:3, 188:4.8
When once you grasp the idea of God as a true and loving Father, the only
concept which Jesus ever taught, you must forthwith, in all consistency, utterly
abandon all those primitive notions about God as an offended monarch, a stern
and all-powerful ruler whose chief delight is to detect his subjects in wrongdoing
and to see that they are adequately punished, unless some being almost equal
to himself should volunteer to suffer for them, to die as a substitute and
in their stead. The whole idea of ransom and atonement is incompatible with
the concept of God as it was taught and exemplified by Jesus of Nazareth.
The infinite love of God is not secondary to anything in the divine nature.
P2017:4, 188:4.9
All this concept of atonement and sacrificial salvation is rooted and grounded
in selfishness. Jesus taught that service to one's fellows is the highest
concept of the brotherhood of spirit believers. Salvation should be taken
for granted by those who believe in the fatherhood of God. The believer's
chief concern should not be the selfish desire for personal salvation but
rather the unselfish urge to love and, therefore, serve one's fellows even
as Jesus loved and served mortal men.
P2017:5, 188:4.10
Neither do genuine believers trouble themselves so much about the future punishment
of sin. The real believer is only concerned about present separation from
God. True, wise fathers may chasten their sons, but they do all this in love
and for corrective purposes. They do not punish in anger, neither do they
chastise in retribution.
P2017:6, 188:4.11
Even if God were the stern and legal monarch of a universe in which justice
ruled supreme, he certainly would not be satisfied with the childish scheme
of substituting an innocent sufferer for a guilty offender.
P2017:7, 188:4.12
The great thing about the death of Jesus, as it is related to the enrichment
of human experience and the enlargement of the way of salvation, is not the
fact of his death but rather the superb manner and the matchless spirit
in which he met death.
P2017:8, 188:4.13
This entire idea of the ransom of the atonement places salvation upon a plane
of unreality; such a concept is purely philosophic. Human salvation is real;
it is based on two realities which may be grasped by the creature's faith
and thereby become incorporated into individual human experience: the fact
of the fatherhood of God and its correlated truth, the brotherhood of man.
It is true, after all, that you are to be "forgiven your debts, even as you
forgive your debtors."