
Urantia Paper 15—The Seven Superuniverses—§5. The Origin of Space Bodies
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このコンテンツについて
This section explores how the physical spheres of the universe (suns, planets, and other celestial bodies) come into being. As we read last week, this section reiterates that most of the mass in the superuniverses originates from the nebulae, which are the vast cosmic formations, the Mother Wheels, that give birth to stars and planetary systems.
The section outlines ten classifications of space body origins, such as:
Concentric Contraction Rings – Nebulae that condense into rings, forming suns and planets.
Whirled Stars – Suns ejected in spiral or non-spiral formations.
Gravity-Explosion Planets – Bodies formed from tidal disruptions during close encounters between massive celestial objects (our solar system is said to have this origin).
Centrifugal Planetary Daughters – Matter flung off from rapidly spinning suns.
Gravity-Deficiency Spheres – Stars that split due to rotational instability, forming double stars and planets.
The section also touches on the role of Universe Power Directors, who help shape and regulate these processes, though most mass formation is attributed to natural cosmic evolution rather than direct intervention.
It’s a fascinating blend of cosmic mechanics and spiritual cosmology and it suggests that even the birth of stars is part of a vast, purposeful design.
We hope you enjoy it!