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FOURTH PRINCIPLE—THE ACCEPTANCE OF THE RELATION BETWEEN RELIGION AND SCIENCE |
All religious laws conform to reason, and are suited
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to the people for whom they are framed, and for the
age in which they are to be obeyed.
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The spiritual part never changes. All the Manifestations
of God and His Prophets have taught the same
truths and given the same spiritual law. They all
teach the one code of morality. There is no division in
the truth. The Sun has sent forth many rays to illumine
human intelligence, the light is always the same.
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In the time of Moses, there were ten crimes punishable
by death. When Christ came this was changed;
the old axiom ‘an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a
tooth’ was converted into ‘Love your enemies, do
good to them that hate you’, the stern old law being
changed into one of love, mercy and forbearance!
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In the former days the punishment for theft was the
cutting off of the right hand; in our time this law could
not be so applied. In this age, a man who curses his
father is allowed to live, when formerly he would have
been put to death. It is therefore evident that whilst the
spiritual law never alters, the practical rules must change
their application with the necessities of the time. The
spiritual aspect of religion is the greater, the more
important of the two, and this is the same for all time,
it never changes! It is the same, yesterday, today, and
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for ever! ‘As it was the beginning, is now, and
ever shall be.’
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Now, all questions of morality contained in the
spiritual, immutable law of every religion are logically
right. If religion were contrary to logical reason
then it would cease to be a religion and be merely a
tradition. Religion and science are the two wings upon
which man’s intelligence can soar into the heights, with
which the human soul can progress. It is not possible
to fly with one wing alone! Should a man try to fly
with the wing of religion alone he would quickly
fall into the quagmire of superstition, whilst on the
other hand, with the wing of science alone he would
also make no progress, but fall into the despairing
slough of materialism. All religions of the present day
have fallen into superstitious practices, out of harmony
alike with the true principles of the teaching they represent
and with the scientific discoveries of the time.
Many religious leaders have grown to think that the
importance of religion lies mainly in the adherence
to a collection of certain dogmas and the practice of
rites and ceremonies! Those whose souls they profess
to cure are taught to believe likewise, and these cling
tenaciously to the outward forms, confusing them
with the inward truth.
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Now, these forms and rituals differ in the various
churches and amongst the different sects, and even
contradict one another; giving rise to discord, hatred,
and disunion. The outcome of all this dissension is the
belief of many cultured men that religion and science
are contradictory terms, that religion needs no powers
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of reflection, and should in no wise be regulated by
science, but must of necessity be opposed, the one to
the other. The unfortunate effect of this is that science
has drifted apart from religion, and religion has become
a mere blind and more or less apathetic following of
the precepts of certain religious teachers, who insist
on their own favourite dogmas being accepted even
when they are contrary to science. This is foolishness,
for it is quite evident that science is the light, and,
being so, religion truly so-called does not oppose
knowledge.
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Consider what it is that singles man out from among
created beings, and makes of him a creature apart.
Is it not his reasoning power, his intelligence? Shall he
not make use of these in his study of religion? I say
unto you: weigh carefully in the balance of reason and
science everything that is presented to you as religion.
If it passes this test, then accept it, for it is truth! If,
however, it does not so conform, then reject it, for
it is ignorance!
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Look around and see how the world of today is
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drowned in superstition and outward forms!
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Some worship the product of their own imagination:
they make for themselves an imaginary God and adore
this, when the creation of their finite minds cannot be
the Infinite Mighty Maker of all things visible and
invisible! Others worship the sun or trees, also
stones! In past ages there were those who adored the
sea, the clouds, and even clay!
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Today, men have grown into such adoring attachment
to outward forms and ceremonies that they dispute
over this point of ritual or that particular practice,
until one hears on all sides of wearisome arguments and
unrest. There are individuals who have weak intellects
and their powers of reasoning have not developed, but
the strength and power of religion must not be
doubted because of the incapacity of these persons to
understand.
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A small child cannot comprehend the laws that
govern nature, but this is on account of the immature
intellect of that child; when he is grown older and has
been educated he too will understand the everlasting
truths. A child does not grasp the fact that the earth
revolves round the sun, but, when his intelligence is
awakened, the fact is clear and plain to him.
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God made religion and science to be the measure, as
it were, of our understanding. Take heed that you
neglect not such a wonderful power. Weigh all things
in this balance.
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Put all your beliefs into harmony with science;
there can be no opposition, for truth is one. When
religion, shorn of its superstitions, traditions, and unintelligent
dogmas, shows its conformity with science,
then will there be a great unifying, cleansing force in
the world which will sweep before it all wars, disagreements,
discords and struggles—and then will
mankind be united in the power of the Love of God.
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