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12 October 1912 |
The greatest bestowal of God in the world of humanity is religion,
for assuredly the divine teachings of religion are above all other
sources of instruction and development to man. Religion confers
upon man eternal life and guides his footsteps in the world of morality.
It opens the doors of unending happiness and bestows everlasting
honor upon the human kingdom. It has been the basis of all
civilization and progress in the history of mankind.
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We will, therefore, investigate religion, seeking from an unprejudiced
standpoint to discover whether it is the source of illumination,
the cause of development and the animating impulse of all
human advancement. We will investigate independently, free
from the restrictions of dogmatic beliefs, blind imitations of ancestral
forms and the influence of mere human opinion; for as we
enter this question, we will find some who declare that religion is a
cause of uplift and betterment in the world, while others assert just
as positively that it is a detriment and a source of degradation to
mankind. We must give these questions thorough and impartial
consideration so that no doubt or uncertainty may linger in our
minds regarding them.
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We will first consider the Founders of the religions—the
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Prophets—review the story of Their lives, compare the conditions
preceding Their appearance with those subsequent to Their departure,
following historical records and irrefutable facts instead of
relying upon traditionary statements which are open to both acceptance
and denial.
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Among the great Prophets was Abraham, Who, being an iconoclast
and a Herald of the oneness of God, was banished from
His native land. He founded a family upon which the blessing of
God descended, and it was owing to this religious basis and ordination
that the Abrahamic house progressed and advanced.
Through the divine benediction noteworthy and luminous prophets
issued from His lineage. There appeared Isaac, Ishmael, Jacob,
Joseph, Moses, Aaron, David and Solomon. The Holy Land was
conquered by the power of the Covenant of God with Abraham,
and the glory of the Solomonic wisdom and sovereignty dawned.
All this was due to the religion of God which this blessed lineage
established and upheld. It is evident that throughout the history of
Abraham and His posterity this was the source of their honor, advancement
and civilization. Even today the descendants of His
household and lineage are found throughout the world.
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There is another and more significant aspect to this religious impulse
and impetus. The children of Israel were in bondage and captivity
in the land of Egypt four hundred years. They were in an extreme
state of degradation and slavery under the tyranny and oppression
of the Egyptians. While they were in the condition of abject
poverty, in the lowest degree of abasement, ignorance and servility,
Moses suddenly appeared among them. Although He was
but a shepherd, such majesty, grandeur and efficiency became
manifest in Him through the power of religion that His influence
continues to this day. His Prophethood was established throughout
the land, and the law of His Word became the foundation of the
laws of the nations. This unique Personage, single and alone, rescued
the children of Israel from bondage through the power of religious
training and discipline. He led them to the Holy Land and
founded there a great civilization which has become permanent
and renowned and under which these people attained the highest
degree of honor and glory. He freed them from bondage and captivity.
He imbued them with qualities of progressiveness and capability.
They proved to be a civilizing people with instincts toward
education and scholastic attainment. Their philosophy became
renowned; their industries were celebrated throughout the nations.
In all lines of advancement which characterize a progressive
people they achieved distinction. In the splendor of the reign of
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Solomon their sciences and arts advanced to such a degree that
even the Greek philosophers journeyed to Jerusalem to sit at the
feet of the Hebrew sages and acquire the basis of Israelitish law.
According to eastern history this is an established fact. Even Socrates
visited the Jewish doctors in the Holy Land, consorting with
them and discussing the principles and basis of their religious belief.
After his return to Greece he formulated his philosophical
teaching of divine unity and advanced his belief in the immortality
of the spirit beyond the dissolution of the body. Without doubt,
Socrates absorbed these verities from the wise men of the Jews
with whom he came in contact. Hippocrates and other philosophers
of the Greeks likewise visited Palestine and acquired wisdom
from the Jewish prophets, studying the basis of ethics and morality,
returning to their country with contributions which have made
Greece famous.
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When a movement fundamentally religious makes a weak nation
strong, changes a nondescript tribal people into a mighty and powerful
civilization, rescues them from captivity and elevates them to
sovereignty, transforms their ignorance into knowledge and
endows them with an impetus of advancement in all degrees of development
(this is not theory, but historical fact), it becomes evident
that religion is the cause of man’s attainment to honor and
sublimity.
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But when we speak of religion, we mean the essential foundation
or reality of religion, not the dogmas and blind imitations
which have gradually encrusted it and which are the cause of the
decline and effacement of a nation. These are inevitably destructive
and a menace and hindrance to a nation’s life—even as it is
recorded in the Torah and confirmed in history that when the Jews
became fettered by empty forms and imitations, the wrath of God
became manifest. When they forsook the foundations of the law of
God, Nebuchadnezzar came and conquered the Holy Land. He
killed and made captive the people of Israel, laid waste the country
and populous cities and burned the villages. Seventy thousand
Jews were carried away captive to Babylon. He destroyed
Jerusalem, despoiled the great Temple, desecrated the Holy of
Holies and burned the Torah, the heavenly book of Scriptures.
Therefore, we learn that allegiance to the essential foundation of
the divine religions is ever the cause of development and progress,
whereas the abandonment and beclouding of that essential reality
through blind imitations and adherence to dogmatic beliefs are the
causes of a nation’s debasement and degradation. After their conquest
by the Babylonians the Jews were successively subjugated
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by the Greeks and Romans. Under the Roman general Titus in A.D.
70 the Holy Land was stripped and pillaged, Jerusalem razed to its
foundations and the Israelites scattered broadcast throughout the
world. So complete was their dispersion that they have continued
without a country and government of their own to the present day.
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From this review of the history of the Jewish people we learn
that the foundation of the religion of God laid by Moses was the
cause of their eternal honor and national prestige, the animating
impulse of their advancement and racial supremacy and the source
of that excellence which will always command the respect and reverence
of those who understand their peculiar destiny and outcome.
The dogmas and blind imitations which gradually obscured
the reality of the religion of God proved to be Israel’s destructive
influences, causing the expulsion of these chosen people from the
Holy Land of their Covenant and promise.
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What, then, is the mission of the divine Prophets? Their mission
is the education and advancement of the world of humanity. They
are the real Teachers and Educators, the universal Instructors of
mankind. If we wish to discover whether any one of these great
Souls or Messengers was in reality a Prophet of God, we must investigate
the facts surrounding His life and history, and the first
point of our investigation will be the education He bestowed upon
mankind. If He has been an Educator, if He has really trained a nation
or people, causing it to rise from the lowest depths of ignorance
to the highest station of knowledge, then we are sure that He was a
Prophet. This is a plain and clear method of procedure, proof that is
irrefutable. We do not need to seek after other proofs. We do not
need to mention miracles, saying that out of rock water gushed
forth, for such miracles and statements may be denied and refused
by those who hear them. The deeds of Moses are conclusive evidences
of His Prophethood. If a man be fair, unbiased and willing
to investigate reality, he will undoubtedly testify to the fact that
Moses was, verily, a man of God and a great Personage.
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In further consideration of this subject, I wish you to be fair and
reasonable in your judgment, setting aside all religious prejudices.
We should earnestly seek and thoroughly investigate realities, recognizing
that the purpose of the religion of God is the education of
humanity and the unity and fellowship of mankind. Furthermore,
we will establish the point that the foundations of the religions of
God are one foundation. This foundation is not multiple, for it is
reality itself. Reality does not admit of multiplicity, although each
of the divine religions is separable into two divisions. One concerns
the world of morality and the ethical training of human nature.
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It is directed to the advancement of the world of humanity in
general; it reveals and inculcates the knowledge of God and makes
possible the discovery of the verities of life. This is ideal and spiritual
teaching, the essential quality of divine religion, and not
subject to change or transformation. It is the one foundation of all
the religions of God. Therefore, the religions are essentially one
and the same.
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The second classification or division comprises social laws and
regulations applicable to human conduct. This is not the essential
spiritual quality of religion. It is subject to change and transformation
according to the exigencies and requirements of time and
place. For instance, in the time of Noah certain requirements made
it necessary that all seafood be allowable or lawful. During the
time of the Abrahamic Prophethood it was considered allowable,
because of a certain exigency, that a man should marry his aunt,
even as Sarah was the sister of Abraham’s mother. During the
cycle of Adam it was lawful and expedient for a man to marry his
own sister, even as Abel, Cain and Seth, the sons of Adam, married
their sisters. But in the law of the Pentateuch revealed by
Moses these marriages were forbidden and their custom and sanction
abrogated. Other laws formerly valid were annulled during the
time of Moses. For example, it was lawful in Abraham’s cycle to
eat the flesh of the camel, but during the time of Jacob this was prohibited.
Such changes and transformations in the teaching of religion
are applicable to the ordinary conditions of life, but they are
not important or essential. Moses lived in the wilderness of Sinai
where crime necessitated direct punishment. There were no
penitentiaries or penalties of imprisonment. Therefore, according
to the exigency of the time and place it was a law of God that an eye
should be given for an eye and a tooth for a tooth. It would not be
practicable to enforce this law at the present time—for instance, to
blind a man who accidentally blinded you. In the Torah there are
many commands concerning the punishment of a murderer. It
would not be allowable or possible to carry out these ordinances
today. Human conditions and exigencies are such that even the
question of capital punishment—the one penalty which most nations
have continued to enforce for murder—is now under discussion
by wise men who are debating its advisability. In fact, laws for
the ordinary conditions of life are only valid temporarily. The
exigencies of the time of Moses justified cutting off a man’s hand
for theft, but such a penalty is not allowable now. Time changes
conditions, and laws change to suit conditions. We must remember
that these changing laws are not the essentials; they are the accidentals
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of religion. The essential ordinances established by a
Manifestation of God are spiritual; they concern moralities, the
ethical development of man and faith in God. They are ideal and
necessarily permanent—expressions of the one foundation and not
amenable to change or transformation. Therefore, the fundamental
basis of the revealed religion of God is immutable, unchanging
throughout the centuries, not subject to the varying conditions of
the human world.
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Christ ratified and proclaimed the foundation of the law of
Moses. Muḥammad and all the Prophets have revoiced that same
foundation of reality. Therefore, the purposes and accomplishments
of the divine Messengers have been one and the same. They
were the source of advancement to the body politic and the cause
of the honor and divine civilization of humanity, the foundation
of which is one and the same in every dispensation. It is evident,
then, that the proofs of the validity and inspiration of a Prophet
of God are the deeds of beneficent accomplishment and greatness
emanating from Him. If He proves to be instrumental in the
elevation and betterment of mankind, He is undoubtedly a valid
and heavenly Messenger.
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At the time when the Israelites had been dispersed by the power
of the Roman Empire and the national life of the Hebrew people
had been effaced by their conquerors—when the law of God had
seemingly passed from them and the foundation of the religion of
God was apparently destroyed—Jesus Christ appeared. When He
arose among the Jews, the first thing He did was to proclaim the
validity of the Manifestation of Moses. He declared that the Torah,
the Old Testament, was the Book of God and that all the prophets
of Israel were valid and true. He extolled the mission of Moses,
and through His proclamation the name of Moses was spread
throughout the world. Through Christianity the greatness of Moses
became known among all nations. It is a fact that before the appearance
of Christ, the name of Moses had not been heard in Persia.
In India they had no knowledge of Judaism, and it was only
through the Christianizing of Europe that the teachings of the Old
Testament became spread in that region. Throughout Europe there
was not a copy of the Old Testament. But consider this carefully
and judge it aright: Through the instrumentality of Christ, through
the translation of the New Testament, the little volume of the Gospel,
the Old Testament, the Torah, has been translated into six
hundred languages and spread everywhere in the world. The
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names of the Hebrew prophets became household words among
the nations, who believed that the children of Israel were, verily,
the chosen people of God, a holy nation under the especial blessing
and protection of God, and that, therefore, the prophets who had
arisen in Israel were the daysprings of revelation and brilliant stars
in the heaven of the will of God.
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Therefore, Christ really promulgated Judaism; for he was a Jew
and not opposed to the Jews. He did not deny the Prophethood of
Moses; on the contrary, He proclaimed and ratified it. He did not
invalidate the Torah; He spread its teachings. That portion of the
ordinances of Moses which concerned transactions and unimportant
conditions underwent transformation, but the essential teachings
of Moses were revoiced and confirmed by Christ without
change. He left nothing unfinished or incomplete. Likewise,
through the supreme efficacy and power of the Word of God He
united most of the nations of the East and the West. This was accomplished
at a time when these nations were opposed to each
other in hostility and strife. He led them beneath the overshadowing
tent of the oneness of humanity. He educated them until they
became united and agreed, and through His spirit of conciliation
the Roman, Greek, Chaldean and Egyptian were blended in a
composite civilization. This wonderful power and extraordinary
efficacy of the Word prove conclusively the validity of Christ.
Consider how His heavenly sovereignty is still permanent and
lasting. Verily, this is conclusive proof and manifest evidence.
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From another horizon we see Muḥammad, the Prophet of
Arabia, appearing. You may not know that the first address of
Muḥammad to His tribe was the statement, “Verily, Moses was a
Prophet of God, and the Torah is a Book of God. Verily, O ye
people, ye must believe in the Torah, in Moses and the prophets.
Ye must accept all the prophets of Israel as valid.” In the Qur’án,
the Muslim Bible, there are seven statements or repetitions of
the Mosaic narrative, and in all the historic accounts Moses is
praised. Muḥammad announces that Moses was the greatest Prophet
of God, that God guided Him in the wilderness of Sinai, that
through the light of guidance Moses hearkened to the summons of
God, that He was the Interlocutor of God and the bearer of the tablet
of the Ten Commandments, that all the contemporary nations of
the world arose against Him and that eventually Moses conquered
them, for falsehood and error are ever overcome by truth. There
are many other instances of Muḥammad’s confirmation of Moses. I
am mentioning but a few. Consider that Muḥammad was born
among the savage and barbarous tribes of Arabia, lived among
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them and was outwardly illiterate and uninformed of the Holy
Books of God. The Arabian people were in the utmost ignorance
and barbarism. They buried their infant daughters alive, considering
this to be an evidence of a valorous and lofty nature. They lived
in bondage and serfdom under the Persian and Roman governments
and were scattered throughout the desert, engaged in
continual strife and bloodshed. When the light of Muḥammad
dawned, the darkness of ignorance was dispelled from the deserts
of Arabia. In a short period of time those barbarous peoples attained
a superlative degree of civilization which, with Baghdád as
its center, extended as far westward as Spain and afterward influenced
the greater part of Europe. What proof of Prophethood
could be greater than this, unless we close our eyes to justice and
remain obstinately opposed to reason?
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Today the Christians are believers in Moses, accept Him as a
Prophet of God and praise Him most highly. The Muslims are,
likewise, believers in Moses, accept the validity of His Prophethood,
at the same time believing in Christ. Could it be said that the
acceptance of Moses by the Christians and Muslims has been
harmful and detrimental to those people? On the contrary, it has
been beneficial to them, proving that they have been fair-minded
and just. What harm could result to the Jewish people, then, if they
in return should accept Christ and acknowledge the validity of the
Prophethood of Muḥammad? By this acceptance and praiseworthy
attitude the enmity and hatred which have afflicted mankind so
many centuries would be dispelled, fanaticism and bloodshed pass
away and the world be blessed by unity and agreement. Christians
and Muslims believe and admit that Moses was the Interlocutor of
God. Why do you not say that Christ was the Word of God? Why
do you not speak these few words that will do away with all this
difficulty? Then there will be no more hatred and fanaticism, no
more warfare and bloodshed in the Land of Promise. Then there
will be peace among you forever.
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Verily, I now declare to you that Moses was the Interlocutor of
God and a most noteworthy Prophet, that Moses revealed the fundamental
law of God and founded the real ethical basis of the
civilization and progress of humanity. What harm is there in this?
Have I lost anything by saying this to you and believing it as a
Bahá’í? On the contrary, it benefits me; and Bahá’u’lláh, the
Founder of the Bahá’í Movement, confirms me, saying, “You
have been fair and just in your judgment; you have impartially investigated
the truth and arrived at a true conclusion; you have announced
your belief in Moses, a Prophet of God, and accepted the
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Torah, the Book of God.” Inasmuch as it is possible for me to
sweep away all evidences of prejudice by such a liberal and universal
statement of belief, why is it not possible for you to do
likewise? Why not put an end to this religious strife and establish a
bond of connection between the hearts of men? Why should not the
followers of one religion praise the Founder or Teacher of another?
The other religionists extol the greatness of Moses and admit that
He was the Founder of Judaism. Why do the Hebrews refuse to
praise and accept the other great Messengers Who have appeared in
the world? What harm could there be in this? What rightful objection?
None whatever. You would lose nothing by such action and
statement. On the contrary, you would contribute to the welfare of
mankind. You would be instrumental in establishing the happiness
of the world of humanity. The eternal honor of man depends upon
the liberalism of this modern age. Inasmuch as our God is one God
and the Creator of all mankind, He provides for and protects all.
We acknowledge Him as a God of kindness, justice and mercy.
Why then should we, His children and followers, war and fight,
bringing sorrow and grief into the hearts of each other? God is loving
and merciful. His intention in religion has ever been the bond
of unity and affinity between humankind.
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Praise be to God! The medieval ages of darkness have passed
away and this century of radiance has dawned, this century wherein
the reality of things is becoming evident, wherein science is
penetrating the mysteries of the universe, the oneness of the world
of humanity is being established, and service to mankind is the
paramount motive of all existence. Shall we remain steeped in
our fanaticisms and cling to our prejudices? Is it fitting that we
should still be bound and restricted by ancient fables and superstitions
of the past, be handicapped by superannuated beliefs and the
ignorances of dark ages, waging religious wars, fighting and shedding
blood, shunning and anathematizing each other? Is this becoming?
Is it not better for us to be loving and considerate toward
each other? Is it not preferable to enjoy fellowship and unity, join
in anthems of praise to the most high God and extol all His
Prophets in the spirit of acceptance and true vision? Then, indeed,
this world will become a paradise, and the promised Day of God
will dawn. Then, according to the prophecy of Isaiah, the wolf and
the lamb will drink from the same stream, the owl and the vulture
will nest together in the same branches, and the lion and the calf
pasture in the same meadow. What does this mean? It means that
fierce and contending religions, hostile creeds and divergent beliefs
will reconcile and associate, notwithstanding their former
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hatreds and antagonism. Through the liberalism of human attitude
demanded in this radiant century they will blend together in perfect
fellowship and love. This is the spirit and meaning of Isaiah’s
words. There will never be a day when this prophecy will come to
pass literally, for these animals by their natures cannot mingle and
associate in kindness and love. Therefore, this prophecy symbolizes
the unity and agreement of races, nations and peoples who
will come together in attitudes of intelligence, illumination and
spirituality.
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