Do not permit the magnitude of God, his infinity, either to
obscure or eclipse his personality. “He who planned the ear, shall he not hear?
He who formed the eye, shall he not see?” The Universal Father is the acme of
divine personality; he is the origin and destiny of personality throughout all
creation. God is both infinite and personal; he is an infinite personality. The
Father is truly a personality, notwithstanding that the infinity of his person
places him forever beyond the full comprehension of material and finite beings.
God is much more than a personality as personality is
understood by the human mind; he is even far more than any possible concept of
a superpersonality. But it is utterly futile to discuss such incomprehensible
concepts of divine personality with the minds of material creatures whose
maximum concept of the reality of being consists in the idea and ideal of
personality. The material creature’s highest possible concept of the Universal
Creator is embraced within the spiritual ideals of the exalted idea of divine
personality. Therefore, although you may know that God must be much more than
the human conception of personality, you equally well know that the Universal
Father cannot possibly be anything less than an eternal, infinite, true, good,
and beautiful personality.
God is not hiding from any of his creatures. He is
unapproachable to so many orders of beings only because he “dwells in a light
which no material creature can approach.” The immensity and grandeur of the
divine personality is beyond the grasp of the unperfected mind of evolutionary
mortals. He “measures the waters in the hollow of his hand, measures a universe
with the span of his hand. It is he who sits on the circle of the earth, who
stretches out the heavens as a curtain and spreads them out as a universe to
dwell in.” “Lift up your eyes on high and behold who has created all these
things, who brings out their worlds by number and calls them all by their
names”; and so it is true that “the invisible things of God are partially
understood by the things which are made.” Today, and as you are, you must
discern the invisible Maker through his manifold and diverse creation, as well
as through the revelation and ministration of his Sons and their numerous
subordinates.
Even though material mortals cannot see the person of God,
they should rejoice in the assurance that he is a person; by faith accept the
truth which portrays that the Universal Father so loved the world as to provide
for the eternal spiritual progression of its lowly inhabitants; that he
“delights in his children.” God is lacking in none of those superhuman and
divine attributes which constitute a perfect, eternal, loving, and infinite
Creator personality.
In the local creations (excepting the personnel of the
superuniverses) God has no personal or residential manifestation aside from the
Paradise Creator Sons who are the fathers of the inhabited worlds and the
sovereigns of the local universes. If the faith of the creature were perfect,
he would assuredly know that when he had seen a Creator Son he had seen the
Universal Father; in seeking for the Father, he would not ask nor expect to see
other than the Son. Mortal man simply cannot see God until he achieves
completed spirit transformation and actually attains Paradise.
The natures of the Paradise Creator Sons do not encompass
all the unqualified potentials of the universal absoluteness of the infinite
nature of the First Great Source and Center, but the Universal Father is in
every way divinely present in the Creator Sons. The Father and
his Sons are one. These Paradise Sons of the order of Michael are perfect
personalities, even the pattern for all local universe personality from that of
the Bright and Morning Star down to the lowest human creature of progressing
animal evolution.
Without God and except for his great and central person,
there would be no personality throughout all the vast universe of universes. God
is personality.
Notwithstanding that God is an eternal power, a majestic
presence, a transcendent ideal, and a glorious spirit, though he is all these
and infinitely more, nonetheless, he is truly and everlastingly a perfect
Creator personality, a person who can “know and be known,” who can “love and be
loved,” and one who can befriend us; while you can be known, as other humans
have been known, as the friend of God. He is a real spirit and a spiritual
reality.
As we see the Universal Father revealed throughout his
universe; as we discern him indwelling his myriads of creatures; as we behold
him in the persons of his Sovereign Sons; as we continue to sense his divine
presence here and there, near and afar, let us not doubt nor question his
personality primacy.
Notwithstanding all these far-flung distributions, he
remains a true person and everlastingly maintains personal connection with the
countless hosts of his creatures scattered throughout the universe of universes.
The idea of the personality of the Universal Father is an
enlarged and truer concept of God which has come to mankind chiefly through
revelation. Reason, wisdom, and religious experience all infer and imply the
personality of God, but they do not altogether validate it. Even the indwelling
Thought Adjuster is prepersonal. The truth and maturity of any religion is
directly proportional to its concept of the infinite personality of God and to
its grasp of the absolute unity of Deity. The idea of a personal Deity becomes,
then, the measure of religious maturity after religion has first formulated the
concept of the unity of God.
Primitive religion had many personal gods, and they were
fashioned in the image of man. Revelation affirms the validity of the
personality concept of God which is merely possible in the scientific postulate
of a First Cause and is only provisionally suggested in the philosophic idea of
Universal Unity. Only by personality approach can any person begin to
comprehend the unity of God. To deny the personality of the First Source and
Center leaves one only the choice of two philosophic dilemmas: materialism or
pantheism.
In the contemplation of Deity, the concept of personality
must be divested of the idea of corporeality. A material body is not
indispensable to personality in either man or God. The corporeality error is
shown in both extremes of human philosophy. In materialism, since man loses his
body at death, he ceases to exist as a personality; in pantheism, since God has
no body, he is not, therefore, a person. The superhuman type of progressing
personality functions in a union of mind and spirit.
Personality is not simply an attribute of God; it rather
stands for the totality of the co-ordinated infinite nature and the unified
divine will which is exhibited in eternity and universality of perfect
expression. Personality, in the supreme sense, is the revelation of God to the
universe of universes.
God, being eternal, universal, absolute, and infinite, does
not grow in knowledge nor increase in wisdom. God does not acquire experience,
as finite man might conjecture or comprehend, but he does, within the realms of
his own eternal personality, enjoy those continuous expansions of
self-realization which are in certain ways comparable to, and analogous with,
the acquirement of new experience by the finite creatures of the evolutionary
worlds.
The absolute perfection of the infinite God would cause him
to suffer the awful limitations of unqualified finality of perfectness were it
not a fact that the Universal Father directly participates in the personality
struggle of every imperfect soul in the wide universe who seeks, by divine aid,
to ascend to the spiritually perfect worlds on high. This progressive
experience of every spirit being and every mortal creature throughout the
universe of universes is a part of the Father’s ever-expanding
Deity-consciousness of the never-ending divine circle of ceaseless self-realization.
It is literally true: “In all your afflictions he is
afflicted.” “In all your triumphs he triumphs in and with you.” His prepersonal
divine spirit is a real part of you. The Isle of Paradise responds to all the
physical metamorphoses of the universe of universes; the Eternal Son includes
all the spirit impulses of all creation; the Conjoint Actor encompasses all the
mind expression of the expanding cosmos. The Universal Father realizes in the
fullness of the divine consciousness all the individual experience of the
progressive struggles of the expanding minds and the ascending spirits of every
entity, being, and personality of the whole evolutionary creation of time and
space. And all this is literally true, for “in Him we all live and move and
have our being.”
Excerpt Courtesy of urantia.org
In the Eternal Majesty of His Love and Mercy
Michael of Nebadon
Michael of Nebadon