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Sunday, May 17, 2026

Why do some people keep playing politics with others? What happens to them eventually?

At its core, when people "play politics" with others in workplaces, social circles, or families, they are using manipulation, alliances, and hidden agendas to gain an advantage.

​While it can be incredibly frustrating to deal with, psychological and sociological insights help explain why this behavior is so common:

​The Pursuit of Power and Control

​For some, interpersonal relationships are viewed as zero-sum games—where for one person to win, another must lose. People who play politics often have a high need for control. They use tactics like gatekeeping information, forming exclusive cliques, or undermining rivals to secure their own position, status, or authority.

​Insecurity and Self-Doubt

​Paradoxically, political maneuvering often stems from a deep sense of inadequacy. When individuals feel they cannot succeed based on their merits, skills, or genuine worth alone, they resort to political games. By shifting the focus to alliances, gossip, or optics, they camouflage their own perceived shortcomings.

​The "Machiavellian" Personality

​In psychology, there is a personality trait known as Machiavellianism (part of the "Dark Triad," alongside narcissism and psychopathy). Individuals high in this trait are naturally predisposed to be cynical, calculating, and manipulative. They view other people not as individuals to connect with, but as tools or stepping stones to achieve their own goals.

​Cultural and Environmental Incentives

​Sometimes, the environment itself breeds political behavior. If an organization, community, or family system rewards loyalty over competence, favors "who you know" over "what you do," or suffers from a scarcity of resources (like attention, promotion, or funding), it forces people into a survival mode where playing politics becomes a necessary strategy to get ahead or protect oneself.

​Emotional Avoidance

​Direct communication requires vulnerability, courage, and accountability. Playing politics—using passive-aggressive behavior, backchannel communication, or subtle sabotage—allows a person to influence outcomes without ever having to take direct responsibility for their actions. If a confrontation occurs, they maintain "plausible deniability."

​People play politics because, in the short term, it often works. It provides a shortcut to influence and protection without the hard work of building genuine trust or competence.

​Dealing with these dynamics usually requires setting firm boundaries, documenting interactions, refusing to engage in gossip, and focusing strictly on objective realities rather than emotional games.

Taking leadership responsibilities as a genuine service to the community or nation can be a desirable trait, but playing politics to get into leadership for authority to rule over is not.

That distinction gets right to the heart of a timeless crisis in governance and organizational life: the clash between servant leadership and authoritarian rule.

​When leadership is approached as a genuine service, the position is viewed as a heavy responsibility—a duty to steward resources, protect the vulnerable, and build sustainable systems for the common good.

Power, in this context, is simply a tool used to achieve collective progress.

​Conversely, when the primary motive is the desire to rule, the focus shifts entirely to the acquisition and retention of power.

​Here is a closer look at how these two mindsets diverge in practice:

​The Motive: Impact vs. Status

​The Statesman/Servant is driven by a vision or a specific problem that needs solving. They measure success by the well-being of the community and the strength of the institutions they leave behind.

​The Politician/Ruler is driven by the proximity to power and the prestige of the title. They measure success by their rank, the deference they receive from subordinates, and their ability to command compliance.

​The Method: Collaboration vs. Manipulation

​Genuine Service: Relies on transparency, meritocracy, and open debate. A service-oriented leader encourages strong, capable subordinates because the goal is the success of the mission, not the inflation of the leader's ego.

​Playing Politics: Relies on patronage, factionalism, and the strategic weakening of potential rivals. To maintain absolute authority, those who play politics often surround themselves with "yes-men" and use gatekeeping to control the flow of information.

​Institutional Strength vs. Personal Control

​Genuine Service: Focuses on building robust, transparent systems that can outlast the leader. They respect the rules of governance and the checks and balances designed to prevent the abuse of power.

​Authoritarian Rule: Tends to centralize control, bending rules and weakening institutions to serve personal or factional interests. When the system is built entirely around maintaining a specific person's or group's authority, the institution itself becomes fragile and prone to decay.

​"True heroism is remarkably sober, very undramatic. It is not the urge to surpass all others at whatever cost, but the urge to serve others at whatever cost." — Arthur Ashe

​Ultimately, when political maneuvering becomes the sole mechanism for ascending to leadership, it filters out the very people best suited to govern. Those who view leadership as a burden of service are often reluctant to engage in the toxic games required to win power in a broken system, leaving the floor open to those who desire power purely for its own sake.

The Urantia Book reveals that serving others selflessly is a divine attribute while aspiring to get power in the guise of service is evil.

This alignment between the above observation and the core teachings of The Urantia Book points directly to one of its most profound moral and spiritual distinctions. The text repeatedly emphasizes that the motive behind an action determines its spiritual value, and it draws a sharp, uncompromising line between selfless service and the pursuit of personal power.

​In the universe framework of the papers, true service is not just a social virtue; it is a reflection of the divine nature itself.

​The Divine Nature of Selfless Service

​The Urantia Book establishes that the Universal Father and the Creator Sons rule not through arbitrary dominance, but through ministry and service.

​The Law of the Universe: True greatness in the cosmos is always measured by the extent of one's service. The text mirrors the master's injection into human history: "He who would be chief among you, let him become the server of all."

​Spiritual Progress: Selfless service is the practical fruit of a mind led by the spirit. When a person serves others without desiring personal gain, recognition, or power, they are actively cooperating with the divine spark within them—the Thought Adjuster. This aligns human will with the universal law of love.

​The Lucifer Rebellion: The Prototype of Self-Seeking Power

​To understand why aspiring to power in the guise of service is characterized as profoundly wrong—even evil—one only has to look at the book’s account of the Lucifer rebellion.

​The Sophistry of False Service:

Lucifer did not launch his rebellion by declaring an intent to be evil. Instead, he presented his manifesto under the guise of liberation, progress, and intense "service" to the local system. He claimed he was working for the self-assertion of local personalities and freedom from the "unreasonable" administration of the Ancients of Days.

​The Root of Evil: The Urantia Book defines this as the ultimate delusion: choosing self-will and personal aggrandizement over the divine order. When a leader uses the language of public good, spiritual leadership, or community service as a mere camouflage to gain authority and rule over others, they are repeating the exact spiritual error of the cosmic rebellion. They are putting the self in the place of God.

​True Service vs. The "Will to Power"

​The revelatory text of the book   provides clear psychological and spiritual contrasts between these two paths.

The Cosmic Verdict

​The Urantia Book's revelatory papers make it clear that power sought for its own sake is inherently unstable and spiritually dead. Temporal authority passeth away, but the spiritual value created through genuine, unpretentious service becomes a permanent part of an individual's eternal soul survival.

​When a person strips away the political games and chooses to serve simply because it is right and loving, they cease playing human politics and begin participating in the actual administration of the divine kingdom.

In other words, any one who play politics for power is working against the will of God and therefore essentially evil. What they gain ultimately is the precious divine gift of everlasting life and personality. What good for a man or woman to lose these precious gifts even though they gained much power, wealth and fame on earth for a short period till their death!

That is the ultimate cosmic equation with absolute clarity. What is the above describing is the profound tragedy of spiritual blindness—trading an eternal, divinely sustained destiny for a fleeting shadow of temporal control.

​In the teachings of The Urantia Book, this exchange is not just a poor moral choice; it is a mathematical and ontological mathematical bankruptcy. When a person dedicates their life to political maneuvering, self-aggrandizement, and the subjugation of others, they are actively dismantling the foundations of their own eternal existence.

​Here is how the Urantia papers break down the gravity of what is actually lost when one chooses the path of self-will over the divine will:

​The Disintegration of Personality

​One of the most unique revelations of the text is that personality is a direct gift from the Universal Father, but its survival depends entirely on the choices of the free will.

​Personality requires a unifying spiritual core to survive the transition from the material world to the mansion worlds.

​When an individual uses their intellect solely to manipulate, deceive, and rule over others, they align their mind completely with the material, animalistic, and ego-driven levels of existence.

​By consistently rejecting the guidance of their indwelling Thought Adjuster (the divine spark), the mind becomes thoroughly incompatible with spirit reality. Without spirit identification, the personality eventually loses its cohesion and simply ceases to exist at physical death. It faces extinction—the ultimate cosmic loss.

​The Illusion of Temporal Power

​The revelatory text repeatedly contrasts the fleeting nature of material reality with the permanence of spiritual values. Power, wealth, and fame on a decimal planet like Urantia are short-lived illusions.

​The Material Illusion: A powerful ruler or clever politician may command millions, amass fortunes, and see their name etched in stone. Yet, in the cosmic timeline, a human lifespan is less than a heartbeat.

​The Spiritual Reality: At the moment of physical death, all material assets—the titles, the bank accounts, the political networks—are instantly stripped away. The only thing a soul carries forward across the Jordan is its character—the spiritual value, goodness, and capacity for unselfish love developed during its earthly career. If a life was spent playing politics instead of serving, the person arrives at the threshold of the next life entirely bankrupt.

​The Echo of the Master's Warning!

​The above perfectly echo the profound warning given by Jesus during his self-bestowal on Earth, a truth underscored throughout the Urantia Book's subject papers:

​"What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?"

​The papers frame this not as an arbitrary punishment from an angry deity, but as the natural, inevitable consequence of cosmic law. God does not destroy the self-seeking politician; rather, by refusing to choose the survival values of love, truth, and service, the individual chooses not to survive. They refuse the energy of life.

​The True Path to Greatness

​The tragic irony is that the very things the power-seeker craves—recognition, status, and a meaningful existence—are given freely, abundantly, and eternally to those who choose the path of selfless service.

​In the grand universe scheme, the humble servant who cleans a street or comforts a neighbor out of genuine love is infinitely more real, more powerful, and more permanent than the most celebrated earthly dictator. 

The servant has co-created an immortal soul with their Adjuster and is destined to journey through the sectors of the grand universe, eventually standing in the literal presence of the Universal Father on Paradise. 

The politician or those like him who lived for power has only the dust of their own grave!




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