P944:1, 85:0.1
Primitive religion had a biologic origin, a natural evolutionary development,
aside from moral associations and apart from all spiritual influences. The
higher animals have fears but no illusions, hence no religion. Man creates
his primitive religions out of his fears and by means of his illusions.
P944:2, 85:0.2
In the evolution of the human species, worship in its primitive manifestations
appears long before the mind of man is capable of formulating the more complex
concepts of life now and in the hereafter which deserve to be called religion.
Early religion was wholly intellectual in nature and was entirely predicated
on
associational circumstances. The objects of worship were altogether suggestive;
they consisted of the things of nature which were close at hand, or which
loomed large in the commonplace experience of the simple-minded primitive
Urantians.
P944:3, 85:0.3
When religion once evolved beyond nature worship, it acquired roots of spirit
origin but was nevertheless always conditioned by the social environment.
As nature worship developed, man's concepts envisioned a division of labor
in the supermortal world; there were nature spirits for lakes, trees,
waterfalls,
rain, and hundreds of other ordinary terrestrial phenomena.
P944:4, 85:0.4
At one time or another mortal man has worshiped everything on the face of
the earth, including himself. He has also worshiped about everything imaginable
in the sky and beneath the surface of the earth. Primitive man feared all
manifestations of power; he worshiped every natural phenomenon he could not
comprehend. The observation of powerful natural forces, such as storms, floods,
earthquakes,
landslides, volcanoes, fire, heat, and cold, greatly impressed
the expanding mind of man. The inexplicable things of life are still termed
"acts of God" and "mysterious dispensations of Providence."