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Part One: ON THE INFLUENCE OF THE PROPHETS IN THE EVOLUTION OF HUMANITY 1: NATURE IS GOVERNED BY ONE UNIVERSAL LAW 1 2 3 |
This Nature is subjected to an absolute organization, to
determined laws, to a complete order and a finished design,
from which it will never depart—to such a degree,
indeed, that if you look carefully and with keen sight,
from the smallest invisible atom up to such large bodies of
the world of existence as the globe of the sun or the other
great stars and luminous spheres, whether you regard
their arrangement, their composition, their form or their
movement, you will find that all are in the highest degree
of organization and are under one law from which they
will never depart.
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But when you look at Nature itself, you see that it has
no intelligence, no will. For instance, the nature of fire is
to burn; it burns without will or intelligence. The nature
of water is fluidity; it flows without will or intelligence.
The nature of the sun is radiance; it shines without will or
intelligence. The nature of vapor is to ascend; it ascends
without will or intelligence. Thus it is clear that the natural
movements of all things are compelled; there are no
voluntary movements except those of animals and, above
all, those of man. Man is able to resist and to oppose Nature
because he discovers the constitution of things, and
through this he commands the forces of Nature; all the inventions
he has made are due to his discovery of the constitution
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of things. For example, he invented the telegraph,
which is the means of communication between the
East and the West. It is evident, then, that man rules over
Nature.
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Now, when you behold in existence such organizations,
arrangements and laws, can you say that all these
are the effect of Nature, though Nature has neither intelligence
nor perception? If not, it becomes evident that this
Nature, which has neither perception nor intelligence, is
in the grasp of Almighty God, Who is the Ruler of the
world of Nature; whatever He wishes, He causes Nature
to manifest.
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One of the things which has appeared in the world of
existence, and which is one of the requirements of Nature,
is human life. Considered from this point of view man is
the branch; nature is the root. Then can the will and the
intelligence, and the perfections which exist in the branch,
be absent in the root?
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It is said that Nature in its own essence is in the grasp of
the power of God, Who is the Eternal Almighty One: He
holds Nature within accurate regulations and laws, and
rules over it.
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On the idea of God, cf. “The Divinity Can Only Be Comprehended through the Divine Manifestations,” p. 146; and “Man’s Knowledge of God,” p. 220. The reader will there see that the Bahá’í Faith has not an anthropomorphic conception of God, and that if it employs a customary terminology, it is careful to explain its symbolic meaning. [ Back To Reference] |