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In the Name of God the Clement, the Merciful
Praise and thanksgiving be unto Providence that out of all the realities in existence He has chosen the reality of man and has honored it with intellect and wisdom, the two most luminous lights in either world. Through the agency of this great endowment, He has in every epoch cast on the mirror of creation new and wonderful configurations. If we look objectively upon the world of being, it will become apparent that from age to age, the temple of existence has continually been embellished with a fresh grace, and distinguished with an ever-varying splendor, deriving from wisdom and the power of thought.
This supreme emblem of God stands first in the order of creation and first in rank, taking precedence over all created things. Witness to it is the Holy Tradition, “Before all else, God created the mind.” From the dawn of creation, it was made to be revealed in the temple of man.
Sanctified is the Lord, Who with the dazzling rays of
this strange, heavenly power has made our world of darkness the envy
of the worlds of light: “And the earth shall shine with the
light of her Lord.” Qur’án
39:69. Qur’án
55:1–3.
O ye that have minds to know! Raise up your suppliant hands to the heaven of the one God, and humble yourselves and be lowly before Him, and thank Him for this supreme endowment, and implore Him to succor us until, in this present age, godlike impulses may radiate from the conscience of mankind, and this divinely kindled fire which has been entrusted to the human heart may never die away.
Consider carefully: all these highly varied phenomena,
these concepts, this knowledge, these technical procedures and
philosophical systems, these sciences, arts, industries and
inventions—all are emanations of the human mind. Whatever
people has ventured deeper into this shoreless sea, has come to excel
the rest. The happiness and pride of a nation consist in this, that
it should shine out like the sun in the high heaven of knowledge.
“Shall they who have knowledge and they who have it not, be
treated alike?” Qur’án
39:12.
How long shall we drift on the wings of passion and vain
desire; how long shall we spend our days like barbarians in the
depths of ignorance and abomination? God has given us eyes, that we
may look about us at the world, and lay hold of whatsoever will
further civilization and the arts of living. He has given us ears,
that we may hear and profit by the wisdom of scholars and
philosophers and arise to promote and practice it. Senses and
faculties have been bestowed upon us, to be devoted to the service of
the general good; so that we, distinguished above all other forms of
life for perceptiveness and reason, should labor at all times and
along all lines, whether the occasion be great or small, ordinary or
extraordinary, until all mankind are safely gathered into the
impregnable stronghold of knowledge. We should continually be
establishing new bases for human happiness and creating and promoting
new instrumentalities toward this end. How excellent, how honorable
is man if he arises to fulfil his responsibilities; how wretched and
contemptible, if he shuts his eyes to the welfare of society and
wastes his precious life in pursuing his own selfish interests and
personal advantages. Supreme happiness is man’s, and he beholds
the signs of God in the world and in the human soul, if he urges on
the steed of high endeavor in the arena of civilization and justice.
“We will surely show them Our signs in the world and within
themselves.” Qur’án
41:53.
And this is man’s uttermost wretchedness: that he
should live inert, apathetic, dull, involved only with his own base
appetites. When he is thus, he has his being in the deepest ignorance
and savagery, sinking lower than the brute beasts. “They are
like the brutes: Yea, they go more astray... For the vilest beasts in
God’s sight, are the deaf, the dumb, who understand not.” Qur’án
7:178; 8:22.
We must now highly resolve to arise and lay hold of all those instrumentalities that promote the peace and well-being and happiness, the knowledge, culture and industry, the dignity, value and station, of the entire human race. Thus, through the restoring waters of pure intention and unselfish effort, the earth of human potentialities will blossom with its own latent excellence and flower into praiseworthy qualities, and bear and flourish until it comes to rival that rosegarden of knowledge which belonged to our forefathers. Then will this holy land of Persia become in every sense the focal center of human perfections, reflecting as if in a mirror the full panoply of world civilization.
All praise and honor be to the Dayspring of Divine
wisdom, the Dawning Point of Revelation (Muḥammad), and to the
holy line of His descendants, since, by the widespread rays of His
consummate wisdom, His universal knowledge, those savage denizens of
Yathrib (Medina) and Bathá (Mecca), miraculously, and
in so brief a time, were drawn out of the depths of their ignorance,
rose up to the pinnacles of learning, and became centers of arts and
sciences and human perfections, and stars of felicity and true
civilization, shining across the horizons of the world.
His Majesty the The
original Persian text written in 1875 carried no author’s
name, and the first English translation published in 1910 under the
title The Mysterious Forces of Civilization states only “Written
in Persian by an Eminent Bahai Philosopher.” Qur’án
76:9.Sháh has, at the present
time, [1875] resolved to bring about the advancement of the Persian
people, their welfare and security and the prosperity of their
country. He has spontaneously extended assistance to his subjects,
displaying energy and fair-mindedness, hoping that by the light of
justice he might make Írán the envy of East and West,
and set that fine fervor which characterized the first great epochs
of Persia to flowing again through the veins of her people. As is
clear to the discerning, the writer has for this reason felt it
necessary to put down, for the sake of God alone and as a tribute to
this high endeavor, a brief statement on certain urgent questions. To
demonstrate that His one purpose is to promote the general welfare,
He has withheld His name.
O people of Persia! Look into those blossoming pages that tell of another day, a time long past. Read them and wonder; see the great sight. Írán in that day was as the heart of the world; she was the bright torch flaming in the assemblage of mankind. Her power and glory shone out like the morning above the world’s horizons, and the splendor of her learning cast its rays over East and West. Word of the widespread empire of those who wore her crown reached even to the dwellers in the arctic circle, and the fame of the awesome presence of her King of Kings humbled the rulers of Greece and Rome. The greatest of the world’s philosophers marveled at the wisdom of her government, and her political system became the model for all the kings of the four continents then known. She was distinguished among all peoples for the scope of her dominion, she was honored by all for her praiseworthy culture and civilization. She was as the pivot of the world, she was the source and center of sciences and arts, the wellspring of great inventions and discoveries, the rich mine of human virtues and perfections. The intellect, the wisdom of the individual members of this excellent nation dazzled the minds of other peoples, the brilliance and perceptive genius that characterized all this noble race aroused the envy of the whole world.
Aside from that which is a matter of record in Persian
histories, it is stated in the Old Testament—established today,
among all European peoples, as a sacred and canonical Text—that
in the time of Cyrus, called in Iranian works Bahman son of
Iṣfandíyár, the three hundred and sixty divisions
of the Persian Empire extended from the inner confines of India and
China to the farthermost reaches of Yemen and Ethiopia. 2
Chronicles 36:22–23; Ezra 1:2; Esther 1:1; 8:9; Isaiah 45:1,
14; 49:12.shdádíyán
Dynasty—who was indeed, for his inherent perfections, his
powers of judgment, the scope of his knowledge, and his long series
of continual victories, unique among all the rulers who preceded and
followed him—divided the whole known world among his three
sons.
As attested by the annals of the world’s most illustrious peoples, the first government to be established on earth, the foremost empire to be organized among the nations, was Persia’s throne and diadem.
O people of Persia! Awake from your drunken sleep! Rise up from your lethargy! Be fair in your judgment: will the dictates of honor permit this holy land, once the wellspring of world civilization, the source of glory and joy for all mankind, the envy of East and West, to remain an object of pity, deplored by all nations? She was once the noblest of peoples: will you let contemporary history register for the ages her now degenerate state? Will you complacently accept her present wretchedness, when she was once the land of all mankind’s desire? Must she now, for this contemptible sloth, this failure to struggle, this utter ignorance, be accounted the most backward of nations?
Were not the people of Persia, in days long gone, the head and front of intellect and wisdom? Did they not, by God’s grace, shine out like the daystar from the horizons of Divine knowledge? How is it that we are satisfied today with this miserable condition, are engrossed in our licentious passions, have blinded ourselves to supreme happiness, to that which is pleasing in God’s sight, and have all become absorbed in our selfish concerns and the search for ignoble, personal advantage?
This fairest of lands was once a lamp, streaming with the rays of Divine knowledge, of science and art, of nobility and high achievement, of wisdom and valor. Today, because of the idleness and lethargy of her people, their torpor, their undisciplined way of life, their lack of pride, lack of ambition—her bright fortune has been totally eclipsed, her light has turned to darkness. “The seven heavens and the seven earths weep over the mighty when he is brought low.”
It should not be imagined that the people of Persia are inherently deficient in intelligence, or that for essential perceptiveness and understanding, inborn sagacity, intuition and wisdom, or innate capacity, they are inferior to others. God forbid! On the contrary, they have always excelled all other peoples in endowments conferred by birth. Persia herself, moreover, from the standpoint of her temperate climate and natural beauties, her geographical advantages and her rich soil, is blessed to a supreme degree. What she urgently requires, however, is deep reflection, resolute action, training, inspiration and encouragement. Her people must make a massive effort, and their pride must be aroused.
Today throughout the five continents of the globe it is Europe and most sections of America that are renowned for law and order, government and commerce, art and industry, science, philosophy and education. Yet in ancient times these were the most savage of the world’s peoples, the most ignorant and brutish. They were even stigmatized as barbarians—that is, utterly rude and uncivilized. Further, from the fifth century after Christ until the fifteenth, that period defined as the Middle Ages, such terrible struggles and fierce upheavals, such ruthless encounters and horrifying acts, were the rule among the peoples of Europe, that the Europeans rightly describe those ten centuries as the Dark Ages. The basis of Europe’s progress and civilization was actually laid in the fifteenth century of the Christian era, and from that time on, all her present evident culture has been, under the stimulus of great minds and as a result of the expansion of the frontiers of knowledge and the exertion of energetic and ambitious efforts, in the process of development.
Today by the grace of God and the spiritual influence of
His universal Manifestation, the fair-minded ruler of Írán
has gathered his people into the shelter of justice, and the
sincerity of the imperial purpose has shown itself in kingly acts.
Hoping that his reign will rival the glorious past, he has sought to
establish equity and righteousness and to foster education and the
processes of civilization throughout this noble land, and to
translate from potentiality into actuality whatever will insure its
progress. Not until now had we seen a monarch, holding in his capable
hands the reins of affairs, and on whose high resolve the welfare of
all his subjects depends, exerting as it would befit him, like a
benevolent father, his efforts toward the training and cultivation of
his people, seeking to insure their well-being and peace of mind, and
exhibiting due concern for their interests; this Servant and those
like Him have therefore remained silent. Now, however, it is clear to
the discerning that the Sháh has of his own accord
determined to establish a just government and to secure the progress
of all his subjects. His honorable intention has consequently evoked
this present statement.
It is indeed strange that instead of offering thanks for
this bounty, which truly derives from the grace of Almighty God, by
arising as one in gratitude and enthusiasm and praying that these
noble purposes will daily multiply, some, on the contrary, whose
reason has been corrupted by personal motives and the clarity of
whose perception has been clouded by self-interest and conceit; whose
energies are devoted to the service of their passions, whose sense of
pride is perverted to the love of leadership, have raised the
standard of opposition and waxed loud in their complaints. Up to now,
they blamed the Sháh for not, on his own initiative,
working for his people’s welfare and seeking to bring about
their peace and well-being. Now that he has inaugurated this great
design they have changed their tune. Some say that these are
newfangled methods and foreign isms, quite unrelated to the present
needs and the time-honored customs of Persia. Others have rallied the
helpless masses, who know nothing of religion or its laws and basic
principles and therefore have no power of discrimination—and
tell them that these modern methods are the practices of heathen
peoples, and are contrary to the venerated canons of true faith, and
they add the saying, “He who imitates a people is one of them.”
One group insists that such reforms should go forward with great
deliberation, step by step, haste being inadmissible. Another
maintains that only such measures should be adopted as the Persians
themselves devise, that they themselves should reform their political
administration and their educational system and the state of their
culture and that there is no need to borrow improvements from other
nations. Every faction, in short, follows its own particular
illusion.
O people of Persia! How long will you wander? How long must your confusion last? How long will it go on, this conflict of opinions, this useless antagonism, this ignorance, this refusal to think? Others are alert, and we sleep our dreamless sleep. Other nations are making every effort to improve their condition; we are trapped in our desires and self-indulgences, and at every step we stumble into a new snare.
God is Our witness that We have no ulterior motive in
developing this theme. We seek neither to curry favor with any one
nor to attract any one to Ourselves nor to derive any material
benefit therefrom. We speak only as one earnestly desiring the good
pleasure of God, for We have turned Our gaze away from the world and
its peoples and have sought refuge in the sheltering care of the
Lord. “No pay do I ask of you for this... My reward is of God
alone.” Qur’án
6:90; 11:31.
Those who maintain that these modern concepts apply only to other countries and are irrelevant in Írán, that they do not satisfy her requirements or suit her way of life, disregard the fact that other nations were once as we are now. Did not these new systems and procedures, these progressive enterprises, contribute to the advancement of those countries? Were the people of Europe harmed by the adoption of such measures? Or did they rather by these means reach the highest degree of material development? Is it not true that for centuries, the people of Persia have lived as we see them living today, carrying out the pattern of the past? Have any discernible benefits resulted, has any progress been made? If these things had not been tested by experience, some in whose minds the light of native intelligence is clouded, might idly question them. On the contrary, however, every aspect of these prerequisites to progress have in other countries been time and again put to the test, and their benefits demonstrated so plainly that even the dullest mind can grasp them.
Let us consider this justly and without bias: let us ask ourselves which one of these basic principles and sound, well-established procedures would fail to satisfy our present needs, or would be incompatible with Persia’s best political interests or injurious to the general welfare of her people. Would the extension of education, the development of useful arts and sciences, the promotion of industry and technology, be harmful things? For such endeavor lifts the individual within the mass and raises him out of the depths of ignorance to the highest reaches of knowledge and human excellence. Would the setting up of just legislation, in accord with the Divine laws which guarantee the happiness of society and protect the rights of all mankind and are an impregnable proof against assault—would such laws, insuring the integrity of the members of society and their equality before the law, inhibit their prosperity and success?
Or if by using one’s perceptive faculties, one can draw analogies from present circumstances and the conclusions arrived at by collective experience, and can envisage as coming realities situations now only potential, would it be unreasonable to take such present measures as would guarantee our future security? Would it seem shortsighted, improvident and unsound, would it constitute a deviation from what is right and proper, if we were to strengthen our relationships with neighboring countries, enter into binding treaties with the great powers, foster friendly connections with well-disposed governments, look to the expansion of trade with the nations of East and West, develop our natural resources and increase the wealth of our people?
Would it spell perdition for our subjects if the
provincial and district governors were relieved of their present
absolute authority, whereby they function exactly as they please, and
were instead limited to equity and truth, and if their sentences
involving capital punishment, imprisonment and the like were
contingent on confirmation by the Sháh and by higher
courts in the capital, who would first duly investigate the case and
determine the nature and seriousness of the crime, and then hand down
a just decision subject to the issuance of a decree by the sovereign?
If bribery and corruption, known today by the pleasant names of gifts
and favors, were forever excluded, would this threaten the
foundations of justice? Would it be an evidence of unsound thinking
to deliver the soldiery, who are a living sacrifice to the state and
the people and brave death at every turn, from their present extreme
misery and indigence, and to make adequate arrangements for their
sustenance, clothing and housing, and exert every effort to instruct
their officers in military science, and supply them with the most
advanced types of firearms and other weapons?
Should anyone object that the above-mentioned reforms have never yet been fully effected, he should consider the matter impartially and know that these deficiencies have resulted from the total absence of a unified public opinion, and the lack of zeal and resolve and devotion in the country’s leaders. It is obvious that not until the people are educated, not until public opinion is rightly focused, not until government officials, even minor ones, are free from even the least remnant of corruption, can the country be properly administered. Not until discipline, order and good government reach the degree where an individual, even if he should put forth his utmost efforts to do so, would still find himself unable to deviate by so much as a hair’s breadth from righteousness, can the desired reforms be regarded as fully established.
Furthermore, any agency whatever, though it be the instrument of mankind’s greatest good, is capable of misuse. Its proper use or abuse depends on the varying degrees of enlightenment, capacity, faith, honesty, devotion and highmindedness of the leaders of public opinion.
The Qur’án
14:23; 35:18.Sháh has certainly done his part, and
the execution of the proposed beneficial measures is now in the hands
of persons functioning in assemblies of consultation. If these
individuals prove to be pure and high-minded, if they remain free
from the taint of corruption, the confirmations of God will make them
a never-failing source of bounty to mankind. He will cause to issue
from their lips and their pens what will bless the people, so that
every corner of this noble country of Írán will be
illumined with their justice and integrity and the rays of that light
will encompass the whole earth. “Neither will this be difficult
with God.”
Otherwise it is clear that the results will prove unacceptable. For it has been directly witnessed in certain foreign countries that following on the establishment of parliaments those bodies actually distressed and confused the people and their well-meant reforms produced maleficent results. While the setting up of parliaments, the organizing of assemblies of consultation, constitutes the very foundation and bedrock of government, there are several essential requirements which these institutions must fulfill. First, the elected members must be righteous, God-fearing, high-minded, incorruptible. Second, they must be fully cognizant, in every particular, of the laws of God, informed as to the highest principles of law, versed in the rules which govern the management of internal affairs and the conduct of foreign relations, skilled in the useful arts of civilization, and content with their lawful emoluments.
Let it not be imagined that members of this type would be impossible to find. Through the grace of God and His chosen ones, and the high endeavors of the devoted and the consecrated, every difficulty can be easily resolved, every problem however complex will prove simpler than blinking an eye.
If, however, the members of these consultative assemblies are inferior, ignorant, uninformed of the laws of government and administration, unwise, of low aim, indifferent, idle, self-seeking, no benefit will accrue from the organizing of such bodies. Where, in the past, if a poor man wanted his rights he had only to offer a gift to one individual, now he would either have to renounce all hope of justice or else satisfy the entire membership.
Close investigation will show that the primary cause of oppression and injustice, of unrighteousness, irregularity and disorder, is the people’s lack of religious faith and the fact that they are uneducated. When, for example, the people are genuinely religious and are literate and well-schooled, and a difficulty presents itself, they can apply to the local authorities; if they do not meet with justice and secure their rights and if they see that the conduct of the local government is incompatible with the Divine good pleasure and the king’s justice, they can then take their case to higher courts and describe the deviation of the local administration from the spiritual law. Those courts can then send for the local records of the case and in this way justice will be done. At present, however, because of their inadequate schooling, most of the population lack even the vocabulary to explain what they want.
As to those persons who, here and there, are considered leaders of the people: because this is only the beginning of the new administrative process, they are not yet sufficiently advanced in their education to have experienced the delights of dispensing justice or to have tasted the exhilaration of promoting righteousness or to have drunk from the springs of a clear conscience and a sincere intent. They have not properly understood that man’s supreme honor and real happiness lie in self-respect, in high resolves and noble purposes, in integrity and moral quality, in immaculacy of mind. They have, rather, imagined that their greatness consists in the accumulation, by whatever means may offer, of worldly goods.
A man should pause and reflect and be just: his Lord,
out of measureless grace, has made him a human being and honored him
with the words: “Verily, We created man in the goodliest of
forms” Qur’án
95:4. The
Imám ‘Alí.
Were it not our purpose to be brief and to develop our primary subject, we would here set down a summary of themes from the Divine world, as to the reality of man and his high station and the surpassing value and worth of the human race. Let this be, for another time.
The highest station, the supreme sphere, the noblest, most sublime position in creation, whether visible or invisible, whether alpha or omega, is that of the Prophets of God, notwithstanding the fact that for the most part they have to outward seeming been possessed of nothing but their own poverty. In the same way, ineffable glory is set apart for the Holy Ones and those who are nearest to the Threshold of God, although such as these have never for a moment concerned themselves with material gain. Then comes the station of those just kings whose fame as protectors of the people and dispensers of Divine justice has filled the world, whose name as powerful champions of the people’s rights has echoed through creation. These give no thought to amassing enormous fortunes for themselves; they believe, rather, that their own wealth lies in enriching their subjects. To them, if every individual citizen has affluence and ease, the royal coffers are full. They take no pride in gold and silver, but rather in their enlightenment and their determination to achieve the universal good.
Next in rank are those eminent and honorable ministers of state and representatives, who place the will of God above their own, and whose administrative skill and wisdom in the conduct of their office raises the science
of government to new heights of perfection. They shine in the learned world like lamps of knowledge; their thinking, their attitudes and their acts demonstrate their patriotism and their concern for the country’s advancement. Content with a modest stipend, they consecrate their days and nights to the execution of important duties and the devising of methods to insure the progress of the people. Through the effectiveness of their wise counsel, the soundness of their judgment, they have ever caused their government to become an example to be followed by all the governments of the world. They have made their capital city a focal center of great world undertakings, they have won distinction, attaining a supreme degree of personal eminence, and reaching the loftiest heights of repute and character.
Again, there are those famed and accomplished men of learning, possessed of praiseworthy qualities and vast erudition, who lay hold on the strong handle of the fear of God and keep to the ways of salvation. In the mirror of their minds the forms of transcendent realities are reflected, and the lamp of their inner vision derives its light from the sun of universal knowledge. They are busy by night and by day with meticulous research into such sciences as are profitable to mankind, and they devote themselves to the training of students of capacity. It is certain that to their discerning taste, the proffered treasures of kings would not compare with a single drop of the waters of knowledge, and mountains of gold and silver could not outweigh the successful solution of a difficult problem. To them, the delights that lie outside their work are only toys for children, and the cumbersome load of unnecessary possessions is only good for the ignorant and base. Content, like the birds, they give thanks for a handful of seeds, and the song of their wisdom dazzles the minds of the world’s most wise.
Again, there are sagacious leaders among the people and influential personalities throughout the country, who constitute the pillars of state. Their rank and station and success depend on their being the well-wishers of the people and in their seeking out such means as will improve the nation and will increase the wealth and comfort of the citizens.
Observe the case when an individual is an eminent person in his country, zealous, wise, pure-hearted, known for his innate capacity, intelligence, natural perspicacity—and is also an important member of the state: what, for such an individual, can be regarded as honor, abiding happiness, rank and station, whether in the here or the hereafter? Is it a diligent attention to truth and righteousness, is it dedication and resolve and devotion to the good pleasure of God, is it the desire to attract the favorable consideration of the ruler and to merit the approval of the people? Or would it, rather, consist in this, that for the sake of indulging in feasts and dissipations by night he should undermine his country and break the hearts of his people by day, causing his God to reject him, and his sovereign to cast him out and his people to defame him and hold him in deserved contempt? By God, the mouldering bones in the graveyard are better than such as these! Of what value are they, who have never tasted the heavenly food of truly human qualities, and never drunk of the crystalline waters of those bounties which belong to the realm of man?
It is unquestionable that the object in establishing parliaments is to bring about justice and righteousness, but everything hinges on the efforts of the elected representatives. If their intention is sincere, desirable results and unforeseen improvements will be forthcoming; if not, it is certain that the whole thing will be meaningless, the country will come to a standstill and public affairs will continuously deteriorate. “I see a thousand builders unequal to one subverter; what then of the one builder who is followed by a thousand subverters?”
The purpose of the foregoing statements is to demonstrate at least this, that the happiness and greatness, the rank and station, the pleasure and peace, of an individual have never consisted in his personal wealth, but rather in his excellent character, his high resolve, the breadth of his learning, and his ability to solve difficult problems. How well has it been said: “On my back is a garment which, were it sold for a penny, that penny would be worth far more; yet within the garment is a soul which, if you weighed it against all the souls in the world, would prove greater and nobler.”
In the present writer’s view it would be preferable if the election of nonpermanent members of consultative assemblies in sovereign states should be dependent on the will and choice of the people. For elected representatives will on this account be somewhat inclined to exercise justice, lest their reputation suffer and they fall into disfavor with the public.
It should not be imagined that the writer’s earlier remarks constitute a denunciation of wealth or a commendation of poverty. Wealth is praiseworthy in the highest degree, if it is acquired by an individual’s own efforts and the grace of God, in commerce, agriculture, art and industry, and if it be expended for philanthropic purposes. Above all, if a judicious and resourceful individual should initiate measures which would universally enrich the masses of the people, there could be no undertaking greater than this, and it would rank in the sight of God as the supreme achievement, for such a benefactor would supply the needs and insure the comfort and well-being of a great multitude. Wealth is most commendable, provided the entire population is wealthy. If, however, a few have inordinate riches while the rest are impoverished, and no fruit or benefit accrues from that wealth, then it is only a liability to its possessor. If, on the other hand, it is expended for the promotion of knowledge, the founding of elementary and other schools, the encouragement of art and industry, the training of orphans and the poor—in brief, if it is dedicated to the welfare of society—its possessor will stand out before God and man as the most excellent of all who live on earth and will be accounted as one of the people of paradise.
As to those who maintain that the inauguration of
reforms and the setting up of powerful institutions would in reality
be at variance with the good pleasure of God and would contravene the
laws of the Divine Law-Giver and run counter to basic religious
principles and to the ways of the Prophet—let them consider how
this could be the case. Would such reforms contravene the religious
law because they would be acquired from foreigners and would
therefore cause us to be as they are, since “He who imitates a
people is one of them”? In the first place these matters relate
to the temporal and material apparatus of civilization, the
implements of science, the adjuncts of progress in the professions
and the arts, and the orderly conduct of government. They have
nothing whatever to do with the problems of the spirit and the
complex realities of religious doctrine. If it be objected that even
where material affairs are concerned foreign importations are
inadmissible, such an argument would only establish the ignorance and
absurdity of its proponents. Have they forgotten the celebrated
hadí Qur’án
5:85.th (Holy Tradition): “Seek after knowledge,
even unto China”? It is certain that the people of China were,
in the sight of God, among the most rejected of men, because they
worshiped idols and were unmindful of the omniscient Lord. The
Europeans are at least “Peoples of the Book,” and
believers in God and specifically referred to in the sacred verse,
“Thou shalt certainly find those to be nearest in affection to
the believers, who say, ‘We are Christians.’”
Furthermore, in the Battle of the Confederates, Abú
Súfyán enlisted the aid of the Baní Kinánih,
the Baní Qahtán and the Jewish Baní Qurayzih and
rose up with all the tribes of the Quray Qur’án
29:2.sh to put out the
Divine Light that flamed in the lamp of Yathrib (Medina). In
those days the great winds of trials and tribulations were blowing
from every direction, as it is written: “Do men think when they
say ‘We believe’ they shall be let alone and not be put
to proof?”
It is moreover a matter of record in the books of the
various Islamic schools and the writings of leading divines and
historians, that after the Light of the World had risen over Ḥijáz,
flooding all mankind with Its brilliance, and creating through the
revelation of a new divine Law, new principles and institutions, a
fundamental change throughout the world—holy laws were revealed
which in some cases conformed to the practices of the Days of
Ignorance. Jáhilíyyih:
the period of paganism in Arabia, prior to the advent of Muḥammad. The
pagan Arabs observed one separate and three consecutive months of
truce, during which period pilgrimages were made to Mecca, and
fairs, poetry contests and similar events took place.
“The people of the Days of Ignorance engaged in many practices which the Law of Islám later confirmed. They would not take in marriage both a mother and her daughter, and the most shameful of acts in their view was to marry two sisters. They would stigmatize a man marrying the wife of his father, derisively calling him his father’s competitor. It was their custom to go on pilgrimage to the House at Mecca, where they would perform the ceremonies of visitation, putting on the pilgrim’s dress, practicing the circumambulation, running between the hills, pausing at all the stopping-places, and casting the stones. It was, furthermore, their wont to intercalate one month in every three-year period, to perform ablutions after intercourse, to rinse out the mouth and snuff up water through the nostrils, to part the hair, use the tooth-stick, pare the nails and pluck the armpits. They would, likewise, cut off the right hand of a thief.”
Can one, God forbid, assume that because some of the divine laws resemble the practices of the Days of Ignorance, the customs of a people abhorred by all nations, it follows that there is a defect in these laws? Or can one, God forbid, imagine that the Omnipotent Lord was moved to comply with the opinions of the heathen? The divine wisdom takes many forms. Would it have been impossible for Muḥammad to reveal a Law which bore no resemblance whatever to any practice current in the Days of Ignorance? Rather, the purpose of His consummate wisdom was to free the people from the chains of fanaticism which had bound them hand and foot, and to forestall those very objections which today confuse the mind and trouble the conscience of the simple and helpless.
Some, who are not sufficiently informed as to the
meaning of the divine Texts and the contents of traditional and
written history, will aver that these customs of the Days of
Ignorance were laws which had come down from His Holiness Abraham and
had been retained by the idolaters. In this connection they will cite
the Qur’ánic verse: “Follow the religion of
Abraham, the sound in faith.” Qur’án
16:124. Qur’án
4:45; 5:16. Cf.
Bahá’u’lláh, The Kitáb-i-Íqán,
p. 86.
According to some accounts, mankind has been directed to borrow various good qualities and ways from wild animals, and to learn a lesson from these. Since it is permissible to imitate virtues of dumb animals, it is certainly far more so to borrow material sciences and techniques from foreign peoples, who at least belong to the human race and are distinguished by judgment and the power of speech. And if it be contended that such praiseworthy qualities are inborn in animals, by what proof can they claim that these essential principles of civilization, this knowledge and these sciences current among other peoples, are not inborn? Is there any Creator save God? Say: Praised be God!
The most learned and accomplished divines, the most
distinguished scholars, have diligently studied those branches of
knowledge the root and origin of which were the Greek philosophers
such as Aristotle and the rest, and have regarded the acquisition
from the Greek texts of sciences such as medicine, and branches of
mathematics including algebra “If
by the word algebra we mean that branch of mathematics by which we
learn how to solve the equation x2+5x=14, written in this
way, the science begins in the 17th century. If we allow the
equation to be written with other and less convenient symbols, it
may be considered as beginning at least as early as the 3rd century.
If we permit it to be stated in words and solved, for simple cases
of positive roots, by the aid of geometric figures, the science was
known to Euclid and others of the Alexandrian school as early as 300
B.C. If we permit of more or less scientific guessing in achieving a
solution, algebra may be said to have been known nearly 2000 years
B.C., and it had probably attracted the attention of the
intellectual class much earlier... The name ‘algebra’ is
quite fortuitous. When Mohammed ibn Músá al-Khowarizmí
... wrote in Baghdad (c. 825) he gave to one of his works the name
Al-jebr w’al-muqábalah. The title is sometimes
translated as ‘restoration and equation,’ but the
meaning was not clear even to the later Arab writers.”
Encyclopedia Britannica, 1952, s.v. Algebra.
It has now been clearly and irrefutably shown that the importation from foreign countries of the principles and procedures of civilization, and the acquisition from them of sciences and techniques— in brief, of whatsoever will contribute to the general good—is entirely permissible. This has been done to focus public attention on a matter of such universal advantage, so that the people may arise with all their energies to further it, until, God helping them, this Sacred Land may within a brief period become the first of nations.
O you who are wise! Consider this carefully: can an ordinary gun compare with a Martini-Henry rifle or a Krupp gun? If anyone should maintain that our old-time firearms are good enough for us and that it is useless to import weapons which have been invented abroad would even a child listen to him? Or should anyone say: “We have always transported merchandise from one country to another on the backs of animals. Why do we need steam engines? Why should we try to ape other peoples?” could any intelligent person tolerate such a statement? No, by the one God! Unless he should, because of some hidden design or animosity, refuse to accept the obvious.
Foreign nations, in spite of their having achieved the greatest expertness in science, industry and the arts, do not hesitate to borrow ideas from one another. How can Persia, a country in the direst need, be allowed to lag behind, neglected, abandoned?
Those eminent divines and men of learning who walk the
straight pathway and are versed in the secrets of divine wisdom and
informed of the inner realities of the sacred Books; who wear in
their hearts the jewel of the fear of God, and whose luminous faces
shine with the lights of salvation—these are alert to the
present need and they understand the requirements of modern times,
and certainly devote all their energies toward encouraging the
advancement of learning and civilization. “Are they equal,
those who know, and those who do not know?... Or is the darkness
equal with the light?” Qur’án
39:12; 13:17.
The spiritually learned are lamps of guidance among the nations, and stars of good fortune shining from the horizons of humankind. They are fountains of life for such as lie in the death of ignorance and unawareness, and clear springs of perfections for those who thirst and wander in the wasteland of their defects and errors. They are the dawning places of the emblems of Divine Unity and initiates in the mysteries of the glorious Qur’án. They are skilled physicians for the ailing body of the world, they are the sure antidote to the poison that has corrupted human society. It is they who are the strong citadel guarding humanity, and the impregnable sanctuary for the sorely distressed, the anxious and tormented, victims of ignorance. “Knowledge is a light which God casteth into the heart of whomsoever He willeth.”
For every thing, however, God has created a sign and symbol, and established standards and tests by which it may be known. The spiritually learned must be characterized by both inward and outward perfections; they must possess a good character, an enlightened nature, a pure intent, as well as intellectual power, brilliance and discernment, intuition, discretion and foresight, temperance, reverence, and a heartfelt fear of God. For an unlit candle, however great in diameter and tall, is no better than a barren palm tree or a pile of dead wood.
Rúmí,
The Mathnaví, I, 1906–1907.
An authoritative Tradition states: “As for him who
is one of the learned: ‘Ulamá,
from the Arabic alima, to know, may be translated learned men,
scientists, religious authorities.
The first of these requirements is to guard one’s own self. It is obvious that this does not refer to protecting oneself from calamities and material tests, for the Prophets and saints were, each and every one, subjected to the bitterest afflictions that the world has to offer, and were targets for all the cruelties and aggressions of mankind. They sacrificed their lives for the welfare of the people, and with all their hearts they hastened to the place of their martyrdom; and with their inward and outward perfections they arrayed humanity in new garments of excellent qualities, both acquired and inborn. The primary meaning of this guarding of oneself is to acquire the attributes of spiritual and material perfection.
The first attribute of perfection is learning and the cultural attainments of the mind, and this eminent station is achieved when the individual combines in himself a thorough knowledge of those complex and transcendental realities pertaining to God, of the fundamental truths of Qur’ánic political and religious law, of the contents of the sacred Scriptures of other faiths, and of those regulations and procedures which would contribute to the progress and civilization of this distinguished country. He should in addition be informed as to the laws and principles, the customs, conditions and manners, and the material and moral virtues characterizing the statecraft of other nations, and should be well versed in all the useful branches of learning of the day, and study the historical records of bygone governments and peoples. For if a learned individual has no knowledge of the sacred Scriptures and the entire field of divine and natural science, of religious jurisprudence and the arts of government and the varied learning of the time and the great events of history, he might prove unequal to an emergency, and this is inconsistent with the necessary qualification of comprehensive knowledge.
If for example a spiritually learned Muslim is conducting a debate with a Christian and he knows nothing of the glorious melodies of the Gospel, he will, no matter how much he imparts of the Qur’án and its truths, be unable to convince the Christian, and his words will fall on deaf ears. Should, however, the Christian observe that the Muslim is better versed in the fundamentals of Christianity than the Christian priests themselves, and understands the purport of the Scriptures even better than they, he will gladly accept the Muslim’s arguments, and he would indeed have no other recourse.
When the Chief of the Exile The
Resh Galuta, a prince or ruler of the exiles in Babylon, to whom
Jews, wherever they were, paid tribute.
The state is, moreover, based upon two potent forces, the legislative and the executive. The focal center of the executive power is the government, while that of the legislative is the learned—and if this latter great support and pillar should prove defective, how is it conceivable that the state should stand?
In view of the fact that at the present time such fully developed and comprehensively learned individuals are hard to come by, and the government and people are in dire need of order and direction, it is essential to establish a body of scholars the various groups of whose membership would each be expert in one of the aforementioned branches of knowledge. This body should with the greatest energy and vigor deliberate as to all present and future requirements, and bring about equilibrium and order.
Up to now the religious law has not been given a decisive role in our courts, because each of the ‘ulamá has been handing down decrees as he saw fit, based on his arbitrary interpretation and personal opinion. For example, two men will go to law, and one of the ‘ulamá will find for the plaintiff and another for the defendant. It may even happen that in one and the same case two conflicting decisions will be handed down by the same mujtahid, on the grounds that he was inspired first in one direction and then in the other. There can be no doubt that this state of affairs has confused every important issue and must jeopardize the very foundations of society. For neither the plaintiff nor the defendant ever loses hope of eventual success, and each in turn will waste his life in the attempt to secure a later verdict which would reverse the previous one. Their entire time is thus given over to litigation, with the result that their life instead of being devoted to beneficial undertakings and necessary personal affairs, is completely involved with the dispute. Indeed, these two litigants might just as well be dead, for they can serve their government and community not a particle. If, however, a definite and final verdict were forthcoming, the duly convicted party would perforce give up all hope of reopening the case, and would then be relieved on that score and would go back to looking after his own concerns and those of others.
Since the primary means for securing the peace and tranquillity of the people, and the most effective agency for the advancement of high and low alike, is this all-important matter, it is incumbent on those learned members of the great consultative assembly who are thoroughly versed in the Divine law to evolve a single, direct and definite procedure for the settlement of litigations. This instrument should then be published throughout the country by order of the king, and its provisions should be strictly adhered to. This all-important question requires the most urgent attention.
The second attribute of perfection is justice and impartiality. This means to have no regard for one’s own personal benefits and selfish advantages, and to carry out the laws of God without the slightest concern for anything else. It means to see one’s self as only one of the servants of God, the All-Possessing, and except for aspiring to spiritual distinction, never attempting to be singled out from the others. It means to consider the welfare of the community as one’s own. It means, in brief, to regard humanity as a single individual, and one’s own self as a member of that corporeal form, and to know of a certainty that if pain or injury afflicts any member of that body, it must inevitably result in suffering for all the rest.
The third requirement of perfection is to arise with complete sincerity and purity of purpose to educate the masses: to exert the utmost effort to instruct them in the various branches of learning and useful sciences, to encourage the development of modern progress, to widen the scope of commerce, industry and the arts, to further such measures as will increase the people’s wealth. For the mass of the population is uninformed as to these vital agencies which would constitute an immediate remedy for society’s chronic ills.
It is essential that scholars and the spiritually learned should undertake in all sincerity and purity of intent and for the sake of God alone, to counsel and exhort the masses and clarify their vision with that collyrium which is knowledge. For today the people out of the depths of their superstition, imagine that any individual who believes in God and His signs, and in the Prophets and Divine Revelations and laws, and is a devout and God-fearing person, must of necessity remain idle and spend his days in sloth, so as to be considered in the sight of God as one who has forsaken the world and its vanities, set his heart on the life to come, and isolated himself from human beings in order to draw nearer to God. Since this theme will be developed elsewhere in the present text, We shall leave it for the moment.
Other attributes of perfection are to fear God, to love
God by loving His servants, to exercise mildness and forbearance and
calm, to be sincere, amenable, clement and compassionate; to have
resolution and courage, trustworthiness and energy, to strive and
struggle, to be generous, loyal, without malice, to have zeal and a
sense of honor, to be high-minded and magnanimous, and to have regard
for the rights of others. Whoever is lacking in these excellent human
qualities is defective. If We were to explain the inner meanings of
each one of these attributes, “the poem would take up seventy
maunds A
measure of weight, in Ṭihrán equivalent to six and
two-thirds pounds.
The second of these spiritual standards which apply to the possessor of knowledge is that he should be the defender of his faith. It is obvious that these holy words do not refer exclusively to searching out the implications of the Law, observing the forms of worship, avoiding greater and lesser sins, practicing the religious ordinances, and by all these methods, protecting the Faith. They mean rather that the whole population should be protected in every way; that every effort should be exerted to adopt a combination of all possible measures to raise up the Word of God, increase the number of believers, promote the Faith of God and exalt it and make it victorious over other religions.
If, indeed, the Muslim religious authorities had
persevered along these lines as they ought to have done, by now every
nation on earth would have been gathered into the shelter of the
unity of God and the bright fire of “that He may make it
victorious over every other religion” Qur’án
9:33; 48:28; 61:9.
Fifteen centuries after Christ, Luther, who was originally one of the twelve members of a Catholic religious body at the center of the Papal government and later on initiated the Protestant religious belief, opposed the Pope on certain points of doctrine such as the prohibition of monastic marriage, the revering and bowing down before images of the Apostles and Christian leaders of the past, and various other religious practices and ceremonies which were accretional to the ordinances of the Gospel. Although at that period the power of the Pope was so great and he was regarded with such awe that the kings of Europe shook and trembled before him, and he held control of all Europe’s major concerns in the grasp of his might—nevertheless because Luther’s position as regards the freedom of religious leaders to marry, the abstention from worshiping and making prostrations before images and representations hung in the churches, and the abrogation of ceremonials which had been added on to the Gospel, was demonstrably correct, and because the proper means were adopted for the promulgation of his views: within these last four hundred and some years the majority of the population of America, four-fifths of Germany and England and a large percentage of Austrians, in sum about one hundred and twenty-five million people drawn from other Christian denominations, have entered the Protestant Church. The leaders of this religion are still making every effort to promote it, and today on the East Coast of Africa, ostensibly to emancipate the Sudanese and various Negro peoples, they have established schools and colleges and are training and civilizing completely savage African tribes, while their true and primary purpose is to convert some of the Muslim Negro tribes to Protestantism. Every community is toiling for the advancement of its people, and we (i.e., Muslims) sleep on!
Although it was not clear what purpose impelled this man or where he was tending, see how the zealous efforts of Protestant leaders have spread his doctrines far and wide.
Now if the illustrious people of the one true God, the recipients of His confirmations, the objects of His Divine assistance, should put forth all their strength, and with complete dedication, relying upon God and turning aside from all else but Him, should adopt procedures for spreading the Faith and should bend all their efforts to this end, it is certain that His Divine light would envelop the whole earth.
A few, who are unaware of the reality below the surface
of events, who cannot feel the pulse of the world under their
fingers, who do not know what a massive dose of truth must be
administered to heal this chronic old disease of falsehood, believe
that the Faith can only be spread by the sword, and bolster their
opinion with the Tradition, “I am a Prophet by the sword.”
If, however, they would carefully examine this question, they would
see that in this day and age the sword is not a suitable means for
promulgating the Faith, for it would only fill peoples’ hearts
with revulsion and terror. According to the Divine Law of Muḥammad,
it is not permissible to compel the People of the Book to acknowledge
and accept the Faith. While it is a sacred obligation devolving on
every conscientious believer in the unity of God to guide mankind to
the truth, the Traditions “I am a Prophet by the sword”
and “I am commanded to threaten the lives of the people until
they say, ‘There is none other God but God’”
referred to the idolaters of the Days of Ignorance, who in their
blindness and bestiality had sunk below the level of human beings. A
faith born of sword thrusts could hardly be relied upon, and would
for any trifling cause revert to error and unbelief. After the
ascension of Muḥammad, and His passing to “the seat of
truth, in the presence of the potent King,” Qur’án
54:55.
Remember when the holy breaths of the Spirit of God
(Jesus) were shedding their sweetness over Palestine and Galilee,
over the shores of Jordan and the regions around Jerusalem, and the
wondrous melodies of the Gospel were sounding in the ears of the
spiritually illumined, all the peoples of Asia and Europe, of Africa
and America, of Oceania, which comprises the islands and
archipelagoes of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, were fire-worshipers
and pagans, ignorant of the Divine Voice that spoke out on the Day of
the Covenant. Qur’án
7:171: Yawm-i-Alast, the Day when God, addressing Adam’s
posterity-to-be, said to them, “Am I not your Lord?”
(a-lastu bi Rabbikum) and they replied: “Yea, we bear
witness.” Qur’án
9:33.
It has now by the above irrefutable proofs been fully established that the Faith of God must be propagated through human perfections, through qualities that are excellent and pleasing, and spiritual behavior. If a soul of his own accord advances toward God he will be accepted at the Threshold of Oneness, for such a one is free of personal considerations, of greed and selfish interests, and he has taken refuge within the sheltering protection of his Lord. He will become known among men as trustworthy and truthful, temperate and scrupulous, high-minded and loyal, incorruptible and God-fearing. In this way the primary purpose in revealing the Divine Law—which is to bring about happiness in the after life and civilization and the refinement of character in this—will be realized. As for the sword, it will only produce a man who is outwardly a believer, and inwardly a traitor and apostate.
We shall here relate a story that will serve as an
example to all. The Arabian chronicles tell how, at a time prior to
the advent of Muḥammad, Nu’mán son of Mundhír
the Lakhmite —an Arab king in the Days of Ignorance, whose seat
of government was the city of Hírih—had one day returned
so often to his wine-cup that his mind clouded over and his reason
deserted him. In this drunken and insensible condition he gave orders
that his two boon companions, his close and much-loved friends,
Khálid son of Mudallil and ‘Amr son of
Mas’úd-Kaldih, should be put to death. When he wakened
after his carousal, he inquired for the two friends and was given the
grievous news. He was sick at heart, and because of his intense love
and longing for them, he built two splendid monuments over their two
graves and he named these the Smeared-With-Blood.
Then he set apart two days out of the year, in memory of the two companions, and he called one of them the Day of Evil and one the Day of Grace. Every year on these two appointed days he would issue forth with pomp and circumstance and sit between the monuments. If, on the Day of Evil, his eye fell on any soul, that person would be put to death; but on the Day of Grace, whoever passed would be overwhelmed with gifts and benefits. Such was his rule, sealed with a mighty oath and always rigidly observed.
One day the king mounted his horse, that was called
Maḥmúd, and rode out into the plains to hunt. Suddenly
in the distance he caught sight of a wild donkey. Nu’mán
urged on his horse to overtake it, and galloped away at such speed
that he was cut off from his retinue. As night approached, the king
was hopelessly lost. Then he made out a tent, far off in the desert,
and he turned his horse and headed toward it. When he reached the
entrance of the tent he asked, “Will you receive a guest?”
The owner (who was Hanzalá, son of Ábi-Ghafráy-i-Tá’í)
replied, “Yea.” He came forward and helped Nu’mán
to dismount. Then he went to his wife and told her, “There are
clear signs of greatness in the bearing of this person. Do your best
to show him hospitality, and make ready a feast.” His wife
said, “We have a ewe. Sacrifice it. And I have saved a little
flour against such a day.” Hanzalá first milked the ewe
and carried a bowl of milk to Nu’mán, and then he
slaughtered her and prepared a meal; and what with his friendliness
and loving-kindness, Nu’mán spent that night in peace
and comfort. When dawn came, Nu’mán made ready to leave,
and he said to Hanzalá: “You have shown me the utmost
generosity, receiving and feasting me. I am Nu’mán, son
of Mundhír, and I shall eagerly await your arrival at
my court.”
Time passed, and famine fell on the land of Tayy. Hanzalá was in dire need and for this reason he sought out the king. By a strange coincidence he arrived on the Day of Evil. Nu’mán was greatly troubled in spirit. He began to reproach his friend, saying, “Why did you come to your friend on this day of all days? For this is the Day of Evil, that is, the Day of Wrath and the Day of Distress. This day, should my eyes alight on Qábús, my only son, he should not escape with his life. Now ask me whatever favor you will.”
Hanzalá said: “I knew nothing of your Day of Evil. As for the gifts of this life, they are meant for the living, and since I at this hour must drink of death, what can all the world’s storehouses avail me now?”
Nu’mán said, “There is no help for this.”
Hanzalá told him: “Respite me, then, that I may go back to my wife and make my testament. Next year I shall return, on the Day of Evil.”
Nu’mán then asked for a guarantor, so that,
if Hanzalá should break his word, this guarantor would be put
to death instead. Hanzalá, helpless and bewildered, looked
about him. Then his gaze fell on one of Nu’mán’s
retinue, Sharík, son of ‘Amr, son of Qays of
Shaybán, and to him he recited these lines: “O my
partner, O son of ‘Amr! Is there any escape from death? O
brother of every afflicted one! O brother of him who is brotherless!
O brother of Nu’mán, in thee today is a surety for the
Shaykh. Where is Shaybán the noble—may
the All-Merciful favor him!” But Sharík only
answered, “O my brother, a man cannot gamble with his life.”
At this the victim could not tell where to turn. Then a man named
Qarád, son of Adjá the Kalbite stood up and offered
himself as a surety, agreeing that, should he fail on the next Day of
Wrath to deliver up the victim, the king might do with him, Qarád,
as he wished. Nu’mán then bestowed five hundred camels
on Hanzalá, and sent him home.
In the following year on the Day of Evil, as soon as the true dawn broke in the sky, Nu’mán as was his custom set out with pomp and pageantry and made for the two mausoleums called the Smeared-With-Blood. He brought Qarád along, to wreak his kingly wrath upon him. The pillars of the state then loosed their tongues and begged for mercy, imploring the king to respite Qarád until sundown, for they hoped that Hanzalá might yet return; but the king’s purpose was to spare the life of Hanzalá, and to requite his hospitality by putting Qarád to death in his place. As the sun began to set, they stripped off the garments of Qarád, and made ready to sever his head. At that moment a rider appeared in the distance, galloping at top speed. Nu’mán said to the swordsman, “Why delayest thou?” The ministers said, “Perchance it is Hanzalá who comes.” And when the rider drew near, they saw it was none other.
Nu’mán was sorely displeased. He said, “Thou fool! Thou didst slip away once from the clutching fingers of death; must thou provoke him now a second time?”
And Hanzalá answered, “Sweet in my mouth and pleasant on my tongue is the poison of death, at the thought of redeeming my pledge.”
Nu’mán asked, “What could be the reason for this trustworthiness, this regard for thine obligation and this concern for thine oath?” And Hanzalá answered, “It is my faith in the one God and in the Books that have come down from heaven.” Nu’mán asked, “What Faith dost thou profess?” And Hanzalá said, “It was the holy breaths of Jesus that brought me to life. I follow the straight pathway of Christ, the Spirit of God.” Nu’mán said, “Let me inhale these sweet aromas of the Spirit.”
So it was that Hanzalá drew out the white hand of
guidance from the bosom of the love of God, Cf.
Qur’án 27:12, referring to Moses: “Put now thy
hand into thy bosom: it shall come forth white ... one of nine signs
to Pharaoh and his people....” Also Qur’án 7:105;
20:23; 26:32; 32. Also Exodus 4:6. See too Edward Fitzgerald’s
The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam:
The metaphors here refer to white blossoms and the
perfumes of spring.
Observe how one individual, and he a man of the desert, to outward seeming unknown and of no station—because he showed forth one of the qualities of the pure in heart, was able to deliver this proud sovereign and a great company of others from the dark night of unbelief and guide them into the morning of salvation; to save them from the perdition of idolatry and bring them to the shores of the oneness of God, and to put an end to practices of the sort which blight a whole society and reduce the peoples to barbarism. One must think deeply over this, and grasp its meaning.
My heart aches, for I note with intense regret that the attention of the people is nowhere directed toward that which is worthy of this day and time. The Sun of Truth has risen above the world but we are ensnared in the dark of our imaginings. The waters of the Most Great Sea are surging all around us, while we are parched and weak with thirst. The divine bread is coming down from heaven, and yet we grope and stumble in a famine-stricken land. “Between the weeping and the telling, I spin out my days.”
One of the principal reasons why people of other
religions have shunned and failed to become converted to the Faith of
God is fanaticism and unreasoning religious zeal. See for example the
divine words that were addressed to Muḥammad, the Ark of
Salvation, the Luminous Countenance and Lord of Men, bidding Him to
be gentle with the people and long-suffering: “Debate with them
in the kindliest manner.” Qur’án
16:126. Qur’án
24:35. Qur’án
20:46.Dhu’l-Awtád
is variously rendered by translators of the Qur’án as
The Impaler, The Contriver of the Stakes, The Lord of a Strong
Dominion, The One Surrounded by Ministers, etc. Awtád means
pegs or tent stakes. See Qur’án 38:11 and 89:9.
Although the noble conduct of the Prophets and Holy Ones
of God is widely known, and it is indeed, until the coming of the
Hour, Qur’án
33:63: “Men will ask Thee of ‘the Hour.’ Say: The
knowledge of it is with God alone.” Cf. also 22:1, “the
earthquake of the Hour,” etc. See also Matthew 24:36, 42, etc.
To Bahá’ís, this refers to the Advent of the Báb
and Bahá’u’lláh. Cf.
the Islamic confession of faith, sometimes called the two
testimonies: “I testify that there is no God but God and
Muḥammad is the Prophet of God.”
If we ponder a while over the Qur’ánic verses and proofs, and the traditional accounts which have come down to us from those stars of the heaven of Divine Unity, the Holy Imáms, we shall be convinced of the fact that if a soul is endowed with the attributes of true faith and characterized with spiritual qualities he will become to all mankind an emblem of the outstretched mercies of God. For the attributes of the people of faith are justice and fair-mindedness; forbearance and compassion and generosity; consideration for others; candor, trustworthiness, and loyalty; love and loving-kindness; devotion and determination and humanity. If therefore an individual is truly righteous, he will avail himself of all those means which will attract the hearts of men, and through the attributes of God he will draw them to the straight path of faith and cause them to drink from the river of everlasting life.
Today we have closed our eyes to every righteous act and have sacrificed the abiding happiness of society to our own transitory profit. We regard fanaticism and zealotry as redounding to our credit and honor, and not content with this, we denounce one another and plot each other’s ruin, and whenever we wish to put on a show of wisdom and learning, of virtue and godliness, we set about mocking and reviling this one and that. “The ideas of such a one,” we say, “are wide of the mark, and so-and-so’s behavior leaves much to be desired. The religious observances of Zayd are few and far between, and ‘Amr is not firm in his faith. So-and-so’s opinions smack of Europe. Fundamentally, Blank thinks of nothing but his own name and fame. Last night when the congregation stood up to pray, the row was out of line, and it is not permissible to follow a different leader. No rich man has died this month, and nothing has been offered to charity in memory of the Prophet. The edifice of religion has crumbled, the foundations of faiths have been blown to the winds. The carpet of belief has been rolled up, the tokens of certitude blotted out; the whole world has fallen into error; when it comes to repelling tyranny all are soft and remiss. Days and months have passed away, and these villages and estates still belong to the same owners as they did last year. In this town there used to be seventy different governments functioning in good order, but the number has steadily decreased; there are only twenty-five left now, as a memento. It used to be that two hundred contradictory judgments were handed down by the same muftí in any one day, now we hardly get fifty. In those days there were crowds of people who were all brainsick with litigation, and now they rest in peace; today the plaintiff would be defeated and the defendant victorious, tomorrow the plaintiff won the case and the defendant lost it—but now this excellent practice has been abandoned too. What is this heathenish religion, this idolatrous kind of error! Alas for the Law, alas for the Faith, alas for all these calamities! O Brothers in the Faith! This is surely the end of the world! The Judgment is coming!”
With words such as these they assault the minds of the helpless masses and disturb the hearts of the already bewildered poor, who know nothing of the true state of affairs and the real basis for all such talk, and remain completely unaware of the fact that a thousand selfish purposes are concealed behind the supposedly religious eloquence of certain individuals. They imagine that speakers of this type are motivated by virtuous zeal, when the truth is that such individuals keep up a great hue and cry because they see their own personal ruin in the welfare of the masses, and believe that if the people’s eyes are opened, their own light will go out. Only the keenest insight will detect the fact that if the hearts of these individuals were really impelled by righteousness and the fear of God, the fragrance of it would, like musk, be spreading everywhere. Nothing in the world can ever be supported by words alone.
Cf. Qur’án 27:20 ff.
The spiritually learned, those who have derived infinite significance and wisdom from the Book of Divine Revelation, and whose illumined hearts draw inspiration from the unseen world of God, certainly exert their efforts to bring about the supremacy of the true followers of God, in all respects and above all peoples, and they toil and struggle to make use of every agency that will conduce to progress. If any man neglects these high purposes he can never prove acceptable in the sight of God; he stands out with all his shortcomings and claims perfection, and destitute, pretends to wealth.
Knowledge, purity, devotion, discipline, independence, have nothing to do with outer appearance and dress. Once in the course of My travels I heard an eminent personage make the following excellent remark, the wit and charm of which remain in memory: “Not every cleric’s turban is a proof of continence and knowledge; not every layman’s hat a sign of ignorance and immorality. How many a hat has proudly raised the banner of knowledge, how many a turban pulled down the Law of God!”
The third element of the utterance under discussion is, “opposes his passions.” How wonderful are the implications of this deceptively easy, all-inclusive phrase. This is the very foundation of every laudable human quality; indeed, these few words embody the light of the world, the impregnable basis of all the spiritual attributes of human beings. This is the balance wheel of all behavior, the means of keeping all man’s good qualities in equilibrium.
For desire is a flame that has reduced to ashes uncounted lifetime harvests of the learned, a devouring fire that even the vast sea of their accumulated knowledge could never quench. How often has it happened that an individual who was graced with every attribute of humanity and wore the jewel of true understanding, nevertheless followed after his passions until his excellent qualities passed beyond moderation and he was forced into excess. His pure intentions changed to evil ones, his attributes were no longer put to uses worthy of them, and the power of his desires turned him aside from righteousness and its rewards into ways that were dangerous and dark. A good character is in the sight of God and His chosen ones and the possessors of insight, the most excellent and praiseworthy of all things, but always on condition that its center of emanation should be reason and knowledge and its base should be true moderation. Were the implications of this subject to be developed as they deserve the work would grow too long and our main theme would be lost to view.
All the peoples of Europe, notwithstanding their vaunted civilization, sink and drown in this terrifying sea of passion and desire, and this is why all the phenomena of their culture come to nothing. Let no one wonder at this statement or deplore it. The primary purpose, the basic objective, in laying down powerful laws and setting up great principles and institutions dealing with every aspect of civilization, is human happiness; and human happiness consists only in drawing closer to the Threshold of Almighty God, and in securing the peace and well-being of every individual member, high and low alike, of the human race; and the supreme agencies for accomplishing these two objectives are the excellent qualities with which humanity has been endowed.
A superficial culture, unsupported by a cultivated
morality, is as “a confused medley of dreams,” Qur’án
12:44; 21:5.
external lustre without inner perfection is “like
a vapor in the desert which the thirsty dreameth to be water.” Qur’án
24:39.
The peoples of Europe have not advanced to the higher planes of moral civilization, as their opinions and behavior clearly demonstrate. Notice, for example, how the supreme desire of European governments and peoples today is to conquer and crush one another, and how, while harboring the greatest secret repulsion, they spend their time exchanging expressions of neighborly affection, friendship and harmony.
There is the well-known case of the ruler who is fostering peace and tranquillity and at the same time devoting more energy than the warmongers to the accumulation of weapons and the building up of a larger army, on the grounds that peace and harmony can only be brought about by force. Peace is the pretext, and night and day they are all straining every nerve to pile up more weapons of war, and to pay for this their wretched people must sacrifice most of whatever they are able to earn by their sweat and toil. How many thousands have given up their work in useful industries and are laboring day and night to produce new and deadlier weapons which would spill out the blood of the race more copiously than before.
Each day they invent a new bomb or explosive and then
the governments must abandon their obsolete arms and begin producing
the new, since the old weapons cannot hold their own against the new.
For example at this writing, in the year 1292 A.H. 1875
A.D.
Be just: can this nominal civilization, unsupported by a genuine civilization of character, bring about the peace and well-being of the people or win the good pleasure of God? Does it not, rather, connote the destruction of man’s estate and pull down the pillars of happiness and peace?
At the time of the Franco-Prussian War, in the year 1870 of the Christian era, it was reported that 600,000 men died, broken and beaten, on the field of battle. How many a home was torn out by the roots; how many a city, flourishing the night before, was toppled down by sunrise. How many a child was orphaned and abandoned, how many an old father and mother had to see their sons, the young fruit of their lives, twisting and dying in dust and blood. How many women were widowed, left without a helper or protector.
And then there were the libraries and magnificent buildings of France that went up in flames, and the military hospital, packed with sick and wounded men, that was set on fire and burned to the ground. And there followed the terrible events of the Commune, the savage acts, the ruin and horror when opposing factions fought and killed one another in the streets of Paris. There were the hatreds and hostilities between Catholic religious leaders and the German government. There was the civil strife and uproar, the bloodshed and havoc brought on between the partisans of the Republic and the Carlists in Spain.
Only too many such instances are available to demonstrate the fact that Europe is morally uncivilized. Since the writer has no wish to cast aspersions on anyone He has confined Himself to these few examples. It is clear that no perceptive and well-informed mind can countenance such events. Is it right and proper that peoples among whom, diametrically opposed to the most desirable human behavior, such horrors take place, should dare lay claim to a real and adequate civilization? Especially when out of all this no results can be hoped for except the winning of a transient victory; and since this outcome never endures, it is, to the wise, not worth the effort.
Time and again down the centuries, the German state has subdued the French; over and over, the kingdom of France has governed German land. Is it permissible that in our day 600,000 helpless creatures should be offered up as a sacrifice to such nominal and temporary uses and results? No, by the Lord God! Even a child can see the evil of it. Yet the pursuit of passion and desire will wrap the eyes in a thousand veils that rise out of the heart to blind the sight and the insight as well.
True civilization will unfurl its banner in the midmost
heart of the world whenever a certain number of its distinguished and
high-minded sovereigns—the shining exemplars of devotion and
determination—shall, for the good and happiness of all mankind,
arise, with firm resolve and clear vision, to establish the Cause of
Universal Peace. They must make the Cause of Peace the object of
general consultation, and seek by every means in their power to
establish a Union of the nations of the world. They must conclude a
binding treaty and establish a covenant, the provisions of which
shall be sound, inviolable and definite. They must proclaim it to all
the world and obtain for it the sanction of all the human race. This
supreme and noble undertaking—the real source of the peace and
well-being of all the world—should be regarded as sacred by all
that dwell on earth. All the forces of humanity must be mobilized to
ensure the stability and permanence of this Most Great Covenant. In
this all-embracing Pact the limits and frontiers of each and every
nation should be clearly fixed, the principles underlying the
relations of governments towards one another definitely laid down,
and all international agreements and obligations ascertained. In like
manner, the size of the armaments of every government should be
strictly limited, for if the preparations for war and the military
forces of any nation should be allowed to increase, they will arouse
the suspicion of others. The fundamental principle underlying this
solemn Pact should be so fixed that if any government later violate
any one of its provisions, all the governments on earth should arise
to reduce it to utter submission, nay the human race as a whole
should resolve, with every power at its disposal, to destroy that
government. Should this greatest of all remedies be applied to the
sick body of the world, it will assuredly recover from its ills and
will remain eternally safe and secure. The
foregoing paragraph, together with the later paragraph beginning “A
few, unaware of the power latent in human endeavor,” was
translated by Shoghi Effendi, Guardian of the Bahá’í
Faith. Cf. The World Order of Bahá’u’lláh,
pp. 37–38.
Observe that if such a happy situation be forthcoming, no government would need continually to pile up the weapons of war, nor feel itself obliged to produce ever new military weapons with which to conquer the human race. A small force for the purposes of internal security, the correction of criminal and disorderly elements and the prevention of local disturbances, would be required—no more. In this way the entire population would, first of all, be relieved of the crushing burden of expenditure currently imposed for military purposes, and secondly, great numbers of people would cease to devote their time to the continual devising of new weapons of destruction—those testimonials of greed and bloodthirstiness, so inconsistent with the gift of life—and would instead bend their efforts to the production of whatever will foster human existence and peace and well-being, and would become the cause of universal development and prosperity. Then every nation on earth will reign in honor, and every people will be cradled in tranquillity and content.
A few, unaware of the power latent in human endeavor, consider this matter as highly impracticable, nay even beyond the scope of man’s utmost efforts. Such is not the case, however. On the contrary, thanks to the unfailing grace of God, the loving-kindness of His favored ones, the unrivaled endeavors of wise and capable souls, and the thoughts and ideas of the peerless leaders of this age, nothing whatsoever can be regarded as unattainable. Endeavor, ceaseless endeavor, is required. Nothing short of an indomitable determination can possibly achieve it. Many a cause which past ages have regarded as purely visionary, yet in this day has become most easy and practicable. Why should this most great and lofty Cause—the daystar of the firmament of true civilization and the cause of the glory, the advancement, the well-being and the success of all humanity—be regarded as impossible of achievement? Surely the day will come when its beauteous light shall shed illumination upon the assemblage of man.
The apparatus of conflict will, as preparations go on at their present rate, reach the point where war will become something intolerable to mankind.
It is clear from what has already been said that man’s glory and greatness do not consist in his being avid for blood and sharp of claw, in tearing down cities and spreading havoc, in butchering armed forces and civilians. What would mean a bright future for him would be his reputation for justice, his kindness to the entire population whether high or low, his building up countries and cities, villages and districts, his making life easy, peaceful and happy for his fellow beings, his laying down fundamental principles for progress, his raising the standards and increasing the wealth of the entire population.
Consider how throughout history many a king has sat on
his throne as a conqueror. Among them were Hulagü Khán
and Tamerlane, who took over the vast continent of Asia, and
Alexander of Macedon and Napoleon I, who stretched their arrogant
fists over three of the earth’s five continents. And what was
gained by all their mighty victories? Was any country made to
flourish, did any happiness result, did any throne stand? Or was it
rather that those reigning houses lost their power? Except that Asia
went up in the flame of many battles and fell away to ashes,
Changíz’s Hulagü, the warlord, gathered no
fruit from all his conquests. And Tamerlane, out of all his triumphs,
reaped only the peoples blown to the winds, and universal ruin. And
Alexander had nothing to show for his vast victories, except that his
son toppled from the throne and Philip and Ptolemy took over the
dominions he once had ruled. And what did the first Napoleon gain
from subjugating the kings of Europe, except the destruction of
flourishing countries, the downfall of their inhabitants, the
spreading of terror and anguish across Europe and, at the end of his
days, his own captivity? So much for the conquerors and the monuments
they leave behind them.
Contrast with this the praiseworthy qualities and the
greatness and nobility of Anú Sásáníyán
king who reigned 531–578 A.D. i.e.,
the whole world.shírván the
Generous and the Just.
No power on earth can prevail against the armies of justice, and every citadel must fall before them; for men willingly go down under the triumphant strokes of this decisive blade, and desolate places bloom and flourish under the tramplings of this host. There are two mighty banners which, when they cast their shadow across the crown of any king, will cause the influence of his government quickly and easily to penetrate the whole earth, even as if it were the light of the sun: the first of these two banners is wisdom; the second is justice. Against these two most potent forces, the iron hills cannot prevail, and Alexander’s wall will break before them. It is clear that life in this fast-fading world is as fleeting and inconstant as the morning wind, and this being so, how fortunate are the great who leave a good name behind them, and the memory of a lifetime spent in the pathway of the good pleasure of God.
Sa’dí, The Gulistán, On the Conduct of Kings.
A conquest can be a praiseworthy thing, and there are times when war becomes the powerful basis of peace, and ruin the very means of reconstruction. If, for example, a high-minded sovereign marshals his troops to block the onset of the insurgent and the aggressor, or again, if he takes the field and distinguishes himself in a struggle to unify a divided state and people, if, in brief, he is waging war for a righteous purpose, then this seeming wrath is mercy itself, and this apparent tyranny the very substance of justice and this warfare the cornerstone of peace. Today, the task befitting great rulers is to establish universal peace, for in this lies the freedom of all peoples.
The fourth phrase of the aforementioned Utterance which points out the way of salvation is: “obedient to the commandments of his Lord.” It is certain that man’s highest distinction is to be lowly before and obedient to his God; that his greatest glory, his most exalted rank and honor, depend on his close observance of the Divine commands and prohibitions. Religion is the light of the world, and the progress, achievement, and happiness of man result from obedience to the laws set down in the holy Books. Briefly, it is demonstrable that in this life, both outwardly and inwardly the mightiest of structures, the most solidly established, the most enduring, standing guard over the world, assuring both the spiritual and the material perfections of mankind, and protecting the happiness and the civilization of society—is religion.
It is true that there are foolish individuals who have never properly examined the fundamentals of the Divine religions, who have taken as their criterion the behavior of a few religious hypocrites and measured all religious persons by that yardstick, and have on this account concluded that religions are an obstacle to progress, a divisive factor and a cause of malevolence and enmity among peoples. They have not even observed this much, that the principles of the Divine religions can hardly be evaluated by the acts of those who only claim to follow them. For every excellent thing, peerless though it may be, can still be diverted to the wrong ends. A lighted lamp in the hands of an ignorant child or of the blind will not dispel the surrounding darkness nor light up the house—it will set both the bearer and the house on fire. Can we, in such an instance, blame the lamp? No, by the Lord God! To the seeing, a lamp is a guide and will show him his path; but it is a disaster to the blind.
Among those who have repudiated religious faith was the
Frenchman, Voltaire, who wrote a great number of books attacking the
religions, works which are no better than children’s
playthings. This individual, taking as his criterion the omissions
and commissions of the Pope, the head of the Roman Catholic religion,
and the intrigues and quarrels of the spiritual leaders of
Christendom, opened his mouth and caviled at the Spirit of God
(Jesus). In the unsoundness of his reasoning, he failed to grasp the
true significance of the sacred Scriptures, took exception to certain
portions of the revealed Texts and dwelt on the difficulties
involved. “And We send down of the Qur’án that
which is a healing and a mercy to the faithful: But it shall only add
to the ruin of the wicked.” Qur’án
17:84.
The poet Saná’í.
Rúmí,
The Mathnaví, III, 4229–4231.
“Many will He mislead by such
parables and many guide: but none will He mislead thereby except the
wicked...” Qur’án
2:24.
It is certain that the greatest of instrumentalities for
achieving the advancement and the glory of man, the supreme agency
for the enlightenment and the redemption of the world, is love and
fellowship and unity among all the members of the human race. Nothing
can be effected in the world, not even conceivably, without unity and
agreement, and the perfect means for engendering fellowship and union
is true religion. “Hadst Thou spent all the riches of the
earth, Thou couldst not have united their hearts; but God hath united
them...” Qur’án
8:64.
With the advent of the Prophets of God, their power of creating a real union, one which is both external and of the heart, draws together malevolent peoples who have been thirsting for one another’s blood, into the one shelter of the Word of God. Then a hundred thousand souls become as one soul, and unnumbered individuals emerge as one body.
See
Rúmí, The Mathnaví, II, 185 and 189.
Also the Hadíth: “God created the creatures in
darkness, then He sprinkled some of His Light upon them. Those whom
some of that Light reached took the right way, while those whom it
missed wandered from the straight road.” Cf. R. A. Nicholson’s
“The Mathnawí of Jalálu’ddín
Rúmí” in the E. J. W. Gibb Memorial Series.
The events that transpired at the advent of the Prophets of the past, and Their ways and works and circumstances, are not adequately set down in authoritative histories, and are referred to only in condensed form in the verses of the Qur’án, the Holy Traditions and the Torah. Since, however, all events from the days of Moses until the present time are contained in the mighty Qur’án, the authoritative Traditions, the Torah and other reliable sources, We shall content Ourself with brief references here, the purpose being to determine conclusively whether religion is the very basis and root-principle of culture and civilization, or whether as Voltaire and his like suppose, it defeats all social progress, well-being and peace.
To preclude once and for all objections on the part of any of the world’s peoples, We shall conduct Our discussion conformably to those authoritative accounts which all nations are agreed upon.
At a time when the Israelites had multiplied in Egypt
and were spread throughout the whole country, the Coptic Pharaohs of
Egypt determined to strengthen and favor their own Coptic peoples and
to degrade and dishonor the children of Israel, whom they regarded as
foreigners. Over a long period, the Israelites, divided and
scattered, were captive in the hands of the tyrannical Copts, and
were scorned and despised by all, so that the meanest of the Copts
would freely persecute and lord it over the noblest of the
Israelites. The enslavement, wretchedness and helplessness of the
Hebrews reached such a pitch that they were never, day or night,
secure in their own persons nor able to provide any defense for their
wives and families against the tyranny of their Pharaohic captors.
Then their food was the fragments of their own broken hearts, and
their drink a river of tears. They continued on in this anguish until
suddenly Moses, the All-Beauteous, beheld the Divine Light streaming
out of the blessed Vale, the place that was holy ground, and heard
the quickening voice of God as it spoke from the flame of that Tree
“neither of the East nor of the West,” Qur’án
24:35.
It is furthermore a matter of record in numerous historical works that the philosophers of Greece such as Pythagoras, acquired the major part of their philosophy, both divine and material, from the disciples of Solomon. And Socrates after having eagerly journeyed to meet with some of Israel’s most illustrious scholars and divines, on his return to Greece established the concept of the oneness of God and the continuing life of the human soul after it has put off its elemental dust. Ultimately, the ignorant among the Greeks denounced this man who had fathomed the inmost mysteries of wisdom, and rose up to take his life; and then the populace forced the hand of their ruler, and in council assembled they caused Socrates to drink from the poisoned cup.
After the Israelites had advanced along every level of
civilization, and had achieved success in the highest possible
degree, they began little by little to forget the root-principles of
the Mosaic Law and Faith, to busy themselves with rites and
ceremonials and to show forth unbecoming conduct. In the days of
Rehoboam, the son of Solomon, terrible dissension broke out among
them; one of their number, Jeroboam, plotted to get the throne, and
it was he who introduced the worship of idols. The strife between
Rehoboam and Jeroboam led to centuries of warfare between their
descendants, with the result that the tribes of Israel were scattered
and disrupted. In brief, it was because they forgot the meaning of
the Law of God that they became involved in ignorant fanaticism and
blameworthy practices such as insurgence and sedition. Their divines,
having concluded that all those essential qualifications of humankind
set forth in the Holy Book were by then a dead letter, began to think
only of furthering their own selfish interests, and afflicted the
people by allowing them to sink into the lowest depths of
heedlessness and ignorance. And the fruit of their wrong doing was
this, that the old-time glory which had endured so long now changed
to degradation, and the rulers of Persia, of Greece, and of Rome,
took them over. The banners of their sovereignty were reversed; the
ignorance, foolishness, abasement and self-love of their religious
leaders and their scholars were brought to light in the coming of
Nebuchadnezzar, King of Babylon, who destroyed them. After a general
massacre, and the sacking and razing of their houses and even the
uprooting of their trees, he took captive whatever remnants his sword
had spared and carried them off to Babylon. Seventy years later the
descendants of these captives were released and went back to
Jerusalem. Then Hezekiah and Ezra reestablished in their midst the
fundamental principles of the Holy Book, and day by day the
Israelites advanced, and the morning-brightness of their earlier ages
dawned again. In a short time, however, great dissensions as to
belief and conduct broke out anew, and again the one concern of the
Jewish doctors became the promotion of their own selfish purposes,
and the reforms that had obtained in Ezra’s time were changed
to perversity and corruption. The situation worsened to such a degree
that time and again, the armies of the republic of Rome and of its
rulers conquered Israelite territory. Finally the warlike Titus,
commander of the Roman forces, trampled the Jewish homeland into
dust, putting every man to the sword, taking the women and children
captive, flattening their houses, tearing out their trees, burning
their books, looting their treasures, and reducing Jerusalem and the
Temple to an ash heap. After this supreme calamity, the star of
Israel’s dominion sank away to nothing, and to this day, the
remnant of that vanished nation has been scattered to the four winds.
“Humiliation and misery were stamped upon them.” Qur’án
2:58. Qur’án
17:4 ff.
Our purpose is to show how true religion promotes the civilization and honor, the prosperity and prestige, the learning and advancement of a people once abject, enslaved and ignorant, and how, when it falls into the hands of religious leaders who are foolish and fanatical, it is diverted to the wrong ends, until this greatest of splendors turns into blackest night.
When for the second time the unmistakable signs of Israel’s disintegration, abasement, subjection and annihilation had become apparent, then the sweet and holy breathings of the Spirit of God (Jesus) were shed across Jordan and the land of Galilee; the cloud of Divine pity overspread those skies, and rained down the copious waters of the spirit, and after those swelling showers that came from the most great Sea, the Holy Land put forth its perfume and blossomed with the knowledge of God. Then the solemn Gospel song rose up till it rang in the ears of those who dwell in the chambers of heaven, and at the touch of Jesus’ breath the unmindful dead that lay in the graves of their ignorance lifted up their heads to receive eternal life. For the space of three years, that Luminary of perfections walked about the fields of Palestine and in the neighborhood of Jerusalem, leading all men into the dawn
of redemption, teaching them how to acquire spiritual qualities and attributes well-pleasing to God. Had the people of Israel believed in that beauteous Countenance, they would have girded themselves to serve and obey Him heart and soul, and through the quickening fragrance of His Spirit they would have regained their lost vitality and gone on to new victories.
Alas, of what avail was it; they turned away and opposed Him. They rose up and tormented that Source of Divine knowledge, that Point where the Revelation had come down—all except for a handful who, turning their faces toward God, were cleansed of the stain of this world and found their way to the heights of the placeless Realm. They inflicted every agony on that Wellspring of grace until it became impossible for Him to live in the towns, and still He lifted up the flag of salvation and solidly established the fundamentals of human righteousness, that essential basis of true civilization.
In the fifth chapter of Matthew beginning with the
thirty-seventh verse He counsels: “Resist not evil and injury
with its like; but whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek,
turn to him the other also.” And further, from the forty-third
verse: “Ye have heard that it hath been said, ‘Thou shalt
love thy neighbor, and thou shalt not vex thine enemy with enmity.’ The
King James Bible reads: “Ye have heard that it hath been said,
Thou shalt love thy neighbour, and hate thine enemy.” Scholars
object to this reading because it is contrary to the known Law as
set forth in Leviticus 19:18, Exodus 23:4–5, Proverbs 25:21,
the Talmud, etc.