View - Urantia Book Historical Society
Transcription
View - Urantia Book Historical Society
ln religious experience, creqtures vnakeclntactwiththeC,odwhois love,but suchspiritual insightwustneverecliytsethe intelligentrecognition oftheuniverse fact of thepatternwhichisParddise,rflEuRANIA BooK ,104:4,B /1148 Pattern clncef)ts inTHEURANT| AB}OK * * * *** In the world at iarge_,-therei.s a glg.wing sense of_ ygtteyn, even of a purpose, transcending all momentary events. Ideas such as "limifs t-o growth", uthe cufting edge"r-and',,paradigm slift" exprery cognizance_ofsuch a.pattern within the processof evolution. As ie approa"h u n.ri era, ovr thinking, our problem.-solving, and even our spiritual search must inclu de'iwareness of pattern. only in The Urantia Book can we find a,comprehensiverevelation of the reality of divinely -planned, projecting as material, mindal, and/or spiritual energies and pewading personalities, llTr!$' identities, entities, o1 (Foreword:w, En""gy and-pattern).As mastei original, ttrii lgnlivfng matter universal matrix lies.behind the cor,lfigurationsand individiality in all reproductions and"muliipl.r. The.boot's explanations of paftern's mysteries are as conceptually unique to the revelation aj the topics of the Supreme,the ascension career,or the morontia fife. pemERN, as a creation of the First Source and Center, is a fundamental dynamic principle that generates, and also unifies, all of exisfence. Even divinely-given personality form is the pattern aspectof a living being (paper<2: tz.z). Coming to recognize this PATTERNof patterns - the all-pervasive signature of the Infinite in the universes of time and space - can give us a restorative iense of oui own containment within a wholeness ever growing toward perfection. Tracing relationships of beauty and harmony back to a spiritual intelligence, creation's master designer, cingive us u deeper insight into the revelation of cosmic reality. _ Our giganlic master universe, with all its interlockrn{ patterns, can be better understood rboth as an actuality and a potentiality meaningful for our lives oilJrantia here and now. *** DefiningPATTERN dndp^tterns'* {. * In the-Engfiqh langaage, upattern' and *patternf are words apt to be used interchangeably and casually, with definition.and import taken for granted. Even the dictionary uses the sinluh" t.r* upattern" for both duplicates and source. The Urantia Book, however, clearly defines""pattern, (singular)_asthe divine PATTERNemanatingfromParadise, while "patteins" (piural) urc ullcopies, the reproductions derived from a source-matrix..__ Amgng countless patterns wittrin a vast perfecting time/space process'we exist. Our anchor is a still, calm center of reality rthe eternal Isle of paradise.- CONTEMPLANONS ************* Theworldis charged, withthegrandeur 0fGud, Gerard Manley Hopkins He fathers-forth whose beauty is past change.. Praise him. Yes, Codisa verb, Gerard Manley Hopkins thevnost adive,clnnltinqthevasthdrvnonic relrderang theuniverse frovnunleashed chaos ofenergy For each age is a dream that is ding, Orone that is cotning to birth. R.Buckminster Fuller Arthur O'Shaughnessy lnthebeginning wastheWord, , , ,lohn 1 : 1 * Word vnadg Tlgsh byKathreen Raine IN TT{ISPOEM WE CAN FIND: Word whosebreath is the world-circling atmosphere, Word that utters the world that turns the wind, Word that articulatesthe bird that speedsupon the air, An intuitive, aesthetic, & reverenfial comprehension of PATTERIvI, as spiritual source, the universal matrix. Word that blazesout the trumpet of the sun, Whose silenceis the violin-music of the stars, Whose melody is the dawn, and harmony the night, Metaphors using patterns, the copies, to offer poetic insight into greater patterns. Word traced in water of lakes, andlight on water, Light on still water, moving waterrwaterfall And water colours of cloud, of dew, of spectralrain, Appreciative obseruation of patterns and beauty "written into" the gifts of nature. Word inscribedon stone, mountain rangeupon rangeof stone, Word that is fire of the sun and fire within Order of atoms,crystallinesymmetry An understandirg that energr and order are linked, in all thirgs great and small. Grammar of five-fold rose and six-fold lilu Spiral of leaveson abough, helix of shelli, Rotationof twining plants on axesof darkness andlight, Descriptions of the universal geometry behind, and patternirg, material forms. Instinctivewisdom of fish and lion and ram, Rhythm of generation in flagellate and fern, Flashof fin,beat of wing, heartbeat,beat of the dance. Intuifion, growth, action, Iife itsell seen as pulsing and ever on the move. Hierqglyph in whose exact precision is defined Featherand insect-wing,refraction of multiple eyes, Eyesof the creatures, oh myriadfold vision of the world, Statementof mystery how shall we name A spirit clothed in world, a world made man? Syrnful, sight, and that which is seen are unified in the poet's uision. . " And we are led to see, to contemplate. " PATTERN silent "Word" behind patterns, creafion's gloty on display . . . P_ATTERNS OF THE UNIVERSE:Intensive.Program suNDAY,AUGUST4/MONDAY,AUGUST5, 1996 MORNING STUDYSESSION.SUNDAY. 1O:3OA.M.- 12:OONOON o Qoenina eona: John Creger,Berkeley,Califorrua o 9oeakerlslide t.ooical oreeerrtations on different- aE?eats of ?attern: Part l, Stephen7*ndtr SanFrancisco, California Paftll PatFearey,SanFrancisco,California PartIII ChuckThurston,Boulder,Colorado o Erief degcrivt,ione of followuo workehoos o Multi-imaae fglideElmueic\ eeauence; "Transformations"(a work-in-prcgress contemplatingPATTIRN) 2:3O :4:3O P.M. SUNDAY AFTERNOONHANDS-ON ARTS.W. ORICSHOPS, TO THOSE WHO HAVE ATTENDED THE MORNING SESSION. @EEN-ONIY "TICKET' TO PARTICIPATEIN EITHERONE BRING T}IIS PROGRAMAS YOUR OF THESEWORKSHOPS. SPACEIS LIMTED; FIRST-COMEFIRST-SERVED. o ?aiterne ae ArAigLio9yr.nbols - with PatFearey DUBOIS,ROOM# 11 (DOWNSTAIRS) Making centered mandalas, that ancient spiritual alt form found in almost every culture, we need not 'be able to draw'fo create soul-satisfoing collages of beauty and syrnmetry. t ?atlernsinForm * with ClaudiaAyers DUBOIS, ROOM# 30 (DOWNSTAIRS) Exercisesdemonstratingnumber relationships,gnzzles,origami paperwork, investigating universal and *sacred'geometric concepts,wiII stimulatepattern awareness(and be fun). MONDAY EVENINGMUSIC WORKSHOP,8:3O- IO:OOP.M. - KIDS TOO,IF WILLING TO STAYQUIEI & ATTENTIVE.) c ?atberns and5ound - with Stephen7*ndt andl,arry Watkins s.B.s.,RooM # 110 - (SAMEROOMASSUNDAYA.M. SESSION) Listening to, critically appreciating, and enjoying wonderfnl world music of different eras. Coorl$nator Pt Feereyl Vlannin6commlf,tee: S!ephen7*ndl; Larty Watkins & Claudia Ayers, Sacramento, Cg Chuck Thurstonl Computer art; Pat Fesrey& Chuck Thurstonl 5peaker-suworL phoWTrapho: Pat feareyl Chuck thurstony Bruce Millen, Kingston, C)ntario, CanaAa; Mut,l-image ?roqramming& com?uter slide ?rocessinT:Chuck Thurstonl Technicalsu?port: David Kantor, aI'he Dawningn by ConstanceDemby (CD: (Aeterna") Lafayette,Cl; W: ONPATTERN * * **** *.:. * * * * * * * * W ecravepattern.Weftndtt all aroundus,in sanddunes and ytineclnes, weavndgine it whenwelookat clouds andstawgnights, wecreate andleave it everywherelike footprints.,.Habits,.,l)atterns of condud... reassure us thatlifeis stable, ordeAg, andytred,ixable...We relyon patterns, we alsocherish and, and advnirethevn... as beautiful... Diane Ackerman ...basicpattem-forming processes..., operafing within strict limits, createlimitless uarieties of shapesand harmonies...Why isn't the harmony that is apparent in natural forms a more powerful force in our social forms? Perhapsit is becausewe have tost sight of fhepwer of limits...In aII realms of our experience,we are finding the need to rediscoverproper proportions. The proportions of nature, art, and architecture can help us...for thesi are shared limitations that create harmonious relationships out of differences. G y c i r g yD o c z i Theprinciples ofnumber areattheheart oftheuniuerse. fhendture and character of unity,twlness, threeness...unde{ie thewhole of existence. Philip Heselton What pattern connects the crab to the lobster and the orchid to the primrose and all four of them to me? And me to you? Gregory Bateson ...nature accll'nplishes theseevningly ivnpossible, creating forvnsthdtdreboth sivnilar and dissimilar, united anddiverse dtthesavnetivne... Gydrgy Doczi we seepattern everyvuhere. Its discernment has practical ualue: a hunter traces his prey through...the pattern of the spores; a farmer prognosticates weather from...clouds...Decorative art, which is universally pructised and of the greatest antiquity, shows how strongly people are disposed to the orderly arrangement of things.... Yi-FuTuan ...thenatureof theuniverse delights aboveallin changing thethingsthat existand,vnaking newlnes ofrhesdmepaturn,fur everythingthat eKists istheseed of thatwhichshall clvnefrlvn it, MarcusAurelius ...7he bodyrnind is a process... with seven million of our red blod cells blinking out of existence every second, replaced by seven million more. Even our bones ate fully rebuilt over a seven-year period. Just as in the dance of the goddess Shiva, we are continuously creating and destroyng, creating and destroying. Marilyn Ferguson t t '.' t * THECIRCLE 0T ETERNIry* * * .a.v.a, O - . a The wisephilosopher willalways look forthecreative d,esign... . THEuMNrrABooK pase 42/ z:T.S behind, and, pre-existenttl, alluniverse ythenomena. The eternal quest is for unification, for diuine coherence page42 / z:7.7 ] Patternis a vuasterdesign frovnwhichcupies ayevnade. Eternal Pdradise is the absolute of patterns.,. is an exhibit Havona of these in actuality... ytotentials Thiscentral planetary favnily,..called Hauona... istheeterndl coreoflterfection, aboutwhichswirlsthc4t endless of universes whichconstitute l)rlcessiln thetrevnendlus evll;rtilnary experiment, theaudacious adventure oftheCreatlrSlns0fald, whoasrpire to duplicate in timeandto reprlduce in space thepatternuniuerse, theidealof divineclvnpletr:ness, Su()revAefrna|ity,ultimdterea|ity,andeternd||)er{ecti0n,,.-ffi AII forms of force and all phases of energlr seem to be encircuited; they circulate throughout the universes and return by definite routes.....Every known form of cosmic reality has the bend of the ages,the trend of the circle, the swing of the great ellipse. Pages123 and 1,25/ L1,:5.8& 1.t:8.2 Allbeings in alluniverses arefashioned alonqthelinesofsovne lne lrder ofpatterncreature livingonslynelneof thebillionworlds ofHavona. The spirit is the architect, the mind is the builder, the body is the material building. Page157 / 74:4.8 Page484 / 42:12.5 There is original endowvnent ofadapution in livingthings andbeings. tnevery - waterlal - thereis livingplant0raniwdlcell,in euer1 or spiritual fuWorganisvn dn insdtidble cravingfortheattainment of euer-increasing of environvnentul perfection ddlustvnent, lrganisvnaladaptr4tiln, andaugvnented,life realizdtion. These intervnindble efforts of dll livingthingsevidence theexistence withinthevn of aninnak striuing for perfection. The finite universe of matter would eventually become uniform and deterministic but for the combined presence of mind and spirit. The influence of the cosmic mind constantly injects spontaneity into even the material worlds pase T3T / 6s:6.2 pageZ)ZS/ t91:6.r5 I I ] It is theintegrated, functioning oftheLifeCarriers, theythysical controllers, and,the spirita$utants thdt conditilns theclurseoforganicevolution ontheinhabited rllrlds. Andthisis whq ev1luti1n - isalwayspurplseful 0nurantiaorelsewhere andneueraccidentnl. Page730 / 65:0.4 Every impulse of euery electron, thought, or spirit is an acting unit in the whole universe.... the universe is a whole; no thing or being exists or lives in isilation. Page647 / 56:10.14 Pattern canbeprojected asvnaterial, spiritual, or vnindal, 0r anqcovnbination of these energies. lt canyteruade personalities, identities, entities, or nonliving vndlter,Butpatternis patterndndrevnains lnly eryLare vnultiplied.,...patterns areneverreflections; ?fittern; - re()r0ducti0ns. theyareduplications Pages10 and 1,27/ F:Yl.lO and tl:9.5 ..Havona containsthepatterns, thepattern studies, for all phasesand forms of spirit artistry. Page498 / 44:0.6 ...theforcesof divineloveand thewaysdnd vneans of divineadvninistrdtion are dll interloclud, in an efforttofaciliutetheddvdncement of everyworthgintelligence of everyuniverse to thePdrddise presence oftheLtniuersalTather. Page63 / 5:1.8 Your ascension is a part of the circuit of the seven superuniverses...in spirit and in status... ever s-winging inward ...from the outer circuits ever ieare, the inner "intr", and some day,.. you shall stand in the divine and central presence..... Pages63 and 64 / S:L9 Thephgsical, intelledudl, and sytiritual dovnains of uniuersdl creation are divinelyclrrelated,. Page637 / 56:0.1 God's residence is central and eternal, glorious and ideal. His home is the beauteous pattern for all universe headquarters worlds; and the central universe of his immediate indwelling is the pattern for all universes in their ideals, organization, and ultimate destiny, YageI27 / lI:9.6 Ihe forvndtion of allmdtteris ontheorderofthe solarsqstevn, P a g e 4 7 7/ 4 2 : 7 . 1 ...the vdstcreatilnlne gigantic wheel,, Page164 / l5:O.l ...auniverse()cr,ternof intelligentlif e... Page173 / 15:6.1I Godactsin accordancewith a well-defined, unchanging,immutable law throughout the wide-spreadingmasteruniverse;but he mdifiei thepatterns of his action soas to contribute to the co-ordinateand balancedconduct of eachuniverse.constellation. systgmJplangtr,andpersonality in accordancewith the local objects,aims, and plans of the finite projects of evolutionaryunfolding. Page56 / 4:2.1 * * * ******* ONTHESETHINcS THINK of to therhgthvn fieldswithinlargerfields,\ur brainsresplnd W , ort oscillating oftevnperature. clllrs,tingchanges 0f light,specific slunds,pulsations Marilyn Ferguson Every life is a point of view directed upon the universe. Strictly speaking, what one life seesno other can. Every...person, nation, or epoch, is an organ, for which there can be no substitute, constructed for the apprehension of truth... Without the development, the perpetual change and the inexhaustible series of adventures which constitute life, the universe. or absolutely ualid truth, would remain unknown... Jos6Ortega y Gasset for rightprlplrtiln for balance, a strivang searchi of spiritual this haseverbeentheheart ynevnbers luYinnerdnd outerlives, of ourinnerlife,andbetween theconstituent between ofBeinq. dndtheC'round lur tltr^lbeinq andbetween PhilipZaleski The Mandala has appeared throughout man's history as a universal and essential symbol of integration,harmony, and transformation...A Mandala consists of a series of concentric forms, suggestive of a passagebetween different dim ensions...i t perta in s...to th e macrocosm and m ictocosm, the largest structural processesas well as the smallest. ,los6and Miriam Arquelles forvn.,. andthesllarege,theall-encowp^ssing ofheaven sgvnbol sign...the is theoriginal Ihe circle Io$ and Miriam Arsuelles No one can stop us from imagining another kind of rttture, one that departsfrom the terrible cataclysmof uiolent conflict, of hateful divisions,poverty and suffering. Let us begin to imagine the worlds we would like to inhabit, the long lives we will share,and the many fiitures in our hands. SusanGriffin ...t0turn,tt turn, willbe lur deliqht. round,'ight we'llcome' turning, TilI byturning, 'simple Gifts"- Shakerhymn *t* READINc TO(URTHER A * * * * * * * "fyiendlg . , , interchange 0fideas"(ureg:4 6) T h e A q u a r i a n C o n s p i r a c y : P e r s o n a la n d S o c i a l T r a n s f o r m a t i o n i n t h e 1 9 8 0 s , b y M a r i l y n F e r g u s o n . J . P .T a r c h e r , L o s A n g e l e s ,1 9 8 0 . READ IT AGAIN! And again. A revelation of new paradigns in its own time, this book has Iost none of its power or its relevance to the issues of transformation in and for our worlcl . Like The Urantia Book, its pattern for relationships ernbraces the entire planetary family. A B e g i n n e r ' sG u i d e t o c o n s t r u c t i n g t h e u n i v e r s e :T h e M a t h e m a t i c a l A r . c h e t y p eosf N a t u r e .A r t . a n d s c i e n c e( A v o y a g ef r o m 1 t o 1 o ) , b y M i c h a e l s . S c h n e i d e r .H a r p e r P e r e n n i a lN , ew York, 1995. This is the oJoy of Pattern'book to read for a conplete understanding of - and genuine delight in - the mathenatical principles behind nature's nultiplicity of forms. Chock full illustrations, diagrams, quotes, this book reintroduces sacred geometry to the worlcl. of A B r i e f H i s t o r y o f E v e r y t h i n g ,b y K e n w i l b e r . s h a m b a l a ,B o s t o n , 1 g g 6 . Extraordinary insights into evolutionary about The Urantia Book's vast patterned patterns can trigger new and deeper realizations explanatory structure. A must fir serious reatlersl At Home in the Universe: The Searchfor the Laws of Self-Organization a n d S e l f - C o m p l e x i t y ,b y S t ua r t K a u f f m a n . O x f o r d U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 1 g g S . This book colnes out of one of those scientific minds that sees the universe as soiritual. It's interesting to speculate whether computer-based conplexity studies and seirchin.g nay be edging close io sone cutting-edge scientific substantiations for concepts in The IJraniia Eook. B y N a t u r e ' s D e s i g n .A n E X P L o R A T o R I U M Book,by patMurphy, william Neill, a n d D i a n e A c k e r m a n . C h r o n i c l eB o o k s ,S a n F r a n c i s c o 1, 9 g 3 . Sinilar information is available in A Beginner's Guide. Fractals, and S.vmmetr.v. but nowhere can you find nore elegant pattern-in-nature photographs or rnore eloquent text. Definitely an inspiring gift for families that include photographers, campers, readers of good books. D a l e S e y m o u r P u b l i c a t i o n s .P . O .B o x 1 0 8 8 8 . P a l o A l t o . C A 9 4 3 0 3 ; 1 - 8 O O - 8 7 2 - 1 1 0 0 . A GOLDMINE for PARENTS & TEACHERS!!! Catalog of educational resource naterials, for grades K-8 & wonderful for adults also. Books, posters, puzzles, garnes, to enjoy & Iearn science, math, & arts concepts. Home page address will be: HTTP://WWW.AW.COM.DSp/ T h e D i s c o v e r y o f P o e t r y r b y F r a n c e sM a y e s . H a r c o u r t B r a c e J o v a n o v i c h , 7 g 8 7 . The author says she had to take a poetry class in college, and discover A.E. Housman,s poen called aLoveliest of Trees', in order to be astruck that I had lost nineteen years of seeing a cherry ttee in bloom,' Her book considers poetry - othg- language art" - at both aestheiic and analytical levels. She says "learninS; to see precisely how words work teaches you how to cone closer to what you want to write, whether it's a newspapet article, a law brief, a cost estimate, or a Ietter home." {Or, for closely rereading words-as-poetry in The Urantia Bookl) F r a c t a l s : t h e P a t t e r n s o f C h a o s - D i s c o v e r i n ga N e w A e s t h e t i co f A r t . S c i e n c e , a n d N a t u r e , b y J o h n B r i g g s . S i m o n a n d S c h u s t e r ,N e w y o r k , 7 g g Z . It could be that only now - with recently-discovered fractal geometty showing us that there are smaller and snaller self-similar wrink!es within wrinkles, branches witiin branches, in nature's tnany rough and wiggly forms - can we really begin to understand The IJrantia book,s pithy and sometimes brief descriptions of the mysteries in universe pattern principtes ana structures. This book has both visual beauty and clearly understandable detailed information. J g u r n e y si n M i c r o s p a c e ,T h e A r t o f t h e E l e c t r o ns c a n n i n gM i c r o s c o p e , b y D e e B r e g e r .C o l u m b i aU n i v e r s i t yP r e s s N , ew York, 1ggS. Images and descriptions of a beautiful nicroworld we cannot visit in any other way - even with a powerfal optical microscope - because it is so tiny in relation to our hunan scale. L e a r n i n g b y H e a r t : T e a c h i n g st o F r e e t h e c r e a t i v e S p i r i t , b y c o r i t a K e n t and Jan Steward.Bantam Books, 1992. Corita, a nun when she was an art teacher at Imrnaculate Heart College in Los Angeles, may well have been the quintessential celestial-artisan-on-earth, teaching her stident:s high ,,the abiliiv playfulness and joy in the visual arts - and in their lives. She called creativitv to make connections and to play around with naterials and ideas.' Artists, wiiters, actori, whatever your experience level, do treat yourselves to this bookl M a n d a l a , b y J o s 6 a n d M i r i a m A r g u e l l e s . S h a m b a l a ,B e r k e l e y ,C A , 7 9 7 2 A N D 1 g g S . This is still the classic work on the centered desiS;ns of sacred intent found throughout history. P a s s i n q S t r a n q e a n d W o n d e r f u l : A e s t h e t i c s .N a t u r e . a n d C u l t u r e , b y Y i - F u T u a n . K o d a n s h a I n t e r n a t i o n a l , N . Y ./ T o k y o / L o n d o n , I g g 5 . A marvelous book, on beauty as essential both to individual Iives and to civilization, relating aesthetics to social norality. It stretches the mind and inspires us to open all the senses. The Power of Li{nits: PrqportionalHarmoniesin Nature. Art, and Architecture, by Gybrgy Doczi. Shambala,Boston, 1.994. An advanced, but most rewarding, detailed study of harmonious visual and musical proportions, sinilarities, and patterns, filled with diagrarns showing how golden rectangles and golden spirals underlie measurernents - such as a frog form's similaity to a humai body. P o w e r s o f T e n : A b o u t t h e R e l a t i v eS i z e o f T h i n g s i n t h e u n i v e r s e , by Philip & PhylisMorrison and rhe office of charles & Ray Eames. ScientificAmerican Library, 7982. A pictorial tour of the universe, from quasars subject in steps changing tenfold in nagnitude to quarks, zooning out from each time. Mind-boggtingl and in on a human (AIso on video...) S i g n s o f L i f e : T h e F i v e U n i v e r s a l S h a p e sa n d H o w t o U s e T h e m , b y A n g e l e s A r r i e n . A r c u s P u b l i s h i n g ,S o n o n l a ,C A , 7 9 9 2 . If you play information test, which fanily garnes with teenagers, you'll enjoy this book. It not only has interesting about basic archetypal shapes, but also shows how to use them in a psychological is fun to take - and, with no right or wrong, can tell you a lot about yourseli. S o p h i . e ' sW o r l d : A N o v e l A b o u t t h e H i s t o r y o f P h i l o s o p h y .b y J o s t e i n G a a r d e r , B e r k l e yP u b l i s h i n g N , Y C , 1 9 9 6 . o r i g i n a l l y p u b l i s h e di n N o i w e g i a n , 1 9 9 1 . A real teaching deli5;ht, well worth reading aloud to young people, this book is a bestseller numerous countries. Its joy in SOOO yeats of evolving continuity of thought is its pattern. in S y n c h r o n i c i t y : T h e B r i d g e B e t w e e nM a t t e r a n d M i n d , b y F . D a v i d P e a t . B a n t a m , 1 9 8 8 . The Urantia Book presents pattern as that grea't holistic source-fount which provides meaning for every level of existence as well as aII conplex branching diversity. This-book is fitled wih parallel insights to augnent our contenplations on IJB references to pattern and wholeness. s y m m e . t . r yA : unifying concept, by Istvan and Magdo|na Hargittai. shelter P u b l i c a t i o n sB, o l i n a s ,C A , 1 9 9 4 . Cramned with illustrations, photos, geometric diagrams, and interesting explanations, this beautiful and exciting book cannot help but increase our delight in the visial patterns all around us. You night consider giving a copy to an artistic teenager or college art major. W a l k i n g a S a c r e d P a t h : R e d i s c o v e r i n qt h q L a b y r i n t h a s a S p i r i t u a lT o o l , by Dr. Lauren Artress. Riverhead Books, New York, 1ggS. An extraordinary Srassroots process began a few years ago at Grace Cathedral in San Francisco, with the installation of a Iabyrinth Iike the ancient maze on the floor of Chartres, symbolizing the pilgrins'progress on the path toward the divine. Now, the construction of Iabyrinths is occurring in numerous churches all over the world. In the neditative walk, ueach of us brings different raw material to the Iabyrinth...our unique hopes, drearns, history, and Iongings of ihe s.oul'and moving through the naze to the center, then out again, can nh"lp us see our lives in context of a path and pilgrimage.o People who have becone Ieaders of wiat is now a rapidly-growing movement foresee Iabyrinths becoming 21st-century spiritual tools. The PATTERN of Patternsin The Urantia Book by StephenZendt PATITRN,ASTTIEMASTERDESIGN,REFERS TO A SYSTEM SOURCf,=1 RELATIONSHIP=2 $YSTEM=3 UNIVERSATFATHER + ITTRNALSON + INFINITESPIRIT CIheTrinity hadto comeinto existence, in order for there tobe a system) PATTERN AND CREATION PATTDRN=I CRXATION=Z UNIVERSE=3 THE ISIE OF PARADISE is the absolutePATTERN, and is alsothe nucleusof the ULTIMATON, therefore: PATTERNpervadesall SPACE... TIME gives pattern to ETERNITY... PATTERNgives purpose to INFINITY... SUPREME EVOLUTIONis the maximum utrliz.ahonofpotential in space and.trme.Human destinyis positedon the achievementof maximum social utility. One strivesto attain self-revelationof potentialsrealiz.ed. TIMf, is the sequence of evolutionalyevents:beginning,climx, termination. Unfolding moftal potentialsrequfueexperiencewith reality in time and space. Human free will conformsto the wisdom of experienceonly after realiznhon of errorcin judgmentand choice. THI FATHE&MASTEROFAtt PATTERN AND PERSONALITY, must be rcalizedin worship andidealizedin decisions.loyalty and duty follow upon wisedecisions. LOVEis sharedwith the family of Father-fellows, privilege asMta and pleasure.Challenges arisein daily life, in encounterswith others orphanedby failure to contactthe sourceof wisdom andthe objectof worship. PATTIRNappliesto origin, not to outcome. Patternis sourceand someday may becomedestiny,but the presentuniversaloutworking of time and spacn is evolution and gnrwth. PATTERNIN NATURALLANDSCAPES by Bruce Millen Paradise is the absolute pattern. This pattern canbe projected as matefial energy. As material rcality unfolds under the confrol and interpretation of a hierarchy of inueasingly fallible beings, Paradise perfection is filtered down/diluted to the point where only faint echoes of the original paltetn remain. I would like to think that I am detectrng these echoes when I sense visual beauty in a natural composition.* It may be a balanced communify of plants, interdigitated mosses,Srassesand shrubs growing in responseto genetic messagesand v"arious tropiuns, and countefualanced by subtle interactions between neighbors. Or, it may be the relationship of a tree, a rmk and an expanse of drifted snow, each element being where if is and how it is as a result of fhe long-term inferacfive evolutions of the biology, geology and climate af the arca. As an aspiri ng Ur anttan landscape photogr apher, I try to perceive and record natural beauty , that pale reflection of perfect pattern. Unavoidably, edifing is inherenf in phofographic composition, so I, as a boftom-of-hierarchy matefial being, get afinal kick at the perfection filtering can. A lot happens to Paradise pattern on the wayto becominga 35 mm. transparency. * The word "patternr'used in its physical sensej can be qualified in diverse ways regalar, random, repeat, geometric/linear, positive/negative, etc. Within this context, it would seem that aapaftern"refers to the spatial relationship of objects. The inherenf beaafy of a natural composition tends to be a function of the aesthefic patterning of compositional elements. IDEAS FOR EXPLORING PATTERNS AT HOME Ta?,elongnaturewalk,&with glaes,toer<aminetiny amagnfuing weedeand florets. Discussroot worde......Look for Vatternein Wms (in borhcorltent&form)...... 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" q p .5, *: : - - - - * : * - f _"=*at?E?-ga EBeEE$Fa++ $$$X SEBga*+5 r EgES e a a $ 5 r 3 $$5=55E H E o ' [ o 2 F d E . qF PATTERNSOF THE UN IVERSEINTENSI\A, ICg6, MANDAIA INFORMATIONFORFELLOWSHIP AND ANY FILES INTERESTED CREATIVE-APPROACH FACILITATORS, FROMPATRICIAFEAREYINTENSIVECOORDINATOR WORKSHOP (This multi-facetedlntensiaeutas conceiaed asA PROTATYPEFOR TREATMENT, intellectually, spiritually, audio-aisually,and artistically,OF CERTAINOTHER GRAND THEMES IN THE URANTIA BOOK suchas theSupreme,theascension cAreerr theMother Spirit, etc, Hopefully,our PatternIntensiuecornponents mayLrelpto triggerideasfor inspirationalpresentations on othergreat thcmes.Thisparticularworkshapwas tlteoiginal seedideafrom which the totality unfolded.) One of the two hands-on workshops offered as part of the Pattern Intensive at IC96 was on mandalas. Thesecenteredradial images can be found in nafure at every level * in the atom's forrn; as snowflakes, flower forms or seed patterns in frui! as the planetary circling of the sun. Human representations of such pivotal imagery have existed throughout history, most often as spiritual expressions (as in Christian stained-glass rose windows, the ]ewish Star of David" elaborate Tibetan mandalas, or our own three concentric circles, so meaningful to dedicated Urantia Book readers'- and so very old even in evolutionary history). Our artistic aim in the aftemoon workshop was to leam something of the design dynamics involved and then to create mandalas as personal expressions of a spiritual art forrr and/or a meditative exercise. Our art medium was collage, one of the best approaches for beginners, since results can be far more quickly visualized and modified in-progress than with paints or colored pencils. (The creation of a mandala can be both satisfying tL the novice, with pieasing visual results, and deeply challenging to the experienced artist, to perceive more and more subtlety as one works. No other artistic project offers the beginner an easier way to plunge right in. In a way, the symmetrical mandala matrix offers a color-between-the-lines format * but, we also find it meaningful at the deepestlevel of the soul.). To save workshop time spent searching through brlky piles of magazines (impractical anyway to bring to a conference),to minimize a mess interfering with acfual creation, and to pose a design problem to solve by working within some dictated limitations, participants were given folders with materials already prepared. (Pat Fearey, workshop facilitator, had organized these at home, with some help from other local readers in providing clippings from magazines.) These folders contained pieces already cut from high-quality color photos of forms and patterns in nature, supplemented by small pieces of art papers, such as metallic color foils and printed color gradations. Only images of nafure were used in the photographs, so that leaves, rock striations, sunsets or clouds could all become evocative and meditative sourcesof irupiration. Each folder had sufficient quantity to offer a wide choice (extra unused pieces could be taken home to use later or turned in). Participants had also been provided with good-quality heavy blank paper, plus items on loan, such as glue sticks, pencils, scissors,and protractors, etc. Our spirifual and intellecfual objectives were to become more aware of mandalas as visible footprints of divine order, as communicative archetypes, and as symmetry expressive of the human longing for ever-growing wholeness. As in the morning session,there was time only for MANDAL.TS, CONTINVEDI the briefest reference to a historical overview -- a short introduction by the workshop facilitator and a written handout suggested that personal reading and artistic experimentation could continue at home, not only individually, but also as a family pursuit (and one fuirtily group attending decided they would do just that, as they had such a good time working together). It was suggested that participants cooperate loosely as parbrers, if they so desire4 sharing their o$ectives, once the folder material suggesteda possiblecreativelspfuitual theme or tone, "mirror-itrrage" view) offering feedback as the with the person acrossthe table (who had a other's work progressed. It turned out that people becameso deeply absorbedthat most ended up working singly, in silence. Later, we propped up all the mandalas side by side against the wall and stood in front of them (they were marvelous!), while alnnosteveryone took fums sharing their intention and experience,explaining the personal meaning that had emerged during the process. That in itself becamea profoundly satisfying experience for us all. We also, during this wind-up sharing period, invited participants from Claudia Ayers' geometry-oriented Pattern-Intensive workshop acrossthe hall to bring their work to show us. Their results were equally exciting. My two big regrets, as facilitator, were that we had no camera or camcorder to document that final sharing, and that I had made no advance provision for exhibiting the finished artwork --- it was so good that the entire conference should have seen "non-attists" among us. We tried it as a body of work, to encourage the many self-deprecating to get €mannouncement made, to round up the individual pieces for showing them at the fair, but somehow that got overlooked. For me, as facilitator, this idea evolved from leading small art workshops at local reheats, where we have created mandalas with collage and rubber stamp images, sometimes working in pairs on the same image. A major result of this creative process seemsto be that working with the mandala has a life far beyond this IC96 intensive. Mandala figures appear to be natural artistic symbols of the Urantia Book's tremendous vistas of wholeness at the macro and micro cosmic levels. One local reader who did not even attend lc96,brt attended thesereheat sessions,led a mandala-collage workshop, reportedly fantastically successful,at a SpiritFest conference (very kindly attributing the idea to me. I was very pleased, becausethose retreat workshop experiences had not only helped her overcome a childhood discouragement over creativity, provoked by unaware adults, but had begun to bring out her natural abilities as an art teacher.). And another artistlteacher with whom I had shared my ideas and handouts led a different kind of mandala art workshop at the Vancouver summer conferencein1997,I was told -- he had people going out in nature to gather the materials to use in their collages (leaves,twigs, branches, grasses,etc. On a flat surface, these can become a three-dimensional bas-relief). I could visualize, within an intensive on the Supreme, a mandala art workshop using people photos, perhaps combining color Xeroxes of family pictures brought from home with magazine photos - of people from around the world, of the world in space,of starscapes,cathedrals, great art from history, etc. This would be a much more difficult and risky design problem, for both the beginner and the experienced artist to bring to a visually satisfying conclusion. Such a project should have more workshop time and carefully-thought-out parameters, instructions, and MANDAL,AS, CONTINUED: materials, prepared in advance, which would be conducive to synmetrical symbology, if mandalas are the theme. (Perhaps the analogy of the twelve gates to the city could be useful -- suggesting that participilts visualize someone whose spfifual path, leading to God at the center, has entered at the exact opposite to one'$ own entrance on the clock-face, and whose contributions to the Supreme are an equally-valid integral part of the whole, regardless of one's own comprehension thereof. Whatever spiritual/intellectual idea is considered to be the basic-bedrock for a project, it must be clearly held in mind by any facilitator, even iI it is never mentioned per se. In order to foster awareness of archetypal meaning and to illuminate core concepts in The Urantia Book, the design format and the presentation of materials in any such hands-on spiritually-creative 1 creatively-spiritual workshop should arise from that idea not primarily involve technique.) A FOOTNOTEABOUT MANDAL,A5THAT MAY INSPIRE soME VB-OR|ENTED TH|NK|NQ: Duing thepastyeaL&bookcallcdThePattern,by LynnclnireDennis,hasappeared.As a consequence o.fa near-dcath experience, a rnostinterestingmandalaimngewith manyaariations,dependinguponone's aiewpoint@othphysicaland intellectual),hasslowlybeendiscLosed to her. Shebelieoes it is an imngefor healin-g and promotingpeace,sinceit projects,within its own extraordinaryunity and unificd dtaeriiiy, aisualsuggestions of symbolsof all themajoreaolutionaryreligionsof theworld, aswell as theatom. it seemsto beat theoery leastthree-dimznsional, and theideaof an "ultimatonic" symboloccarsto me. For us, as UB readers,to build modelso.fthree-dimensional mandnlas,basd on our rmealcdknowledge aboutspacennd timein their relationto thespiritual,might well inspircsomesolid insightsand/arproaide teachingmaterinls,it seemsto me. (Imnginingthe threeconcentriccirclesin 3-D, oneses that any x or y --whereasthebeautifulIC 9: axis view wouldalwaysdispW thesamenestingspheres __\n 3D Yg:!:igry!!V_ SteveMclntosh,a 2-D mandala,wouldproducedifferente.ffects if seetfitiiaief,aTfi.f1erewx or y angrcs.r notethat Ms Dennis'patternrotationsproducefficts bothfluid and changing.To mc, thechangeless three concentriccircles*em a tnuchmoreaccuraterepresentation of "THE" Pattern'sSourceand Cnnter,the inmostfount .forall patterns.) Theseidle thoughtshaaenot suggested any specificaction. But I dp notethat our readership produces masses -of printoutswith pro* to read(inear-thinkingpresentations on 2-D surfaes). This only one kind of thoughtfuIapproaehto therwelation -- is in contrastto experiences suchas theliaing kinetic three-dimensional realityof SaraBlnckstock's memorable ICg6 lerusalemmnrketfor thekids. I urgeour artists,scicntists,andfamiliestofoster,throughmoperatioe the facilitationof nnny handsonexperiences, tth Clnudia'smathcreatiaityneedcdto constructthewolltlwg se!. We soughtto dosome au)areness workshopand mi wish participantscouldhaae experience d both. Scheduling put us progrnntat thesametime. OTHERCOMPONENTS OFTHEPATTERNINTENSI\AINCLVDED,IN THE MORNINq OPENINq PROqRAM: SPEAKERS, SPEAKER-SL/PPORT 5L|DES,INSPIRATIONALMULTIIMAqE (THE5HOWTRAN5FORMATIONS"),LI\/E MVsIC. AND IN THE EVENINQ:A MUslcAL-LlsTENlNq PROqRAM. DESCR|PT|ONS OFTHE5EAREPRESENTED SEPARATELY. HANDOVTs, WITH PROqRAMS,QUOTES,BTBLIOqRAPHYETC,,AS BEAUTIR/L45 WE COTILDMAKE THEM, WEREPARTOF EACH MODULE.