Selected Topics of Comparison in Christianity and the Bahá'í Faith: chapter
THE SON AND THE FATHER - A
BAHÁ´Í VIEW
In the Bahá´í Writings, Jesus Christ is referred to
several times as Son of Man. In the passage quoted below,
Bahá´u´lláh pays a moving tribute to Jesus. He testifies
of him, as foretold in the Bible (John 15:26), and confirms and elucidates the
spiritual meaning of the Biblical healing
miracles.[1] Most interestingly, the impact of
Christ's sacrifice is described in inspirational terms, being universal and
perennial in nature, complementing the traditional view of individual
redemption, which is also confirmed in the Bahá´í
Writings.[2] Cole writes that "Jesus' passion is
here identified as the motive force behind Christian civilization, the unseen
source of human advance" and acknowledges the innovative contribution of
Bahá´u´lláh "in linking the redemption gained by the
cross to ideas such as civilization, progress, and the arts and
sciences."[3] Taking all these aspects into
consideration, it is safe to say that here the title Son of Man has a
messianic meaning rather than being a reference to the human station of
Jesus.
Know thou that when the Son of Man yielded up His breath to God, the
whole creation wept with a great weeping. By sacrificing Himself, however, a
fresh capacity was infused into all created things. Its
evidences, as witnessed in all the peoples of the earth, are now
manifest before thee. The deepest wisdom which the sages have uttered, the
profoundest learning which any mind hath unfolded, the arts which the
ablest hands have produced, the influence exerted by the most potent of
rulers, are but manifestations of
the quickening power released by His transcendent, His all-pervasive,
and resplendent Spirit.
We testify that when He came into the world, He shed the splendor of
His glory upon all created things. Through Him the leper recovered from the
leprosy of perversity and ignorance. Through Him, the unchaste and wayward were
healed. Through His power, born of Almighty God, the eyes of the blind were
opened,
and the soul of the sinner sanctified.
Leprosy may be interpreted as any veil that interveneth between man and
the recognition of the Lord, his God.
Whoso alloweth himself to be shut out from Him is indeed a leper, who
shall not be remembered in the
Kingdom of God, the Mighty, the All-Praised. We bear witness that
through the power of the Word of God
every leper was cleansed, every sickness was healed, every human
infirmity was banished. He it is Who
purified the world. Blessed is the man who, with a face beaming with
light, hath turned towards Him.[4]
The eschatological references to the coming of the Son of Man
have, according to Bahá´í view, found their fulfillment in
the subsequent missions of Muhammad, the Báb and
Bahá´u´lláh. In the Kitab-i Iqan, we find an
extensive exegesis of Matt. 24:29-31, where the apocalyptic scenario of the
shaking of "the powers of heaven" is explained in spiritual terms, although the
physical (literal) realization of some of the phenomena is
acknowledged.[5] Primarily aimed at justifying
the claim of the Báb, Bahá´u´lláh's apology is
universal in character. Every prophet comes at a time when religion has lost its
purity and illuminating power (one meaning of the darkening of sun, moon and
stars). All of them are faced with the opposition of the clergy of previous
religions who also prevent their followers to recognize the new divine Messenger
(another meaning of the same imagery). The underlying motives of this clerical
opposition, according to Bahá´u´lláh, are thirst for
power and material wealth, ignorance, corruption, selfishness, pride and
hypocrisy. These self-centered characteristics are also the cause for the rising
of manifold sects, because "in leadership they have recognized the ultimate
object of their endeavour, and account pride and haughtiness as the highest
attainments of their heart's desire." This is the true meaning of the
"oppression" (Matt. 24:29), when people, in their search for truth and divine
knowledge, "should not know where to go for it and from whom to seek
it".[6] Bahá´u´lláh's
stern rebuke of the clergy is reminiscent of Christ's critique of the Pharisees
and Bahá´u´lláh even compares the divine leaders with "a
number of voracious beasts [that] have gathered and preyed upon the carrion of
the souls of men."[7] This "oppression" and the
other events described are "the essential feature of every
Revelation."[8]
Consequently, in the scheme of 'eternal return', every divine Messenger
succeeding Christ (i.e., Muhammad, Báb and
Bahá´u´lláh) could be regarded as "the Son of man
[coming] in the glory of his father" (Matt. 16:24). However, just as the title
'Son' is most appropriate for Jesus, and the designation 'Seal' most befitting
for Muhammad, the station of 'Fatherhood' would best characterize the
dispensation of Bahá´u´lláh.
This can be best explained with the doctrine of the 'twofold station'
of the Messengers of God.
From the point of view of the "station of pure abstraction and
essential unity",[9] every Manifestation of God
could be addressed with the same name. Such an understanding helps to avoid the
temptation of regarding a certain title as more prominent than others, and of
elevating one religion above the rest. From the point of view of the second
station however, the "station of
distinction",[10] certain names and titles are
surely more meaningful than others, because "each of the Manifestations of God
hath a distinct individuality, a definitely prescribed mission, a predestined
Revelation, and specially designated
limitations."[11] Regarding the designation
Son of God for instance, Stockman has aptly argued that "while all
Manifestations exemplify perfect Sonship, it was a particular and central
characteristic of Jesus Christ's mission to exemplify such a
relationship."[12] Similarly it can be argued
that the concept of 'Fatherhood' fits best both the personality and the mission
of Bahá´u´lláh.[13] The Father
It is not so much the image of the Son of Man that is taken up
again with reference to Bahá´u´lláh, but the appearance
"in the glory of the Father", shortened to "the Father", which is stressed when
describing the station of
Bahá´u´lláh.[14] In the
following passage, it is Christ who, as the Son of Man, hails the advent
of the Father. This quote is taken from a tablet that
Bahá´u´lláh called Lawh-i Aqdas (Most Holy
Tablet).[15]
The river Jordan is joined to the Most Great Ocean, and the Son, in the
holy vale, crieth out: ´Here am I,
here am I O Lord, my God!', whilst Sinai circleth round the House, and
the Burning Bush calleth aloud:
´He Who is the Desired One is come in His transcendent majesty.'
Say, Lo! The Father is come, and that
which ye were promised in the Kingdom is fulfilled! This is the Word
which the Son concealed, when to
those around Him He said: ´Ye cannot bear it now.' And when the
appointed time was fulfilled and the
Hour had struck, the Word shone forth above the horizon of the Will of
God.[16]
Likewise, in a tablet to the Pope Pius IX,
Bahá´u´lláh raises the claim of being the 'Father' who
the Christians have been waiting for for almost nineteen hundred years. Again,
as in the passage quoted above, Bahá´u´lláh equals the
station of the Father with that of the Word (Gr. logos) that had been
concealed by Christ, because of the inability of his contemporaries to "bear" it
(cf. John 16:12).
The Word which the Son concealed is made manifest. It hath been sent
down in the form of the human
temple in this day. Blessed be the Lord Who is the Father! He,
verily, is come unto the nations in His
most great majesty. Turn your faces towards Him, O concourse of the
righteous... This is the day whereon
the Rock (Peter) crieth out and shouteth, and celebrateth the praise of
its Lord, the All-Possessing, the Most
High, saying: ´Lo! The Father is come, and that which ye were
promised in the Kingdom is fulfilled!...'
My body longeth for the cross, and Mine head waiteth the thrust of the
spear, in the path of the All-Merciful,
that the world may be purged from its
transgressions....[17]
In describing the fatherly characteristics of
Bahá´u´lláh's life and mission, we can analyze the
primary duties and responsibilities of a father towards his family and look for
equivalent aspects promoted by Bahá´u´lláh for the
family of humankind. A responsible father would provide for and support his
family and would be concerned about the well-being of all its members. He would
make sure that his children receive the best education possible and can develop
their talents. He would also guide and counsel his children and foster the ties
of family unity.[18] It is safe to say that all
of these aspects – the well-being of humanity, education, guidance and
consultation, and peace and unity – are central and interdependent themes
in Bahá´u´lláh's Revelation.
Concerning the well-being of humanity,
Bahá´u´lláh declares that his Teachings provide the
basis for its achievement. "The well-being of mankind, its peace and security,
are unattainable unless and until its unity is firmly established. This unity
can never be achieved so long as the counsels which the Pen of the Most High
hath revealed are suffered to pass
unheeded."[19] These teachings consist of Laws,
Ordinances and Exhortations, covering all aspects of life, personal and social,
spiritual and material. Bahá´u´lláh himself likens his
teachings to parental educational measures. "We school you with the rod of
wisdom and laws, like unto the father who educateth his son, and this for naught
but the protection of your own selves and the elevation of your
stations."[20]
Bahá´u´lláh has established the institution of
the House of Justice and delegated his divine, 'parental' authority to its
members who should "regard themselves as the guardians appointed of God for all
that dwell on earth."[21] It seems that the
children of mankind, on the verge of maturity, are still under age, so to speak,
and in need of a guardian.[22] However, just as
responsible parents would acknowledge the growing maturity and independence of
their adolescent children and regard themselves more as partners and helpmates
than as educators, the Bahá´í administrative institutions
should play a similar role. Bahá´ís are encouraged to see in
them "not only their elected representatives, but their helper, - one might
almost say their father - and the one to whom they can confidently take their
problem.[23] The guiding role of the
Bahá´í institutions is also described by taking up the
ancient imagery of the shepherd and his
flock.[24]
O ye Men of Justice! Be ye, in the realm of God, shepherds unto His
sheep and guard
them from the ravening wolves that have appeared in disguise, even as
ye would guard
your own sons. Thus exhorteth you the Counsellor, the
Faithful.[25]
The divinely ordained institution of the Local Spiritual Assembly
operates at the first
levels of human society and is the basic administrative unit of
Baha'u'llah's World Order...
It protects the Cause of God; it acts as the loving shepherd of the
Baha'i flock.[26]
The "Bahá´í flock" consists of people from every
religious and ethnic background. Sears has therefore argued that Christ's
statement, "And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold: them also I must
bring, and they shall hear my voice; and there shall be one fold, and one
shepherd" (John 10:16), relates to Bahá´u´lláh's mission
as he "is the Shepherd of all the sheep from whatever flock they may have
come."[27] This view has been popularized among
Bahá´ís, as Sours
observes.[28] However, the Christian
interpretation that this refers to the uniting of diverse pagan peoples and the
Jews, is certainly compatible with the Bahá´í point of view
of "the progressive nature of prophetic
fulfillment".[29] According to this
perspective, "visible evidences of fulfillment will be greater in this age than
in any past age, so much so that it can be said that such prophecies culminate
in this age."[30]
But Bahá´u´lláh is not only adressing humanity
as a whole in his role as 'universal Father'. He provides abundant guidance for
parents, often addressing specifically the fathers. He confirms and reinforces
the institution of marriage, which he regards as foundation of community life,
calling it a "fortress for well-being and
salvation".[31] He views it as a moral law to
marry and upholds the primary purpose of raising children, prioritizing moral
and spiritual education.[32] It is precisely in
this area of comprehensive education that Bahá´u´lláh
encourages and exhorts fathers to take a more decisive
part.[33] The importance of the mother as
"first educator" is being recognized as "the most important formative influence
in his [the child's] development". On the other hand, "the father also has the
responsibility of educating his children, and this responsibility is so weighty
that Baha'u'llah has stated that a father who fails to exercise it forfeits his
rights of fatherhood...."[34] This area of
responsibility covers both the intellectual and artistic training of the
children as well as their moral upbringing.
God hath prescribed unto every father to educate his children, both
boys and girls, in the sciences
and in morals, and in crafts and
professions....[35]
Unto every father hath been enjoined the instruction of his son and
daughter in the art of
reading and writing and in all that hath been laid down in the Holy
Tablet.[36]
In light of the paradigm shift mentioned before, fathers are encouraged
and expected to develop and display characteristics such as love, tenderness and
compassion that traditionally are viewed as 'female'. In Jungian terms, the
Bahá´í Writings appeal to men to balance their personality by
building up their anima. Following passage makes gender stereotypes look
old by employing a classic female metaphor, the hen nurturing her chicken, and
transfer it to describe a new role model for fathers.
If a wise father plays with his children, who has a right to say it is
not good for them? He calls
them to come to him as the hen calls her chicks; he knows that they are
little and must be coaxed
along - coaxed along because they are young and
tiny.[37]
Concerning counselling and guidance,
Bahá´u´lláh takes the same approach as outlined above
with respect to his role as divine Educator and delegating this function to the
elected institutions. Alluding to one of the Messianic titles given by Isaiah,
Bahá´u´lláh calls himself the "true", "trustworthy",
"faithful", or "benevolent Counsellor"[38] and
exhorts the people to give ear unto his call and not to be heedless. With the
ethical principles for and the method of consultation he provided an instrument
that would ensure that "the lamp of guidance" continues to be
lit.[39] "No welfare and no well-being can be
attained except through consultation"[40], he
says, a statement that consonates with and can be linked to the one about unity
being the prerequisite for well-being (quoted above). Consultation and
compassion, the frank and open exchange of thoughts in an appreciative and
encouraging environment, could then be regarded as a means for achieving unity
on any level of society.
The heaven of divine wisdom is illumined with the two luminaries of
consultation and compassion.
Take ye counsel together in all matters, inasmuch as consultation is
the lamp of guidance which
leadeth the way, and is the bestower of
understanding.[41]
Consultation bestoweth greater awareness and transmuteth conjecture
into certitude. It is a shining
light which, in a dark world, leadeth the way and guideth. For
everything there is and will continue
to be a station of perfection and maturity. The maturity of the gift
of understanding is made manifest
through consultation.[42]
The one-sided communication of the past, delivered by patriarchal
fathers, rulers, and priests, is being replaced by the egalitarian setting of
joint problem-solving and truth-finding. The quality of consultation, being the
result and expression of intellectual maturity, as the quote above suggests, can
be regarded as yardstick for the level of maturity a certain group or
institution has reached. The Everlasting Father
The designation Father (in the context of "glory of the Father") as
messianic title is not confined to Christianity only. In a prominent passage of
his writings, the prophet Isaiah gives five names by which the future Davidic
Messiah would be known.
For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government
shall be upon his shoulder:
and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The
everlasting Father,
The Prince of Peace. Of the increase of his government and peace there
shall be no end, upon the
throne of David, and upon his kingdom, to order it, and to establish it
with judgment and with justice
from henceforth even for ever. (Isa. 9:5-6).
It is important to understand that these names are not proper names in
the modern sense but rather descriptive designations or titles. Even proper
names, in Biblical tradition, are often descriptive in nature or sometimes
replaced with new names, reflecting new spiritual
characteristics.[43]
In a dream, Joseph was told to call Mary's son Jesus, "for he will save
his people from their sins" (Matt. 1:21). The proper name here has a descriptive
meaning referring to the redemptive character of Jesus' mission. Interestingly
enough, the gospel narrative goes on to say that this event constituted the
fulfillment of Isaiah's prophecy to King Ahas: "Behold, a
virgin[44] shall conceive, and bear a son, and
shall call his name Immanuel" (Isa. 7:14). In the New Testament passage, the
clarification "Immanuel, which being interpreted is, God with us" (Matt.
1:22-23) is being added, obviously to point out that this prophecy was not
fulfilled literally but symbolically. People did not call Jesus by the name
Immanuel but according to his own testimony, his presence signified the
presence of God on earth.[45]
With this understanding of the descriptive nature of names in mind, we
can further explore the name Everlasting Father.
Bahá´u´lláh only once uses this designation (in the
Writings translated so far) when he addresses the representatives of
Christianity, challenging them with the claim of having fulfilled Isaiah's
prophecy.
O concourse of bishops! Trembling hath seized all the kindreds of the
earth, and He Who is the
Everlasting Father calleth aloud between earth and heaven. Blessed the
ear that hath heard, and
the eye that hath seen, and the heart that hath turned unto Him Who is
the Point of Adoration of
all who are in the heavens and all who are on
earth....[46]
The allusion to Matt. 13:16 ("But blessedare your eyes, for they see: and your ears, for they hear.") serves
as a warning not to expect a literal fulfillment of these prophecies. It is only
with spiritual senses, so to speak, that the advent of the Messiah would be
witnessed. Referring to himself as a universal "Point of Adoration",
Bahá´u´lláh reinforces the image of being the
Everlasting Father for the whole of humanity and, by implication, of fulfilling
the end-time prophecies of other (non-semitic) religions as
well.[47] In a similar vein, the prophet Haggai
referred to the universality of the future Messiah when he called him "the
desire of all nations".
For thus saith the LORD of hosts; Yet once, it is a little while, and I
will shake the heavens,
and the earth, and the sea, and the dry land; And I will shake all
nations, and the desire of all
nations shall come: and I will fill this house with glory, saith the
LORD of hosts (Haggai 2:6-7).
On two occasions, Bahá´u´lláh takes up this
designation, further supporting his claim to be a universal Prophet expected and
desired by all peoples.
Glory be unto Thee, O Lord of the world and Desire of the nations, O
Thou Who hast become
manifest in the Greatest
Name...[48]
This is the Day, O my Lord, whereon every atom of the earth hath been
made to vibrate and to
cry out: "O Thou Who art the Revealer of signs and the King of
creation! I, verily, perceive the
fragrance of Thy presence. Methinks Thou hast revealed Thyself, and
unlocked the door of
reunion with Thee before all who are in Thy heaven and all who are on
Thy earth. I am persuaded
through the fragrance of Thy robe, O my Lord, that the world hath been
honored through Thy
presence, and hath inhaled the sweet smell of Thy meeting. I know not,
however, O Thou the
Beloved of the world and the Desire of the nations, the place wherein
the throne of Thy majesty
hath been established, nor the seat which hath been made Thy footstool,
and been illumined with
the splendors of the light of Thy
face."[49]
In this second quote, the universality of the response is expressed as
the desire of the whole creation, not only of its peoples but also of "every
atom". The connection to the Davidic messianic kingship is established by
reference to the "throne" and the
"footstool".[50] In one sense, the whole earth
serves as the footstool of the heavenly
throne[51], more specifically, the Holy
Land[52], respectively, Mount
Carmel.[53]
The Tablet of Carmel, revealed by Bahá´u´lláh
during his fourth visit to Haifa, one year before his passing, "contains
significant allusions to the establishment of the World Centre of the Faith and
is considered its charter."[54] Seventy-two
years later, in 1963, the Universal House of Justice was elected for the first
time and has guided the Bahá´í world ever since.
One of their means of guidance is an annual message to the
Bahá´í world at Ridvan,[55]
summarizing the previous year's achievements and highlighting the goals for the
year to come. Often these messages contain some kind of visionary outlook,
pointing towards the 'Golden Age' of universal peace and brotherhood. In the
1973 Message, the Biblical themes of the Everlasting Father, his Covenant, and
the establishment of the Kingdom of God on Earth are connected to the
present-day activities of the Bahá´í community.
The progress of the Cause of God gathers increasing momentum and we may
with confidence
look forward to the day when this Community ... shall have raised on
this tormented planet the
fair mansions of God's Own Kingdom ... All this shall be accomplished
within the Covenant of
the everlasting Father, the Covenant of
Baha'u'llah."[56]
Such references can be regarded as a continuation of
´Abdu´l-Bahá's approach to increase the awareness of the
historical religious connections and the fulfillment of prophecies in our
present day and age.[57]
The Ancient of Days
Bearing the twin revelation of the Báb and
Bahá´u´lláh in mind, we can say that Daniel's vision
(and similarly Enoch's) could also refer to the advent of both these two holy
figures. Traditionally, the "one like the Son of man" (Dan. 7:13) is regarded as
the Messiah and the "Ancient of Days" (Enoch: "Chief of Days") as symbolizing
God. But when we interpret these visions as depicting the twin manifestations,
the "Son of man" figure would represent the Báb and the "Ancient of Days"
Bahá´u´lláh. The life and mission of the Báb
equals in many ways that of Christ, summarized by Shoghi Effendi in the
following passage:
The passion of Jesus Christ, and indeed His whole public ministry,
alone offer a parallel to the
Mission and death of the Bab, a parallel which no student of
comparative religion can fail to
perceive or ignore. In the youthfulness and meekness of the Inaugurator
of the Babi Dispensation;
in the extreme brevity and turbulence of His public ministry; in the
dramatic swiftness with which
that ministry moved towards its climax; in the apostolic order which He
instituted, and the primacy
which He conferred on one of its members; in the boldness of His
challenge to the time-honored
conventions, rites and laws which had been woven into the fabric of the
religion He Himself had
been born into; in the role which an officially recognized and firmly
entrenched religious hierarchy
played as chief instigator of the outrages which He was made to suffer;
in the indignities heaped
upon Him; in the suddenness of His arrest; in the interrogation to
which He was subjected; in the
derision poured, and the scourging inflicted, upon Him; in the public
affront He sustained; and,
finally, in His ignominious suspension before the gaze of a hostile
multitude - in all these we cannot
fail to discern a remarkable similarity to the distinguishing features
of the career of Jesus Christ.[58]
It is therefore more than appropriate to see in the Báb the
perfect resemblance of the Son of man imagery of Jesus. At least on one
occasion (in the excerpts translated so far) the Báb refers to himself as
the Son when he urges his mother, Fatimih-Bagum, to recognize the divine Sonship
in her son. The equation of the Son with the divine Word (logos) echoes
the Johannine prologue and
provides a further link to
Christ.[59]
O Thou Mother of the Remembrance! May the peace and salutation of God
rest upon thee.
Indeed thou hast endured patiently in Him Who is the sublime Self of
God. Recognize then
the station of thy Son Who is none other than the mighty Word of
God.[60]
Bahá´u´lláh, on the other side, refers to
himself several times as the "Ancient of Days", respectively as representative
of the "Ancient of Days", using the imagery of pen, voice, tongue, fingers, and
countenance: "Wert thou to incline thine inner ear unto all created things, thou
wouldst hear:
´The Ancient of Days is come in His great
glory!'''[61]
All glory be to this Day, the Day in which the fragrances of mercy have
been wafted over all
created things, a Day so blest that past ages and centuries can never
hope to rival it, a Day in
which the countenance of the Ancient of Days hath turned towards His
holy seat. Thereupon
the voices of all created things, and beyond them those of the
Concourse on high, were heard
calling aloud: "Haste thee, O Carmel, for lo, the light of the
countenance of God, the Ruler of
the Kingdom of Names and Fashioner of the heavens, hath been lifted
upon thee...
Rejoice, for God hath in this Day established upon thee His
throne..."[62]
Both these passages allude to the apocalyptic vision of Daniel. In the
first, Bahá´u´lláh identifies himself directly with the
Ancient of Days, which supports the interpretation suggested above. In the
second, as in all the other representational
passages[63],
Bahá´u´lláh represents the Godhead. He is the visible
expression and manifestation of God, the invisible Ancient of Days. "The Ancient
of Days [Bahá´u´lláh] is come in His great glory"
because "the door of the knowledge of the Ancient of Days [God]" is "closed in
the face of all beings", including the Prophets of
God.[64] He is one of the "sanctified mirrors"
whose " beauty of their countenance is but a reflection of His [God's]
image."[65]
The "snow-white Scroll" that the "Tongue of the Ancient of Days" writes
upon could be a further allusion to the biblical Ancient of Days "whose garment
was white as snow" (Dan 7:9).
Once again doth the Tongue of the Ancient of Days reveal, while in this
Most Great Prison,
these words which are recorded in this snow-white
Scroll...[66]
The relationship between garment and scroll becomes more apparent when
it is being taken into consideration that the Ancient of Days is synonymous with
the Word of God. The garment beautifies the outer form (the body) of the
Prophet, just as the scroll beautifies the outer form (the letters) of the Word.
Furthermore, both objects are of the same colour and of a similar form (longish,
undulating). The colour symbolism refers in both cases to the essence. The
whiteness of the garment represents the purity of the Prophet's reality, the
whiteness of the scroll represents the purity of the message.
The second characteristic of the biblical Ancient of Days is his white
hair. White hair, in consistence with the image of a dignified old man,
signifies wisdom. Such a connotation is certainly appropriate for any of the
Prophets of God who Bahá´u´lláh calls "Gems of
knowledge" and "irreproachable and purest Symbols of
wisdom".[67] But hair also turns white because
of suffering and sorrows. The "iniquities" of the Shi'ih clergy, heaped upon
Bahá´u´lláh in the form of imprisonment, torture and
banisment have, according to Shoghi Effendi, "bowed down Baha'u'llah,
and turned His hair white, and caused Him to groan aloud in
anguish.[68] This description is obviously a
direct reference to Bahá´u´lláh's own
testimony.
The cruelties inflicted by My oppressors have bowed Me down, and turned
My hair white.
Shouldst thou present thyself before My throne, thou wouldst fail to
recognize the Ancient
Beauty, for the freshness of His countenance is altered, and its
brightness hath faded, by
reason of the oppression of the
infidels.[69]
The self-portrayal of Bahá´u´lláh as Ancient
Beauty sitting on his throne evokes the apocalyptic scene of Daniel's Day of
Judgement and Isaiah's prophecies. He is the one who will sit "upon the throne
of David" (Isa. 9:7) and "will come with strong hand" (Isa. 40:10) and "shall
judge among the nations" (Isa. 2:4), "the Judge, the Lawgiver and Redeemer of
all mankind"[70].
Bahá´u´lláh's lamentation provides a new emphasis
though. It calls up Isaiah's description of the Messiah as 'suffering servant'.
The impressive scene that Daniel foresaw, when "thousand thousands ministered
unto him, and ten thousand times ten thousand stood before him: the judgment was
set, and the books were opened" (Dan. 7:10) is tempered with the image of a
suffering and grief-stricken king whose "countenance" has lost its "brightness".
This shift of emphasis prompts us to take up the symbolism of the "garment" once
more and explore another facet of a possibly intended meaning. Just as the white
hair symbolizes wisdom but also suffering, the white garment stands not only for
purity but for affliction as well. "We have made abasement the garment of glory,
and affliction the adornment of Thy temple, O Pride of the
worlds."[71]
In another passage, the images of purity and pain are merged. This
makes it possible to visualize the messianic Judge in all his majesty and power
and yet, in all his weakness and frailty because of his exposure to the world of
humanity and the sufferings he had to endure. "I beseech Thee ... by Thy pure
and spotless Beauty ... and by Thy Name, cloaked with the garment of affliction
every morn and eve..."[72]
The life and mission of Christ was characterized by a stark contrast
between material poverty, physical humiliation, and apparent defeat on one side
and surrender under God's will, spiritual nobility, royal authority and ultimate
victory on the other side. This paradoxical situation had challenged the
established traditions of the Jews regarding the appearance and role of their
Messiah. This contrast is also typical for the life and mission of
Bahá´u´lláh. The spiritual authority of the Prophet is
never endangered by any earthly conditions, dire as they may be. This is why
Jesus, at the moment of utter helplessness in the hands of the Jewish council,
could nevertheless boldly assert that he was indeed the Messiah, endowed with
divine power.[73] Similarly, the spiritual
authority of Bahá´u´lláh was never impaired regardless
of his status as a prisoner, as "the Wronged
One".[74]
May all existence be a sacrifice for Thy favour, and all that hath been
and will ever be, a ransom
for Thy Word, O Thou the Wronged One amongst the people of enmity, O
Thou in Whose grasp
are the reins of all who are in heaven and on
earth....[75]
Briefly, this Wronged One hath, in the face of all that hath befallen
Him at their hands, and all that
hath been said of Him, endured patiently, and held His peace, inasmuch
as it is Our purpose, through
the loving providence of God - exalted be His glory - and His
surpassing mercy, to abolish, through
the force of Our utterance, all disputes, war, and bloodshed, from the
face of the earth.[76]
The thought that Christ upon his return would have to suffer again may
well be a challenging one for many Christians, just as it was hard for the Jews
to come to terms with the notion of a suffering Messiah in the first place.
Taking the apocalyptic visions literally, expecting the descent of Christ in the
clouds of the sky establishing the promised Kingdom of God on earth, leaves no
place for his suffering, persecution, and rejection.
Bahá´u´lláh repeatedly warns the Christians not to
repeat the past mistakes of rejecting the Prophet of God because of the
non-fulfillment of prophecies in a literal sense. These literal expectations, he
says, constitute one of the intended meanings of the symbolism of the "clouds of
heaven". Besides "those things that are contrary to the ways and desires of
men", clouds also refer to "the appearance of that immortal Beauty in the image
of mortal man with such human limitations as ... glory and abasement" among
others.[77] In this context, following passage
is illuminating, as it alludes to the suffering of
Bahá´u´lláh, drawing on the "cloud"
symbolism.
Open your eyes that ye may behold the Ancient Beauty from this shining
and luminous station...
The Promised One Himself hath come down from heaven, seated upon the
crimson cloud with
the hosts of revelation on His right, and the angels of inspiration on
His left...[78]
According to Note 127 in the Kitab-i Aqdas, "the word "crimson"
[in the Bahá´í Writings] is used in several allegorical and
symbolic senses". One of the primary meanings is certainly the connotation with
blood, in the context of suffering and martyrdom, as the following passages
show.
O SON OF MAN! Write all that We have revealed unto thee with the ink of
light upon the tablet
of thy spirit. Should this not be in thy power, then make thine ink of
the essence of thy heart. If
this thou canst not do, then write with that crimson ink that hath been
shed in My path. Sweeter
indeed is this to Me than all else, that its light may endure for ever.
[79]
O God, my God! Thou seest this wronged servant of Thine, held fast in
the talons of ferocious
lions, of ravening wolves, of bloodthirsty beasts. Graciously assist
me, through my love for Thee,
that I may drink deep of the chalice that brimmeth over with
faithfulness to Thee and is filled with
Thy bountiful Grace; so that, fallen upon the dust, I may sink
prostrate and senseless whilst my
vesture is dyed crimson with my
blood.[80]
Allusions to Akka as "Crimson Spot", to his cause and its followers as
"Companions of the Crimson Arc", or to his Kitab-i Ahd (Book of Covenant)
as "Crimson Book" are certainly more complex metaphors whose wide spectrum of
meanings cannot be explored here.[81]
Nevertheless, the intended meaning of 'suffering' can easily be deduced with
reference to Akka as "Crimson Spot". Bahá´u´lláh
repeatedly mentions the sufferings and trials that he had to endure in that
penal colony, designated by him as the 'Most Great
Prison'.[82] However, as the following passages
suggest, Bahá´u´lláh sufferered not only or even
primarily due to the machinations of his enemies but rather because of
the lack of response towards his divine call.
The eye of My loving-kindness weepeth sore over you, inasmuch as ye
have failed to recognize
the One upon Whom ye have been calling in the daytime and in the night
season, at even and at
morn. Advance, O people, with snow-white faces and radiant hearts,
unto the blest and crimson
Spot, wherein the Sadratu'l-Muntaha is calling: "Verily, there is none
other God beside Me, the
Omnipotent Protector, the
Self-Subsisting!"[83]
My imprisonment doeth Me no harm, neither the tribulations I suffer,
nor the things that have
befallen Me at the hands of My oppressors. That which harmeth Me is the
conduct of those who,
though they bear My name, yet commit that which maketh My heart and My
pen to lament.[84]
It is obvious that the colour symbolism of 'crimson' is not limited to
the level of physical suffering, to the shedding of physical blood. In a broader
sense, it can refer to emotional and spiritual suffering as well. The 'bleeding
heart' may well cause more pain than any other wound. "From Our eyes there
rained tears of anguish, and in Our bleeding heart there surged an ocean of
agonizing pain", is Bahá´u´lláh's testimony in another
context.[85]
Despite the trials and tribulations during his time of imprisonment in
Akka, Bahá´u´lláh
"established His seat" in this "most desolate" of
towns.[86] This filthy place then, from a
spiritual
perspective, became an "exalted habitation", with strong allusions to
the Biblical imagery of the seat of David's throne.
Rejoice with exceeding joy inasmuch as thou hast been remembered in the
Most Great Prison and
the Countenance of the Ancient of Days hath turned towards thee from
this exalted habitation.[87]
The prison of Akka and its Prisoner are portrayed in the contrasting
colours of (physical) abasement and (spiritual) glory. The 'crimson cloud' and
the 'Crimson Spot' symbolize simultaneously the sufferings of
Bahá´u´lláh and the people's inability to perceive his
hidden messianic reality.
The Ancient Beauty
A frequent designation of Bahá´u´lláh is
Ancient Beauty. This title can be regarded as synonymous with Ancient
of Days: "The Most Great Law is come, and the Ancient Beauty ruleth upon the
throne of David.Thus hath My Pen spoken that which the histories of bygone ages
have related.[88]
Furthermore, this designation could be regarded as a combination of two
Biblical messianic terms, the Ancient of Days (Dan. 7:9) and
Wonderful (Isa. 9:5). Wonderful is one of the five names for the
Messiah mentioned above. Bahá´u´lláh seemed not to have
used this name specifically, although references to his "wonderful" personality
can be found in the Bahá´í
Writings.[89] Instead,
Bahá´u´lláh coined a new designation, which merges the
images of beauty with a range of images related to "ancient", such as age,
continuity and wisdom. Similarly, the designation Everlasting Beauty
combines these attributes, alluding to the terms Everlasting Father and
Wonderful.[90]
The phenomenon of deification
Several times in the Bahá´í Writings reference to
God is made by the term 'Father', respectively, 'Heavenly Father', following the
usage in the New Testament.[91] It is important
not to confuse the divine and the prophetic level, so that references to God as
Father in the Bible are not wrongly
attributed to Bahá´u´lláh and also to remain
alert against the danger of unduly deifying the Prophet-
founder of the Bahá´í Faith.
Bahá´u´lláh clarifies, for instance, that the reference
to the Father in Matt. 24:36 ("But of that Day and Hour knoweth no man, no, not
the angels of heaven, nor the Son, but the Father.") refers to God and not to
himself: "By Father in this connection is meant God - exalted be His
glory."[92] This explanation implies that in
other cases Father refers to
Bahá´u´lláh[93] but its
main didactic function seems to be the caveat not to confuse the level of God as
Heavenly Father with that of Bahá´u´lláh as being
the Everlasting Father. Such caveats have obviously been necessary from
Bahá´u´lláh's own lifetime up until today, judging from
a variety of statements in response to individual inquiries, clarifying
ambiguous and abstruse passages of the Bahá´í Writings.
On one such occasion, Shoghi Effendi clarifies that
Bahá´u´lláh cannot be regarded as an "intermediary"
between other Prophets and God. Such a view was probably based on
Bahá´u´lláh's claim to having fulfilled a prophecy of
the Imam Ali: "Anticipate ye the Revelation of Him Who conversed with Moses from
the Burning Bush on Sinai."[94] Shoghi
Effendi's interpretation rejects a literal reading of this prophecy and provides
a key to an appropriate understanding of similar statements of
doxology.[95]
Baha'u'llah is not the intermediary between other Manifestations and
God. Each has His own
relation to the Primal Source. But in the sense that Baha'u'llah is the
greatest Manifestation to
yet appear, the One who consummates the Revelation of Moses, He was the
One Moses
conversed with in the Burning Bush. In other words, Baha'u'llah
identifies the glory of the
God-Head on that occasion with Himself. No distinction can be made
amongst the Prophets
in the sense that They all proceed from one Source, and are of one
essence. But Their stations
and functions in this world are
different.[96]
Another statement seems also to suggest that
Bahá´u´lláh is superior to other Manifestations of God:
"The Holy Spirit Itself hath been generated through the agency of a single
letter revealed by this Most Great Spirit, if ye be of them that
comprehend."[97]
Bahá´u´lláh's caveat to "comprehend" this statement well
seems to hint at a meaning beyond its literal sense. Superficially, one could
assume that Bahá´u´lláh's source of inspiration, the
"Most Great Spirit", is substantially different from the "Holy Spirit", the
perennial source of guidance for God's Prophets. Following passage, although not
directly addressing this mystical utterance, makes clear that the "Most Great
Spirit" is identical with the "Holy Spirit". The statement above, therefore,
seems to be doxological again, expressing the special station of
Bahá´u´lláh, as opposed to any inferred essential
distinction.
[T]he "Most Great Spirit," as designated by Himself, and symbolized in
the Zoroastrian,
the Mosaic, the Christian, and Muhammadan Dispensations by the Sacred
Fire, the Burning
Bush, the Dove and the Angel Gabriel respectively, descended upon, and
revealed itself,
personated by a "Maiden," to the agonized soul of
Baha'u'llah.[98]
Despite such clarifications, thre have always been attempts to deify
Bahá´u´lláh, to see in him a fuller and higher
expression of the Divine. Unlike in the past, where such notions have led to
various religious conflicts and schisms, such thoughts find an outlet in the
Bahá´í community and can be expressed freely. Such individual
interpretations are appreciated because they "constitute the fruit of man's
rational power and may well contribute to a greater comprehension of the
Faith."
The only limitations are that personal points of view should be offered
in a spirit of humility "as a contribution to knowledge", must not lead to
strive and contention, and must not "deny or contend with the authoritative
interpretation."[99]
Following excerpt from a tablet of
Bahá´u´lláh[100]
sheds further light on this issue. It gives room for different views, provided
no "contention and disputation" arises.
[O]ne person envisages the Unseen the Transcendent, the Inaccessible
One in the Person of the
Manifestation without making any distinction or connection. Others
there are who recognise
the Person of the Manifestation as the Appearance of God and consider
the commands and
prohibitions of the Manifestation to be identical with such as
originate with the one True God.
These two positions are both acceptable before the throne of God. If
however, the supporters
of these two positions should contend and quarrel with one another in
their exposition of the
two perspectives, both groups are, and hath ever been, rejected. This
inasmuch as the purpose
of the spiritual understanding and the exposition of the highest levels
of the elucidation of the
teachings is to attract the hearts, cause fellowship between souls, and
further the propagation of
the Cause of God. As a result of contention and disputation amongst
those who hold to these
two positions, there hath been and will ever result the dissipation of
the Cause of God and
both groups shall return to the hellfire despite the fact that they, in
their own estimation, soar
in the highest horizon of spiritual understanding.
This is a sobering warning that bars the way to any legitimization of
religious disputes. The criteria of establishing "right and wrong" are not to be
found in the domain of intellectual arguments and theological propositions but
in the process of community building, in overcoming estrangement and fostering
love and fellowship. This has always been the case in the eyes of God,
Bahá´u´lláh argues, although it may not have been
formulated explicitly in previous sacred
literature.[101] But since the mission of the
"Father", the hallmark of his teachings, is to establish world unity, it is not
surprising that this issue is taken up many times in the
Bahá´í Writings and explored and dealt with from different
angles.
The Relativity of Divine Truth
The relationship symbolized by the Son and the Father can also be
described as one of promise and fulfillment. Christ has promised that, upon his
return, the Kingdom of God will be established on earth and that humanity will
be led "into all truth" (John 16:13).
Bahá´u´lláh's revelation does of course lead
into "all truth", as foretold in the Bible. His hundred volumes of Sacred
Writings far exceed the sayings and parables of Christ, but all of this
nevertheless consists of the "many things" that Christ could have taught if the
receptivity and maturity of the people had allowed it.
"All truth", however, is still relative. Humanity, at the threshold of
collective maturity, has received abundant guidance for the next millenium,
which could be regarded as 'completion' of the message of Christ. But the
process of spiritual evolution is never-ending. So it is not surprising that
Bahá´u´lláh on the one hand confirms the completion of
his revelation[102] but relativizes this
statement by referring to the limitations of the human mind in general,
respectively to the present stage of intellectual and spiritual development in
particular.
All that I have revealed unto thee with the tongue of power, and have
written for thee with the pen
of might, hath been in accordance with thy capacity and understanding,
not with My state and the
melody of My
voice.[103]
The theme of limited human understanding and divine knowledge is
addressed in the following two quotes as well. The first focusses on the
infinity of divine knowledge, indicating that the process of divine Revelation
can never come to an end. The second quote seems to imply that humanity at large
could have 'matured' faster and would then have received an even greater amount
of divine guidance. In other words, this passage deals with the ancient biblical
theme of the reciprocal Covenant between God and humanity.
Behold, how many are the mysteries that lie as yet unravelled within
the tabernacle of the
knowledge of God, and how numerous the gems of His wisdom that are
still concealed in His
inviolable treasuries! Shouldest thou ponder this in thine heart, thou
wouldst realize that His
handiwork knoweth neither beginning nor
end.[104]
The generality of mankind is still immature. Had it acquired sufficient
capacity We would
have bestowed upon it so great a measure of Our knowledge that all who
dwell on earth and
in heaven would have found themselves, by virtue of the grace streaming
from Our pen,
completely independent of all knowledge save the knowledge of God, and
would have been
securely established upon the throne of abiding
tranquillity.[105]
These passages balance the notion of fulfillment with yet another
promise, albeit implicit and indirect. Bahá´u´lláh's
Revelation constitutes, in the words of Shoghi Effendi, "the promise and
crowning glory of past ages and centuries" and "the consummation of all the
Dispensations within the Adamic Cycle". It is therefore both a climax and a
turningpoint in religious history as it marks "the end of the Prophetic Era and
the beginning of the Era of
Fulfillment."[106]
From a different point of view, each religion within the Prophetic Era,
in its relation to the previous one, was also one of
fulfillment.[107] But all of them can rightly
be regarded as prophetic, inasmuch as they all promised and focussed on a
messianic era of global peace. Similarly it can be said that the
Bahá´í Faith, in its relation to the religion to come,
contains prophetic elements as well and the same can be expected from the
subsequent religions within the "Era of
Fulfillment".[108]
Contemplating on Bahá´u´lláh's role as
inaugurator of a new cycle, the symbolism of his station as Father gets
even a wider range of meaning. Beyond the fulfillment of messianic promises, and
the notion of completion and fulfillment, Fatherhood marks the beginning
of a new 'family' of divine Messengers to come within the
Bahá´í cycle.
Concerning the Manifestations that will come down in the future 'in the
shadows of the clouds',
know, verily, that in so far as their relation to the Source of their
inspiration is concerned, they
are under the shadow of the Ancient Beauty. In their relation,
however, to the age in which they
appear, each and every one of them 'doeth whatsoever He
willeth.'[109]
Based on ´Abdu´l-Bahá's prediction that this new cycle
"must extend over a period of at least five hundred thousand
years"[110], and
Bahá´u´lláh's explanation that divine Prophets appear
roughly every thousand years[111], we can
count with possibly five hundred Manifestations of God within the
Bahá´í Era. Each one of them will carry on the torch of
divine guidance and refine the human character. At the same time they will
undoubtedly refer and pay tribute to the originator of this cycle, to the
Everlasting Father.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Abdu´l-Bahá. Paris Talks. Adresses Given by
´Abdu´l-Bahá in 1911. London: Bahá´í
Publishing Trust 1995 [1912].
---. The Promulgation of Universal Peace. Talks Delivered by
´Abdu´l-Bahá during His Visit to the United States and
Canada in 1912. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá´í
Publishing Trust 1982 [1922-25].
---. Selections from the Writings of
´Abdu´l-Bahá. Haifa: Bahá´í World Centre
1978.
---. Some Answered Questions. Wilmette, Ill.:
Bahá´í Publishing Trust 1981.
---. Tablets of the Divine Plan. Wilmette, Ill.:
Bahá´í Publishing Trust 1977.
---. Will and Testament. MARS (The Multiple Author Refer
System), Version 2.0. Crimson Publications 1997. Arts. A compilation of extracts from the Bahá´í
Writings. MARS (The Multiple Author Refer System), Version 2.0.
Crimson Publ. 1997.
Báb. Selections from the Writings of the Báb.
Haifa: Bahá´í World Centre 1978. Bahá´í Prayers. A Selection of Prayers
revealed by Bahá´u´lláh, the Báb, and
´Abdu´l-Bahá. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá´í
Publishing Trust 1985 [1954].
Bahá´u´lláh. Epistle to the Son of the
Wolf. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá´í Publishing Trust
1988.
---. Gleanings from the Writings of
Bahá´u´lláh. Wilmette, Ill.:
Bahá´í Publishing Trust 1983.
---. The Hidden Words. Oxford: Oneworld 1992.
---. The Kitab-i-Aqdas.The Most Holy Book. Wilmette,
Ill.: Bahá´í Publishing Trust 1993.
---. The Kitab-i-Iqan. The Book of Certitude. Wilmette, Ill.:
Bahá´í Publishing Trust 1974.
---. Prayers and Meditations. Wilmette, Ill.:
Bahá´í Publishing Trust 1987 [1938].
---. Tablets of Bahá´u´lláh: Revealed after
the Kitab-i-Aqdas. Haifa: Bahá´í World Centre
1978.
---. "Tablet to Jamal-i Burundi". Provisional translation by K.
Fananapazir, available on the Internet at
http://www.bahailibrary.com.
Cole, Juan. "Behold the Man: Bahá´u´lláh on the
life of Jesus". Published on the Internet at
http:\\www-personal.umich.edu/~jrcole/bahai Consultation. A compilation of extracts from the
Bahá´í Writings. London: Bahá´í
Publishing Trust 1990.
Esslemont, J.E. Bahá´u´lláh and the New
Era. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá´í Publishing Trust, 1980
[1950]. The Holy Bible. Authorized King James Version. London: Diamond
Books 1994. Lights of Guidance. Compiled by Helen Bassett Hornby. New Delhi:
Bahá´í Publishing Trust 1996 [1983].
Sears, William. The Wine of Astonishment. Oxford: George Ronald
1985 [1963].
Shoghi Effendi. The Advent of Divine Justice. Wilmette, Ill.:
Bahá´í Publishing Trust 1990.
---. Bahá´í Administration. Selected Messages
1922-1932. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá´í Publishing Trust 1974.
---. God Passes By. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá´í
Publishing Trust 1974.
---. The Light of Divine Guidance. The Messages from the Guardian of
the Bahá´í Faith to the Bahá´ís of Germany
and Austria. Vol. I. Hofheim-Langenhain:
Bahá´í Verlag 1982.
---. Messages to the Antipodes. Communications from Shoghi
Effendi to the Bahá´í Communities of Australasia.
Mona Vale NSW: Bahá´í Publications Australia
1997. ---. The Promised Day Is Come. Wilmette, Ill.:
Bahá´í Publishing Trust 1996 [1941].
---. Unfolding Destiny. The Messages from the Guardian of the
Bahá´í Faith to the Bahá´í Community of
the British Isles. London: Bahá´í Publishing Trust
1981. ---. World Order of Bahá´u´lláh.
Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá´í Publishing Trust 1991.
Sours, Michael. A Study of Bahá´u´lláh's
Tablet to the Christians. Oxford: Oneworld 1990.
---. Understanding Biblical Prophecy. Oxford: Oneworld
1997.
Stockman, Robert. "Jesus Christ in the Bahá´í
Writings". The Bahá´í Studies Review 2:1 (1992):
33-41.
Taherzadeh, Adib. The Revelation of
Bahá´u´lláh. Vol. 4. Oxford: George Ronald
1988. Women. Bahá´í Writings on the Equality of Men and
Women. London: Bahá´í Publishing Trust 1990.
[1] The spiritual meaning of healing
blindness and "hardened hearts" can be deduced from Isaiah 6:9-10, quoted and
referred to in John 12:40 resp. John 9:39, whereas the elucidation of leprosy in
spiritual terms is novel. [2] Cf.
Bahá´u´lláh, Gleanings 76. [3] Juan Cole, "Behold the Man:
Bahá´u´lláh on the life of Jesus" 8. [4] Bahá´u´lláh,
Gleanings 85-6. [5] The "sign of the Son of man in
heaven", for instance, refers both to the appearance of a "star" in the sky and
to the coming of a herald, a fore-runner, who announces to and prepares the
people for the coming of a new Manifestation of God (see
Bahá´u´lláh, Kitab-i Iqan 62). For the whole
excursus on the three verses of the minor apocalypse (Matt. chapters 24 and 25),
which comprises almost a third of the Kitab-i Iqan, see pp. 20-93.
[6] Bahá´u´lláh,
Kitab-i Iqan 30-1. [7] Ibid., 31. This statement alludes to
and sheds light on a similar saying in the minor apocalypse: "For wheresoever
the carcase is, there will the eagles be gathered together" (Matt. 24:28). The
New Jerusalem Bible Commentary assumes this to be an inserted proverb, conveying
the same idea as the preceding verse (where the coming of the Son of man is
compared to a "lightning"), namely being a reference to the "immediate
visibility" of the coming of the Messiah. Bahá´u´lláh,
on the other hand, links this verse with the succeeding one, reading it as a
description of the "oppression" mentioned there. [8] Ibid. [9] Bahá´u´lláh,
Kitab-i Iqan 152. [10] Ibid., 176. [11] Ibid. [12] Stockman, "Jesus Christ in the
Bahá´í Writings". The Bahá´í Studies
Review 2:1 (1992): 37-8. Stockman lists the "deeper, more personal, more loving
relationship" between God and humanity that Christ exemplified, than the
historical fact that this title has been only applied to Jesus, third the
"important and fitting counterpoint to the title 'Son of Man'", and fourth that
it alludes to the virgin birth. [13] This point will be discussed
further below. [14] The arabic title
Bahá´u´lláh means Glory of God. Equating the term Father
with God, it could also be rendered as Glory of the Father. [15] This tablet is commonly known and
referred to as 'Tablet to the Christians'. It adresses both the Christian clergy
and Christian believers in general, presenting them with the claim of
Bahá´u´lláh being the Messiah, the return of Christ. Why
Bahá´u´lláh has called it 'most holy' is not entirely
clear but Shoghi Effendi lists it among the tablets that are "most noteworthy",
belonging to the "choicest fruits" of Bahá´u´lláh's
Revelation (God Passes By 216). For a detailed study of this tablet, see
Sours, A Study of Bahá´u´lláh's Tablet to the
Christians. [16]
Bahá´u´lláh, Tablets 11. [17]
Bahá´u´lláh, quoted in Shoghi Effendi, The Promised
Day Is Come 32. [18] These functions are not to be
taken exclusively of course as mothers share the same responsibilities.
Undoubtedly the parental roles and functions will be more dynamic in their
complementarity as in the past, due to the paradigm shift towards a new age "in
which the masculine and feminine elements of civilization will be more evenly
balanced" (´Abdu´l-Bahá, quoted in Esslemont,
Bahá´u´lláh and the New Era 148). [19]
Bahá´u´lláh, Gleanings 286. [20]
Bahá´u´lláh, Kitab-i Aqdas 36. [21]
Bahá´u´lláh, Kitab-i Aqdas 31. [22] It is important in this context
to remember that the 'parental' authority lies with the Institution and not with
its individual members who cannot regard themselves in any way superior to the
community. [23] Shoghi Effendi, Light of
Divine Guidance Vol. I 168. Similarly, in a letter from the Universal House
of Justice: "In caring for its community, a Spiritual Assembly should act as a
loving father rather than as a stern judge..." Quoted in Lights of
Guidance 363. [24] The image of the "shepherd" is
used for God (see, for instance, Psalm 23), and for priests and kings as his
representatives on earth (see, for instance, Jer. 50:6). It also refers to the
Messiah (see, for instance, Ez. 34:23) who will gather the "lost sheep" because
"their shepherds have caused them to go astray" (Jer. 50:6). Christ takes up
this theme with his parable of the lost sheep (Matt. 18:12-14) and his sermon
about the "good shepherd" (John 10:11-18), alluding to his messianic role.
Similarly, Bahá´u´lláh likens his role as Lawgiver to
that of a shepherd (see Kitab-i Aqdas 63) and critizises the corrupt
clergy as wearing "the guise of a shepherd" (Epistle to the Son of the Wolf
16). References to the members of Bahá´í institutions as
"shepherds" allude to messianic promises such as: "And I will give you pastors
according to mine heart, which shall feed you with knowledge and understanding"
(Jer. 3:13; see also 23:4). [25]
Bahá´u´lláh, Kitab-i Aqdas 38. [26] Universal House of Justice,
quoted in Lights of Guidance 3. [27] Sears, The Wine of
Astonishment 88. [28] Sours, A Study of
Bahá´u´lláh's Tablet to the Christians
76. [29] Sours, Understanding Biblical
Prophecy 65. See also ´Abdu´l-Bahá's interpretation of a
related prophecy (Isa. 11:6-8) in Some Answered Questions 63.
[30] Sours, Understanding Biblical
Prophecy 64. [31]
Bahá´u´lláh, Bahá´í Prayers
(US) 105. [32] Concerning the priority of moral
education, see, for instance, ´Abdu´l-Bahá, Selections
135. About the importance of spiritual education, see, for instance, Shoghi
Effendi, quoted in Lights of Guidance 211. [33] "As the child grows older and
more independent, the relative nature of its relationship with its mother and
father modifies and the father can play a greater role." Universal House of
Justice, quoted in Lights of Guidance 627. [34] Universal House of Justice,
quoted in Lights of Guidance 232. [35]
Bahá´u´lláh, quoted in the Compilation on Arts
1-2. [36]
Bahá´u´lláh, Tablets 128. Again, these are not
exclusive statements, as others address both parents. See, for instance,
´Abdu´l-Bahá Selections 127: "... it is enjoined upon
the father and mother, as a duty, to strive with all effort to train the
daughter and the son, to nurse them from the breast of knowledge and to rear
them in the bosom of sciences and arts." Such statements seem to stress the
importance of the participation of fathers in the educational process as opposed
to an imbalanced focus on the bread-winning aspect. [37] ´Abdu´l-Bahá,
quoted in Lights of Guidance 147. [38] Cf.
Bahá´u´lláh, Gleanings 218; Tablets 42,
44, 71 a.o. The prophecy of Isaiah will be discussed below. [39] Ethical aspects include freedom
from estrangement, devotion, courtesy, dignity, moderation of speech,
detachment, frankness, honesty a.o. Concerning the method of consultation
outlined by Bahá´u´lláh, see Kitab-i Aqdas 134.
[40]
Bahá´u´lláh, quoted in the Compilation on Consultation
1. [41]
Bahá´u´lláh, Tablets 168. [42]
Bahá´u´lláh, quoted in the Compilation on Consultation
1. [43] Examples for descriptive names
are Samuel ('Heard by God'), Daniel ('God is my judge') and also Jesus (Hebr.
Joshua, 'God is salvation'). Altered or new names include Abraham ('Father of
many nations') for Abram, and Peter (Hebr. Kephas, 'Rock') for Simon. For more
details concerning the Biblical use and meaning of names, see Sours,
Understanding Biblical Prophecy chapter 17. [44] The hebrew term alma is
generally used for a young (unmarried, i.e. virgin) girl but can also refer to a
young married woman. The Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible (Septuaginta),
rendering this word as 'virgin', gives an early record of Jewish exegesis which
supports the Christian claim of the virgin birth of Jesus. [45] See, for instance, John 8:29:
"And he that sent me is with me: the Father hath not left me alone; for I do
always those things that please him." See also John 1:14; 10:30, 38; 14:9-10;
17:21 a.o. [46]
Bahá´u´lláh, quoted in Shoghi Effendi, The Promised
Day Is Come 101. [47] Cf. Shoghi Effendi, God Passes
By 94-5. [48]
Bahá´u´lláh, Tablets 33. [49]
Bahá´u´lláh, Prayers and Meditations
279-80. [50] See Chron. I 28:2. [51] See Isa. 66:1; Matt. 5:35; and
also Bahá´u´lláh, quoted in Shoghi Effendi, The
Advent of Divine Justice 78; The Promised Day Is Come
124. [52] ´Abdu´l-Bahá,
Selections 235. See also Lam. 2:1. [53] Cf.
Bahá´u´lláh, Tablets 3-5. This tablet, called
Lawh-i Karmil (Tablet of Carmel), could be regarded as a divine, mystic
response to the earth's desire to be informed about the location of the heavenly
Throne. During the lifetime of Bahá´u´lláh, the
"Throne", symbolizing his spiritual authority, had been first 'erected' in
Bagdad (Gleanings 112; God Passes By 110) and then in Akka
(Prayers and Meditations 200). See also a related statement by the
Báb, quoted by Bahá´u´lláh in the Kitab-i
Aqdas 68: "The Qiblih is indeed He Whom God will make manifest; whenever He
moveth, it moveth, until He shall come to rest." [54] Taherzadeh, The Revelation of
Bahá´u´lláh 351-2. [55] lit. Paradise. Marks both the
place (a garden outside of Baghdad) and time (April 21 – May 2) of
Bahá´u´lláh's public declaration as Manifestation of God
for our day and age. [56] The Universal House of Justice,
quoted in Lights of Guidance 190. [57] See, for instance, Tablets of
the Divine Plan 49 (referring to Bahá´ís as "angels" and
"apostles"). [58] Shoghi Effendi, God Passes
By 56-7. [59] A parallel to Jesus and his
mother can be drawn here as well. Some passages in the Bible suggest that Mary
did not immediately recognize the station of her son (cf. Matt. 12:46-50; Luke
2:43-51). [60] Báb, Selections
52. [61]
Bahá´u´lláh, Epistle to the Son of the Wolf
47. [62]
Bahá´u´lláh, Gleanings 14-15. The establisment of
the throne, which, as seen by Daniel, "was like the fiery flame, and his wheels
as burning fire" (Dan 7:9) on Mount Carmel could refer to the rulership and
guidance of the Universal House of Justice. [63] This term refers to designations
such as "Pen of the Most High", "Tongue of Grandeur", "Hand of God" etc., which
describe or rather only hint at the relationship between the Manifestation of
God (Bahá´u´lláh) and God. Such passages are often
ambiguous because the stress could be placed on either the representative
(Bahá´u´lláh) or the Represented One (God), especially
in cases where the designation (such as "Ancient of Days") can refer to
both. [64]
Bahá´u´lláh, Kitab-i Iqan 99. [65] Ibid., 100. [66]
Bahá´u´lláh, Gleanings 241. [67]
Bahá´u´lláh, Kitab-i Iqan 44. [68] Shoghi Effendi, The Promised
Day is come 90. [69]
Bahá´u´lláh, quoted in Shoghi Effendi, God Passes
By 169. [70] Shoghi Effendi, God Passes
By 93. [71]
Bahá´u´lláh, Bahá´í Prayers (US) 220
("Fire Tablet"). [72]
Bahá´u´lláh, Bahá´í Prayers (US) 98
("Long Healing Prayer"). [73] Cf. Matt. 26:64. [74] This designation has been used by
Bahá´u´lláh more than 200 times, which indicates the
predominant state of his sufferings. On one occasion, Shoghi Effendi even
referred to him as "Great Sufferer" (Bahá´í Administration
190). [75]
Bahá´u´lláh, quoted in Women 1-2. [76]
Bahá´u´lláh, Epistle to the Son of the Wolf
34. [77] Cf.
Bahá´u´lláh, Kitab-i Iqan 71-2. [78]
Bahá´u´lláh, Tablets 182. [79]
Bahá´u´lláh, Hidden Words, Arabic #
71. [80] ´Abdu´l-Bahá,
Will and Testament 9. [81] See Kitab-i Aqdas, Note
127 (Crimson Spot), Note 115 (Crimson Arc and Companions), God Passes By
238 (Crimson Book). [82] See, for instance, Epistle to
the Son of the Wolf 108; Prayers and Meditations 200
a.o. [83]
Bahá´u´lláh, Kitab-i Aqdas 56. [84]
Bahá´u´lláh, Epistle to the Son of the Wolf 23.
Similarly, Gleanings 100: "I sorrow not for the burden of My imprisonment
... My sorrows are for those who have involved themselves in their corrupt
passions, and claim to be associated with the Faith of God..." [85]
Bahá´u´lláh, Kitab-i Iqan 250, referring to his
two years of seclusion in the mountains of Kurdistan. [86] Cf. Prayers and
Meditations 200. [87]
Bahá´u´lláh, Tablets 253-4. [88]
Bahá´u´lláh, quoted in Shoghi Effendi, The Promised
Day is come 76. [89] See, for instance
´Abdu´l-Bahá, Promulgation of Universal Peace 431: "Yet
these great numbers, instead of being able to dominate Him, could not withstand
His wonderful personality and the power and influence of His heavenly
Cause." [90] This name occurs only four times
in Bahá´u´lláh's Writings (translated so far, see
Gleanings 72; Kitab-i Iqan 22; Hidden Words Persian # 10,
14), as opposed to the designaton Ancient Beauty, which is used around
fifteen times by Bahá´u´lláh. Other variants of
Beauty include BlessedBeauty (used primarily by
´Abdu´l-Bahá), Most Great Beauty, Abha Beauty
(used mainly by Shoghi Effendi), and other descriptive, though not titular,
adjectives, such as promised, most effulgent, pure and spotless,
resplendent, a.o. [91] See, for instance,
´Abdu´l-Bahá, Paris Talks 120: "God has created us, one
and all - why do we act in opposition to His wishes, when we are all His
children, and love the same Father?" Or idem, Promulgation of Universal
Peace 266: "God is the Father of all." ´Abdu´l-Bahá often
uses the Biblical term Heavenly Father with reference to God (see, for
instance, Paris Talks 101, 113, 148; Promulgation of Universal
Peace 48, 216, 373, 468 a.o.). For the use of this term in the New
Testament, see Matt. 6:14, 26, 32; 15:13; 18:35; Luke 11:13). [92]
Bahá´u´lláh, Epistle to the Son of the
Wolf 143. [93] This seems to be mostly true for
the predictions of Christ's return ("in the glory of the Father"). [94]
Bahá´u´lláh, Epistle to the Son of the Wolf
42. [95] Another example would be
Bahá´u´lláh's statement that God "out of utter
nothingness, hath created the reality of all things, Who, from naught, hath
brought into being the most refined and subtle elements of His creation"
(Gleanings 64). What could easily be regarded as a reference to and
confirmation of a theory of evolution ex nihilo, "should be taken in a
symbolic and not literal sense. It is only to demonstrate the power and
greatness of God" (Shoghi Effendi, Messages to the Antipodes
179). [96] Shoghi Effendi, Unfolding
Destiny 448. [97]
Bahá´u´lláh, quoted in Shoghi Effendi, World Order of
Bahá´u´lláh 109. [98] Shoghi Effendi, God Passes
By 101. [99] See Notes in Kitab-i Aqdas
221-2. [100]
Bahá´u´lláh, "Tablet to Jamal-i Burundi" (provisional
translation by K. Fananapazir, available on the Internet at
http://www.bahailibrary.com). [101] Christ's promise "For where
two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them"
(Matt. 18:20) can be related to this exposition. [102] Cf. Hidden Words,
Arabic No. 70: " Know thou, that I have wafted unto thee all the fragrances of
holiness, have fully revealed to thee My word..." [103]
Bahá´u´lláh, Hidden Words, Arabic No. 67.
[104]
Bahá´u´lláh, Kitab-i Iqan 167. [105]
Bahá´u´lláh, quoted in Shoghi Effendi, The World
Order of Bahá´u´lláh 104. [106] Shoghi Effendi, God Passes
By 100. [107] Concerning Christianity being
the fulfillment of the Judaic Faith, see Luke 24:44, Matt. 5:17, Acts
3:18. [108] Prophetic in nature, for
instance, is Bahá´u´lláh's statement that the next
Revelation of God cannot be expected "ere the expiration of a full thousand
years" (Kitab-i Aqdas 32), or his prediction that the next Manifestation
of God will have to suffer as well (see God Passes By 250). [109] ´Abdu´l-Bahá,
quoted in Shoghi Effendi, World Order of
Bahá´u´lláh 167. [110] ´Abdu´l-Bahá,
quoted in Shoghi Effendi, World Order of
Bahá´u´lláh 102. [111] Cf.
Bahá´u´lláh, Kitab-i Iqan 199: "Once in about a
thousand years shall this City be renewed and re-adorned."