1 |
This is a Tablet from this Servant, who is called Husayn in the
kingdom of names, to the concourse of the kings of the earth. Haply
they may approach it in a spirit of open-mindedness, discover from its
message the mysteries of divine providence, and be of those that
comprehend its meaning, and perchance they may forsake all they
possess, turn towards the retreats of holiness, and draw nigh unto
God, the All-Glorious, the Incomparable.
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2 |
O kings of the earth! Give ear unto the Voice of God, calling from
this sublime, this fruit-laden Tree, that hath sprung out of the
Crimson Hill, upon the holy Plain, intoning the words: ``There is none
other God but He, the Mighty, the All-Powerful, the All-Wise.'' This
is a Spot which hath been sanctified by God for those who approach it,
a Spot wherein His Voice may be heard from the celestial Tree of
Holiness. Fear God, O concourse of kings, and suffer not yourselves to
be deprived of this most sublime grace. Fling away, then, the things
ye possess, and take fast hold on the Handle of God, the Exalted, the
Great. Set your hearts towards the Face of God, and abandon that which
your desires have bidden you to follow, and be not of those who
perish.
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3 |
Relate unto them, O Servant, the story of `Alí,{中中弓 when He came
unto them with truth, bearing His glorious and weighty Book, and
holding in His hands a testimony and proof from God, and holy and
blessed tokens from Him. Ye, however, O kings, have failed to heed the
Remembrance of God in His days and to be guided by the lights which
arose and shone forth above the horizon of a resplendent Heaven. Ye
examined not His Cause when so to do would have been better for you
than all that the sun shineth upon, could ye but perceive it. Ye
remained careless until the divines of Persia -- those cruel ones --
pronounced judgement against Him, and unjustly slew Him. His spirit
ascended unto God, and the eyes of the inmates of Paradise and the
angels that are nigh unto Him wept sore by reason of this
cruelty. Beware that ye be not careless henceforth as ye have been
careless aforetime. Return, then, unto God, your Maker, and be not of
the heedless.
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4 |
Say: The Sun of vicegerency hath dawned, the Point of knowledge and
wisdom hath been made plain, and the Testimony of God, the Almighty,
the All-Wise, hath been made manifest. Say: The Moon of eternity hath
risen in the midmost heaven, and its light hath illumined the dwellers
of the realms above. My face hath come forth from the veils, and shed
its radiance upon all that is in heaven and on earth; and yet, ye
turned not towards Him, notwithstanding that ye were created for Him,
O concourse of kings! Follow, therefore, that which I speak unto you,
and hearken unto it with your hearts, and be not of such as have
turned aside. For your glory consisteth not in your sovereignty, but
rather in your nearness unto God and your observance of His command as
sent down in His holy and preserved Tablets. Should any one of you
rule over the whole earth, and over all that lieth within it and upon
it, its seas, its lands, its mountains, and its plains, and yet be not
remembered by God, all these would profit him not, could ye but know
it.
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5 |
Know ye that a servant's glory resideth in his nearness unto God, and
that, unless he draweth nigh unto Him, naught else can ever profit
him, even should he hold sway over the entire creation. Say: The
breeze of God hath wafted over you from the retreats of Paradise, but
ye have neglected it and chosen to persist in your
waywardness. Guidance hath been given unto you from God, but ye have
failed to follow it and preferred to reject its truth. The Lamp of God
hath been lit within the niche of His Cause, but ye have neglected to
seek the radiance of its glory and to draw nigh unto its light. And
still ye slumber upon the couch of heedlessness!
|
6 |
Arise, then, and make steadfast your feet, and make ye amends for that
which hath escaped you, and set then yourselves towards His holy
Court, on the shore of His mighty Ocean, so that the pearls of
knowledge and wisdom, which God hath stored up within the shell of His
radiant heart, may be revealed unto you. Such is the counsel that
shall profit you most; make of it your provision, that ye may be of
those who are guided aright. Beware lest ye hinder the breeze of God
from blowing over your hearts, the breeze through which the hearts of
such as have turned unto Him can be quickened. Hearken unto the clear
admonitions that We have revealed for you in this Tablet, that God, in
turn, may hearken unto you, and may open before your faces the portals
of His mercy. He, verily, is the Compassionate, the Merciful.
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7 |
Lay not aside the fear of God, O kings of the earth, and beware that
ye transgress not the bounds which the Almighty hath fixed. Observe
the injunctions laid upon you in His Book, and take good heed not to
overstep their limits. Be vigilant, that ye may not do injustice to
anyone, be it to the extent of a grain of mustard seed. Tread ye the
path of justice, for this, verily, is the straight path.
|
8 |
Compose your differences and reduce your armaments, that the burden of
your expenditures may be lightened, and that your minds and hearts may
be tranquillized. Heal the dissensions that divide you, and ye will
no longer be in need of any armaments except what the protection of
your cities and territories demandeth. Fear ye God, and take heed not
to outstrip the bounds of moderation and be numbered among the
extravagant.
|
9 |
We have learned that ye are increasing your outlay every year, and are
laying the burden thereof on your subjects. This, verily, is more than
they can bear, and is a grievous injustice. Decide ye justly between
men, O kings, and be ye the emblems of justice amongst them. This, if
ye judge fairly, is the thing that behoveth you, and beseemeth your
station.
|
10 |
Beware not to deal unjustly with anyone that appealeth to you and
entereth beneath your shadow. Walk ye in the fear of God, and be ye of
them that lead a godly life. Rest not on your power, your armies, and
treasures. Put your whole trust and confidence in God, Who hath
created you, and seek ye His help in all your affairs. Succour cometh
from Him alone. He succoureth whom He willeth with the hosts of the
heavens and of the earth.
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11 |
Know ye that the poor are the trust of God in your midst. Watch that
ye betray not His trust, that ye deal not unjustly with them and that
ye walk not in the ways of the treacherous. Ye will most certainly be
called upon to answer for His trust on the day when the Balance of
Justice shall be set, the day when unto everyone shall be rendered his
due, when the doings of all men, be they rich or poor, shall be
weighed.
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12 |
If ye pay no heed unto the counsels which, in peerless and unequivocal
language, We have revealed in this Tablet, Divine chastisement shall
assail you from every direction, and the sentence of His justice shall
be pronounced against you. On that day ye shall have no power to
resist Him, and shall recognize your own impotence. Have mercy on
yourselves and on those beneath you, and judge ye between them
according to the precepts prescribed by God in His most holy and
exalted Tablet, a Tablet wherein He hath assigned to each and every
thing its settled measure, in which He hath given, with distinctness,
an explanation of all things, and which is in itself a monition unto
them that believe in Him.
|
13 |
Examine Our Cause, inquire into the things that have befallen Us, and
decide justly between Us and Our enemies, and be ye of them that act
equitably towards their neighbour. If ye stay not the hand of the
oppressor, if ye fail to safeguard the rights of the downtrodden, what
right have ye then to vaunt yourselves among men? What is it of which
ye can rightly boast? Is it on your food and your drink that ye pride
yourselves, on the riches ye lay up in your treasuries, on the
diversity and the cost of the ornaments with which ye deck yourselves?
If true glory were to consist in the possession of such perishable
things, then the earth on which ye walk must needs vaunt itself over
you, because it supplieth you, and bestoweth upon you, these very
things, by the decree of the Almighty. In its bowels are contained,
according to what God hath ordained, all that ye possess. From it, as
a sign of His mercy, ye derive your riches. Behold then your state,
the thing in which ye glory! Would that ye could perceive it!
|
14 |
Nay, by Him Who holdeth in His grasp the kingdom of the entire
creation! Nowhere doth your true and abiding glory reside except in
your firm adherence unto the precepts of God, your wholehearted
observance of His laws, your resolution to see that they do not remain
unenforced, and to pursue steadfastly the right course.
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15 |
O kings of Christendom! Heard ye not the saying of Jesus, the Spirit
of God, ``I go away, and come again unto you''?65 Wherefore, then,
did ye fail, when He did come again unto you in the clouds of heaven,
to draw nigh unto Him, that ye might behold His face, and be of them
that attained His Presence? In another passage He saith: ``When He,
the Spirit of Truth, is come, He will guide you into all truth.''66
And yet behold how, when He did bring the truth, ye refused to turn
your faces towards Him, and persisted in disporting yourselves with
your pastimes and fancies. Ye welcomed Him not, neither did ye seek
His Presence, that ye might hear the verses of God from His own mouth,
and partake of the manifold wisdom of the Almighty, the All-Glorious,
the All-Wise. Ye have, by reason of your failure, hindered the breath
of God from being wafted over you, and have withheld from your souls
the sweetness of its fragrance. Ye continue roving with delight in the
valley of your corrupt desires. By God! Ye, and all ye possess, shall
pass away. Ye shall, most certainly, return to God, and shall be
called to account for your doings in the presence of Him Who shall
gather together the entire creation.
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16 |
Again, heard ye not that which hath been recorded in the Gospel
concerning those ``which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of
the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God''67 -- that is, those
who have been made manifest through the power of God? Wherefore it
becometh evident that one may well be manifested in the world of
creation who is truly of God, the Almighty, the All-Knowing, the
All-Wise. How is it then that when word reached you of Our Cause, ye
failed to inquire from Our own lips, that ye might distinguish truth
from falsehood, discover Our aim and purpose, and learn of the
afflictions which We have suffered at the hands of an evil and wayward
generation?
|
17 |
O Minister of the King of Paris!68 Hast thou forgotten the
pronouncement recorded in the Gospel according to John concerning the
Word and those who are its Manifestations? And hast thou ignored the
counsels of the Spirit{~~~~~~} concerning the Manifestations of the
Word, and been numbered with the heedless? If not, wherefore then
didst thou conspire with the Minister of Persia69 to inflict upon Us
that which hath caused the hearts of men of insight and understanding
to melt, the tears of the denizens of the Realm of eternity to flow,
and the souls of them who are nigh unto God to mourn? And all this
thou didst commit without seeking to examine Our Cause or to discern
its truth. For is it not thy clear duty to investigate this Cause, to
inform thyself of the things that have befallen Us, to judge with
equity, and to cleave unto justice?
|
18 |
Thy days shall pass away, thy ministry shall come to an end, and thy
possessions shall vanish and be no more. Then, in the presence of the
almighty King, thou shalt be called to answer for that which thy hands
have wrought. How many the ministers who came before thee into this
world, men who exceeded thee in power, excelled thee in station, and
surpassed thee in wealth, and yet returned to dust, leaving upon the
face of the earth neither name nor trace, and are now plunged in
grievous remorse. Amongst them were those who failed in their duty
towards God, followed their own desires, and trod the path of lust and
wickedness. And amongst them were those who observed that which hath
been prescribed in the verses of God, judged with fairness by the
divine guidance that overshadowed them, and entered beneath the
shelter of the mercy of their Lord.
|
19 |
I admonish thee, and those who are like thee, to deal not with anyone
as ye have dealt with Us. Beware lest ye follow in the footsteps of
the Evil One and walk in the ways of the unjust. Take from this world
only to the measure of your needs, and forgo that which exceedeth
them. Observe equity in all your judgements, and transgress not the
bounds of justice, nor be of them that stray from its path.
|
20 |
Twenty years have passed, O kings, during which We have, each day,
tasted the agony of a fresh tribulation. No one of them that were
before Us hath endured the things We have endured. Would that ye
could perceive it! They that rose up against Us have put us to death,
have shed our blood, have plundered our property, and violated our
honour. Though aware of most of our afflictions, ye, nevertheless,
have failed to stay the hand of the aggressor. For is it not your
clear duty to restrain the tyranny of the oppressor, and to deal
equitably with your subjects, that your high sense of justice may be
fully demonstrated to all mankind?
|
21 |
God hath committed into your hands the reins of the government of the
people, that ye may rule with justice over them, safeguard the rights
of the downtrodden, and punish the wrongdoers. If ye neglect the duty
prescribed unto you by God in His Book, your names shall be numbered
with those of the unjust in His sight. Grievous, indeed, will be your
error. Cleave ye to that which your imaginations have devised, and
cast behind your backs the commandments of God, the Most Exalted, the
Inaccessible, the All-Compelling, the Almighty? Cast away the things
ye possess, and cling to that which God hath bidden you observe. Seek
ye His grace, for he that seeketh it treadeth His straight Path.
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22 |
Consider the state in which We are, and behold ye the ills and
troubles that have tried Us. Neglect Us not, though it be for a
moment, and judge ye between Us and Our enemies with equity. This
will, surely, be a manifest advantage unto you. Thus do We relate to
you Our tale, and recount the things that have befallen Us, that ye
might take off Our ills and ease Our burden. Let him who will, relieve
Us from Our trouble; and as to him that willeth not, My Lord is
assuredly the best of helpers.
|
23 |
Warn and acquaint the people, O Servant, with the things We have sent
down unto Thee, and let the fear of no one dismay Thee, and be Thou
not of them that waver. The day is approaching when God will have
exalted His Cause and magnified His testimony in the eyes of all who
are in the heavens and all who are on the earth. Place, in all
circumstances, Thy whole trust in Thy Lord, and fix Thy gaze upon Him,
and turn away from all them that repudiate His truth. Let God, Thy
Lord, be Thy sufficing succourer and helper. We have pledged Ourself
to secure Thy triumph upon earth and to exalt Our Cause above all men,
though no king be found who would turn his face towards Thee.
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24 |
Call Thou to remembrance Thine arrival in the City, how the Ministers
of the Sultán thought Thee to be unacquainted with their laws
and regulations, and believed Thee to be one of the ignorant. Say:
Yea, by My Lord! I am ignorant of all things except what God hath,
through His bountiful favour, been pleased to teach Me. To this We
assuredly testify, and unhesitatingly confess it.
|
25 |
Say: If the laws and regulations to which ye cleave be of your own
making, We will, in no wise, follow them. Thus have I been instructed
by Him Who is the All-Wise, the All-Informed. Such hath been My way in
the past, and such will it remain in the future, through the power of
God and His might. This, indeed, is the true and right way. If they be
ordained by God, bring forth, then, your proofs, if ye be of them that
speak the truth. Say: We have written down in a Book which leaveth not
unrecorded the work of any man, however insignificant, all that they
have imputed to Thee, and all that they have done unto Thee.
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26 |
Say: It behoveth you, O Ministers of State, to keep the precepts of
God, and to forsake your own laws and regulations, and to be of them
who are guided aright. Better is this for you than all ye possess, did
ye but know it. If ye transgress the commandment of God, not one jot
or one tittle of all your works shall be acceptable in His sight. Ye
shall, erelong, discover the consequences of that which ye shall have
done in this vain life, and shall be repaid for them. This, verily, is
the truth, the undoubted truth.
|
27 |
How great the number of those who, in bygone ages, have committed the
things ye have committed, and who, though superior to you in rank,
have, in the end, returned unto dust, and been consigned to their
inevitable doom! Would that ye might ponder the Cause of God in your
hearts! Ye shall follow in their wake, and shall be made to enter a
habitation wherein none shall be found to befriend or help you. Ye
shall, of a truth, be asked of your doings, shall be called to account
for your failure in duty with regard to the Cause of God, and for
having disdainfully rejected His loved ones who, with manifest
sincerity, have come unto you.
|
28 |
It is ye who have taken counsel together regarding them, ye that have
preferred to follow the promptings of your own desires, and forsaken
the commandment of God, the Help in Peril, the Almighty.
|
29 |
Say: What! Cleave ye to your own devices, and cast behind your backs
the precepts of God? Ye, indeed, have wronged your own selves and
others. Would that ye could perceive it! Say: If your rules and
principles be founded on justice, why is it, then, that ye follow
those which accord with your corrupt inclinations and reject such as
conflict with your desires? By what right claim ye, then, to judge
fairly between men? Are your rules and principles such as to justify
your persecution of Him Who, at your bidding, hath presented Himself
before you, your rejection of Him, and your infliction on Him every
day of grievous injury? Hath He ever, though it be for one short
moment, disobeyed you? All the inhabitants of `Iráq, and beyond them
every discerning observer, will bear witness to the truth of My words.
|
30 |
Be fair in your judgement, O ye Ministers of State! What is it that We
have committed that could justify Our banishment? What is the offence
that hath warranted Our expulsion? It is We Who have sought you, and
yet, behold how ye refused to receive Us! By God! This is a sore
injustice that ye have perpetrated -- an injustice with which no
earthly injustice can measure. To this the Almighty is Himself a
witness.
|
31 |
Have I at any time transgressed your laws, or disobeyed any of your
ministers in `Iráq? Inquire of them, that ye may act with discernment
towards Us and be numbered with those who are well-informed. Hath
anyone ever brought before them a plaint against Us? Hath anyone
amongst them ever heard from Us a word contrary to that which God hath
revealed in His Book? Bring forth, then, your evidence, that We may
approve your actions and acknowledge your claims!
|
32 |
Had ye wished to deal with Us in accordance with your principles and
standards, it would have behoved you to respect and honour Us for
complying with your commands and following that which ye have pleased
to ordain. Likewise, it would have beseemed you to repay the debts
which We incurred in `Iráq in the execution of your wishes. Ye should
have given ear then unto Us, heard the account of Our woes, and judged
with equity, as ye would judge your own selves. Ye should not have
wished for Us that which ye have not wished for yourselves, but rather
chosen to act with generosity. By God! Ye dealt with Us neither in
accordance with your own principles and standards, nor with those of
any man living, but in accordance with the promptings of your evil and
wayward passions, O ye concourse of the froward and the arrogant!
|
33 |
O Bird of Holiness! Soar in the heaven of communion with Me, and
acquaint the people with that which We disclosed unto Thee in the
billowing oceans of immortality beyond the mount of glory. Let the
fear of no one dismay Thee, and put Thy trust in God, the Almighty,
the Beneficent. We, verily, shall protect Thee from those who, without
a clear token from God or an enlightening Book, have grievously
wronged Thee.
|
34 |
Say: God is My witness, O concourse of the negligent! We came not unto
you to spread disorder in your lands or to sow dissension amongst your
peoples. Nay rather, We came in obedience to the command of the
sovereign, and in order to exalt your authority, to instruct you in
the ways of Our wisdom, and to remind you of that which ye had
forgotten -- even as He saith in truth: ``Warn them, for, in truth,
Thy warning will profit the believers.''70 But ye hearkened not unto
the sweet melodies of the Spirit, and gave ear unwittingly unto Our
enemies, they who follow the promptings of their corrupt inclinations,
whose deeds the Evil One hath made fair-seeming in their own eyes, and
whose tongues utter calumnies against Us. Heard ye not that which hath
been revealed in His all-glorious and unerring Book: ``If a wicked man
come to you with news, clear it up at once''?71 Wherefore have ye
then cast the command of God behind your backs, and followed in the
footsteps of them that are bent on mischief?
|
35 |
We have heard that one of these calumniators hath alleged that this
Servant practised usury whilst residing in `Iráq, and was engaged in
amassing riches for Himself. Say: How can ye judge a matter whereof ye
have no knowledge? How can ye hurl calumnies against the servants of
God, and entertain such evil suspicions? And how could this
accusation be true, when God hath forbidden this practice unto His
servants in that most holy and well-guarded Book revealed unto
Muhammad, the Apostle of God and the Seal of the Prophets, a
Book which He hath ordained to be His abiding testimony, and His
guidance and monition unto all mankind? This is but one of the matters
in which We have opposed the divines of Persia, inasmuch as We have,
according to the text of the Book, forbidden unto all men the practice
of usury. God Himself beareth witness to the truth of My words. ``Yet
I hold not myself clear, for the soul is prone to evil.''72 We
intend only to impart unto you the truth, that ye might be informed
thereof and be of them that lead a godly life. Beware lest ye give
ear to the words of those from whom the foul smell of malice and envy
can be discerned; pay no heed to them, and stand ye for righteousness.
|
36 |
Know ye that the world and its vanities and its embellishments shall
pass away. Nothing will endure except God's Kingdom which pertaineth
to none but Him, the Sovereign Lord of all, the Help in Peril, the
All-Glorious, the Almighty. The days of your life shall roll away, and
all the things with which ye are occupied and of which ye boast
yourselves shall perish, and ye shall, most certainly, be summoned by
a company of His angels to appear at the spot where the limbs of the
entire creation shall be made to tremble, and the flesh of every
oppressor to creep. Ye shall be asked of the things your hands have
wrought in this, your vain life, and shall be repaid for your
doings. This is the day that shall inevitably come upon you, the hour
that none can put back. To this the Tongue of Him that speaketh the
truth and is the Knower of all things hath testified.
|
37 |
Fear God, ye inhabitants of the City, and sow not the seeds of
dissension amongst men. Walk not in the paths of the Evil One. Walk
ye, during the few remaining days of your life, in the ways of the one
true God. Your days shall pass away as have the days of them who were
before you. To dust shall ye return, even as your fathers of old did
return.
|
38 |
Know ye that I am afraid of none except God. In none but Him have I
placed My trust; to none will I cleave but Him, and wish for naught
except the thing He hath wished for Me. This, indeed, is My heart's
desire, did ye but know it. I have offered up My soul and My body as a
sacrifice for God, the Lord of all worlds. Whoso hath known God shall
know none but Him, and he that feareth God shall be afraid of no one
except Him, though the powers of the whole earth rise up and be
arrayed against him. I speak naught except at His bidding, and follow
naught, through the power of God and His might, except His truth. He,
verily, shall recompense the truthful.
|
39 |
Narrate, O Servant, the things Thou didst behold at the time of Thine
arrival in the City, that Thy testimony may endure amongst men, and
serve as a warning unto them that believe. We found, upon Our arrival
in the City, its governors and elders as children gathered about and
disporting themselves with clay. We perceived no one sufficiently
mature to acquire from Us the truths which God hath taught Us, nor
ripe for Our wondrous words of wisdom. Our inner eye wept sore over
them, and over their transgressions and their total disregard of the
thing for which they were created. This is what We observed in that
city, and which We have chosen to note down in Our Book, that it may
serve as a warning unto them, and unto the rest of mankind.
|
40 |
Say: If ye be seekers after this life and the vanities thereof, ye
should have sought them while ye were still enclosed in your mothers'
wombs, for at that time ye were continually approaching them, could ye
but perceive it. Ye have, on the other hand, ever since ye were born
and attained maturity, been all the while receding from the world and
drawing closer to dust. Why, then, exhibit such greed in amassing the
treasures of the earth, when your days are numbered and your chance is
well-nigh lost? Will ye not, then, O heedless ones, shake off your
slumber?
|
41 |
Incline your ears to the counsels which this Servant giveth you for
the sake of God. He, verily, asketh no recompense from you and is
resigned to what God hath ordained for Him, and is entirely submissive
to God's Will.
|
42 |
The days of your life are far spent, O people, and your end is fast
approaching. Put away, therefore, the things ye have devised and to
which ye cleave, and take firm hold on the precepts of God, that haply
ye may attain that which He hath purposed for you, and be of them that
pursue a right course. Delight not yourselves in the things of the
world and its vain ornaments, neither set your hopes on them. Let your
reliance be on the remembrance of God, the Most Exalted, the Most
Great. He will, erelong, bring to naught all the things ye
possess. Let Him be your fear, and forget not His covenant with you,
and be not of them that are shut out as by a veil from Him.
|
43 |
Beware that ye swell not with pride before God, and disdainfully
reject His loved ones. Defer ye humbly to the faithful, they that have
believed in God and in His signs, whose hearts witness to His unity,
whose tongues proclaim His oneness, and who speak not except by His
leave. Thus do We exhort you with justice, and warn you with truth,
that perchance ye may be awakened.
|
44 |
Lay not on any soul a load which ye would not wish to be laid upon
you, and desire not for anyone the things ye would not desire for
yourselves. This is My best counsel unto you, did ye but observe it.
|
45 |
Respect ye the divines and learned amongst you, they whose conduct
accords with their professions, who transgress not the bounds which
God hath fixed, whose judgements are in conformity with His behests as
revealed in His Book. Know ye that they are the lamps of guidance
unto them that are in the heavens and on the earth. They who disregard
and neglect the divines and learned that live amongst them -- these
have truly changed the favour with which God hath favoured them.
|
46 |
Say: Wait ye till God will have changed His favour unto you. Nothing
whatsoever escapeth Him. He knoweth the secrets both of the heavens
and of the earth. His knowledge embraceth all things. Rejoice not in
what ye have done, or will do in the future, nor delight in the
tribulation with which ye have afflicted Us, for ye are unable by such
means as these to exalt your stations, were ye to examine your works
with acute discernment. Neither will ye be capable of detracting from
the loftiness of Our state. Nay, God will add unto the recompense with
which He shall reward Us, for having sustained with persevering
patience the tribulations We have suffered. He, verily, shall increase
the reward of them that endure with patience.
|
47 |
Know ye that trials and tribulations have, from time immemorial, been
the lot of the chosen Ones of God and His beloved, and such of His
servants as are detached from all else but Him, they whom neither
merchandise nor traffic beguile from the remembrance of the Almighty,
they that speak not till He hath spoken, and act according to His
commandment. Such is God's method carried into effect of old, and such
will it remain in the future. Blessed are the steadfastly enduring,
they that are patient under ills and hardships, who lament not over
anything that befalleth them, and who tread the path of resignation.
|
48 |
That which hath befallen Us hath been witnessed before. Ours is not
the first goblet dashed to the ground in the lands of Islám, nor is
this the first time that such schemers have intrigued against the
beloved of the Lord. The tribulations We have sustained are like unto
the trials endured aforetime by Imám Husayn. For he was
approached by messengers from malicious and evil-hearted plotters,
inviting him to come forth from the city; yet when he came unto them,
accompanied by his kindred, they rose up against him with all their
might, until at last they slew him, slaughtered his sons and his
brothers, and took captive the remainder of his family. So did it come
to pass in an earlier age, and God, verily, is a witness unto My
words. Of his lineage there survived none, whether young or old, save
his son `Alí al-Awsat, known as Zaynu'l-`Ábidín.
|
49 |
Behold then, O heedless ones, how brightly the fire of the love of God
blazed aforetime in the heart of Husayn, if ye be of them that
ponder! So intense grew its flame that fervour and longing at last
seized the reins of patience from his grasp, and the love of Him Who
is the All-Compelling so enraptured his heart that he surrendered his
soul, his spirit, his substance, and his all in the path of God, the
Lord of the worlds. By God! Sweeter was this in his sight than the
empire of earth and heaven. For the true lover desireth naught save
reunion with his beloved and the seeker hath no goal but to attain
unto the object of his quest. Their hearts long for reunion even as
the body yearneth for the spirit, nay greater indeed is their longing,
could ye but perceive it!
|
50 |
Say: That same fire now blazeth in Mine own breast, and My wish is
that this Husayn may lay down His life in like manner, in the
hope of attaining unto so august and sublime a station, that station
wherein the servant dieth to himself and liveth in God, the Almighty,
the Exalted, the Great. Were I to disclose unto you the mysteries
which God hath enshrined therein, ye would, of a truth, offer up your
lives in His path, renounce your riches, and forsake all that ye
possess, that ye might attain this transcendent and all-glorious
station. God, however, hath veiled your hearts and obscured your eyes,
lest ye should apprehend His mysteries and be made aware of their
meaning.
|
51 |
Say: The sincere soul longeth for nearness to God even as the suckling
babe yearneth for its mother's breast, nay more ardent is his longing,
could ye but know it! Again, his longing is even as the panting of one
sore athirst after the living waters of grace, or the yearning of the
sinner for forgiveness and mercy. Thus do We expound unto you the
mysteries of the Cause, and impart unto you what shall render you
independent of all that hath so far occupied you, that perchance ye
may enter the Court of Holiness within this exalted Paradise. I swear
by God! Whoso entereth therein shall never abandon its precincts, and
whoso gazeth thereon shall never turn away therefrom, even should the
swords of infidels and deniers rain blows upon him. Thus have We
related unto you that which befell Husayn, and We beseech God
that He may destine for Us that which He had decreed for him. He,
verily, is the Most Generous, the All-Bountiful.
|
52 |
By the righteousness of God! Through his deed the fragrances of
holiness were wafted over all things, the proof of God was perfected,
and His testimony made manifest to all men. And after him God raised
up a people who avenged his death, who slew his enemies, and who wept
over him at dawn and at eventide. Say: God hath pledged in His Book
to lay hold upon every oppressor for his tyranny, and to uproot the
stirrers of mischief. Know ye that such holy deeds exert, in
themselves, a great influence upon the world of being -- an influence
which is, however, inscrutable to all save those whose eyes have been
opened by God, whose hearts He hath freed from obscuring veils, and
whose souls He hath guided aright.
|
53 |
The day is approaching when God will have raised up a people who will
call to remembrance Our days, who will tell the tale of Our trials,
who will demand the restitution of Our rights from them that, without
a tittle of evidence, have treated Us with manifest injustice. God,
assuredly, dominateth the lives of them that wronged Us, and is well
aware of their doings. He will, most certainly, lay hold on them for
their sins. He, verily, is the fiercest of avengers.
|
54 |
Thus have We recounted unto you the tales of the one true God, and
sent down unto you the things He had preordained, that haply ye may
ask forgiveness of Him, may return unto Him, may truly repent, may
realize your misdeeds, may shake off your slumber, may be roused from
your heedlessness, may atone for the things that have escaped you, and
be of them that do good. Let him who will, acknowledge the truth of My
words; and as to him that willeth not, let him turn aside. My sole
duty is to remind you of your failure in duty towards the Cause of
God, if perchance ye may be of them that heed My warning. Wherefore,
hearken ye unto My speech, and return ye to God and repent, that He,
through His grace, may have mercy upon you, may wash away your sins,
and forgive your trespasses. The greatness of His mercy surpasseth the
fury of His wrath, and His grace encompasseth all who have been called
into being and been clothed with the robe of life, be they of the past
or of the future.
|
55 |
O concourse of Ministers of State! Do ye believe in your hearts that
We have come to divest you of your earthly possessions and vanities?
Nay, by the One in Whose hand is My soul! Our intention hath been to
make clear that We oppose not the commands of the sovereign, nor are
We to be numbered with the rebellious. Know ye of a certainty that all
the treasures of the earth, all the gold, the silver, and the rare and
precious gems they contain, are, in the sight of God, of His chosen
ones and His loved ones, as worthless as a handful of clay. For
erelong all that is on earth shall perish, and the kingdom will remain
unto God, the All-Powerful, the Incomparable. That which perisheth can
never profit Us, nor can it profit you, were ye but to reflect.
|
56 |
By the righteousness of God! I speak not falsely, and utter naught
save that which God hath bidden Me. To this bear witness the very
words of this Tablet, if ye but reflect upon its contents. Follow not
the promptings of your own desires, nor the whisperings of the Evil
One in your souls. Follow rather the Cause of God, both in your
outward and your inner lives, and be not of the heedless. Better is
this for you than all that ye have laid up in your houses, and all
that ye have sought by day and night.
|
57 |
The world will pass away, and so will all the things whereat your
hearts rejoice, or wherein ye pride yourselves before men. Cleanse the
mirrors of your hearts from the dross of the world and all that is
therein, that they may reflect the resplendent light of God. This,
indeed, shall enable you to dispense with all save God, and to attain
unto the good pleasure of your Lord, the Most Bountiful, the
All-Knowing, the All-Wise. We, verily, have unfolded before your eyes
that which shall profit you both in this world and in the realm of
faith, and which will lead you to the path of salvation. Would that ye
might turn thereunto!
|
58 |
Hearken, O King,{++++++} to the speech of Him that speaketh the truth,
Him that doth not ask thee to recompense Him with the things God hath
chosen to bestow upon thee, Him Who unerringly treadeth the straight
Path. He it is Who summoneth thee unto God, thy Lord, Who showeth
thee the right course, the way that leadeth to true felicity, that
haply thou mayest be of them with whom it shall be well.
|
59 |
Beware, O King, that thou gather not around thee such ministers as
follow the desires of a corrupt inclination, as have cast behind their
backs that which hath been committed into their hands and manifestly
betrayed their trust. Be bounteous to others as God hath been
bounteous to thee, and abandon not the interests of thy people to the
mercy of such ministers as these. Lay not aside the fear of God, and
be thou of them that act uprightly. Gather around thee those ministers
from whom thou canst perceive the fragrance of faith and of justice,
and take thou counsel with them, and choose whatever is best in thy
sight, and be of them that act generously.
|
60 |
Know thou for a certainty that whoso disbelieveth in God is neither
trustworthy nor truthful. This, indeed, is the truth, the undoubted
truth. He that acteth treacherously towards God will, also, act
treacherously towards his king. Nothing whatever can deter such a man
from evil, nothing can hinder him from betraying his neighbour,
nothing can induce him to walk uprightly.
|
61 |
Take heed that thou resign not the reins of the affairs of thy state
into the hands of others, and repose not thy confidence in ministers
unworthy of thy trust, and be not of them that live in
heedlessness. Shun them whose hearts are turned away from thee, and
place not thy confidence in them, and entrust them not with thine
affairs and the affairs of such as profess thy faith. Beware that thou
allow not the wolf to become the shepherd of God's flock, and
surrender not the fate of His loved ones to the mercy of the
malicious. Expect not that they who violate the ordinances of God will
be trustworthy or sincere in the faith they profess. Avoid them, and
preserve strict guard over thyself, lest their devices and mischief
hurt thee. Turn away from them, and fix thy gaze upon God, thy Lord,
the All-Glorious, the Most Bountiful. He that giveth up himself wholly
to God, God shall, assuredly, be with him; and he that placeth his
complete trust in God, God shall, verily, protect him from whatsoever
may harm him, and shield him from the wickedness of every evil
plotter.
|
62 |
Wert thou to incline thine ear unto My speech and observe My counsel,
God would exalt thee to so eminent a position that the designs of no
man on the whole earth can ever touch or hurt thee. Observe, O King,
with thine inmost heart and with thy whole being, the precepts of God,
and walk not in the paths of the oppressor. Seize thou, and hold
firmly within the grasp of thy might, the reins of the affairs of thy
people, and examine in person whatever pertaineth unto them. Let
nothing escape thee, for therein lieth the highest good.
|
63 |
Render thanks unto God for having chosen thee out of the whole world,
and made thee king over them that profess thy faith. It well beseemeth
thee to appreciate the wondrous favours with which God hath favoured
thee, and to magnify continually His name. Thou canst best praise Him
if thou lovest His loved ones, and dost safeguard and protect His
servants from the mischief of the treacherous, that none may any
longer oppress them. Thou shouldst, moreover, arise to enforce the law
of God amongst them, that thou mayest be of those who are firmly
established in His law.
|
64 |
Shouldst thou cause rivers of justice to spread their waters amongst
thy subjects, God would surely aid thee with the hosts of the unseen
and of the seen, and would strengthen thee in thine affairs. No God is
there but Him. All creation and its empire are His. Unto Him return
the works of the faithful.
|
65 |
Place not thy reliance on thy treasures. Put thy whole confidence in
the grace of God, thy Lord. Let Him be thy trust in whatever thou
doest, and be of them that have submitted themselves to His Will. Let
Him be thy helper and enrich thyself with His treasures, for with Him
are the treasuries of the heavens and of the earth. He bestoweth them
upon whom He will, and from whom He will He withholdeth them. There is
none other God but Him, the All-Possessing, the All-Praised. All are
but paupers at the door of His mercy; all are helpless before the
revelation of His sovereignty, and beseech His favours.
|
66 |
Overstep not the bounds of moderation, and deal justly with them that
serve thee. Bestow upon them according to their needs, and not to the
extent that will enable them to lay up riches for themselves, to deck
their persons, to embellish their homes, to acquire the things that
are of no benefit unto them, and to be numbered with the
extravagant. Deal with them with undeviating justice, so that none
among them may either suffer want, or be pampered with luxuries. This
is but manifest justice.
|
67 |
Allow not the abject to rule over and dominate them who are noble and
worthy of honour, and suffer not the high-minded to be at the mercy of
the contemptible and worthless, for this is what We observed upon Our
arrival in the City, and to it We bear witness. We found among its
inhabitants some who were possessed of an affluent fortune and lived
in the midst of excessive riches, while others were in dire want and
abject poverty. This ill beseemeth thy sovereignty, and is unworthy of
thy rank.
|
68 |
Let My counsel be acceptable to thee, and strive thou to rule with
equity among men, that God may exalt thy name and spread abroad the
fame of thy justice in all the world. Beware lest thou aggrandize thy
ministers at the expense of thy subjects. Fear the sighs of the poor
and of the upright in heart who, at every break of day, bewail their
plight, and be unto them a benignant sovereign. They, verily, are thy
treasures on earth. It behoveth thee, therefore, to safeguard thy
treasures from the assaults of them who wish to rob thee. Inquire into
their affairs, and ascertain, every year, nay every month, their
condition, and be not of them that are careless of their duty.
|
69 |
Set before thine eyes God's unerring Balance and, as one standing in
His Presence, weigh in that Balance thine actions every day, every
moment of thy life. Bring thyself to account ere thou art summoned to
a reckoning, on the Day when no man shall have strength to stand for
fear of God, the Day when the hearts of the heedless ones shall be
made to tremble.
|
70 |
It behoveth every king to be as bountiful as the sun, which fostereth
the growth of all beings, and giveth to each its due, whose benefits
are not inherent in itself, but are ordained by Him Who is the Most
Powerful, the Almighty. The King should be as generous, as liberal in
his mercy as the clouds, the outpourings of whose bounty are showered
upon every land, by the behest of Him Who is the Supreme Ordainer, the
All-Knowing.
|
71 |
Have a care not to entrust thine affairs of state entirely into
another's hands. None can discharge thy functions better than thine
own self. Thus do We make clear unto thee Our words of wisdom, and
send down upon thee that which can enable thee to pass over from the
left hand of oppression to the right hand of justice, and approach the
resplendent ocean of His favours. Such is the path which the kings
that were before thee have trodden, they that acted equitably towards
their subjects, and walked in the ways of undeviating justice.
|
72 |
Thou art God's shadow on earth. Strive, therefore, to act in such a
manner as befitteth so eminent, so august a station. If thou dost
depart from following the things We have caused to descend upon thee
and taught thee, thou wilt, assuredly, be derogating from that great
and priceless honour. Return, then, and cleave wholly unto God, and
cleanse thine heart from the world and all its vanities, and suffer
not the love of any stranger to enter and dwell therein. Not until
thou dost purify thine heart from every trace of such love can the
brightness of the light of God shed its radiance upon it, for to none
hath God given more than one heart. This, verily, hath been decreed
and written down in His ancient Book. And as the human heart, as
fashioned by God, is one and undivided, it behoveth thee to take heed
that its affections be, also, one and undivided. Cleave thou,
therefore, with the whole affection of thine heart, unto His love, and
withdraw it from the love of anyone besides Him, that He may aid thee
to immerse thyself in the ocean of His unity, and enable thee to
become a true upholder of His oneness. God is My witness. My sole
purpose in revealing to thee these words is to sanctify thee from the
transitory things of the earth, and aid thee to enter the realm of
everlasting glory, that thou mayest, by the leave of God, be of them
that abide and rule therein.
|
73 |
Hast thou heard, O King, what We have suffered at the hands of thy
ministers and how We have been treated by them, or art thou of the
negligent? If indeed thou hast heard and known, wherefore didst thou
not forbid thy ministers to commit such deeds? How didst thou desire
for Him Who hath complied with thy command, and been obedient to thy
behest, that which no king would desire for any of his subjects? And
if thou knowest not, this indeed is a more grievous error, wert thou
of the God-fearing. Wherefore shall I recount to thee that which We
have suffered at the hands of these oppressors.
|
74 |
Know, then, that We came unto thy city at thine own behest, and
entered therein with conspicuous honour. They expelled Us, however,
from thy city with an abasement with which no abasement on earth can
compare, if thou be of them that are well-informed. They made Us
journey until We reached the place[@@@@@@} which none entereth except
such as have rebelled against the authority of the sovereign, and as
are numbered with the transgressors. All this, notwithstanding that We
had never disobeyed thee, though it be for a single moment, for when
We heard thy bidding We observed it and submitted to thy will. In
dealing with Us, however, thy ministers neither honoured the standards
of God and His commandments, nor heeded that which hath been revealed
to the Prophets and Messengers. They showed Us no mercy and committed
against Us that which no one among the faithful hath ever wrought
against his fellow, nor any believer inflicted upon an infidel. God
knoweth and is a witness unto the truth of Our words.
|
75 |
When they expelled Us from thy city, they placed Us in such
conveyances as the people use to carry baggage and the like. Such was
the treatment We received at their hands, shouldst thou wish to know
the truth. Thus were We sent away, and thus were We brought to the
city which they regard as the abode of rebels. Upon our arrival, We
could find no house in which to dwell, and perforce resided in a place
where none would enter save the most indigent stranger. There We
lodged for a time, after which, suffering increasingly from the
confined space, We sought and rented houses which by reason of the
extreme cold had been vacated by their occupants. Thus in the depth of
winter we were constrained to make our abode in houses wherein none
dwell except in the heat of summer. Neither My family, nor those who
accompanied Me, had the necessary raiment to protect them from the
cold in that freezing weather.
|
76 |
Would that thy ministers had dealt with Us according to the principles
they uphold amongst themselves! For, by God, they dealt with Us
neither in accordance with the commandments of God, nor with the
practices they uphold, nor with the standards current amongst men, nor
even with the manner in which the destitute of the earth receive a
wayfarer. Such is the account of what We suffered at their hands, and
which We have related unto thee in a language of truthfulness and
sincerity.
|
77 |
All this befell Me, though I had come unto them at their own behest
and did not oppose their authority, which deriveth from thine
own. Thus did We accept and observe their bidding. They, however,
appear to have forgotten that which God hath commanded. He saith, and
His Word is the truth: ``Act with humility towards the
believers.''73 Methinks that their only concern was their own
comfort and repose, and that their ears were deaf to the sighs of the
poor and the cries of the oppressed. They seem to imagine that they
have been created from pure light, while others have been fashioned
out of dust. How wretched are their imaginings! We have all been
created from a sorry germ.74
|
78 |
I swear by God, O King! It is not My wish to make My plaint to thee
against them that persecute Me. I only plead My grief and My sorrow to
God, Who hath created Me and them, Who well knoweth our state and Who
watcheth over all things. My wish is to warn them of the consequences
of their actions, if perchance they might desist from treating others
as they have treated Me, and be of them that heed My warning.
|
79 |
The tribulations that have touched Us, the destitution from which We
suffer, the various troubles with which We are encompassed, shall all
pass away, as shall pass away the pleasures in which they delight and
the affluence they enjoy. This is the truth which no man on earth can
reject. The days in which We have been compelled to dwell in the dust
will soon be ended, as will the days in which they occupied the seats
of honour. God shall, assuredly, judge with truth between Us and them,
and He, verily, is the best of judges.
|
80 |
We render thanks unto God for whatsoever hath befallen Us, and We
patiently endure the things He hath ordained in the past or will
ordain in the future. In Him have I placed My trust; and into His
hands have I committed My Cause. He will, certainly, repay all them
that endure with patience and put their confidence in Him. His is the
creation and its empire. He exalteth whom He will, and whom He will He
doth abase. He shall not be asked of His doings. He, verily, is the
All-Glorious, the Almighty.
|
81 |
Let thine ear be attentive, O King, to the words We have addressed to
thee. Let the oppressor desist from his tyranny, and cut off the
perpetrators of injustice from among them that profess thy faith. By
the righteousness of God! The tribulations We have sustained are such
that any pen that recounteth them cannot but be overwhelmed with
anguish. No one of them that truly believe and uphold the unity of
God can bear the burden of their recital. So great have been Our
sufferings that even the eyes of Our enemies have wept over Us, and
beyond them those of every discerning person. And to all these trials
have We been subjected, in spite of Our action in approaching thee,
and in bidding the people to enter beneath thy shadow, that thou
mightest be a stronghold unto them that believe in and uphold the
unity of God.
|
82 |
Have I, O King, ever disobeyed thee? Have I, at any time, transgressed
any of thy laws? Can any of thy ministers that represented thee in
`Iráq produce any proof that can establish My disloyalty to thee?
Nay, by Him Who is the Lord of all worlds! Not for one short moment
did We rebel against thee, or against any of thy ministers. Never, God
willing, shall We revolt against thee, though We be exposed to trials
more severe than any We suffered in the past.
|
83 |
In the daytime and in the night season, at even and at morn, We pray
to God on thy behalf, that He may graciously aid thee to be obedient
unto Him and to observe His commandment, that He may shield thee from
the hosts of the evil ones. Do, therefore, as it pleaseth thee, and
treat Us as befitteth thy station and beseemeth thy sovereignty. Be
not forgetful of the law of God in whatever thou desirest to achieve,
now or in the days to come. Say: Praise be to God, the Lord of all
worlds!
|
84 |
Dost thou imagine, O Minister of the Sháh in the City, that I
hold within My grasp the ultimate destiny of the Cause of God?
Thinkest thou that My imprisonment, or the shame I have been made to
suffer, or even My death and utter annihilation, can deflect its
course? Wretched is what thou hast imagined in thine heart! Thou art
indeed of them that walk after the vain imaginings which their hearts
devise. No God is there but Him. Powerful is He to manifest His
Cause, and to exalt His testimony, and to establish whatsoever is His
Will, and to elevate it to so eminent a position that neither thine
own hands, nor the hands of them that have turned away from Him, can
ever touch or harm it.
|
85 |
Dost thou believe thou hast the power to frustrate His Will, to hinder
Him from executing His judgement, or to deter Him from exercising His
sovereignty? Pretendest thou that aught in the heavens or in the
earth can resist His Faith? Nay, by Him Who is the Eternal Truth!
Nothing whatsoever in the whole of creation can thwart His Purpose.
Cast away, therefore, the mere conceit thou dost follow, for mere
conceit can never take the place of truth. Be thou of them that have
truly repented and returned to God, the God Who hath created thee, Who
hath nourished thee, and made thee a minister among them that profess
thy faith.
|
86 |
Know thou, moreover, that He it is Who hath, by His own behest,
created all that is in the heavens and all that is on the earth. How
can, then, the thing that hath been created at His bidding prevail
against Him? High is God exalted above what ye imagine about Him, ye
people of malice! If this Cause be of God, no man can prevail against
it; and if it be not of God, the divines amongst you, and they that
follow their corrupt desires and such as have rebelled against Him
will surely suffice to overpower it.
|
87 |
Hast thou not heard what a man of the family of Pharaoh, a believer,
hath said of old, and which God recounted unto His Apostle, Whom He
hath chosen above all human beings, and entrusted with His Message,
and made the source of His mercy unto all them that dwell on earth? He
said, and He, verily, speaketh the truth: ``Will ye slay a man because
he saith my Lord is God, when he hath already come to you with proofs
of his mission? And if he be a liar, on him will be his lie, but if he
be a man of truth, part at least of what he threateneth will fall upon
you.''75 This is what God hath revealed unto His Well-Beloved One,
in His unerring Book.
|
88 |
And yet, ye have failed to incline your ears unto His bidding, have
disregarded His law, have rejected His counsel as recorded in His
Book, and have been of them that have strayed far from Him. How many
those who, every year, and every month, have because of you been put
to death! How manifold the injustices ye have perpetrated --
injustices the like of which the eye of creation hath not seen, which
no chronicler hath ever recorded! How numerous the babes and
sucklings who were made orphans, and the fathers who lost their sons,
because of your cruelty, O ye unjust doers! How oft hath a sister
pined away and mourned over her brother, and how oft hath a wife
lamented after her husband and sole sustainer!
|
89 |
Your iniquity waxed greater and greater until ye slew Him Who had
never taken His eyes away from the face of God, the Most Exalted, the
Most Great.{中中中} Would that ye had put Him to death after the
manner men are wont to put one another to death! Ye slew Him, however,
in such circumstances as no man hath ever witnessed. The heavens wept
sore over Him, and the souls of them who are nigh unto God cried out
for His affliction. Was He not a Scion of your Prophet's ancient
House? Had not His fame as a direct descendant of the Apostle been
spread abroad amongst you? Why, then, did ye inflict upon Him what no
man, however far ye may look back, hath inflicted upon another? By
God! The eye of creation hath never beheld your like. Ye slay Him Who
is a Scion of your Prophet's House, and rejoice and make merry while
seated on your seats of honour! Ye utter your imprecations against
them who were before you, and who have perpetrated what ye have
perpetrated, and remain yourselves all the time unaware of your
enormities!
|
90 |
Be fair in your judgement. Did they whom ye curse, upon whom ye invoke
evil, act differently from yourselves? Have they not slain the
descendant of their Prophet{~~} as ye have slain the descendant of
your own? Is not your conduct similar to their conduct? Wherefore,
then, claim ye to be different from them, O ye sowers of dissension
amongst men?
|
91 |
And when ye took away His life, one of His followers arose to avenge
His death. He was unknown of men, and the design he had conceived was
unnoticed by anyone. Eventually he committed what had been
preordained. It behoveth you, therefore, to attach blame to no one
except to yourselves, for the things ye have committed, if ye but
judge fairly. Who is there on the whole earth who hath done what ye
have done? None, by Him Who is the Lord of all worlds!
|
92 |
All the rulers and kings of the earth honour and revere the
descendants of their Prophets and holy men, could ye but perceive
it. Ye, on the other hand, are responsible for such acts as no man
hath, at any time, performed. Your misdeeds have caused every
understanding heart to be consumed with grief. And yet, ye have
remained sunk in your heedlessness, and failed to realize the
wickedness of your actions.
|
93 |
Ye have persisted in your waywardness until ye rose up against Us,
though We had committed nothing to justify your enmity. Fear ye not
God Who hath created you, and fashioned you, and caused you to attain
your strength, and joined you with them that have resigned themselves
to Him?{+++++++} How long will ye persist in your waywardness? How
long will ye refuse to reflect? How long ere ye shake off your slumber
and are roused from your heedlessness? How long will ye remain
unaware of the truth?
|
94 |
Ponder in thine heart. Did ye, notwithstanding your behaviour and the
things your hands have wrought, succeed in quenching the fire of God
or in putting out the light of His Revelation -- a light that hath
enveloped with its brightness them that are immersed in the billowing
oceans of immortality, and hath attracted the souls of such as truly
believe in and uphold His unity? Know ye not that the Hand of God is
over your hands, that His Decree transcendeth all your devices, that
He is supreme over His servants, that He is equal to His Purpose, that
He doth what He wisheth, that He shall not be asked of whatever He
willeth, that He ordaineth what He pleaseth, that He is the Most
Powerful, the Almighty? If ye believe this to be the truth, wherefore,
then, will ye not cease from troubling and be at peace with
yourselves?
|
95 |
Ye perpetrate every day a fresh injustice, and treat Me as ye treated
Me in times past, though I never attempted to meddle with your
affairs. At no time have I opposed you, neither have I rebelled
against your laws. Behold how ye have, at the last, made Me a prisoner
in this far-off land! Know for a certainty, however, that whatever
your hands or the hands of the infidels have wrought will never, as
they never did of old, change the Cause of God or alter His ways.
|
96 |
Give heed to My warning, ye people of Persia! If I be slain at your
hands, God will assuredly raise up one who will fill the seat made
vacant through My death, for such is God's method carried into effect
of old, and no change can ye find in God's method of dealing. Seek ye
to put out God's light that shineth upon His earth? Averse is God from
what ye desire. He shall perfect His light, albeit ye abhor it in the
secret of your hearts.
|
97 |
Pause for but a little while and reflect, O Minister, and be fair in
thy judgement. What is it that We have committed that could justify
thee in having slandered Us unto the King's Ministers, in following
thy desires, in perverting the truth, and in uttering thy calumnies
against Us? We have never met each other except when We met thee in
thy father's house, in the days when the martyrdom of Imám
usayn was being commemorated. On those occasions no one could
have had the chance of making known to others his views and beliefs in
conversation or in discourse. Thou wilt bear witness to the truth of
My words, if thou be of the truthful. I have frequented no other
gatherings in which thou couldst have learned My mind or in which any
other could have done so. How, then, didst thou pronounce thy verdict
against Me, when thou hadst not heard My testimony from Mine own lips?
Hast thou not heard what God, exalted be His glory, hath said: ``Say
not to everyone who meeteth you with a greeting, `Thou art not a
believer'.''76 ``Thrust not away those who cry to their Lord at morn
and even, craving to behold His face.''77 Thou hast indeed forsaken
what the Book of God hath prescribed, and yet thou deemest thyself to
be a believer!
|
98 |
Despite what thou hast done I entertain -- and to this God is My
witness -- no ill will against thee, nor against anyone, though from
thee and others We receive such hurt as no believer in the unity of
God can sustain. My cause is in the hand of none except God, and My
trust is in no one else but Him. Erelong shall your days pass away, as
shall pass away the days of those who now, with flagrant pride, vaunt
themselves over their neighbour. Soon shall ye be gathered together in
the presence of God, and shall be asked of your doings, and shall be
repaid for what your hands have wrought, and wretched is the abode of
the wicked doers!
|
99 |
By God! Wert thou to realize what thou hast done, thou wouldst surely
weep sore over thyself, and wouldst flee for refuge to God, and
wouldst pine away and mourn all the days of thy life, till God will
have forgiven thee, for He, verily, is the Most Generous, the
All-Bountiful. Thou wilt, however, persist, till the hour of thy
death, in thy heedlessness, inasmuch as thou hast, with all thine
heart, thy soul and inmost being, busied thyself with the vanities of
the world. Thou shalt, after thy departure, discover what We have
revealed unto thee, and shalt find all thy doings recorded in the Book
wherein the works of all them that dwell on earth, be they greater or
less than the weight of an atom, are noted down. Heed, therefore, My
counsel, and hearken thou, with the hearing of thine heart, unto My
speech, and be not careless of My words, nor be of them that reject My
truth. Glory not in the things that have been given thee. Set before
thine eyes what hath been revealed in the Book of God, the Help in
Peril, the All-Glorious: ``And when they had forgotten their warnings,
We set open to them the gates of all things,'' even as We did set open
to thee and to thy like the gates of this earth and the ornaments
thereof. Wait thou, therefore, for what hath been promised in the
latter part of this holy verse,78 for this is a promise from Him Who
is the Almighty, the All-Wise -- a promise that will not prove untrue.
|
100 |
I know not the path ye have chosen and which ye tread, O congregation
of My ill-wishers! We summon you to God, We remind you of His Day, We
announce unto you tidings of your reunion with Him, We draw you nigh
unto His court, and send down upon you tokens of His wondrous wisdom,
and yet lo, behold how ye reject Us, how ye condemn Us, through the
things which your lying mouths have uttered, as an infidel, how ye
devise your devices against Us! And when We manifest unto you what God
hath, through His bountiful favour, bestowed upon Us, ye say, ``It is
but plain magic.'' The same words were spoken by the generations that
were before you and were what ye are, did ye but perceive it. Ye have
thereby deprived yourselves of the bounty of God and of His grace, and
shall never obtain them till the day when God will have judged between
Us and you, and He, verily, is the best of judges.
|
101 |
Certain ones among you have said: ``He it is Who hath laid claim to be
God.'' By God! This is a gross calumny. I am but a servant of God Who
hath believed in Him and in His signs, and in His Prophets and in His
angels. My tongue, and My heart, and My inner and My outer being
testify that there is no God but Him, that all others have been
created by His behest, and been fashioned through the operation of His
Will. There is none other God but Him, the Creator, the Raiser from
the dead, the Quickener, the Slayer. I am He that telleth abroad the
favours with which God hath, through His bounty, favoured Me. If this
be My transgression, then I am truly the first of the transgressors. I
and My kindred are at your mercy. Do ye as ye please, and be not of
them that hesitate, that I might return to God My Lord, and reach the
place where I can no longer behold your faces. This, indeed, is My
dearest wish, My most ardent desire. Of My state God is, verily,
sufficiently informed, observant.
|
102 |
Imagine thyself to be under the eye of God, O Minister! If thou seest
Him not, He, in truth, clearly seeth thee. Observe, and judge fairly
Our Cause. What is it that We have committed that could have induced
thee to rise up against Us, and to slander Us to the people, if thou
be of them who are just? We departed out of Tihrán, at the
bidding of the King,{@@@@@@@} and, by his leave, transferred Our
residence to `Iráq. If I had transgressed against him, why, then, did
he release Me? And if I were innocent of guilt, wherefore did ye
afflict Us with such tribulation as none among them that profess your
faith hath suffered? Hath any of Mine acts, after Mine arrival in
`Iráq, been such as to subvert the authority of the government? Who
is it that can be said to have detected anything reprehensible in Our
behaviour? Enquire for thyself of its people, that thou mayest be of
them who have discerned the truth.
|
103 |
For eleven years We dwelt in that land, until the Minister
representing thy government arrived,79 whose name Our pen is loth to
mention, who was given to wine, who followed his lusts, and committed
wickedness, and was corrupt and corrupted `Iráq. To this will bear
witness most of the inhabitants of Baghdád, wert thou to
inquire of them, and be of such as seek the truth. He it was who
wrongfully seized the substance of his fellow-men, who forsook all the
commandments of God, and perpetrated whatever God had
forbidden. Eventually, he, following his desires, rose up against Us,
and walked in the ways of the unjust. He accused Us, in his letter to
thee, and thou didst believe him and followed in his way, without
seeking any proof or trustworthy evidence from him. Thou didst ask for
no explanation, nor didst thou attempt either to investigate or
ascertain the matter, that the truth might be distinguished from
falsehood in thy sight, and that thou mightest be clear in thy
discernment. Find out for thyself the sort of man he was by asking
those Ministers who were, at that time, in `Iráq, as well as the
Governor of the City{中中中弓 and its high Counsellor, that the truth
may be revealed to thee, and that thou mayest be of the well-informed.
|
104 |
God is Our witness! We have, under no circumstances, opposed either
him, or others. We observed, under all conditions, the precepts of
God, and were never one of those that wrought disorders. To this he
himself doth testify. His intention was to lay hold on Us, and send Us
back to Persia, that he might thereby exalt his fame and
reputation. Thou hast committed the same crime, and for the self-same
purpose. Ye both are of equal grade in the sight of God, the
sovereign Lord of all, the All-Knowing.
|
105 |
It is not Our purpose in addressing to thee these words to lighten the
burden of Our woe, or to induce thee to intercede for Us with
anyone. Nay, by Him Who is the Lord of all worlds! We have set forth
the whole matter before thee, that perchance thou might realize what
thou hast done, might desist from inflicting on others the hurt thou
hast inflicted on Us, and might be of them that have truly repented to
God, Who created thee and created all things, and might act with
discernment in the future. Better is this for thee than all thou dost
possess, than thy ministry whose days are numbered.
|
106 |
Beware lest thou be led to connive at injustice. Set thy heart firmly
upon justice, and alter not the Cause of God, and be of them whose
eyes are directed towards the things that have been revealed in His
Book. Follow not, under any condition, the promptings of thine evil
desires. Keep thou the law of God, thy Lord, the Beneficent, the
Ancient of Days. Thou shalt most certainly return to dust, and shalt
perish like all the things in which thou takest delight. This is what
the Tongue of truth and glory hath spoken.
|
107 |
Rememberest thou not God's warning uttered in times past, that thou
mayest be of them that heed His warning? He said, and He, verily,
speaketh the truth: ``From it (earth) have We created you, and unto it
will We return you, and out of it will We bring you forth a second
time.''80 This is what God ordained unto all them that dwell on
earth, be they high or low. It behoveth not, therefore, him who was
created from dust, who will return unto it, and will again be brought
forth out of it, to swell with pride before God, and before His loved
ones, to proudly scorn them, and be filled with disdainful
arrogance. Nay, rather it behoveth thee and those like thee to submit
yourselves to them Who are the Manifestations of the unity of God, and
to defer humbly to the faithful, who have forsaken their all for the
sake of God, and have detached themselves from the things which
engross men's attention, and lead them astray from the path of God,
the All-Glorious, the All-Praised. Thus do We send down upon you that
which shall profit you and profit them that have placed their whole
trust and confidence in their Lord.
|
108 |
O ye divines of the City! We came to you with the truth, whilst ye
were heedless of it. Methinks ye are as dead, wrapt in the coverings
of your own selves. Ye sought not Our presence, when so to do would
have been better for you than all your doings. Know ye that the Sun of
vicegerency hath dawned in all truth, and yet ye have turned away
therefrom. The Moon of guidance hath risen high in the midmost heaven,
and yet ye remain veiled therefrom. The Star of divine bounty hath
shone forth above the horizon of eternal holiness, and yet ye have
strayed far therefrom.
|
109 |
Know ye, that had your leaders, to whom ye owe allegiance, and on whom
ye pride yourselves, and whom ye mention by day and by night, and from
whose traces ye seek guidance -- had they lived in these days, they
would have circled around Me, and would not have separated themselves
from Me, whether at eventide or at morn. Ye, however, did not turn
your faces towards My face, for even less than a moment, and waxed
proud, and were careless of this Wronged One, Who hath been so
afflicted by men that they dealt with Him as they pleased. Ye failed
to inquire about My condition, nor did ye inform yourselves of the
things which befell Me. Thereby have ye withheld from yourselves the
winds of holiness, and the breezes of bounty, that blow from this
luminous and perspicuous Spot.
|
110 |
Methinks ye have clung to outward things, and forgotten the inner
things, and say that which ye do not. Ye are lovers of names, and
appear to have given yourselves up to them. For this reason make ye
mention of the names of your leaders. And should anyone like them, or
superior unto them, come unto you, ye would flee him. Through their
names ye have exalted yourselves, and have secured your positions, and
live and prosper. And were your leaders to reappear, ye would not
renounce your leadership, nor would ye turn in their direction, nor
set your faces towards them.
|
111 |
|
112 |
We found you, as We found most men, worshipping names which they
mention during the days of their life, and with which they occupy
themselves. No sooner do the Bearers of these names appear, however,
than they repudiate them, and turn upon their heels. Thus have We
found you, and thus have We reckoned up your actions and borne witness
to all your doings in this day. Know ye that God will not, in this
day, accept your thoughts, nor your remembrance of Him, nor your
turning towards Him, nor your devotions, nor your vigilance, unless ye
be made new in the estimation of this Servant, could ye but perceive
it.
|
113 |
By God! The Tree of vicegerency hath been planted, the Point of
knowledge hath been made plain, and the sovereignty of God, the Help
in Peril, the Self-Subsisting, hath been established. Fear ye the
Lord. Follow not the promptings of your evil desires, but keep the law
of God all your days. Renew the rules of the ways ye follow, that ye
may be led by the light of guidance and may hasten in the path of the
True One.
|
114 |
O ye wise men of the City and philosophers of the world! Beware lest
human learning and wisdom cause you to wax proud before God, the Help
in Peril, the Self-Subsisting. Know ye that true wisdom is to fear
God, to know Him, and to recognize His Manifestations. This wisdom,
however, can be attained only by those who detach themselves from the
world, and who walk in the ways of the good pleasure of their
Lord. Are ye possessed of greater wisdom than the one who contrived a
moon which would rise from one well and set in another, and whose
light was visible at a distance of three leagues?81 God, verily,
blotted out every trace of his works and returned him unto dust, as ye
have already heard or are now informed.
|
115 |
How many the sages and philosophers who equalled or surpassed him in
learning and wisdom! And how vast the number of those who equalled or
surpassed yourselves! Some of them believed in God, while others
disbelieved and joined partners with Him. The latter were at last cast
into the Fire, there to take up their abode, while the former returned
unto the mercy of their Lord, therein to abide. For God doth not ask
you of your sciences, but of your faith and of your conduct. Are ye
greater in wisdom than the One Who brought you into being, Who
fashioned the heavens and all that they contain, the earth and all
that dwell upon it? Gracious God! True wisdom is His. All creation and
its empire are His. He bestoweth His wisdom upon whomsoever He
chooseth amongst men, and withholdeth it from whomsoever He
desireth. He, in truth, is the Bestower and the Withholder, and He,
verily, is the All-Bountiful, the All-Wise.
|
116 |
O ye learned of the world! Ye failed to seek Our presence, that ye
might hearken unto the sweet melodies of the Spirit and perceive that
which God in His bounty hath pleased to bestow upon Me. Verily, this
grace hath now escaped you, did ye but know. Had ye sought Our
presence, We would have imparted unto you a knowledge that would have
rendered you independent of all else. But this ye failed to do, and
thus hath the decree of God been fulfilled. Now have I been forbidden
to disclose it, since We stand accused of sorcery, if ye perceive Our
meaning. The same words were uttered by the deniers of old, men whom
death hath long since overtaken and who now dwell in the fire
bewailing their plight. The deniers of this day shall likewise meet
their doom. Such is the irrevocable decree of Him Who is the
All-Powerful, the Self-Sufficient.
|
117 |
I counsel you, in the end, not to overstep the bounds of God, nor to
heed the ways and habits of men, for these can neither ``fatten nor
appease your hunger''. Fix, rather, your gaze upon the precepts of
God. Whosoever desireth, let him accept this counsel as a path leading
unto his Lord, and whosoever desireth, let him return to his own idle
imaginings. My Lord, verily, is independent above all who are in the
heavens and on the earth, and above all that they say and do.
|
118 |
I close with these words uttered by God, exalted be His glory: ``Say
not to everyone who meeteth you with a greeting, `Thou art not a
believer'.''82
|
119 |
Peace be upon you, O concourse of the faithful, and praise be to God,
the Lord of the worlds.
|