Directives From the Guardian
23 BAHÁ'ÍS--NEW (On Admittance of New Applicants)
"He has noted with care what you had written him regarding
the question of admittance of applicants into the Cause.
This is certainly a matter which calls for the utmost tact,
wisdom and consideration on the part of Bahá'í Assemblies.
While, as he himself has repeatedly stressed, a uniform procedure
should be adopted and followed whereby every applicant
should be required to express his whole-hearted and unconditional
acceptance of the essential verities of the Cause, great
care should also be taken not to insist on matters of a secondary
importance which the newcomer cannot, for obvious reasons,
fully grasp and apprehend at the beginning. Once the applicant
has been admitted in the Community with a clear understanding
of the duties and responsibilities, and essential implications
which such membership entails, there would be no difficulty for
him in gradually adjusting his whole ideas according to the
requirements set forth in the Teachings. The process of becoming
a Bahá'í is necessarily slow and gradual. The essential is
not that the beginner should have a full and detailed knowledge
of the Cause, a thing which is obviously impossible in the vast
majority of cases, but that he should, by an act of his own will,
be willing to uphold and follow the truth and guidance set
forth in the Teachings, and thus open his heart and mind to the
reality of the Manifestation."
Directives From the Guardian
pages 8-9
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