© 2003 Ken Glasziou
© 2003 The Brotherhood of Man Library
These Papers confirm that the purpose of Jesus’ life on our planet included revealing God to man and man to God, and that his life was to exhibit “the transcendent possibilities attainable by a God-knowing mortal being during the short career of mortal existence.” (UB 120:2.8)
Having fully achieved his purpose, Jesus left us with this injunction: “Your mission to the world is founded on the fact that I lived a God-revealing life among you; on the truth that you and all other men and women are the sons and daughters of God. And this mission shall consist in the life which you will live among them—the actual and living experience of loving them and serving them, even as I have loved and served you.” (UB 191:5.3)
However, just knowing where Jesus went and what he said and did would be of little help for our task. To emulate him, we need to know how he thought and what he thought. We must know the mind of Jesus.
The Papers have provided the necessary information—but have spread that information over almost 700 pages of text.
Human memory is such that it is helpful for most of us to have a framework on which to build.
Herein we have tried to provide a synopsis of Part 4 that will assist in the understanding of Jesus mind. It is a framework for helping us to think as Jesus might think that is based upon spiritual aspects of his life, thought, work, and teaching.
If our thoughts are absolutely tranquil, the heavenly heart can be seen. The heavenly heart lies between the sun and the moon, it is the home of the Inner Light. (Note: The sun and moon refer to our two eyes).
Lu Yen
The function of the indwelling Father-Spirit is described as: “The great goal of our human existence is to attune to the divinity of the indwelling Spirit. The great achievement of our mortal life is the attainment of a true and understanding consecration to the eternal aims of the divine Spirit who waits and works within our mind. And our ideal life is one of loving service to our fellow travelers.” (UB 110:3.4)
We start our synopsis as Jesus entered his 28th year at which time he began to be certain that he was indwelt by the Spirit of God. As this relationship grew, he also became aware that this same Spirit of the Father indwells all of his earthly children as their mentor and guide.
Jesus taught us: “The will of God is the way of God, partnership with the choice of God in the face of any potential alternative. To do the will of God is the progressive experience of becoming more and more like God—who is the source and destiny of all that is good and beautiful and true.” (UB 130:2.7)
“Only in the perfection, harmony, and unanimity of will can the creature become as one with the Creator . . . always must the desire to do the Father’s will be supreme in the soul and dominant over the mind of a mortal child of God.” (UB 130:4.3)
“Become interested in your fellows; learn how to love them and watch for the opportunity to do something for them that you are sure they want done. They who would have friends must first show themselves friendly.” (UB 130:7.2)
“When wise men and women understand the inner impulses of their fellows, they will love them. And when you love your brothers and sisters, you have already forgiven them.”
During a lengthy period of intimate association with religious leaders in his early career, never once did Jesus attack their errors or even mention the flaws in their teaching. In each case he would select the truth in what they taught and then proceed to embellish and illuminate this truth in their minds that in a very short time this enhancement of truth effectively crowded out the associated error.
Calm, quiet, and love have the power to overcome the world.
Listen to others, no matter how dull or ignorant they may seem, for everyone has their own story.
He taught: “Goodness, like truth, is always relative, unfailingly evil contrasted, living, and always progressing, a personal experience that is everlastingly correlated with the discernment of truth and beauty.” (UB 132:2.7)
“Goodness is found in the recognition of positive truth—its values at the spiritual level—which must, in human experience, be contrasted with the negative counterpart—the shadows of potential evil.” (UB 132:2.7)
“Evil becomes a reality of personal choice only when a moral mind makes evil its choice.” (UB 132:2.10)
“Truth cannot be defined with words, only by living.” (UB 132:3.2)
“Revealed truth, personally discovered truth is the joint creation of the material mind and the indwelling Spirit.” (UB 132:3.4)
“But truth can never become our possession without the exercise of faith. Faith acts to release the superhuman activities of the divine spark that indwells us.” (UB 132:3.5)
“Human life continues—survives—because it has a universe function, the task of finding God.” (UB 132:3.7)
“Prayer is the great unifier of the inspirations and faith urges of a soul trying to identify itself with the spirit ideals of the Indwelling Spirit.” (UB 132:3.10)
“There are only two groups of mortals in the eyes of God; those who desire to do his will and those who do not. Likewise there are two great classes—those who know God and those who do not.” (UB 133:0.3)
“If we know God, our real business on Earth is so to live as to permit the Father to reveal himself in our lives, and thus will all God-seeking persons see the Father in us and ask for our help in finding out more about God who in this manner finds expression in our lives.” (UB 132:7.2)
Jesus taught a young associate: “I have absolute confidence in my Father’”'s overcare; I am consecrated to doing the will of my Father in heaven. I do not believe that real harm can befall me. I am absolutely assured that the entire universe is friendly to me—this all-powerful truth I insist on believing with a whole hearted trust in spite of all appearances to the contrary.” (UB 133:1.4)
“The soul of man is distinct from the divine Spirit that dwells within the mind. The divine Spirit arrives simultaneously with the first moral activity of the human mind, and that is the occasion of the birth of the soul.” (UB 133:6.5)
“The soul is self-reflective, truth discerning, and spirit-perceiving, the part of mankind which elevates the human being above the level of the animal world. Self-consciousness is, in and of itself, not the soul. Moral self-consciousness is true human self-realization and constitutes the foundation of the human soul—and the soul is that which represents the survival value of human experience. Moral choice and spiritual attainment, the ability to know God and the urge to be like him are the characteristics of the soul.” (UB 133:6.5)
In deciphering Jesus’ life be mindful of his purposes—first, to acquire creature experience, second, to reveal the Paradise Father, and third, to untangle the consequences of our rebellious sin. (later Christianity reversed this order, making Jesus’ sacrificial death his primary purpose.)
On the day of his baptism, Jesus stood in the Jordan a perfected mortal of the evolutionary worlds of time and space. Perfect synchrony and full communication had become established between the mortal mind of Jesus and his indwelling Spirit of the Father.
Following his baptism, the choices confronting Jesus for the kind of ministry to adopt were: his own way—one that might seem profitable from the stand point of immediate needs; or the Father’s way—one that provided an example to humanity of a farseeing ideal of creature life.
There was just one motive in Jesus’ post baptismal life and that was a better and truer revelation of his Paradise Father; he was the pioneer of the new and better way to God, the way of faith and love—which he insisted on going about in the most quiet and non-dramatic manner, avoiding all display of power.
Jesus told his apostles, “Make no mistake; we go forth to labor for a generation of sign seekers . . . but they will be slow to recognize in the revelation of my Father”s love, the credentials of my mission.” (UB 137:6.5)
When we come to know that we have enough, then we will be rich.
Let us not be afraid to listen to others for ear of what we may hear.
Jesus did not make the mistake of over-teaching. He did not precipitate confusion in his audience by the presentation of truth too far beyond their capacity to comprehend.
“My Father’s kingdom concerns not things visible and material. For wherever the Spirit of God teaches and leads the soul of man, there, in reality, is the kingdom of heaven. And this kingdom of God is righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit.” (UB 137:8.9)
“In my Father’s kingdom there shall be neither Jew nor gentile, only those who seek perfection through service, for I declare that he who would be great in my Father’s kingdom must first become of server of all.” (UB 137:8.11)
Jesus’ program—he would not cater to the physical gratification of his people. He would not deal out bread to the multitudes; he would not attract attention to himself through wonder working; nor would he use temporal power or authority to gain acceptance of a spiritual message.
Jesus taught the apostles to preach forgiveness of sin through faith in God but without penance or sacrifice. They also early learned that Jesus had a profound respect and sympathetic regard for every human being he met, and that nothing ever seemed so important to him as the individual human who chanced to be in his immediate presence.
Jesus never ceased repeating that faith only was necessary in the business of finding God, adding that, “it will be by the lives you live that others will know that you have been with me and have learned of the realities of the kingdom.”
He told his disciples that the kingdom of God is within you, that you do not have to see alike, feel alike, even think alike in order, spiritually, to be alike. “Harmony,” he said, “grows from the fact that each of us is identical in origin, nature, and destiny.” (UB 141:5.1)
“Spirit unity implies two things—first you are possessed of a common motive for soul service—to do the will of the Father—and second, you have a common goal of existence—to find the Father and to become like him.” (UB 141:5.3)
Again and again Jesus warned against the formulation of creeds and the establishment of traditions as a means of guiding believers. “Lead men into the kingdom,” he said, “and the great and living truths of the kingdom will presently drive out all serious error. Your business is to reveal God to the individual as their heavenly Father, to lead men and women to become God-conscious—and to present them to God as his faith children.” (UB 141:6.2)
The only reward to Jesus followers—in this world, spiritual joy and divine communion; in the next world, eternal life in the progress of divine spirit realities of the Father.
Jesus was a teacher, not a preacher. He came to present spiritual truths to material minds. He came to do the Father’s will and only his Father’s will. And because of this singleness of purpose he was not anxiously bothered by evil in the world. He paid no attention to public opinion and was not influenced by praise. He was never excited, vexed, or disconcerted, sometimes saddened, but never discouraged. And he was always unselfish.
Let us not be satisfied to stay on the first rung of the spiritual ladder forever, but rather to be prepared to travel onwards and upwards.
Our background and our circumstances at any time have no bearing upon whom we can become.
Love is the rule of living in the kingdom—supreme devotion to God while loving your neighbor as yourself. Obedience to the will of the Father, yielding the fruits of the spirit in one’s personal life is the law of the kingdom.
“If you recognize you are children of the Father, then you have been born of the spirit of God; and whosoever has been born of the spirit has the power within himself to overcome all doubt.” (UB 142:5.3)
There are high values in mortal existence—intellectual mastery and spiritual achievement—which far transcend the gratification of man’s purely physical appetites and urges.
“The evidence to all the world that you have been born of the spirit is that you sincerely love one another.” (UB 142:5.4)
“Just as earthly families are built on tolerance, patience, forgiveness, and love, so with the earthly family of God.” (UB 140:8.13)
To his disciples, Jesus said, “Temporal matters are the concern of the men of the world. You are spiritual ambassadors of a spiritual kingdom, special representatives of the spirit Father. Love is the greatest of all spirit realities. Truth is a liberating revelation but love is the supreme relationship.” (UB 142:7.17)
The Master was a perfect specimen of human self-control. When he was reviled, he reviled not; when he suffered, he uttered no threats; when he was denounced, he simply committed himself to the righteous judgment of the Father.
“I come with a new message of self-forgetfulness and self-control. I show you the way of life as revealed to me by my Father in heaven. By your love for one another you are to convince the world you have passed from death into life everlasting.” (UB 143:2.2)
Jesus taught: “If the Spirit dwells within you, you are free and liberated children of the Spirit. Your secret of self-mastery is faith in the Indwelling Spirit which ever works by love. If then you are born of the Spirit, you are forever delivered from a life of self-denial and watch-care over the desires of the flesh and are translated into the joyous kingdom of the Spirit whence you spontaneously show forth the fruits of the spirit in your daily lives.” (UB 143:2.7)
“When you have become wholly dedicated to doing the will of the Father, all your petitions will be forthcoming because all these petitions will be in full accordance with the Father’s will.” (UB 146:2.7)
“Avoid materialistic praying; pray in the spirit and for the abundant gifts of the Spirit.” (UB 146:2.10)
Jesus taught that the prayer for divine guidance over the earthly life was next in importance to a petition for knowledge of the Father’s will. In reality this means a prayer for divine wisdom.
We worship God by the aid of the Indwelling Spirit. And this spirit of the Father speaks best to man when the human mind is in an attitude of true worship. Worship, taught Jesus, makes one increasingly like the one who is being worshipped.
“The degree of your love for others is the direct measure of just how much you have yielded your soul to the teaching and guidance of your indwelling God-Spirit.” (UB 146:3.6)
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself.
George Bernard Shaw
There is no wrong time to do the right thing.
“Whereas the level of brotherly love is upgraded when it embraces unselfish devotion to the welfare of our fellows, the greatest advance is at the level of spirit insight and spiritual interpretation which impels us to recognize in this rule of life the divine command to treat all people as we conceive God would treat them.” (UB 147:4.9)
“The Father never sends affliction as an arbitrary punishment for wrong doing. Mankind should not blame God for those afflictions that are a natural result of the way they choose to live, nor complain of experiences that are the natural result of life as it is lived on this world.” (UB 148:5.3)
Jesus transcended the teachings of his forbears when he boldly substituted clean hearts for clean hands as the mark of true religion.
Jesus taught: “Emotionally people react individually. The only uniform thing about them is the Indwelling Spirit of God. Thus, only through and by appeal to this indwelling Spirit can mankind ever attain unity and brotherhood.” (UB 149:3.3)
Anger is a material (animalistic) manifestation indicating failure of the spiritual nature to gain control. “Anger rests in the bosom of fools.”
Jesus said, “Let your hearts be so dominated by love that your indwelling Spirit will have little trouble in delivering you from the tendency to give vent to those outbursts of animal anger which are so inconsistent with the status of a child of the Father.” (UB 149:4.2)
Jesus always preached temperance and consistency—pointing out that excessive zeal can lead to recklessness and presumption, while too much prudence and discretion can lead to cowardice and failure.
Jesus said: “Your forebears feared God because he was mighty and mysterious. You shall adore him because he is magnificent in love, plenteous in mercy, and glorious in truth.” (UB 149:6.5)
“I have come into the world to put love in the place of fear, joy in the place of sorrow, confidence in the place of dread, loving service and appreciative worship in the place of slavish bondage and meaningless ceremonies.” (UB 149:6.5)
“You do well to be meek before God and self-controlled before men; but let your meekness be of spiritual origin and not the self-deceptive display of a self-conscious sense of self-righteous superiority. My Father disdains pride, loathes hypocrisy, and abhors iniquity.” (UB 149:6.11)
“The Father has sent me into the world to show how he desires to indwell and guide all his earthly children; and I have so lived this life in the flesh as to inspire everybody likewise ever to seek to know and do the will of the indwelling Spirit of the heavenly Father.” (UB 153:3.2)
Jesus’ kingdom is founded on love, proclaimed in mercy, and established by unselfish service.
Thefuture, no matter how threatening it may appear, can only come one day at a time.
Endurance is a form of concentrated patience.
“Let me emphatically state this eternal truth: if you, by truth coordination learn to exemplify in your lives this beautiful wholeness of righteousness, your acquaintances will then seek after you that they may gain what you have acquired.” (UB 155:1.5)
“The measure wherewith truth seekers are drawn to you represents the measure of your truth endowment, your righteousness. The extent to which you have to go with your message to the people is, in a way, the measure of your failure to live the whole or righteous life, the truth coordinated life.” (UB 155:1.5)
“Many souls can best be led to love the unseen God by first being taught to love their brothers and sisters whom they can see.” (UB 155:3.4)
“When religion is wholly spiritual in motive, it makes all of life more worthwhile, filling it with high purposes, dignifying it with transcendent values, inspiring it with superb motives, all the while comforting the human soul with a sublime and sustaining hope.” (UB 155:3.7)
“The most thrilling and inspiring of all possible human experiences is the personal quest for truth, the determination to explore the realities of personal religious experience, and the exhilaration of facing the perils of intellectual discovery. It is the supreme satisfaction of experiencing the personal victory of spiritual faith over intellectual doubt as it is honestly won in that supreme adventure of all human existence—man seeking God for himself, of himself, and as himself—and finding him.” (UB 155:5.10)
“The religion of the spirit means effort, struggle, conflict, faith, determination, love, loyalty, and progress.” (UB 155:5.11)
Jesus continued: “We will shortly begin the bold proclamation of a new religion—a religion that makes its chief appeal to the divine spirit of my Father that resides in the mind of man—a religion that shall derive its authority from the fruits of its acceptance.” (UB 155:5.12)
“I have called upon you to discover the supernal experience of finding God for yourself, in yourself, and of yourself and as a fact of your own experience. The religion of the spirit leaves you forever free to follow the truth wherever the leadings of the Spirit may take you.” (UB 155:6.5)
“The supreme experience of human existence is: finding God for yourselves and knowing him in your own souls.” (UB 110:3.4)
“Never forget there is only one adventure that is more satisfying than the attempt to discover the will of God, and that is the supreme experience of honestly trying to do the divine will.” (UB 155:6.11)
“Spiritual destiny is dependent on faith, love and devotion to truth—hunger and thirst for righteousness—the whole hearted desire to find God and to be like him.” (UB 156:5.7)
“You are destined to live a narrow and mean life if you learn to love only those who love you. The less of love in any person’s nature the greater their love need—and the more does divine love seek to satisfy such need.” (UB 156:5.11)
“Kingdom believers should have an implicit faith, a whole souled belief in the certain triumph of righteousness. They must increasingly learn to step aside from the harassments of material existence while they refresh the soul, inspire the mind, and renew the spirit by worshipful communion.” (UB 156:5.12)
“In advancing the cause of the kingdom, make your appeals directly to the divine spirit that dwells within the mind.” (UB 159:3.2)
“In bringing others into the kingdom, do not lesson or destroy their self-respect. It is the purpose of this gospel to restore self-esteem to those who have lost it and to restrain it in those who have it.” (UB 159:3.3)
“Do not make the mistake of only condemning the wrongs in peoples’ lives. Accord generous recognition for the most praiseworthy things in their lives. Forget not that I will stop at nothing to restore self-esteem to those who have lost it and who really desire to regain it.” (UB 159:3.3)
“Idleness is destructive to self-esteem; therefore encourage your brethren to ever keep busy at their chosen tasks.” (UB 159:3.4)
“God’s children die searching for the very same God who dwells within them.”
“The believer has only one battle and that is against doubt—unbelief. In preaching the gospel you are simply teaching friendship with God.” (UB 159:3.9)
Sometimes when we all, it is those whom we would least expect who help us up again.
We are only really listening when we listen from the heart.
“If you dare to believe in me and wholeheartedly follow me, you shall most certainly, by so doing, enter upon a sure pathway to trouble. I do not promise to deliver you from the waters of adversity, but I do promise to go with you through all of them.” (UB 159:3.13)
“Never forget, the Father does not limit the revelation of truth to any one generation or to any one people.” (UB 159:4.6)
“Fear not those who are able to kill the body but after that have no more power over you. I admonish you to fear no one, neither in heaven nor on Earth but rejoice in the knowledge of him who has power to deliver you from all unrighteousness and to present you blameless before the judgment seat.” (UB 165:3.3)
“The Father never compels anyone to enter the kingdom. Though the door to life may be narrow, it is wide enough to admit all those who sincerely seek to find him.” (UB 166:3.3)
“I am the new and living way. Whosoever wills may enter to embark upon the endless truth-search for eternal life. All too long have your fathers believed that prosperity was the token of divine approval, that adversity was the proof of God’s displeasure. Such beliefs are superstitions.” (UB 166:4.3)
Jesus on prayer: “All true prayers are addressed to spiritual beings, and all such petitions must be answered in spiritual terms and consist in spiritual realities. Spirit beings cannot bestow material answers to the spirit petitions of material beings.” (UB 168:4.9)
“In this world, the kingdom is the supreme desire to do the will of God, the unselfish love of your fellow man which yields the good fruits of improved ethical and moral conduct.” (UB 170:2.18)
“In heaven, the kingdom is the goal of mortal believers wherein their love of God is perfected.” (UB 170:2.19)
Jesus taught that we enter the kingdom by faith. Two things only are essential, firstly to come with the faith-sincerity of a little child to receive our entry as a gift while submitting to the Father’s will unconditionally, and secondly, truth hunger, the thirst for righteousness—the acquirement of the motive to find God and to be like him.
The receipt of God’s forgiveness involves a four step process:
“The righteousness of any act must be measured by the motive.”
Let us not expect to do the impossible— there are limitations to being only human.
We canfeel we know something and we can feel confident to do something, but often the truth is, we don’t know what we’re doing.
Jesus spread good cheer everywhere he went. He was full of grace and truth. His associates never ceased to wonder at the gracious words that proceeded from his mouth. You can cultivate gracefulness, but graciousness is the aroma of friendliness which emanates from a love-saturated soul.
Goodness is attractive only when it is gracious—and is effective only when it is attractive.
Jesus was always ready and willing to stop or detain a multitude while he ministered to the needs of a single person or to a little child. Most of the really important things that Jesus said or did seemed to happen casually, “as he passed by.” He dispensed health and happiness naturally and gracefully as he journeyed though life. It was literally true, “he went about doing good.”
And so it behooves the Master’s followers in all ages to learn to minister ‘as they pass by’ -to do unselfish good as they go about their daily duties.
“When the wise understand the inner impulses of others, they will love them. And when you love your neighbors, you have already forgiven them. This capacity to understand human nature and to forgive apparent wrongdoing is Godlike.” (UB 174:1.4)
“Your inability or unwillingness to forgive your neighbor is the measure of your immaturity, your failure to attain adult sympathy, understanding, and love. You hold grudges and nurse vengefulness in direct proportion to your ignorance of the inner nature and true longings of your fellow human beings.” (UB 174:1.5)
“Love is the outworking of the divine and inner urge of life. It is founded on understanding, nurtured by unselfish service and perfected in wisdom. Seek not in your daily lives, self-glorification, but seek rather the glory of God.” (UB 174:1.5)
“You cannot stand still in the affairs of the eternal kingdom. My father requires all his children to grow in grace and in the knowledge of truth. You who know these truths must yield the increase of the fruits of the spirit and manifest a growing devotion to the unselfish service of your fellows. In faithfulness do what is entrusted to you, and thereby shall you be ready for the reckoning call of death.” (UB 176:3.5)
In teaching children to pray “Our Father,” an enormous responsibility is placed upon earthly fathers so to live and order their homes so that the word “father” has worthy connotations while becoming enshrined in the minds and hearts of growing children.
“The fruits of the spirit, your sincere and loving service, are the mighty social lever to uplift the races of darkness. And this Spirit of Truth will become your powerful multiplying fulcrum.” (UB 178:1.6)
“Remember that you are commissioned to preach this gospel of the kingdom—the supreme desire to do the Father’s will coupled with the supreme joy of the faith realization of sonship with God.” (UB 178:1.11)
“Humanitarian labors are social by-products that must not replace the proclamation of the gospel.”
“Labor to persuade the minds of others but never dare to compel them.”
“Be gentle in your dealings with erring mortals, patient in intercourse with the ignorant, and forbearing under provocation—but be valiant in defense of righteousness, mighty in the promulgation of truth, and aggressive in preaching the gospel of the kingdom” (UB 178:1.14)
“The revelation I have made is a living revelation, and in accordance with the laws of spiritual growth and adaptive development, it shall bear appropriate fruits in each generation.” (UB 178:1.15)
“Do not forget that you are commissioned to go forth preaching only the good news. You are not to attack the old ways; you are skillfully to put the leaven of new truth in the midst of the old beliefs. Let the Spirit of Truth do his own work.” (UB 178:1.16)
“Remember always to love one another. Do not strive with others, even with unbelievers. Sow mercy, even to those who despitefully abuse you.” (UB 178:1.17)
“He who would be great among you, let him become server of all.” (UB 171:0.6)
Those who seek the true path to enlightenment must not expect an easy task or one made pleasant by offers of respect, honor, and devotion.
Buddha
We must ‘be’ that change we wish to see in the world.
The remembrance supper is the emblem of the bestowal ministry of the Spirit of Truth. It is also a symbol of our emergence from the bondage of ceremonialism and selfishness into the spiritual joy of brotherhood and fellowship. [Note: the Spirit of Truth is the spirit of Jesus which was bestowed upon all believers after his resurrection.]
Upon all such occasions (a remembrance supper), the Master is really present and his spirit fraternizes with our indwelling Father-Spirit.
Jesus to his disciples: “And so I give you a new commandment, that you love one another even as I have loved you. And by this will all mankind know that you are my disciples if you thus love one another as I have loved you.” (UB 180:1.1)
Jesus: “If you abide in me and my words live in you, you will be able to commune freely with me, and then can my living Spirit so infuse you that you may ask whatsoever my Spirit wills and the Father will grant us our petition.” (UB 180:2.1)
“Prayer is a way of taking God’s way, an experience of learning how to recognize and execute the Father’s will.” (UB 180:2.4)
“You are in this world but your lives are not to be world-like. I have chosen you ‘out of the world’ to represent the spirit of another world even to this.” (UB 180:3.1)
“With the coming of the Spirit of Truth all the children of light will be drawn toward one another. And my Father and I will be able to live in the souls of each one of you, and also in the hearts of all other men who love us and make that love real in their experiences by loving one another even as I am now loving you.” (UB 180:4.5)
This new teacher is the spirit of living and growing truth, expanding, unfolding, and adaptive truth.
Divine truth is a spirit discerned and living reality. Living truth is dynamic and can enjoy only an experiential existence in the human mind.
Truth is a spiritual reality value experienced only by spirit-endowed beings who function on supermaterial levels of universe consciousness, and who, after the realization of truth, permit its spirit of activation to live and reign within their souls.
“Love, unselfishness, must undergo a constant and living re-adaptive interpretation of relationships in accordance with the leading of Spirit of Truth. Love must grasp the ever changing concept of the highest cosmic good of the individual who is loved. And such love goes on to strike this same attitude to all individuals who could possibly be influenced by one spirit-led mortal’s love for his fellows”. (UB 180:5.10)
The golden rule and the teaching of non-resistance cannot be dogmatized; they can only be comprehended by living them in accordance with the interpretation of the Spirit of Truth who directs the loving contact of one human being with another.
“When the new teacher comes, then shall this Spirit of Truth lead each of you abroad to labor for the kingdom.” (UB 181:2.13)
“God is no respector of persons; in the sight of God, all are equal, all believers are the children of God.” (UB 181:2.14)
“When the new teacher comes let him teach you the poise of compassion and that sympathetic tolerance which is born of sublime confidence in me and of perfect submission to the Father’s will.” (UB 181:2.15)
Avoid the path that inevitably leads to a triple heart by-pass.
II intelligent thoughts have already been thought; what is now necessary is to try to think them again.
Goethe
“Dedicate your life to demonstrating the combined human affection and divine dignity of the God-knowing disciple.” (UB 181:2.15)
“As far as is in your power live long on Earth that your life of many years may be fruitful in souls won for the heavenly kingdom.” (UB 181:2.15)
“To him who is God-knowing there is no such thing as common labor or secular toil. All earthly labor is sacred and is a service—even to God the Father.” (UB 181:2.19)
“Learn that the expression of even a good thought must be modulated in accordance with the intellectual status and spiritual development of the hearer.” (UB 181:2.21)
“Be not dismayed that you fail to grasp the full meaning of the gospel. You are but finite and fallible mortal men—and that which I have taught you is infinite, divine, and eternal.” (UB 181:2.25)
Participation in the religion of Jesus is the sure and certain technique whereby spiritually isolated and cosmically lonely individuals can escape personality isolation and all its consequences of fear and helplessness.
“In half-civilized man there still lurks an evil brutality that seeks to vent itself upon those who are superior in wisdom and spiritual attainment.” (UB 184:4.5)
Having revealed God to man, Jesus was now (at his crucifixion) engaged in making an unprecedented revelation of man to God. He was now revealing to the worlds the final triumph over all fears of creature personality isolation.
As taunts, insults, and blows fell upon Jesus, he was not vanquished, merely uncontending in the material sense.
Jesus was not even angry when, at his trial, ignorant mortals derisively struck him in the face after blindfolding him.
As they nailed Jesus on the cross, his only words were, “Father, forgive them for they know not what they do.” He could not have so mercifully and lovingly interceded for his executioners if such thoughts of affectionate devotion had not been the mainspring of all his life of unselfish service.
The gospel of the good news that we mortals may, by faith, become spirit-conscious that we are children of God, is not in any way dependent on the death of Jesus. True, indeed, this gospel of the kingdom has been illuminated by the master’s death, but even more so, by his life.
Moses taught the dignity and justice of a creator God; but Jesus portrayed the love and mercy of a heavenly Father.
It is wholly correct to refer to Jesus as our savior. He forever made the way of salvation (survival) more clear and more certain.
The concept of atonement and sacrificial salvation is rooted and grounded in selfishness. The believer’s chief concern should not be the selfish desire for personal salvation but rather the unselfish urge to love and serve our fellow beings even as Jesus loved and served mortal man.
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 that death.
The cross forever shows that the attitude of Jesus toward sinners was neither condemnation nor condonation, but rather eternal and loving salvation.
When thinking men and women look upon Jesus as he offered up his life on the cross, they will hardly again permit themselves to complain at even the severest hardships of life, much less at petty harassments and fictitious grievances.
Jesus is truly a savior in the sense that his life and death do win us over to goodness and righteous survival.
Jesus loved us so much that his love awakens the response of love in the human heart. Love is truly contagious—and eternally creative.
Ajourney of a thousand miles starts with but a single step.
It takes a lifetime to become the person we want to be.
Jesus portrayed a higher quality of righteousness than justice—mere technical right and wrong. Divine love does not merely forgive wrongs; it absorbs and actually destroys them.
Greater love can no one have than this—that they would be willing to lay down their life for their friends. And Jesus had such love that he was willing to lay down his life even for his enemies.
“Your mission to the world is founded on the fact that I lived a God-revealing life among you, and on the truth that you and all others are the children of God. And your mission shall consist in the life that you will live—the actual living experience of loving and serving others, even your enemies, just as I have loved and served you.” (UB 191:5.3)
“Give up intolerance and learn to love others as I have loved you. Devote your life to proving that love is the greatest thing in the world. It is the love of God that impels the individual to seek salvation. Love is the ancestor of all goodness, the essence of the true and the beautiful.” (UB 192:2.1)
“Do not neglect to minister to the weak, the poor, and the young.” (UB 192:2.2)
“If you trust me more, you will be less impatient with your brethren. If you will trust me, it will help you to be kind to the brotherhood of believers. Pray for tranquility of spirit and try to cultivate patience.” (UB 192:2.8)
“Make sure you are devoted to the welfare of your brethren on Earth with a tireless affection. Admix friendship with your counsel and add love to your philosophy. Be faithful. Be less critical. Expect less of some.” (UB 192:2.10)
“When you are a faith child of God, all upright work is sacred. Nothing that a child of God does can be common. Do your work, as from this time on, as you would do it for God.” (UB 192:2.13)
“My one purpose is to reveal my Father. I have lived this God-revealing bestowal that you might experience the God-knowing career.” (UB 193:0.3)
Trust is something that takes years to build but only seconds to destroy.
Every time we feel discouraged with our lives remember nobody got to where they are today without beginning where they were yesterday. (UB 156:5.15)
“Salvation is the free gift of God, but those who are born of the spirit will immediately begin to show forth the fruits of the spirit in loving service to their fellow creatures. And the fruits of the divine spirit that are yielded in the lives of spirit-born and God-knowing mortals are: loving service, unselfish devotion, courageous loyalty, sincere fairness, enlightened honesty, undying hope, confiding trust, merciful ministry, unfailing goodness, forgiving tolerance, and enduring peace.” (UB 193:2.2)
“You may enter the kingdom as a child, but the Father requires that you grow up to the full stature of spiritual adulthood.” (UB 193:2.2)
“The first mission of the Spirit of Truth is to foster and personalize truth, for it is the comprehension of truth that constitutes the highest form of human liberty. Next, it is the purpose of this Spirit to destroy the believer’s feeling of orphanhood.” (UB 194:2.2)
The Spirit of Truth never creates a consciousness of himself, only a consciousness of Jesus, the Son.
The Spirit of Truth also came to help you to recall and understand the words of the Master as well as to illuminate and re-interpret his life on Earth.
Next the Spirit of Truth came to help the believer to witness to the realities of Jesus’ teachings and his life as he lived it in the flesh and as he again lives it anew in the individual believer of each passing generation.
The Spirit of Truth equips the teachers of Jesus’ new religion with spiritual weapons. They are to go out to conquer the world with unfailing forgiveness, matchless goodwill, and abounding love. They are equipped to overcome evil with good, to vanquish hate by love, to destroy fear with courageous and living faith in truth.
Pentecost endowed mortal man with the capacity to forgive personal injuries, to keep sweet in the face of the gravest injustice, to remain unmoved in the face of appalling danger, and to challenge the evils of hate and anger by the fearless acts of love and forbearance.
Up to Pentecost, religion had revealed only mankind seeking for God. Since Pentecost, there shines out over the world the spectacle of God also seeking for mankind—and sending his Spirit to dwell within those whom he has found.
Before Pentecost, women had little or no spiritual standing in the tenets of the older religions. After Pentecost, women stood before God in equality with men. No longer can men presume to monopolize the ministry of religious service.
Before Pentecost, the apostles had given up much for Jesus. After Pentecost, they gave themselves to God, and the Father and Son responded, giving themselves to man by sending their Spirits to live within them.
The material spirit of selfishness has been swallowed up in this new spiritual bestowal of selflessness.
It is not impossiblefor us personally to leave the world a slightly better place than wefound it.
It is as important to be able to forgive yourselfas it is to be forgiven by others.
Jesus lived a life which is a revelation of man submitted to the Father’s will.
The religion of Jesus does not seek to escape this life—rather it provides the joy and peace of another and spiritual existence to ennoble the current life in the flesh.
Mankind has passed through the ravages of great and destructive wars from which there emerged but one victor—Jesus of Nazareth with his gospel of overcoming evil with good. The secret of a better civilization is bound up in the Master’s teachings of the brotherhood of man, and the good will of love and mutual trust.
In Rome, Christianity came with refreshing comfort and liberating power to a spiritually hungry people whose language had no word for unselfishness.
Religion is the revelation to man of his divine and eternal destiny. It is designed to find those values that call forth faith, trust, and assurance—and culminate in worship. It discovers supreme values—superhuman insight that can be had through genuine religious experience.
A lasting social system without a morality predicated on spiritual realities can no more be maintained than could the solar system without gravity.
When there is so much good truth to publish and proclaim, why dwell upon evil?
In religion, Jesus advocated and followed the method of experience—even as science pursues the technique of experiment. We find God through spiritual insight, but we approach God through the love of the beautiful, pursuit of truth, loyalty to duty, and worship of divine goodness. But of all these values, love is the true guide to real insight.
No matter what the conflict between materialism and the teachings of Jesus may be, eventually Jesus’ teachings will fully triumph.
In reality true religion cannot become involved in controversy with science or materialism as it is in no way concerned with material things—only with things of the spirit.
Freedom or initiative in any realm of existence is directly proportional to the degree of spiritual influence and cosmic mind control; that is, in human experience, the degree of actuality of doing “the Father’s will”. And so, when once you start out to find God—and seek to do his will—that is the conclusive proof that God has already found you.
The religion of Jesus stands as the transcendent spiritual summons, calling to the best there is in man to rise above all these legacies of animal evolution and, by grace, attain the moral heights of true human destiny.
Modern culture must become spiritually baptized with a new revelation of Jesus’ life.
Religion is only an exalted humanism until it is made divine by the discovery of the reality of the presence of God in personal experience.
Jesus’ religion is based on personal spiritual relations with the Father and wholly validated by the supreme authority of genuine personal experience.
Jesus’ faith was so real and all-encompassing that it absolutely swept away any spiritual doubts and effectively destroyed every conflicting desire.
Jesus’ personal faith, spiritual hope, and moral devotion were always correlated with the keen realization of the reality and sacredness of all human loyalties—personal honor, family love, religious obligations, social duty, and economic necessity.
The personal faith of Jesus in the certainty and security of the guidance and protection of the heavenly Father imparted to his unique life a profound endowment of spiritual reality.
As a man of the realm, Jesus brought to God the greatest of all offerings; the consecration and dedication of his own will to the majestic service of doing the divine will. Jesus always and consistently interpreted religion in terms of the Father’s will.
Those who want to succeed will surelyfind a way, and those who do not will just as surely find an excuse.
Nothing is more damaging to a new truth than an old error.
The secret of Jesus’ unparalleled religious life was his consciousness of the presence of God and he attained it by intelligent prayer and sincere worship—unbroken communion with God—and not by leadings, visions, or extraordinary religious practices.
Jesus trusted God much as the child trusts a parent. He had a profound confidence in the universe—just such a trust as a child has in its parents.
Jesus does not require his disciples to believe in him but rather to believe with him in the reality of the love of God and, in full confidence, to accept the security of the assurance of membership in the family of the heavenly Father. He desires that all his followers should share fully his transcendent faith. He challenged his followers to believe as he believed. This is the full significance of his one supreme command, “Follow me.”
To follow Jesus means to personally share his religious faith and to enter into the spirit of the Master’s life of unselfish service for man.
Of all human knowledge that which is of the greatest value is to know the religious life of Jesus and how he lived it.
Jesus was a wholly consecrated mortal, unreservedly dedicated to doing his Father’s will. It was this very singleness of purpose and unselfish devotion that enabled him to effect such extraordinary progress in the conquest of the human mind in one short life.
In his devotion to the cause of the kingdom, Jesus burned all bridges behind him; he sacrificed all hindrances to the doing of the Father’s will.
Jesus did not long to escape from his earthly life; he mastered a technique of acceptably doing the Father’s will while in the flesh. He attained an idealistic religious life in the very midst of a realistic world.
Jesus taught men to place a high value on themselves in time and in eternity, and he was willing to spend himself in unremitting service to humankind. And it was this infinite worth of the finite that made the golden rule a vital factor in his religion. What mortal beings could fail to be uplifted by the extraordinary faith Jesus had in them?
Personal spiritual religious experience is an efficient solvent for most mortal difficulties; it is an effective sorter, evaluator, and adjuster of all human problems. Religion does not remove or destroy human troubles—but it does dissolve, absorb, illuminate, and transcend them.
The mind of man can attain high levels of spiritual insight and corresponding spheres of divinity of values because it is not wholly material. There is a spirit nucleus in the mind of man—the indwelling Spirit of God.
Three separate evidences of this Spirit indwelling of the human mind are:
It is the same moon that is reflected in the puddles as in the fountains.
Compatibility comes about not through sameness but through respect for our differences.
The human mind does not create real values; human experience does not yield universe insight. Concerning insight—the recognition of moral values and the discernment of spiritual meanings—all that the human mind can do is to discover, recognize, interpret, and choose.
The moral values of the universe become intellectual possessions by the exercise of three basic judgments or choices of the mortal mind:
Thus it appears that all human progress is effected by a technique of conjoint revelational evolution.
Unless a Divine Lover lived in the mind of man, individuals could not unselfishly and spiritually love. And unless an Interpreter lived in their minds, they could not truly realize the unity of the universe. Also, unless an Evaluator indwelt each mind, that mind could not appraise moral values nor recognize spiritual meanings. This Indwelling Lover hails from the very source of Infinite Love; this Interpreter is part of Universal Unity; this evaluator is of the Center and Source of all absolute values of divine and eternal reality.
Human survival is, in great measure, dependent on consecrating the human will to the choosing of those values selected by this spirit-value sorter—the indwelling interpreter and unifier—our indwelling God-Spirit.
Jesus revealed and exemplified a religion of love—security in the Father’s love, with joy in sharing this love in the service of the human brotherhood.
Every time any person makes a reflective moral choice, they immediately experience a new divine invasion of their soul.
Man’s contact with the highest objective reality, God, is only through the purely subjective experience of knowing him, worshipping him, and of realizing family membership with him.
Religion is mankind’s supreme experience during the mortal nature, and love is the highest motivation that any person may utilize in their universe ascent—but love, divested of truth, beauty, and goodness is only a sentiment.
The religious person can transcend an environment and, in this way, escape the limitations of the world through the insight of divine love. This concept of love generates in the soul of man the super-animal effort to find truth, beauty, and goodness; and when these are found, God is found—and the finder is consumed with the desire to be like him.
Be not discouraged; human evolution is still in progress, and the revelation of God to the world, in and through Jesus shall not fail.
The great challenge to modern man is to achieve better communication with the divine indwelling Spirit of God.
Man’s greatest adventure consists in a sane effort to advance the borders of self-consciousness, through the realms of soul-consciousness, in a whole-hearted effort to reach the borderland of spirit-consciousness—contact with the divine presence. Such an experience constitutes God-consciousness, an experience mightily confirmative of the pre-existent truth of the religious experience of knowing God.
Our relationship with God is an experience of faith in that we have reached out to the borderland of spirit consciousness to the point of contact of the divine presence, the God-Spirit within—and so attained that spirit consciousness that is equivalent to knowledge of the actuality of our child-parent relationship with the Father.
The Father is living love and this life of the Father is in his Son. And the Spirit of the Father is in his Son’s sons and daughters—mortal man. And when all is said and done, the Father idea is still the highest human concept of God.