N
Norm
Guest
On the other hand, you pointed out how in the Urantia book there is the story of the unauthorized teacher, and Jesus saying "forbid him not"? Same pattern, different context? But when to apply it, and when not? Just wondering, I have no stakes in this.
Yes, perhaps. Jesus probably would have left Paul alone, and it seems that's what he did. But as Jesus says to one preacher in The Urantia Book:
132:4.7 To the speaker at the forum he said: “Your eloquence is pleasing, your logic is admirable, your voice is pleasant, but your teaching is hardly true. If you could only enjoy the inspiring satisfaction of knowing God as your spiritual Father, then you might employ your powers of speech to liberate your fellows from the bondage of darkness and from the slavery of ignorance.”
So while Jesus would not forbid Paul, had they been together ever, Jesus would surely have corrected him. And I think the matter of a false preacher is probably more of a problem for the listener to decide and sort out. Catholics forbid. Mormons forbid. Muslims forbid.
The thing is that Jesus preached "the gospel of the kingdom" and he told his followers to preach that "in all the world," (Matthew 24:14) but after Jesus was long gone Paul showed up and switched them to a different gospel, the gospel of the cross, atonement, all ABOUT Jesus, etc. Jesus never preached that. The "gospel of the kingdom" is not about Jesus, it's about the kingdom and our place in it. (It's like the old joke about "Who is burred in Grant's Tomb??, What is the "gospel of the kingdom" about? Gee, I wonder what it could be about?) Christians do not preach that even though Jesus did and it's what he told them to preach. When I ask Christians why they don't preach what Jesus preached, they look confused. Or they'll say, Well, Paul said..."
Interesting, and funny (to those not involved in such law suits). Again, parallels to other faiths in recent times - human nature, as you point out.
What are the teachings like - do they address day to day concerns, dietary rules, an ideal society?
Um, I'd say, "the teachings" in The Urantia Book (and using the term the way I think you're meaning it) "the teachings" are the same as those in the bible when one stops Christianizing the bible and making it say what they want it to say. The "teachings" in The Urantia Book, the "gospel of the kingdom" consists of one or two sentences, the rest of the book is filler, interesting and relevant filler to be sure, but not "the gospel of the kingdom." These are the teachings from The Urantia Book as given in the bible, and that Christians mostly ignore and do not emphasize.
...Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life? (Luke 10:25)
"Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind; and thy neighbor as thyself." (Luke 10:27)
The Urantia Book says the same, and really, what more does anyone need to know besides the direct answer from Jesus to the question, "...Master, what shall I do to inherit eternal life? (Luke 10:25)? It's all there. But Christians have added a lot of their own doctrines of men.
And this:
"Not every one who says to me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he who does the will of my Father who is in heaven." (Matthew 7:21)
You MUST do the Father's will to enter the kingdom of heaven. The bible and The Urantia Book are in agreement about this, but Christians have lots of additions and qualifiers to it. And the Father's will is, ""Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy strength, and with all thy mind; and thy neighbor as thyself." (Luke 10:27) And one Catholic told me that it was the Father's will that everyone convert to Catholicism. So there's that, the complete circle for Catholicism, the Father's will is all about them. LOL.
No, no dietary rules. God is not concerned with what we eat (IMO). And probably not concerned with who we have sex with. Seriously. He is concerned with our ethics, how we treat each other, our brothers and sisters in His family. As far as an ideal society, surely that's up to us to figure out. But, the book does say,
154:4.2 There was much talk about Jesus’ preaching doctrines which were upsetting for the common people; his enemies maintained that his teachings were impractical, that everything would go to pieces if everybody made an honest effort to live in accordance with his ideas. And the men of many subsequent generations have said the same things. Many intelligent and well-meaning men, even in the more enlightened age of these revelations, maintain that modern civilization could not have been built upon the teachings of Jesus—and they are partially right. But all such doubters forget that a much better civilization could have been built upon his teachings, and sometime will be. This world has never seriously tried to carry out the teachings of Jesus on a large scale, notwithstanding that halfhearted attempts have often been made to follow the doctrines of so-called Christianity.
And by the way, the "gospel of the kingdom" that Jesus preached and which he told his followers to preach is, "All men are the sons of God." Christianity lost that and has not preached that in 2000 years. You tell them that's the gospel of the kingdom and they will say No, it can't be. Only Christians are the sons of God, etc. Muslims? No. Buddhists? No. Hindus? No. And so on.