The existence of God
We present in this issue
the topic #57 from the
Systematized Study of
the Spiritist Doctrine,
that is being presented
weekly, according to the
programme elaborated by
the Brazilian Spiritist
Federation (FEB),
structured in 6 modules
and 147 topics.
If the reader uses this
program for a study
group, we suggest that
questions proposed be
discussed freely before
the reading of the text
that follows. If you
would like to study
alone, we ask you to try
to answer the questions
at first and only then
read the text that
follows. The answer key
can be found at the end
of the lesson.
Questions
1. What are the most
relevant principles of
the Spiritist Doctrine?
2. The materialists are
opposed to the existence
of God, an interesting
point deemed
unanswerable for them.
What are they trying to
get at?
3. What is the main
point presented by the
Spiritism as an evidence
of existence of God?
4. How does the
Spiritist Doctrine
define God?
5. Were Albert Einstein
and Isaac Newton,
geniuses of Physics,
atheist?
Text
The existence of God is
a fundamental point in
Spiritism
1. One of the key points
of the Spiritist
Doctrine is the
existence of God as the
Creator of everything
that exists. Another,
likewise fundamental, is
the existence of
Spirits, as His
creations; another one
is the principle of
spiritual nature of the
human soul, considered
as incarnated Spirit,
who makes up the
conscientious, permanent
and endless uniqueness
of the man.
2. Everything else the
Spirits revealed – the
plurality of worlds, the
incarnation and
reincarnation, the Law
of cause and effect, the
need of probations as a
way to progress and
expiations –, all this,
that reveals the supreme
wisdom of the Creator,
is a natural consequence
of those basic points.
It stands out, though,
first and foremost, the
principle of the
existence of the Eternal
Creator.
3. Kardec began “The
Spirits’ Book” with a
chapter totally focusing
God and evidences of His
existence. In this book,
the Compiler asked the
Spirits where we could
find the evidence that
God exists, and so they
answered: “The axiom
which you apply in all
your scientific
researches, 'There is no
effect without a cause.'
Search out the cause of
whatever is not the work
of man, and reason will
furnish the answer to
your question."
(4).
4. In “Genesis”, his
last work, after
explaining, in chapter
I, the Spiritist
Revelation, the Compiler
once again talks of the
existence of God, as
soon as he starts
chapter II, showing that
it is the most important
aspect of the Doctrine.
God won’t show Himself,
but through His works
5. The compiler of
Spiritism examines as it
follows the question of
those who oppose to the
existence of God the
thought that the works
from the so-called
Nature are produced by
material forces that act
automatically, because
of the law of attraction
and repulsion, where
everything occurs, both
in Plantae and Animalia
Kingdom, with automatic
regularity where no
intelligence is
required. The man –
according to the
oppositions – moves his
arm when and how he
wants to. The one,
though, who moved it the
exact same way, since
the crib until the
grave, would be a robot.
So, the organic forces
of Nature are purely
automatic.
6. All of this is
correct, said Kardec,
but these forces are
effects that must have a
cause. They are material
and mechanical, but they
are put into action,
distributed, proper to
the needs of everything
by an intelligence that
is not the man’s. The
useful application of
these forces is an
intelligent effect,
which qualifies it as an
intelligent cause.
7. Spiritism gives the
man an idea of God,
through the sublimity of
the Revelation, which is
according to the most
perfect rationality.
8. We are convinced by
the existence of the
Creator not needing to
use other evidences that
do not come from the
sheer contemplation of
the Universe, where God
is revealed through wise
laws and admirable works
that makes up such a set
of harmony where there
is a perfect adequacy of
the means to the ends,
and it turns out to be
impossible not to see
behind such a mechanism
the action of a Supreme
Intelligence, as the
Spirits made a point of
emphasizing in the
answer given to the
opening question of “The
Spirits’ Book”: “God
is the Supreme
Intelligence - First
Cause of all things.”
(The Spirits’ Book,
question 1).
The celestial mechanics
cannot be understood by
itself
9. This is how they
understand, in an unborn
feeling of His existence
and power, all of those
who did not let
themselves got totally
dominated by the
terrible numbing of
intelligence and human
feelings, which is
pride, figuring in the
harmonious mechanism
where lies the universal
movements the invaluable
existence of a first
transcendental engine.
“The celestial
mechanics cannot be
understood by itself–
Léon Denis wrote -,
and the existence of a
starting engine is a
must. The primitive
nebula, mother of the
Sun and the planets, was
animated of a spinning
movement. But who would
make such a movement?
“We answer promptly:
God”
10. As admitted Léon
Denis, already enlighten
by Spiritism, so did
Albert Einstein, with
all the rigours of his
logical thinking. Much
he thought searching the
truth, Einstein acquired
a high degree of
intuition which led him,
the same ways as other
things, also admitting
the existence of God, as
the necessary source of
energy that makes
everything to move in
the Universe.
11. Prior to Einstein,
so Isaac Newton had to
admit the necessary
existence of a
transcendental cause and
of a first engine to
explain the movement of
the planets. Despite
finding out the great
law of universal
gravitation, that would
probably solve this
millennial problem, in
the end of his book
“Mathematical Principles
of Natural Philosophy”
the great mathematician
declared he was
powerless to explain
those movements only
under the laws of
Mechanics.
Answer Key
1. What are the most
relevant principles of
the Spiritist Doctrine?
A.: The plurality of
worlds, the incarnation
and reincarnation, the
Law of cause and effect,
the need of probations
as a way to progress and
expiations –, all this,
that reveals the supreme
wisdom of the Creator,
is a natural consequence
of those basic points.
It stands out, though,
first and foremost, the
principle of the
existence of the Eternal
Creator.
2. The materialists are
opposed to the existence
of God, an interesting
point deemed
unanswerable for them.
What are they trying to
get at?
A.: Those who oppose to
the existence of God the
thought that the works
from the so-called
Nature are produced by
material forces that act
automatically, because
of the law of attraction
and repulsion, where
everything occurs, both
in Plantae and Animalia
Kingdom, with automatic
regularity where no
intelligence is
required. The man –
according to the
oppositions – moves his
arm when and how he
wants to. The one,
though, who moved it the
exact same way, since
the crib until the
grave, would be a robot.
So, the organic forces
of Nature would be
purely automatic.
3. What is the main
point presented by the
Spiritism as an evidence
of existence of God?
R.: The axiom which you
apply in all your
scientific researches,
'There is no effect
without a cause.' Search
out the cause of
whatever is not the work
of man, and reason will
furnish the answer to
your question.
4. How does the
Spiritist Doctrine
define God?
A.: "God is the Supreme
Intelligence-First Cause
of all things".
5. Were Albert Einstein
and Isaac Newton,
geniuses of Physics,
atheist?
A.: No.
Einstein acknowledged
the existence of God as
the necessary source of
energy that makes
everything to move in
the Universe and Newton,
prior to him, declared
he was powerless to
explain those movements
only under the laws of
Mechanics.
Bibliography:
The Spirits’ Book,
by Allan Kardec, item
1.
Genesis,
by Allan Kardec, chap.
II, items 1-6.
The Great Puzzle,
by Léon Denis, FEB, 6a.
Edition, pages. 70 and
238.