Chapter 2
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Part II
Major Themes
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page 113
Persecution of the Bahá'ís in Iran
During the past five years, the historical dialectic of
triumph and disaster has operated simultaneously within
the Cause of God. The Army of Light has sustained the loss
of six Hands of the Cause and waves of bitter persecution
which have again engulfed the long-suffering community in
Iran, and have resulted in the razing of the House of the Báb,
the demolition of Bahá'u'lláh's ancestral home in Takur, and
the martyrdom of scores of valiant souls. Yet these disasters
have called forth fresh energies in the hearts of the friends,
have fed the deep roots of the Cause and given rise to a great
harvest of signal victories. Chief among these are the successful
conclusion of the Five Year Plan; the launching of the
Seven Year Plan, now in the final year of its second phase and
unprecedented proclamation of the Faith to Heads of States,
parliaments and parliamentarians, government ministers
and officials, leaders of thought and people prominent in the
professions, resulting in a change of attitude on the part of the
mass media, which now increasingly approach us for information
about the Cause....
Above and beyond all these is the unity in action achieved
by the Bahá'í world community in its efforts to enlist public
support for the dearly-loved, greatly-admired, cruelly-beleaguered
Iranian believers, a unity further manifested in an
outpouring of funds to replace their former liberal contributions,
and an upsurge of personal dedication rarely seen on
so universal a scale and holding the highest promise for the
future.
—
Ridván 1983
The soul-stirring events in Bahá'u'lláh's native land and
the concomitant advance into the theater of world affairs of
the agencies of His Administrative Order have combined to
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bring into focus new possibilities in the evolution of the
Bahá'í world community. Our Ridván message this year
captured these implications in its reference to the opening
before us of a wider horizon in whose light can dimly be
discerned new pursuits and undertakings upon which we
must soon embark. These portend our greater involvement
in the development of the social and economic life of peoples.
—
October 20, 1983
A Highlight of this period of the Seven Year Plan has been
the phenomenal proclamation accorded the Faith in the wake
of the unabating persecutions in Iran; a new interest in its
Teachings has been aroused on a wide scale. Simultaneously,
more and more people from all strata of society frantically
seek their true identity, which is to say, although they would
not so plainly admit it, the spiritual meaning of their lives;
prominent among these seekers are the young. Not only does
this knowledge open fruitful avenues for Bahá'í initiative, it
also indicates to young Bahá'ís a particular responsibility so
to teach the Cause and live the life as to give vivid expression
to those virtues that would fulfill the spiritual yearning of
their peers.
For the sake of preserving such virtues much innocent
blood has been shed in the past, and much, even today, is
being sacrificed in Iran by young and old alike. Consider, for
example, the instances in Shíráz last summer of the six young
women, their ages ranging from 18 to 25 years, whose lives
were snuffed out by the hangman's noose. All faced attempted
inducements to recant their Faith; all refused to
deny their Beloved. Look also at the accounts of the astounding
fortitude shown over and over again by children and
youth who were subjected to the interrogations and abuses of
teachers and mullahs and were expelled from school for
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upholding their beliefs. It, moreover, bears noting that under
the restrictions so cruelly imposed on their community, the
youth rendered signal services, placing their energies at the
disposal of Bahá'í institutions throughout the country. No
splendor of speech could give more fitting testimony to their
spiritual commitment and fidelity than these pure acts of
selflessness and devotion. In virtually no other place on earth
is so great a price for faith required of the Bahá'ís. Nor could
there be found more willing, more radiant bearers of the cup
of sacrifice than the valiant Bahá'í youth of Iran. Might it,
then, not be reasonably expected that you, the youth and
young adults living at such an extraordinary time, witnessing
such stirring examples of the valor of your Iranian fellows,
and exercising such freedom of movement, would sally forth,
"unrestrained as the wind," into the field of Bahá'í action?
—
January 3, 1984
The year just closing has been overshadowed by the
continued persecution of the friends in Iran. They have been
forced to disband their administrative structure, they have
been harassed, dispossessed, dismissed from employment,
made homeless and their children are refused education.
Some six hundred men, women and children are now in
prison, some denied any contact with their friends and
relatives, some subjected to torture and all under pressure to
recant their faith. Their heroic and exemplary steadfastness
has been the mainspring in bringing the Cause out of obscurity,
and it is the consolation of their hearts that their suffering
results in unprecedented advances in teaching and proclaiming
the divine Message to a world so desperately in need of
its healing power. For this they embrace the final service of
martyrdom. Our obligation is crystal clear. We cannot fail
them now. Sacrificial action in teaching and promoting the
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Cause of God must follow every new instance of publicity
arising from their persecution. Let this be our message to
them of love and spiritual union.
—
Ridván 1984
The opening of that Plan coincided with the recrudescence
of savage persecution of the Bahá'í community in Iran,
a deliberate effort to eliminate the Cause of God from the land
of its birth. The heroic steadfastness of the Persian friends has
been the mainspring of tremendous international attention
focused on the Cause, eventually bringing it to the agenda of
the General Assembly of the United Nations, and, together
with world-wide publicity in all the media, accomplishing its
emergence from the obscurity which characterized and sheltered
the first period of its life. This dramatic process impelled
the Universal House of Justice to address a Statement on
Peace to the Peoples of the World and arrange for its delivery
to Heads of State and the generality of the rulers.
—
Ridván 1986
The steadfastness of the sorely-tried Persian believers
continues to be the mainspring of this world-wide attention
increasingly being focused upon the Faith. While the brutal
executions of heroic martyrs are now less frequent, the
harassment and deprivations, vilification and plundering of
the long-persecuted community continue — more than 200
are still in prison — giving the representatives of the Bahá'í
International Community at the United Nations firm grounds
for strong and persistent appeals, which have aroused the
concern of the General Assembly itself, and resulted in
representations to the Iranian Government on behalf of the
defenseless Bahá'ís by the Commission on Human Rights, and
by many powerful nations including the various governments
constituting the European Community.
—
Ridván 1987
page 117
The spark which ignited the mounting interest in the
Cause of Bahá'u'lláh was the heroic fortitude and patience of
the beloved friends in Iran, which moved the Bahá'í world
community to conduct a persistent, carefully orchestrated
program of appeal to the conscience of the world. This vast
undertaking, involving the entire community acting unitedly
through its Administrative Order, was accompanied by
equally vigorous and visible activities of that community in
other spheres which have been detailed separately. Nonetheless,
we are impelled to mention that an important outcome
of this extensive exertion is our recognition of a new stage in
the external affairs of the Cause, characterized by a marked
maturation of National Spiritual Assemblies in their growing
relations with governmental and non-governmental organizations
and with the public in general....
At one of the darkest periods in the prolonged oppression
of the dearly-loved, resolutely steadfast friends in Iran, Shoghi
Effendi was moved to comfort them in a letter of astounding
insight. "It is the shedding of the sacred blood of the martyrs
in Persia" he wrote, "which, in this shining era, this resplendent,
this gem-studded Bahá'í age, shall change the face of
the earth into high heaven and, as revealed in the Tablets,
raise up the tabernacle of the oneness of mankind in the very
heart of the world, reveal to men's eyes the reality of the unity
of the human race, establish the Most Great Peace, make of
this lower realm a mirror for the Abhá Paradise, and establish
beyond any doubt before all the peoples of the world the
truth of the verse: '...the day when the Earth shall be changed
into another Earth."' Reflections like these, in adducing such
wondrous future consequences from the horrific suffering to
which our Iranian friends are subjected, illuminate the opportunity
and the challenge facing us all at this crucial
moment in the fortunes of the Cause.
—
Ridván 1988
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No reference to such marvelous progress could fail to
acknowledge the spiritual and social impact effected by the
decade-long episode of persecution inflicted with such cruel
excesses on our Iranian fellow-believers. Only in the future
will the full consequence of their sacrifice be known, but we
can clearly recognize its influence on the extraordinary success
in proclaiming the Faith and in establishing good relations
with governmental authorities and major non-governmental
organizations around the world. It is therefore with profound
thanksgiving and joy that we announce the release of
the vast majority of Bahá'í prisoners in Iran. Even as we
rejoice we cannot forget that there remain to be realized the
full emancipation of the Iranian Bahá'í community and the
assurance of the human rights of its members in all respects.
—
Ridván 1989
The continuing efforts to secure the emancipation of the
Bahá'ís of Iran evolved to a new stage. For the first time, a
United Nations representative was able officially to meet on
Iranian soil with a representative of the proscribed Bahá'í
community. The result was recorded in a report to the United
Nations Commission on Human Rights, at whose recent
session in Geneva a resolution on Iran mentioning the Bahá'ís
was again adopted. In a corollary action of far-reaching
importance the United States House of Representatives unanimously
adopted a resolution calling for the emancipation of
the Iranian Bahá'í community and outlining steps to be taken
by the United States Government towards this end; a similar
resolution is before the Senate.
—
Ridván 1990
With sorrowful hearts we have received information of
the execution in Evin Prison in Tehran on March 18, 1992, of
Mr. Bahman Samandari, member of a distinguished Bahá'í
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family who had been active in the affairs of the Bahá'í
community. No reason for his execution has been given by
the judicial or prison authorities, nor have they disclosed the
location of his grave.
This tragic surprise is the more shocking for the fact that
the whole matter has been shrouded in secrecy....
It is a source of outrage to the international Bahá'í community
that after a cessation of executions of Bahá'ís for a
period of three and a half years, such a brutal act could again
be perpetrated against an innocent community. It belies the
position publicly and repeatedly affirmed by the Iranian
government that Bahá'ís are not being persecuted for their
religious beliefs.
—
April 8, 1992
Emergence from Obscurity
The emergence from obscurity, which has been so marked
a feature of the Cause of God during the first five years of the
Seven Year Plan, has been attended by changes, both external
and internal, affecting the Bahá'í world community. Externally,
there are signs of a crystallization of a public image of
the Cause largely uninformed, however friendly — while
internally growing maturity and confidence are indicated by
increased administrative ability, a desire for Bahá'í communities
to render service to the larger body of mankind and a
deepening understanding of the relevance of the divine
Message to modern problems. Both these aspects of change
must be taken into consideration as we enter the third and
final phase of the Seven Year Plan.
—
Ridván 1984
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The entrance of the Cause onto the world scene is apparent
from a number of public statements in which we have
been characterized as "model citizens," "gentle," "law-abiding,"
"not guilty of any political offense or crime"; all excellent
but utterly inadequate insofar as the reality of the Faith and
its aims and purposes are concerned. Nevertheless people
are willing to hear about the Faith, and the opportunity must
be seized. Persistently greater and greater efforts must be
made to acquaint the leaders of the world, in all departments
of life, with the true nature of Bahá'u'lláh's revelation as the
sole hope for the pacification and unification of the world.
Simultaneously so that we may be seen to be a growing
community, while universal observance by the friends of the
Bahá'í laws of personal living will assert the fullness of, and
arouse a desire to share in, the Bahá'í way of life. By all these
means the public image of the Faith will become, gradually
but constantly, nearer to its true character.
—
Ridván 1984
As we enter the final year of the Seven Year Plan, confidence
of victory and a growing sense of the opening of a new
stage in the onward march of the Faith must arouse in every
Bahá'í heart feelings of gratitude and eager expectation.
Victory in the Plan is now within sight and at its completion
the summation of its achievements may well astonish us all.
But the great, the historic feature of this period is the emergence
of the Faith from obscurity, promoted by the steadfast
heroism of the renowned, the indefatigable, dearly-loved
Bahá'í community of Bahá'u'lláh's and the
Báb's native land.
This dramatic change in the status of the Faith of God,
occurring at so chaotic a moment in the world's history when
statesmen and leaders and governors of human institutions
are witnessing, with increasing despair, the bankruptcy and
utter ineffectiveness of their best efforts to stay the tide of
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disruption, forces upon us, the Bahá'ís, the obligation to
consider anew and ponder deeply the beloved Guardian's
statement that "The principle of the Oneness of mankind — the
pivot round which all the teachings of Bahá'u'lláh
revolve — ... implies an organic change in the structure of
present day society, an change such as the world has not yet
experienced."
—
Ridván 1985
The present requirements of a Faith whose responsibilities
rapidly increase in relation to its rise from obscurity
impose an inescapable duty on the youth to ensure that their
lives reflect to a marked degree the transforming power of the
new Revelation they have embraced. Otherwise, by what
example are the claims of Bahá'u'lláh to be judged? How is
His healing Message to be acknowledged by a skeptical
humanity if it produces no noticeable effect upon the young,
who are seen to be among the most energetic, the most pliable
and promising elements in any society?
—
May 8, 1985
A silver lining to the dark picture which has overshadowed
most of this century now brightens the horizon. It is
discernible in the new tendencies impelling the social processes
at work throughout the world, in the evidences of an
accelerated trend towards peace. In the Faith of God, it is the
growing strength of the Order of Bahá'u'lláh as its banner
rises to more stately heights. It is a strength that attracts. The
media are giving increasing attention to the Bahá'í world
community; authors are acknowledging its existence in a
growing number of articles, books and reference works, one
of the most highly respected of which recently listed the Faith
as the most widely spread religion after Christianity. A
remarkable display of interest in this community by governments,
civil authorities, prominent personalities and
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humanitarian organizations is increasingly apparent. Not
only are the community's laws and principles, organization
and way of life being investigated, but its advice and active
help are also being sought for the alleviation of social problems
and the carrying out of humanitarian activities.
—
Ridván 1988
The spark which ignited the mounting interest in the
Cause of Bahá'u'lláh was the heroic fortitude and patience of
the beloved friends in Iran, which moved the Bahá'í world
community to conduct a persistent, carefully orchestrated
program of appeal to the conscience of the world. This vast
undertaking, involving the entire community acting unitedly
through its Administrative Order, was accompanied by
equally vigorous and visible activities of that community in
other spheres which have been detailed separately. Nonetheless,
we are impelled to mention that an important outcome
of this extensive exertion is our recognition of a new stage in
the external affairs of the Cause, characterized by a marked
maturation of National Spiritual Assemblies in their growing
relations with governmental and non-governmental organizations
and with the public in general.
This recognition prompted a meeting in Germany last
November of national Bahá'í external affairs representatives
from Europe and North America, together with senior representatives
of the Offices of the Bahá'í International
Community, intent on effecting greater coordination of their
work. This was a preliminary step towards the gathering of
more and more National Spiritual Assemblies into a harmoniously
functioning, international network capable of
executing global undertakings in this rapidly expanding
field. Related to these developments was the significant
achievement of international recognition accorded the Faith
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through its formal acceptance last October into membership
of the Network on Conservation and Religion of the renowned
World Wide Fund for Nature.
—
Ridván 1988
Just as the community has extended its ramifications
internally, it has also expanded its relations, influence and
appeal externally in a variety of ways, some astonishing in
their breadth and potential. A few examples will suffice:
Through the newly established Office of the Environment,
the Bahá'í International Community, on its own initiative
and in collaboration with other environmental organizations,
re-instituted the annual World Forestry Charter
Gathering founded in 1945 by the renowned Richard St.
Barbe Baker; since then the Office of the Environment has
been invited to participate in important events sponsored by
international organizations concerned with environmental
questions. The Bahá'í International Community has been
involved in the work of the Task Force for Literacy under the
aegis of UNESCO and was invited to participate in the World
Conference on Education for All held in Thailand, where its
representative was asked to assume a variety of highly visible
and important tasks which gave prominence to the
Bahá'í community. Steps were taken, with the encouragement
of a Fijian senior Government official, to open in Suva
a branch of the Bahá'í International Community's United
Nations Office for the Pacific region. The University of Maryland
in the United States announced its decision to establish
"The Bahá'í Chair for World Peace" in its Center for International
Development and Conflict Management, which will
give rise to a great increase in academic efforts to examine the
Cause of Bahá'u'lláh. At almost the same time the National
Spiritual Assembly of India announced that an agreement
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had been reached to establish a Chair for Bahá'í Studies at the
University of Indore.
—
Ridván 1990
Another illustration of the rising authority of the Cause of
Bahá'u'lláh in the public mind emerges from Germany, where
the Federal Constitutional Court, the highest legal authority
in the land, rendered a decision of capital importance to the
recognition of the Faith. A series of lower courts had refused
to register the by-laws of a Local Spiritual Assembly on the
grounds that the authority granted to the National Spiritual
Assembly in that document violated the legal principle requiring
the autonomy of all legally incorporated associations.
The issues involved are indeed complex and cannot be elaborated
here. Suffice it to say that the Federal Constitutional
Court upheld the appeal of the Local Spiritual Assembly in a
long, closely-reasoned decision in which, among other things,
it affirmed the right of the Bahá'í community to gain legal
capacity in the very shape ordained in the scriptures of the
Bahá'í Faith and stated that its nature as a recognized religion
was unquestionably confirmed by its inherent character, by
public knowledge, and by the testimony of scholars of comparative
religion. So significant was the verdict in the Court's
own estimation that it took the rare step of issuing a statement
to the press explaining its decision. This outstanding act will
have implications for the Bahá'í community far beyond the
borders of a united Germany.
Yet another instance of the growing public appreciation
for the penetrating perspectives of the Cause involves the
Republic of South Africa, where the National Spiritual Assembly, taking
advantage of the initiatives of the Government
towards resolving the decades-long problem of apartheid,
decided to submit its views for the drafting of a new constitution
for the country. The President of the South African
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Law Commission, the judge acting on behalf of the Government,
who received the National Spiritual Assembly's
submission from a delegation appointed by it, commented
that the Bahá'ís were the only group thus far whose ideas had
provided a spiritual and moral foundation for a constitution.
Whatever may be the individual effects of any one of
these aforementioned developments — and of such others as
the appearance of a representative of the Bahá'í International
Community as the only non-Buddhist speaker invited to
address a public meeting held in conjunction with the Asian
Buddhist Conference for Peace in Mongolia; the specific
mention of the Bahá'ís by Pope John Paul II at a reception
during his recent visit to Burundi; the official listing of the
Bahá'í Faith as one of the common religions in Tuvalu; the
International Exposition on Education for Peace sponsored
by the Brazilian National Spiritual Assembly with the participation
of 23 embassies and educational institutions — one
thing is abundantly clear: the cumulative impact across the
globe affirms the emergence of the Faith from obscurity. Such
marks of increasing public recognition of the true character
and rich potentialities of the Bahá'í community are a distinctive
feature of the advancement of the Faith in the fourth
epoch of the Formative Age.
—
Ridván 1991
The further emergence of the Faith from obscurity is
reflected in distinctive ways. In learned circles, in reference
works and in the media, the Faith is increasingly being
referred to as a "principal" or "major" world religion. Media
coverage of the Faith's activities has increased voluminously
by the intensified efforts of the friends in proclamation activities,
but more important is the fact that the media are showing
an independent interest in the Bahá'í community and are
initiating contacts with it in various parts of the world. The
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exposure of influential segments of the public to Bahá'í ideas
in such areas as peace, the environment, status of women,
education and literacy, has induced a response which increasingly
calls upon the Bahá'ís to participate with others in
a range of projects associated with governments or with
non-governmental organizations.
Moreover, such exposure is creating in the public mind
the realization that the Faith has answers to current problems
and thus the expectation that the Bahá'í community should
take a more active part in public affairs. The notable success
of the activities of the Bahá'í International Community's
Office of the Environment, established during the Plan, amply
illustrates the nature of these developments. Furthermore,
the formal relationship which the Bahá'í International Community
established with the Conservation and Religion
Network of the World Wide Fund for Nature and with the
World Conference on Religion and Peace, in conjunction
with the numerous such relationships established by National
and Local Spiritual Assemblies in their respective
jurisdictions, reflects a trend in the Faith's emergence as an
entity to be reckoned with. Altogether, the drive of the
ramified proclamation campaign has produced a public
resonance about the Faith, which can be said to be known to
the most significant public institutions and prominent persons
on earth.
—
Ridván 1992
ENCOURAGING INDICATIONS GROWING PUBLIC
INTEREST IN FAST-APPROACHING EVENTS HOLY YEAR
NOW GREATLY REINFORCED BY WELCOME NEWS
FROM BRAZIL OF FORMAL TRIBUTE TO FOUNDER
FAITH BY BRAZILIAN FEDERAL CHAMBER OF DEPUTIES
WHICH, FOLLOWING REQUEST BY A GROUP OF
ITS OWN MEMBERS, HAS TAKEN DECISION HOLD
page 127
SOLEMN SESSION ITS BODY ON 29 MAY TO MARK
CENTENARY ASCENSION BAHA'U'LLAH. REPRESENTATIVE
BAHA'I NATIONAL SPIRITUAL ASSEMBLY HAS
BEEN OFFICIALLY REQUESTED PARTICIPATE. INVITATIONS
TO BE EXTENDED BY CHAMBER TO ALL
SENATORS AND FOREIGN AMBASSADORS. OBSERVERS
FROM VARIOUS LOCAL BAHA'I COMMUNITIES
WILL ALSO BE PRESENT. MOMENTOUS DECISION YET
ANOTHER SIGNIFICANT STEP IN DIVINELY PROPELLED
PROCESS LEADING TO EVENTUAL WORLDWIDE RECOGNITION
ACCLAMATION FAITH OF GOD IN THIS
DAY.
—
March 30, 1992
The Processes of Integration
and Disintegration
The observable acceleration, during the past decade, of
the two processes described by our beloved Guardian, the
disintegration of the old order and the progress and consolidation
of the new World Order of Bahá'u'lláh, may well come
to be regarded by future historians as one of the most remarkable
features of this period. The recent increase in this very
acceleration is even more remarkable. Both within and without
the Cause of God, powerful forces are operating to bring
to a climax the twin tendencies of this portentous century.
Among the many evidences which reveal this process may be
cited, on the one hand, the continual increase of lawlessness,
terrorism, economic confusion, immorality and the growing
danger from the proliferation of weapons of destruction, and
on the other, the world-wide, divinely propelled expansion,
consolidation and rapid emergence into the limelight of
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world affairs of the Cause itself, a process crowned by the
wonderful efflorescence of Mount Carmel, the mountain of
God, whose Divine springtime is now so magnificently
burgeoning.
—
Ridván 1983
To visualize, however imperfectly, the challenges that
engage us now, we have only to reflect, in the light of our
sacred Writings, upon the confluence of favorable circumstances
brought about by the accelerated unfolding of the
Divine Plan over nearly five decades, by the untold potencies
of the spiritual drama being played out in Iran, and by the
creative energy stimulated by awareness of the approaching
end of the twentieth century.
—
January 3, 1984
It [the Seven Year Plan] will have run its course through
a period of unprecedented world confusion, bearing witness
to the vitality, the irresistible advance and socially creative
power of the Cause of God, standing out in sharp contrast to
the accelerating decline in the fortunes of the generality of
mankind.
Beloved Friends, the bounties and protection with which
the Blessed Beauty is nurturing and sheltering the infant
organism of His new world order through this violent period
of transition and trial, give ample assurance of victories to
come if we but follow the path of His guidance. He rewards
our humble efforts with effusions of grace which bring not
only advancement to the Cause but assurance and happiness
to our hearts, so that we may indeed look upon our neighbors
with bright and shining faces, confident that from our services
now will eventuate that blissful future which our
descendants will inherit, glorifying Bahá'u'lláh, the Prince of
Peace, the Redeemer of Mankind.
—
Ridván 1984
page 129
The dark horizon faced by a world which has failed to
recognize the Promised One, the Source of its salvation,
acutely affects the outlook of the younger generations; their
distressing lack of hope and their indulgence in desperate but
futile and even dangerous solutions make a direct claim on
the remedial attention of Bahá'í youth, who, through their
knowledge of that Source and the bright vision with which
they have thus been endowed, cannot hesitate to impart to
their despairing fellow youth the restorative joy, the constructive
hope, the radiant assurances of Bahá'u'lláh's
stupendous Revelation.
—
May 8, 1995
Shoghi Effendi perceived in the organic life of the Cause
a dialectic of victory and crisis. The unprecedented triumphs,
generated by the adamantine steadfastness of the Iranian
friends, will inevitably provoke opposition to test and increase
our strength. Let every Bahá'í in the world be assured
that whatever may befall this growing Faith of God is but
incontrovertible evidence of the loving care with which the
King of Glory and His martyred Herald, through the incomparable
Center of His Covenant and our beloved Guardian,
are preparing His humble followers for ultimate and magnificent
triumph. Our loving prayers are with you all.
—
January 2, 1986
This day the Bahá'í world has already seen in Africa, the
Pacific, in Asia and in Latin America, and this process of entry
by troops must, in the present plan, be augmented and
spread to other countries for, as the Guardian stated in this
same letter, it "will be the prelude to that long-awaited hour
when a mass conversion on the part of these same nations and
races, and as a direct result of a chain of events, momentous
and possibly catastrophic in nature, and which cannot as yet
page 130
be even dimly visualized, will suddenly revolutionize the
fortunes of the Faith, derange the equilibrium of the world,
and reinforce a thousandfold the numerical strength as well
as the material power and the spiritual authority of the Faith
of Bahá'u'lláh." This is the time for which we must now
prepare ourselves; this is the hour whose coming it is our task
to hasten.
At this climacteric of human history, we are called upon
to rise up in sacrificial endeavor, our eyes on the awe-inspiring
responsibilities which such developments will place
upon Bahá'í institutions and individual believers in every
land, and our hearts filled with unshakable confidence in the
guiding Hand of the Founder of our Faith. That our Beloved
Lord will arouse His followers in every land to a mighty
united effort is our ardent prayer at the Sacred Threshold.
—
August 31, 1987
Through the shadow of confusion deranging present-day
society, there is a far glimmer, yet so faint but discernible,
of an approach, slow but definite, towards the culmination of
the three collateral processes envisaged by the beloved Guardian,
namely: the emergence of the Lesser Peace, the
construction of the buildings on the Arc on Mount Carmel
and the evolution of National and Local Spiritual Assemblies.
Indeed, throughout the Six Year Plan, during this
fourth epoch of the Formative Age, and particularly during
the year just ended, this glimmer, still so distant, has drawn
closer. For who could have imagined, even at the beginning
of this Plan, the sudden changes of attitude moving political
leaders in some of the most troubled spots on the planet to
break away from seemingly intractable positions — changes
which in recent months have prompted editorial writers to
ask: "Is peace breaking out?" To any observer conscious of
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the divine Source of such occurrences, this development
must certainly be encouraging, although the precise circumstances
attending the establishment of the Lesser Peace are
not known to us; even its exact timing is concealed in the
Major Plan of God.
The two other processes, however, are directly influenced
by the degree to which the followers of Bahá'u'lláh
fulfill their clearly delineated tasks. There is good reason to
take heart. For have not the architectural concepts for the
remaining buildings on the Arc been adopted and the detailed
specifications which will effect their realization as
splendid monumental structures been undertaken? Have we
not witnessed the increasing strength of National and Local
Spiritual Assemblies in their ability to conceive and execute
plans, in their capacity to deal with governmental authorities
and social organizations, to respond to public calls upon their
services and to collaborate with others in projects of social
and economic development? Are these Assemblies not reinforced
by the alert, loving support of the Continental
Counselors, the Auxiliary Board members and their assistants,
all of whose burgeoning energies are being skillfully
coordinated by the International Teaching Centre — an institution
whose augmented membership has already displayed
a verve, a vision and a versatility evocative of warm admiration?
Tempting as it may be to dwell upon the positive features
of our progress, better that we should be spurred on by them
than that we should rest on our achievements. Let us continue,
therefore, undeflected and confident, to seize the
magnificent possibilities which the mix and blend of these
ongoing processes and events allow for actualizing the immediate
interests of our sacred Cause.
—
Ridván 1989
page 132
FAR-REACHING EVENTS BEING ENACTED WORLD
STAGE, PARTICULARLY IN EASTERN EUROPE AND
SOVIET UNION, ON THRESHOLD FINAL FATE-LADEN
DECADE CENTURY OF LIGHT, PROVIDE FURTHER DRAMATIC
EVIDENCE RESISTLESS OPERATION OF GOD'S
MAJOR PLAN FOR TRANSFORMATION OF HUMAN
SOCIETY. RAPID UNFORESEEN DEVELOPMENTS NECESSITATE
CORRESPONDING PARALLEL ACCELERATION
IN LIFE-GIVING ENTERPRISES BEING PURSUED
BY INHERITORS BAHA'U'LLAH'S RESPLENDENT
REVELATION.
REJOICE THEREFORE ANNOUNCE LAUNCHING AT
RIDVAN OF SUBSIDIARY TWO YEAR TEACHING PLAN
FOR VAST REMAINING REACHES EASTERN EUROPE
AND ASIA. MOMENTOUS STEP INVOLVES FURTHER
SYSTEMATIC UNFOLDMENT PROVISIONS TABLETS
MASTER-PLAN OF 'ABDU'L-BAHA ALREADY IN ADVANCED
STAGE OF OPERATION OTHER AREAS
PLANET.
—
February 8, 1990
Having ended a year of momentous achievements, we
stand at the threshold of the last decade of this radiant
twentieth century facing an immediate future of immense
challenges and dazzling prospects. The swiftness of events
during the past year is indicative of the acceleration, as the
hundredth anniversary of Bahá'u'lláh's Ascension approaches,
of the spiritual forces released with the advent of
His revolutionizing mission. It is an acceleration which, in its
suddenness and wide transformational impact on social
thought and on political entities, has aroused feelings of
delight as to its immediate effects and of bewilderment as to
its real meaning and destined outcome, prompting the astonished
editors of an outstanding newspaper, finding
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themselves bereft of explanations, to attribute it to the workings
of an "Invisible Hand."
For the followers of Bahá'u'lláh throughout the world
there can be no doubt as to the Divine Source and clear
intention of these extraordinary happenings. Let us rejoice,
therefore, in the wondrous signs of the beneficence of God's
abounding grace....
Our dear and valued Co-workers: It is at such a time of
profound anticipation for us that world society finds itself in
a critical phase of its transition to the character envisioned for
it by the Lord of the Age. The winds of God rage on, upsetting
old systems, adding impetus to the deep yearning for a new
order in human affairs, and opening the way for the hoisting
of the banner of Bahá'u'lláh in lands from which it has
hitherto been barred. The rapidity of the changes being
wrought stirs up the expectations which inspire our dreams
in the closing decade of the twentieth century. The situation
is equally a bright portent and a weighty challenge.
It is portentous of the profound change in the structure of
present-day society which attainment to the Lesser Peace
implies. Hopeful as are the signs, we cannot forget that the
dark passage of the Age of Transition has not been fully
traversed; it is as yet long, slippery and tortuous. For godlessness
is rife, materialism rampant. Nationalism and racism
still work their treachery in men's hearts, and humanity
remains blind to the spiritual foundations of the solution to
its economic woes. For the Bahá'í community the situation is
a particular challenge, because time is running out and we
have serious commitments to keep. The most immediate of
these are: One, to teach the Cause of God and build its
divinely ordained institutions throughout the world with
wisdom, courage and urgency; and two, to complete on
Mount Carmel the construction of the Terraces of the Shrine
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of the Báb and the remaining buildings on the Arc of the
World Administrative Center of the Faith. The one calls for
resolute, sustained and confident action on the part of the
individual believer. The other requires a liberal outpouring
of funds. Both are intimately related.
—
Ridván 1990
That there are indications that the Lesser Peace cannot be
too far distant, that the local and national institutions of the
Administrative Order are growing steadily in experience
and influence, that the plans for the construction of the
remaining administrative edifices on the Arc are in an advanced
stage that these hopeful conditions make more
discernible the shaping of the dynamic synchronization envisaged
by Shoghi Effendi, no honest observer can deny.
As a community clearly in the vanguard of the constructive
forces at work on the planet, and as one which has access
to proven knowledge, let us be about our Father's business.
He will, from His glorious retreats on high, release liberal
effusions of His grace upon our humble efforts, astonishing
us with the incalculable victories of His conquering power. It
is for the unceasing blessings of such a Father that we shall
continue to supplicate on behalf of each and every one of you
at the Sacred Threshold.
—
Ridván 1990
No earthly tongue can voice the gratitude we feel for the
extraordinary bestowals vouchsafed by the Blessed Beauty
to His world-wide community and to the World Centre of
His Faith during the year just ended. We bow our heads in
humility before the striking evidences of His sustaining grace
and all-compelling might.
The overwhelming danger which, as a result of the turmoil
in the Middle East, enveloped the Holy Land during the
latter part of the year receded without halting or even seriously
page 135
hampering the operation of the Bahá'í administration.
The situation was a poignant reminder of the contrast between
the unobtrusive, steadily developing, distinctly
integrative System of Bahá'u'lláh and the turbulent character
of the Age of Transition, "whose tribulations," Shoghi Effendi
avers, "are the precursors of that Era of blissful felicity which
is to incarnate God's ultimate purpose for all mankind." It
was another of the "ominous signs simultaneously proclaiming
the agonies of a disintegrating civilization and the birth
pangs of that World Order — that Ark of human salvation — that
must needs arise upon its ruins."
The forces which united the remedial reactions of so
many nations to the sudden crisis in this region demonstrated
beyond any doubt the necessity of the principle of
collective security prescribed by Bahá'u'lláh more than a
century ago as a means of resolving conflict. While the
international arrangement envisioned by Him for the full
application of this principle is far from having been adopted
by the rulers of mankind, a long step towards the behavior
outlined for the nations by the Lord of the Age has thus been
taken. How illuminating are Bahá'u'lláh's words foreshadowing
the future reorientation of the nations: "Be united, O
concourse of the sovereigns of the world," He wrote, "for
thereby will the tempest of discord be stilled amongst you,
and your peoples find rest. Should any one among you take
up arms against another, rise ye all against him, for this is
naught but manifest justice."
Indeed, from whatever direction we gaze, the power of
Bahá'u'lláh's Revelation is visibly at work in the world. In the
call for a new world order, which has issued like a refrain
from the statements of political leaders and influential thinkers,
even when they themselves were incapable of defining
their own meaning, can be discerned the slow awakening of
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humanity to the principal purpose of His Revelation. That
such a call should have come so insistently from the head of
that republic which is destined, in 'Abdu'l-Bahá's words, to
be "the first nation to establish the foundation of international
agreement" and to "lead all nations spiritually," is an
indication of the efficacy and the acceleration of two simultaneous
processes, one operating outside and one inside the
Cause, which Shoghi Effendi tells us are destined to culminate
"in a single glorious consummation."
—
Ridván 1991
All these developments have made it evident that the
accumulated potential for further progress of the Bahá'í
community is incalculable. The changed situation within and
among nations and the many problems afflicting society
amplify this potential. The impression produced by such
change is of the near approach of the Lesser Peace. But there
has been a simultaneous recrudescence of countervailing
forces. With the fresh tide of political freedom resulting from
the collapse of the strongholds of communism has come an
explosion of nationalism. The concomitant rise of racism in
many regions has become a matter of serious global concern.
These are compounded by an upsurge in religious fundamentalism
which is poisoning the wells of tolerance. Terrorism
is rife. Widespread uncertainty about the condition of the
economy indicates a deep disorder in the management of the
material affairs of the planet, a condition which can only
exacerbate the sense of frustration and futility affecting the
political realm. The worsening state of the environment and
of the health of huge populations is a source of alarm. And yet
an element of this change is the amazing advances in communications
technology making possible the rapid transmission
of information and ideas from one part of the world to the
other. It is against such "simultaneous processes of rise and
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fall, of integration and of disintegration, of order and chaos,
with their continuous and reciprocal reactions on each other,"
that a myriad new opportunities for the next stage in the
unfoldment of the beloved Master's Divine Plan present
themselves.
The burgeoning influence of Bahá'u'lláh's Revelation
seemed, with the imminence of the Holy Year, to have
assumed the character of an onrushing wind blowing through
the archaic structures of the old order, felling mighty pillars
and clearing the ground for new conceptions of social organization.
The call for unity, for a new world order, is audible
from many directions. The change in world society is characterized
by a phenomenal speed. A feature of this change is a
suddenness, or precipitateness, which appears to be the
consequence of some mysterious, rampant force. The positive
aspects of this change reveal an unaccustomed openness
to global concepts, movement towards international and
regional collaboration, an inclination of warring parties to
opt for peaceful solutions, a search for spiritual values. Even
the Community of the Most Great Name itself is experiencing
the rigorous effects of this quickening wind as it ventilates the
modes of thought of us all, renewing, clarifying and amplifying
our perspectives as to the purpose of the Order of
Bahá'u'lláh in the wake of humanity's suffering and turmoil.
The situation in the world, while presenting us with an
acute challenge of the utmost urgency, calls to mind the
encouraging global vision of Shoghi Effendi for the prospects
of the Administrative Order during the second century of the
Bahá'í Era, whose midpoint we are rapidly approaching. In
1946, he wrote: "The second century is destined to witness a
tremendous deployment and a notable consolidation of the
forces working towards the world-wide development of that
Order, as well as the first stirrings of that World Order, of
page 138
which the present Administrative System is at once the
precursor, the nucleus and pattern — an Order which, as it
slowly crystallizes and radiates its benign influence over the
entire planet, will proclaim at once the coming of age of the
whole human race, as well as the maturity of the Faith itself,
the progenitor of that Order."
—
Ridván 1992
Social and Economic Development
A wider horizon is opening before us, illumined by a
growing and universal manifestation of the inherent potentialities
of the Cause for ordering human affairs. In this light
can be discerned not only our immediate tasks but, more
dimly, new pursuits and undertakings upon which we must
shortly become engaged. At present we must complete the
objectives of the Seven Year Plan, paying great attention to
those inner spiritual developments which will be manifested
in greater unity among the friends and in National and Local
Spiritual Assemblies functioning "harmoniously, vigorously
and efficiently" as the Guardian desired.
We have no doubt that the Bahá'í world community will
accomplish all these tasks and go forward to new achievements.
The powers released by Bahá'u'lláh match the needs
of the times. We may therefore be utterly confident that the
new throb of energy now vibrating throughout the Cause
will empower it to meet the oncoming challenges of assisting,
as maturity and resources allow, the development of the
social and economic life of peoples, of collaborating with the
forces leading towards the establishment of order in the
world, of influencing the exploitation and constructive uses
of modern technology, and in all these ways enhancing the
page 139
prestige and progress of the Faith and uplifting the conditions
of the generality of mankind.
—
Ridván 1983
The soul-stirring events in Bahá'u'lláh's native land and
the concomitant advance into the theater of world affairs of
the agencies of His Administrative Order have combined to
bring into focus new possibilities in the evolution of the
Bahá'í world community. Our Ridván message this year
captured these implications in its reference to the opening
before us of a wider horizon in whose light can dimly be
discerned new pursuits and undertakings upon which we
must soon embark. These portend our greater involvement
in the development of the social and economic life of peoples.
From the beginning of His stupendous mission,
Bahá'u'lláh urged upon the attention of nations the necessity
of ordering human affairs in such a way as to bring into being
a world unified in all the essential aspects of its life. In
unnumbered verses and tablets He repeatedly and variously
declared the "progress of the world" and the "development
of nations" as being among the ordinances of God for this
day. The oneness of mankind, which is at once the operating
principle and ultimate goal of His Revelation, implies the
achievement of a dynamic coherence between the spiritual
and practical requirements of life on earth. The indispensability
of this coherence is unmistakably illustrated in His
ordination of the Mashriqu'l-Adhkár, the spiritual center of
every Bahá'í community round which must flourish dependencies
dedicated to the social, humanitarian, educational
and scientific advancement of mankind. Thus, we can readily
appreciate that although it has hitherto been impracticable
for Bahá'í institutions generally to emphasize development
activities, the concept of social and economic development is
enshrined in the sacred Teachings of our Faith. The beloved
page 140
Master, through His illuminating words and deeds, set the
example for the application of this concept to the reconstruction
of society. Witness, for instance, what social and economic
progress the Iranian believers attained under His loving
guidance and, subsequently, with the unfailing encouragement
of the Guardian of the Cause.
Now, after all the years of constant teaching activity, the
community of the Greatest Name has grown to the stage at
which the processes of this development must be incorporated
into its regular pursuits; particularly is action compelled
by the expansion of the Faith in Third World countries where
the vast majority of its adherents reside. The steps to be taken
must necessarily begin in the Bahá'í Community itself, with
the friends endeavoring, through their application of spiritual
principles, their rectitude of conduct and the practice of
the art of consultation, to uplift themselves and thus become
self-sufficient and self-reliant. Moreover, these exertions will
conduce to the preservation of human honor, so desired by
Bahá'u'lláh. In the process and as a consequence, the friends
will undoubtedly extend the benefits of their efforts to society
as a whole, until all mankind achieves the progress intended
by the Lord of the Age.
Progress in the development field will largely depend on
natural stirrings at the grassroots, and it should receive its
driving force from those sources rather than from an imposition
of plans and programs from the top. The major task of
National Assemblies, therefore, is to increase the local communities'
awareness of needs and possibilities, and to guide
and coordinate the efforts resulting from such awareness.
Already in many areas the friends are witnessing the confirmations
of their initiatives in such pursuits as the founding of
tutorial and other schools, the promotion of literacy, the
launching of rural development programs, the inception of
page 141
educational radio stations, and the operation of agricultural
and medical projects. As they enlarge the scope of their
endeavors other modes of development will undoubtedly
emerge....
We go forward confident that the wholehearted involvement
of the friends in these activities will ensure a deeper
consolidation of the community at all levels. Our engagement
in the technical aspects of development should, however,
not be allowed to supplant the essentials of teaching, which
remains the primary duty of every follower of Bahá'u'lláh.
Rather should our increased activities in the development
field be viewed as a reinforcement of the teaching work, as a
greater manifestation of faith in action. For, if expansion of
the teaching work does not continue, there can be no hope of
success for this enlarged dimension of the consolidation
process.
—
October 20, 1983
The upsurge of zeal throughout the Bahá'í world for
exploration of the new dimension of social and economic
development is both heartwarming and uplifting to all our
hopes. This energy within the community, carefully and
wisely directed, will undoubtedly bring about a new era of
consolidation and expansion, which in turn will attract further
widespread attention, so that both aspects of change in
the Bahá'í world community will be interactive and mutually
propelling.
—
Ridván 1984
All this has kept our beloved Faith under international
observation, an interest increased not only by the circulation
of the Peace Statement but also by the rapidly expanding
activities in the field of economic and social development,
ranging from the inauguration and operation of radio stations — of
which there are seven now broadcasting — to schools,
page 142
literacy programs, agricultural assistance and a host of small
but valuable undertakings at village level in many parts of
the world.
—
Ridván 1987
Moreover, further systematic attention needs to be given
to the eventual elimination of illiteracy from the Bahá'í
community, an accomplishment which would, beyond anything
else, make the Holy Word accessible to all the friends
and thus reinforce their efforts to live the Bahá'í life.
Similarly, assisting in endeavors to conserve the environment in
ways which blend with the rhythm of life of our community
must assume more importance in Bahá'í activities.
—
Ridván 1989
The Holy Word has been extolled by the Prophets of God
as the medium of celestial power and the wellspring of all
spiritual, social and material progress. Access to it, constant
study of it and daily use of it in our individual lives are vital
to the inner personal transformation towards which we
strive and whose ultimate outer manifestation will be the
emergence of that divine civilization which is the promise of
the World Order of Bahá'u'lláh....
The most immediate access to the dynamic influence of
the sacred Word is through reading. The ability to read is
therefore a fundamental right and privilege of every human
being. Bahá'u'lláh promotes this right in His command to
parents to ensure the instruction of their sons and daughters
in the "art of reading and writing." For this essential reason,
in our last Ridván message we called attention to the need for
systematic attention to be given to eventually eliminating
illiteracy from the Bahá'í community. This matter must assume
its proper importance as a continuing objective of that
community.
page 143
Let each National and Local Spiritual Assembly, according
to necessity and circumstance, address itself to this
objective, conscious that even where total achievement is not
immediately possible, opportunities must be sought to make
steady progress. Let each be confident that the shining example
set by Iran, the mother community of the Bahá'í world,
under the inspiration of Bahá'u'lláh's teachings and the
urging of 'Abdu'l-Bahá and Shoghi Effendi, upholds a standard
all can follow. In the earliest years of this century, when
no systematic, overall plan of education existed in Iran, the
Bahá'ís seized their chance and organized a widespread
program of education. Its teachers were distinguished for
their ability to foster child, youth and adult education, which
led to significant self-improvement among the Iranian Bahá'ís.
The emergence of a literate Bahá'í community was an outstanding
result.
Some local or national Bahá'í communities may wish to
follow the example of those who have already instituted their
own literacy projects and are achieving notable success;
others may wish to participate in literacy programs organized
by governmental or non-governmental organizations.
Each community will have to determine whether to engage in
one or the other, or to do both. Progress will depend not only
on the initiatives of Bahá'í institutions in relation to children,
but also on the active interest of adult believers who want to
learn to read. Such friends should definitely be encouraged
and assisted to achieve, with dignity, their heart's desire.
Certainly, the willing participation of the friends in an undertaking
of such importance to the upliftment of individuals
and the consolidation of the Bahá'í community as a whole
will attract divine favors and confirmations.
—
July 10, 1989
page 144
We enclose a copy of a new compilation entitled "Conservation
of the Earth's Resources" which was prepared by the
Research Department at the instruction of the Universal
House of Justice for the purpose of assisting the friends in
responding to the call, in the Ridván message, for an increase
in Bahá'í activities aimed at supporting endeavors to protect
the environment.
The compilation was assembled, primarily, to deepen the
believers' appreciation of the Bahá'í concept of nature and to
enhance their understanding of both man's relationship to
nature and his responsibility to preserve the world's ecological
balance. It could also serve as a valuable tool for use with
non-Bahá'ís who have some knowledge of the
Bahá'í Faith
and its approach to the solution of pressing social problems.
It is the hope of the Universal House of Justice that ...
armed with increased knowledge of this important subject,
the friends will be inspired to lend their assistance to those
who are striving to make this world "an earthly paradise."
With great pleasure the House of Justice takes this opportunity
to announce the establishment of an Office of the
Environment, which will conduct the external relations of the
Bahá'í International Community with regard to environmental
matters. Thus it will foster relations with the World Wide
Fund for Nature and other like-minded non-governmental
organizations and will work in collaboration with the Office
of Social and Economic Development. The new Office operates
alongside the other offices of the Bahá'í International
Community in New York, namely, the United Nations Office
and the Office of Public Information.
—
October 26, 1989, Department of the Secretariat
on behalf of the Universal House of Justice
page 145
Bahá'í projects of social and economic development have
greatly multiplied and brought much credit to the community
in the examples of the power of group initiative and
voluntary consultative action that have been set in numerous
places. Activities in this respect involved more than one
thousand projects in the areas of education, agriculture,
health, literacy, the environment and improvement of the
status of women. In a number of instances the projects
benefited from collaboration with or assistance from governments
and international non-governmental organizations,
as, for example, the projects for the improvement of the status
of women undertaken by five National Spiritual Assemblies
with the financial assistance of the United Nations Development
Fund for Women (UNIFEM), and those projects in other
fields receiving assistance from the Canadian, Indian, German
and Norwegian governments. Some projects have been
so distinguished in their achievements as to be given public
notice through the citations and awards of governments and
international non-governmental agencies.
—
Ridván 1992
Involvement in the Life of Society
A wider horizon is opening before us, illumined by a
growing and universal manifestation of the inherent potentialities
of the Cause for the ordering of human affairs. In this
light can be discerned not only our immediate tasks but, more
dimly, new pursuits and undertakings upon which we must
shortly become engaged....
We have no doubt that the Bahá'í world community will
accomplish all these tasks and go forward to new achievements.
The powers released by Bahá'u'lláh match the needs
page 146
of the times. We may therefore be utterly confident that the
new throb of energy now vibrating throughout the Cause
will empower it to meet the oncoming challenges of assisting,
as maturity and resources allow, the development of the
social and economic life of peoples, of collaborating with the
forces leading towards the establishment of order in the
world, of influencing the exploitation and constructive uses
of modern technology, and in all these ways enhancing the
prestige and progress of the Faith and uplifting the conditions
of the generality of mankind.
—
Ridván 1983
The fourth area is in the development and coordination of
world-wide efforts to present to a far more extensive audience
than ever before the divine remedy for the problems
besetting society and its individual members, to establish the
universality of the Faith and the implications of its teachings
in the eyes of statesmen, and to ensure that the leaders of
thought become thoroughly aware of the Bahá'í Revelation
and the profundity of its message.
—
January 2, 1984
There can be no doubt that the progress of the Cause from
this time onward will be characterized by an ever increasing
relationship to the agencies, activities, institutions and leading
individuals of the non-Bahá'í world. We shall acquire
greater stature at the United Nations, become better known
in the deliberations of governments, a familiar figure to the
media, a subject of interest to academics, and inevitably the
envy of failing establishments. Our preparation for and response
to this situation must be a continual deepening of our
faith, an unwavering adherence to its principles of abstention
from partisan politics and freedom from prejudices, and
above all an increasing understanding of its fundamental
verities and relevance to the modern world.
—
Ridván 1984
page 147
1986 has been named the International Year of Peace by
the United Nations. Considering the dangers surrounding
mankind and the remedial prospects of the Lesser Peace to
which Bahá'u'lláh has summoned the nations, we embrace
this God-sent opportunity to proclaim ever more widely and
convincingly the vitalizing principles upon which, as our
Teachings emphatically assert, a lasting peace must be
founded....
In effect, we envision a proclamation campaign which
will not only involve large public events and the use of the
mass media, but will also engage people at the grassroots and
at all other levels of society in a broad range of profoundly
effective activities through which they will interact with the
Bahá'í community in a sustained, world-wide effort to attend
to the fundamental issues of peace, aided by the unique
insights provided by the Teachings of Bahá'u'lláh....
Your planning efforts for 1986 must not, of course, interrupt
the work of the Seven Year Plan. Indeed, the activities
associated with the economic and social development of the
Bahá'í community, the observance during 1985 of International
Youth Year, and the anticipated activities for the peace
campaign to begin a year hence are mutually reinforcing and
go far to enhance the teaching opportunities necessary to the
successful completion of the Plan. We have every confidence
that your continuing exertions to meet the new challenges
resulting from the emergence of the Faith from obscurity will
be richly rewarded by the Blessed Beauty; and we shall renew
our supplications at the Holy Threshold that your brightest
expectations may be surpassed by resounding triumph.
—
January 23, 1985
Intimations in the non-Bahá'í world of a rapidly growing
realization that mankind is indeed entering a new stage in its
page 148
evolution present us with unprecedented opportunities to
show that the Bahá'í world community is "not only the
nucleus but the very pattern" of that world society which it
is the purpose of Bahá'u'lláh to establish and towards which
a harassed humanity, albeit largely unconsciously, is striving.
The time has come for the Bahá'í community to become
more involved in the life of the society around it, without in
the least supporting any of the world's moribund and divisive
concepts, or slackening its direct teaching efforts, but
rather, by association, exerting its influence towards unity,
demonstrating its ability to settle differences by consultation
rather than by confrontation, violence or schism, and declaring
its faith in the divine purpose of human existence.
—
Ridván 1985
Together with the opposing tendency to warfare and self-aggrandizement
against which it ceaselessly struggles, the
drive towards world unity is one of the dominant, pervasive
features of life on the planet during the closing years of the
twentieth century.
The experience of the Bahá'í community may be seen as
an example of this enlarging unity. It is a community of some
three to four million people draw from many nations, cultures,
classes and creeds, engaged in a wide range of activities
serving the spiritual, social and economic needs of the peoples
of many lands. It is a single social organism, representative of
the diversity of the human family, conducting its affairs
through a system of commonly accepted consultative principles,
and cherishing equally all the great outpourings of
divine guidance in human history. Its existence is yet another
convincing proof of the practicality of its Founder's vision of
a united world, another evidence that humanity can live as
one global society, equal to whatever challenges its coming of
page 149
age may entail. If the Bahá'í experience can contribute in
whatever measure to reinforcing hope in the unity of the
human race, we are happy to offer it as a model for study.
—
October, 1985
Rejecting the low sights of mediocrity, let them scale the
ascending heights of excellence in all they aspire to do. May
they resolve to elevate the very atmosphere in which they
move, whether it be in the school rooms or halls of higher
learning, in their work, their recreation, their Bahá'í activity
or social service.
Indeed, let them welcome with confidence the challenges
awaiting them. Imbued with this excellence and a corresponding
humility, with tenacity and a loving servitude,
today's youth must move towards the front ranks of the
professions, trades, arts and crafts which are necessary to the
further progress of humankind — this to ensure that the spirit
of the Cause will cast its illumination on all these important
areas of human endeavor. Moreover, while aiming at mastering
the unifying concepts and swiftly advancing technologies
of this era of communications, they can, indeed they must
also guarantee the transmittal to the future of those skills
which will preserve the marvelous, indispensable achievements
of the past. The transformation which is to occur in the
functioning of society will certainly depend to a great extent
on the effectiveness of the preparations the youth make for
the world they will inherit.
—
May 8, 1985
The launching of the Six Year Plan at Ridván 1986 coincided
with the opening of a new epoch — the fourth — in the
organic unfoldment of the Formative Age of our Faith. The
administrative institutions of this growing Cause of God had
already begun to show signs of an increasing maturity, while
page 150
at the same time emerging from the protective obscurity of
their early days into the larger arena of public notice. These
twin processes were signalized by a development of far-reaching
consequence to the internal life of the Bahá'í
community and by an outward activity of a magnitude
unprecedented in its entire history....
The latter was a united uprising of the entire Bahá'í world
community to distribute the statement, "The Promise of
World Peace," issued in October 1985, to the peoples of the
world. Heads of State, large numbers of the members of
national governments, diplomats, teachers, trade unionists,
leaders of religion, eminent members of the judiciary, the
police, legal, medical and other professions, members of local
authorities, clubs and associations, and thousands of individuals
have been presented with the statement. It is estimated
that more than a million copies, in some seventy languages,
have so far been distributed. These two activities alone have
heavily reinforced the growing strength and maturity of the
Bahá'í world community and given it a more clearly defined
and readily recognizable public image.
Other factors have contributed greatly to the rapid entrance
of the Faith onto the world stage. Indeed it appears that
every activity of the widespread Army of Life is now observed
or commented upon by some section of the public,
from the General Assembly of the United Nations to small
and even remote local communities.
—
Ridván 1987
All this has kept our beloved Faith under international
observation, an interest increased not only by the circulation
of the Peace Statement but also by the rapidly expanding
activities in the field of economic and social development,
ranging from the inauguration and operation of radio stations — of
which there are seven now broadcasting — to schools,
page 151
literacy programs, agricultural assistance and a host of small
but valuable undertakings at village level in many parts of
the world.
National Bahá'í communities have organized and successfully
conducted inter-religious conferences, peace
seminars, symposiums on racism and other subjects on which
we have a specific contribution to make, often achieving
widespread publicity and the interest of highly-placed leaders
of society.
—
Ridván 1987
With feelings of thankfulness and joy we announce an
achievement of immense importance to the accelerating
progress of the Cause of Bahá'u'lláh. The University of Maryland
and the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the
United States recently signed a memorandum of understanding,
establishing "The Bahá'í Chair for World Peace" at
that University's Center for International Development and
Conflict Management. The stated purpose of the Chair is "to
conduct and publish research, design courses and conduct
seminars in the field of Bahá'í studies and world peace within
an interdisciplinary context; to initiate public forums for
discussing the issues proposed in the Statement of the Universal
House of Justice entitled 'The Promise of World Peace';
and to establish academic linkages with and provide technical
assistance to Bahá'í institutions in the fields of peace
education and international development...."
...we hail this seminal development both as a mark of the
Faith's emergence from obscurity and as the harbinger of that
day when hosts of scholars will devote their energies to the
exploration, exposition and defense of the dynamic principles
animating the World Order of Bahá'u'lláh, thereby
fulfilling the need identified by the beloved Guardian for
"well-read and well-educated people, capable of correlating
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our teachings to the current thoughts of the leaders of society."
On that day, we shall witness an expansion and
consolidation of the community as has not yet been experienced.
—
February 12, 1990
At the national level, the structure of Bahá'í communities
is growing in complexity as the number of believers rises, and
National Spiritual Assemblies are being increasingly invited
by national governments and non-governmental organizations
to offer advice and assistance in upholding human
rights, in safeguarding the environment, in promoting moral
education, and in overcoming the ravages of prejudice and
the rising tide of lawlessness which are undermining the
social structure. Internationally a parallel process is taking
place.
At the World Centre itself, the construction work on the
Mount Carmel Projects has begun, preparing facilities befitting
the central institutions of the Administrative Order of
Bahá'u'lláh for that time when they will have to shoulder the
tremendous responsibilities that will be thrust upon them as
the Lesser Peace begins to be established in the world.
—
November 18, 1991
The exposure of influential segments of the public to
Bahá'í ideas in such areas as peace, the environment, status of
women, education and literacy, has induced a response
which increasingly calls upon the Bahá'ís to participate with
others in a range of projects associated with governments or
with non-governmental organizations.
Moreover, such exposure is creating in the public mind
the realization that the Faith has answers to current problems
and thus the expectation that the Bahá'í community should
take a more active part in public affairs. The notable success
page 153
of the activities of the Bahá'í International Community's
Office of the Environment, established during the Plan, amply
illustrates the nature of these developments. Furthermore,
the formal relationship which the Bahá'í International Community
established with the Conservation and Religion
Network of the World Wide Fund for Nature and with the
World Conference on Religion and Peace, in conjunction
with the numerous such relationships established by
National and Local Spiritual Assemblies in their respective
jurisdictions, reflects a trend in the Faith's emergence as an
entity to be reckoned with. Altogether, the drive of the
ramified proclamation campaign has produced a public resonance
about the Faith, which can be said to be known to the
most significant public institutions and prominent persons
on earth.
—
Ridván 1992
Participation of Youth
RECENT MARTYRDOMS COURAGEOUS STEADFAST
YOUTH IN SHIRAZ, SCENE INAUGURATION MISSION
MARTYR-PROPHET, REMINISCENT ACTS VALOR
YOUTHFUL IMMORTALS HEROIC AGE. CONFIDENT
BAHA'I YOUTH THIS GENERATION WILL NOT ALLOW
THIS FRESH BLOOD SHED ON VERY SOIL WHERE FIRST
WAVE PERSECUTION FAITH TOOK PLACE REMAIN
UNVINDICATED OR THIS SUBLIME SACRIFICE UNAVAILING.
AT THIS HOUR OF AFFLICTION AND GRIEF,
AND AS WE APPROACH ANNIVERSARY MARTYRDOM
BLESSED BAB CALL ON BAHA'I YOUTH TO REDEDICATE
THEMSELVES TO URGENT NEEDS CAUSE
BAHA'U'LLAH. LET THEM RECALL BLESSINGS HE
page 154
PROMISED THOSE WHO IN PRIME OF YOUTH WILL
ARISE TO ADORN THEIR HEARTS WITH HIS LOVE AND
REMAIN STEADFAST AND FIRM. LET THEM CALL TO
MIND EXPECTATIONS MASTER FOR EACH TO BE A
FEARLESS LION, A MUSK-LADEN BREEZE WAFTING
OVER MEADS VIRTUE. LET THEM MEDITATE OVER
UNIQUE QUALITIES YOUTH SO GRAPHICALLY MENTIONED
IN WRITINGS GUARDIAN WHO PRAISED THEIR
ENTERPRISING AND ADVENTUROUS SPIRIT, THEIR
VIGOR, THEIR ALERTNESS, OPTIMISM AND EAGERNESS,
AND THEIR DIVINELY-APPOINTED, HOLY AND
ENTHRALLING TASKS. WE FERVENTLY PRAY AT SACRED
THRESHOLD THAT ARMY OF SPIRITUALLY
AWAKENED AND DETERMINED YOUTH MAY IMMEDIATELY
ARISE RESPONSE NEEDS PRESENT HOUR
DEVOTE IN EVER GREATER MEASURE THEIR VALUED
ENERGIES TO PROMOTE BOTH ON HOMEFRONTS AND
IN FOREIGN FIELDS, CAUSE THEIR ALL-WATCHFUL
AND EXPECTANT LORD. MAY THEY MANIFEST SAME
SPIRIT SO RECENTLY EVINCED THEIR MARTYR BRETHREN
CRADLE FAITH, SCALE SUCH HEIGHTS OF
ENDEAVOR AS TO BECOME PRIDE THEIR PEERS CONSOLATION
HEARTS PERSIAN BELIEVERS, AND
DEMONSTRATE THAT THE FLAME HIS OMNIPOTENT
HAND HAS KINDLED BURNS EVER BRIGHTER AND
THAT ITS LIFE-IMPARTING WARMTH AND RADIANCE
SHALL SOON ENVELOP PERMEATE WHOLE EARTH.
—
June 23, 1983
This generation of Bahá'í youth enjoys a unique distinction.
You will live your lives in a period when the forces of
history are moving to a climax, when mankind will see the
establishment of the Lesser Peace, and during which the
page 155
Cause of God will play an increasingly prominent role in the
reconstruction of human society. It is you who will be called
upon in the years to come to stand at the helm of the Cause in
face of conditions and developments which can, as yet,
scarcely be imagined.
European Bahá'í youth in particular face tremendous
and challenging tasks in the immediate future.... Now is an
opportunity to awaken the interest, set afire the hearts and
enlist the active support of young people of every nation,
class and creed in that continent. The key to success in this
endeavor is, firstly, to deepen your understanding of the
Teachings of the Cause so that you will be able to apply them
to the problems of individuals and society, and explain them
to your peers in ways that they will understand and welcome;
secondly, to strive to model your behavior in every way after
the high standards of honesty, trustworthiness, courage,
loyalty, forbearance, purity and spirituality set forth in the
Teachings; and, above all, to live in continual awareness of
the presence and all-conquering power of Bahá'u'lláh, which
will enable you to overcome every temptation and surmount
every obstacle....
A particular challenge to the Bahá'í youth of Europe is the
vast eastern half of the continent that is as yet scarcely
touched by the light of the Faith of Bahá'u'lláh. It is not easy
to settle in those lands, but with ingenuity, determination
and reliance upon the confirmations of Bahá'u'lláh it is
certainly possible both to settle and to persevere in service in
goals which demand a spirit of self-sacrifice, detachment and
purity of heart worthy of those who would emulate the
shining example set by the martyrs in Iran, so many of whom
are youth, who have given their lives rather than breathe one
word that would be a betrayal of the trust of God placed upon
them.
page 156
With love and utmost longing we call upon you to immerse
yourselves in the Divine Teachings, champion the
Cause of God and His Law, and arise for the quickening of
mankind.
—
July 4, 1983
To visualize, however imperfectly, the challenges that
engage us now, we have only to reflect, in the light of our
sacred Writings, upon the confluence of favorable circumstances
brought about by the accelerated unfolding of the
Divine Plan over nearly five decades, by the untold potencies
of the spiritual drama being played out in Iran, and by the
creative energy stimulated by awareness of the approaching
end of the twentieth century. Undoubtedly, it is within your
power to contribute significantly to shaping the societies of
the coming century; youth can move the world....
A highlight of this period of the Seven Year Plan has been
the phenomenal proclamation accorded the Faith in the wake
of the unabating persecutions in Iran; a new interest in its
Teachings has been aroused on a wide scale. Simultaneously,
more and more people from all strata of society frantically
seek their true identity, which is to say, although they would
not so plainly admit it, the spiritual meaning of their lives;
prominent among these seekers are the young. Not only does
this knowledge open fruitful avenues for Bahá'í initiative, it
also indicates to young Bahá'ís a particular responsibility so
to teach the Cause and live the life as to give vivid expression
to those virtues that would fulfill the spiritual yearning of
their peers.
For the sake of preserving such virtues much innocent
blood has been shed in the past, and much, even today, is
being sacrificed in Iran by young and old alike. Consider, for
example, the instances in Shíráz last summer of the six young
women, their ages ranging from 18 to 25 years, whose lives
page 157
were snuffed out by the hangman's noose. All faced attempted
inducements to recant their Faith; all refused to
deny their Beloved. Look also at the accounts of the astounding
fortitude shown over and over again by children and
youth who were subjected to the interrogations and abuses of
teachers and mullahs and were expelled from school for
upholding their beliefs. It, moreover, bears noting that under
the restrictions so cruelly imposed on their community, the
youth rendered signal services, placing their energies at the
disposal of Bahá'í institutions throughout the country. No
splendor of speech could give more fitting testimony to their
spiritual commitment and fidelity than these pure acts of
selflessness and devotion. In virtually no other place on earth
is so great a price for faith required of the Bahá'ís. Nor could
there be found more willing, more radiant bearers of the cup
of sacrifice than the valiant Bahá'í youth of Iran. Might it,
then, not be reasonably expected that you, the youth and
young adults living at such an extraordinary time, witnessing
such stirring examples of the valor of your Iranian fellows,
and exercising such freedom of movement, would sally forth,
"unrestrained as the wind," into the field of Bahá'í action?
May you all persevere in your individual efforts to teach
the Faith, but with added zest, to study the Writings, but with
greater earnestness. May you pursue your education and
training for future service to mankind, offering as much of
your free time as possible to activities on behalf of the Cause.
May those of you already bent on your life's work and who
may have already founded families, strive toward becoming
the living embodiments of Bahá'í ideals, both in the spiritual
nurturing of your families and in your active involvement in
the efforts on the home front or abroad in the pioneering field.
May all respond to the current demands upon the Faith by
displaying a fresh measure of dedication to the tasks at hand.
page 158
Further to these aspirations is the need for a mighty
mobilization of teaching activities reflecting regularity in the
patterns of service rendered by young Bahá'ís. The native
urge of youth to move from place to place, combined with
their abounding zeal, indicates that you can become more
deliberately and numerously involved in these activities as
traveling teachers. One pattern of this mobilization could be
short-term projects, carried out at home or in other lands,
dedicated to both teaching the Faith and improving the living
conditions of people. Another could be that, while still young
and unburdened by family responsibilities, you give attention
to the idea of volunteering a set period, say, one or two
years, to some Bahá'í service, on the home front or abroad, in
the teaching or development field. It would accrue to the
strength and stability of the community if such patterns
could be followed by succeeding generations of youth.
Regardless of the modes of service, however, youth must be
understood to be fully engaged, at all times, in all climes and
under all conditions. In your varied pursuits you may rest
assured of the loving support and guidance of the Bahá'í
institutions operating at every level.
—
January 3, 1984
The present requirements of a Faith whose responsibilities
rapidly increase in relation to its rise from obscurity
impose an inescapable duty on the youth to ensure that their
lives reflect to a marked degree the transforming power of the
new Revelation they have embraced. Otherwise, by what
example are the claims of Bahá'u'lláh to be judged? How is
His healing Message to be acknowledged by a skeptical
humanity if it produces no noticeable effect upon the young,
who are seen to be among the most energetic, the most pliable
and promising elements in any society?
page 159
The dark horizon faced by a world which has failed to
recognize the Promised One, the Source of its salvation,
acutely affects the outlook of the younger generations; their
distressing lack of hope and their indulgence in desperate but
futile and even dangerous solutions make a direct claim on
the remedial attention of Bahá'í youth, who, through their
knowledge of that Source and the bright vision with which
they have thus been endowed, cannot hesitate to impart to
their despairing fellow youth the restorative joy, the constructive
hope, the radiant assurances of Bahá'u'lláh's
stupendous Revelation.
The words, the deeds, the attitudes, the lack of prejudice,
the nobility of character, the high sense of service to others — in
a word, those qualities and actions which distinguish a
Bahá'í must unfailingly characterize their inner life and outer
behavior, and their interactions with friend or foe.
Rejecting the low sights of mediocrity, let them scale the
ascending heights of excellence in all they aspire to do. May
they resolve to elevate the very atmosphere in which they
move, whether it be in the school rooms or halls of higher
learning, in their work, their recreation, their Bahá'í activity
or social service.
Indeed, let them welcome with confidence the challenges
awaiting them. Imbued with this excellence and a corresponding
humility, with tenacity and a loving servitude,
today's youth must move towards the front ranks of the
professions, trades, arts and crafts which are necessary to the
further progress of humankind — this to ensure that the spirit
of the Cause will cast its illumination on all these important
areas of human endeavor.... The transformation which is to
occur in the functioning of society will certainly depend to a
great extent on the effectiveness of the preparations the youth
make for the world they will inherit.
—
May 8, 1985
page 160
Bahá'í youth, inspired and uplifted by the vision and
idealism of "the new race of men" have, through their many
gatherings, attracted large numbers of their compeers and
galvanized their own members to direct their lives towards
service in the many fields in which a rich harvest awaits the
dedicated Bahá'í worker.
—
Ridván 1987
Every individual believer — man, woman, youth and
child — is summoned to this field of action; for it is on the
initiative, the resolute will of the individual to teach and to
serve, that the success of the entire community depends.
Well-grounded in the mighty Covenant of Bahá'u'lláh, sustained
by daily prayer and reading of the Holy Word,
strengthened by a continual striving to obtain a deeper
understanding of the divine Teachings, illumined by a constant
endeavor to relate these Teachings to current issues,
nourished by observance of the laws and principles of His
wondrous World Order, every individual can attain increasing
measures of success in teaching.
—
Ridván 1988
Youth activities took on a special character shaped by the
idea of a youth year of service. The involvement of the youth
in the Six Year Plan as short-term pioneers, traveling teachers
and projecteers had a profound effect on the teaching work
overall and in bolstering the efforts at social and economic
development attempted by growing numbers of national
and local communities. They had much to do with the many
victories in the former communist countries. Their work in
social and economic development projects attracted, in some
cases, the attention of governments and development organizations.
Creation of the European Bahá'í Youth Council
galvanized the activities of the youth which powerfully
reinforced the teaching thrust on that continent during the
page 161
final years of the Plan. A significant feature of the youth's
activities has been their involvement, as short-term volunteers
from all parts of the planet, in the work of the World
Centre where their services have been of inestimable value.
—
Ridván 1992
Opportunities for Progress and the Fund
During the succeeding eight months we have been developing
the agencies and formulating the plans to enable the
Faith to seize the unprecedented opportunities now before it,
but we are confronted with a shortage of funds which, if not
remedied, could frustrate these plans. For the last two years
there has been a decline in the amount of contributions to the
international funds of the Faith, and we note that many
national funds are also facing the danger of deficits.
Beyond carrying on the general work of the Cause there
are four areas where immediate action is required.
The first is the completion of the Mashriqu'l-Adhkárs in
India and Samoa. Any delay in this work can but make it
more expensive and also seriously injure the reputation of the
Faith in these two vital areas.
The second is the development of the World Centre, the
focal point of the entire Administrative Order of the Faith
where, in the words of Shoghi Effendi, "the dust of its
Founders reposes, where the processes disclosing its purposes,
energizing its life and shaping its destiny all originate."
The third is in the prosecution of programs of social and
economic development. Bahá'í communities in many lands
have attained a size and complexity that both require and
make possible the implementation of a range of activities for
page 162
their social and economic development which will not only
be of immense value for the consolidation of these communities
and the development of their Bahá'í life, but will also
benefit the wider communities within which they are embedded
and will demonstrate the beneficial effects of the Bahá'í
Message to the critical gaze of the world. Funds for the
initiation and carrying out of these projects will be dispensed
very gradually and with great care in order not to undermine
the natural growth and sense of responsibility of these communities,
but the field is so vast, the opportunities so
far-reaching, that the need will stretch the resources of the
Cause to the uttermost.
The fourth area is in the development and coordination of
world-wide efforts to present to a far more extensive audience
than ever before the divine remedy for the problems
besetting society and its individual members, to establish the
universality of the Faith and the implications of its teachings
in the eyes of statesmen, and to ensure that the leaders of
thought become thoroughly aware of the Bahá'í Revelation
and the profundity of its message....
This fourfold challenge faces us at the very time when the
world is in the midst of an economic crisis and is overshadowed
with threats of war and other disasters. These conditions,
far from daunting the followers of Bahá'u'lláh, can only drive
home to us the urgency for our response.
We therefore call upon every true-hearted Bahá'í to consecrate
his life anew to the service of God and the betterment
of the lot of mankind, so that manpower will not be lacking
in the fields of pioneering, teaching and administrative service.
Most urgently, may every believer give sacrificially of
his substance, each in accordance with his means, to the funds
of the Cause, local, national, continental and international, so
that the material resources — the life-blood of all activities
page 163
will be adequate to the tremendous work that we have to
perform in the months and years immediately ahead. It requires
a concentration of effort, a unity of purpose and a degree
of self-sacrifice to match the heroic exertions of the victors
of past plans in the progress of the Cause.
—
January 2, 1984
During the final months of the second phase of the Seven
Year Plan a generous response has been made by believers
and institutions alike to an appeal which set out the increasing
needs of the International Fund. We are confident that
sustained and regular contributions during the final phase of
the Plan will enable its aims and objectives to be fully
accomplished.
—
Ridván 1984
Twelve months have passed since we addressed to the
devoted followers of the Blessed Beauty throughout the
world a message in which we outlined the major challenges
which face the Cause of God and the thrilling opportunities
which are presenting themselves for us to use in His Service.
There was an immediate and heart-warming response in
offers of service, in plans of action put promptly into effect,
and in contributions to the Fund.
The activities of the friends are still increasing, and evidences
of rich harvests are appearing.... In relation to the
Fund, however, the rate of contributions during the second
six months of the year has slowed seriously, and we feel it is
timely to draw your attention that our letter of 2 January 1984
was not an appeal for a one-time herculean effort, but was
intended to inform the whole world community of the present
great challenges and opportunities which are not only immediate
but require also a long-range, sustained increase in the
efforts and self-sacrifices of the friends, both in service and in
page 164
contributing from their financial resources to the advancement
of the Faith.
The challenges which we enumerated then are by no
means met, nor the opportunities wholly seized....
...the devoted followers of Bahá'u'lláh have... every
opportunity to contribute regularly and sacrificially to the
work of the Cause. It is to a greater realization of the privilege
and responsibility of supporting the multiple activities of our
beloved Faith that we call you all at this critical time in world
history, and remind you that to support the Bahá'í funds is an
integral part of the Bahá'í way of life. The need is not only
now, but throughout the years to come, until our exertions,
reinforced by confirmations from on high, will have overcome
the great perils now facing mankind and have made
this world another world — a world whose splendor and
grace will surpass our highest hopes and greatest dreams.
—
January 3, 1985
Great and wonderful tasks challenge us as never before.
They demand equally great and wonderful sacrifice, dedication
and single-minded devotion from every one of us. At
present, the Bahá'í International Fund is utterly inadequate
to support the tremendous expansion now required in all the
multitudinous activities of the Bahá'í world community. The
record of the Seven Year Plan, just completed, stands witness
to our ability to meet the growing demands of the Cause. The
heroism of the beloved friends in Iran, the eager response of
3,694 dedicated pioneers to the call raised for this essential
service, the unceasing activity of teachers, administrators,
local communities and individual believers throughout the
entire organism of the embryonic world order, have endowed
this growing Army of Life with new strengths and
capacities. As we stride forward into the future we may be
page 165
fully assured of His ever present bounty and the final victory
of our efforts to establish His Kingdom in this troubled
world.
—
Ridván 1987
As indicated in our letter of 30 April 1987, the way is now
open for the Bahá'í world to erect the remaining buildings of
its Administrative Center, and we must without delay stride
forward resolutely on this path.
Five closely related projects demand our attention: the
erection of the three remaining buildings on the Arc and,
added now to these, the construction of the terraces of the
Shrine of the Báb and the extension of the International
Archives Building....
It is impossible at this stage to give an accurate estimate
of the cost of these projects. All that we can now say is that in
the immediate future two objectives have to be met: to
accumulate rapidly a reserve of fifty million dollars on which
plans for the construction can realistically begin to be implemented,
and to provide an income of between twenty and
twenty-five million dollars for the Bahá'í International Fund
for each of the next ten years. As the work proceeds, contracts
are signed and costs can be accurately determined, further
information will be announced....
At this climacteric of human history, we are called upon
to rise up in sacrificial endeavor, our eyes on the awe-inspiring
responsibilities which such developments will place
upon Bahá'í institutions and individual believers in every
land, and our hearts filled with unshakable confidence in the
guiding Hand of the Founder of our Faith. That our Beloved
Lord will arouse His followers in every land to a mighty
united effort is our ardent prayer at the Sacred Threshold.
—
August 31, 1987
page 166
Regarding the projects on Mount Carmel, the Office of
the Project Manager has been established, and a technical
staff is being assembled. Geological testing at the sites of the
designated buildings on the Arc is about to begin — a step
preliminary to the ground breaking anticipated by the entire
Bahá'í world. Hence, we seize this opportunity to apprise
you of the urgency for the required funds both to initiate
construction and to sustain this work once it has begun.
—
Ridván 1989
FOLLOWING STRENUOUS DETAILED NEGOTIATIONS,
TOWN PLANNING SCHEME ESSENTIAL FOR
INITIATION OF PROJECTS WAS OFFICIALLY APPROVED
BY LOCAL TOWN PLANNING COMMITTEE AND CITY
COUNCIL OF HAIFA ON 11 OCTOBER 1989, CONFIRMING
GOOD WILL TOWARDS PROJECTS EXPRESSED BY
CITY COUNCIL AT TIME INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION....
OF $50,000,000 CALLED FOR AS ESSENTIAL RESERVE
FOR INITIATION CONSTRUCTION, APPROXIMATELY
$26,000,000 SO FAR CONTRIBUTED. REMAINING SUM
NOW URGENTLY NEEDED.
—
January 23, 1990
WITH FEELINGS OF PROFOUND JOY ANNOUNCE
TO FOLLOWERS OF BAHA'U'LLAH IN EVERY LAND
THAT ON MORNING OF TWENTY-THIRD MAY, ONE
HUNDRED AND FORTY-SIX YEARS AFTER THE DECLARATION
OF THE BAB, WORK ON EXTENSION TERRACES
COMMENCED....
CALL UPON FRIENDS EVERY LAND RALLY SUPPORT
THIS SACRED ENTERPRISE NOW INSEPARABLY
LINKED WITH ARC PROJECT EXPRESS BEFITTINGLY
page 167
THEIR AWARENESS MAGNITUDE BOUNTY CONFERRED
UPON MANKIND BY MINISTRY AND SACRIFICE
BLESSED BAB, DEMONSTRATE THEIR COMMITMENT
TO BAHA'U'LLAH'S CALL IN TABLET OF CARMEL TO
ESTABLISH UPON THAT MOUNTAIN SEAT GOD'S
THRONE AND FULFILL, THROUGH THEIR GENEROUS
CONTRIBUTIONS, 'ABDU'L-BAHA'S AND SHOGHI
EFFENDI'S VISION OF EFFLORESCENCE MIGHTY INSTITUTIONS
FAITH ON MOUNTAIN OF THE LORD.
—
May 24, 1990
IN HOLY LAND WORK ON TERRACE OF SHRINE OF
THE BAB PROGRESSING. RESERVE REQUIRED FOR COMMENCEMENT
WORK ON ARC NOW REACHED
$45,000,000: $29,000,000 FROM EARMARKED CONTRIBUTIONS,
$16,000,000 THROUGH TRANSFERS MADE FROM
CONTRIBUTIONS TO HUQUQU'LLAH AND THE BAHA'I
INTERNATIONAL FUND. IMPERATIVE FULFILL INITIAL
GOAL $50,000,000 FORTHWITH, AND ENSURE ANNUAL
CONTRIBUTION $20,000,000 FOR MOUNT CARMEL
PROJECTS TO ENABLE WORK PROCEED WITHOUT
INTERRUPTION.
—
November 12, 1990
WORK MOUNT CARMEL PROJECTS CONTINUING
WITH UTMOST SPEED IN SPITE OF REPERCUSSIONS
TROUBLED CONDITIONS MIDDLE EAST. REJOICE ANNOUNCE
INITIAL GOAL FIFTY MILLION DOLLARS
FUND THIS PURPOSE NOW ACHIEVED. URGE FRIENDS
ALL LANDS CONTINUE FLOW VITALLY NEEDED CONTRIBUTIONS
ENABLE THESE HISTORIC PROJECTS
PROCEED WITHOUT ABATEMENT DURING MONTHS
AND YEARS IMMEDIATELY AHEAD.
—
February 20, 1991
page 168
A time of challenge for the stalwart upholders of the
Cause of God has now come upon us at the very moment
when the world is grappling with tremendous problems,
moral, social, economic and ecological. The Bahá'í community
has grown in size and influence to the point where it is
put to the test on all sides and at all levels. The opportunities
are immense but we now face the question of whether to push
forward with all speed, or to hold back because the resources
available to us are inadequate for the purpose.
In lands where people have accepted the Faith in large
numbers, the process of economic and social development,
linked with the establishment, consolidation and strong functioning
of Local Spiritual Assemblies, is attaining ever greater
importance and is placing upon the international resources
of the Faith a heavy demand for manpower and finance. In
the countries of the former Eastern Bloc the need for assistance
in the form of Bahá'í literature, pioneers, traveling
teachers, the establishment of local centres, is made the more
urgent by the extraordinary receptivity to the Message of
Bahá'u'lláh shown by the spiritually thirsty populations. The
opportunities for the promotion of the Cause of God in these
areas cannot be allowed to go unheeded.
At the national level, the structure of Bahá'í communities
is growing in complexity as the number of believers rises, and
National Spiritual Assemblies are being increasingly invited
by national governments and non-governmental organizations
to offer advice and assistance in upholding human
rights, in safeguarding the environment, in promoting moral
education, and in overcoming the ravages of prejudice and
the rising tide of lawlessness which are undermining the
social structure. Internationally a parallel process is taking
place.
page 169
At the World Centre itself, the construction work on the
Mount Carmel Projects has begun, preparing facilities befitting
the central institutions of the Administrative Order of
Bahá'u'lláh for that time when they will have to shoulder the
tremendous responsibilities that will be thrust upon them as
the Lesser Peace begins to be established in the world.
Over the past four years there was a steady increase in the
contributions of the friends worldwide to the international
funds of the Faith, and it had been our hope and expectation
that this rise would continue and even be accelerated in the
current year. But since last Ridván, on the contrary, there has
been a sudden drop in contributions both to the international
funds as a whole and to the Arc Projects Fund, creating a crisis
which must be promptly overcome. In response to the growing
needs of the teaching work and the Arc Projects, we have
for several years been drastically cutting the expenditure of
the World Centre, cancelling or postponing many activities
which, although valuable, cannot be pursued under the
present condition of shortage of funds. This process cannot
be taken much further without seriously hampering the
ability of the World Centre to function at the level which the
interests of the Faith require.
If the financial needs of this year and those immediately
ahead are to be met, the contributions to the international
funds of the Cause must, far from decreasing, be substantially
increased.
Such an effort will call for sacrifice on the part of
individual believers and also for the diversion of funds from
those local and national projects which are not essential. We
are confident that the friends will respond to this call, as they
did to the crisis precipitated by the Iranian Revolution in 1979
when, at one moment, 61% of the income of the international
funds was cut off.
page 170
This is the immediate need. Beyond this there is, we
believe, a worldwide need for appreciation of this basic
principle of our Faith: that contributing to the Fund should
constitute an integral part of the spiritual life of every Bahá'í
and be regarded as the fulfillment of a fundamental spiritual
obligation. In too many countries we have encountered a
reluctance among the teachers of the Cause to include, in
their presentation of the Teachings, support of the Fund as a
natural part of Bahá'í life. In the Kitáb-i-Aqdas,
Bahá'u'lláh
more than once refers to the necessity for combining spiritual
and material means in achieving the purposes of the Faith.
Shoghi Effendi, for his part, referred to the Fund as the lifeblood
of the Cause.
We urge all the friends to give deep thought to the
importance of supporting the Cause financially and to the
effect that Bahá'í activities have on the condition of the entire
human race.
—
November 18, 1991
Huqúqu'lláh
Last April we were deeply touched by receiving a petition
from the delegates gathered at the National Convention
of the Bahá'ís of the United States, requesting that the Law of
Huqúqu'lláh be made binding on all the believers of that
country. Although it is not yet the time to take this far-reaching
step, we were moved to decide that, as a preliminary
measure, the texts relating to the law of Huqúqu'lláh will be
translated into English for general information against the
time when this law will be applied more widely.
However, important as is the law of Huqúqu'lláh, the
devoted followers of Bahá'u'lláh have, even without it, every
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opportunity to contribute regularly and sacrificially to the
work of the Cause. It is to a greater realization of the privilege
and responsibility of supporting the multiple activities of our
beloved Faith that we call you all at this critical time in world
history, and remind you that to support the Bahá'í funds is an
integral part of the Bahá'í way of life. The need is not only
now, but throughout the years to come, until our exertions,
reinforced by confirmations from on high, will have overcome
the great perils now facing mankind and have made
this would another world — a world whose splendor and
grace will surpass our highest hopes and greatest dreams.
—
January 3, 1985
In one of His Tablets Bahá'u'lláh refers to this Law as
ranking in importance immediately after the two great obligations
of recognition of God and steadfastness in His Cause,
and yet the introduction and implementation of this Law are
characterized by kindness, forgiveness, tolerance and magnanimity.
Although it deals with the material things of this
world, it is placed among those spiritual obligations resting
on the individual soul, such as prayer and fasting, the fulfillment
of which is a direct responsibility of each believer
towards God, not subject to the sanctions or impositions of
His institutions in this world. It is, indeed, a clear expression
of the priorities with which Bahá'u'lláh views the duties of
mankind. First comes the spiritual, and then the material — however
important in practice the latter may be.
After the Kitáb-i-Aqdas had been revealed in response to
the pleas of the friends, Bahá'u'lláh withheld it from publication
for some time and even then, when a number of devoted
Bahá'ís, having learned of the law, endeavored to offer the
Huqúqu'lláh, the payment was not accepted. The Tablets of
Bahá'u'lláh show His acute consciousness of the way in
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which material wealth has been permitted to degrade religion
in the past, and He preferred the Faith to sacrifice all
material benefits rather than to soil to the slightest degree its
dignity and purity. Herein is a lesson for all Bahá'í institutions
for all time.
However, as the beloved Guardian explained, funds are
the life-blood of the Cause. God Himself, as Bahá'u'lláh
stated, has made achievement dependent on material means.
Therefore, as the awareness of the friends grew, He permitted
the Huqúqu'lláh to be accepted, provided the donor
made the offering willingly with joy and awareness.
To receive the Huqúqu'lláh, Bahá'u'lláh brought into
being one of the great Institutions of the Faith, the Trusteeship
of Huqúqu'lláh....
A new stage, therefore, has now been opened in the
development of this Institution, a stage that will for ever be
associated with the opening of the Fourth Epoch of the
Formative Age of the Faith and the emergence of the Bahá'í
community from obscurity into the arena of world affairs.
—
March 1987, prepared by the Research Department
at the request of the Universal House of Justice
Huqúqu'lláh (The Right of God) is a great law and a
sacred institution. Laid down in the Most Holy Book (Kitáb-i-Aqdas),
it is one of the key instruments for constructing the
foundation and supporting the structure of the World Order
of Bahá'u'lláh. It has far-reaching ramifications that extend
from promoting the welfare of the individual, to buttressing
the authority and extending the activity of the Head of the
Faith. In providing a regular and systematic source of revenue
for the Central Institution of the Cause, Bahá'u'lláh has
assured the means for the independence and decisive functioning
of the World Centre of His Faith.
page 173
By identifying this law as "The Right of God" Bahá'u'lláh
has re-emphasized the nature of the relationship between
human beings and their Creator as a Covenant based on
mutual assurances and obligations; and, by designating the
Central Authority in the Cause, to which all must turn, as the
recipient of this Right, He has created a direct and vital link
between every individual believer and the Head of his Faith
that is unique in the structure of His World Order. This law
enables the friends to recognize the elevation of their economic
activity to the level of divine acceptability, it is a means
for the purification of their wealth and a magnet attracting
divine blessings. The computation and the payment of
Huqúqu'lláh, within the general guidelines set forth, are
exclusively a matter of conscience between the individual
and God; demanding or soliciting the Huqúqu'lláh is prohibited,
only appeals, reminders and exhortations of a general
nature, under the auspices of the institutions of the Faith, are
permissible. That the observance and enforcement of this
law, so crucial to the material well-being of the emerging
Bahá'í commonwealth, should thus have been left entirely to
the faith and conscience of the individual, gives substance to
and sheds light on what the beloved Master calls the spiritual
solution to economic problems. Indeed, the implications of
the law of Huqúqu'lláh for the realization of a number of the
principles of the Faith, such as the elimination of extremes of
wealth and poverty, and a more equitable distribution of
resources, will increasingly become manifest as the friends
assume in ever greater measure the responsibility for observing
it.
The fundamentals of the law of Huqúqu'lláh are promulgated
in the Kitáb-i-Aqdas. Further elaborations of its features
are to be found in other Writings of Bahá'u'lláh, in Tablets
from 'Abdu'l-Bahá and in letters from Shoghi Effendi and the
page 174
Universal House of Justice, mostly in response to questions
raised by the friends. All these major references have been
compiled by the Research Department of the Universal House
of Justice and separately published. A study of that compilation
makes it clear that the application of the law has been
progressive, and will continue to be so, as its ramifications
and subsidiary rulings are elucidated.
—
March 1987, prepared by the Research Department
at the request of the Universal House of Justice
Such an exceptional confluence of imminent achievements — the
publication of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas, the progress of
the building projects on Mount Carmel, the conclusion of the
Six Year Plan, the inception of the Holy Year — animates the
expectations of the Bahá'í world, sets the stage for mightier
endeavors than have already been attempted, and points us
all to the opening of a new phase of history. It seems fitting,
then, that the sacred law which enables each one to express
his or her personal sense of devotion to God in a profoundly
private act of conscience that promotes the common good,
which directly connects the individual believer with the
Central Institution of the Faith, and which, above all, ensures
to the obedient and the sincere the ineffable grace and abundant
blessings of Providence, should, at this favorable juncture,
be embraced by all who profess their belief in the Supreme
Manifestation of God. With humility before our sovereign
Lord, we now announce that as of Ridván 1992, the beginning
of the Holy Year, the Law of Huqúqu'lláh, the Right of God,
will become universally applicable. All are lovingly called to
observe it.
—
Ridván 1991
The Office of Huqúqu'lláh has been established in the
Holy Land under the direction of the Chief Trustee of
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Huqúqu'lláh, the Hand of the Cause of God 'Alí-Muhammad
Varqá, in anticipation of the worldwide application of the
Law of Huqúqu'lláh next Ridván. Concurrent
with this development
are the steps being taken by Dr. Varqá to organize
regional and national Boards of Trustees of Huqúqu'lláh,
following the example of the Board already functioning in the
United States.
—
November 26, 1991
And now, amid the eager anticipations occasioned by the
two major commemorative events and by the imminent
publication of the Mother Book of the Bahá'í Revelation, the
Law of Huqúqu'lláh takes effect as part of the constant
practice of the members of our entire world community. May
the promised divine bounties associated with the activation
of this holy law be showered upon the beloved of the Lord in
every land.
—
Ridván 1992
Fourth Epoch of the Formative Age
The beloved Counselors, strengthened and enriched by
their experience in the Holy Land, will, as early as possible,
consult with all National Spiritual Assemblies on measures
to conclude triumphantly the current Plan, and on preparations
to launch the Six Year Plan. In anticipation of those
consultations, National Spiritual Assemblies will receive the
full announcement of the aims and characteristics of that
PIan, so that together with the Counselors they may formulate
the national plans which will, for each community,
establish its pursuit of the overall objectives.
This new process, whereby the national goals of the next
Plan are to be largely formulated by National Spiritual
page 176
Assemblies and Boards of Counselors, signalizes the inauguration
of a new stage in the unfoldment of the Administrative
Order. Our beloved Guardian anticipated a succession of
epochs during the Formative Age of the Faith; we have no
hesitation in recognizing that this new development in the
maturation of Bahá'í institutions marks the inception of the
fourth epoch of that Age.
—
January 2, 1986
Paralleling these outstanding events has been a remarkable
unfoldment of organic growth in the maturity of the
institutions of the Cause. The development of capacity and
responsibility on their part and the devolution upon them of
continually greater autonomy have been fostered by the
encouragement of ever closer co-operation between the twin
arms of the Administrative Order. This process now takes a
large stride forward as the National Spiritual Assemblies and
Counselors consult together to formulate, for the first time,
the national goals of an international teaching plan. Together
they must carry them out; together they must implement the
world objectives of the Six Year Plan as they apply in each
country. This significant development is a befitting opening
to the fourth epoch of the Formative Age and initiates a
process which will undoubtedly characterize that epoch as
national communities grow in strength and influence and are
able to diffuse within their own countries the spirit of love
and social unity which is the hallmark of the Cause of God.
—
Ridván 1986
In disclosing the panoramic vision of the unfoldment of
the Dispensation of Bahá'u'lláh, Shoghi Effendi refers to
three major evolutionary stages through which the Faith
must pass — the Apostolic or Heroic Age (1844-1921) associated
with the Central Figures of the Faith; the Formative or
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Transitional Age (1921- ), the "hall-mark" of which is the rise
and establishment of the Administrative Order, based on the
execution of the provisions of 'Abdu'l-Bahá's Will and Testament;
and, the Golden Age which will represent the
"consummation of this glorious Dispensation." Close examination
of the details of Bahá'í history reveals that the individual
Ages are comprised of a number of periods — inseparable
parts of one integrated whole....
The Formative Age, in which we now live and serve, was
ushered in with the passing of 'Abdu'l-Bahá. Its major thrust
is the shaping, development and consolidation of the local,
national and international institutions of the Faith. It is clear
from the enumeration of the tasks associated with the Formative
Age that their achievement will require increasingly
mature levels of functioning of the Bahá'í community:
"During this Formative Age of the Faith, and in the
course of present and succeeding epochs, the last and
crowning stage in the erection of the framework of the
Administrative Order of the Faith of Bahá'u'lláh — the
election of the Universal House of Justice — will have
been completed, the Kitáb-i-Aqdas, the Mother-Book of
His Revelation, will have been codified and its laws
promulgated, the Lesser Peace will have been established,
the unity of mankind will have been achieved and
its maturity attained, the Plan conceived by 'Abdu'l-Bahá
will have been executed, the emancipation of the Faith
from the fetters of religious orthodoxy will have been
effected, and its independent religious status will have
been universally recognized...."
The epochs of the Formative Age mark progressive stages
in the evolution of the organic Bahá'í community and signal
page 178
the maturation of its Institutions, thus enabling the Faith to
operate at new levels and to initiate new functions. The
timing of each epoch is designated by the Head of the Faith,
and given the organic nature of evolutionary development,
the transition from one epoch to another may not be abrupt,
but may well occur over a period of time. This is the case, for
example, in relation to both the inception of the Formative
Age and the end of its first epoch. In relation to the former, the
passing of 'Abdu'l-Bahá is the transitional event most often
identified with the close of the Heroic Age and the beginning
of the Formative Age. However, the Guardian also asserts
that the Apostolic Age of the Faith concluded "more particularly
with the passing [in 1932] of His well-beloved and
illustrious sister the Most Exalted Leaf — the last survivor of
a glorious and heroic age." With regard to the termination of
the first epoch of the Formative Age, Shoghi Effendi has
placed this between the years, 1944 and 1946.
Before describing the individual epochs of the Formative
Age, it is important to comment on the use of the term
"epoch" in the writings of the Guardian. In a letter dated 18
January 1953, written on his behalf to a National Spiritual
Assembly, it is explained that the term is used to apply both
to the stages in the Formative Age of the Faith, and to the
phases in the unfoldment of 'Abdu'l-Bahá's Divine Plan. We
are currently in the fourth epoch of the Formative Age and
the second epoch of 'Abdu'l-Bahá's Divine Plan. (The first
epoch of the Divine Plan began in 1937 with the inception of
the First Seven Year Plan of the North American Bahá'í
community, and concluded with the successful completion
of the Ten Year Crusade in 1963. The second epoch of 'Abdu'l-Bahá's
Divine Plan commenced in 1964 with the inauguration
of the Nine Year Plan of the Universal House of Justice)....
page 179
In a letter dated 2 January 1986 written by the Universal
House of Justice to the Bahá'ís of the World, the Supreme
Body announced the inception of the fourth epoch of the
Formative Age. It highlighted the significant developments
that had taken place in the "organic growth of the Cause of
God" during the course of the recently completed third
epoch, by assessing the readiness of the Bahá'í community to
begin to address the objectives of the new Six Year Plan
scheduled to begin on 21 April 1986, and, outlined the general
aims and characteristics of this new Plan. Whereas national
plans had previously derived largely from the World Centre,
in this new epoch the specific goals for each national community
will be formulated, within the framework of the overall
objectives of the Plan, by means of consultation between the
particular National Spiritual Assembly and the Continental
Board of Counselors....
The tasks that remain to be accomplished during the
course of the Formative Age are many and challenging.
Additional epochs can be anticipated, each marking significant
stages in the evolution of the Administrative Order and
culminating in the Golden Age of the Faith. The Golden Age,
itself, will involve "successive epochs" leading ultimately to
the establishment of the Most Great Peace, to the World
Bahá'í Commonwealth and to the "birth and efflorescence of
a world civilization."
—
February 5, 1986, from the Research Department
of the Universal House of Justice
The launching of the Six Year Plan at Ridván 1986 coincided
with the opening of a new epoch — the fourth — in the
organic unfoldment of the Formative Age of our Faith. The
administrative institutions of this growing Cause of God had
already begun to show signs of an increasing maturity, while
page 180
at the same time emerging from the protective obscurity of
their early days into the larger arena of public notice. These
twin processes were signalized by a development of far-reaching
consequence to the internal life of the Bahá'í
community and by an outward activity of a magnitude
unprecedented in its entire history.
The former was a devolution of responsibility whereby
all national communities, through their National Spiritual
Assemblies, in consultation with Counselors, Local Spiritual
Assemblies and the generality of believers, were requested to
formulate, for the first time, their own objectives for achievement
during the new Plan. This expectation of maturity
challenging the national communities was matched by their
formulation of national plans submitted to the World Centre
for coordination into the world-embracing Six Year Plan.
—
Ridván 1987
Whatever may be the individual effects of any one of
these aforementioned developments — and of such others as
the appearance of a representative of the Bahá'í International
Community as the only non-Buddhist speaker invited to
address a public meeting held in conjunction with the Asian
Buddhist Conference for Peace in Mongolia; the specific
mention of the Bahá'ís by Pope John Paul II at a reception
during his recent visit to Burundi; the official listing of the
Bahá'í Faith as one of the common religions in Tuvalu; the
International Exposition on Education for Peace sponsored
by the Brazilian National Spiritual Assembly with the participation
of 23 embassies and educational institutions — one
thing is abundantly clear: the cumulative impact across the
globe affirms the emergence of the Faith from obscurity. Such
marks of increasing public recognition of the true character
and rich potentialities of the Bahá'í community are a distinctive
page 181
feature of the advancement of the Faith in the fourth
epoch of the Formative Age.
—
Ridván 1991
The Six Year Plan
The organic growth of the Cause of God, indicated by
recent significant developments in its life, becomes markedly
apparent in the light of the main objectives and expectations
of the Six Year Plan: a vast expansion of the numerical and
financial resources of the Cause; enlargement of its status in
the world; a world-wide increase in the production, distribution
and use of Bahá'í literature; a firmer and world-wide
demonstration of the Bahá'í way of life requiring special
consideration of the Bahá'í education of children and youth,
the strengthening of Bahá'í family life and attention to universal
participation and the spiritual enrichment of individual
life; further acceleration in the process of the maturation of
local and national Bahá'í communities and a dynamic consolidation
of the unity of the two arms of the Administrative
Order; an extension of the involvement of the Bahá'í world
community in the needs of the world around it; and the
pursuit of social and economic development in well-established
Bahá'í communities. These are some of the features of
the Six Year Plan which will open on 21 April 1986 and
terminate on 20 April 1992....
The beloved Counselors, strengthened and enriched by
their experience in the Holy Land, will, as early as possible,
consult with all National Spiritual Assemblies on measures
to conclude triumphantly the current Plan, and on preparations
to launch the Six Year Plan. In anticipation of those
consultations, National Spiritual Assemblies will receive the
page 182
full announcement of the aims and characteristics of that
Plan, so that together with the Counselors they may formulate
the national plans which will, for each community,
establish its pursuit of the overall objectives.
—
January 2, 1986
The House of Justice has instructed us to send you the
following additional guidelines together with the enclosed
statement of the Major Objectives of the Plan at the national
level, which includes some suggestions for specific goals to
provide a basis for your consultations. You should not,
however, confine yourselves to these suggestions....
The major objectives of the Six Year Plan include: carrying
the healing Message of Bahá'u'lláh to the generality of
mankind; greater involvement of the Faith in the life of
human society; a worldwide increase in the translation,
production, distribution and use of Bahá'í literature; further
acceleration in the process of the maturation of national and
local Bahá'í communities; greater attention to universal participation
and the spiritual enrichment of individual believers;
a wider extension of Bahá'í education to children and youth
and the strengthening of Bahá'í family life; and the pursuit of
projects of social and economic development in well-established
Bahá'í communities.
—
February 25, 1986, Department of the Secretariat
on behalf of the Universal House of Justice
Paralleling these outstanding events has been a remarkable
unfoldment of organic growth in the maturity of the
institutions of the Cause.... This process now takes a large
stride forward as the National Spiritual Assemblies and
Counselors consult together to formulate, for the first time,
the national goals of an international teaching plan. Together
page 183
they must carry them out; together they must implement the
world objectives of the Six Year Plan as they apply in each
country....
The goals to be achieved at the World Centre include
publication of a copiously annotated English translation of
the Kitáb-i-Aqdas and related texts, education of the Bahá'í
world in the law of the Huqúqu'lláh, pursuit of plans for the
erection of the remaining buildings on the Arc, and the
broadening of the basis of the international relations of the
Faith.
—
Ridván 1986
The stage is set for universal, rapid and massive growth
of the Cause of God. The immediate and basic challenge is
pursuit of the goals of the Six Year Plan, the preliminary
stages of which have already been initiated. The all-important
teaching work must be imaginatively, persistently and
sacrificially continued, ensuring the enrollment of ever larger
numbers who will provide the energy, the resources and
spiritual force to enable the beloved Cause to worthily play
its part in the redemption of mankind. To reinforce this
process the international goals of the Plan have been adopted,
calling for the undertaking of many hundreds of inter-assembly
assistance projects, the re-formation of the National
Spiritual Assembly of Zaire at Ridván 1987 and the establishment,
in the course of the Plan, of new National Spiritual
Assemblies, of which those of Angola, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau
and Macau have already been approved. During the first
year of the Six Year Plan 338 pioneers, guided by the needs set
forth in previous plans, have already arisen and settled in 119
countries. A new appeal is now being prepared, details of
which will be announced shortly. The promotion and facilitation
of service projects for Bahá'í youth in the emergent
countries of the world are now called for. National Spiritual
page 184
Assemblies are asked to arrange, in consultation with each
other and with the assistance of the Continental Boards of
Counselors, the best means of ensuring the effective service
of those who respond.
Preparations for the Holy Year 1992, when the 100th
Anniversary of the Ascension of the Blessed Beauty and the
inception of the Covenant will be commemorated, have
already begun. It is fitting, then, that the Covenant of
Bahá'u'lláh, which links the past and the future with the
progressive stages towards the fulfillment of God's ancient
Promise, should be the major theme of the Six Year Plan.
Concentration on this theme will enable us all to obtain a
deeper appreciation of the meaning and purpose of His
Revelation — "A Revelation," in the words of the Guardian,
"hailed as the promise and crowning glory of past ages and
centuries, as the consummation of all the Dispensations
within the Adamic Cycle, inaugurating an era of at least a
thousand years' duration, and a cycle destined to last no less
than five thousand centuries, signalizing the end of the
Prophetic Era and the beginning of the Era of Fulfillment,
unsurpassed alike in the duration of its Author's ministry
and the fecundity and splendor of His mission...." The
questions that such concentrated study should answer will
undoubtedly include the meaning of the Bahá'í Covenant, its
origin and what should be our attitude towards it.
Ever present in our contemplation of these profound
questions is the magnetic figure of 'Abdu'l-Bahá, the Center
of the Covenant, the Mystery of God, the perfect Exemplar,
Whose unerring interpretation of the Holy Texts and luminous
examples of their application to personal conduct shed
light on a way of life we must strive diligently to follow.
—
Ridván 1987
page 185
The great projects already launched must be pursued to
their completion. The Terraces below and above the Shrine of
the Báb and the Arc on Mount Carmel must be completed,
fulfilling the glorious vision of the efflorescence of God's holy
mountain; the second World Congress must be held in the
City of the Covenant to celebrate the hundredth anniversary
of the inauguration of that Covenant; the steadily advancing
work on the translation and annotation of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas,
the Most Holy Book, must be brought to publication; the
interest shown by the friends in the Law of Huqúqu'lláh must
be cultivated; the pioneers and traveling teachers must go
forth; the expenses of the Cause must be met; all objectives of
the Six Year Plan must be achieved.
—
Ridván 1988
The spiritual current which exerted such galvanic effects
at the International Bahá'í Convention last Ridván has swept
through the entire world community, arousing its members
in both the East and the West to feats of activity and achievement
in teaching never before experienced in any one year.
The high level of enrollments alone bears this out, as nearly
half a million new believers have already been reported. The
names of such far-flung places as India and Liberia, Bolivia
and Bangladesh, Taiwan and Peru, the Philippines and Haiti
leap to the fore as we contemplate the accumulating evidences
of the entry by troops called for in our message of a
year ago. These evidences are hopeful signs of the greater
acceleration yet to come and in which all national communities,
whatever the current status of their teaching effort, will
ultimately be involved.
We look back with feelings of humble gratitude and
heightened expectations at the stupendous developments
which have taken place in so brief a period. One such development
has been the adoption of the architectural design
page 186
conceived by Mr. Faríburz Sahbá for the Terraces of the
Shrine of the Báb, which launches a new stage towards the
realization of the Master's and the Guardian's vision for the
path along which the kings and rulers will ascend the slopes
of Mount Carmel to pay homage at the resting place of
Bahá'u'lláh's Martyr-Herald. Other developments include:
the approval by the central authorities in Moscow of the
application submitted by a number of Bahá'ís in
'Ishqábád to
restore the Local Spiritual Assembly of that city; the initiation
of steps to open a Bahá'í Information Center in Budapest, the
first such agency of the Faith in the Eastern Bloc; the establishment
of a branch of the Bahá'í International Community's
Office of Public Information in Hong Kong in anticipation of
the time when the Faith can be proclaimed on the mainland
of China.
Also outstanding among these developments have been
the successful co-sponsorship by the Bahá'í International
Community of the "Arts for Nature" program in London
held to benefit the work of the World Wide Fund for Nature;
the signing of an agreement in Geneva establishing formal
working relations between the World Health Organization
(WHO) and the Bahá'í International Community; the official
approval of a Bahá'í curriculum for public schools in New
South Wales, Australia; the immense stream of visitors to the
Temple in New Delhi, swelling to some four million since
that edifice's inauguration in December 1986, and including
an unusual number of high government officials and other
prominent persons from many lands, among them China, the
Soviet Union and countries of the Eastern Bloc. These, added
to numerous other highlights of this single year, merge with
the overall record of accomplishments thus far in the Six Year
Plan, presenting a dynamic picture of accelerated activity
throughout the Bahá'í world.
—
Ridván 1989
page 187
The preparation of the long-expected, annotated English
translation of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas, the Book of Laws, the Most
Holy Book, the Mother Book of Bahá'u'lláh's Revelation, will
be completed — a monumental achievement which alone and
of itself will usher in a new stage in the evolution of the
Bahá'í world and thus crown the accomplishments of the
Six Year Plan.
—
Ridván 1991
Indeed, the immediate portal to this propitious Holy Year
is the vista of new horizons opened by the triumph of the Six
Year Plan, which coincided with the initial phase of the fourth
epoch of the Formative Age of our Faith. Overall it is not so
much a triumph in numerical achievements, though in many
places and at particular moments the scope of expansion was
extraordinary. It is a triumph that has been manifested in a
new variety of victories, in new beginnings, fresh initiatives
and mature institutional developments, such as to stamp the
seal of success on the Plan's seven major objectives. Impossible
as it is to enumerate in these few pages the results of the
Plan, the main aspects of the developments in this remarkably
dynamic period deserve, nonetheless, to be highlighted.
The Bahá'í community changed markedly over the last six
years. The major indicators are, no doubt, discernible to the
friends everywhere and may be summed up thus:
One: The Faith of Bahá'u'lláh is represented in every
country on earth.... Figures already available to the World
Centre indicate that more than one and a half million souls
entered the Cause during the Six Year Plan....
Two: The proclamation of the Faith throughout the world
attained an entirely new stage....
Three: The dedication in December 1986 of the Mother
Temple of the Indian Subcontinent to public worship introduced
page 188
a new force to the teaching and proclamation activities
of the Faith....
Four: The further emergence of the Faith from obscurity
is reflected in distinctive ways....
Five: Bahá'í projects of social and economic development
have greatly multiplied and brought much credit to the
community in the examples of the power of group initiative
and voluntary consultative action that have been set in numerous
places....
Six: Youth activities took on a special character shaped by
the idea of a youth year of service....
Seven: The advances in the consolidation of the Bahá'í
administrative system are evident from the marked improvement
in the internal development and collaborative
efforts of its two arms....
Eight: The great building projects on the Mountain of
God, anticipated by Bahá'u'lláh in the Tablet of Carmel,
inaugurated by 'Abdu'l-Bahá with the construction of the
Tomb of the Báb and carried forward in the plans of Shoghi
Effendi, entered a new stage....
All these developments have made it evident that the
accumulated potential for further progress of the Bahá'í
community is incalculable.
—
Ridván 1992
Maturation of the Institutions
In the international sphere, the beloved Hands of the
Cause, ever growing in our love and admiration, have, whenever
their health has permitted, continued to uplift and
encourage the friends and to promote the unity and onward
march of the army of life. The International Teaching Centre,
page 189
operating from its world seat, has provided loving and wise
leadership and direction to the Board of Counselors. Its
sphere of service has been immensely extended by the assignment
of new responsibilities and by raising the number
of its Counselor members to seven. The dedicated services of
the Counselors in all the continents, ably supported by the
Auxiliary Board members, have been invaluable in fostering
the spiritual health and integrity of the world wide community.
To develop further this vital organ of the Administrative
Order, it has been decided to establish a term of five years
service for those appointed to the Auxiliary Boards, commencing
November 26, 1986.
—
Ridván 1984
A prime element in the careful and wise direction needed
is the achievement of victory in the Seven Year Plan, paying
great attention to the development and strengthening of
Local Assemblies. Great efforts must be made to encourage
them to discharge their primary duties of meeting regularly,
holding the Nineteen Day Feasts and observing Holy Days,
organizing children's classes, encouraging the practice of
family prayers, undertaking extension teaching projects,
administering the Bahá'í Fund and constantly encouraging
and leading their communities in all Bahá'í activities. The
equality of men and women is not, at the present time,
universally applied. In those areas where traditional inequality
still hampers its progress we must take the lead in practicing
this Bahá'í principle. Bahá'í women
and girls must be encouraged
to take part in the social, spiritual and administrative
activities of their communities.
—
Ridván 1984
Armed with the strength of action and the co-operation of
the individual believers composing it, the community as a
whole should endeavor to establish greater stability in the
page 190
patterns of its development, locally and nationally, through
sound, systematic planning and execution of its work — and
this in striking contrast to the short-lived enthusiasms and
frenetic superficialities so characteristic of present-day American
life. A Bahá'í community which is consistent in its
fundamental life-giving, life-sustaining activities will at its
heart be serene and confident; it will resonate with spiritual
dynamism, will exert irresistible influence, will set a new
course in social evolution, enabling it to win the respect and
eventually the allegiance of admirers and critics alike. These
profound possibilities reside in the will of the individual to
take initiative, to act in accordance with the guidance offered
by Bahá'í institutions, and to maintain such action regardless
of the myriad distractions posed by the disintegration of a society
adrift in a sea of materialism.
—
Ridván 1984 to the U. S.
But it is in the local Bahá'í communities that the most
widespread presentation of the Faith can take place. It is here
that the real pattern of Bahá'í life can be seen. It is here that the
power of Bahá'u'lláh to organize human affairs on a basis of
spiritual unity can be most apparent. Every Local Spiritual
Assembly which unitedly strives to grow in maturity and
efficiency and encourages its community to fulfill its destiny
as a foundation stone of Bahá'u'lláh's World Order can add
to a growing groundswell of interest in and eventual recognition
of the Cause of God as the sole hope for mankind.
—
Ridván 1985
Paralleling these outstanding events has been a remarkable
unfoldment of organic growth in the maturity of the
institutions of the Cause. The development of capacity and
responsibility on their part and the devolution upon them of
continually greater autonomy have been fostered by the
page 191
encouragement of ever closer co-operation between the twin
arms of the Administrative Order. This process now takes a
large stride forward as the National Spiritual Assemblies and
Counselors consult together to formulate, for the first time,
the national goals of an international teaching plan. Together
they must carry them out; together they must implement the
world objectives of the Six Year Plan as they apply in each
country. This significant development is a befitting opening
to the fourth epoch of the Formative Age and initiates a
process which will undoubtedly characterize that epoch as
national communities grow in strength and influence and are
able to diffuse within their own countries the spirit of love
and social unity which is the hallmark of the Cause of God.
—
Ridván 1986
The launching of the Six Year Plan at Ridván 1986 coincided
with the opening of a new epoch — the fourth — in the
organic unfoldment of the Formative Age of our Faith. The
administrative institutions of this growing Cause of God had
already begun to show signs of an increasing maturity, while
at the same time emerging from the protective obscurity of
their early days into the larger arena of public notice. These
twin processes were signalized by a development of far-reaching
consequence to the internal life of the Bahá'í
community and by an outward activity of a magnitude
unprecedented in its entire history.
The former was a devolution of responsibility whereby
all national communities, through their National Spiritual
Assemblies, in consultation with Counselors, Local Spiritual
Assemblies and the generality of believers, were requested to
formulate, for the first time, their own objectives for achievement
during the new Plan. This expectation of maturity
challenging the national communities was matched by their
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formulation of national plans submitted to the World Centre
for coordination into the world-embracing Six Year Plan.
—
Ridván 1987
Through the shadow of confusion deranging present-day
society, there is a far glimmer, yet so faint but discernible,
of an approach, slow but definite, towards the culmination of
the three collateral processes envisaged by the beloved Guardian,
namely: the emergence of the Lesser Peace, the
construction of the buildings on the Arc on Mount Carmel
and the evolution of National and Local Spiritual Assemblies....
Have we not witnessed the increasing strength of National
and Local Spiritual Assemblies in their ability to
conceive and execute plans, in their capacity to deal with
governmental authorities and social organizations, to respond
to public calls upon their services and to collaborate
with others in projects of social and economic development?
Are these Assemblies not reinforced by the alert, loving
support of the Continental Counselors, the Auxiliary Board
members and their assistants, all of whose burgeoning energies
are being skillfully coordinated by the International
Teaching Centre — an institution whose augmented membership
has already displayed a verve, a vision and a versatility
evocative of warm admiration?
—
Ridván 1989
The Nineteen Day Feast, its framework, purpose and
possibilities, have in recent years become a subject of increasing
inquiry among the friends. It occupied much of the
consultation at the Sixth International Bahá'í Convention last
year, and we feel the time has come for us to offer clarifications.
page 193
The World Order of Bahá'u'lláh encompasses all units of
human society; integrates the spiritual, administrative and
social processes of life; and canalizes human expression in its
varied forms towards the construction of a new civilization.
The Nineteen Day Feast embraces all these aspects at the very
base of society. Functioning in the village, the town, the city,
it is an institution of which all the people of Baha are members.
It is intended to promote unity, ensure progress, and
foster joy....
But it is not only in the sense of its gradual unfoldment as
an institution that the evolution of the Feast must be regarded;
there is a broader context yet. The Feast may well be
seen in its unique combination of modes as the culmination
of a great historic process in which primary elements of
community life — acts of worship, of festivity and other forms
of togetherness — over vast stretches of time have achieved a
glorious convergence. The Nineteen Day Feast represents the
new stage in this enlightened age to which the basic expression
of community life has evolved. Shoghi Effendi has
described it as the foundation of the new World Order, and
in a letter written on his behalf, it is referred to as constituting
"a vital medium for maintaining close and continued contact
between the believers themselves, and also between them
and the body of their elected representatives in the local
community."
Moreover, because of the opportunity which it provides
for conveying messages from the national and international
levels of the administration and also for communicating the
recommendations of the friends to those levels, the Feast
becomes a link that connects the local community in a dynamic
relationship with the entire structure of the
Administrative Order. But considered in its local sphere
alone there is much to thrill and amaze the heart. Here it links
page 194
the individual to the collective processes by which a society
is built or restored. Here, for instance, the Feast is an arena of
democracy at the very root of society, where the Local Spiritual
Assembly and the members of the community meet on
common ground, where individuals are free to offer their
gifts of thought, whether as new ideas or constructive criticism,
to the building processes of an advancing civilization.
Thus it can be seen that aside from its spiritual significance,
this common institution of the people combines an array of
elemental social disciplines which educate its participants in
the essentials of responsible citizenship....
—
August 27, 1989
An expansion of thought and action in certain aspects of
our work would enhance our possibilities for success in
meeting our aforementioned commitments. Since change,
ever more rapid change, is a constant characteristic of life at
this time, and since our growth, size and external relations
demand much of us, our community must be ready to adapt.
In a sense this means that the community must become more
adept at accommodating a wide range of actions without
losing concentration on the primary objectives of teaching,
namely, expansion and consolidation. A unity in diversity of
actions is called for, a condition in which different individuals
will concentrate on different activities, appreciating the
salutary effect of the aggregate on the growth and development
of the Faith, because each person cannot do everything
and all persons cannot do the same thing. This understanding
is important to the maturity which, by the many demands
being made upon it, the community is being forced to attain.
The Order brought by Bahá'u'lláh is intended to guide
the progress and resolve the problems of society. Our numbers
are as yet too small to effect an adequate demonstration
page 195
of the potentialities inherent in the administrative system we
are building, and the efficacy of this system will not be fully
appreciated without a vast expansion of our membership.
With the prevailing situation in the world the necessity to
effect such a demonstration becomes more compelling. It is
all too obvious that even those who rail against the defects of
the old order, and would even tear it down, are themselves
bereft of any viable alternative to put in its place. Since the
Administrative Order is designed to be a pattern for future
society, the visibility of such a pattern will be a signal of hope
to those who despair....
The affairs of mankind have reached a stage at which
increasing calls will be made upon our community to assist,
through advice and practical measures, in solving critical
social problems. It is a service that we will gladly render, but
this means that our Local and National Spiritual Assemblies
must adhere more scrupulously to principle. With increasing
public attention being focused on the Cause of God, it becomes
imperative for Bahá'í institutions to improve their
performance, through a closer identification with the fundamental
verities of the Faith, through greater conformity to the
spirit and form of Bahá'í administration and through a keener
reliance on the beneficial effects of proper consultation, so
that the communities they guide will reflect a pattern of life
that will offer hope to the disillusioned members of society.
—
Ridván 1990
At Ridván 1993, immediately following the Holy Year
and during a period which will witness the holding of the
Seventh Bahá'í International Convention at the World Centre,
a Three Year Plan will be launched. The national goals of
this global Plan will be set through consultations between the
Continental Counselors and National Spiritual Assemblies.
page 196
The unusual character and rapidity of developments both
inside and outside the Faith signify the necessity for a short,
flexible plan attuned to the dynamic nature of the times.
—
November 26, 1991
The advances in the consolidation of the Bahá'í administrative
system are evident from the marked improvement in
the internal development and collaborative efforts of its two
arms. The cherished and intrepid Hands of the Cause of God,
true to the allegiance they bear to their beloved Guardian,
persevere in their unique services, astonishing the community
with their resilient powers. The growth in confidence
and strength of the Boards of Counselors and their auxiliaries,
backed by a reinforced and vigorous International
Teaching Centre, assured to the Spiritual Assemblies, whom
they are charged to stimulate and advise, a buttressing indispensable
to the welfare of the entire system; while the extension
of the span of activities of the National and Local Spiritual
Assemblies, themselves charged with guiding the destinies
of their communities, significantly broadened the base of that
system. Collaterally, the work of these institutions has facilitated
and boosted the evolution of the Administrative Order.
Even more: they have demonstrated a creative energy that
bodes well for their continued maturation.
—
Ridván 1992
Maturation and Urgency of the Teaching Work
It is, of course, the individual believer who bears primary
responsibility for securing this goal; therefore, it is primarily
to the individual believer "on whom," as the beloved Guardian
averred, "in the last resort, depends the fate of the entire
page 197
community," that our concern in this instance is addressed.
For it is the individual who possesses the will to act as a
teacher or not. No Spiritual Assembly, no teaching committee,
no group of well-intentioned Bahá'ís, however much it
exerts itself, may usurp the position occupied by the individual
in this fundamental activity. Recognizing that the
Spiritual Assemblies and their designated committees have
devoted much to proclaiming the Faith through the mass
media and sundry other means, that the enormous resources
poured into such proclamation represent an investment in
the teaching work which paves the way for the action of the
individual teacher, and that publicity, however much it may
arouse public interest in the Cause, is incapable of replacing
personal teaching efforts, let the individual Bahá'í renew his
resolve to "arise and respond to the call of teaching." Let him,
acting on Shoghi Effendi's advice, "survey the possibilities
which the particular circumstances in which he lives offer
him, evaluate their advantages, and proceed intelligently
and systematically to utilize them for the achievement of the
object he has in mind." Let him also strive to obtain adequate
knowledge of the Teachings and reflect the virtues of that
knowledge in his daily life. Finally, let him waste no time,
forfeit no further opportunity.
Armed with the strength of action and the co-operation of
the individual believers composing it, the community as a
whole should endeavor to establish greater stability in the
patterns of its development, locally and nationally, through
sound, systematic planning and execution of its work — and
this in striking contrast to the short-lived enthusiasms and
frenetic superficialities so characteristic of present-day American
life. A Bahá'í community which is consistent in its
fundamental life-giving, life-sustaining activities will at its
heart be serene and confident; it will resonate with spiritual
page 198
dynamism, will exert irresistible influence, will set a new
course in social evolution, enabling it to win the respect and
eventually the allegiance of admirers and critics alike. These
profound possibilities reside in the will of the individual to
take initiative, to act in accordance with the guidance offered
by Bahá'í institutions, and to maintain such action regardless
of the myriad distractions posed by the disintegration of a
society adrift in a sea of materialism. May you with renewed
determination and a rededication to spiritual values, seize
your chance, while there is yet time, to convey the Message of
Bahá'u'lláh thoughtfully, patiently and attractively to your
fellow-citizens....
—
Ridván 1984 to the U. S.
The stage is set for universal, rapid and massive growth
of the Cause of God. The immediate and basic challenge is
pursuit of the goals of the Six Year Plan, the preliminary
stages of which have already been initiated. The all-important
teaching work must be imaginatively, persistently and
sacrificially continued, ensuring the enrollment of ever larger
numbers who will provide the energy, the resources and
spiritual force to enable the beloved Cause to worthily play
its part in the redemption of mankind.
—
Ridván 1987
The great work of constructing the terraces, landscaping
their surroundings, and erecting the remaining buildings of
the Arc will bring into being a vastly augmented World
Centre structure which will be capable of meeting the challenges
of coming centuries and of the tremendous growth of
the Bahá'í community which the beloved Guardian has told
us to expect. Already we see the effect of the spiritual energies
which the completion of the Seat of the Universal House of
Justice has released, and the new impulse this has given to the
advancement of the Faith. Who can gauge what transformations
page 199
will be effected as a result of the completion of each
successive stage of this great enterprise? The Faith advances,
not at a uniform rate of growth, but in vast surges, precipitated
by the alternation of crisis and victory. In a passage
written on 18 July 1953, in the early months of the Ten Year
Crusade, Shoghi Effendi, referring to the vital need to ensure
through the teaching work a "steady flow" of "fresh recruits
to the slowly yet steadily advancing army of the Lord of
Hosts," stated that this flow would "presage and hasten the
advent of the day which, as prophesied by 'Abdu'l-Bahá, will
witness the entry by troops of peoples of divers nations and
races into the Bahá'í world." This day the
Bahá'í world has
already seen in Africa, the Pacific, in Asia and in Latin
America, and this process of entry by troops must, in the
present plan, be augmented and spread to other countries
for, as the Guardian stated in this same letter, it "will be the
prelude to that long-awaited hour when a mass conversion
on the part of these same nations and races, and as a direct
result of a chain of events, momentous and possibly catastrophic
in nature, and which cannot as yet be even dimly
visualized, will suddenly revolutionize the fortunes of the
Faith, derange the equilibrium of the world, and reinforce a
thousandfold the numerical strength as well as the material
power and the spiritual authority of the Faith of Bahá'u'lláh."
This is the time for which we must now prepare ourselves;
this is the hour whose coming it is our task to hasten.
—
Ridván 1987
A thrilling consequence of these favorably conjoined
developments is the emergence of a new paradigm of opportunity
for further growth and consolidation of our world-wide
community. New prospects for teaching the Cause at all
levels of society have unfolded. These are confirmed in the
page 200
early results flowing from the new teaching initiatives being
fostered in a number of places as more and more national
communities witness the beginnings of that entry by troops
promised by the beloved Master and which Shoghi Effendi
said would lead on to mass conversion. The immediate
possibilities presented by this providential situation compel
us to expect that an expansion of the Community of the Most
Great Name, such as has not yet been experienced, is, indeed,
at hand.
—
Ridván 1988
The great projects already launched must be pursued to
their completion. The Terraces below and above the Shrine of
the Báb and the Arc on Mount Carmel must be completed,
fulfilling the glorious vision of the efflorescence of God's holy
mountain; the second World Congress must be held in the
City of the Covenant to celebrate the hundredth anniversary
of the inauguration of that Covenant; the steadily advancing
work on the translation and annotation of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas,
the Most Holy Book, must be brought to publication; the
interest shown by the friends in the Law of Huqúqu'lláh must
be cultivated; the pioneers and traveling teachers must go
forth; the expenses of the Cause must be met; all objectives of
the Six Year Plan must be achieved.
But the paramount purpose of all Bahá'í activity is teaching.
All that has been done or will be done revolve around this
central activity, the "head corner-stone of the foundation
itself," to which all progress in the Cause is due. The present
challenge calls for teaching on a scale and of a quality, a
variety, and intensity outstripping all current efforts. The
time is now, lest opportunity be lost in the swiftly changing
moods of a frenetic world. Let it not be imagined that expedience
is the essential motive arousing this sense of urgency.
There is an overarching reason: it is the pitiful plight of
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masses of humanity, suffering and in turmoil, hungering
after righteousness, but "bereft of discernment to see God
with their own eyes, or hear His Melody with their own ears."
They must be fed. Vision must be restored where hope is lost,
confidence built where doubt and confusion are rife. In these
and other respects, "The Promise of World Peace" is designed
to open the way. Its delivery to national governmental
leaders having been virtually completed, its contents must
now be conveyed, by all possible means, to peoples everywhere
from all walks of life. This is a necessary part of the
teaching work in our time and must be pursued with unabated
vigor.
Teaching is the food of the spirit; it brings life to
unawakened souls and raises the new heaven and the new
earth; it uplifts the banner of a unified world; it ensures the
victory of the Covenant and brings those who give their lives
to it the supernal happiness of attainment to the good pleasure
of their Lord.
Every individual believer — man, woman, youth and
child — is summoned to this field of action; for it is on the
initiative, the resolute will of the individual to teach and to
serve, that the success of the entire community depends.
Well-grounded in the mighty Covenant of Bahá'u'lláh, sustained
by daily prayer and reading of the Holy Word,
strengthened by a continual striving to obtain a deeper
understanding of the divine Teachings, illumined by a constant
endeavor to relate these Teachings to current issues,
nourished by observance of the laws and principles of His
wondrous World Order, every individual can attain increasing
measures of success in teaching. In sum, the ultimate
triumph of the Cause is assured by that "one thing and only
one thing" so poignantly emphasized by Shoghi Effendi,
namely, "the extent to which our own inner life and private
page 202
character mirror forth in their manifold aspects the splendor
of those eternal principles proclaimed by Bahá'u'lláh."
Beloved Friends — you who are addressed by the Best
Beloved, the Blessed Beauty, as "the solace of the eye of
creation," as "the soft-flowing waters upon which must
depend the very life of all men" — we urge you, with all
earnestness from the utter depths of our conviction as to the
ripeness of the time, to lay aside your every minor concern
and direct your energies to teaching His Cause — to proclaiming,
expanding and consolidating it. You can approach your
task in full confidence that this clear field of progress
outstretched before you derives from the operation of that
"God-born Force" which "vibrates within the innermost being
of all created things" and which, "acting even as a two-edged
sword, is, under our very eyes, sundering, on the one
hand, the age-old ties which for centuries have held together
the fabric of civilized society, and is unloosing, on the other,
the bonds that still fetter the infant and as yet unemancipated
Faith of Bahá'u'lláh."
Have no fear or doubts. The power of the Covenant will
assist you and invigorate you and remove every obstacle
from your path. "He, verily, will aid everyone that aideth
Him, and will remember everyone that remembereth Him."
—
Ridván 1988
REJOICE EVE WORLDWIDE CELEBRATIONS ANNIVERSARY
BIRTH BLESSED BAB EVIDENCES GROWING
NUMBER NATIONAL COMMUNITIES ENGAGED
TEACHING INITIATIVES LEADING TO ENTRY BY
TROOPS. THIRTY-FIVE NATIONAL ASSEMBLIES HAVE
SPONTANEOUSLY REPORTED ENROLLMENTS TOTALING
QUARTER MILLION NEW BELIEVERS SINCE
RIDVAN. GRATIFIED NOTEWORTHY CONSOLIDATION
page 203
ACTIVITIES ESSENTIAL SAFEGUARD HARD-WON VICTORIES.
HOUR PROPITIOUS FRIENDS ASSEMBLIES
EVERYWHERE REDOUBLE SACRIFICIAL HIGHLY MERITORIOUS
EFFORTS CONCENTRATE THEIR ATTENTION
ON ALL-IMPORTANT TEACHING ACTIVITIES DESTINED
CARRY BAHA'U'LLAH'S WORLD-REDEEMING
FAITH INTO LONG-AWAITED PERIOD UNIVERSAL RESPONSE
HIS LIFE-GIVING CALL.
—
October 13, 1988
The spiritual current which exerted such galvanic effects
at the International Bahá'í Convention last Ridván has swept
through the entire world community, arousing its members
in both the East and the West to feats of activity and achievement
in teaching never before experienced in any one year.
The high level of enrollments alone bears this out, as nearly
half a million new believers have already been reported. The
names of such far-flung places as India and Liberia, Bolivia
and Bangladesh, Taiwan and Peru, the Philippines and Haiti
leap to the fore as we contemplate the accumulating evidences
of the entry by troops called for in our message of a
year ago. These evidences are hopeful signs of the greater
acceleration yet to come and in which all national communities,
whatever the current status of their teaching effort, will
ultimately be involved.
—
Ridván 1989
All these requirements must and will surely be met
through reconsecrated service on the part of every conscientious
member of the Community of Baha, and particularly
through personal commitment to the teaching work. So
fundamentally important is this work to ensuring the foundation
for success in all Bahá'í undertakings and to furthering
the process of entry by troops that we are moved to add a
word of emphasis for your consideration. It is not enough to
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proclaim the Bahá'í message, essential as that is. It is not
enough to expand the rolls of Bahá'í membership, vital as that
is. Souls must be transformed, communities thereby consolidated,
new models of life thus attained. Transformation is the
essential purpose of the Cause of Bahá'u'lláh, but it lies in the
will and effort of the individual to achieve it in obedience to
the Covenant. Necessary to the progress of this life-fulfilling
transformation is knowledge of the will and purpose of God
through regular reading and study of the Holy Word.
Beloved Friends: The momentum generated by this past
year's achievements is reflected not only in the opportunities
for marked expansion of the Cause but also in a broad range
of challenges — momentous, insistent and varied — which have
combined in ways that place demands beyond any previous
measure upon our spiritual and material resources. We must
be prepared to meet them. At this mid-point of the Six Year
Plan, we have reached a historic moment pregnant with
hopes and possibilities — a moment at which significant trends
in the world are becoming more closely aligned with principles
and objectives of the Cause of God. The urgency upon
our community to press onward in fulfillment of its
world-embracing mission is therefore tremendous.
Our primary response must be to teach — to teach ourselves
and to teach others — at all levels of society, by all
possible means, and without further delay. The beloved
Master, in an exhortation on teaching, said it is "not until the
candle is lit that it can shed the brightness of its flame; not
until the light shineth forth that its brilliance can dispel the
surrounding gloom." Go forth, then, and be the "lighters of
the unlit candles."
—
Ridván 1989
Nor have the Counselor members of the International
Teaching Centre been slow in responding to opportunities to
page 205
foster the climate of progress now evident in all quarters of
the globe. Through the unified vision of growth to which they
have called the Continental Boards of Counselors and their
able, hardworking and self-sacrificing auxiliaries, a new
vitality can be felt in the expansion and consolidation of the
Faith throughout the world.
—
Ridván 1990
For the Bahá'í community the situation is a particular
challenge, because time is running out and we have serious
commitments to keep. The most immediate of these are: One,
to teach the Cause of God and build its divinely ordained
institutions throughout the world with wisdom, courage and
urgency; and two, to complete on Mount Carmel the construction
of the Terraces of the Shrine of the Báb and the
remaining buildings on the Arc of the World Administrative
Center of the Faith. The one calls for resolute, sustained and
confident action on the part of the individual believer. The
other requires a liberal outpouring of funds. Both are intimately
related.
Over the last two years, almost one million souls entered
the Cause. The increasing instances of entry by troops in
different places contributed to that growth, drawing attention
to Shoghi Effendi's vision which shapes our perception
of glorious future possibilities in the teaching field. For he has
asserted that the process of "entry by troops of peoples of
divers nations and races into the Bahá'í world... will be the
prelude to that long-awaited hour when a mass conversion
on the part of these same nations and races, and as a direct
result of a chain of events, momentous and possibly catastrophic
in nature, and which cannot as yet be even dimly
visualized, will suddenly revolutionize the fortunes of the
Faith, derange the equilibrium of the world, and reinforce a
thousandfold the numerical strength as well as the material
page 206
power and the spiritual authority of the Faith of Bahá'u'lláh."
We have every encouragement to believe that large-scale
enrollments will expand, involving village after village, town
after town, from one country to another. However, it is not for
us to wait passively for the ultimate fulfillment of Shoghi
Effendi's vision. We few, placing our whole trust in the
providence of God and regarding as a divine privilege the
challenges which face us, must proceed to victory with the
plans in hand.
An expansion of thought and action in certain aspects of
our work would enhance our possibilities for success in
meeting our aforementioned commitments. Since change,
ever more rapid change, is a constant characteristic of life at
this time, and since our growth, size and external relations
demand much of us, our community must be ready to adapt.
In a sense this means that the community must become more
adept at accommodating a wide range of actions without
losing concentration on the primary objectives of teaching,
namely, expansion and consolidation. A unity in diversity of
actions is called for, a condition in which different individuals
will concentrate on different activities, appreciating the
salutary effect of the aggregate on the growth and development
of the Faith, because each person cannot do everything
and all persons cannot do the same thing. This understanding
is important to the maturity which, by the many demands
being made upon it, the community is being forced to
attain....
Thus far, we have achieved a marvellous diversity in the
large numbers of ethnic groups represented in the Faith, and
everything should be done to fortify it through larger enrollments
from among groups already represented and the
attraction of members from groups not yet reached. However,
there is another category of diversity which must be
page 207
built up and without which the Cause will not be able
adequately to meet the challenges being thrust upon it. Its
membership, regardless of ethnic variety, needs now to
embrace increasing numbers of people of capacity, including
persons of accomplishment and prominence in the various
fields of human endeavor. Enrolling significant numbers of
such persons is an indispensable aspect of teaching the
masses, an aspect which cannot any longer be neglected and
which must be consciously and deliberately incorporated
into our teaching work, so as to broaden its base and accelerate
the process of entry by troops. So important and timely is
the need for action on this matter that we are impelled to call
upon Continental Counselors and National Spiritual Assemblies
to devote serious attention to it in their consultations
and plans.
—
Ridván 1990
It is the ardent prayer of the House of Justice that careful
study of the passages included will assist the believers to
appreciate the importance of fostering cordial relations with
accomplished and distinguished figures, with people of capacity
and with those occupying prominent positions in
society. The aim of the believers should be to make of them
friends of the Faith, dispelling any misconceptions they may
have and unfolding before their eyes the vision of world
solidarity and peace enshrined in the teachings of Bahá'u'lláh.
The friends should be confident that the spiritually minded
and receptive souls among such people will eventually accept
the truth of the Bahá'í Revelation and join the ranks of its
active supporters.
—
September 28, 1990, Department of the Secretariat
on behalf of the Universal House of Justice
page 208
Figures already available to the World Centre indicate
that more than one and a half million souls entered the Cause
during the Six Year Plan. Of particular interest was the three-year
special teaching project in Guyana which resulted in an
increase of the size of the Bahá'í community to some six
percent of the country's population.
—
Ridván 1992
It is against such "simultaneous processes of rise and fall,
of integration and of disintegration, of order and chaos, with
their continuous and reciprocal reactions on each other," that
a myriad new opportunities for the next stage in the unfoldment of the beloved
Master's Divine Plan present themselves....
Attention to the special occasions of the Holy Year will
surely equip us to undertake the urgent tasks of the next stage
in the evolution of the Divine Plan. This commemorative
period provides a befitting demarcation between the glories
and triumphs of the last one hundred years and the lustrous
prizes yet to be garnered.
—
Ridván 1992
How laudable it would be if, imbued by this desire to
blazon abroad His Name, and as a demonstration of our
special love for the Abhá Beauty, we could each of us mount
a personal campaign of teaching, such that the collective
force and results of it throughout the world would bring to a
resounding conclusion the sacred exercises of this Holy Year
and set the stage for the launching of the impending Three
Year Plan at Ridván 1993!
—
Ridván 1992
New Opportunities for Expansion
As Bahá'ís, we have been entrusted with the responsibility
page 209
of taking the message of Bahá'u'lláh to all of mankind, but
only a comparatively small beginning has yet been made to
take the teachings to the vast population of China. The
Universal House of Justice feels that this task must be regarded
as one of the highest priorities for the entire Bahá'í
world.
—
April 19, 1989, written on behalf
of the Universal House of Justice
We look back with feelings of humble gratitude and
heightened expectations at the stupendous developments
which have taken place in so brief a period.... Other
developments include: the approval by the central authorities
in Moscow of the application submitted by a number of
Bahá'ís in 'Ishqábád to restore the Local Spiritual Assembly
of that city; the initiation of steps to open a Bahá'í Information
Center in Budapest, the first such agency of the Faith in the
Eastern Bloc; the establishment of a branch of the Bahá'í
International Community's Office of Public Information in
Hong Kong in anticipation of the time when the Faith can be
proclaimed on the mainland of China.
—
Ridván 1989
FAR-REACHING EVENTS BEING ENACTED WORLD
STAGE, PARTICULARLY IN EASTERN EUROPE AND
SOVIET UNION, ON THRESHOLD FINAL FATE-LADEN
DECADE CENTURY OF LIGHT, PROVIDE FURTHER DRAMATIC
EVIDENCE RESISTLESS OPERATION OF GOD'S
MAJOR PLAN FOR TRANSFORMATION OF HUMAN
SOCIETY. RAPID UNFORESEEN DEVELOPMENTS NECESSITATE
CORRESPONDING PARALLEL ACCELERATION
IN LIFE-GIVING ENTERPRISES BEING PURSUED
BY INHERITORS BAHA'U'LLAH'S RESPLENDENT REVELATION.
page 210
REJOICE THEREFORE ANNOUNCE LAUNCHING AT
RIDVAN OF SUBSIDIARY TWO YEAR TEACHING PLAN
FOR VAST REMAINING REACHES EASTERN EUROPE
AND ASIA. MOMENTOUS STEP INVOLVES FURTHER
SYSTEMATIC UNFOLDMENT PROVISIONS TABLETS
MASTER-PLAN OF 'ABDU'L-BAHA ALREADY IN ADVANCED
STAGE OF OPERATION OTHER AREAS
PLANET. REGIONAL ENTERPRISE, CONCEIVED IN CONSULTATION
INTERNATIONAL TEACHING CENTRE,
DESIGNED SIGNIFICANTLY REINFORCE CURRENT SIX
YEAR GLOBAL PLAN. OBJECTIVES INCLUDE ATTRACTION
NUMEROUS NEW SUPPORTERS FAITH, GREAT
INCREASE TRANSLATION, PUBLICATION AND DISSEMINATION
BAHA'I LITERATURE IN REQUISITE
LANGUAGES ENTIRE AREA, AND EXTENSION BENEFICENT
INFLUENCE DIVINELY APPOINTED ADMINISTRATIVE
ORDER THROUGH ERECTION FRAMEWORK
LOCAL NATIONAL BAHA'I INSTITUTIONS IN AS MANY
EASTERN COUNTRIES AS POSSIBLE UP TO AND INCLUDING
RIDVAN 1992.
CALLING UPON THOSE NATIONAL ASSEMBLIES
EUROPE, ASIA AND AMERICA WHICH BEAR PRIMARY
RESPONSIBILITY FOR INDIVIDUAL NATIONS INVOLVED,
TO CONSULT WITH COUNSELORS AND
FORMULATE DETAILS SPECIFIC GOALS INCORPORATING
AND SUPPLEMENTING THOSE ALREADY
ADOPTED AND IN PROCESS ACCOMPLISHMENT UNDER
SIX YEAR PLAN. MOVED PAY TRIBUTE PRESENT
HOUR REMARKABLE UNSUNG ACHIEVEMENTS THOSE
INSTITUTIONS AND INDIVIDUAL BELIEVERS PRESENTLY
LABORING ADVANCEMENT CAUSE IN
EASTERN EUROPE AND SOVIET UNION, ACHIEVEMENTS
WHICH HAVE BLAZED TRAILS FOR COMING
LARGE-SCALE INITIATIVE. CALL UPON BAHA'I WORLD
page 211
ARISE SUPPORT DIFFUSION WORLD-REDEEMING MESSAGE
FAITH GOAL AREAS THROUGH SETTLEMENT
PIONEERS AND THROUGH DESPATCH STEADY FLOW
TRAVELING TEACHERS, ESPECIALLY THOSE WITH
KNOWLEDGE LANGUAGES COUNTRIES AND REPUBLICS
EASTERN BLOC.
CONCOMITANT THESE MEASURES, VITAL ONGOING
PROCESS CHINESE TEACHING RECEIVING
FURTHER IMPETUS.
BROAD VISTAS NOW OPEN TO FAITH GOD PROVIDE
UNPRECEDENTED OPPORTUNITIES WIN FRESH
VICTORIES AS WORTHY OFFERING SACRED THRESHOLD
BLESSED BEAUTY OCCASION COMMEMORATION
FIRST CENTENARY HIS ASCENSION COMING HOLY
YEAR. IMPLORING ABUNDANT OUTPOURING DIVINE
CONFIRMATIONS PARTICIPANTS ALL FACETS HISTORIC
SIX YEAR CAMPAIGN.
—
February 8, 1990
Having ended a year of momentous achievements, we
stand at the threshold of the last decade of this radiant
twentieth century facing an immediate future of immense
challenges and dazzling prospects. The swiftness of events
during the past year is indicative of the acceleration, as the
hundredth anniversary of Bahá'u'lláh's Ascension approaches,
of the spiritual forces released with the advent of
His revolutionizing mission. It is an acceleration which, in its
suddenness and wide transformational impact on social
thought and on political entities, has aroused feelings of
delight as to its immediate effects and of bewilderment as to
its real meaning and destined outcome, prompting the astonished
editors of an outstanding newspaper, finding
themselves bereft of explanations, to attribute it to the workings
of an "Invisible Hand."
page 212
For the followers of Bahá'u'lláh throughout the world
there can be no doubt as to the Divine Source and clear
intention of these extraordinary happenings. Let us rejoice,
therefore, in the wondrous signs of the beneficence of God's
abounding grace. The high level of teaching and enrollments
reported last Ridván has been sustained, and new fields of
teaching have been opened from Eastern Europe to the China
Sea. With the settlement in recent weeks of two Knights of
Bahá'u'lláh in Sakhalin Island, the last remaining territory
named by Shoghi Effendi in his Ten Year Global Plan entered
the Bahá'í fold. The re-creation last Ridván of the Local
Spiritual Assembly of 'Ishqábád, the recent election of that of
Cluj in Romania, the first new Assembly in the "East Bloc,"
the re-establishment and formation this Ridván of Local
Spiritual Assemblies in other parts of the Soviet Union and in
other countries of Eastern Europe all these achievements
and immediate prospects affirm our arrival at a significant
milestone in the fourth epoch of the Formative Age. The
Administrative Order now embraces a community of wider
diversity than ever before. It is such prodigious developments
that prompted our recent announcement of a subsidiary
Two Year Teaching Plan, now formally launched, to which
we commend your urgent and active attention.
How staggering, how far-reaching have been the activities
which propelled the community in one short year towards
this stage in its evolution!
—
Ridván 1990
SEVEN MONTHS AFTER LAUNCHING SUPPLEMENTARY
TWO YEAR PLAN REJOICE ANNOUNCE
FOURTEEN LOCAL SPIRITUAL ASSEMBLIES IN SOVIET
UNION, PLUS SIX IN ROMANIA WHERE THERE ARE
NOW OVER 600 BELIEVERS, AND ONE LOCAL SPIRITUAL
ASSEMBLY EACH IN CZECHOSLOVAKIA,
page 213
HUNGARY AND YUGOSLAVIA. DEVELOPMENT FAITH
IN ALL THESE COUNTRIES AS WELL AS IN ALBANIA,
BULGARIA, MONGOLIA AND POLAND GOING FORWARD
WITH EXTRAORDINARY SPEED, FORMATION
MORE LOCAL ASSEMBLIES IN PROCESS OR EXPECTED
SHORTLY.
—
November 12, 1990
Within the Cause, the signs of overwhelming achievements
for the Six Year Plan, though not necessarily as projected
at the outset, are abundant. Arresting examples are evident in
the wake of the phenomenal changes occurring in the Soviet
Union and its former satellite countries. Just one year since
the re-establishment of the Local Spiritual Assembly of Moscow,
a National Spiritual Assembly of the Soviet Union is to
be formed. Similarly, little more than a year since the revolutionary
political changes in Romania, the Government has
recognized the Bahá'í community as a religious association
with the right to spread the teachings of Bahá'u'lláh; here,
too, a National Spiritual Assembly is to be formed this
Ridván. Rapid expansion of the Faith in Czechoslovakia
compelled the decision taken only in recent weeks also to
establish a National Spiritual Assembly there. At the same
time, in the Caribbean area, the National Spiritual Assembly
of the West Leeward Islands will be formed as a result of the
division of the Leeward Islands group into two regional
administrative units. With these four very welcome formations,
the number of National Spiritual Assemblies reaches
155.
—
Ridván 1991
Seven new National Spiritual Assemblies will be formed
at Ridván 1992: Angola in Africa; Greenland in the Americas;
and Albania, the Baltic States, Bulgaria, Hungary and Poland
in Europe. The emergence of the latter five will set a befitting
page 214
seal on the victorious supplementary Two Year Plan launched
at Ridván 1990.
—
November 26, 1991
We take great joy in announcing, consequent upon the
changed situation in the former Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics, and further to our message of 26 November 1991,
the formation next Ridván of three additional Spiritual Assemblies
in that vast area, as follows:
The Regional Spiritual Assembly of Ukraine, Bielarus
and Moldova with its seat in Kiev.
The Regional Spiritual Assembly of Central Asia with its
seat in Ashkhabad, comprising the republics of Kazakhstan,
Kirgizia, Tadzhikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.
The National Spiritual Assembly of Azerbaijan with its
seat in Baku.
In accordance with these changes, the former Spiritual
Assembly of the USSR with its seat in Moscow will become
the Regional Spiritual Assembly of Russia, Georgia and
Armenia.
—
January 7, 1992
The sudden change in the political climate, no doubt by
intervention of God's Major Plan, opened vast regions to the
penetration of the divine teachings, primarily in the former
Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc countries. The opportunities
created by this change made possible the settlement of Knights
of Bahá'u'lláh in the last virgin territories that remained from
Shoghi Effendi's Ten Year World Crusade. They also impelled
the launching at Ridván 1990 of the subsidiary Two
Year Plan for those regions. This supplementary Plan was a
spectacular success, not only in terms of expansion in the
many countries involved, but also in the diversity of the
page 215
strata represented by the new believers in these countries, in
the volume and variety of Bahá'í literature published and in
the array of Bahá'í institutions established during that short
time. The Bahá'í world was highly stimulated by these developments,
and a number of countries elsewhere recorded
significant successes in the teaching work.
—
Ridván 1992
Challenges of the
American Bahá'í Community
Exultant as we are over the remarkable feats you have
attained, both those already cited and those too numerous to
mention, we cannot help noting the sad lag in the rate of your
enrollments, a lag which is conspicuously at variance with
the high energy of your endeavors and the teaching opportunities
abounding in your richly blessed land. We call this to
your attention not to cause distress but rather to stir a deeper
consciousness of your immediate possibilities, to arouse you
to new heights of action. You are a community of victors; you
occupy the front ranks of Bahá'u'lláh's invincible army of
light; indeed, you must remain in the vanguard of its thrust.
The soul-shaking events transpiring at this very moment in
the motherland of our Faith make even more urgent than ever
the necessity of multiplying the size of your community on
which rest inescapable God-given responsibilities towards
the world community, no less than towards itself. All your
accomplishments proclaim your ability to excel in the fundamental
goal of expanding your membership. The progress of
the Cause in your country undoubtedly depends upon such
expansion....
page 216
Armed with the strength of action and the co-operation of
the individual believers composing it, the community as a
whole should endeavor to establish greater stability in the
patterns of its development, locally and nationally, through
sound, systematic planning and execution of its work — and
this in striking contrast to the short-lived enthusiasms and
frenetic superficialities so characteristic of present-day American
life. A Bahá'í community which is consistent in its
fundamental life-giving, life-sustaining activities will at its
heart be serene and confident; it will resonate with spiritual
dynamism, will exert irresistible influence, will set a new
course in social evolution, enabling it to win the respect and
eventually the allegiance of admirers and critics alike. These
profound possibilities reside in the will of the individual to
take initiative, to act in accordance with the guidance offered
by Bahá'í institutions, and to maintain such action regardless
of the myriad distractions posed by the disintegration of a
society adrift in a sea of materialism. May you with renewed
determination and a rededication to spiritual values, seize
your chance, while there is yet time, to convey the Message of
Bahá'u'lláh thoughtfully, patiently and attractively to your
fellow-citizens, whether they be dwellers in the cities or rural
areas, whether they be high or low, lettered or unlettered, rich
or poor.
—
Ridván 1984 to the U. S.
This new year marks the seventieth anniversary of the
Tablets of the Divine Plan, that sublime series of letters
addressed by 'Abdu'l-Bahá to the North American Bahá'ís
and which, constituting one of the mighty Charters of His
Father's Faith, have inspired your highly prized community
to achieve during the first three epochs of the Formative Age
what no mind can fully assess, nor tongue adequately praise.
Now, at the inception of the fourth epoch of that Age, your
page 217
National Spiritual Assembly, working in close collaboration
with the Continental Board of Counselors and drawing upon
the advice of the delegates to your National Convention and
of your Local Spiritual Assemblies, has the inestimable privilege
of devising the plans that will chart your course during
the next six years to the eve of the Holy Year when you will
join your sister communities in commemorating the centenary
of the Ascension of Bahá'u'lláh and host, in the City of
the Covenant, the second Bahá'í World Congress....
In a sense, the imminent launching of the Six Year Plan,
with all the special features it will entail, is a salute to your
immortal triumphs as "spiritual descendants of the Dawn-breakers"
and a fresh reminder that you possess the vast,
largely unrealized potential of a community blessed by
Bahá'u'lláh with a unique destiny in the unfoldment of His
mighty World Order. We appeal, therefore, to each and every
one of you, whether or not you occupy any position in the
Bahá'í Administration, to respond wholeheartedly to the call
of your National Spiritual Assembly to assist in meeting the
goals to be set. As the beloved Guardian repeatedly stated in
his letters to the American believers, it is the individual who
has the power to act, and on whom, "in the last resort,
depends the fate of the entire community." Onward, then,
with your inescapable but glorious tasks!
—
Naw-Rúz 1986 to the U. S.
WE ACKNOWLEDGE WITH DEEP SATISFACTION
PROPOSED OBJECTIVES SIX YEAR PLAN UNITED STATES
BAHA'I COMMUNITY AS CONVEYED YOUR ELECTRONIC
LETTER 6 NOVEMBER. WARMLY COMMEND
CARE, IMAGINATION, PRACTICALITY, COMPREHENSIVENESS
YOUR APPROACH....
AS COMMUNITY ESPECIALLY ENDOWED BY BELOVED
page 218
MASTER'S DIVINE PLAN WITH UNUSUAL POTENTIALITIES
YOU CONTINUE TO BEAR EXTRAORDINARY
RESPONSIBILITIES WHICH MUST BE MET
THROUGH MATURE, SYSTEMATIC, ENERGETIC EXECUTION
YOUR MANIFOLD TASKS. LET SPIRIT UNIFIED
ACTION WHICH HAS CHARACTERIZED YOUR PLANNING
THUS FAR EXTEND THROUGHOUT THIS SIX YEAR
ENDEAVOR. REST ASSURED COMPLETE TRIUMPH.
ARDENTLY PRAYING HOLY THRESHOLD THAT
CHAMPION-BUILDERS WORLD ORDER BAHA'U'LLAH
MAY RISE TO NOBLER HEIGHTS ACHIEVEMENT THAN
HAS YET ADORNED THEIR ALREADY ILLUSTRIOUS
ANNALS.
—
November 11, 1986
We have noticed with concern evidences of a confusion of
attitudes among some of the friends when they encounter
difficulties in applying Bahá'í principles to questions of the
day. On the one hand, they acknowledge their belief in
Bahá'u'lláh and His teachings; on the other, they invoke
Western liberal democratic practices when actions of Bahá'í
institutions or of some of their fellow Bahá'ís do not accord
with their expectations. At the heart of this confusion are
misconceptions of such fundamental issues as individual
rights and freedom of expression in the Bahá'í community.
The source of the potential difficulties of the situation appears
to us to be an inadequacy of Bahá'í perspective on the
part of both individual believers and their institutions.
Recognizing the immense challenge you face to resolve
such confusion, we pause to reflect with you on these issues
in search of a context in which relevant fundamental questions
may be discussed and understood in the community....
The spirit of liberty which in recent decades has swept
over the planet with such tempestuous force is a manifestation
page 219
of the vibrancy of the Revelation brought by Bahá'u'lláh.
His own words confirm it. "The Ancient Beauty," He wrote
in a soul-stirring commentary on His sufferings, "hath consented
to be bound with chains that mankind may be released
from its bondage, and hath accepted to be made a prisoner
within this most mighty Stronghold that the whole earth may
attain unto true liberty."
Might it not be reasonably concluded, then, that "true
liberty" is His gift of love to the human race? Consider what
Bahá'u'lláh has done: He revealed laws and principles to
guide the free, He established an Order to channel the actions
of the free, He proclaimed a Covenant to guarantee the unity
of the free.
Thus, we hold to this ultimate perspective: Bahá'u'lláh
came to set humanity free. His Revelation is, indeed, an
invitation to freedom — freedom from want, freedom from
war, freedom to unite, freedom to progress, freedom in peace
and joy.
You, who live in a land where freedom is so highly prized,
have not, then, to dispense with its fruits, but you are challenged
and do have the obligation to uphold and vindicate
the distinction between the license that limits your possibilities
for genuine progress and the moderation that ensures the
enjoyment of true liberty.
—
December 29, 1988
The spiritual current which exerted such galvanic effects
at the International Bahá'í Convention last Ridván has swept
through the entire world community, arousing its members
in both the East and the West to feats of activity and achievement
in teaching never before experienced in any one year.
The high level of enrollments alone bears this out, as nearly
half a million new believers have already been reported. The
names of such far-flung places as India and Liberia, Bolivia
page 220
and Bangladesh, Taiwan and Peru, the Philippines and Haiti
leap to the fore as we contemplate the accumulating evidences
of the entry by troops called for in our message of a
year ago. These evidences are hopeful signs of the greater
acceleration yet to come and in which all national communities,
whatever the current status of their teaching effort, will
ultimately be involved.
—
Ridván 1989
The determination of your National Spiritual Assembly
and your ready acceptance to pursue a campaign to promote
racial unity in your country are of critical importance to the
advancement of the Cause in America and to the ultimate
success of your country in fulfilling the world-transforming
mission foreshadowed for it in the prophetic words of the
beloved Master: "May this American Democracy be the first
nation to establish the foundation of international agreement.
May it be the first nation to proclaim the unity of
mankind. May it be the first to unfurl the standard of the Most
Great Peace."
We cannot but heartily applaud the bold initiative you
have described and to express the hope that the entire Community
of the Greatest Name in the United States will arise
with single-minded purpose to carry it forward with courage,
consistency and confidence. That this campaign may abundantly
multiply the possibilities of a resounding victory in
the Six Year Plan for the American Bahá'í Community will be
a cherished object of our supplications on your behalf at the
Holy Threshold.
—
April 1991
The recent riots in Los Angeles and other cities are one
more compelling reminder of the warnings uttered repeatedly
by 'Abdu'l-Bahá during His visit to North America, and
frequently echoed by Shoghi Effendi in his writings, about
page 221
the dangerous consequences of racial prejudice. They also
underscore the timeliness of the statement on racial unity
which you issued at the Bahá'í National Convention in 1991.
In the wake of the disturbances which threaten to engulf
other areas, we reiterate more strongly than before the encouragement
we expressed for your campaign to combat
racism in the United States. It is highly fitting that during this
Holy Year, which marks the centenary of the ascension of the
Manifestation of God Who made the oneness of humankind
the pivotal principle and goal of His Faith, you should sally
forth in a mighty effort to rally the forces which will in His
Name and in obedience to His command assist in eradicating
this evil from the fair name of your country.
—
May 11, 1992
The Arc on Mount Carmel
Nigh on one hundred years ago, Bahá'u'lláh walked on
God's Holy Mountain and revealed the Tablet of Carmel, the
Charter of the World Centre of His Faith, calling into being
the metropolis of the Kingdom of God on Earth. Through
decades of oppression and expansion, persecution and emancipation,
His followers have successfully labored to carry His
message to the remotest regions of the earth, to erect the
structure of His Administrative Order, and to proclaim to
mankind the divinely-prescribed cure for all its ills. In the
past eight years the agonies suffered by His lovers in Iran
have awakened the interest of a slumbering world and have
brought His Faith to the center of human attention.
On this same Mount Carmel 'Abdu'l-Bahá, with infinite
pains, raised the Mausoleum of the Báb on the spot chosen by
His Father, and laid to rest within its heart the sacred remains
page 222
of the Prophet Herald of the Faith, establishing a Spiritual
Center of immeasurable significance. In accordance with the
same divine command, Shoghi Effendi embellished the Shrine
with an exquisite shell and then, under its protecting wing,
began the construction of the Administrative Center of the
Faith, to comprise five buildings in a harmonious style of
architecture, standing on a far-flung Arc centering on the
Monuments of the Greatest Holy Leaf, her Mother and Brother.
The first of these five buildings, the International Archives,
was completed in the beloved Guardian's lifetime. The second,
the Seat of the Universal House of Justice, now stands at
the apex of the Arc. Plans for the remaining three were
prepared in fulfillment of a goal of the Seven Year Plan, and
are now being detailed.
As indicated in our letter of 30 April 1987, the way is now
open for the Bahá'í world to erect the remaining buildings of
its Administrative Center, and we must without delay stride
forward resolutely on this path.
Five closely related projects demand our attention: the
erection of the three remaining buildings on the Arc and,
added now to these, the construction of the terraces of the
Shrine of the Báb and the extension of the International
Archives Building. A brief description of each of these will
convey an impression of their significance for the Faith.
- The Terraces of the Shrine of the Báb. In His plans for the
development of Mount Carmel, 'Abdu'l-Bahá envisaged
nineteen monumental terraces from the foot of the mountain
to its crest, nine leading to the terrace on which the
Shrine of the Báb itself stands, and nine above it. These
plans were often referred to by Shoghi Effendi, and he
completed in preliminary form the nine terraces constituting
the approach to the Shrine from the central avenue of
the former German Templar Colony.
page 223
- The International Teaching Centre will be the seat of that
institution which is specifically invested with the twin
functions of the protection and propagation of the Cause of
God . The institution itself, referred to by the beloved Guardian
in his writings, was established in June 1973, bringing
to fruition the work of the Hands of the Cause of God
residing in the Holy Land and providing for the extension
into the future of functions with which that body had been
endowed.
-
The Centre for the Study of the Texts. This building will
be the seat of an institution of Bahá'í scholars, the efflorescence
of the present Research Department of the World
Centre, which will assist the Universal House of Justice in
consulting the Sacred Writings, and will prepare translations
of and commentaries on the authoritative texts of the
Faith.
-
The International Archives Building. We have decided to
construct, westwards, an extension to the basement of the
present Archives Building to provide accommodation for
the central office of the ever-growing Archives at the World
Centre. This institution is charged with responsibility for
the preservation of the Sacred Texts and Relics and the
historic documents of the Cause of God.
-
The International Bahá'í Library. This Library is the
central depository of all literature published on the Faith,
and is an essential source of information for the institutions
of the World Centre on all subjects relating to the Cause of
God and the conditions of mankind. In future decades its
functions must grow, it will serve as an active center for
knowledge in all fields, and it will become the kernel of
great institutions of scientific investigation and discovery.
page 224
It is impossible at this stage to give an accurate estimate
of the cost of these projects. All that we can now say is that in
the immediate future two objectives have to be met: to
accumulate rapidly a reserve of fifty million dollars on which
plans for the construction can realistically begin to be implemented,
and to provide an income of between twenty and
twenty-five million dollars for the Bahá'í International Fund
for each of the next ten years. As the work proceeds, contracts
are signed and costs can be accurately determined, further
information will be announced.
—
August 31, 1987
We look back with feelings of humble gratitude and
heightened expectations at the stupendous developments
which have taken place in so brief a period. One such development
has been the adoption of the architectural design
conceived by Mr. Faríburz Sahbá for the Terraces of the
Shrine of the Báb, which launches a new stage towards the
realization of the Master's and the Guardian's vision for the
path along which the kings and rulers will ascend the slopes
of Mount Carmel to pay homage at the resting place of
Bahá'u'lláh's Martyr-Herald.
—
Ridván 1989
In the Holy Land, preparations for the execution of the
building projects on Mount Carmel received a definite boost.
It is a cause of deep satisfaction that, on the eve of Naw-Ruz,
the District Town Planning Commission, after delicate and
complex negotiations, decided to approve the plan submitted
by the Bahá'í World Centre. This paves the way for the
ultimate issuance of building permits.
—
Ridván 1990
WITH FEELINGS OF PROFOUND JOY ANNOUNCE
TO FOLLOWERS OF BAHA'U'LLAH IN EVERY LAND
THAT ON MORNING OF TWENTY-THIRD MAY, ONE
page 225
HUNDRED AND FORTY-SIX YEARS AFTER THE DECLARATION
OF THE BAB, WORK ON EXTENSION TERRACES
COMMENCED....
GLORIOUS UNDERTAKING CREATION BEFITTING
RESTING PLACE MARTYR-HERALD FAITH WAS ENVISAGED
BY BAHA'U'LLAH HIMSELF, WAS SOLEMNLY
INITIATED BY 'ABDU'L-BAHA, WHO RAISED WITH INFINITE
PAINS ORIGINAL STRUCTURE AND PLACED
WITHIN IT THE SACRED REMAINS OF THE BAB, WAS
VIGOROUSLY PURSUED BY SHOGHI EFFENDI, WHO
COMPLETED CENTRAL EDIFICE, EMBELLISHED IT WITH
BEAUTEOUS SUPERSTRUCTURE AND CONNECTED IT
WITH MAIN AVENUE TEMPLAR COLONY THROUGH
CONSTRUCTION FIRST NINE TERRACES, IS NOW ENTERING
UPON CULMINATING PHASE ITS DEVELOPMENT
THROUGH EXTENSION BEAUTIFICATION
NINE EXISTING TERRACES AND CONSTRUCTION NINE
MORE TO REALIZE MONUMENTAL CONCEPT REACHING
FROM FOOT TO CREST HOLY MOUNTAIN.
CALL UPON FRIENDS EVERY LAND RALLY SUPPORT
THIS SACRED ENTERPRISE NOW INSEPARABLY
LINKED WITH ARC PROJECT EXPRESS BEFITTINGLY
THEIR AWARENESS MAGNITUDE BOUNTY CONFERRED
UPON MANKIND BY MINISTRY AND SACRIFICE
BLESSED BAB, DEMONSTRATE THEIR COMMITMENT
TO BAHA'ULLAH'S CALL IN TABLET OF CARMEL TO
ESTABLISH UPON THAT MOUNTAIN SEAT GOD'S
THRONE AND FULFILL, THROUGH THEIR GENEROUS
CONTRIBUTIONS, 'ABDU'L-BAHA'S AND SHOGHI
EFFENDI'S VISION OF EFFLORESCENCE MIGHTY INSTITUTIONS
FAITH ON MOUNTAIN OF THE LORD.
—
May 24, 1990
page 226
At the World Centre itself, the construction work on the
Mount Carmel Projects has begun, preparing facilities befitting
the central institutions of the Administrative Order of
Bahá'u'lláh for that time when they will have to shoulder the
tremendous responsibilities that will be thrust upon them as
the Lesser Peace begins to be established in the world.
—
November 18, 1991
The great building projects on the Mountain of God,
anticipated by Bahá'u'lláh in the Tablet of Carmel, inaugurated
by 'Abdu'l-Bahá with the construction of the Tomb of
the Báb and carried forward in the plans of Shoghi Effendi,
entered a new stage. Work commenced in May 1990 on
reinforcing and extending the main terrace of the Shrine of
the Báb as the initial step towards realizing the architectural
concept for fulfilling 'Abdu'l-Bahá's vision of the Terraces
that will extend from the foot to the ridge of the mountain. By
September of the next year, ground was broken for the
construction of the Centre for the Study of the Texts and for
the Extension to the International Archives Building, to be
followed by the construction of other edifices on the Arc,
namely: the buildings for the International Teaching Centre
and, in due course, the International Bahá'í Library.
—
Ridván 1992
The Holy Year
Ridván 1992 will mark the inception of a Holy Year,
during which the Centenary of the Ascension of Bahá'u'lláh
will be observed by commemorations around the world and
the inauguration of His Covenant will be celebrated, in the
page 227
City of the Covenant, by the holding of the second Bahá'í
World Congress.
—
January 2, 1986
Beloved Friends: Merely two years separate us from the
conclusion of the Six Year Plan and the beginning at Ridván
1992 of the Holy Year, that special time when we shall pause
to appreciate the tumultuous record of events which will
have brought us to the Centenary of the Ascension of
Bahá'u'lláh and to reflect with due solemnity upon the redemptive
purpose of the life of the most precious Being ever
to have drawn breath on this planet.
In anticipation of this high watermark in Bahá'í history,
plans have been set in motion for two major world events:
One, the gathering in the Holy Land of a wide representation
of believers from around the globe to participate in a befitting
commemoration of that poignant consummation in the vicinity
of the Most Holy Shrine. A component of this
commemoration, symbolic of the transcendent and victorious
influence of Bahá'u'lláh's liberated Spirit, will be the
depositing beneath the floor at the entrance door of His
Shrine of a receptacle containing the illuminated Roll of
Honor of the Knights of Bahá'u'lláh, a listing initiated by
Shoghi Effendi during his Ten Year Plan of those intrepid
souls who arose to conquer in the Name of their Lord virgin
territories mentioned in that Plan. This will have brought to
a fitting conclusion, after nearly four decades, an intention
expressed by the beloved Guardian himself . The living Knights
of Bahá'u'lláh will be invited to witness this occurrence.
The other event will be the Bahá'í World Congress to
celebrate the centennial of the inauguration of the Covenant
bequeathed to posterity by Bahá'u'lláh as the sure means of
safeguarding the unity and integrity of His world-embracing
Order. It is to be convened in November 1992 in New York,
page 228
the place designated as the City of the Covenant by Him Who
is its appointed Center and Who anticipated that "New York
will become a blessed spot from which the call to steadfastness
in the Covenant and Testament of God will go forth to
every part of the world."
—
Ridván 1990
Celebration in this connection does not mean merely
festive activities. It is primarily a spiritual celebration that is
called for: occasions for deep reflection on the historic importance,
the uniqueness, the meaning and the efficacy of the
Covenant established by Bahá'u'lláh, on the outstanding
results of its influence in raising up a worldwide community
comprising a great diversity of members, and on the triumph
of its virtue as a unifying power. At the heart of such reflection
will be contemplation of the peerless purpose, magnetic
person, luminous character and exemplary acts of 'Abdu'l-Bahá
in His station as the Center and living embodiment of
the Covenant of Bahá'u'lláh. Consciousness of the exceptional
and glorious stage in humanity's spiritual evolution
initiated by the Covenant, the awe such consciousness inspires
and the thankful gladness it induces are of the essence
of the celebration intended by the World Congress and all
other events associated with this centenary. A major purpose
of these events will therefore be to evoke this solemn consciousness,
which is itself the wellspring of the most exquisite
celebratory joy. In this spirit the commemorative activities
around the world should acclaim and proclaim the Covenant
as the pivotal center of unity for all humankind and illustrate
its dynamic effect on the struggle, the spread, and the redemptive
achievements of the Bahá'í community since the
passing of the Blessed Beauty....
An important feature of the activities of the Holy Year
will be the widest possible proclamation of the Name of
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Bahá'u'lláh; care must, of course, be exercised in all situations
to uphold the dignity of this Name. As an assistance to your
efforts, a statement on Bahá'u'lláh has been prepared, at the
request of the House of Justice, by the Office of Public
Information at the Bahá'í World Centre.
—
April 3, 1991, from the Department of the Secretariat
written on behalf of the Universal House of Justice
The Plan's end will mark the beginning of the Holy Year,
1992-1993, a conscious year-long pause to allow His followers
to pay befitting regard to the Centenary of the Ascension
of Bahá'u'lláh and of the inauguration of His world-unifying
Covenant. As has already been announced, major observances
are being planned to reflect the distinctive character
and world-shaking importance of the two occasions.
The one: the gathering of representatives of the Bahá'í
world, along with Knights of Bahá'u'lláh, at Bahjí in the
precincts of the Mansion, from whence Bahá'u'lláh's liberated
Spirit repaired to the throne of His heavenly sovereignty,
and in the vicinity of the Most Holy Shrine, wherein the Roll
of Honor of the Knights of Bahá'u'lláh will be deposited as a
gesture indicative of the response of His lovers to His call to
spread His teachings throughout the earth. There at Bahjí this
gathering will engage in a solemn act of worship, the sacred
readings for which will soon be shared with Bahá'í communities
everywhere for use in their own commemorations, so
as to unify the devotional experience of the entire Bahá'í
world during this centennial observance.
The other: the World Congress scheduled to be held on
23-26 November 1992 in New York City, where the beloved
Master revealed the implications of His station as the appointed
Center of the Covenant of Bahá'u'lláh and which He
designated as the City of the Covenant. Throughout the
page 230
world, Bahá'í communities will hold appropriate auxiliary
events to magnify the Congress's purpose, which is to celebrate
the centenary of the inauguration of the Covenant of
Bahá'u'lláh and to proclaim its aims and unifying power. A
corollary to these activities will be the wide distribution of a
statement on Bahá'u'lláh, prepared at our request by the
Office of Public Information, which will serve both as a
source of study and inspiration for the Bahá'ís themselves
and as an informative publication for presentation to the
public. In these and other ways the community of the Greatest
Name will endeavor to blazon the Name of Bahá'u'lláh
across the globe, to make it a known eminence in the consciousness
of peoples everywhere.
—
Ridván 1991
So imbued are we by the sacred remembrances evoked by
this Holy Year, that we can do no less than invite you all to
take pause to enter into this period of reflection, this time of
reconsecration, this stage of preparation for tasks yet to be
done, heights yet to be attained, splendors yet to be unveiled.
For if we look back at one hundred years of an unexampled
history of unremitting progress, we also look forward to
many centuries of unfolding fulfillment of divine purpose —
fulfillment, which as experience has shown, is incrementally
realized through the systematic advances of Plans and the
wondrous leaps and thrusts of epochs.
Attention to the special occasions of the Holy Year will
surely equip us to undertake the urgent tasks of the next stage
in the evolution of the Divine Plan. This commemorative
period provides a befitting demarcation between the glories
and triumphs of the last one hundred years and the lustrous
prizes yet to be garnered....
Only a few weeks from now, in the sacred precincts of the
Shrine of Bahá'u'lláh, a gathering of solemn purpose will take
page 231
place to mark the one hundredth anniversary of the Ascension
of the Desire of the Nations. The scroll bearing the Roll
of Honor of the Knights of Bahá'u'lláh will, on the previous
morning, 28 May, have been deposited, as indicated by our
beloved Guardian, at the entrance door of the inner Sanctuary
of the Most Holy Shrine, there to remain a symbol of the
historic victory that rewarded the unswerving determination
of the lovers of the Blessed Beauty who, in response to the
call of the mighty Ten Year Crusade, planted the banner of
His Faith in virgin territories throughout the world.
Subsequently, in November, at the second Bahá'í World
Congress, the hosts of Bahá will gather in New York in their
thousands to register, in a highly symbolic gesture on behalf
of their brethren throughout the world, their regard for the
Covenant which Bahá'u'lláh bequeathed, and to evoke the
memory of Him Who was appointed its Center and Who
exalted that metropolis by bestowing upon it the designation
"City of the Covenant." There they will also demonstrate the
power of the unity that the Covenant is meant to ensure to all
the peoples of the world. It will be a moment of capital
importance to the Bahá'í community in the gaze of the world
at large.
These two international events are pivotal to the gatherings
of similar intent in which the friends in every corner of
the world will take part. The spiritual character and dignified
manner of their participation will surely draw down confirmations
from on high and profoundly influence the
constructive forces at work throughout the earth.
Another source of blessings to which we have long directed
our hopes will also become manifest. Bahá'u'lláh has
written: "While in prison We have revealed a Book which We
have entitled 'The Most Holy Book.' We have enacted laws
therein and adorned it with the commandments of thy Lord,
page 232
Who exerciseth authority over all that are in the heavens and
on the earth." Hence, it is with full cognizance of its
world-shaking significance that we inform you of the forthcoming
publication during the course of this year of the annotated
English translation of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas, the Charter of the
future world civilization which Bahá'u'lláh revealed in the
House of 'Údí Khammár in 'Akká some six score years ago.
And now, amid the eager anticipations occasioned by the
two major commemorative events and by the imminent
publication of the Mother Book of the Bahá'í Revelation, the
Law of Huqúqu'lláh takes effect as part of the constant
practice of the members of our entire world community. May
the promised divine bounties associated with the activation
of this holy law be showered upon the beloved of the Lord in
every land.
A year charged with happenings of such sacred import is
bound to yield consequences of unimaginable potency. The
immediate outcome is, however, impossible to predict, nor
can it be fruitfully speculated about. Rather should we direct
our thoughts to the meaning of the solemn occasions which
this year is set apart to memorialize. For the purpose of the
Holy Year is not fulfilled by public memorials alone, befitting
as they will be. Essential to its purpose is the opportunity it
offers for inner reflection on the part of every Bahá'í individual.
Indeed, this is a special time for a rendezvous of the
soul with the Source of its light and guidance, a time to turn
to Bahá'u'lláh, to seek to obtain a deeper appreciation of His
purpose, to renew allegiance to Him. This is a time of retreat
to one's innermost being, to the dwelling-place of the Spirit
of Bahá, that interior to which He summons us when He says:
"Turn thy sight unto thyself, that thou mayest find Me
standing within thee, mighty, powerful and self-subsisting."
This is a time for recommitment to the Covenant, for
page 233
rededication to duty, for revitalizing the energy for teaching,
the "most meritorious of all deeds." ...
How laudable it would be if, imbued by this desire to
blazon abroad His Name, and as a demonstration of our
special love for the Abhá Beauty, we could each of us mount
a personal campaign of teaching, such that the collective
force and results of it throughout the world would bring to a
resounding conclusion the sacred exercises of this Holy Year
and set the stage for the launching of the impending Three
Year Plan at Ridván 1993!
—
Ridván 1992
The Person and Mission of Bahá'u'lláh
It is a time for rejoicing. The Sun of Bahá'u'lláh is
mounting the heavens, bringing into ever clearer light the
contrast between the gloom, the despair, the frustrations
and bewilderment of the world, and the radiance, confidence,
joy and certitude of His lovers. Life up your hearts. The Day
of God is here.
—
Ridván 1983
Beloved Friends, the bounties and protection with which
the Blessed Beauty is nurturing and sheltering the infant
organism of His new world order through this violent period
of transition and trial, give ample assurance of victories to
come if we but follow the path of His guidance. He rewards
our humble efforts with effusions of grace which bring not
only advancement to the Cause but assurance and happiness
to our hearts, so that we may indeed look upon our neighbors
with bright and shining faces, confident that from our services
now will eventuate that blissful future which our
descendants will inherit, glorifying Bahá'u'lláh, the Prince of
Peace, the Redeemer of Mankind.
—
Ridván 1984
page 234
Merely two years separate us from the conclusion of the
Six Year Plan and the beginning at Ridván 1992 of the Holy
Year, that special time when we shall pause to appreciate the
tumultuous record of events which will have brought us to
the Centenary of the Ascension of Bahá'u'lláh and to reflect
with due solemnity upon the redemptive purpose of the life
of the most precious Being ever to have drawn breath on this
planet....
Related events at the local and national levels will combine
with these two primary occasions to give vent to the
innermost sentiments of the Bahá'ís and to impress on the
public the profound fact of the appearance in the world of the
Lord of the Covenant and the aims and achievements of His
sublime mission. Indeed, plans are in progress to mount an
intensive campaign to emblazon His Name across the globe.
The friends everywhere must now orient themselves to
the significances of these twin anniversaries. They must be
spiritually prepared through prayer and study of the Teachings
to obtain a deeper appreciation of the station and purpose
of Bahá'u'lláh and of the basic meaning of His mighty Covenant.
Such preparation is at the very core of their striving to
effect a transformation in their individual and collective
lives. Let all the friends — every man, woman and youth — demonstrate
through the high quality of their inner life and
private character, the unified spirit of their association one
with another, the rectitude of their conduct in relation to all,
and the excellence of their achievements, that they belong to
a truly enlightened and exemplary community; that their
Best Beloved, whose Ascension they will commemorate, had
not suffered His life on earth in vain. Let these requisites be
the standard of their efforts to teach His Cause, the hallmark
of their homage to the King of Kings.
—
Ridván 1990
page 235
Throughout the world, Bahá'í communities will hold
appropriate auxiliary events to magnify the Congress's purpose,
which is to celebrate the centenary of the inauguration
of the Covenant of Bahá'u'lláh and to proclaim its aims and
unifying power. A corollary to these activities will be the
wide distribution of a statement on Bahá'u'lláh, prepared at
our request by the Office of Public Information, which will
serve both as a source of study and inspiration for the Bahá'ís
themselves and as an informative publication for presentation
to the public. In these and other ways the community of
the Greatest Name will endeavor to blazon the Name of
Bahá'u'lláh across the globe, to make it a known eminence in
the consciousness of peoples everywhere....
Our very dear brothers and sisters: Witness how the
Beloved One has answered our entreaties. See how He has
enriched our lives with new brethren and new institutions in
lands hitherto closed to His healing Word. Consider with
what potency His divine prescriptions are being affirmed as
guide-lines for the behavior of nations large and small. Surely
such abounding benedictions have imbued you with indomitable
courage and with confidence to face a challenging but
brilliant future. Indeed, you have embarked on this auspicious
year poised for the ultimate triumph of the Six Year
Plan.
—
Ridván 1991
From the peak of triumph of the Six Year Plan now ended,
we come to the threshold of the Holy Year, now begun,
awestruck at the very thought of the unique significances
associated with the commemoration of that sanctified occasion
one hundred years ago when Bahá'u'lláh, the Promised
One of all ages, took His leave of this earthly life. The Sun of
Truth, however, was to set only to shine everlastingly from
the "Kingdom of fadeless glory," thenceforward to shed the
page 236
radiance of its regenerative power on the entire world. Gone
from this plane was He Who is the Author of a Revelation of
"inconceivable greatness" in which "all the Dispensations of
the past have attained their highest, their final consummation";
the Originator of a new Universal Cycle "that must
extend over a period of at least five hundred thousand years";
the Founder of a World Order, a "System — the like of which
mortal eyes have never witnessed." Moreover, He was the
Dawning Point of the Day of God, the "Day in which God's
most excellent favors have been poured out upon men." Such
are the superlative realities upon which our contemplations
are focused during this special anniversary occurring at this
crucial moment in the affairs of humankind.
—
Ridván 1992
A year charged with happenings of such sacred import is
bound to yield consequences of unimaginable potency. The
immediate outcome is, however, impossible to predict, nor
can it be fruitfully speculated about. Rather should we direct
our thoughts to the meaning of the solemn occasions which
this year is set apart to memorialize. For the purpose of the
Holy Year is not fulfilled by public memorials alone, befitting
as they will be. Essential to its purpose is the opportunity it
offers for inner reflection on the part of every Bahá'í individual.
Indeed, this is a special time for a rendezvous of the
soul with the Source of its light and guidance, a time to turn
to Bahá'u'lláh, to seek to obtain a deeper appreciation of His
purpose, to renew allegiance to Him. This is a time of retreat
to one's innermost being, to the dwelling-place of the Spirit
of Baha, that interior to which He summons us when He says:
"Turn thy sight unto thyself, that thou mayest find Me
standing within thee, mighty, powerful and self-subsisting."
This is a time for recommitment to the Covenant, for rededication
page 237
to duty, for revitalizing the energy for teaching, the
"most meritorious of all deeds."
As the foremost aid to your reflections and actions, you
will doubtless draw upon the insight and inspiration of such
of His words as these: "I am the Sun of Wisdom and the Ocean
of Knowledge. I cheer the faint and revive the dead. I am the
guiding Light that illumineth the way." "By My Life! Not of
Mine own volition have I revealed Myself, but God, of His
own choosing, hath manifested Me." "I have come in the
shadows of the clouds of glory, and am invested by God with
invincible sovereignty." "He that hath Me not is bereft of all
things. Turn ye away from all that is on earth and seek none
else but Me." "Love Me, that I may love thee. If thou lovest Me
not, My love can in no wise reach thee. Know this, O servant."
"The Ancient Beauty hath consented to be bound with chains
that mankind may be released from its bondage, and hath
accepted to be made a prisoner within this most mighty
Stronghold that the whole world may attain unto true liberty.
He hath drained to its dregs the cup of sorrow, that all the
peoples of the earth may attain unto abiding joy, and be filled
with gladness."
Whatever our private reflections or response to duty may
lead us to do, of one thing we must be sure: that the Name of
Him Who is the Lifegiver of the World becomes known
throughout the earth among high and low alike. Considering
that it is already a whole century since the Blessed Beauty
ascended, and given the crushing weight of the ills burdening
the peoples of the world, and seeing that a veritable cry
of anguish is issuing more loudly from the hearts of those
who long for some hope of relief, we, His avowed servants,
can neither falter nor fail in this primary and urgent duty. For
He, Bahá'u'lláh, is the Supreme Manifestation, the Unifier
and Redeemer of all mankind, the Fountainhead of Justice, the
page 238
immortal Beloved; for, according to His own unerring proclamation,
"He Who is the Unconditioned is come, in the clouds
of light, that He may quicken all created things with the
breezes of His Name, the Most Merciful, and unify the world,
and gather all men around this Table which hath been sent
down from heaven." Let us bear His Name with dignity to
those who must hear It, offer It as a treasure to those who must
receive It, speak It with love to those who must embrace It.
How laudable it would be if, imbued by this desire to
blazon abroad His Name, and as a demonstration of our
special love for the Abha Beauty, we could each of us mount
a personal campaign of teaching, such that the collective
force and results of it throughout the world would bring to a
resounding conclusion the sacred exercises of this Holy Year
and set the stage for the launching of the impending Three
Year Plan at Ridván 1993!
Finally, it is highly fitting at this time to recall Bahá'u'lláh's
expression in the Most Holy Book of His will for us with
regard to the nature of our reactions to His passing: "Be not
dismayed, O peoples of the world," He wrote, "when the
day-star of My beauty is set, and the heaven of My tabernacle
is concealed from your eyes. Arise to further My Cause, and
to exalt My Word amongst men. We are with you at all times,
and shall strengthen you through the power of truth. We are
truly almighty. Whoso hath recognized Me, will arise and
serve Me with such determination that the powers of earth
and heaven shall be unable to defeat his purpose."
Beloved friends, we shall not forget to supplicate at the
Holy Threshold that from His retreat of deathless splendor
the Blessed Beauty may fill the souls of each and all of you
with the revivifying breath of His celestial power.
—
Ridván 1992
page 239
With soul-stirring emotion we gather in the hallowed
environs of His resting place to honor the memory of the
Supreme Manifestation of God, Bahá'u'lláh, on the solemn,
historic occasion of the centenary of His ascension.
We lift our voices at the prompting of our hearts' desire
to pay tribute to a life infinitely beyond compare. But how
shall we realize such a wish when it is evident that no mind
can attain the comprehension which would make possible
the vocabulary worthy of His celestial court? In very truth,
our tongues falter in their impotence to describe, let alone
extol, the prodigies of a prophetic career which was framed
in superlatives. For here at Bahjí, one hundred years ago, was
drawn the last breath on earth of the world's greatest Luminary,
Founder of the Dispensation marking the culmination
of the six-thousand-year-old Adamic Cycle, and Inaugurator
of the five-thousand-century Bahá'í Cycle. He, the Most
Great Manifestation appeared in the Most Great Name and
endured the greatest suffering in authoring the Most Great
Revelation, which is the wellspring of the Most Great Peace.
In our attempt to appreciate these matchless bounties, we
recite the gem-like names of the Adored One, picked out as
pearls from the veritable ocean of His Revelation, bestrewing
them throughout our testimonial that they may lend an
acceptable gleam to our expression of His glory and majesty.
King of Kings, Lord of Lords, Supreme Mediator, Most
Ancient Beauty: He is the Well-Beloved of all worlds. We hail
Him as the long-awaited Promised One, the Object of the
adoration of the world. And we exclaim: "Hallowed be the
Lord in Whose hand is the source of dominion!"
How grievously Bahá'u'lláh suffered to regenerate the
world! Wrongly accused, imprisoned, beaten, chained, banished
from country to country, betrayed, poisoned, stripped
of material possessions, and "at every moment tormented
page 240
with a fresh torment": such was the cruel reception that
greeted the Everlasting Father, Him Who is the Possessor of
all Names and Attributes. For two score years, until the end
of His earthly days, He remained a prisoner and exile —
persecuted unceasingly by the rulers of Persia and the Ottoman
Empire, opposed relentlessly by a vicious and scheming
clergy, neglected abjectly by other sovereigns to whom He
addressed potent letters imparting to them that which, in His
truth-bearing words, "is the cause of the well-being, the
unity, the harmony, and the reconstruction of the world, and
of the tranquillity of the nations." "My grief," He once
lamented, "exceedeth all the woes to which Jacob gave vent,
and all the afflictions of Job are but a part of My sorrows."
The voice halts for shame from continuing so deplorable
a recitation, the heart is torn by mere thought of the Divine
Target of such grief — grief no ordinary mortal could endure.
But lest we give way to feelings of gloom and distress, we take
recourse in the tranquil calm He induces with such meaningful
words as these: "We have borne it all with the utmost
willingness and resignation, so that the souls of men may be
edified, and the Word of God be exalted." Thus, the Wronged
One, patient beyond measure, preserved a majestic composure,
revealing His true Self as the Merciful, the Loving, the
Incomparable Friend. Concentrating His energies on the
pivotal purpose of His Revelation, He transmuted His tribulations
into instruments of redemption and summoned all
peoples to the banner of unity....
Now, on this commemorative occasion, the Roll of Honor
on which the names of the Knights have been inscribed is
being deposited by Amatu'l-Bahá Rúhíyyih Khánum at the
entrance door of the Most Holy Shrine in the spot designated
by our beloved Guardian. This is both a symbol and a
promise — a symbol registering the reality of a clear response,
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at a critical time, to the duty laid upon us by the Lord of Hosts
to diffuse His teachings among all peoples; a promise that the
commitment so dazzlingly displayed by these intrepid pioneers
will be reaffirmed by generations of their successors,
ensuring that the light of Bahá'u'lláh's Revelation, "shining
in all its power and glory, will have suffused and enveloped
the entire planet."
This is also a mark of recognition of the power of the Hand
of Omnipotence to turn gnats into eagles. His bounties
embolden us. Broken-winged birds are we; yet, with His
assurances resounding in our souls, we soar to ever greater
heights in His service. "I am the royal Falcon on the arm of the
Almighty!" He declares, benevolently adding: "I unfold the
drooping wings of every broken bird and start it on its flight."
How then can we fail?
We here make this vow: With a stirring history of divine
support behind us and a clear vision of unfolding destiny
before us, we move onward, renewed, reconsecrated, resolute,
until the consciousness of every human being has been
touched by the knowledge of God's triumphant Faith. And,
intoning the expectant words of His Martyr-Herald, we
exclaim: "Exalted be His glory, and magnified be His might,
and sanctified be His holiness, and glorified be His grandeur,
and lauded be His ways!"
—
On the Occasion of the Centenary Commemoration
of the Ascension of Bahá'u'lláh at Bahjí
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