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160. Verily, there is none other God besides Me # 143 |
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The Bahá’í Writings contain many passages that elucidate
the nature of the Manifestation and His relationship to God.
Bahá’u’lláh underlines the unique and transcendent nature
of the Godhead. He explains that “since there can be no tie of
direct intercourse to bind the one true God with His creation” God
ordains that “in every age and dispensation a pure and stainless
Soul be made manifest in the kingdoms of earth and heaven”. This
“mysterious and ethereal Being”, the Manifestation of God, has
a human nature which pertains to “the world of matter” and a
spiritual nature “born of the substance of God Himself”. He is
also endowed with a “double station”:
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Were any of the all-embracing Manifestations of God to
declare: “I am God”, He, verily, speaketh the truth, and no
doubt attacheth thereto. For it hath been repeatedly demonstrated
that through their Revelation, their attributes and names, the
Revelation of God, His names and His attributes, are made
manifest in the world…
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While the Manifestations reveal the names and
attributes of God and are the means by which humanity has
access to the knowledge of God and His Revelation, Shoghi
Effendi states that the Manifestations should “never … be
identified with that invisible Reality, the Essence of
Divinity itself”. In relation to Bahá’u’lláh, the Guardian
wrote that the “human temple that has been the vehicle of
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so overpowering a Revelation” is not to be identified with
the “Reality” of God.
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To Israel He was neither more nor less than the
incarnation of the “Everlasting Father”, the “Lord of
Hosts” come down “with ten thousands of saints”; to
Christendom Christ returned “in the glory of the Father”;
to Shí’ah Islám the return of the Imám Ḥusayn; to Sunní
Islám the descent of the “Spirit of God” (Jesus Christ); to
the Zoroastrians the promised Sháh-Bahrám; to the
Hindus the reincarnation of Krishna; to the Buddhists
the fifth Buddha.
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