Morontia Mota
The lower planes of morontia mota join
directly with the higher levels of human philosophy. On the
first mansion world it is the practice to teach the less
advanced students by the parallel technique; that is, in one
column are presented the more simple concepts of mota
meanings, and in the opposite column citation is made of
analogous statements of mortal philosophy.
Not long since, while executing an assignment on the first
mansion world of Satania, I had occasion to observe this
method of teaching; and though I may not undertake to present
the mota content of the lesson, I am permitted to record the
twenty-eight statements of human philosophy which this
morontia instructor was utilizing as illustrative material
designed to assist these new mansion world sojourners in their
early efforts to grasp the significance and meaning of mota.
These illustrations of human philosophy were:
1. A display of specialized skill does not signify possession
of spiritual capacity. Cleverness is not a substitute for true
character.
2. Few persons live up to the faith which they really have.
Unreasoned fear is a master intellectual fraud practiced upon
the evolving mortal soul.
3. Inherent capacities cannot be exceeded; a pint can never
hold a quart. The spirit concept cannot be mechanically forced
into the material memory mold.
4. Few mortals ever dare to draw anything like the sum of
personality credits established by the combined ministries of
nature and grace. The majority of impoverished souls are truly
rich, but they refuse to believe it.
5. Difficulties may challenge mediocrity and defeat the
fearful, but they only stimulate the true children of the Most
Highs.
6. To enjoy privilege without abuse, to have liberty without
license, to possess power and steadfastly refuse to use it for
self-aggrandizement -- these are the marks of high
civilization.
7. Blind and unforeseen accidents do not occur in the cosmos.
Neither do the celestial beings assist the lower being who
refuses to act upon his light of truth.
8. Effort does not always produce joy, but there is no
happiness without intelligent effort.
9. Action achieves strength; moderation eventuates in charm.
10. Righteousness strikes the harmony chords of truth, and the
melody vibrates throughout the cosmos, even to the recognition
of the Infinite.
11. The weak indulge in resolutions, but the strong act. Life
is but a day's work -- do it well. The act is ours; the
consequences God's.
12. The greatest affliction of the cosmos is never to have
been afflicted. Mortals only learn wisdom by experiencing
tribulation.
13. Stars are best discerned from the lonely isolation of
experiential depths, not from the illuminated and ecstatic
mountain tops.
14. Whet the appetites of your associates for truth; give
advice only when it is asked for.
15. Affectation is the ridiculous effort of the ignorant to
appear wise, the attempt of the barren soul to appear rich.
16. You cannot perceive spiritual truth until you feelingly
experience it, and many truths are not really felt except in
adversity.
17. Ambition is dangerous until it is fully socialized. You
have not truly acquired any virtue until your acts make you
worthy of it.
18. Impatience is a spirit poison; anger is like a stone
hurled into a hornet's nest.
19. Anxiety must be abandoned. The disappointments hardest to
bear are those which never come.
20. Only a poet can discern poetry in the commonplace prose of
routine existence.
21. The high mission of any art is, by its illusions, to
foreshadow a higher universe reality, to crystallize the
emotions of time into the thought of eternity.
22. The evolving soul is not made divine by what it does, but
by what it strives to do.
23. Death added nothing to the intellectual possession or to
the spiritual endowment, but it did add to the experiential
status the consciousness of survival.
24. The destiny of eternity is determined moment by moment by
the achievements of the day by day living. The acts of today
are the destiny of tomorrow.
25. Greatness lies not so much in possessing strength as in
making a wise and divine use of such strength.
26. Knowledge is possessed only by sharing; it is safeguarded
by wisdom and socialized by love.
27. Progress demands development of individuality; mediocrity
seeks perpetuation in standardization.
28. The argumentative defense of any proposition is inversely
proportional to the truth contained.
Such is the work of the beginners on the first mansion world
while the more advanced pupils on the later worlds are
mastering the higher levels of cosmic insight and morontia
mota.
From Within:
The
Urantia Book -- Part II. The Local Universe
PAPER 48: Section 7.