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25 September 1912 |
In the Orient I was informed of the lofty purposes and wonderful
attainments of the American people. When I arrived in this country,
I realized that American ideals are indeed most praiseworthy and
that the people here are lovers of truth. They investigate reality,
and there is no trace of fanaticism among them. Today the nations
of the world are on the verge of war, influenced and impelled by
prejudices of ignorance and racial fanaticism. Praise be to God!
You are free from such prejudice, for you believe in the oneness
and solidarity of the world of humanity. There is no doubt that the
divine confirmations will uphold you.
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One of the forms of prejudice which afflict the world of mankind
is religious bigotry and fanaticism. When this hatred burns in
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human hearts, it becomes the cause of revolution, destruction,
abasement of humankind and deprivation of the mercy of God. For
the holy Manifestations and divine Founders of religion Themselves
were completely unified in love and agreement, whereas
Their followers are characterized by bitter antagonism and attitudes
of hostility toward each other. God has desired for mankind
the effulgence of love, but through blindness and misapprehension
man has enveloped himself in veils of discord, strife and hatred.
The supreme need of humanity is cooperation and reciprocity. The
stronger the ties of fellowship and solidarity amongst men, the
greater will be the power of constructiveness and accomplishment
in all the planes of human activity. Without cooperation and reciprocal
attitude the individual member of human society remains
self-centered, uninspired by altruistic purposes, limited and solitary
in development like the animal and plant organisms of the
lower kingdoms. The lower creatures are not in need of cooperation
and reciprocity. A tree can live solitary and alone, but this is
impossible for man without retrogression. Therefore, every
cooperative attitude and activity of human life is praiseworthy and
foreintended by the will of God. The first expression of cooperation
is family relationship, which is unreliable and uncertain in its
potency, for it is subject to separation and does not permanently
cement together the individual members of humanity. There is also
a cooperation and oneness in nativity or race which is likewise not
efficient, for although its members may agree in general, they differ
radically in personal and particular points of view. Racial association,
therefore, will not ensure the requirements of divine relationship.
There are other means in the human world by which
physical association is established, but these fail to weld together
the hearts and spirits of men and are correspondingly inefficient.
Therefore, it is evident that God has destined and intended religion
to be the cause and means of cooperative effort and accomplishment
among mankind. To this end He has sent the Prophets of
God, the holy Manifestations of the Word, in order that the fundamental
reality and religion of God may prove to be the bond of
human unity, for the divine religions revealed by these holy Messengers
have one and the same foundation. All will admit, therefore,
that the divine religions are intended to be the means of true
human cooperation, that they are united in the purpose of making
humanity one family, for they rest upon the universal foundation of
love, and love is the first effulgence of Divinity.
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Each one of the divine religions has established two kinds of ordinances:
the essential and the accidental. The essential ordinances
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rest upon the firm, unchanging, eternal foundations of the Word itself.
They concern spiritualities, seek to stabilize morals, awaken
intuitive susceptibilities, reveal the knowledge of God and inculcate
the love of all mankind. The accidental laws concern the administration
of outer human actions and relations, establishing
rules and regulations requisite for the world of bodies and their
control. These are ever subject to change and supersedure according
to exigencies of time, place and condition. For example, during
the time of Moses, ten commandments concerning the punishment
of murder were revealed in His Book. Divorce was sanctioned
and polygamy allowable to a certain extent. If a man committed
theft, his hand was cut off. This was drastic law and severe
punishment applicable to the time of Moses. But when the
time of Christ came, minds had developed, realizations were
keener and spiritual perceptions had advanced so that certain laws
concerning murder, plurality of wives and divorce were abrogated.
But the essential ordinances of the Mosaic dispensation remained
unchanged. These were the fundamental realities of the knowledge
of God and the holy Manifestations, the purification of morals, the
awakening of spiritual susceptibilities—eternal principles in
which there is no change or transformation. Briefly, the foundation
of the divine religions is one eternal foundation, but the laws for
temporary conditions and exigencies are subject to change.
Therefore, by adherence to these temporary laws, blindly following
and imitating ancestral forms, difference and divergence have
arisen among followers of the various religions, resulting in disunion,
strife and hatred. Blind imitations and dogmatic observances
are conducive to alienation and disagreement; they lead to
bloodshed and destruction of the foundations of humanity. Therefore,
the religionists of the world must lay aside these imitations
and investigate the essential foundation or reality itself, which is
not subject to change or transformation. This is the divine means of
agreement and unification.
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The purpose of all the divine religions is the establishment of the
bonds of love and fellowship among men, and the heavenly
phenomena of the revealed Word of God are intended to be a
source of knowledge and illumination to humanity. So long as man
persists in his adherence to ancestral forms and imitation of obsolete
ceremonials, denying higher revelations of the divine light in
the world, strife and contention will destroy the purpose of religion
and make love and fellowship impossible. Each of the holy Manifestations
announced the glad tidings of His successor, and each
One confirmed the message of His predecessor. Therefore, inasmuch
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as They were agreed and united in purpose and teaching, it is
incumbent upon Their followers to be likewise unified in love and
spiritual fellowship. In no other way will discord and alienation
disappear and the oneness of the world of humanity be established.
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After we have proved the validity of the Manifestations of the
Word of God by investigating the divine teachings, we must discover
for a certainty whether They have been real Educators of
mankind. Among the revelators of the law of God was Moses.
When He appeared, all the contemporaneous nations rejected
Him. Notwithstanding this, single and alone He promulgated the
divine teachings and liberated a nation from the lowest condition of
degradation and bondage. The people of Israel were ignorant,
lowly, debased in morals—a race of slaves under burdensome oppression.
Moses led them out of captivity and brought them to the
Holy Land. He educated and disciplined them, established among
them the foundations of material and divine civilization. Through
the education of Moses these ignorant people attained an advanced
degree of power and prestige, culminating in the glory of the reign
of Solomon. From the abyss of bereavement and slavery they were
uplifted to the highest plane of progress and civilized nationhood.
It is evident, therefore, that Moses was an Educator and Teacher.
The purpose and mission of the holy, divine Messengers is the
training and advancement of humanity, the cultivation of divine
fruits in the gardens of human hearts, the reflection of heavenly
effulgence in the mirrors of human souls, the quickening of mental
capacity and the increase of spiritual susceptibilities. When these
results and outcomes are witnessed in mankind, the function and
mission of the Manifestations are unmistakable. Christ, single and
alone, without schooling or outward education and trained to labor
in the shop of a carpenter, appeared in the world at the time when
the Jewish nation was in the greatest abasement. This radiant
Youth, without wealth, power of armies or prestige, rescued the
Jews who believed on Him from tyranny and degradation and lifted
them to the highest plane of development and glory. Peter, His disciple,
was a fisherman. Through the power of Christ he shed light
upon all the horizons of the world. Furthermore, various people of
the Greek, Roman, Egyptian and Assyrian nations were brought
together in unity and agreement; where warfare and bloodshed had
existed, humility and love were manifest, and the foundations of
divine religion were established, never to be destroyed. This
proves that Christ was a heavenly Teacher and Educator of the
world of humanity, for such evidences are historical and irrefutable,
not based upon tradition and circumstantial report. The power
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of His Word in cementing these nations together is as clear and
evident as the sun at midday. There is no need of further demonstration.
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The proof of the validity of a Manifestation of God is the penetration
and potency of His Word, the cultivation of heavenly attributes
in the hearts and lives of His followers and the bestowal of
divine education upon the world of humanity. This is absolute
proof. The world is a school in which there must be Teachers of the
Word of God. The evidence of the ability of these Teachers is
efficient education of the graduating classes.
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In the early part of the nineteenth century the horizon of Persia
was shrouded in great darkness and ignorance. The people of that
country were in a condition of barbarism. Hatred and bigotry prevailed
among the various religions; bloodshed and hostility were
frequent among sects and denominations of belief. There were no
evidences of affiliation and unity; violent prejudice and antagonism
ruled the hearts of men. At such a time as this
Bahá’u’lláh proclaimed the first principle of His mission and
teaching—the oneness of the world of humanity. His second announcement
was the investigation of reality; the third was the oneness
of the foundations of the divine religions. Through spiritual
education He led the people out of darkness and ignorance into the
clear light of truth, illuminated their hearts with the splendor of
knowledge, laid a true and universal basis for religious teachings,
cultivated the virtues of humanity, conferred spiritual susceptibilities,
awakened inner perceptions and changed the dishonor of
prejudiced souls to the highest degree of honor and capacity.
Today in Persia and the Orient you will find the followers of
Bahá’u’lláh united in the closest ties of fellowship and love. They
have abandoned religious prejudices and have become as one family.
When you enter their meetings, you will find Christians, Muslims,
Buddhists, Zoroastrians, Jews and representatives of other
beliefs present, all conjoined in a wonderful unity without a trace
of bigotry or fanaticism, and the light of the oneness of the world of
humanity reflected in their faces. Day by day they are advancing,
manifesting greater and still greater love for each other. Their faith
is fixed upon the unification of mankind, and their highest purpose
is the oneness of religious belief. They proclaim to all humanity the
sheltering mercy and infinite grace of God. They teach the reconciliation
of religion with science and reason. They show forth in
words and deeds the reality of love for all mankind as the servants
of one God and the recipients of His universal bounty. These are
their thoughts, their beliefs, their guiding principles, their religion.
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No trace of religious, racial, patriotic or political prejudice can be
found among them, for they are real servants of God and obedient
to His will and command.
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My highest hope and desire is that the strongest and most indissoluble
bond shall be established between the American nation and
the people of the Orient. This is my prayer to God. May the day
come when through divine and spiritual activity in the human
world the religions shall be reconciled and all races of mankind
come together in unity and love. Fifty years ago Bahá’u’lláh proclaimed
the peace of the nations and oneness of the divine religions,
addressing His words to all the kings and rulers of the world in
specific Tablets. Therefore, my supreme desire is the unity of the
East and West, universal peace and the oneness of the world of
humanity.
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