The 5th Epochal Revelation
-The Urantia Papers
PAPER 98
THE MELCHIZEDEK TEACHINGS IN THE OCCIDENT
98:0.1
THE Melchizedek teachings entered Europe along many
routes, but chiefly they came by way of Egypt and were
embodied in Occidental philosophy after being thoroughly
Hellenized and later Christianized. The ideals of the
Western world were basically Socratic, and its later
religious philosophy became that of Jesus as it was
modified and compromised through contact with evolving
Occidental philosophy and religion, all of which
culminated in the Christian church.
98:0.2
For a long time in Europe the Salem missionaries carried
on their activities, becoming gradually absorbed into
many of the cults and ritual groups which periodically
arose. Among those who maintained the Salem teachings in
the purest form must be mentioned the Cynics. These
preachers of faith and trust in God were still
functioning in Roman Europe in the first century after
Christ, being later incorporated into the newly forming
Christian religion.
98:0.3
Much of the Salem doctrine was spread in Europe by the
Jewish mercenary soldiers who fought in so many of the
Occidental military struggles. In ancient times the Jews
were famed as much for military valor as for theologic
peculiarities.
98:0.4
The basic doctrines of Greek philosophy, Jewish
theology, and Christian ethics were fundamentally
repercussions of the earlier Melchizedek teachings.
1. THE SALEM RELIGION AMONG THE GREEKS
98:1.1
The Salem missionaries might have built up a great
religious structure among the Greeks had it not been for
their strict interpretation of their oath of ordination,
a pledge imposed by Machiventa which forbade the
organization of exclusive congregations for worship, and
which exacted the promise of each teacher never to
function as a priest, never to receive fees for
religious service, only food, clothing, and shelter.
When the Melchizedek teachers penetrated to pre-Hellenic
Greece, they found a people who still fostered the
traditions of Adamson and the days of the Andites, but
these teachings had become greatly adulterated with the
notions and beliefs of the hordes of inferior slaves
that had been brought to the Greek shores in increasing
numbers. This adulteration produced a reversion to a
crude animism with bloody rites, the lower classes even
making ceremonial out of the execution of condemned
criminals.
98:1.2
The early influence of the Salem teachers was nearly
destroyed by the so-called Aryan invasion from southern
Europe and the East. These Hellenic invaders brought
along with them anthropomorphic God concepts similar to
those which their Aryan fellows had carried to India.
This importation inaugurated the evolution of the Greek
family of gods and goddesses. This new religion was
partly based on the cults of the incoming Hellenic
barbarians, but it also shared in the myths of the older
inhabitants of Greece.
98:1.3
The Hellenic Greeks found the Mediterranean world
largely dominated by the mother cult, and they imposed
upon these peoples their man-god, Dyaus-Zeus, who had
already become, like Yahweh among the henotheistic
Semites, head of the whole Greek pantheon of subordinate
gods. And the Greeks would have eventually achieved a
true monotheism in the concept of Zeus except for their
retention of the overcontrol of Fate. A God of final
value must, himself, be the arbiter of fate and the
creator of destiny.
98:1.4
As a consequence of these factors in religious
evolution, there presently developed the popular belief
in the happy-go-lucky gods of Mount Olympus, gods more
human than divine, and gods which the intelligent Greeks
never did regard very seriously. They neither greatly
loved nor greatly feared these divinities of their own
creation. They had a patriotic and racial feeling for
Zeus and his family of half men and half gods, but they
hardly reverenced or worshiped them.
98:1.5
The Hellenes became so impregnated with the
antipriestcraft doctrines of the earlier Salem teachers
that no priesthood of any importance ever arose in
Greece. Even the making of images to the gods became
more of a work in art than a matter of worship.
98:1.6
The Olympian gods illustrate man's typical
anthropomorphism. But the Greek mythology was more
aesthetic than ethic. The Greek religion was helpful in
that it portrayed a universe governed by a deity group.
But Greek morals, ethics, and philosophy presently
advanced far beyond the god concept, and this imbalance
between intellectual and spiritual growth was as
hazardous to Greece as it had proved to be in India.
2. GREEK PHILOSOPHIC THOUGHT
98:2.1
A lightly regarded and superficial religion cannot
endure, especially when it has no priesthood to foster
its forms and to fill the hearts of the devotees with
fear and awe. The Olympian religion did not promise
salvation, nor did it quench the spiritual thirst of its
believers; therefore was it doomed to perish. Within a
millennium of its inception it had nearly vanished, and
the Greeks were without a national religion, the gods of
Olympus having lost their hold upon the better minds.
98:2.2
This was the situation when, during the sixth century
before Christ, the Orient and the Levant experienced a
revival of spiritual consciousness and a new awakening
to the recognition of monotheism. But the West did not
share in this new development; neither Europe nor
northern Africa extensively participated in this
religious renaissance. The Greeks, however, did engage
in a magnificent intellectual advancement. They had
begun to master fear and no longer sought religion as an
antidote therefor, but they did not perceive that true
religion is the cure for soul hunger, spiritual
disquiet, and moral despair. They sought for the solace
of the soul in deep thinking -- philosophy and
metaphysics. They turned from the contemplation of
self-preservation -- salvation -- to self-realization
and self-understanding.
98:2.3
By rigorous thought the Greeks attempted to attain that
consciousness of security which would serve as a
substitute for the belief in survival, but they utterly
failed. Only the more intelligent among the higher
classes of the Hellenic peoples could grasp this new
teaching; the rank and file of the progeny of the slaves
of former generations had no capacity for the reception
of this new substitute for religion.
98:2.4
The philosophers disdained all forms of worship,
notwithstanding that they practically all held loosely
to the background of a belief in the Salem doctrine of
"the Intelligence of the universe," "the idea of God,"
and "the Great Source." In so far as the Greek
philosophers gave recognition to the divine and the
superfinite, they were frankly monotheistic; they gave
scant recognition to the whole galaxy of Olympian gods
and goddesses.
98:2.5
The Greek poets of the fifth and sixth centuries,
notably Pindar, attempted the reformation of Greek
religion. They elevated its ideals, but they were more
artists than religionists. They failed to develop a
technique for fostering and conserving supreme values.
98:2.6
Xenophanes taught one God, but his deity concept was too
pantheistic to be a personal Father to mortal man.
Anaxagoras was a mechanist except that he did recognize
a First Cause, an Initial Mind. Socrates and his
successors, Plato and Aristotle, taught that virtue is
knowledge; goodness, health of the soul; that it is
better to suffer injustice than to be guilty of it, that
it is wrong to return evil for evil, and that the gods
are wise and good. Their cardinal virtues were: wisdom,
courage, temperance, and justice.
98:2.7
The evolution of religious philosophy among the Hellenic
and Hebrew peoples affords a contrastive illustration of
the function of the church as an institution in the
shaping of cultural progress. In Palestine, human
thought was so priest-controlled and scripture-directed
that philosophy and aesthetics were entirely submerged
in religion and morality. In Greece, the almost complete
absence of priests and "sacred scriptures" left the
human mind free and unfettered, resulting in a startling
development in depth of thought. But religion as a
personal experience failed to keep pace with the
intellectual probings into the nature and reality of the
cosmos.
98:2.8
In Greece, believing was subordinated to thinking; in
Palestine, thinking was held subject to believing. Much
of the strength of Christianity is due to its having
borrowed heavily from both Hebrew morality and Greek
thought.
98:2.9
In Palestine, religious dogma became so crystallized as
to jeopardize further growth; in Greece, human thought
became so abstract that the concept of God resolved
itself into a misty vapor of pantheistic speculation not
at all unlike the impersonal Infinity of the Brahman
philosophers.
98:2.10
But the average men of these times could not grasp, nor
were they much interested in, the Greek philosophy of
self-realization and an abstract Deity; they rather
craved promises of salvation, coupled with a personal
God who could hear their prayers. They exiled the
philosophers, persecuted the remnants of the Salem cult,
both doctrines having become much blended, and made
ready for that terrible orgiastic plunge into the
follies of the mystery cults which were then
overspreading the Mediterranean lands. The Eleusinian
mysteries grew up within the Olympian pantheon, a Greek
version of the worship of fertility; Dionysus nature
worship flourished; the best of the cults was the Orphic
brotherhood, whose moral preachments and promises of
salvation made a great appeal to many.
98:2.11
All Greece became involved in these new methods of
attaining salvation, these emotional and fiery
ceremonials. No nation ever attained such heights of
artistic philosophy in so short a time; none ever
created such an advanced system of ethics practically
without Deity and entirely devoid of the promise of
human salvation; no nation ever plunged so quickly,
deeply, and violently into such depths of intellectual
stagnation, moral depravity, and spiritual poverty as
these same Greek peoples when they flung themselves into
the mad whirl of the mystery cults.
98:2.12
Religions have long endured without philosophical
support, but few philosophies, as such, have long
persisted without some identification with religion.
Philosophy is to religion as conception is to action.
But the ideal human estate is that in which philosophy,
religion, and science are welded into a meaningful unity
by the conjoined action of wisdom, faith, and
experience.
3. THE MELCHIZEDEK TEACHINGS IN ROME
98:3.1
Having grown out of the earlier religious forms of
worship of the family gods into the tribal reverence for
Mars, the god of war, it was natural that the later
religion of the Latins was more of a political
observance than were the intellectual systems of the
Greeks and Brahmans or the more spiritual religions of
several other peoples.
98:3.2
In the great monotheistic renaissance of Melchizedek's
gospel during the sixth century before Christ, too few
of the Salem missionaries penetrated Italy, and those
who did were unable to overcome the influence of the
rapidly spreading Etruscan priesthood with its new
galaxy of gods and temples, all of which became
organized into the Roman state religion. This religion
of the Latin tribes was not trivial and venal like that
of the Greeks, neither was it austere and tyrannical
like that of the Hebrews; it consisted for the most part
in the observance of mere forms, vows, and taboos.
98:3.3
Roman religion was greatly influenced by extensive
cultural importations from Greece. Eventually most of
the Olympian gods were transplanted and incorporated
into the Latin pantheon. The Greeks long worshiped the
fire of the family hearth -- Hestia was the virgin
goddess of the hearth; Vesta was the Roman goddess of
the home. Zeus became Jupiter; Aphrodite, Venus; and so
on down through the many Olympian deities.
98:3.4
The religious initiation of Roman youths was the
occasion of their solemn consecration to the service of
the state. Oaths and admissions to citizenship were in
reality religious ceremonies. The Latin peoples
maintained temples, altars, and shrines and, in a
crisis, would consult the oracles. They preserved the
bones of heroes and later on those of the Christian
saints.
98:3.5
This formal and unemotional form of pseudoreligious
patriotism was doomed to collapse, even as the highly
intellectual and artistic worship of the Greeks had gone
down before the fervid and deeply emotional worship of
the mystery cults. The greatest of these devastating
cults was the mystery religion of the Mother of God
sect, which had its headquarters, in those days, on the
exact site of the present church of St. Peter's in Rome.
98:3.6
The emerging Roman state conquered politically but was
in turn conquered by the cults, rituals, mysteries, and
god concepts of Egypt, Greece, and the Levant. These
imported cults continued to flourish throughout the
Roman state up to the time of Augustus, who, purely for
political and civic reasons, made a heroic and somewhat
successful effort to destroy the mysteries and revive
the older political religion.
98:3.7
One of the priests of the state religion told Augustus
of the earlier attempts of the Salem teachers to spread
the doctrine of one God, a final Deity presiding over
all supernatural beings; and this idea took such a firm
hold on the emperor that he built many temples, stocked
them well with beautiful images, reorganized the state
priesthood, re-established the state religion, appointed
himself acting high priest of all, and as emperor did
not hesitate to proclaim himself the supreme god.
98:3.8
This new religion of Augustus worship flourished and was
observed throughout the empire during his lifetime
except in Palestine, the home of the Jews. And this era
of the human gods continued until the official Roman
cult had a roster of more than twoscore self-elevated
human deities, all claiming miraculous births and other
superhuman attributes.
98:3.9
The last stand of the dwindling band of Salem believers
was made by an earnest group of preachers, the Cynics,
who exhorted the Romans to abandon their wild and
senseless religious rituals and return to a form of
worship embodying Melchizedek's gospel as it had been
modified and contaminated through contact with the
philosophy of the Greeks. But the people at large
rejected the Cynics; they preferred to plunge into the
rituals of the mysteries, which not only offered hopes
of personal salvation but also gratified the desire for
diversion, excitement, and entertainment.
4. THE MYSTERY CULTS
98:4.1
The majority of people in the Graeco-Roman world, having
lost their primitive family and state religions and
being unable or unwilling to grasp the meaning of Greek
philosophy, turned their attention to the spectacular
and emotional mystery cults from Egypt and the Levant.
The common people craved promises of salvation --
religious consolation for today and assurances of hope
for immortality after death.
98:4.2
The three mystery cults which became most popular were:
1. The Phrygian cult of Cybele and her son Attis.
2. The Egyptian cult of Osiris and his mother Isis.
3. The Iranian cult of the worship of Mithras as the
savior and redeemer of sinful mankind.
98:4.3
The Phrygian and Egyptian mysteries taught that the
divine son (respectively Attis and Osiris) had
experienced death and had been resurrected by divine
power, and further that all who were properly initiated
into the mystery, and who reverently celebrated the
anniversary of the god's death and resurrection, would
thereby become partakers of his divine nature and his
immortality.
98:4.4
The Phrygian ceremonies were imposing but degrading;
their bloody festivals indicate how degraded and
primitive these Levantine mysteries became. The most
holy day was Black Friday, the "day of blood,"
commemorating the self-inflicted death of Attis. After
three days of the celebration of the sacrifice and death
of Attis the festival was turned to joy in honor of his
resurrection.
98:4.5
The rituals of the worship of Isis and Osiris were more
refined and impressive than were those of the Phrygian
cult. This Egyptian ritual was built around the legend
of the Nile god of old, a god who died and was
resurrected, which concept was derived from the
observation of the annually recurring stoppage of
vegetation growth followed by the springtime restoration
of all living plants. The frenzy of the observance of
these mystery cults and the orgies of their ceremonials,
which were supposed to lead up to the "enthusiasm" of
the realization of divinity, were sometimes most
revolting.
5. THE CULT OF MITHRAS
98:5.1
The Phrygian and Egyptian mysteries eventually gave way
before the greatest of all the mystery cults, the
worship of Mithras. The Mithraic cult made its appeal to
a wide range of human nature and gradually supplanted
both of its predecessors. Mithraism spread over the
Roman Empire through the propagandizing of Roman legions
recruited in the Levant, where this religion was the
vogue, for they carried this belief wherever they went.
And this new religious ritual was a great improvement
over the earlier mystery cults.
98:5.2
The cult of Mithras arose in Iran and long persisted in
its homeland despite the militant opposition of the
followers of Zoroaster. But by the time Mithraism
reached Rome, it had become greatly improved by the
absorption of many of Zoroaster's teachings. It was
chiefly through the Mithraic cult that Zoroaster's
religion exerted an influence upon later appearing
Christianity.
98:5.3
The Mithraic cult portrayed a militant god taking origin
in a great rock, engaging in valiant exploits, and
causing water to gush forth from a rock struck with his
arrows. There was a flood from which one man escaped in
a specially built boat and a last supper which Mithras
celebrated with the sun-god before he ascended into the
heavens. This sun-god, or Sol Invictus, was a
degeneration of the Ahura-Mazda deity concept of
Zoroastrianism. Mithras was conceived as the surviving
champion of the sun-god in his struggle with the god of
darkness. And in recognition of his slaying the mythical
sacred bull, Mithras was made immortal, being exalted to
the station of intercessor for the human race among the
gods on high.
98:5.4
The adherents of this cult worshiped in caves and other
secret places, chanting hymns, mumbling magic, eating
the flesh of the sacrificial animals, and drinking the
blood. Three times a day they worshiped, with special
weekly ceremonials on the day of the sun-god and with
the most elaborate observance of all on the annual
festival of Mithras, December twenty-fifth. It was
believed that the partaking of the sacrament ensured
eternal life, the immediate passing, after death, to the
bosom of Mithras, there to tarry in bliss until the
judgment day. On the judgment day the Mithraic keys of
heaven would unlock the gates of Paradise for the
reception of the faithful; whereupon all the unbaptized
of the living and the dead would be annihilated upon the
return of Mithras to earth. It was taught that, when a
man died, he went before Mithras for judgment, and that
at the end of the world Mithras would summon all the
dead from their graves to face the last judgment. The
wicked would be destroyed by fire, and the righteous
would reign with Mithras forever.
98:5.5
At first it was a religion only for men, and there were
seven different orders into which believers could be
successively initiated. Later on, the wives and
daughters of believers were admitted to the temples of
the Great Mother, which adjoined the Mithraic temples.
The women's cult was a mixture of Mithraic ritual and
the ceremonies of the Phrygian cult of Cybele, the
mother of Attis.
6. MITHRAISM AND CHRISTIANITY
98:6.1
Prior to the coming of the mystery cults and
Christianity, personal religion hardly developed as an
independent institution in the civilized lands of North
Africa and Europe; it was more of a family, city-state,
political, and imperial affair. The Hellenic Greeks
never evolved a centralized worship system; the ritual
was local; they had no priesthood and no "sacred book."
Much as the Romans, their religious institutions lacked
a powerful driving agency for the preservation of higher
moral and spiritual values. While it is true that the
institutionalization of religion has usually detracted
from its spiritual quality, it is also a fact that no
religion has thus far succeeded in surviving without the
aid of institutional organization of some degree,
greater or lesser.
98:6.2
Occidental religion thus languished until the days of
the Skeptics, Cynics, Epicureans, and Stoics, but most
important of all, until the times of the great contest
between Mithraism and Paul's new religion of
Christianity.
98:6.3
During the third century after Christ, Mithraic and
Christian churches were very similar both in appearance
and in the character of their ritual. A majority of such
places of worship were underground, and both contained
altars whose backgrounds variously depicted the
sufferings of the savior who had brought salvation to a
sin-cursed human race.
98:6.4
Always had it been the practice of Mithraic worshipers,
on entering the temple, to dip their fingers in holy
water. And since in some districts there were those who
at one time belonged to both religions, they introduced
this custom into the majority of the Christian churches
in the vicinity of Rome. Both religions employed baptism
and partook of the sacrament of bread and wine. The one
great difference between Mithraism and Christianity,
aside from the characters of Mithras and Jesus, was that
the one encouraged militarism while the other was
ultrapacific. Mithraism's tolerance for other religions
(except later Christianity) led to its final undoing.
But the deciding factor in the struggle between the two
was the admission of women into the full fellowship of
the Christian faith.
98:6.5
In the end the nominal Christian faith dominated the
Occident. Greek philosophy supplied the concepts of
ethical value; Mithraism, the ritual of worship
observance; and Christianity, as such, the technique for
the conservation of moral and social values.
7. THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION
98:7.1
A Creator Son did not incarnate in the likeness of
mortal flesh and bestow himself upon the humanity of
Urantia to reconcile an angry God but rather to win all
mankind to the recognition of the Father's love and to
the realization of their sonship with God. After all,
even the great advocate of the atonement doctrine
realized something of this truth, for he declared that
"God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself."
98:7.2
It is not the province of this paper to deal with the
origin and dissemination of the Christian religion.
Suffice it to say that it is built around the person of
Jesus of Nazareth, the humanly incarnate Michael Son of
Nebadon, known to Urantia as the Christ, the anointed
one. Christianity was spread throughout the Levant and
Occident by the followers of this Galilean, and their
missionary zeal equaled that of their illustrious
predecessors, the Sethites and Salemites, as well as
that of their earnest Asiatic contemporaries, the
Buddhist teachers.
98:7.3
The Christian religion, as a Urantian system of belief,
arose through the compounding of the following
teachings, influences, beliefs, cults, and personal
individual attitudes:
98:7.4
1. The Melchizedek teachings, which are a basic factor
in all the religions of Occident and Orient that have
arisen in the last four thousand years.
98:7.5
2. The Hebraic system of morality, ethics, theology, and
belief in both Providence and the supreme Yahweh.
98:7.6
3. The Zoroastrian conception of the struggle between
cosmic good and evil, which had already left its imprint
on both Judaism and Mithraism. Through prolonged contact
attendant upon the struggles between Mithraism and
Christianity, the doctrines of the Iranian prophet
became a potent factor in determining the theologic and
philosophic cast and structure of the dogmas, tenets,
and cosmology of the Hellenized and Latinized versions
of the teachings of Jesus.
98:7.7
4. The mystery cults, especially Mithraism but also the
worship of the Great Mother in the Phrygian cult. Even
the legends of the birth of Jesus on Urantia became
tainted with the Roman version of the miraculous birth
of the Iranian savior-hero, Mithras, whose advent on
earth was supposed to have been witnessed by only a
handful of gift-bearing shepherds who had been informed
of this impending event by angels.
98:7.8
5. The historic fact of the human life of Joshua ben
Joseph, the reality of Jesus of Nazareth as the
glorified Christ, the Son of God.
98:7.9
6. The personal viewpoint of Paul of Tarsus. And it
should be recorded that Mithraism was the dominant
religion of Tarsus during his adolescence. Paul little
dreamed that his well-intentioned letters to his
converts would someday be regarded by still later
Christians as the "word of God." Such well-meaning
teachers must not be held accountable for the use made
of their writings by later-day successors.
98:7.10
7. The philosophic thought of the Hellenistic peoples,
from Alexandria and Antioch through Greece to Syracuse
and Rome. The philosophy of the Greeks was more in
harmony with Paul's version of Christianity than with
any other current religious system and became an
important factor in the success of Christianity in the
Occident. Greek philosophy, coupled with Paul's
theology, still forms the basis of European ethics.
98:7.11
As the original teachings of Jesus penetrated the
Occident, they became Occidentalized, and as they became
Occidentalized, they began to lose their potentially
universal appeal to all races and kinds of men.
Christianity, today, has become a religion well adapted
to the social, economic, and political mores of the
white races. It has long since ceased to be the religion
of Jesus, although it still valiantly portrays a
beautiful religion about Jesus to such individuals as
sincerely seek to follow in the way of its teaching. It
has glorified Jesus as the Christ, the Messianic
anointed one from God, but has largely forgotten the
Master's personal gospel: the Fatherhood of God and the
universal brotherhood of all men.
98:7.12
And this is the long story of the teachings of
Machiventa Melchizedek on Urantia. It is nearly four
thousand years since this emergency Son of Nebadon
bestowed himself on Urantia, and in that time the
teachings of the "priest of El Elyon, the Most High
God," have penetrated to all races and peoples. And
Machiventa was successful in achieving the purpose of
his unusual bestowal; when Michael made ready to appear
on Urantia, the God concept was existent in the hearts
of men and women, the same God concept that still flames
anew in the living spiritual experience of the manifold
children of the Universal Father as they live their
intriguing temporal lives on the whirling planets of
space.
98:7.13
Presented by a Melchizedek of Nebadon.
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