Review of: Symbol and Secret: Qur'án Commentary in Bahá'u'lláh's Kitab-i Íqán (Studies in the Bábí and Bahá'í
Religions, volume 7)
Author: Christopher Buck
Published by: Kalimát Press, Los Angeles, 1995
and
Review of: Revisioning the Sacred: New Perspectives on a Bahá'í Theology (Studies in the Bábí
and Bahá'í Religions, volume 8)
Edited by: Jack McLean
Published by: Kalimát Press, Los Angeles, 1997
Reviews by: Jonah Winters
Reviews published in: Iranian Studies 32:1 (Winter 1999), pp. 141-145
Kalimát Press, a small, independent publishing house,
can fairly be described as the premier producer of academic material on
the Bahá'í Faith. Most notable of its contributions in this
area is the "Studies in Bábí and Bahá'í
History" series, volume one of which appeared in 1982.1 The volumes of this series have consistently
featured scholarship that is rigorous and often groundbreaking. Volumes
seven and eight are no exception.
Christopher Buck's Symbol and Secret: Qur'an Commentary
in Bahá'u'lláh's Kitáb-i Íqán
(Studies in the Bábí and Bahá'í Religions,
volume 7) is an examination of the central theological work of the
Bahá'í religion and its relation to pre-existing Islamic
theologies and literary forms.2
Written circa 1862, shortly before Bahá'u'lláh first announced
to his followers that he was the "one who God shall make manifest" foretold by the Báb,
the "Íqán" is ostensibly an extended defense of the mission of the Báb. For
Bahá'ís, though, it came to be seen as a defense of and theological exposition on
both Babism and the Bahá'í religion, and it bridges and coordinates the two
religions. Further, it is regarded as Bahá'u'lláh's masterpiece of theological
interpretation and exposition. To adduce proofs of the Báb's prophethood and refute
objections to it, Bahá'u'lláh develops a coherent hermeneutic of creative
scriptural interpretation, an explanation of which is unfortunately beyond the scope of this
review.
The title of the book derives from its two main areas of focus. Buck first
examines the "symbol" by relating Bahá'u'lláh's hermeneutical enterprise in the
Íqán to the well-established traditions of tafsir, Qur'anic interpretation.
He demonstrates that, since the Íqán can be seen as residing
within—though transcending and reshaping—a tradition of Islamic works of
exegesis, it is itself an example of Qur'anic exegesis. Much of the value of this examination lies
in the fact that comparative studies between Islam and the Bahá'í religion have
yet to be undertaken. Such studies are crucial, for it is only through investigations into Islam
that certain metaphors and symbols, technical terms, and cultural assumptions in the earlier
Bahá'í scriptures can be understood.
Second, Buck examines the "secret" by exploring the theological underpinnings
of the Íqán. What was Bahá'u'lláh's "messianic consciousness" at
the time of its writing, asks Buck, and to what extent was he disclosing his own secret: that he
himself was the promised "Manifestation"? Here Buck is on unexplored territory, for this topic
has barely been addressed in published Bahá'í studies. Along the way the book
touches on many other issues, such as the manuscript and publication history of the
Íqán, ShÍ`Í notions of the Mahdi, and Bahá'u'lláh's
agenda of social and religious reform.
Much of Buck's work in this book is to be commended. His examination is
groundbreaking—he broaches topics vital and yet often ignored. The background work on
the history of the Íqán which precedes his main topics is conducted with a depth
and assiduousness that could be regarded as a model for future work by scholars of the
Bahá'í religion. He examines the publication history of the Íqán,
the dating and dissemination of other key Bahá'í texts, offers solutions to certain
historical dilemmas, and responds to critical charges made by early opponents of the religion
with a diligence and concentration which offers great promise for the rest of the book to follow.
The heart of Buck's project is a demonstration that Bahá'u'lláh's
agenda in the Íqán is prosecuted through innovative tafsÍr. Buck
examines many types of exegetical innovation pioneered by Bahá'u'lláh. These
include the "interscriptural exegesis," i.e. explaining the symbolism in the scripture of one
religion through recourse to the scripture of another religion, and the appeal to rationality, i.e.
demonstrating the absurdity of literalism. Through these, Bahá'u'lláh prepares
the reader of the Íqán to transcend traditional interpretation and become more
receptive to a new revelation. Finally, Buck adapts the tafsÍr typology of
Islamicist John Wansbrough to prepare a hermeneutical typology of the Íqán.
This section is among the most focused published examinations of Bahá'í
scripture and, even if a reader might disagree with some of Buck's analyses, the endeavour
itself is to be applauded.
Symbol and Secret's conclusion extrapolates from the above discussions
of Islamic context and content in the writings of Bahá'u'lláh into the realm of
Bahá'í theology. Here Buck examines the implications of
Bahá'u'lláh's exegetically-founded break from Islam for issues such as post-
Qur'anic revelation, religious and social reform, and metaphorical approaches to scripture.
This chapter contains some of the most enlightening and useful discussion in the book, and Buck
quite successfully conveys the sense of urgency and potency infusing the Íqán and
the state of the early Bahá'í community.
Given the importance of the topics Buck addresses and the skill with which he
examines them, it is regrettable that some readers might find Symbol and Secret
impenetrable. The two main obstacles in approaching this work are the opacity of Buck's prose
and the occasional disorderliness of the book's content.
Buck's writing can in places read as an unsuccessful juxtaposition of poetic and
academic styles. His use of metaphors, while colorful, can be distracting. His fondness for
polysyllabic alliteration, as in "vituperative vaticination" (84) or "extraordinary
extemporaneity," (294) can bog down the reader or, worse, bemuse him. As well, he often opts
for technicality over clarity. Why "variae lectiones," (139) when "variant readings" carries
exactly the same semantic value?
A more problematic aspect of Symbol and Secret is its somewhat chaotic
form. It lacks coherence both in formatting and in content, giving the impression that it was
composed in numerous parts which were combined into a somewhat haphazard whole for
publication. Its inconsistent use of italics and diacritics might be no more than an occasional
distraction, but does indicate a certain lack of editing—as do the few dozen typographical
errors occurring throughout the book. The topics examined in the text can be jumbled, with
unrelated sentences, paragraphs, and whole sections inserted in the middle of otherwise succinct
presentations. Conversely, topics that should be presented coherently can be found scattered
across the book. One further wonders what organization guided the layout of Symbol and
Secret when the book ends, not with a tight summary of ground covered, but a discussion of
Bahá'u'lláh's agenda of socio-religious reform which does not bear direct
relevance to the preceding book and reads more as the introduction to a new, unrelated book.
These criticisms aside, Buck has undertaken a project that is to be commended
on many fronts. This study is daring in that it is the first extended analysis of the Islamic
context and content of Bahá'u'lláh's thought and writings. The rigour with which
Buck has treated his topics is a model for anyone engaging in textual scholarship: his research is
broad, his attention to detail thorough, and his coverage of the topics exhaustive. Finally, many
of his conclusions, the light he throws on the Íqán and its content, and in places
even his methods are frankly brilliant. Though Symbol and Secret can be a frustrating
text which is difficult to penetrate, it is a good study which will well repay the diligent reader.
The seven essays of Revisioning the Sacred: New Perspectives on a
Bahá'í Theology (Studies in the Bábí and
Bahá'í Religions, volume 8), edited by Jack McLean, cover a variety of topics on
Bahá'í theology. While the wide range of style and content of these essays could,
in a more established discipline, indicate poor editing or an unfocused mandate, here they
demonstrate the richness and potential of this nascent field.
Bahá'í theology is currently a tentative subject. It faces the
expected obstacles confronting such a new and relatively unexplored field, such as a lack of
scholastic tradition to build upon, little or no recognition and support from its faith community
and institutions, and the difficulty of obtaining formal training. More than this, it also faces
potential doctrinal obstacles. Bahá'ís consider their religion the most complete
revelation from God to date. The figures in Bábí and Bahá'í
history—the Báb, Bahá'u'lláh, 'Abdu'l-Bahá, and Shoghi
Effendi—constitute an authoritative chain of revelation and interpretation. The sheer
volume of the tens of thousands of letters and books they wrote can give the impression that
every question one could have about God must be contained somewhere in them, hence what need
for practicing theology? As well, Bahá'u'lláh sought to correct abuses of
ecclesiastical authority by, among other things, limiting the exercise of interpretation. While
individuals are enjoined to come to their own understandings of scripture and religion,
authoritative interpretation is strictly limited that of the above four individuals. There is thus
a common sentiment that the only appropriate theological endeavor is to read, catalogue, and
study these writings, and any form of systematic theology can be regarded with suspicion.3
The development of Bahá'í theology is, however, a key component
in the gradual maturation of the religion. As McLean rightly notes, the "Bahá'í
Faith cannot come to be recognized as a distinct and independent world religion without a
distinctive theology." (xi) Given the religion's emphasis on "independent investigation of
truth," combined with the constraints on authoritative interpretation, it is likely that
Bahá'í theology will develop along pluralist lines. In a note near the close of the
book, McLean observes that "The universal scope of Bahá'í sacred
scripture...would seem to defy any one theological system." Rather, "it is rather more likely
that a number of differing theological and metaphysical thought systems will emerge in time and
coexist within the Bahá'í writings." (208, note 12)
These seven essays indicate an auspicious future for the project. Written by a
veritable "who's who" within Bahá'í studies, they address a wide variety of
topics in an equally wide variety of styles and methodologies.
The book opens with Dann J. May's "The Bahá'í Principle of
Religious Unity: A Dynamic Perspective." May attempts to "unpack" what can sometimes sound
like a Bahá'í platitude: that religious truth is, at core, unitary. In the
Bahá'í view, religious identity and phenomena can be isolated into two aspects,
the essential and the accidental. In "essence," religions are one in as much as God is one; they
share what May (following Frithjof Schuon) terms a transcendent unity. The problem, of
course, is that the "accidental" aspect of religious experience is highly diverse, which can lead
to inter-religious misunderstanding and conflict. May adapts Bahá'í theology to a
six-tiered typology of pluralism of Raimundo Panikkar to attempt to classify and better
elucidate this principle of religious unity. This essay contains some very useful overviews of
pluralist theologies, and May's adaptation of Panikkar's typology is instructive. Given the
complexity and variety of contemporary discussion of pluralism, though, the essay can read
merely as an introduction which leaves many questions and objections unaddressed.
Stephen Lambden's "The Background and Centrality of Apophatic Theology in
Bábi and Bahá'í Scripture" would have more appropriately been titled
"An Overview of Apophatic Theology in Western Religions." Lambden surveys negative theology
in Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Bábism, and then in the writings of
Bahá'u'lláh, 'Abdu'l-Bahá, and Shoghi Effendi. Most of the article is
simply a catalogue of sample instances of apophaticism in scripture, which does serve well to
highlight the variety and commonality of apophatic approaches. Yet while the number of
instances of the via negativa Lambden finds in writings of the Báb and
Bahá'u'lláh does indicate that it was a well-favored approach of each figure, and
hence "central" in terms of frequency, Lambden offers very little theological analysis to
illuminate this. This is unfortunate, because the via negativa could well prove to be a key in
understanding and resolving the very problems of religious diversity May has just hinted at. If
Bahá'ís are to teach that religious truth is unitary, and yet retain a respect for
the diversity of religious expression, Bahá'í theology might well have to insist
on a form of relativism in which all talk of God is ultimately founded on the via negativa. While
this article would serve as a fine introduction to the topic for readers having no background in
theology, it adds little to the field.
Juan Cole's "Bahá'u'lláh and Liberation Theology" is, in contrast,
a very welcome piece which begins to fill a clear gap in Bahá'í scholarship.
Whether in an attempt to find common ground and avoid offense, or simply because of non-
religious concerns, the Bahá'í Faith is sometimes presented more as a social
development organization than as a religious movement. In its quest for legitimacy and its
sincere desire to improve the lot of the dispossessed, the sheer "religiousness" of the religion is
often downplayed. On the other extreme, theological discussion, in any tradition, can lose sight
of practical experience in its pursuit of theory. Liberation theology offers promise to bridge
this gap, to apply theology to social welfare and vice versa. Cole pleas for such an approach:
"...the world desperately needs a new vision of spiritual and social justice such as
Bahá'u'lláh enunciates." (82) Cole approaches this by first introducing
Bahá'u'lláh's own social welfare concerns and activities. He then discusses a
number of Bahá'u'lláh's writings to bring out aspects which are often
overlooked, namely the emphasis Bahá'u'lláh places on empowering the
impoverished and the degree to which such concerns were truly revolutionary for Qajar Iran.
This is a well-written and timely article.
Anjam Khursheed's survey of contemporary common philosophies of science,
"The Spiritual Foundations of Science," demonstrates that most share a common empiricist
philosophy. Such an approach, he argues, exaggerates positivism and masks the fact that,
historically, science has been founded on spirituality more than materialism. Given the
Bahá'í view that truth is unitary—that religious truth and scientific truth
are complementary—Khursheed calls for a renewed emphasis on morality and on value-
oriented scientific practice. This essay summarizes well common Bahá'í
explanations of the religion's principle of "unity of science and religion" and provides a fine
overview of competing paradigms of the twentieth century, but it presents little original
analysis or theological justification. One weakness of this essay is that Khursheed bases part of
his explanation of the unity paradigm on the fact that the Bahá'í writings often
mention "science" and "arts" as complementary endeavors and refer to both simply as
"knowledge." (107) One suspects that this stems partly from linguistic differences. Terms such
as "science" and "knowledge" had quite different meanings and connotations in nineteenth-
century Persian and Arabic than in in twentieth-century English, and without a philological
discussion some of Khursheed's conclusions are suspect.
In "Interreligious Dialogue and the Bahá'í Faith," Seena Fazel
addresses a concern that has been raised by numerous scholars outside the religion:
Bahá'í dialogue often starts and ends with the claim that all religions offer truth
from the same divine source, and hence are to be respected in their own right. This, Fazel points
out, is "only... a beginning." (127) Dialogues which merely declare commonalities will founder
on the real fact of difference. Dialogue is sometimes no more than a polite form of proselytism,
an opportunity to present one's own tradition in a friendly setting with the covert hope of
persuading the other. In the best dialogue, Fazel argues, each partner comes away transformed.
After discussing types of, and challenges to, religious dialogue, Fazel proposes three approaches
Bahá'ís could adopt in pursuing interreligious discussion. The three "bridges" he
presents—the ethical, the intellectual, and the mystical/spiritual—are valuable
and insightful. Fazel's topic is a vital one, and his proposals welcome. One wishes that this essay
could be made required reading for all Bahá'ís who seek to teach their faith to
others.
Most of the essays in this volume deal with abstracts, with theories of theology.
Keven Brown's "Hermes Trismegistus and Apollonius of Tyana in the Writings of
Bahá'u'lláh" is a reminder that much of theology must concern itself with
specific, practical questions. Bahá'u'lláh mentions Hermes and Apollonius (in
Arabic, BalÍnþs) only a handful of times, but these infrequent citations pose a few
specific problems. One, what is the relevance of these citations to Bahá'í
theology? Two, how should Bahá'ís treat texts which are regarded to be infallible
and inerrant in the face of conflicting historical accounts? Much of the significance of these
citations lies in the fact that the mere mention of Hermes can invoke a range of occult and
alchemical associations, associations quite foreign to contemporary Occidental
Bahá'ísm. After briefing the reader on the historical accounts and myths of
Hermes and Apollonius, Brown presents the more significant citations of these two figures in
early Bahá'í texts and examines their meaning and relevance. This is useful
partly because it is one of the only published discussions of alchemy and the
Bahá'í Faith. The second question arises because Bahá'u'lláh stated
certain historical "facts" about Hermes and Apollonius with which modern historical
scholarship would disagree. Shoghi Effendi and, later, the Universal House of Justice explained
that Bahá'u'lláh wrote to convey truths which sometimes required that he cite
contemporary historical views, even if incorrect, to make his points. Brown agrees that it is
the points Bahá'u'lláh was making, not any inaccurate historical details, that are
significant. While a convincing argument, it is insufficient in that Abdu'l-Bahá, whose
interpretations are also seen as infallible, would on occasion firmly emphasize the inerrancy of
Bahá'u'lláh's historical statements. (see 187, note 115) The first of Brown's
two topics in this essay is treated very well; the second is far from settled.
McLean's essay "The Possibilities of Existential Theism for
Bahá'í Theology" is, like most of his writing, a well-considered and academically
informed meditation on living the Bahá'í life. He surveys the thought of a few key
European "existential" philosophers, relating each to Bahá'í thought and
theology. Through his discussion of existential concerns and approaches, McLean argues that the
scholar working within a faith tradition must not completely objectify his field of study, must
not divorce his studies from the existential commitment. This article, drawing on contemporary
philosophy for a practical comparative approach, offers many original considerations and
provides an engaging conclusion to the volume.
Like Symbol and Secret, this book suffers from the types of faults that
can plague underfunded, independent publishing houses. The articles are inconsistently edited,
both stylistically and grammatically. Further, while most are quite accurate, one is thoroughly
riddled with errors of punctuation, diacritics, and spelling. The table of contents lists an
incorrect title for another. These are no more than a minor distraction, though. Most of these
essays are of a high quality and address original, vital topics. Their range of topics indicates the
vastness and rich potential of emergent Bahá'í theologies, and Kalimát
Press and McLean are to be commended for having produced a valuable addition to
Bahá'í studies.
Notes:
1 Volumes one through four were subtitled "Studies in
Bábí and Bahá'í History"; beginning with volume five the series
was renamed "Studies in the Bábí and Bahá'í Religions."
2 A more in-depth review of this book can be found in Jonah
Winters, "Review of Christopher Buck: Symbol and Secret: Qur'an Commentary in
Bahá'u'lláh's Kitáb-i Íqán" (Journal of
Bahá'í Studies 8:3, 1998).
3 See J. A. McLean, "Prolegomena to a Bahá'í
Theology" (Journal of Bahá'í Studies 5:1, 1992), esp. pp. 28-36, for further
discussion of these issues.