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THIRD PERIOD: THE MINISTRY OF ‘ABDU’L-BAHÁ 1892–1921 Chapter XIV: The Covenant of Bahá’u’lláh 234 235 236 237 |
I have in the preceding chapters endeavored to trace the rise and
progress of the Faith associated with the Báb and Bahá’u’lláh during
the first fifty years of its existence. If I have dwelt too long on the
events connected with the life and mission of these twin Luminaries
of the Bahá’í Revelation, if I have at times indulged in too circumstantial
a narrative of certain episodes related to their ministries, it
is solely because these happenings proclaim the birth, and signalize
the establishment, of an epoch which future historians will acclaim
as the most heroic, the most tragic and the most momentous period
in the Apostolic Age of the Bahá’í Dispensation. Indeed the tale
which the subsequent decades of the century under review unfold
to our eyes is but the record of the manifold evidences of the resistless
operation of those creative forces which the revolution of fifty years
of almost uninterrupted Revelation had released.
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A dynamic process, divinely propelled, possessed of undreamt-of
potentialities, world-embracing in scope, world-transforming in its
ultimate consequences, had been set in motion on that memorable
night when the Báb communicated the purpose of His mission to
Mullá Ḥusayn in an obscure corner of Shíráz. It acquired a tremendous
momentum with the first intimations of Bahá’u’lláh’s dawning
Revelation amidst the darkness of the Síyáh-Chál of Ṭihrán. It was
further accelerated by the Declaration of His mission on the eve of
His banishment from Baghdád. It moved to a climax with the proclamation
of that same mission during the tempestuous years of His
exile in Adrianople. Its full significance was disclosed when the
Author of that Mission issued His historic summonses, appeals and
warnings to the kings of the earth and the world’s ecclesiastical
leaders. It was finally consummated by the laws and ordinances which
He formulated, by the principles which He enunciated and by the
institutions which He ordained during the concluding years of His
ministry in the prison-city of ‘Akká.
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To direct and canalize these forces let loose by this Heaven-sent
process, and to insure their harmonious and continuous operation
after His ascension, an instrument divinely ordained, invested with
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indisputable authority, organically linked with the Author of the
Revelation Himself, was clearly indispensable. That instrument
Bahá’u’lláh had expressly provided through the institution of the
Covenant, an institution which He had firmly established prior to
His ascension. This same Covenant He had anticipated in His Kitáb-i-Aqdas,
had alluded to it as He bade His last farewell to the members
of His family, who had been summoned to His bed-side, in the
days immediately preceding His ascension, and had incorporated it
in a special document which He designated as “the Book of My
Covenant,” and which He entrusted, during His last illness, to His
eldest son ‘Abdu’l-Bahá.
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Written entirely in His own hand; unsealed, on the ninth day
after His ascension in the presence of nine witnesses chosen from
amongst His companions and members of His Family; read subsequently,
on the afternoon of that same day, before a large company
assembled in His Most Holy Tomb, including His sons, some of the
Báb’s kinsmen, pilgrims and resident believers, this unique and epoch-making
Document, designated by Bahá’u’lláh as His “Most Great
Tablet,” and alluded to by Him as the “Crimson Book” in His
“Epistle to the Son of the Wolf,” can find no parallel in the Scriptures
of any previous Dispensation, not excluding that of the Báb Himself.
For nowhere in the books pertaining to any of the world’s religious
systems, not even among the writings of the Author of the Bábí
Revelation, do we find any single document establishing a Covenant
endowed with an authority comparable to the Covenant which
Bahá’u’lláh had Himself instituted.
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“So firm and mighty is this Covenant,” He Who is its appointed
Center has affirmed, “that from the beginning of time until the present
day no religious Dispensation hath produced its like.” “It is indubitably
clear,” He, furthermore, has stated, “that the pivot of the
oneness of mankind is nothing else but the power of the Covenant.”
“Know thou,” He has written, “that the ‘Sure Handle’ mentioned
from the foundation of the world in the Books, the Tablets and the
Scriptures of old is naught else but the Covenant and the Testament.”
And again: “The lamp of the Covenant is the light of the world, and
the words traced by the Pen of the Most High a limitless ocean.”
“The Lord, the All-Glorified,” He has moreover declared, “hath, beneath
the shade of the Tree of Anísá (Tree of Life), made a new
Covenant and established a great Testament… Hath such a Covenant
been established in any previous Dispensation, age, period or
century? Hath such a Testament, set down by the Pen of the Most
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High, ever been witnessed? No, by God!” And finally: “The power
of the Covenant is as the heat of the sun which quickeneth and promoteth
the development of all created things on earth. The light of
the Covenant, in like manner, is the educator of the minds, the
spirits, the hearts and souls of men.” To this same Covenant He has
in His writings referred as the “Conclusive Testimony,” the “Universal
Balance,” the “Magnet of God’s grace,” the “Upraised Standard,” the
“Irrefutable Testament,” “the all-mighty Covenant, the like of which
the sacred Dispensations of the past have never witnessed” and “one
of the distinctive features of this most mighty cycle.”
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Extolled by the writer of the Apocalypse as “the Ark of His
(God) Testament”; associated with the gathering beneath the “Tree
of Anísá” (Tree of Life) mentioned by Bahá’u’lláh in the Hidden
Words; glorified by Him, in other passages of His writings, as the
“Ark of Salvation” and as “the Cord stretched betwixt the earth and
the Abhá Kingdom,” this Covenant has been bequeathed to posterity
in a Will and Testament which, together with the Kitáb-i-Aqdas
and several Tablets, in which the rank and station of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá
are unequivocally disclosed, constitute the chief buttresses designed
by the Lord of the Covenant Himself to shield and support, after
His ascension, the appointed Center of His Faith and the Delineator
of its future institutions.
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In this weighty and incomparable Document its Author discloses
the character of that “excellent and priceless heritage” bequeathed by
Him to His “heirs”; proclaims afresh the fundamental purpose of His
Revelation; enjoins the “peoples of the world” to hold fast to that
which will “elevate” their “station”; announces to them that “God
hath forgiven what is past”; stresses the sublimity of man’s station;
discloses the primary aim of the Faith of God; directs the faithful to
pray for the welfare of the kings of the earth, “the manifestations of
the power, and the daysprings of the might and riches, of God”;
invests them with the rulership of the earth; singles out as His special
domain the hearts of men; forbids categorically strife and contention;
commands His followers to aid those rulers who are “adorned with
the ornament of equity and justice”; and directs, in particular, the
Aghsán (His sons) to ponder the “mighty force and the consummate
power that lieth concealed in the world of being.” He bids them,
moreover, together with the Afnán (the Báb’s kindred) and His own
relatives, to “turn, one and all, unto the Most Great Branch (‘Abdu’l-Bahá)”;
identifies Him with “the One Whom God hath purposed,”
“Who hath branched from this pre-existent Root,” referred to in the
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Kitáb-i-Aqdas; ordains the station of the “Greater Branch” (Mírzá
Muḥammad-‘Alí) to be beneath that of the “Most Great Branch”
(‘Abdu’l-Bahá); exhorts the believers to treat the Aghsán with consideration
and affection; counsels them to respect His family and
relatives, as well as the kindred of the Báb; denies His sons “any
right to the property of others”; enjoins on them, on His kindred
and on that of the Báb to “fear God, to do that which is meet and
seemly” and to follow the things that will “exalt” their station; warns
all men not to allow “the means of order to be made the cause of
confusion, and the instrument of union an occasion for discord”;
and concludes with an exhortation calling upon the faithful to “serve
all nations,” and to strive for the “betterment of the world.”
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That such a unique and sublime station should have been conferred
upon ‘Abdu’l-Bahá did not, and indeed could not, surprise
those exiled companions who had for so long been privileged to
observe His life and conduct, nor the pilgrims who had been brought,
however fleetingly, into personal contact with Him, nor indeed the
vast concourse of the faithful who, in distant lands, had grown to
revere His name and to appreciate His labors, nor even the wide
circle of His friends and acquaintances who, in the Holy Land and
the adjoining countries, were already well familiar with the position
He had occupied during the lifetime of His Father.
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He it was Whose auspicious birth occurred on that never-to-be-forgotten
night when the Báb laid bare the transcendental character
of His Mission to His first disciple Mullá Ḥusayn. He it was Who,
as a mere child, seated on the lap of Táhirih, had registered the
thrilling significance of the stirring challenge which that indomitable
heroine had addressed to her fellow-disciple, the erudite and far-famed
Vahíd. He it was Whose tender soul had been seared with the
ineffaceable vision of a Father, haggard, dishevelled, freighted with
chains, on the occasion of a visit, as a boy of nine, to the Síyáh-Chál
of Ṭihrán. Against Him, in His early childhood, whilst His Father
lay a prisoner in that dungeon, had been directed the malice of a
mob of street urchins who pelted Him with stones, vilified Him and
overwhelmed Him with ridicule. His had been the lot to share with
His Father, soon after His release from imprisonment, the rigors and
miseries of a cruel banishment from His native land, and the trials
which culminated in His enforced withdrawal to the mountains of
Kurdistán. He it was Who, in His inconsolable grief at His separation
from an adored Father, had confided to Nabíl, as attested by him in
his narrative, that He felt Himself to have grown old though still
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but a child of tender years. His had been the unique distinction of
recognizing, while still in His childhood, the full glory of His Father’s
as yet unrevealed station, a recognition which had impelled Him to
throw Himself at His feet and to spontaneously implore the privilege
of laying down His life for His sake. From His pen, while still in
His adolescence in Baghdád, had issued that superb commentary on a
well-known Muḥammadan tradition, written at the suggestion of
Bahá’u’lláh, in answer to a request made by ‘Alí-Shawkat Páshá,
which was so illuminating as to excite the unbounded admiration of
its recipient. It was His discussions and discourses with the learned
doctors with whom He came in contact in Baghdád that first aroused
that general admiration for Him and for His knowledge which was
steadily to increase as the circle of His acquaintances was widened,
at a later date, first in Adrianople and then in ‘Akká. It was to Him
that the highly accomplished Khurshíd Páshá, the governor of Adrianople,
had been moved to pay a public and glowing tribute when,
in the presence of a number of distinguished divines of that city, his
youthful Guest had, briefly and amazingly, resolved the intricacies
of a problem that had baffled the minds of the assembled company—an achievement that affected so deeply the Páshá that from that time
onwards he could hardly reconcile himself to that Youth’s absence
from such gatherings.
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On Him Bahá’u’lláh, as the scope and influence of His Mission
extended, had been led to place an ever greater degree of reliance, by
appointing Him, on numerous occasions, as His deputy, by enabling
Him to plead His Cause before the public, by assigning Him the task
of transcribing His Tablets, by allowing Him to assume the responsibility
of shielding Him from His enemies, and by investing Him with
the function of watching over and promoting the interests of His
fellow-exiles and companions. He it was Who had been commissioned
to undertake, as soon as circumstances might permit, the delicate and
all-important task of purchasing the site that was to serve as the
permanent resting-place of the Báb, of insuring the safe transfer of
His remains to the Holy Land, and of erecting for Him a befitting
sepulcher on Mt. Carmel. He it was Who had been chiefly instrumental
in providing the necessary means for Bahá’u’lláh’s release from
His nine-year confinement within the city walls of ‘Akká, and in
enabling Him to enjoy, in the evening of His life, a measure of that
peace and security from which He had so long been debarred. It was
through His unremitting efforts that the illustrious Badí had been
granted his memorable interviews with Bahá’u’lláh, that the hostility
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evinced by several governors of ‘Akká towards the exiled community
had been transmuted into esteem and admiration, that the purchase of
properties adjoining the Sea of Galilee and the River Jordan had been
effected, and that the ablest and most valuable presentation of the
early history of the Faith and of its tenets had been transmitted to
posterity. It was through the extraordinarily warm reception accorded
Him during His visit to Beirut, through His contact with Midhát
Páshá, a former Grand Vizir of Turkey, through His friendship with
Azíz Páshá, whom He had previously known in Adrianople, and
who had subsequently been promoted to the rank of Valí, and
through His constant association with officials, notables and leading
ecclesiastics who, in increasing number had besought His presence,
during the final years of His Father’s ministry, that He had succeeded
in raising the prestige of the Cause He had championed to a level it
had never previously attained.
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He alone had been accorded the privilege of being called “the
Master,” an honor from which His Father had strictly excluded all
His other sons. Upon Him that loving and unerring Father had
chosen to confer the unique title of “Sirru’lláh” (the Mystery of God),
a designation so appropriate to One Who, though essentially human
and holding a station radically and fundamentally different from
that occupied by Bahá’u’lláh and His Forerunner, could still claim
to be the perfect Exemplar of His Faith, to be endowed with super-human
knowledge, and to be regarded as the stainless mirror reflecting
His light. To Him, whilst in Adrianople, that same Father had,
in the Súriy-i-Ghusn (Tablet of the Branch), referred as “this sacred
and glorious Being, this Branch of Holiness,” as “the Limb of the
Law of God,” as His “most great favor” unto men, as His “most
perfect bounty” conferred upon them, as One through Whom “every
mouldering bone is quickened,” declaring that “whoso turneth towards
Him hath turned towards God,” and that “they who deprive themselves
of the shadow of the Branch are lost in the wilderness of error.”
To Him He, whilst still in that city, had alluded (in a Tablet addressed
to Ḥájí Muḥammad Ibráhím-i-Khalíl) as the one amongst His sons
“from Whose tongue God will cause the signs of His power to stream
forth,” and as the one Whom “God hath specially chosen for His
Cause.” On Him, at a later period, the Author of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas,
in a celebrated passage, subsequently elucidated in the “Book of My
Covenant,” had bestowed the function of interpreting His Holy
Writ, proclaiming Him, at the same time, to be the One “Whom
God hath purposed, Who hath branched from this Ancient Root.”
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To Him in a Tablet, revealed during that same period and addressed
to Mírzá Muḥammad Qulíy-i-Sabzívarí, He had referred as “the
Gulf that hath branched out of this Ocean that hath encompassed
all created things,” and bidden His followers to turn their faces
towards it. To Him, on the occasion of His visit to Beirut, His
Father had, furthermore, in a communication which He dictated to
His amanuensis, paid a glowing tribute, glorifying Him as the One
“round Whom all names revolve,” as “the Most Mighty Branch of
God,” and as “His ancient and immutable Mystery.” He it was Who,
in several Tablets which Bahá’u’lláh Himself had penned, had been
personally addressed as “the Apple of Mine eye,” and been referred to
as “a shield unto all who are in heaven and on earth,” as “a shelter for
all mankind” and “a stronghold for whosoever hath believed in God.”
It was on His behalf that His Father, in a prayer revealed in His
honor, had supplicated God to “render Him victorious,” and to “ordain
… for Him, as well as for them that love Him,” the things destined
by the Almighty for His “Messengers” and the “Trustees” of His
Revelation. And finally in yet another Tablet these weighty words
had been recorded: “The glory of God rest upon Thee, and upon
whosoever serveth Thee and circleth around Thee. Woe, great woe,
betide him that opposeth and injureth Thee. Well is it with him that
sweareth fealty to Thee; the fire of hell torment him who is Thy
enemy.”
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And now to crown the inestimable honors, privileges and benefits
showered upon Him, in ever increasing abundance, throughout the
forty years of His Father’s ministry in Baghdád, in Adrianople and in
‘Akká, He had been elevated to the high office of Center of Bahá’u’lláh’s
Covenant, and been made the successor of the Manifestation
of God Himself—a position that was to empower Him to impart an
extraordinary impetus to the international expansion of His Father’s
Faith, to amplify its doctrine, to beat down every barrier that would
obstruct its march, and to call into being, and delineate the features
of, its Administrative Order, the Child of the Covenant, and the
Harbinger of that World Order whose establishment must needs
signalize the advent of the Golden Age of the Bahá’í Dispensation.
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