Dearly-beloved brethren in 'Abdu'l-Bahá!
With the ascension of Bahá'u'lláh the Day-Star of Divine guidance
which, as foretold by Shaykh Ahmad and Siyyid Kázim, had risen in
Shíráz, and, while pursuing its westward course, had mounted
its zenith in Adrianople, had finally sunk below the horizon of 'Akká,
never to rise again ere the complete revolution of one thousand years. The
setting of so effulgent an Orb brought to a definite termination the period
of Divine Revelationthe initial and most vitalizing stage in the Bahá'í
era. Inaugurated by the Báb, culminating in Bahá'u'lláh,
anticipated and extolled by the entire company of the Prophets of this great
prophetic cycle, this period has, except for the short interval between
the Báb's martyrdom and Bahá'u'lláh's shaking experiences
in the Síyáh Chal of Tihrán, been characterized by
almost fifty years of continuous and progressive Revelationa period
which by its duration and fecundity must be regarded as unparalleled in
the entire field of the world's spiritual history.
The passing of 'Abdu'l-Bahá, on the other hand, marks the closing
of the Heroic and Apostolic Age of this same Dispensationthat primitive
period of our Faith the splendors of which can never be rivalled, much less
be eclipsed, by the magnificence that must needs distinguish the future
victories of Bahá'u'lláh's Revelation. For neither the achievements
of the champion-builders of the present-day institutions of the Faith of
Bahá'u'lláh, nor the tumultuous triumphs which the heroes
of its Golden Age will in the coming days succeed in winning, can measure
with, or be included within the same category as, the wondrous works associated
with the names of those who have generated its very life and laid its pristine
foundations. That first and creative age of the Bahá'í era
must, by its very nature, stand above and apart from the formative period
into which we have entered and the golden age destined to succeed it.
'Abdu'l-Bahá, Who incarnates an institution for which we can find
no parallel whatsoever in any of the world's recognized religious systems,
may be said to have closed the Age to which He Himself belonged and opened
the one in which we are now laboring. His Will and Testament should thus
be regarded as the perpetual, the indissoluble link which the mind of Him
Who is the Mystery of God has conceived in order to insure the continuity
of the three ages that constitute the component parts of the Bahá'í
Dispensation. The period in which the seed of the Faith had been slowly
germinating is thus intertwined both with the one which must witness its
efflorescence and the subsequent age in which that seed will have finally
yielded its golden fruit.
The creative energies released by the Law of Baháulláh,
permeating and evolving within the mind of 'Abdu'l-Bahá, have, by
their very impact and close interaction, given birth to an Instrument which
may be viewed as the Charter of the New World Order which is at once the
glory and the promise of this most great Dispensation. The Will may thus
be acclaimed as the inevitable offspring resulting from that mystic intercourse
between Him Who communicated the generating influence of His divine Purpose
and the One Who was its vehicle and chosen recipient. Being the Child of
the Covenant the Heir of both the Originator and the Interpreter of
the Law of Godthe Will and Testament of 'Abdu'l-Bahá can no
more be divorced from Him Who supplied the original and motivating impulse
than from the One Who ultimately conceived it. Bahá'u'lláh's
inscrutable purpose, we must ever bear in mind, has been so thoroughly infused
into the conduct of 'Abdu'l-Bahá, and their motives have been so
closely wedded together, that the mere attempt to dissociate the teachings
of the former from any system which the ideal Exemplar of those same teachings
has established would amount to a repudiation of one of the most sacred
and basic truths of the Faith.
The Administrative Order, which ever since 'Abdu'l-Bahá's ascension
has evolved and is taking shape under our very eyes in no fewer than forty
countries of the world, may be considered as the framework of the Will itself,
the inviolable stronghold wherein this new-born child is being nurtured
and developed. This Administrative Order, as it expands and consolidates
itself, will no doubt manifest the potentialities and reveal the full implications
of this momentous Documentthis most remarkable expression of the Will
of One of the most remarkable Figures of the Dispensation of Bahá'u'lláh.
It will, as its component parts, its organic institutions, begin to function
with efficiency and vigor, assert its claim and demonstrate its capacity
to be regarded not only as the nucleus but the very pattern of the New World
Order destined to embrace in the fullness of time the whole of mankind.
It should be noted in this connection that this Administrative Order is
fundamentally different from anything that any Prophet has previously established,
inasmuch as Bahá'u'lláh has Himself revealed its principles,
established its institutions, appointed the person to interpret His Word
and conferred the necessary authority on the body designed to supplement
and apply His legislative ordinances. Therein lies the secret of its strength,
its fundamental distinction, and the guarantee against disintegration and
schism. Nowhere in the sacred scriptures of any of the world's religious
systems, nor even in the writings of the Inaugurator of the Bábí
Dispensation, do we find any provisions establishing a covenant or providing
for an administrative order that can compare in scope and authority with
those that lie at the very basis of the Bahá'í Dispensation.
Has either Christianity or Islám,to take as an instance two of the
most widely diffused and outstanding among the world's recognized religions,
anything to offer that can measure with, or be regarded as equivalent to,
either the Book of Bahá'u'lláh's Covenant or to the Will and
Testament of 'Abdu'l-Bahá? Does the text of either the Gospel or
the Qur'án confer sufficient authority upon those leaders and councils
that have claimed the right and assumed the function of interpreting the
provisions of their sacred scriptures and of administering the affairs of
their respective communities? Could Peter, the admitted chief of the Apostles,
or the Imam 'Alí, the cousin and legitimate successor of the Prophet,
produce in support of the primacy with which both had been invested written
and explicit affirmations from Christ and Muhammad that could have silenced
those who either among their contemporaries or in a later age have repudiated
their authority and, by their action, precipitated the schisms that persist
until the present day? Where, we may confidently ask, in the recorded sayings
of Jesus Christ, whether in the matter of succession or in the provision
of a set of specific laws and clearly defined administrative ordinances,
as distinguished from purely spiritual principles, can we find anything
approaching the detailed injunctions, laws and warnings that abound in the
authenticated utterances of both Bahá'u'lláh and 'Abdu'l Bahá?
Can any passage of the Qur'án, which in respect to its legal code,
its administrative and devotional ordinances marks already a notable advance
over previous and more corrupted Revelations, be construed as placing upon
an unassailable basis the undoubted authority with which Muhammad had, verbally
and on several occasions, invested His successor? Can the Author of the
Bábí Dispensation, however much He may have succeeded through
the provisions of the Persian Bayán in averting a schism as permanent
and catastrophic as those that afflicted Christianity and Islám
can He be said to have produced instruments for the safeguarding of His
Faith as definite and efficacious as those which must for all time preserve
the unity of the organized followers of the Faith of Bahá'u'lláh
?
Alone of all the Revelations gone before it this Faith has, through the
explicit directions, the repeated warnings, the authenticated safeguards
incorporated and elaborated in its teachings, succeeded in raising a structure
which the bewildered followers of bankrupt and broken creeds might well
approach and critically examine, and seek, ere it is too late, the invulnerable
security of its world-embracing shelter.
No wonder that He Who through the operation of His Will has inaugurated
so vast and unique an Order and Who is the Center of so mighty a Covenant
should have written these words: "So firm and mighty is this
Covenant that from the beginning of time until the present day no religious
Dispensation hath produced its like. " "Whatsoever
is latent in the innermost of this holy cycle," He wrote during
the darkest and most dangerous days of His ministry, "shall gradually
appear and be made manifest, for now is but the beginning of its growth
and the day-spring of the revelation of its signs." "Fear
not," are His reassuring words foreshadowing the rise of the
Administrative Order established by His Will, "fear not if this
Branch be severed from this material world and cast aside its leaves; nay,
the leaves thereof shall flourish, for this Branch will grow after it is
cut off from this world below, it shall reach the loftiest pinnacles of
glory, and it shall bear such fruits as will perfume the world with their
fragrance."
To what else if not to the power and majesty which this Administrative
Orderthe rudiments of the future all-enfolding Bahá'í
Commonwealthis destined to manifest, can these utterances of Bahá'u'lláh
allude: "The world's equilibrium hath been upset through the
vibrating influence of this most great, this new World Order. Mankind's
ordered life hath been revolutionized through the agency of this unique,
this wondrous System the like of which mortal eyes have never witnessed."
The Báb Himself, in the course of His references to "Him
Whom God will make manifest" anticipates the System and glorifies
the World Order which the Revelation of Bahá'u'lláh is destined
to unfold. "Well is it with him," is His remarkable statement
in the third chapter of the Persian Bayán, "who fixeth
his gaze upon the Order of Bahá 'u'lláh and rendereth thanks
unto his Lord! For He will assuredly be made manifest. God hath indeed irrevocably
ordained it in the Bayán."
In the Tablets of Baháulláh where the
institutions of the International and Local Houses of Justice are specifically
designated and formally established; in the institution of the Hands of
the Cause of God which first Bahá'u'lláh and then 'Abdu'l-Bahá
brought into being; in the institution of both local and national Assemblies
which in their embryonic stage were already functioning in the days preceding
'Abdu'l-Bahá's ascension; in the authority with which the Author
of our Faith and the Center of His Covenant have in their Tablets chosen
to confer upon them; in the institution of the Local Fund which operated
according to 'Abdu'l-Bahá's specific injunctions addressed to certain
Assemblies in Persia; in the verses of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas the implications
of which clearly anticipate the institution of the Guardianship; in the
explanation which 'Abdu'l-Bahá, in one of His Tablets, has given
to, and the emphasis He has placed upon, the hereditary principle and the
law of primogeniture as having been upheld by the Prophets of the past
in these we can discern the faint glimmerings and discover the earliest
intimation of the nature and working of the Administrative Order which the
Will of 'Abdu'l-Bahá was at a later time destined to proclaim and
formally establish.
An attempt, I feel, should at the present juncture be made to explain the
character and functions of the twin pillars that support this mighty Administrative
Structurethe institutions of the Guardianship and of the Universal
House of Justice. To describe in their entirety the diverse elements that
function in conjunction with these institutions is beyond the scope and
purpose of this general exposition of the fundamental verities of the Faith.
To define with accuracy and minuteness the features, and to analyze exhaustively
the nature of the relationships which, on the one hand, bind together these
two fundamental organs of the Will of 'Abdu'l-Bahá and connect, on
the other, each of them to the Author of the Faith and the Center of His
Covenant is a task which future generations will no doubt adequately fulfill.
My present intention is to elaborate certain salient features of this scheme
which, however close we may stand to its colossal structure, are already
so clearly defined that we find it inexcusable to either misconceive or
ignore.
It should be stated, at the very outset, in clear and unambiguous language,that
these twin institutions of the Administrative Order of Bahá'u'lláh
should be regarded as divine in origin, essential in their functions and
complementary in their aim and purpose. Their common, their fundamental
object is to insure the continuity of that divinely-appointed authority
which flows from the Source of our Faith, to safeguard the unity of its
followers and to maintain the integrity and flexibility of its teachings.
Acting in conjunction with each other these two inseparable institutions
administer its affairs, coordinate its activities, promote its interests,
execute its laws and defend its subsidiary institutions. Severally, each
operates within a clearly defined sphere of jurisdiction; each is equipped
with its own attendant institutions instruments designed for the effective
discharge of its particular responsi- bilities and duties. Each exercises,
within the limitations imposed upon it, its powers, its authority, its rights
and prerogatives. These are neither contradictory, nor detract in the slightest
degree from the position which each of these institutions occupies. Far
from being incompatible or mutually destructive, they supplement each other's
authority and functions, and are permanently and fundamentally united in
their aims.
Divorced from the institution of the Guardianship the World Order of Bahá'u'lláh
would be mutilated and permanently deprived of that hereditary principle
which, as 'Abdu'l-Bahá has written, has been invariably upheld by
the Law of God. "In all the Divine Dispensations,"
He states, in a Tablet addressed to a follower of the Faith in Persia, "the
eldest son hath been given extraordinary distinctions. Even the station
of prophethood hath been his birthright."Without such an institution
the integrity of the Faith would be imperilled, and the stability of the
entire fabric would be gravely endangered. Its prestige would suffer, the
means required to enable it to take a long, and uninterrupted view over
a series of generations would be completely lacking, and the necessary guidance
to define the sphere of the legislative action of its elected representatives
would be totally withdrawn.
Severed from the no less essential institution of the Universal House of
Justice this same System of the Will of 'Abdu'l-Bahá would be paralyzed
in its action and would be powerless to fill in those gaps which the Author
of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas has deliberately left in the body of His legislative
and admin istrative ordinances.
"He is the Interpreter of the Word of God, " Abdu'l-Bahá,
referring to the functions of the Guardian of the Faith, asserts, using
in His Will the very term which He Himself had chosen when refuting the
argument of the Covenant breakers who had challenged His right to interpret
the utterances of Bahá'u'lláh. "After him,"
He adds, "will succeed the first-born of his lineal descendants.
" "The mighty stronghold," He further
explains, "shall remain impregnable and safe through obedience
to him who is the Guardian of the Cause of God. "
"It is incumbent upon the members of the House of Justice, upon all
the Aghsán, the Afnán, the Hands of the Cause of God,
to show their obedience, submissiveness and subordination unto the Guardian
of the Cause of God." "It is incumbent upon the
members of the House of Justice," Bahá'u'lláh,
on the other hand, declares in the Eighth Leaf of the Exalted Paradise,
"To take counsel together regarding those things which have not
outwardly been revealed in the Book, and to enforce that which is agreeable
to them. God will verily inspire them with whatsoever He willeth, and He
verily is the Provider, the Omniscient. " "Unto
the Most Holy Book" (the Kitáb-i-Aqdas), 'Abdu'l-Bahá
states in His Will, "every one must turn, and all that is not
expressly recorded therein must be referred to the Universal House of Justice.
That which this body, whether unanimously or by a majority doth carry, that
is verily the truth and the purpose of God Himself. Whoso doth deviate therefrom
is verily of them that love discord, hath shown forth malice, and turned
away from the Lord of the Covenant."
Not only does 'Abdu'l-Bahá confirm in His Will Bahá'u'lláh's
above quoted statement, but invests this body with the additional right
and power to abrogate, according to the exigencies of time, its own enactments,
as well as those of a preceding House of Justice. "Inasmuch as
the House of Justice, " is His explicit statement in His Will,
"hath power to enact laws that are not expressly recorded in the Book
and bear upon daily transactions, so also it hath power to repeal the same
. . . This it can do because these laws form no part of the divine explicit
text."
Referring to both the Guardian and the Universal House of Justice
we read these emphatic words: "The sacred and youthful branch,
the Guardian of the Cause of God, as well as the Universal House of Justice
to be universally elected and established, are both under the care and protection
of the Abhá Beauty, under the shelter and unerring guidance of the
Exalted One (the Báb) (may my life be offered up for them both).
Whatsoever they decide is of God."
From these statements it is made indubitably clear and evident that
the Guardian of the Faith has been made the Interpreter of the Word and
that the Universal House of Justice has been invested with the function
of legislating on matters not expressly revealed in the teachings. The interpretation
of the Guardian, functioning within his own sphere, is as authoritative
and binding as the enactments of the International House of Justice, whose
exclusive right and prerogative is to pronounce upon and deliver the final
judgment on such laws and ordinances as Bahá'u'lláh has not
expressly revealed. Neither can, nor will ever, infringe upon the sacred
and prescribed domain of the other. Neither will seek to curtail the specific
and undoubted authority with which both have been divinely invested.
Though the Guardian of the Faith has been made the permanent head of so
august a body he can never, even temporarily, assume the right of exclusive
legislation. He cannot override the decision of the majority of his fellow-members,
but is bound to insist upon a reconsideration by them of any enactment he
conscientiously believes to conflict with the meaning and to depart from
the spirit of Bahá'u'lláh's revealed utterances. He interprets
what has been specifically revealed, and cannot legislate except in his
capacity as member of the Universal House of Justice. He is debarred from
laying down independently the constitution that must govern the organized
activities of his fellow-members, and from exercising his influence in a
manner that would encroach upon the liberty of those whose sacred right
is to elect the body of his collaborators.
It should be borne in mind that the institution of the Guardianship has
been anticipated by 'Abdu'l-Bahá in an allusion He made in a Tablet
addressed, long before His own ascension, to three of His friends in Persia.
To their question as to whether there would be any person to whom all the
Bahá'ís would be called upon to turn after His ascension He
made the following reply: "As to the question ye have asked me,
know verily that this is a well-guarded secret. It is even as a gem concealed
within its shell. That it will be revealed is predestined. The time will
come when its light will appear, when its evidences will be made manifest,
and its secrets unravelled. "
Dearly-beloved friends ! Exalted as is the position and vital as
is the function of the institution of the Guardianship in the Administrative
Order of Bahá'ulláh, and staggering as must be the weight
of responsibility which it carries, its importance must, whatever be the
language of the Will, be in no wise over-emphasized. The Guardian of the
Faith must not under any circumstances, and whatever his merits or his achievements,
be exalted to the rank that will make him a co-sharer with 'Abdu'l-Bahá
in the unique position which the Center of the Covenant occupiesmuch
less to the station exclusively ordained for the Manifestation of God. So
grave a departure from the established tenets of our Faith is nothing short
of open blasphemy. As I have already stated, in the course of my references
to 'Abdu'l-Bahá's station, however great the gulf that separates
Him from the Author of a Divine Revelation it can never measure with the
distance that stands between Him Who is the Center of Bahá'u'lláh's
Covenant and the Guardians who are its chosen ministers. There is a far,
far greater distance separating the Guardian from the Center of the Covenant
than there is between the Center of the Covenant and its Author.
No Guardian of the Faith, I feel it my solemn duty to place on record,can
ever claim to be the perfect exemplar of the teachings of Bahá'u'lláh
or the stainless mirror that reflects His light. Though overshadowed by
the unfailing, the unerring protection of Bahá'u'lláh and
of the Báb, and however much he may share with 'Abdu'l-Bahá
the right and obligation to interpret the Bahá'í teachings,
he remains essentially human and cannot, if he wishes to remain faithful
to his trust, arrogate to himself, under any pretence whatsoever, the rights,
the privileges and prerogatives which Bahá'u'lláh has chosen
to confer upon His Son. ln the light of this truth to pray to the Guardian
of the Faith, to address him as lord and master, to designate him as his
holiness, to seek his benediction, to celebrate his birthday, or to commemorate
any event associated with his life would be tantamount to a departure from
those established truths that are enshrined within our beloved Faith. The
fact that the Guardian has been specifically endowed with such power as
he may need to reveal the purport and disclose the implications of the utterances
of Bahá'u'lláh and of 'Abdu'l-Bahá does not necessarily
confer upon him a station co-equal with those Whose words he is called upon
to interpret. He can exercise that right and discharge this obligation and
yet remain infinitely inferior to both of them in rank and different in
nature.
To the integrity of this cardinal principle of our Faith the words, the
deeds of its present and future Guardians must abundantly testify. By their
conduct and example they must needs establish its truth upon an unassailable
foundation and transmit to future generations unimpeachable evidences of
its reality. For my own part to hesitate in recognizing so vital a truth
or to vacillate in proclaiming so firm a conviction must constitute a shameless
betrayal of the confidence reposed in me by 'Abdu'l-Bahá and an unpardonable
usurpation of the authority with which He Himself has been invested.
A word should now be said regarding the theory on which this Administrative
Order is based and the principle that must govern the operation of its chief
institutions. It would be utterly misleading to attempt a comparison between
this unique, this divinely-conceived Order and any of the diverse systems
which the minds of men, at various periods of their history, have contrived
for the government of human institutions. Such an attempt would in itself
betray a lack of complete appreciation of the excellence of the handiwork
of its great Author. How could it be otherwise when we remember that this
Order constitutes the very pattern of that divine civilization which the
almighty Law of Baháu'lláh is designed to establish
upon earth? The divers and ever-shifting systems of human polity, whether
past or present, whether originating in the East or in the West, offer no
adequate criterion wherewith to estimate the potency of its hidden virtues
or to appraise the solidity of its foundations.
The Bahá'í Commonwealth of the future, of which this vast
Administrative Order is the sole framework, is, both in theory and practice,
not only unique in the entire history of political institutions, but can
find no parallel in the annals of any of the world's recognized religious
systems. No form of democratic government; no system of autocracy or of
dictatorship, whether monarchical or republican; no intermediary scheme
of a purely aristocratic order; nor even any of the recognized types of
theocracy, whether it be the Hebrew Commonwealth, or the various Christian
ecclesiastical organizations, or the Imamate or the Caliphate in Islámnone
of these can be identified or be said to conform with the Administrative
Order which the master-hand of its perfect Architect has fashioned.
This new-born Administrative Order incorporates within its structure certain
elements which are to be found in each of the three recognized forms of
secular government, without being in any sense a mere replica of anyone
of them, and without introducing within its machinery any of the objectionable
features which they inherently possess. It blends and harmonizes, as no
government fashioned by mortal hands has as yet accomplished, the salutary
truths which each of these systems undoubtedly contains without vitiating
the integrity of those God-given verities on which it is ultimately founded.
The Administrative Order of the Faith of Bahá'u'lláh must
in no wise be regarded as purely democratic in character inasmuch as the
basic assumption which requires all democracies to depend fundamentally
upon getting their mandate from the people is altogether lacking in this
Dispensation. In the conduct of the administrative affairs of the Faith,
in the enactment of the legislation necessary to supplement the laws of
the Kitáb-i-Aqdas, the members of the Universal House of Justice,
it should be borne in mind, are not, as Bahá'u'lláh´s
utterances clearly imply, responsible to those whom they represent, nor
are they allowed to be governed by the feelings, the general opinion, and
even the convictions of the mass of the faithful, or of those who directly
elect them. They are to follow, in a prayerful attitude, the dictates and
promptings of their conscience. They may, indeed they must, acquaint themselves
with the conditions prevailing among the community, must weigh dispassionately
in their minds the merits of any case presented for their consideration,
but must reserve for themselves the right of an unfettered decision. "God
will verily inspire them with whatsoever He willeth,"is Bahá'u'lláh's
incontrovertible assurance. They, and not the body of those who either directly
or indirectly elect them, have thus been made the recipients of the divine
guidance which is at once the life-blood and ultimate safeguard of this
Revelation. Moreover, he who symbolizes the hereditary principle in this
Dispensation has been made the interpreter of the words of its Author, and
ceases consequently, by virtue of the actual authority vested in him, to
be the figurehead invariably associated with the prevailing systems of constitutional
monarchies.
Nor can the Bahá'í Administrative Order be dismissed as a
hard and rigid system of unmitigated autocracy or as an idle imitation of
any form of absolutistic ecclesiastical government, whether it be the Papacy,
the Imamate or any other similar institution, for the obvious reason that
upon the international elected representatives of the followers of Bahá'u'lláh
has been conferred the exclusive right of legislating on matters not expressly
revealed in the Baháí writings. Neither the Guardian
of the Faith nor any institution apart from the International House of Justice
can ever usurp this vital and essential power or encroach upon that sacred
right. The abolition of professional priesthood with its accompanying sacraments
of baptism, of communion and of confession of sins, the laws requiring the
election by universal suffrage of all local, national, and international
Houses of Justice, the total absence of episcopal authority with its attendant
privileges, corruptions and bureaucratic tendencies, are further evidences
of the non autocratic character of the Bahá'í Administrative
Order and of its inclination to democratic methods in the administration
of its affairs.
Nor is this Order identified with the name of Bahá'u'lláh
to be confused with any system of purely aristocratic government in view
of the fact that it upholds, on the one hand, the hereditary principle and
entrusts the Guardian of the Faith with the obligation of interpreting its
teachings, and provides, on the other, for the free and direct election
from among the mass of the faithful of the body that constitutes its highest
legislative organ.
Whereas this Administrative Order cannot be said to have been modelled after
any of these recognized systems of government, it nevertheless embodies,
reconciles and assimilates within its framework such wholesome elements
as are to be found in each one of them. The hereditary authority which the
Guardian is called upon to exercise, the vital and essential functions which
the Universal House of Justice discharges, the specific provisions requiring
its democratic election by the representatives of the faithfulthese
combine to demonstrate the truth that this divinely revealed Order, which
can never be identified with any of the standard types of government referred
to by Aristotle in his works, embodies and blends with the spiritual verities
on which it is based the beneficent elements which are to be found in each
one of them. The admitted evils inherent in each of these systems being
rigidly and permanently excluded, this unique Order, how ever long it may
endure and however extensive its ramifications, cannot ever degenerate into
any form of despotism, of oligarchy, or of demagogy which must sooner or
later corrupt the machinery of all man-made and essentially defective political
institutions.
Dearly-beloved friends! Significant as are the origins of this mighty administrative
structure, and however unique its features, the happenings that may be said
to have heralded its birth and signalized the initial stage of its evolution
seem no less remarkable. How striking, how edifying the contrast between
the process of slow and steady consolidation that characterizes the growth
of its infant strength and the devastating onrush of the forces of disintegration
that are assailing the outworn institutions, both religious and secular,
of present-day society!
The vitality which the organic institutions of this great, this ever expanding
Order so strongly exhibit; the obstacles which the high courage, the undaunted
resolution of its administrators have already surmounted; the fire of an
unquenchable enthusiasm that glows with undiminished fervor in the hearts
of its itinerant teachers; the heights of self-sacrifice which its champion-builders
are now attaining; the breadth of vision, the confident hope, the creative
joy, the inward peace, the uncompromising integrity, the exemplary discipline,
the unyielding unity and solidarity which its stalwart defenders manifest;
the degree to which its moving Spirit has shown itself capable of assimilating
the diversified elements within its pale, of cleansing them of all forms
of prejudice and of fusing them with its own structure these are evidences
of a power which a disillusioned and sadly shaken society can ill afford
to ignore.
Compare these splendid manifestations of the spirit animating this vibrant
body of the Faith of Bahá'u'lláh with the cries and agony,
the follies and vanities, the bitterness and prejudices, the wickedness
and divisions of an ailing and chaotic world. Witness the fear that torments
its leaders and paralyzes the action of its blind and bewildered statesmen.
How fierce the hatreds, how false the ambitions, how petty the pursuits,
how deep-rooted the suspicions of its peoples! How disquieting the lawlessness,
the corruption, the unbelief that are eating into the vitals of a tottering
civilization!
Might not this process of steady deterioration which is insidiously invading
so many departments of human activity and thought be regarded as a necessary
accompaniment to the rise of this almighty Arm of Bahá'u'lláh?
Might we not look upon the momentous happenings which, in the course of
the past twenty years, have so deeply agitated every continent of the earth,
as ominous signs simultaneously proclaiming the agonies of a disintegrating
civilization and the birth pangs of that World Orderthat Ark of human
salvationthat must needs arise upon its ruins?
The catastrophic fall of mighty monarchies and empires in the European continent,
allusions to some of which may be found in the prophecies of Bahá'u'lláh;
the decline that has set in, and is still continuing, in the fortunes of
the Shí'ah hierarchy in His own native land; the fall of the
Qájár dynasty, the traditional enemy of His Faith; the overthrow
of the Sultanate and the Caliphate, the sustaining pillars of Sunní
Islám, to which the destruction of Jerusalem in the latter part of
the first century of the Christian era offers a striking parallel; the wave
of secularization which is invading the Muhammadan ecclesiastical institutions
in Egypt and sapping the loyalty of its staunchest supporters; the humiliating
blows that have afflicted some of the most powerful Churches of Christendom
in Russia, in Western Europe and Central America; the dissemination of those
subversive doctrines that are undermining the foundations and overthrowing
the structure of seemingly impregnable strongholds in the political and
social spheres of human activity; the signs of an impending catastrophe,
strangely reminiscent of the Fall of the Roman Empire in the West, which
threatens to engulf the whole structure of present-day civilizationall
witness to the tumult which the birth of this mighty Organ of the Religion
of Bahá'u'lláh has cast into the world a tumult which
will grow in scope and in intensity as the implications of this constantly
evolving Scheme are more fully understood and its ramifications more widely
extended over the surface of the globe.
A word more in conclusion. The rise and establishment of this Administrative
Orderthe shell that shields and enshrines so precious a gem
constitutes the hall-mark of this second and formative age of the Bahá'í
era. It will come to be regarded, as it recedes farther and farther from
our eyes, as the chief agency empowered to usher in the concluding phase,
the consummation of this glorious Dispensation.
Let no one, while this System is still in its infancy, misconceive its character,
belittle its significance or misrepresent its purpose. The bedrock on which
this Administrative Order is founded is God's immutable Purpose for mankind
in this day. The Source from which it derives its inspiration is no one
less than Bahá'u'lláh Himself . Its shield and defender are
the embattled hosts of the Abhá Kingdom. Its seed is the blood of
no less than twenty thousand martyrs who have offered up their lives that
it may be born and flourish. The axis round which its institutions revolve
are the authentic provisions of the Will and Testament of 'Abdu'l-Bahá.
Its guiding principles are the truths which He Who is the unerring Interpreter
of the teachings of our Faith has so clearly enunciated in His public addresses
throughout the West. The laws that govern its operation and limit its functions
are those which have been expressly ordained in the Kitáb-i-Aqdas.
The seat round which its spiritual, its humanitarian and administrative
activities will cluster are the Mashriqu'l-Adhkár and
its Dependencies. The pillars that sustain its authority and buttress its
structure are the twin institutions of the Guardianship and of the Universal
House of Justice. The central, the underlying aim which animates it is the
establishment of the New World Order as adumbrated by Bahá'u'lláh.
The methods it employs, the standard it inculcates, incline it to neither
East nor West, neither Jew nor Gentile, neither rich nor poor, neither white
nor colored. Its watchword is the unification of the human race; its standard
the "Most Great Peace"; its consummation the advent
of that golden millenniumthe Day when the kingdoms of this world shall
have become the Kingdom of God Himself, the Kingdom of Baháu'lláh.