A new version of the Bahá’í Reference Library is now available. This ‘old version’ of the Bahá’í Reference Library will be replaced at a later date.
The new version of the Bahá’i Reference Library can be accessed here »
159: As to thy question, doth every soul without … |
As to thy question, doth every soul without
exception achieve life everlasting? Know thou that immortality
belongeth to those souls in whom hath been breathed
the spirit of life from God. All save these are lifeless—they
are the dead, even as Christ hath explained in the Gospel
text. He whose eyes the Lord hath opened will see the souls
of men in the stations they will occupy after their release
from the body. He will find the living ones thriving within
190
the precincts of their Lord, and the dead sunk down in the
lowest abyss of perdition.
|
Know thou that every soul is fashioned after the nature
of God, each being pure and holy at his birth. Afterwards,
however, the individuals will vary according to what they
acquire of virtues or vices in this world. Although all existent
beings are in their very nature created in ranks or
degrees, for capacities are various, nevertheless every individual
is born holy and pure, and only thereafter may he
become defiled.
|
And further, although the degrees of being are various,
yet all are good. Observe the human body, its limbs, its
members, the eye, the ear, the organs of smell, of taste, the
hands, the fingernails. Notwithstanding the differences
among all these parts, each one within the limitations of its
own being participateth in a coherent whole. If one of them
faileth it must be healed, and should no remedy avail, that
part must be removed.
|