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The Mission of the Cause 18 |
Great as is the love and paternal care which our beloved Master
is extending to us from on High, and unique as is the Spirit that
animates today His servants in the world, yet a great deal will depend
upon the character and efforts of His loved ones on whom now
rests the responsibility of carrying on His work gloriously after
Him. How great is the need at this moment when the promised
outpourings of His grace are ready to be extended to every soul,
for us all to form a broad vision of the mission of the Cause to
mankind, and to do all in our power to spread it throughout the
world! The eyes of the world, now that the sublime Personality
of the Master has been removed from this visible plane,
are turned with eager anticipation to us who are named after
His name, and on whom rests primarily the responsibility to keep
burning the torch that He has lit in this world. How keenly I
feel at this challenging hour in the history of the Cause the need
for a firm and definite determination to subordinate all our personal
likings, our local interests, to the interests and requirements
of the Cause of God! Now is the time to set aside, nay, to forget
altogether, minor considerations regarding our internal relationships,
and to present a solid united front to the world animated
by no other desire but to serve and propagate His Cause.
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It is my firm conviction which I now express with all sincerity
and candor, that the dignity and unity of the Cause urgently demands—particularly throughout the American continent—that the
friends should in their words and conduct emphasize and give absolute
prominence to the constructive dynamic principles of Bahá’u’lláh,
rather than attach undue importance to His negative Teachings.
With hearts cleansed from the least trace of suspicion and filled
with hope and faith in what the spirit of love can achieve, we must
one and all endeavor at this moment to forget past impressions, and
with absolute good-will and genuine cooperation unite in deepening
and diffusing the spirit of love and service that the Cause has thus
far so remarkably shown to the world. To this attitude of good-will,
of forbearance and genuine kindness to all, must be added,
however, constant but unprovocative vigilance, lest unrestricted association
with the peoples of the world should enable the very few
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who have been definitely pronounced by the Master as injurious to
the body of the Cause, to make a breach in the Movement. Not
until, however, an unmistakable evidence should appear, manifestly
revealing the evil motives of a certain individual or group
of individuals, is it advisable to make the matter public; for an
untimely declaration that shall give rise to open differences among
the friends is far more detrimental than forbearing still further
with those who are suspected of evil intentions. As the Master
so fully and consistently did throughout His lifetime, we must
all make a supreme effort to pour out a genuine spirit of kindness
and hopeful love to peoples of various creeds and classes, and must
abstain from all provocative language that may impede the effect
of what true and continued kindness can produce.
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Does not ‘Abdu’l-Bahá wish us, as He looks down upon us with
loving expectation from His glorious Station, to obliterate as much
as possible all traces of censure, of conflicting discussions, of cooling
remarks, of petty unnecessary observations that impede the onward
march of the Cause, that damp the zeal of the firm believer and
detract from the sublimity of the Bahá’í Cause in the eyes of the
inquirer? In order, however, to insure fair and quick and vigorous
action whenever such an evil activity is revealed and has been carefully
ascertained, the best and only means would appear to be, for
the careful observer, once he is assured of such an evil action, and
has grown hopeless of the attitude of kindness and forbearance, to
report it quietly to the Spiritual Assembly representative of the
friends in that locality and submit the case to their earnest and full
consideration. Should the majority of the members of that Assembly
be conscientiously convinced of the case—and this being a
national issue affecting the body of the friends in America—it
should, only through the intermediary of that Assembly, be cautiously
communicated to that greater body representing all the Assemblies
in America, which will in its turn obtain all the available
data from the local Assembly in question, study carefully the situation
and reserve for itself the ultimate decision. It may, if it
decides so, refer to the Holy Land for further consideration and
consultation.
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