“The Forum and the Origin of the Urantia Papers”—Sioux Oliva, PhD
Oliva was a long-time student of The Urantia Book, but her scholarship led her to a skeptical position about some of its revelatory claims. Sioux has a PhD in American History from the University of Southern California.This scholarly essay is excerpted from her 2014 book, Dr. Sadler and The Urantia Book: A History of a Spiritual Revelation in the 20th Century.
Some Human Sources of The Urantia Book—(editor to be determined)
The authors of The Urantia Book acknowledge that they drew from human sources, especially the Bible, in presenting new revelatory concepts that build on prior traditions. Matthew Block, the world’s premier scholar concerning this topic, has revolutionized scholarly study of the text of The Urantia Book because of his discovery of several hundred human sources. This section provides sample excerpts from some of his numerous essayson these sources and their purported use by the revelators. Block did graduate work in theology at the Divinity School at the University of Chicago.
“Revelatory Mouthpiecing”— Zechariah Mann, PhD (pseudonym)
Mann has a PhD in Pauline theology from University of Durham (UK) and has taught theology at Fordham, Drew, and other universities. His nine academic books include Problems with Atonement (Liturgical Press, 2005), one of his four acclaimed titles on the atonement doctrine. A veteran student of the Urantia Revelation, he also serves as a United Church of Christ pastor.
“Cultural Influence of the Urantia Movement in the Music Industry” (unconfirmed, title TBD)—Michael MacIsaac, MA
MacIsaac is the world’s leading expert on the dissemination of The Urantia Book in artistic and cultural circles. This excerpt from his forthcoming book covers its wide influence on artistic production in contemporary music.