UrantiaUrantia is the name sometimes given to the spiritual movement whose principal text is The Urantia Book. According to The Urantia Book itself, Urantia is simply another name for the planet Earth. The book, a self-purported revelation to the planet, was first published in 1955, reportedly authored by celestial beings in collaboration with a physician named William S. Sadler, living in the vicinity of Chicago, USA. A handful of volunteers at that time, known as the Contact Commission, gathered together under the leadership of this physician to aid in the reception of The Urantia Book. The names of all humans involved in the project were intentionally withheld to prevent their unintended exaltation. Their identities are a matter of recent court record (p.9), however. The book itself is divided into 196 papers across four major parts, and each paper is written as if presented or "sponsored" by a celestial being. The book was first published in English and has since been translated into a number of other languages. In 2001, the Urantia Foundation lost a court decision concerning the book's U.S. copyright, and the text of the original English version is in the public domain. Full electronic copies are available on the Internet.
As Fiction or LiteratureFrom a literary point of view, the book is fairly exceptional in its ability to maintain a high level of internal consistency, while presenting an advanced mythology that draws on numerous sources related to history, religion, philosophy, anthropology, geology, and astronomy. Part I, II, and III are chiefly written in direct, expository language, whereas Part IV of the book, "The Life and Teachings of Jesus," is a rich story involving hundreds of well-developed characters, a high attention to detail, woven sub-plots, and realistic dialogue. As a standalone book, Part IV would be 774 pages, and in many ways is equal if not superior to other literary retellings of Jesus' life, such as "The Gospel According to Jesus Christ" by José Saramago and "Behold the Man" by Michael Moorcock. Many skeptics are dismissive of the book on the grounds that it purports to be a religious text, but others have enjoyed it as a form of science fiction. The opposite is true for many truth-seekers. The "science fiction" aspect comes about from the book's extensive cosmology coupled with the fact that the listed authors and sponsors of the text's individual Papers hail from planets situated in various parts of creation. They are however supernal, rather than mortal and material beings such as are the alien characters in most science fiction literature. While most of the authors are in fact alien to this planet -- there is an invisible species which shares this planet with us as their birthplace -- they are more properly classified in ordinary terminology as "angels" rather than "aliens". It has not been successfully shown that any of the beings revealed in The URANTIA Book are in any way connected with the aliens of UFOlogy. We are told in the book of other material, mortal beings on worlds nearby to earth in the cosmic sense, but there is no indication that they have mastered inter-solar space travel.CriticismThe book has not received a great deal of formal critical analysis due to its obscurity. From a skeptical point of view, the book contains numerous factual errors regarding the science it describes, and many passages have been documented as plagiarized from other sources. The book is not silent on these issues. Regarding the factual errors, the so-called supernal authors admit that "within a few short years many of our statements regarding the physical sciences will stand in need of revision in consequence of additional scientific developments and new discoveries. These new developments we even now foresee, but we are forbidden to include such humanly undiscovered facts in the revelatory records." Regarding the passages plagiarized from other sources, The Urantia Book states in its Forward that it freely used "human concepts, assembled from the God-knowing mortals of the past and the present". The book on occasion makes unsettling statements on racial issues, and at one point even claims that youth should be encouraged to study eugenics. A sample statement: "As long as present-day races are so overloaded with inferior and degenerate strains, race intermingling on a large scale would be most detrimental, but most of the objections to such experiments rest on social and cultural prejudices rather than on biological considerations." A number of outsized claims are made by the book about its own importance. The book matter of factly states that it is the Fifth Epochal Revelation in human history, the fourth revelation having been the life of Jesus Christ. The fourth epochal revelation is presented as having been an entirely new spiritual dispensation, whereas The URANTIA Book is a continuation and/or upgrading of that same dispensation. It defines "epochal" revelations as being those which are "presented by the function of some . . . celestial agency, group, or personality." Much has been made of the mystery surrounding the origin of the book, by those who have read it. According to Urantia: The Great Cult Mystery by Martin Gardner, the Contact Commission originated with a group of former Seventh Day Adventists. He suspects that The Urantia Book was channeled through Dr. John Harvey Kellogg, a physician and friend of Sadler's. Some others suspect that the "Contact Personality" -- who slept throughout all of the contact transactions -- was Edgar Cayce. Sadler and other Contact Commission members, now all deceased, always claimed that the 196 Papers which comprise the published book were physically materialized. This materialization, paper by paper, was said to have been carried out over more than a decade in conjunction with an editing process involving a group of humans known as the Forum, whose entire function was to devise questions about the material. Only the material whose purpose was purportedly to educate Sadler and a few others in the new spiritual and cosmological concepts -- all of which preceded the reception of the Papers -- may be said to have been "channeled", although the Contact Personality's mind is said in The Urantia Book to have been used in its reception.AdherentsMany people find the doctrines of The Urantia Book to be compelling for their detailed attempts to reconcile the innumerable discrepancies between modern science and religion. The Urantia movement does not purport to advocate any organized religion. By strict definition, adherents of the Urantia Book could be considered by some as involved in a cult, however in practice there are not many of the characteristics normally associated with cults. There is not a central charismatic figure, there are no hidden mysteries, there are no rituals or ceremonies, and there is not a teaching that the book's followers are chosen people whereas all others are lost. The book disavows most mysticism. The book teaches that believers are to be both friendly and respectful of the humanity of, as well as the divinity in, all others. It teaches that all people are children of the same and only Paradise Father. Its readers say The Urantia Book contains many advanced spiritual concepts which are inducive to growth.External linksCategory:Religious texts\nCategory:New religious movements\n\n |
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