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XCIII: Know thou that every created thing is a… |
Know thou that every created thing is a
sign of the revelation of God. Each, according to its
capacity, is, and will ever remain, a token of the Almighty.
Inasmuch as He, the sovereign Lord of all,
hath willed to reveal His sovereignty in the kingdom
of names and attributes, each and every created thing
hath, through the act of the Divine Will, been made
a sign of His glory. So pervasive and general is this
revelation that nothing whatsoever in the whole universe
can be discovered that doth not reflect His
splendor. Under such conditions every consideration
of proximity and remoteness is obliterated….
Were the Hand of Divine power to divest of this
high endowment all created things, the entire universe
would become desolate and void.
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Behold, how immeasurably exalted is the Lord your
God above all created things! Witness the majesty
of His sovereignty, His ascendancy, and supreme
power. If the things which have been created by
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Him—magnified be His glory—and ordained to be
the manifestations of His names and attributes,
stand, by virtue of the grace with which they have
been endowed, exalted beyond all proximity and remoteness,
how much loftier must be that Divine
Essence that hath called them into being?…
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Meditate on what the poet hath written: “Wonder
not, if my Best-Beloved be closer to me than mine
own self; wonder at this, that I, despite such nearness,
should still be so far from Him.”… Considering
what God hath revealed, that “We are closer
to man than his life-vein,” the poet hath, in allusion
to this verse, stated that, though the revelation of
my Best-Beloved hath so permeated my being that
He is closer to me than my life-vein, yet, notwithstanding
my certitude of its reality and my recognition
of my station, I am still so far removed from
Him. By this he meaneth that his heart, which is the
seat of the All-Merciful and the throne wherein
abideth the splendor of His revelation, is forgetful
of its Creator, hath strayed from His path, hath shut
out itself from His glory, and is stained with the defilement
of earthly desires.
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It should be remembered in this connection that
the one true God is in Himself exalted beyond and
above proximity and remoteness. His reality transcendeth
such limitations. His relationship to His creatures
knoweth no degrees. That some are near and
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others are far is to be ascribed to the manifestations
themselves.
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Among them is this saying: “Earth and heaven
cannot contain Me; what can alone contain Me
is the heart of him that believeth in Me, and is faithful
to My Cause.” How often hath the human heart,
which is the recipient of the light of God and the seat
of the revelation of the All-Merciful, erred from
Him Who is the Source of that light and the Well
Spring of that revelation. It is the waywardness of
the heart that removeth it far from God, and condemneth
it to remoteness from Him. Those hearts,
however, that are aware of His Presence, are close to
Him, and are to be regarded as having drawn nigh
unto His throne.
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Consider, moreover, how frequently doth man become
forgetful of his own self, whilst God remaineth,
through His all-encompassing knowledge, aware
of His creature, and continueth to shed upon him
the manifest radiance of His glory. It is evident,
therefore, that, in such circumstances, He is closer
to him than his own self. He will, indeed, so remain
for ever, for, whereas the one true God knoweth all
things, perceiveth all things, and comprehendeth all
things, mortal man is prone to err, and is ignorant
of the mysteries that lie enfolded within him….
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Let no one imagine that by Our assertion that all
created things are the signs of the revelation of God
is meant that—God forbid—all men, be they good
or evil, pious or infidel, are equal in the sight of God.
Nor doth it imply that the Divine Being—magnified
be His name and exalted be His glory—is, under
any circumstances, comparable unto men, or can, in
any way, be associated with His creatures. Such an
error hath been committed by certain foolish ones
who, after having ascended into the heavens of their
idle fancies, have interpreted Divine Unity to mean
that all created things are the signs of God, and that,
consequently, there is no distinction whatsoever between
them. Some have even outstripped them by
maintaining that these signs are peers and partners
of God Himself. Gracious God! He, verily, is one
and indivisible; one in His essence, one in His attributes.
Everything besides Him is as nothing when
brought face to face with the resplendent revelation
of but one of His names, with no more than the
faintest intimation of His glory—how much less
when confronted with His own Self!
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By the righteousness of My name, the All-Merciful!
The Pen of the Most High trembleth with a
great trembling and is sore shaken at the revelation
of these words. How puny and insignificant is the
evanescent drop when compared with the waves and
billows of God’s limitless and everlasting Ocean, and
how utterly contemptible must every contingent and
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perishable thing appear when brought face to face
with the uncreated, the unspeakable glory of the
Eternal! We implore pardon of God, the All-Powerful,
for them that entertain such beliefs, and give
utterance to such words. Say: O people! How can a
fleeting fancy compare with the Self-Subsisting, and
how can the Creator be likened unto His creatures,
who are but as the script of His Pen? Nay, His
script excelleth all things, and is sanctified from, and
immeasurably exalted above, all creatures.
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Furthermore, consider the signs of the revelation
of God in their relation one to another. Can the sun,
which is but one of these signs, be regarded as equal
in rank to darkness? The one true God beareth Me
witness! No man can believe it, unless he be of those
whose hearts are straitened, and whose eyes have become
deluded. Say: Consider your own selves. Your
nails and eyes are both parts of your bodies. Do ye
regard them of equal rank and value? If ye say, yea;
say, then: ye have indeed charged with imposture,
the Lord, my God, the All-Glorious, inasmuch as ye
pare the one, and cherish the other as dearly as your
own life.
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To transgress the limits of one’s own rank and station
is, in no wise, permissible. The integrity of every
rank and station must needs be preserved. By this
is meant that every created thing should be viewed in
the light of the station it hath been ordained to occupy.
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It should be borne in mind, however, that when
the light of My Name, the All-Pervading, hath shed
its radiance upon the universe, each and every created
thing hath, according to a fixed decree, been endowed
with the capacity to exercise a particular influence,
and been made to possess a distinct virtue.
Consider the effect of poison. Deadly though it is, it
possesseth the power of exerting, under certain conditions,
a beneficial influence. The potency infused
into all created things is the direct consequence of
the revelation of this most blessed Name. Glorified be
He, Who is the Creator of all names and attributes!
Cast into the fire the tree that hath rot and dried up,
and abide under the shadow of the green and goodly
Tree, and partake of the fruit thereof.
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Consider, for instance, the revelation of the
light of the Name of God, the Educator. Behold,
how in all things the evidences of such a revelation
are manifest, how the betterment of all beings dependeth
upon it. This education is of two kinds.
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The one is universal. Its influence pervadeth all things
and sustaineth them. It is for this reason that God
hath assumed the title, “Lord of all worlds.” The
other is confined to them that have come under
the shadow of this Name, and sought the shelter of
this most mighty Revelation. They, however, that
have failed to seek this shelter, have deprived themselves
of this privilege, and are powerless to benefit
from the spiritual sustenance that hath been sent
down through the heavenly grace of this Most Great
Name. How great the gulf fixed between the one and
the other! If the veil were lifted, and the full glory
of the station of those that have turned wholly
towards God, and have, in their love for Him, renounced
the world, were made manifest, the entire
creation would be dumbfounded. The true believer
in the Unity of God will, as it hath already been explained,
recognize, in the believer and the unbeliever,
the evidences of the revelation of both of these
Names. Were this revelation to be withdrawn, all
would perish.
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Consider, in like manner, the revelation of the light
of the Name of God, the Incomparable. Behold, how
this light hath enveloped the entire creation, how
each and every thing manifesteth the sign of His
Unity, testifieth to the reality of Him Who is the
Eternal Truth, proclaimeth His sovereignty, His oneness,
and His power. This revelation is a token of
His mercy that hath encompassed all created things.
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They that have joined partners with Him, however,
are unaware of such a revelation, and are deprived of
the Faith through which they can draw near unto,
and be united with, Him. Witness how the divers
peoples and kindreds of the earth bear witness to His
unity, and recognize His oneness. But for the sign
of the Unity of God within them, they would have
never acknowledged the truth of the words, “There
is none other God but God.” And yet, consider how
grievously they have erred, and strayed from His
path. Inasmuch as they have failed to recognize the
Sovereign Revealer, they have ceased to be reckoned
among those who may be regarded as true believers
in the Unity of God.
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This sign of the revelation of the Divine Being in
them that have joined partners with Him may, in a
sense, be regarded as a reflection of the glory with
which the faithful are illumined. None, however, can
comprehend this truth save men endued with understanding.
They that have truly recognized the Unity
of God should be regarded as the primary manifestations
of this Name. It is they who have quaffed the
wine of Divine Unity from the cup which the hand
of God hath proffered unto them, and who have
turned their faces towards Him. How vast the distance
that separateth these sanctified beings from
those men that are so far away from God!…
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God grant that, with a penetrating vision, thou
mayest perceive, in all things, the sign of the revelation
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of Him Who is the Ancient King, and recognize
how exalted and sanctified from the whole creation
is that most holy and sacred Being. This, in
truth, is the very root and essence of belief in the
unity and singleness of God. “God was alone; there
was none else besides Him.” He, now, is what He
hath ever been. There is none other God but Him,
the One, the Incomparable, the Almighty, the Most
Exalted, the Most Great.
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