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Cults & Society
Book reviews
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| Bookreview |
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Douglas Groothuis, Ph.D.
Denver Seminary
Denver, Colorado |
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Martin Gardner. Prometheus Books, Amherst, NY, 1995, 445 pages.
Several
months ago I received a call from a young radio announcer for a
Christian station who wanted information on a Christian view of UFOs and
life on other planets. After a few minutes the man reluctantly confessed
that his interest was based on The
Urantia Book, a revelation that supposedly supplements, corrects,
and updates the Bible. (Urantia is what the book calls the Earth.) The
Urantia Book caused this man, despite his Christian background, to
have doubts about the orthodox teachings on Jesus. What is this Urantia
Book, and how could it so confuse someone with a Christian
background? Why would it attract anyone’s interest?
In
Urantia: The Great Cult Mystery, Martin Gardner, who has made a
career out of defending science and deflating paranormal claims, helps
explain both the allure and the deception of The
Urantia Book and the religion it has spawned. He gives us a
meticulous account that traces the personalities and philosophies that
account for the supposedly supernatural revelation given in the book.
Gardner, who is a theist not associated with any particular religious
tradition, does not provide a theological assessment that compares The
Urantia Book with any normative theological system. Rather, he
engages in a sustained historical and scientific investigation of the
book’s claims.
First
appearing in 1955, The Urantia
Book is a mammoth tome that credits no human author. Rather, it
claims to have been assembled by extraterrestrial entities, or
“Revelators,” with ostentatious names such as Perfector of Wisdom,
Number, Divine Counselor, and One Without Name, and channeled by one
unidentified human. The 2097-page volume gives a fantastically
convoluted and obscure account of cosmology, anthropology, theology, and
history. Yet, in this opacity lies much of its fascination. Students of
the book claim that they have received an esoteric dispensation that
eludes the masses. Because of the book’s sheer bulk, it supplies
endless details on cosmology, theology, and anthropology not mentioned
in other religious scriptures. Herein lies its putative superiority.
Under the leadership of the Urantia Foundation in Chicago, the book has
gone through 11 printings in the United States, with translations in
Spanish and Finnish appearing in 1993. Work is being done on Russian and
Dutch editions, and there are plans for other languages as well. My
search of the Internet yielded several home pages dedicated to spreading
the gospel according to The Urantia Book.
The
relatively small number of Urantia devotees, despite their
idiosyncratic beliefs, are not to be considered cultists in a
pejorative sociological sense. Unlike other groups with similar
teachings, it does not have an authoritarian structure of leadership,
nor do its followers typically engage in high-pressure proselytizing.
The main appeal is intellectual. Religious activities are largely based
on studying The Urantia Book.
Despite these qualifications, the book itself leaves much to be desired
as a suitable object of religious instruction and veneration.
To
attempt to fathom The Urantia Book,
one must descend into a dark and foreboding labyrinth of quirky
terminology, pseudoscientific pronouncements, and revisionist ideas
about Jesus. In barest outline, the book informs us that God is a
“Trinity of Trinities,” that humans are “unfallen” beings who
have a divine spark within them (called a “Thought Adjuster”), that
they can become fused with God through evolutionary development, and
that Jesus’ death on the cross did not atone for human sin against
God. To summarize, it is a kind of space age Gnosticism claiming
to update orthodox Christianity.
Gardner
notes that one of the book’s more objectionable anthropological claims
is that the black (or “indigo”) race was the most inferior; although
it claims that these people “have exactly the same standing before the
celestial power as any other earthly race.” Gardner observes that this
“is exactly what southerners in the United States, including their
ministers, used to say about the African American slaves.” This
revelation will certainly fail to endear potential converts who are
African or African American.
Gardner’s
well-researched conclusion is that The
Urantia Book lacks any supernatural credibility. Its contents can be
explained on the basis of purely terrestrial authors; its scientific
claims were either common knowledge at the time or plain wrong; and it
contains numerous plagiarisms (even stealing from Bertrand Russell). Urantia:
The Great Cult Mystery is the most exhaustive critique of the
movement yet published. It will help readers to understand many patterns
of deception found in many other new religious groups as well.
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| ____________________________________________
^ |
| |
|
Cults & Society
Book reviews
|
|
|
|
|
| _______________________________________________ |
| Bookreview |
|
|
| |
Douglas Groothuis, Ph.D.
Denver Seminary
Denver, Colorado |
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
Martin Gardner. Prometheus Books, Amherst, NY, 1995, 445 pages.
Several
months ago I received a call from a young radio announcer for a
Christian station who wanted information on a Christian view of UFOs and
life on other planets. After a few minutes the man reluctantly confessed
that his interest was based on The
Urantia Book, a revelation that supposedly supplements, corrects,
and updates the Bible. (Urantia is what the book calls the Earth.) The
Urantia Book caused this man, despite his Christian background, to
have doubts about the orthodox teachings on Jesus. What is this Urantia
Book, and how could it so confuse someone with a Christian
background? Why would it attract anyone’s interest?
In
Urantia: The Great Cult Mystery, Martin Gardner, who has made a
career out of defending science and deflating paranormal claims, helps
explain both the allure and the deception of The
Urantia Book and the religion it has spawned. He gives us a
meticulous account that traces the personalities and philosophies that
account for the supposedly supernatural revelation given in the book.
Gardner, who is a theist not associated with any particular religious
tradition, does not provide a theological assessment that compares The
Urantia Book with any normative theological system. Rather, he
engages in a sustained historical and scientific investigation of the
book’s claims.
First
appearing in 1955, The Urantia
Book is a mammoth tome that credits no human author. Rather, it
claims to have been assembled by extraterrestrial entities, or
“Revelators,” with ostentatious names such as Perfector of Wisdom,
Number, Divine Counselor, and One Without Name, and channeled by one
unidentified human. The 2097-page volume gives a fantastically
convoluted and obscure account of cosmology, anthropology, theology, and
history. Yet, in this opacity lies much of its fascination. Students of
the book claim that they have received an esoteric dispensation that
eludes the masses. Because of the book’s sheer bulk, it supplies
endless details on cosmology, theology, and anthropology not mentioned
in other religious scriptures. Herein lies its putative superiority.
Under the leadership of the Urantia Foundation in Chicago, the book has
gone through 11 printings in the United States, with translations in
Spanish and Finnish appearing in 1993. Work is being done on Russian and
Dutch editions, and there are plans for other languages as well. My
search of the Internet yielded several home pages dedicated to spreading
the gospel according to The Urantia Book.
The
relatively small number of Urantia devotees, despite their
idiosyncratic beliefs, are not to be considered cultists in a
pejorative sociological sense. Unlike other groups with similar
teachings, it does not have an authoritarian structure of leadership,
nor do its followers typically engage in high-pressure proselytizing.
The main appeal is intellectual. Religious activities are largely based
on studying The Urantia Book.
Despite these qualifications, the book itself leaves much to be desired
as a suitable object of religious instruction and veneration.
To
attempt to fathom The Urantia Book,
one must descend into a dark and foreboding labyrinth of quirky
terminology, pseudoscientific pronouncements, and revisionist ideas
about Jesus. In barest outline, the book informs us that God is a
“Trinity of Trinities,” that humans are “unfallen” beings who
have a divine spark within them (called a “Thought Adjuster”), that
they can become fused with God through evolutionary development, and
that Jesus’ death on the cross did not atone for human sin against
God. To summarize, it is a kind of space age Gnosticism claiming
to update orthodox Christianity.
Gardner
notes that one of the book’s more objectionable anthropological claims
is that the black (or “indigo”) race was the most inferior; although
it claims that these people “have exactly the same standing before the
celestial power as any other earthly race.” Gardner observes that this
“is exactly what southerners in the United States, including their
ministers, used to say about the African American slaves.” This
revelation will certainly fail to endear potential converts who are
African or African American.
Gardner’s
well-researched conclusion is that The
Urantia Book lacks any supernatural credibility. Its contents can be
explained on the basis of purely terrestrial authors; its scientific
claims were either common knowledge at the time or plain wrong; and it
contains numerous plagiarisms (even stealing from Bertrand Russell). Urantia:
The Great Cult Mystery is the most exhaustive critique of the
movement yet published. It will help readers to understand many patterns
of deception found in many other new religious groups as well.
|
| ____________________________________________
^ |
|