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“97: O young trees and plants, matchless and tender, that grow in the meadows…” |
Although now ye be learners, the hope is that through showerings from the
clouds of grace, ye will become teachers; that ye will flourish even as flowers
and fragrant herbs in the garden of that knowledge which is both of the mind
and of the heart; that each one of you will grow as a tree rich in yield, fair,
fresh and strong, heavy with sweet fruit.
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His Holiness the Báb hath said: “Should a tiny ant desire in this day to
be possessed of such power as to be able to unravel the abstrusest and most
bewildering passages of the Qur’án, its wish will no doubt be fulfilled,
inasmuch as the mystery of eternal might vibrates within the innermost being of
all created things.”
1
If so helpless a creature can be endowed with so subtle
a capacity, how much more efficacious must be the power released through the
liberal effusions of the grace of Bahá’u’lláh! What confirmations will be
garnered, what influxes of the heart!
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Wherefore, O ye illumined youth, strive by night and by day to unravel the
mysteries of the mind and spirit, and to grasp the secrets of the Day of God.
Inform yourselves of the evidences that the Most Great Name hath dawned. Open
your lips in praise. Adduce convincing arguments and proofs. Lead those who
thirst to the fountain of life; grant ye true health to the ailing. Be ye
apprentices of God; be ye physicians directed by God, and heal ye the sick
among humankind. Bring those who have been excluded into the circle of
intimate friends. Make the despairing to be filled with hope. Waken them that
slumber; make the heedless mindful.
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(From a Tablet - translated from the Persian) [97]
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1. | Cf. “The World Order of Bahá’u’lláh: Selected Letters” [rev. ed.] (Wilmette: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1982), pp. 126–27. [ Back To Reference] |