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MY PLEA, MY SUPREME ENTREATY |
I have in two recent, successive messages, cabled to your Assembly,
giving expression, as far as it lay in my power, to the feelings of
overpowering gratitude which the response of so many pioneers to the call of
teaching has evoked in my heart. I have moreover felt impelled to convey
my congratulations to the members of your Assembly who, through their
resource, unity and singlemindedness, have lent so needed and timely an
impetus to the mighty work associated with the second year of the Seven
Year Plan. There can be no doubt whatever that what the American believers,
no less than their elected National representatives, have accomplished,
the long and assiduous care of the former and the potent methods employed
by the latter, have witnessed to the uprising of a new spirit on which the
defamers of the Cause may well pause to reflect, and from which its lovers
cannot but derive deep joy and solace. I again wish to thank with all my
soul those whose acts have stirred the imagination of friend and foe alike.
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In my desire not to omit anything that might help to spur on or reinforce
the community of the American believers as they move on to their
destiny, I feel it necessary to add a word of warning in connection with the
work that has been so splendidly begun lest it should be jeopardized or
frustrated. The initial phase of the teaching work operating under the
Seven Year Plan has at long last been concluded. They who have pushed it
forward have withstood the test gloriously. By their acts, whether as teachers
or administrators, they have written a glorious page in the struggle for the
laying of a continent-wide foundation for the Administrative Order of
their Faith. At this advanced stage in the fulfilment of the purpose to
which they have set their hand there can be no turning back, no halting,
no respite. To launch the bark of the Faith, to implant its banner, is not
enough. Support, ample, organized and unremitting, should be lent, designed
to direct the course of that work and to lay an unassailable foundation for
the fort destined to stand guard over that banner.
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The National Spiritual Assembly, the National Teaching Committee,
the Regional and local teaching committees, no less than the itinerant
teachers, should utilize every possible means calculated to fan the zeal,
enrich the resources and insure the solidity and permanency of the work, of
those who, actuated by so laudable and shining a spirit of self-sacrifice, have
arisen to face the hazards and perils of so holy and historic an adventure.
Indeed every believer, however humble and inexperienced, should sense the
obligation to play his or her part in a mission that involves so very deeply
the destinies not only of the American Bahá’í community but of the nation
itself.
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Whether through the frequency of their visits, the warmth of their
correspondence, the liberality of their support, the wisdom of their counsels,
the choice of the literature placed at the disposal of the pioneers, the
members of the community should, at this hour when the sands of a moribund
civilization are inexorably running out, and at a time when they are preparing
themselves to launch yet another stage in their teaching activities,
insure the security and provide for the steady expansion, of the work
initiated in those territories so recently set alight from the torch of an
inextinguishable Faith.
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