Transforming the concept of
atonement to at-onement
by attuning to the spirit of the living God
Righteousness implies that God is the source of the moral law
of the universe. Truth exhibits God as a revealer, as a teacher. But love gives and craves
affection, seeks understanding fellowship such as exists between parent and child.
Righteousness may be the divine thought, but love is a father's attitude. The erroneous
supposition that the righteousness of God was irreconcilable with the selfless love of the
heavenly Father, presupposed absence of unity in the nature of Deity and led directly to
the elaboration of the atonement doctrine, which is a philosophic assault upon both the
unity and the free-willness of God.
The earliest idea of the sacrifice was that of a neutrality
assessment levied by ancestral spirits; only later did the idea of atonement develop. As
man got away from the notion of the evolutionary origin of the race the concept of sin and
of original sin became widespread, so that sacrifice for accidental and personal sin
evolved into the doctrine of sacrifice for the atonement of racial sin. The atonement of
the sacrifice was a blanket insurance device which covered even the resentment and
jealousy of an unknown god.
The evolution of religious observances progressed from placation,
avoidance, exorcism, coercion, conciliation, and propitiation to sacrifice, atonement, and
redemption. The technique of religious ritual passed from the forms of the primitive cult
through fetishes to magic and miracles; and as ritual became more complex in response to
man's increasingly complex concept of the supermaterial realms, it was inevitably
dominated by medicine men, shamans, and priests.
Very early the peoples formed the habit of refraining from eating
the flesh of the animal of tribal veneration. Presently, in order more suitably to impress
the minds of their youths, they evolved a ceremony of reverence which was carried out
about the body of one of these venerated animals; and still later on, this primitive
performance developed into the more elaborate sacrificial ceremonies of their descendants.
And this is the origin of sacrifices as a part of worship. This idea was elaborated by
Moses in the Hebrew ritual and was preserved, in principle, by the Apostle Paul as the
doctrine of atonement for sin by "the shedding of blood." Religion has always
been largely a matter of rites, rituals, observances, ceremonies, and dogmas. It has
usually become tainted with that persistently mischief-making error, the chosen-people
delusion.
The Son of God did not incarnate in the likeness of mortal flesh
and bestow himself upon the humanity of this earth 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."
When primitive man felt that his communion with God had been
interrupted, he resorted to sacrifice of some kind in an effort to make atonement, to
restore friendly relationship. The hunger and thirst for righteousness leads to the
discovery of truth, and truth augments ideals, and this creates new problems for the
individual religionists
Jesus swept away all of the ceremonials of sacrifice and
atonement. He destroyed the basis of all this fictitious guilt and sense of isolation in
the universe by declaring that man is a child of God; the creature-Creator relationship
was placed on a child-parent basis. God becomes a loving Father to his mortal sons and
daughters. All ceremonials not a legitimate part of such an intimate family relationship
are forever abrogated.
Why do so many spend so much time and thought on mere trifles of
living, while many almost wholly overlook the more essential realities of everlasting
import, those very accomplishments which are concerned with the development of a more
harmonious working agreement between you and the spirit of the living God. The great goal
of human existence is to attune to the divinity of the indwelling spirit; the great
achievement of mortal life is the attainment of a true and understanding consecration to
the eternal aims of the divine spirit who waits and works within your mind. But a devoted
and determined effort to realize eternal destiny is wholly compatible with a light-hearted
and joyous life and with a successful and honorable career on earth. Co-operation with
this spirit does not entail self-torture, mock piety, or hypocritical and ostentatious
self-abasement; the ideal life is one of loving service rather than an existence of
fearful apprehension.
Paul's theory of original sin, the doctrines of hereditary guilt
and innate evil and redemption therefrom, was partially Mithraic in origin, having little
in common with Hebrew theology, or Jesus' teachings. Some phases of Paul's teachings
regarding original sin and the atonement were original with himself.
Stoicism was the superior philosophy of the better classes. The
Stoics believed that a controlling Reason-Fate dominated all nature. They taught that the
soul of man was divine; that it was imprisoned in the evil body of physical nature. Man's
soul achieved liberty by living in harmony with nature, with God; thus virtue came to be
its own reward. Stoicism ascended to a sublime morality, ideals never since transcended by
any purely human system of philosophy. While the Stoics professed to be the
"offspring of God," they failed to know him and therefore failed to find him.
Stoicism remained a philosophy; it never became a religion. Its followers sought to attune
their minds to the harmony of the Universal Mind, but they failed to envisage themselves
as the children of a loving Father. Paul leaned heavily toward Stoicism when he wrote,
"I have learned in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content."
Although Jesus did not die this death on the cross to atone for
the racial guilt of mortal man nor to provide some sort of effective approach to an
otherwise offended and unforgiving God; even though the Son of Man did not offer himself
as a sacrifice to appease the wrath of God and to open the way for sinful man to obtain
salvation; notwithstanding that these ideas of atonement and propitiation are erroneous,
nonetheless, there are significances attached to this death of Jesus on the cross which
should not be overlooked.
When once you grasp the idea of God as a true and loving Father,
the only concept which Jesus ever taught, you must forthwith, in all consistency, utterly
abandon all those primitive notions about God as an offended monarch, a stern and
all-powerful ruler whose chief delight is to detect his subjects in wrongdoing and to see
that they are adequately punished, unless some being almost equal to himself should
volunteer to suffer for them, to die as a substitute and in their stead. The whole idea of
ransom and atonement is incompatible with the concept of God as it was taught and
exemplified by Jesus of Nazareth. The infinite love of God is not secondary to anything in
the divine nature.
All this concept of atonement and sacrificial salvation is rooted
and grounded in selfishness. Jesus taught that service to one's fellows is the highest
concept of the brotherhood of spirit believers. Salvation should be taken for granted by
those who believe in the fatherhood of God. The believer's chief concern should not be the
selfish desire for personal salvation but rather the unselfish urge to love and,
therefore, serve one's fellows even as Jesus loved and served mortal men.
This entire idea of the ransom of the atonement places salvation
upon a plane of unreality; such a concept is purely philosophic. Human salvation is real;
it is based on two realities which may be grasped by the creature's faith and thereby
become incorporated into individual human experience: the fact of the fatherhood of God
and its correlated truth, the brotherhood of man. It is true, after all, that you are to
be "forgiven your debts, even as you forgive your debtors."
To become one with the Heavenly Father to become perfect as he is
perfect, never occurs until the mandates of the spiritual forces have pronounced that the
human nature has made a final and irrevocable choice for the eternal career. This is the
at-onement authorization, which, when issued, constitutes the clearance authority for the
fused personality eventually to leave the confines of the material places to proceed
sometime to the headquarters of the Heavenly Father, from which point the pilgrim of time
will, in the distant future, arrive on the distant shores of heaven and the Deity
adventure.
When an evolving mind becomes attuned to the circuits of our
Heavenly Father, when an ascending mortal personality finally attunes to the divine
leading of the spirit that dwells within, then has the actuality of God become more of a
reality, to the children of the living God.