P839:2, 75:1.1
The Adamic mission on experimental,
rebellion-seared, and isolated Urantia
was a formidable undertaking. And the Material Son and Daughter early became
aware of the difficulty and complexity of their planetary assignment. Nevertheless,
they courageously set about the task of solving their manifold problems. But
when they addressed themselves to the all-important work of eliminating the
defectives and degenerates from among the human strains, they were quite dismayed.
They could see no way out of the dilemma, and they could not take counsel
with their superiors on either Jerusem or Edentia. Here they were, isolated
and day by day confronted with some new and complicated tangle, some problem
that seemed to be
unsolvable.
P839:3, 75:1.2
Under normal conditions the first work of a Planetary Adam and Eve would be
the co-ordination and blending of the races. But on Urantia such a project
seemed just about hopeless, for the races, while biologically fit, had never
been purged of their retarded and defective strains.
P839:4, 75:1.3
Adam and Eve found themselves on a sphere wholly unprepared for the proclamation
of the brotherhood of man, a world groping about in abject spiritual darkness
and cursed with confusion worse confounded by the miscarriage of the mission
of the preceding administration. Mind and morals were at a low level, and
instead of beginning the task of effecting religious unity, they must begin
all anew the work of converting the inhabitants to the most simple forms of
religious belief. Instead of finding one language ready for adoption, they
were confronted by the world-wide confusion of hundreds upon hundreds of local
dialects. No Adam of the planetary service was ever set down on a more difficult
world; the obstacles seemed insuperable and the problems beyond creature solution.
P839:5, 75:1.4
They were isolated, and the tremendous sense of loneliness which bore down
upon them was all the more heightened by the early departure of the Melchizedek
receivers. Only indirectly, by means of the angelic orders, could they communicate
with any being off the planet. Slowly their courage weakened, their spirits
drooped, and sometimes their faith almost faltered.
P840:1, 75:1.5
And this is the true picture of the consternation of these two noble souls
as they pondered the tasks which confronted them. They were both keenly aware
of the enormous undertaking involved in the execution of their planetary assignment.
P840:2, 75:1.6
Probably no Material Sons of Nebadon were ever faced with such a difficult
and seemingly hopeless task as confronted Adam and Eve in the sorry plight
of Urantia. But they would have sometime met with success had they been more
farseeing and patient. Both of them, especially Eve, were altogether
too impatient; they were not willing to settle down to the long, long endurance
test. They wanted to see some immediate results, and they did, but the results
thus secured proved most disastrous both to themselves and to their world.