Chapter 5: What is a Bahá’í
Man must show forth fruits. A fruitless man, in the
words of His Holiness the Spirit (i.e. Christ), is like a fruitless
tree, and a fruitless tree is fit for fire.—BAHÁ’U’LLÁH,
Words of Paradise.
Herbert Spencer once remarked that by no political
alchemy is it possible to get golden conduct out of leaden instincts,
and it is equally true that by no political alchemy is it possible to
make a golden society out of leaden individuals. Bahá’u’lláh,
like all previous Prophets, proclaimed this truth and taught that in
order to establish the Kingdom of God in the world, it must first be
established in the hearts of men. In examining the Bahá’í
teachings, therefore, we shall commence with the instructions of
Bahá’u’lláh for individual conduct, and try
to form a clear picture of what it means to be a Bahá’í.
Living the Life
When asked on one occasion: “What is a Bahá’í?”
‘Abdu’l-Bahá replied: “To be a Bahá’í
simply means to love all the world; to love humanity and try to serve
it; to work for universal peace and universal brotherhood.” On
another occasion He defined a Bahá’í as “one
endowed with all the perfections of man in activity.” In one of
His London talks He said that a man may be a Bahá’í
even if He has never heard the name of Bahá’u’lláh.
He added:—
The man who lives the life according to the teachings of
Bahá’u’lláh is already a Bahá’í.
On the other hand, a man may call himself a Bahá’í
for fifty years, and if he does not live the life he is not a Bahá’í.
An ugly man may call himself handsome, but he deceives no one, and a
black man may call himself white, yet he deceives no one, not even
himself.
One who does not know God’s Messengers, however,
is like a plant growing in the shade. Although it knows not the sun,
it is, nevertheless, absolutely dependent on it. The great Prophets
are spirits suns, and Bahá’u’lláh is the
sun of this “day” in which we live. The suns of former
days have warmed and vivified the world, and had those suns not
shone, the earth would not be cold and dead, but it is the sunshine
of today that alone can ripen the fruits which the suns of former
days have kissed into life.
Devotion to God
In order to attain to the Bahá’í
life in all its fullness, conscious and direct relations with
Bahá’u’lláh are as necessary as is sunshine
for the unfolding of the lily or the rose. The Bahá’í
worships not the human personality of Bahá’u’lláh,
but the Glory of God manifest through that personality. He reverences
Christ and Muḥammad and all God’s former Messengers to
mankind, but he recognizes Bahá’u’lláh as
the bearer of God’s Message for the new age in which we live,
as the Great World teacher Who has come to carry on and consummate
the work of His predecessors.
Intellectual assent to a creed does not make a man a
Bahá’í, nor does outward rectitude of conduct.
Bahá’u’lláh requires of His followers
wholehearted and complete devotion. God alone has the right to make
such a demand, but Bahá’u’lláh speaks as
the Manifestation of God, and the Revealer of His Will. Previous
Manifestations have been equally clear on this point. Christ said:
“If any man come after me, let him deny himself, and take up
his cross daily, and follow me. For whosoever will save his life
shall lose it: but whosoever will lose his life for my sake, the same
shall save it.” In different words, all the Divine
Manifestations have made this same demand from Their followers, and
the history of religion shows clearly that as long as the demand has
been frankly recognized and accepted, religion has flourished,
despite all earthly opposition, despite affliction, persecution and
martyrdom of the believers. On the other hand, whenever compromise
has crept in, and “respectability” has taken the place of
complete consecration, then religion has decayed. It has become
fashionable, but it has lost its power to save and transform, its
power to work miracles. True religion has never yet been fashionable.
God grant that one day it may become so; but it is still true, as in
the days of Christ, that “strait is the gate, and narrow is the
way, which leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it.”
The gateway of spiritual birth, like the gateway of natural birth,
admits men only one by one, and without encumbrances. If, in the
future, more people succeed in entering that way than in the past, it
will not be because of any widening of the gate, but because of a
greater disposition on the part of men to make the “great
surrender” which God demands; because long and bitter
experience has at last brought them to see the folly of choosing
their own way instead of God’s way.
Search After Truth
Bahá’u’lláh enjoins justice on
all His followers and defines it as:—“The freedom of man
from superstition and imitation, so that he may discern the
Manifestations of God with the eyes of Oneness, and consider all
affairs with keen sight.”—Words of Wisdom.
It is necessary that each individual should see and
realize for himself the Glory of God manifest in the human temple of
Bahá’u’lláh, otherwise the Bahá’í
faith would be for him but a name without meaning. The call of the
Prophets to mankind has always been that men should open their eyes,
not shut them, use their reason, not suppress it. It is clear seeing
and free thinking, not servile credulity, that will enable them to
penetrate the clouds of prejudice, to shake off the fetters of blind
imitation, and attain to the realization of the truth of a new
Revelation.
He who would be a Bahá’í needs to be
a fearless seeker after truth, but he should not confine his search
to the material plane. His spiritual perceptive powers should be
awake as well as his physical. He should use all the faculties God
has given him for the acquisition of truth, believing nothing without
valid and sufficient reason. If his heart is pure, and his mind free
from prejudice, the earnest seeker will not fail to recognize the
Divine Glory in whatsoever temple it may become manifest. Bahá’u’lláh
further declares:—
Man should know his own self, and know those things that
lead to loftiness or to baseness, to shame or to honor, to wealth or
to poverty.—Tablet of Tarazát.
The source of all learning is the knowledge of God,
exalted be His Glory! and this cannot be attained save through the
knowledge of His divine Manifestation.—Words of Wisdom.
The Manifestation is the Perfect Man, the great Exemplar
for Mankind, the First Fruit of the tree of humanity. Until we know
Him we do not know the latent possibilities within ourselves. Christ
tells us to consider the lilies how they grow, and declares that
Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. The lily
grows from a very unattractive-looking bulb. If we had never seen a
lily in bloom, never gazed on its matchless grace of foliage and
flower, how could we know the reality contained in that bulb? We
might dissect it most carefully and examine it most minutely, but we
should never discover the dormant beauty which the gardener knows how
to awaken. So until we have seen the Glory of God revealed in the
Manifestation, we can have no idea of the spiritual beauty latent in
our own nature and in that of our fellows. By knowing and loving the
Manifestation of God and following His teachings we are enabled,
little by little, to realize the potential perfections within
ourselves; then, and not till then, does the meaning and purpose of
life and of the universe become apparent to us.
Love of God
To know the Manifestation of God means also to love Him.
One is impossible without the other. According to Bahá’u’lláh,
the purpose of man’s creation is that he may know God and adore
Him. He says in one of His Tablets:—
The cause of the creation of all contingent beings has
been love, as it is said in the well-known tradition, “I was a
hidden treasure and I loved to be known. Therefore I created the
creation in order to be known.”
And in the Hidden Words He says:—
O Son of Being!
Love Me, that I may love thee. If
thou lovest Me not, My love can in no wise reach thee. Know this, O
servant.
O Son of the Wondrous Vision!
I have breathed
within thee a breath of My own Spirit, that thou mayest be My lover.
Why hast thou forsaken Me and sought a beloved other than Me?
To be God’s lover! That is the sole object of life
for the Bahá’í. To have God as his closest
companion and most intimate friend, his Peerless Beloved, in Whose
Presence is fullness of joy! And to love God means to love everything
and everybody, for all are of God. The real Bahá’í
will be the perfect lover. He will love everyone with a pure heart,
fervently. He will hate no one. He will despise no one, for he will
have learned to see the Face of the Beloved in every face, and to
find His traces everywhere. His love will know no limit of sect,
nation, class or race. Bahá’u’lláh
says:—“Of old it hath been revealed: ‘Love of one’s
country is an element of the Faith of God.’ The Tongue of
Grandeur hath ... in the day of His manifestation proclaimed: ‘It
is not his to boast who loveth his country, but it is his who loveth
the world.’”—Tablet of the World. And
again:—“Blessed is he who prefers his brother before
himself; such an one is of the people of Bahá.”—Words
of Paradise.
‘Abdu’l-Bahá tells us we must be “as
one soul in many bodies, for the more we love each other, the nearer
we shall be to God.” To an American audience He said:—
Likewise the divine religions of the holy Manifestations
of God are in reality one though in name and nomenclature they
differ. Man must be a lover of the light no matter from what
day-spring it may appear. He must be a lover of the rose no matter
what soil it may be growing. He must be a seeker of the truth no
matter from what source it come. Attachment to the lantern is not
loving the light. Attachment to the earth is not befitting but
enjoyment of the rose which develops from the soil is worthy.
Devotion to the tree is profitless but partaking of the fruit is
beneficial. Luscious fruits no matter upon what tree they grow or
where they may be found must be enjoyed. The word of truth no matter
which tongue utters it must be sanctioned. Absolute verities no
matter in what book they be recorded must be accepted. If we harbor
prejudice it will be the cause of deprivation and ignorance. The
strife between religions, nations and races arises from
misunderstanding. If we investigate the religions to discover the
principles underlying their foundations we will find they agree, for
the fundamental reality of them is one and not multiple. By this
means the religionists of the world will reach their point of unity
and reconciliation.
Again He says:—
Every soul of the beloved ones must love the others and
withhold not his possessions and life from them, and by all means he
must endeavor to make the other joyous and happy. But these others
must also be disinterested and self-sacrificing. Thus may this
Sunrise flood the horizons, this Melody gladden and make happy all
the people, this divine Remedy become the panacea for every disease,
this Spirit of Truth become the cause of life for every soul.
Severance
Devotion to God implies also severance from everything
that is not of God, severance, that is, from all selfish and worldly,
and ever other-worldly desires. The path of God may lie through
riches or poverty, health or sickness, through palace or dungeon,
rose garden or torture chamber. Whichever it be, the Bahá’í
will learn to accept his lot with “radiant acquiescence.”
Severance does not mean stolid indifference to one’s
surroundings or passive resignation to evil conditions; nor does it
mean despising the good things which God has created. The true Bahá’í
will not be callous, nor apathetic nor ascetic. He will find abundant
interest, abundant work and abundant joy in the Path of God, but he
will not deviate one hair’s breadth from that path in pursuit
of pleasure nor hanker after anything that God has denied him. When a
man becomes a Bahá’í, God’s Will becomes
his will, for to be at variance with God is the one thing he cannot
endure. In the path of God no errors can appall, no troubles dismay
him. The light of love irradiates his darkest days, transmutes
suffering into joy, and martyrdom itself into an ecstasy of bliss.
Life is lifted to the heroic plane and death becomes a glad
adventure. Bahá’u’lláh says:—
He that hath in his heart even less than a mustard seed
of love for anything beside Me, verily he cannot enter My
Kingdom.—Súratu’l-Haykal
O Son of Man!
If thou lovest Me, turn away from
thyself; and if thou seekest My pleasure, regard not thine own; that
thou mayest die in Me and I may eternally live in thee.
O My Servant!
Free thyself from the fetters of
this world, and loose thy soul from the prison of self. Seize thy
chance, for it will come to thee no more.—The Hidden Words.
Obedience
Devotion to God involves implicit obedience to His
revealed Commands even when the reason for these Commands is not
understood. The sailor implicitly obeys his captain’s orders,
even when he does not know the reason for them, but his acceptance of
authority is not blind. He knows full well that the captain has
served a thorough probation, and given ample proofs of competence as
a navigator. Were it not so, he would be foolish indeed to serve
under him. So the Bahá’í must implicitly obey the
Captain of his Salvation, but he will be foolish indeed if he has not
first ascertained that this Captain has given ample proofs of
trustworthiness. Having received such proofs, however, to refuse
obedience would be even greater folly, for only by intelligent and
open-eyed obedience to the wise master can we reap the benefits of
his wisdom, and acquire this wisdom for ourselves. Be the captain
never so wise, if none of the crew obey him how shall the ship reach
its port or the sailors learn the art of navigation? Christ clearly
pointed out that obedience is the path of knowledge. He said:—“My
doctrine is not mine, but his that sent me. If any man will do his
will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God, or whether
I speak of myself.”—St. John vii, 16–17. So
Bahá’u’lláh says: “Faith in God, and
the knowledge of Him, cannot be fully attained except ... by
practicing all that He hath commanded and all that is revealed in the
Book from the Pen of Glory.”—Tablet of Tajallíyát.
Implicit obedience is not a popular virtue in these
democratic days, and indeed entire submission to the will of any mere
man would be disastrous. But the Unity of Humanity can be attained
only by complete harmony of each and all with the Divine will. Unless
that Will be clearly revealed, and men abandon all other leaders and
obey the Divine Messenger, then conflict and strife will go on, and
men will continue to oppose each other, to devote a large part of
their energy to frustrating the efforts of their brother men, instead
of working harmoniously together for the Glory of God and the common
good.
Service
Devotion to God implies a life of service to our fellow-
creatures. We can be of service to God in no other way. If we turn
our backs on our fellowmen, we are turning our backs upon God. Christ
said, “Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these,
ye did it not to Me.” So Bahá’u’lláh
says:—“O son of man! If thine eyes be turned towards
mercy, forsake the things that profit thee, and cleave unto that
which will profit mankind. And if thine eyes be turned towards
justice, choose thou for thy neighbor that which thou choosest for
thyself.”—Words of Paradise.
‘Abdu’l-Bahá says:—
In the Bahá’í Cause arts, sciences
and all crafts are counted as worship. The man who makes a piece of
note- paper to the best of his ability, conscientiously,
concentrating all his forces on perfecting it, is giving praise to
God. Briefly, all effort and exertion put forth by man from the
fullness of his heart is worship, if it is prompted by the highest
motives and the will to do service to humanity. This is worship: to
serve mankind and to minister to the needs of the people. Service is
prayer. A physician ministering to the sick, gently, tenderly, free
from prejudice and believing in the solidarity of the human race, is
giving praise.
Teaching
The real Bahá’í will not only
believe in the teachings of Bahá’u’lláh,
but find in them the guide and inspiration of his whole life and
joyfully impart to others the knowledge that is the wellspring of his
own being. Only thus will he receive in full measure “the power
and confirmation of the Spirit.” All cannot be eloquent
speakers or ready writers, but all can teach by “living the
life.” Bahá’u’lláh says:—
The people of Bahá must serve the Lord with
wisdom, teach others by their lives, and manifest the light of God in
their deeds. The effect of deed is in truth more powerful than that
of words.—Words of Paradise
The Bahá’í will, however, on no
account force his ideas on those who do not wish to hear them. He
will attract people to the Kingdom of God, not try to drive them into
it. He will be like the good shepherd who leads his flock, and charms
the sheep by his music, rather than like the one who, from behind,
urges them on with dog and stick.
Bahá’u’lláh says in the Hidden
Words:—
O Son of Dust!
The wise are they that speak not
unless they obtain a hearing, even as the cup-bearer, who proffereth
not his cup till he findeth a seeker, and the lover who crieth not
out from the depths of his heart until he gazeth upon the beauty of
his beloved. Wherefore sow the seeds of wisdom and knowledge in the
pure soil of the heart, and keep them hidden, till the hyacinths of
divine wisdom spring from the heart and not from mire and clay.
Again He says, in the Tablet of Ishráqát:—
O people of Bahá! Ye are the dawning-places of
the Love and daysprings of the Favor of God. Defile not your tongues
with cursing or execrating anyone, and guard your eyes from that
which is not worthy. Show forth that which ye possess (i.e. Truth).
If it be accepted, the aim is attained. If not, to rebuke or
interfere with him who rejects is vain. Leave him to himself, and
advance towards God, the Protector, the Self-Subsistent. Be not the
cause of sorrow, how much less of sedition and strife! It is hoped
that ye may be nurtured in the shade of the tree of Divine Bounty and
act as God has willed for you. Ye are all leaves of one tree and
drops of one sea.
Courtesy and Reverence
Bahá’u’lláh says:—
O people of God! I exhort you to courtesy. Courtesy is
indeed ... the lord of all virtues. Blessed is he who is adorned with
the mantle of Uprightness and illumined with the light of Courtesy.
He who is endowed with Courtesy (or Reverence) is endowed with a
great station. It is hoped that this Wronged One, and all, will
attain to it, hold unto it and observe it. This is the Irrefutable
Command which hath flowed from the pen of the Greatest Name.—Tablet
of the World.
Again and again He repeats:—“Let all the
nations of the world consort with each other with joy and fragrance.
Consort ye, O people, with the people of all religions with joy and
fragrance.”
‘Abdu’l-Bahá says in a letter to the
Bahá’ís of America:—
Beware! Beware! Lest ye offend any heart!
Beware! Beware! Lest ye hurt any soul!
Beware! Beware! Lest ye deal unkindly toward any person!
Beware! Beware! Lest ye be the cause of hopelessness to any creature!
Should one become the cause
of grief to any one heart, or of despondency to any one soul, it were
better to hide oneself in the lowest depths of the earth than to walk
upon the earth.
He teaches that as the flower is hidden in the bud, so a
spirit from God dwells in the heart of every man, no matter how hard
and unlovely his exterior. The true Bahá’í will
treat every man, therefore, as the gardener tends a rare and
beautiful plant. He knows that no impatient interference on his part
can open the bud into a blossom; only God’s sunshine can do
that, therefore his aim is to bring that life-giving sunshine into
all darkened hearts and homes.
Again, ‘Abdu’l-Bahá says:—
Among the teachings of Bahá’u’lláh
is one requiring man, under all conditions and circumstances, to be
forgiving, to love his enemy and to consider an ill-wisher as a
well-wisher. Not that one should consider another as an enemy and
then put up with him ... and be forbearing toward him. This is
hypocrisy and not real love. Nay, rather, you must see your enemies
as friends, your ill-wishers as well-wishers and treat them
accordingly. Your love and kindness must be real ... not merely
forbearance, for forbearance, if not of the heart, is hypocrisy.
Such counsel appears unintelligible and
self-contradictory until we realize that while the outer carnal man
may be a hater and ill-wisher, there is in everyone an inner,
spiritual nature which is the real man, from whom only love and
goodwill can proceed. It is to this real, inner man in each of our
neighbors that we must direct our thought and love. When he awakens
into activity, the outer man will be transformed and renewed.
The Sin-covering Eye
On no subject are the Bahá’í
teaching more imperative and uncompromising than on the requirement
to abstain from faultfinding. Christ spoke very strongly on the same
subject, but it has now become usual to regard the Sermon on the
Mount as embodying “Counsels of Perfection” which the
ordinary Christian cannot be expected to live up to. Both Bahá’u’lláh
and ‘Abdu’l-Bahá are at great pains to make it
clear that on this subject They mean all They say. We read in the
Hidden Words:—
O Son of Man!
Breathe not the sins of others so
long as thou art thyself a sinner. Shouldst thou transgress this
command, accursed wouldst thou be, and to this I bear witness.
O Son of Being!
Ascribe not to any soul that
which thou wouldst not have ascribed to thee, and say not that which
thou doest not. This is My command unto thee, do thou observe it.
‘Abdu’l-Bahá tells us:—
To be silent concerning the faults of others, to pray
for them, and to help them, through kindness, to correct their
faults.
To look always at the good and not at the bad. If a
man has ten good qualities and one bad one, to look at the ten and
forget the one; and if a man has ten bad qualities and one good one,
to look at the one and forget the ten.
Never to allow
ourselves to speak one unkind word about another, even though that
other be our enemy.
To an American friend He writes:—
The worst human quality and the most great sin is
backbiting, more especially when it emanates from the tongues of the
believers of God. If some means were devised so that the doors of
backbiting could be shut eternally, and each one of the believers of
God unsealed his lips in praise of others, then the teachings of His
Holiness Bahá’u’lláh would be spread, the
hearts illumined, the spirits glorified, and the human world would
attain to everlasting felicity.
Humility
While we are commanded to overlook the faults of others,
and see their virtues, we are commanded, on the other hand, to find
out our own faults and take no account of our virtues. Bahá’u’lláh
says in the Hidden Words:—
O Son of Being!
How couldst thou forge thine own
faults and busy thyself with the faults of others? Whoso doeth this
is accursed of Me.
O Emigrants!
The tongue I have designed for the
mention of Me, defile it not with detraction. If the fire of self
overcome you, remember your own faults and not the faults of My
creatures, inasmuch as every one of you knoweth his own self better
than he knoweth others.
‘Abdu’l-Bahá says:—
Let your life be an emanation of the
Kingdom of Christ. He came not to be ministered unto, but to
minister.... In the religion of Bahá’u’lláh
all are servants and maidservants, brothers and sisters. As soon as
one feels a little better than, a little superior to, the rest, he is
in a dangerous position, and unless he casts away the seed of such an
evil thought, he is not a fit instrument for the service of the
Kingdom.
Dissatisfaction with oneself is a sign of progress.
The soul who is satisfied with himself is the manifestation of Satan,
and the one who is not contented with himself is the manifestation of
the Merciful. If a person has a thousand good qualities he must not
look at them; nay, rather he must strive to find out his own defects
and imperfections....However much a man may progress, yet he is
imperfect, because there is always a point ahead of him. No sooner
does he look up towards that point than he become dissatisfied with
his own condition, and aspires to attain to that. Praising one’s
own self is the sign of selfishness.—Diary of Mírzá
Aḥmad Sohrab, 1914.
Although we are commanded to recognize and sincerely
repent of our sins, the practice of confession to priests and others
is definitely forbidden. Bahá’u’lláh says
in the Glad Tidings:—
The sinner, when his heart is free
from all save God, must seek forgiveness from God alone. Confession
before the servants (i.e. before men) is not permissible, for it is
not the means or the cause of Divine Forgiveness. Such confession
before the creatures leads to one’s humiliation and abasement,
and God—exalted by His Glory—does not wish for the
humiliation of His servants. Verily He is Compassionate and
Beneficent. The sinner must, between himself and God, beg for mercy
from the Sea of Mercy and implore pardon from the Heaven of
Forgiveness.
Truthfulness and Honesty
Bahá’u’lláh says in the Tablet
of Tarazát:—
Verily, Honesty is the door of tranquillity to all in
the world, and the sign of glory from the presence of the Merciful
One. Whosoever attains thereto has attained to treasures of wealth
and affluence. Honesty is the greatest door to the security and
tranquillity of mankind. The stability of every affair always depends
on it, and the worlds of honor, glory and affluence are illumined by
its light....
O people of Bahá! Honesty is the best
garment for your temples and the most splendid crown for your heads.
Adhere thereto by the Command of the Omnipotent Commander.
Again He says:—“The principle of faith is to
lessen words and to increase deeds. He who words exceed his acts,
know verily, that his nonbeing is better than his being, his death
better than his life.”
‘Abdu’l-Bahá says:—
Truthfulness is the foundation of all the virtues of
mankind. Without truthfulness, progress and success in all of the
worlds are impossible for a soul. When this holy attribute is
established in man, all the other divine qualities will also become
realized.
Let the light of truth and honesty shine from your
faces so that all may know that your word, in business or pleasure,
is a word to trust and be sure of. Forget self and work for the
whole. (Message to the London Bahá’ís, October
1911).
Self-Realization
Bahá’u’lláh constantly urges
men to realize and give full expression to the perfections latent
within them—the true inner self as distinguished from the
limited outer self, which at best is but the temple, and too often is
the prison of the real man. In the Hidden Words He says:—
O Son of Being!
With the hands of power I made
thee and with the fingers of strength I created thee; and within thee
have I placed the essence of My light. Be thou content with it and
seek naught else, for My work is perfect and My command is binding.
Question it not, nor have a doubt thereof.
O Son of Spirit!
I created thee rich, why dost
thou bring thyself down to poverty? Noble I made thee, wherewith dost
thou abase thyself? Out of the essence of knowledge I gave thee
being, why seekest thou enlightenment from anyone beside Me? Out of
the clay of love I molded thee, how dost thou busy thyself with
another? Turn thy sight unto thyself, that thou mayest find Me
standing within thee, mighty, powerful and self-subsisting.
O My Servant!
Thou art even as a finely tempered
sword concealed in the darkness of its sheath and its value hidden
from the artificer’s knowledge. Wherefore come forth from the
sheath of self and desire that thy worth may be made resplendent and
manifest unto all the world.
O My Friend!
Thou art the day-star of the heavens
of My holiness, let not the defilement of the world eclipse thy
splendor. Rend asunder the veil of heedlessness, that from behind the
clouds thou mayest emerge resplendent and array all things with the
apparel of life.
The life to which Bahá’u’lláh
calls His followers is surely one of such nobility that in all the
vast range of human possibility there is nothing more lofty or
beautiful to which man could aspire. Realization of the spiritual
self in ourselves means realization of the sublime truth that we are
from God and to Him shall we return. This return to God is the
glorious goal of the Bahá’í; but to attain this
goal the only path is that of obedience to His chosen Messengers, and
especially to His Messenger for the time in which we live,
Bahá’u’lláh, the prophet of the New Era.
Chapter 6: Prayer
Prayer is a ladder by which everyone may ascend to
Heaven.—MUḤAMMAD.
Conversation with God
“Prayer,” says ‘Abdu’l-Bahá,
“is conversation with God.” In order that God may make
known His Mind and Will to men, He must speak to them in a language
which they can understand, and this He does by the mouths of His Holy
Prophets. While these Prophets are alive in the body They speak with
men face to face and convey to them the Message of God, and after
Their death Their message continues to reach men’s minds
through Their recorded sayings and writings. But this is not the only
way in which God can commune with and inspire those whose hearts are
seeking after truth, wherever they are, and whatever their native
race or tongue. By this language the Manifestation continues to hold
converse with the faithful after His departure from the material
world. Christ continued to converse with and inspire His disciples
after His crucifixion. In fact He influenced them more powerfully
than before; and with other Prophets it has been the same.
‘Abdu’l-Bahá speaks much of this spiritual
language. He says, for instance:—
We should speak in the language of heaven—in the
language of the spirit—for there is a language of the spirit
and heart. It is as different from our language as our own language
is different from that of the animals, who express themselves only by
cries and sounds.
It is the language of the spirit which
speaks to God. When, in prayer, we are freed from all outward things
and turn to God, then it is as if in our hearts we hear the voice of
God. Without words we speak, we communicate, we converse with God and
hear the answer.... All of us, when we attain to a truly spiritual
condition, can hear the Voice of God. (from a talk reported by Miss
Ethel J. Rosenberg).
Bahá’u’lláh declares that the
higher spiritual truths can be communicated only by means of this
spiritual language. The spoken or written word is quite inadequate.
In a little book called The Seven Valleys, in which He describes the
journey of travelers from the earthly dwelling to the Divine Home, He
says, in speaking of the more advanced stages of the journey:—
The tongue is unable to give an account of these, and
utterance falls exceedingly short. The pen is useless in this court,
and the ink gives no result but blackness.... Heart alone can
communicate to heart the state of the knower; this is not the work of
a messenger, nor can it be contained in letters.
The Devotional Attitude
In order that we may attain the spiritual condition in
which conversation with God becomes possible, ‘Abdu’l-Bahá
says:—
We must strive to attain to that condition by being
separated from all things and from the people of the world and by
turning to God alone. It will take some effort on the part of man to
attain to that condition, but he must work for it, strive for it. We
can attain to it by thinking and caring less for material things and
more for the spiritual. The further we go from the one, the nearer we
are to the other. The choice is ours.
Our spiritual
perception, our inward sight must be opened, so that we can see the
signs and traces of God’s spirit in everything. Everything can
reflect to us the light of the Spirit. (from a talk reported by Miss
Ethel J. Rosenberg).
Bahá’u’lláh has written:—“That
seeker ... at the dawn of every day ... should commune with God, and,
with all his soul, persevere in the quest of his Beloved. He should
consume every wayward thought from the flame of His loving mention.
...”—Gleaning from the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh,
p. 265.
In the same way, ‘Abdu’l-Bahá
declares:—
When man allows the spirit, through his soul, to
enlighten his understanding, then does he contain all creation....
But on the other hand, when man does not open his mind and heart to
the blessing of the spirit, but turns his soul towards the material
side, towards the bodily part of his nature, then his he fallen from
his high place and he becomes inferior to the inhabitants of the
lower animal kingdom.
Again, Bahá’u’lláh writes:—
Deliver your souls, O people, from the bondage of self,
and purify them from all attachment to anything besides Me.
Remembrance of Me cleanseth all things from defilement, could ye but
perceive it....
Intone, O My servant, the verses of God that
have been received by thee, ... that the sweetness of thy melody may
kindle thine own soul, and attract the hearts of all men. Whoso
reciteth, in the privacy of his chamber, the verses revealed by God,
the scattering angels of the Almighty shall scatter abroad the
fragrance of the words uttered by his mouth....—Gleanings from
the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh, pp. 294–295.
Necessity for a Mediator
According to ‘Abdu’l-Bahá:—
A mediator is necessary between man and the Creator—one
who receives the full light of the Divine Splendor and radiates it
over the human world, as the earth’s atmosphere receives and
diffuses the warmth of the sun’s rays.
If we wish to
pray, we must have some object on which to concentrate. If we turn to
God, we must direct our hearts to a certain center. If man worships
God otherwise than through His Manifestation, he must first form a
conception of God, and that conception is created by his own mind. As
the finite cannot comprehend the Infinite, so God is not to be
comprehended in this fashion. That which man conceives with his own
mind he comprehends. That which he can comprehend is not God. That
conception of God which a man forms for himself is but a phantasm, an
image, an imagination, an illusion. There is no connection between
such a conception and the Supreme Being.
If a man wishes to
know God, he must find Him in the perfect mirror, Christ or
Bahá’u’lláh. In either of these mirrors he
will see reflected the Sun of Divinity.
As we know the
physical sun by its splendor, by its light and heat, so we know God,
the Spiritual Sun, when He shines forth from the temple of
Manifestation, by His attributes of perfection, by the beauty of His
qualities and by the splendor of His light. (from a talk to Mr. Percy
Woodcock, at Akká, 1909).
Again He says:
Unless the Holy Spirit become intermediary, one cannot
attain directly to the bounties of God. Do not overlook the obvious
truth, for it is self-evident that a child cannot be instructed
without a teacher, and knowledge is one of the bounties of God. The
soil is not covered with grass and vegetation without the rain of the
cloud; therefore the cloud is the intermediary between the divine
bounties and the soil.... The light hath a center and if one desire
to seek it otherwise than from the center, one can never attain to
it.... Turn thine attention to the days of Christ; some people
imagine that without the Messianic outpourings it was possible to
attain to truth, but this very imagination became the cause of the
deprivation.
A man who tries to worship God without turning to His
Manifestation is like a man in a dungeon trying through his
imagination to revel in the glories of the sunshine.
Prayer Indispensable and Obligatory
The use of prayer is enjoined upon Bahá’ís
in no uncertain terms. Bahá’u’lláh says in
the Kitáb-i-Aqdas:—
Chant (or recite) the Words of God every morning and
evening. The one who neglects this has not been faithful to the
Covenant of God and His agreement, and he who turns away from it
today is of those who have turned away from God. Fear God, O my
people! Let not too much reading (of the Sacred Word) and actions by
day or night make you proud. To chant but one verse with joy and
gladness is better for you than reading all the Revelations of the
Omnipotent God with carelessness. Chant the Tablets of God in such
measure that ye be not overtaken with fatigue and depression. Burden
not the soul so as to cause exhaustion and languour, but rather
refresh it that thus it may soar on the wings of Revelation to the
Dawning-place of proofs. This brings you nearer to God, were ye of
those who understand.—Kitáb-i-Aqdas
‘Abdu’l-Bahá says to a
correspondent:—“O thou spiritual friend! Know thou that
prayer is indispensable and obligatory, and man under no pretext
whatever is excused therefrom unless he be mentally unsound or an
insurmountable obstacle prevent him.”
Another correspondent asked: “Why pray? What is
the wisdom thereof, for God has established everything and executes
all affairs after the best order—therefore, what is the wisdom
in beseeching and supplicating and in stating one’s wants and
seeking help?”
‘Abdu’l-Bahá replied:—
Know thou, verily it is becoming in a
weak one to supplicate to the Strong One, and it behooveth a seeker
of bounty to beseech the Glorious Bountiful One. When one supplicates
to his Lord, turns to Him and seeks bounty from His Ocean, this
supplication brings light to his heart, illumination to his sight,
life to his soul and exaltation to his being.
During thy
supplications to God and thy reciting, “Thy Name is my
healing,” consider how thine heart is cheered, thy soul
delighted by the spirit of the love of God, and thy mind attracted to
the Kingdom of God! By these attractions one’s ability and
capacity increase. When the vessel is enlarged the water increases,
and when the thirst grows the bounty of the cloud becomes agreeable
to the taste of man. This is the mystery of supplication and the
wisdom of stating one’s wants. (from a tablet to an American
believer, translated by ‘Alí Kuli Khán,
October 1908).
Bahá’u’lláh has revealed three
daily obligatory prayers. The believer is free to choose any one of
these three prayers, but is under the obligation of reciting one of
them, and in the manner Bahá’u’lláh has
prescribed.
Congregational Prayer
The prayers which Bahá’u’lláh
has ordained as a daily obligation for Bahá’ís
are to be said privately. Only in the case of the Prayer for the Dead
has Bahá’u’lláh commanded congregational
prayer, and the only requirement is that the believer who reads it
aloud, and all others present, should stand. This differs from the
Islamic practice of congregational prayer in which the believers
stand in rows behind an imám, who leads the prayer, which is
prohibited in the Bahá’í Faith.
These ordinances, which are in accordance with
Bahá’u’lláh’s abolition of
professional clergy, do not mean that He attached no value to
meetings for worship. Regarding the value of gathering for prayer,
‘Abdu’l-Bahá spoke as follows:—
Man may say: “I can pray to God whenever I wish,
when the feelings of my heart are drawn to God; when I am in the
wilderness, when I am in the city, or wherever I may be. Why should I
go where others are gathered upon a special day, at a certain hour,
to unite my prayers with theirs, when I may not be in a frame of mind
for praying?”
To think in this way is useless
imagination, for where many are gathered together their force is
greater. Separate soldiers fighting alone and individually have not
the force of a united army. If all the soldiers in this spiritual war
gather together, then their united spiritual feelings help each
other, and their prayers become acceptable. (from notes taken by Miss
Ethel J. Rosenberg).
Prayer the Language of Love
To someone who asked whether prayer was necessary, since
presumably God knows the wishes of all hearts, ‘Abdu’l-Bahá
replied:—
If one friend loves another, is it not natural that he
should wish to say so? Though he knows that that friend is aware of
his love, does he still not wish to tell him of it? ... It is true
that God knows the wishes of all hearts; but the impulse to pray is a
natural one, springing from man’s love to God.
...
Prayer need not be in words, but rather in thought and action. But if
this love and this desire are lacking, it is useless to try to force
them. Words without love mean nothing. If a person talks to you as an
unpleasant duty, finding neither love nor enjoyment in the meeting,
do you wish to converse with him? (article in Fortnightly Review,
Jul.-Dec. 1911, p. 784 by Miss E. S. Stevens).
In another talk He said:—
In the highest prayer, men pray only for the love of
God, not because they fear Him or hell, or hope for bounty or heaven.
... When a man falls in love with a human being, it is impossible for
him to keep from mentioning the name of his beloved. How much more
difficult is it to keep from mentioning the Name of God when one has
come to love Him.... The spiritual man finds no delight in anything
save in commemoration of God. (from notes of Miss Alma Robertson and
other pilgrims, November and December 1900).
Deliverance from Calamities
According to the teaching of the Prophets, disease and
all other forms of calamity are due to disobedience to the Divine
Commands. Even disasters due to floods, hurricanes, and earthquakes
are attributed by ‘Abdu’l-Bahá indirectly to this
cause.
The suffering that follows error is not vindictive,
however, but educative and remedial. It is God’s Voice
proclaiming to man that he has strayed from the right path. If the
suffering is terrible, it is only because the danger of wrongdoing is
more terrible, for “the wages of sin is death.”
Just as calamity is due to disobedience, so deliverance
from calamity can be obtained only be obedience. There is no chance
or uncertainty about the matter. Turning from God inevitably brings
disaster, and turning to God as inevitably brings blessing.
As the whole of humanity is one organism, however, the
welfare of each individual depends not only on his own behavior, but
on that of his neighbors. If one does wrong, all suffer in greater or
less degree; while if one does well, all benefit. Each has to bear
his neighbor’s burdens, to some extent, and the best of mankind
are those who bear the biggest burdens. The saints have always
suffered abundantly; the Prophets have suffered superlatively.
Bahá’u’lláh says in the Book of Íqán:—“You
must undoubtedly have been informed of the tribulations, the poverty,
the ills, and the degradation that have befallen every Prophet of God
and His companions. You must have heard how the heads of their
followers were sent as presents unto different cities.
...”—Kitáb-i-Íqán, p. 73.
This is not because the saints and Prophets have merited
punishment above other men. Nay, they often suffer for the sins of
others, and choose to suffer, for the sake of others. Their concern
is for the world’s welfare, not for their own. The prayer of
the true lover of humanity is not that he, as an individual, may
escape poverty, ill-health or disaster, but that mankind may be saved
from ignorance and error and the ills that inevitably flow from them.
If he wishes health or wealth for himself, it is in order that he may
serve the Kingdom, and if physical health and wealth are denied him,
he accepts his lot with “radiant acquiescence,” well
knowing that there is a right wisdom in whatever befalls him in the
Path of God.
‘Abdu’l-Bahá says:—
Grief and sorrow do not come to us by chance; they are
sent by the Divine Mercy for our perfecting. When grief and sorrow
come, then will a man remember his Father Who is in Heaven, Who is
able to deliver him from his humiliations. The more a man is
chastened, the greater is the harvest of spiritual virtues shown
forth by him.
At first sight it may seem very unjust that the innocent
should suffer for the guilty, but ‘Abdu’l-Bahá
assures us that the injustice is only apparent and that, in the long
run, perfect justice prevails. He writes:—
As to the subject of babes and children and weak ones
who are afflicted by the hands of the oppressors ... for those souls
there is a recompense in another world ... that suffering is the
greatest mercy of God. Verily that mercy of the Lord is far better
than all the comfort of this world and the growth and development
appertaining to this place of mortality.
Prayer and Natural Law
Many find a difficulty in believing in the efficacy of
prayer because they think that answers to prayer would involve
arbitrary interference with the laws of nature. An analogy may help
to remove this difficulty. If a magnet be held over some iron filings
the latter will fly upwards and cling to it, but this involves no
interference with the law of gravitation. The force of gravity
continues to act on the filings just as before. What has happened is
that a superior force has been brought into play—another force
whose action is just as regular and calculable as that of gravity.
The Bahá’í view is that prayer brings into action
higher forces, as yet comparatively little known; but there seems no
reason to believe that these forces are more arbitrary in their
action than the physical forces. The difference is that they have not
yet been fully studied and experimentally investigated, and their
action appears mysterious and incalculable because of our ignorance.
Another difficulty which some find perplexing is that
prayer seems too feeble a force to produce the great results often
claimed to it. Analogy may serve to clear up this difficulty also. A
small force, when applied to the sluice gate of a reservoir, may
release and regulate an enormous flow of water-power, or, when
applied to the steering gear of an ocean liner, may control the
course of the huge vessel. In the Bahá’í view,
the power that brings about answers to prayer is the inexhaustible
Power of God. The part of the suppliant is only to exert the feeble
force necessary to release the flow or determine the course of the
Divine Bounty, which is ever ready to serve those who have learned
how to draw upon it.
Bahá’í Prayers
Bahá’u’lláh and ‘Abdu’l-Bahá
have revealed innumerable prayers for the use of Their followers at
various times and for various purposes. The greatness of conception
and depth of spirituality revealed in these utterances must impress
every thoughtful student, but only by making their use a regular and
important part of one’s daily life can their significance be
fully appreciated and their power for good realized. Unfortunately,
considerations of space prevent our giving more than a very few short
specimens of these prayers. For further examples the reader must be
referred to other works.
O my Lord! Make Thy beauty to be my food, and Thy
presence my drink, and Thy pleasure my hope, and praise of Thee my
action, and remembrance of Thee my companion, and the power of Thy
sovereignty my succorer, and Thy habitation my home, and my
dwelling-place the seat Thou hast sanctified from the limitations
imposed upon them who are shut out as by a veil from Thee.
Thou
art, verily, the Almighty, the All-Glorious, the Most
Powerful.—BAHÁ’U’LLÁH.
I bear
witness, O my God, that Thou hast created Me to know Thee and to
worship Thee. I testify, at this moment, to my powerlessness and to
Thy might, to my poverty and to Thy wealth.
There is none
other God but Thee, the Help in Peril, the
Self-Subsisting.—BAHÁ’U’LLÁH.
O my God! O my God! Unite the hearts of Thy servants and
reveal to them Thy great purpose. May they follow Thy commandments
and abide in Thy law. Help them, O God, in their endeavor, and grant
them strength to serve Thee. O God! leave them not to themselves, but
guide their steps by the light of knowledge, and cheer their hearts
by Thy love. Verily, Thou art their Helper and their
Lord.—BAHÁ’U’LLÁH.
O Thou kind Lord! Thou has created all humanity from the
same stock. Thou hast decreed that all shall belong to the same
household. In Thy Holy Presence they are all Thy servants, and all
mankind are sheltered beneath Thy Tabernacle; all have gathered
together at Thy Table of Bounty; all are illumined through the light
of Thy Providence.
O God! Thou art kind to all, Thou hast
provided for all, dost shelter all, conferrest life upon all, Thou
hast endowed each and all with talents and faculties, and all are
submerged in the Ocean of Thy Mercy.
O Thou kind Lord! United
all. Let the religions agree and make the nations one, so that they
may see each other as one family and the whole earth as one home. May
they all live together in perfect harmony.
O God! Raise aloft the banner of the oneness of mankind.
O God! Establish the Most Great Peace.
Cement Thou, O God, the hearts together.
O
Thou kind Father, O God! Gladden our hearts through the fragrance of
Thy love. Brighten our eyes through the Light of Thy Guidance.
Delight our ears with the melody of Thy Word, and shelter us all in
the Stronghold of Thy Providence.
Thou art the Might and
Powerful. Thou art the Forgiving and Thou art the One Who overlookest
the shortcomings of all mankind! —‘ABDU’L-BAHÁ.
O Thou Almighty! I am a sinner, but Thou art the
Forgiver! I am full of shortcomings, but Thou art the Compassionate!
I am in darkness of error, but Thou art the Light of
Pardon!
Therefore, O Thou Benevolent God, forgive my sings,
grant Thy Bestowals, overlook my faults, provide for me a shelter,
immerse me in the Fountain of Thy Patience and heal me of all
sickness and disease.
Purify and sanctify me. Give me a
portion from the outpouring of holiness, so that sorrow and sadness
may vanish, joy and happiness descend, despondency and hopelessness
be changed into cheerfulness and trustfulness, and courage take the
place of fear.
Verily Thou art the Forgiver, the
Compassionate, and Thou art the Generous, the Beloved! —‘ABDU’L-BAHÁ.
O compassionate God! Thanks be to Thee for Thou hast
awakened and made me conscious. Thou hast given me a seeing eye and
favored me with a hearing ear; hast led me to Thy Kingdom and guided
me to Thy Path. Thou hast shown me the right way and caused me to
enter the Ark of Deliverance. O God! Keep me steadfast and make me
firm and staunch. Protect me from violent tests and preserve and
shelter me in the strongly fortified fortress of Thy Covenant and
Testament. Thou art the Powerful! Thou art the Seeing! Thou art the
Hearing! O Thou the Compassionate God! Bestow upon me a heart which,
like unto glass, may be illumined with the light of Thy love, and
confer upon me a thought which may change this world into a
rose-garden through the spiritual bounty. Thou art the Compassionate,
the Merciful! Thou art the Great Beneficent God! —‘ABDU’L-BAHÁ.
Bahá’í prayer is not, however,
confined to the use of prescribed forms, important as those are.
Bahá’u’lláh teaches that one’s whole
life should be a prayer, that work done in the right spirit is
worship, that every thought, word and deed devoted to the Glory of
God and the good of one’s fellows is prayer, in the truest
sense of the world.24