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The Weakened Pillars of Religion |
Not only must irreligion and its monstrous offspring, the triple curse
that oppresses the soul of mankind in this day, be held responsible for
the ills which are so tragically besetting it, but other evils and vices,
which are, for the most part, the direct consequences of the “weakening
of the pillars of religion,” must also be regarded as contributory factors to
the manifold guilt of which individuals and nations stand convicted.
The signs of moral downfall, consequent to the dethronement of religion
and the enthronement of these usurping idols, are too numerous
and too patent for even a superficial observer of the state of present-day
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society to fail to notice. The spread of lawlessness, of drunkenness, of
gambling, and of crime; the inordinate love of pleasure, of riches, and
other earthly vanities; the laxity in morals, revealing itself in the
irresponsible attitude towards marriage, in the weakening of parental control,
in the rising tide of divorce, in the deterioration in the standard of
literature and of the press, and in the advocacy of theories that are the
very negation of purity, of morality and chastity—these evidences of
moral decadence, invading both the East and the West, permeating
every stratum of society, and instilling their poison in its members of
both sexes, young and old alike, blacken still further the scroll upon
which are inscribed the manifold transgressions of an unrepentant
humanity.
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Brimful and bitter indeed is the cup of humanity that has failed to
respond to the summons of God as voiced by His Supreme Messenger,
that has dimmed the lamp of its faith in its Creator, that has transferred,
in so great a measure, the allegiance owed Him to the gods of its own
invention, and polluted itself with the evils and vices which such a
transference must necessarily engender.
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Dear friends! It is in this light that we, the followers of Bahá’u’lláh,
should regard this visitation of God which, in the concluding years of
the first century of the Bahá’í era, afflicts the generality, and has thrown
into such a bewildering confusion the affairs, of mankind. It is because
of this dual guilt, the things it has done and the things it has left undone,
its misdeeds as well as its dismal and signal failure to accomplish its clear
and unmistakable duty towards God, His Messenger, and His Faith,
that this grievous ordeal, whatever its immediate political and economic
causes, has laid its adamantine grip upon it.
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God, however, as has been pointed out in the very beginning of these
pages, does not only punish the wrongdoings of His children. He
chastises because He is just, and He chastens because He loves. Having
chastened them, He cannot, in His great mercy, leave them to their
fate. Indeed, by the very act of chastening them He prepares them for
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the mission for which He has created them. “My calamity is My
providence,” He, by the mouth of Bahá’u’lláh, has assured them,
“outwardly it is fire and vengeance, but inwardly it is light and mercy.”
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The flames which His Divine justice have kindled cleanse an unregenerate
humanity, and fuse its discordant, its warring elements as no
other agency can cleanse or fuse them. It is not only a retributory and
destructive fire, but a disciplinary and creative process, whose aim is the
salvation, through unification, of the entire planet. Mysteriously,
slowly, and resistlessly God accomplishes His design, though the sight
that meets our eyes in this day be the spectacle of a world hopelessly
entangled in its own meshes, utterly careless of the Voice which, for a
century, has been calling it to God, and miserably subservient to the
siren voices which are attempting to lure it into the vast abyss.
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