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<head>Preface</head>

<p>The fundamental principle enunciated by Bahá’u’lláh
... is that religious truth is not absolute but relative, that Divine
Revelation is a continuous and progressive process, that all the
great religions of the world are divine in origin, that their basic
principles are in complete harmony, that their aims and purposes are
one and the same, that their teachings are but facets of one truth,
that their functions are complementary, that they differ only in the
nonessential aspects of their doctrines, and that their missions
represent successive stages in the spiritual evolution of human
society....</p>

<p>...His mission is to proclaim that the ages of the
infancy and of the childhood of the human race are past, that the
convulsions associated with the present stage of its adolescence are
slowly and painfully preparing it to attain the stage of manhood, and
are heralding the approach of that Age of Ages when swords will be
beaten into plowshares, when the Kingdom promised by Jesus Christ
will have been established, and the peace of the planet definitely
and permanently ensured. Nor does Bahá’u’lláh
claim finality for His own Revelation, but rather stipulates that a
fuller measure of the truth He has been commissioned by the Almighty
to vouchsafe to humanity, at so critical a juncture in its fortunes,
must needs be disclosed at future stages in the constant and
limitless evolution of mankind.</p>

<p>The Bahá’í Faith upholds the unity
of God, recognizes the unity of His Prophets, and inculcates the
principle of the oneness and wholeness of the entire human race. It
proclaims the necessity and the inevitability of the unification of
mankind, asserts that it is gradually approaching, and claims that
nothing short of the transmuting spirit of God, working through His
chosen Mouthpiece in this day, can ultimately succeed in bringing it
about. It, moreover, enjoins upon its followers the primary duty of
an unfettered search after truth, condemns all manner of prejudice
and superstition, declares the purpose of religion to be the
promotion of amity and concord, proclaims its essential harmony with
science, and recognizes it as the foremost agency for the
pacification and the orderly progress of human society....</p>

<p>Mírzá Ḥusayn-‘Alí,
surnamed Bahá’u’lláh (the Glory of God), a
native of Mázindarán, Whose advent the Báb
[Herald and Forerunner of Bahá’u’lláh] had
foretold, ... was imprisoned in Ṭihrán, was banished, in
1852, from His native land to Ba<hi rend="text-decoration: underline">gh</hi>dád, and thence to
Constantinople and Adrianople, and finally to the prison city of
Akká, where He remained incarcerated for no less than
twenty-four years, and in whose neighborhood He passed away in 1892.
In the course of His banishment, and particularly in Adrianople and
Akká, He formulated the laws and ordinances of His
Dispensation, expounded, in over a hundred volumes, the principles of
His Faith, proclaimed His Message to the kings and rulers of both the
East and the West, both Christian and Muslim, addressed the Pope, the
Caliph of Islám, the Chief Magistrates of the Republics of the
American continent, the entire Christian sacerdotal order, the
leaders of <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>í’ih and Sunní Islám,
and the high priests of the Zoroastrian religion. In these writings
He proclaimed His Revelation, summoned those whom He addressed to
heed His call and espouse His Faith, warned them of the consequences
of their refusal, and denounced, in some cases, their arrogance and
tyranny....</p>

<p>The Faith which this order serves, safeguards and
promotes is ... essentially supernatural, supranational, entirely
non-political, non-partisan, and diametrically opposed to any policy
or school of thought that seeks to exalt any particular race, class
or nation. It is free from any form of ecclesiasticism, has neither
priesthood nor rituals, and is supported exclusively by voluntary
contributions made by its avowed adherents. Though loyal to their
respective governments, though imbued with the love of their own
country, and anxious to promote at all times, its best interests, the
followers of the Bahá’í Faith, nevertheless,
viewing mankind as one entity, and profoundly attached to its vital
interests, will not hesitate to subordinate every particular
interest, be it personal, regional or national, to the over-riding
interests of the generality of mankind, knowing full well that in a
world of interdependent peoples and nations the advantage of the part
is best to be reached by the advantage of the whole, and that no
lasting result can be achieved by any of the component parts if the
general interests of the entity itself are neglected....</p>

<p>—Shoghi Effendi</p>

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<head>The Promised Day Is Come</head>

<p>Friends and fellow-heirs of the Kingdom of Bahá’u’lláh:
</p>

<p>A tempest, unprecedented in its violence, unpredictable
in its course, catastrophic in its immediate effects, unimaginably
glorious in its ultimate consequences, is at present sweeping the
face of the earth. Its driving power is remorselessly gaining in
range and momentum. Its cleansing force, however much undetected, is
increasing with every passing day. Humanity, gripped in the clutches
of its devastating power, is smitten by the evidences of its
resistless fury. It can neither perceive its origin, nor probe its
significance, nor discern its outcome. Bewildered, agonized and
helpless, it watches this great and mighty wind of God invading the
remotest and fairest regions of the earth, rocking its foundations,
deranging its equilibrium, sundering its nations, disrupting the
homes of its peoples, wasting its cities, driving into exile its
kings, pulling down its bulwarks, uprooting its institutions, dimming
its light, and harrowing up the souls of its inhabitants.</p>

<p>“The time for the destruction of the world and its
people,” Bahá’u’lláh’s
prophetic pen has proclaimed, “hath arrived.” “The
hour is approaching,” He specifically affirms, “when the
most great convulsion will have appeared.” “The promised
day is come, the day when tormenting trials will have surged above
your heads, and beneath your feet, saying: ‘Taste ye what your
hands have wrought!’” “Soon shall the blasts of His
chastisement beat upon you, and the dust of hell enshroud you.”
And again: “And when the appointed hour is come, there shall
suddenly appear that which shall cause the limbs of mankind to
quake.” “The day is approaching when its [civilization’s]
flame will devour the cities, when the Tongue of Grandeur will
proclaim: ‘The Kingdom is God’s, the Almighty, the
All-Praised!’” “The day will soon come,” He,
referring to the foolish ones of the earth, has written, “whereon
they will cry out for help and receive no answer.” “The
day is approaching,” He moreover has prophesied, “when
the wrathful anger of the Almighty will have taken hold of them. He,
verily, is the Omnipotent, the All-Subduing, the Most Powerful. He
shall cleanse the earth from the defilement of their corruption, and
shall give it for an heritage unto such of His servants as are nigh
unto Him.”</p>

<p>“As to those who deny Him Who is the Sublime Gate
of God,” the Báb, for His part, has affirmed in the
Qayyúm-i-Asmá, “for them We have prepared, as
justly decreed by God, a sore torment. And He, God, is the Mighty,
the Wise.” And further, “O peoples of the earth! I swear
by your Lord! Ye shall act as former generations have acted. Warn ye,
then, yourselves of the terrible, the most grievous vengeance of God.
For God is, verily, potent over all things.” And again: “By
My glory! I will make the infidels to taste, with the hands of My
power, retributions unknown of anyone except Me, and will waft over
the faithful those musk-scented breaths which I have nursed in the
midmost heart of My throne.”</p>

<p>Dear friends! The powerful operations of this titanic
upheaval are comprehensible to none except such as have recognized
the claims of both Bahá’u’lláh and the Báb.
Their followers know full well whence it comes, and what it will
ultimately lead to. Though ignorant of how far it will reach, they
clearly recognize its genesis, are aware of its direction,
acknowledge its necessity, observe confidently its mysterious
processes, ardently pray for the mitigation of its severity,
intelligently labor to assuage its fury, and anticipate, with
undimmed vision, the consummation of the fears and the hopes it must
necessarily engender.</p>

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<head>This Judgment of God</head>

<p>This judgment of God, as viewed by those who have
recognized Bahá’u’lláh as His Mouthpiece
and His greatest Messenger on earth, is both a retributory calamity
and an act of holy and supreme discipline. It is at once a visitation
from God and a cleansing process for all mankind. Its fires punish
the perversity of the human race, and weld its component parts into
one organic, indivisible, world-embracing community. Mankind, in
these fateful years, which at once signalize the passing of the first
century of the Bahá’í Era and proclaim the
opening of a new one, is, as ordained by Him Who is both the Judge
and the Redeemer of the human race, being simultaneously called upon
to give account of its past actions, and is being purged and prepared
for its future mission. It can neither escape the responsibilities of
the past, nor shirk those of the future. God, the Vigilant, the Just,
the Loving, the All-Wise Ordainer, can, in this supreme Dispensation,
neither allow the sins of an unregenerate humanity, whether of
omission or of commission, to go unpunished, nor will He be willing
to abandon His children to their fate, and refuse them that
culminating and blissful stage in their long, their slow and painful
evolution throughout the ages, which is at once their inalienable
right and their true destiny.</p>

<p>“Bestir yourselves, O people,” is, on the
one hand, the ominous warning sounded by Bahá’u’lláh
Himself, “in anticipation of the days of Divine Justice, for
the promised hour is now come.” “Abandon that which ye
possess, and seize that which God, Who layeth low the necks of men,
hath brought. Know ye of a certainty that if ye turn not back from
that which ye have committed, chastisement will overtake you on every
side, and ye shall behold things more grievous than that which ye
beheld aforetime.” And again: “We have fixed a time for
you, O people! If ye fail, at the appointed hour, to turn towards
God, He, verily, will lay violent hold on you, and will cause
grievous afflictions to assail you from every direction. How severe
indeed is the chastisement with which your Lord will then chastise
you!” And again: “God assuredly dominateth the lives of
them that wronged Us, and is well aware of their doings. He will most
certainly lay hold on them for their sins. He, verily, is the
fiercest of Avengers.” And finally: “O ye peoples of the
world! Know verily that an unforeseen calamity is following you and
that grievous retribution awaiteth you. Think not the deeds ye have
committed have been blotted from My sight. By My Beauty! All your
doings hath My pen graven with open characters upon tablets of
chrysolite.”</p>

<p>“The whole earth,” Bahá’u’lláh,
on the other hand, forecasting the bright future in store for a world
now wrapt in darkness, emphatically asserts, “is now in a state
of pregnancy. The day is approaching when it will have yielded its
noblest fruits, when from it will have sprung forth the loftiest
trees, the most enchanting blossoms, the most heavenly blessings.”
“The time is approaching when every created thing will have
cast its burden. Glorified be God Who hath vouchsafed this grace that
encompasseth all things, whether seen or unseen!” “These
great oppressions,” He, moreover, foreshadowing humanity’s
golden age, has written, “are preparing it for the advent of
the Most Great Justice.” This Most Great Justice is indeed the
Justice upon which the structure of the Most Great Peace can alone,
and must eventually, rest, while the Most Great Peace will, in turn,
usher in that Most Great, that World Civilization which shall remain
forever associated with Him Who beareth the Most Great Name.</p>

<p>Beloved friends! Well nigh a hundred years have elapsed
since the Revelation of Bahá’u’lláh dawned
upon the world—a Revelation, the nature of which, as affirmed
by Himself, “none among the Manifestations of old, except to a
prescribed degree, hath ever completely apprehended.” For a
whole century God has respited mankind, that it might acknowledge the
Founder of such a Revelation, espouse His Cause, proclaim His
greatness, and establish His Order. In a hundred volumes, the
repositories of priceless precepts, mighty laws, unique principles,
impassioned exhortations, reiterated warnings, amazing prophecies,
sublime invocations, and weighty commentaries, the Bearer of such a
Message has proclaimed, as no Prophet before Him has done, the
Mission with which God had entrusted Him. To emperors, kings, princes
and potentates, to rulers, governments, clergy and peoples, whether
of the East or of the West, whether Christian, Jew, Muslim, or
Zoroastrian, He addressed, for well-nigh fifty years, and in the most
tragic circumstances, these priceless pearls of knowledge and wisdom
that lay hid within the ocean of His matchless utterance. Forsaking
fame and fortune, accepting imprisonment and exile, careless of
ostracism and obloquy, submitting to physical indignities and cruel
deprivations, He, the Vicegerent of God on earth, suffered Himself to
be banished from place to place and from country to country, till at
length He, in the Most Great Prison, offered up His martyred son as a
ransom for the redemption and unification of all mankind. “We
verily,” He Himself has testified, “have not fallen short
of Our duty to exhort men, and to deliver that whereunto I was bidden
by God, the Almighty, the All-Praised. Had they hearkened unto Me,
they would have beheld the earth another earth.” And again: “Is
there any excuse left for anyone in this Revelation? No, by God, the
Lord of the Mighty Throne! My signs have encompassed the earth, and
My power enveloped all mankind, and yet the people are wrapped in a
strange sleep!”</p>

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<head>What Response to His Call?</head>

<p>How—we may well ask ourselves—has the world,
the object of such Divine solicitude, repaid Him Who sacrificed His
all for its sake? What manner of welcome did it accord Him, and what
response did His call evoke? A clamor, unparalleled in the history of
<hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>í’ih Islám, greeted, in the land of its
birth, the infant light of the Faith, in the midst of a people
notorious for its crass ignorance, its fierce fanaticism, its
barbaric cruelty, its ingrained prejudices, and the unlimited sway
held over the masses by a firmly entrenched ecclesiastical hierarchy.
A persecution, kindling a courage which, as attested by no less
eminent an authority than the late Lord Curzon of Kedleston, has been
unsurpassed by that which the fires of Smithfield evoked, mowed down,
with tragic swiftness, no less than twenty thousand of its heroic
adherents, who refused to barter their newly born faith for the
fleeting honors and security of a mortal life.</p>

<p>To the bodily agonies inflicted upon these sufferers,
the charges, so unmerited, of Nihilism, occultism, anarchism,
eclecticism, immorality, sectarianism, heresy, political
partisanship—each conclusively disproved by the tenets of the
Faith itself and by the conduct of its followers—were added,
swelling thereby the number of those who, unwittingly or maliciously,
were injuring its cause.</p>

<p>Unmitigated indifference on the part of men of eminence
and rank; unrelenting hatred shown by the ecclesiastical dignitaries
of the Faith from which it had sprung; the scornful derision of the
people among whom it was born; the utter contempt which most of those
kings and rulers who had been addressed by its Author manifested
towards it; the condemnations pronounced, the threats hurled, and the
banishments decreed by those under whose sway it arose and first
spread; the distortion to which its principles and laws were
subjected by the envious and the malicious, in lands and among
peoples far beyond the country of its origin—all these are but
the evidences of the treatment meted out by a generation sunk in
self-content, careless of its God, and oblivious of the omens,
prophecies, warnings and admonitions revealed by His Messengers.</p>

<p>The blows so heavily dealt the followers of so precious,
so glorious, so potent a Faith failed, however, to assuage the
animosity that inflamed its persecutors. Nor did the deliberate and
mischievous misrepresentations of its fundamental teachings, its aims
and purposes, its hopes and aspirations, its institutions and
activities, suffice to stay the hand of the oppressor and the
calumniator, who sought by every means in their power to abolish its
name and extirpate its system. The hand which had struck down so vast
a number of its blameless and humble lovers and servants was now
raised to deal its Founders the heaviest and cruelest blows.</p>

<p>The Báb—“the Point,” as
affirmed by Bahá’u’lláh, “round Whom
the realities of the Prophets and Messengers revolve”—was
the One first swept into the maelstrom which engulfed His supporters.
Sudden arrest and confinement in the very first year of His short and
spectacular career; public affront deliberately inflicted in the
presence of the ecclesiastical dignitaries of <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>íráz;
strict and prolonged incarceration in the bleak fastnesses of the
mountains of Á<hi rend="text-decoration: underline">dh</hi>irbayján; a contemptuous
disregard and a cowardly jealousy evinced respectively by the Chief
Magistrate of the realm and the foremost minister of his government;
the carefully staged and farcical interrogatory sustained in the
presence of the heir to the Throne and the distinguished divines of
Tabríz; the shameful infliction of the bastinado in the prayer
house, and at the hands of the <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>ay<hi rend="text-decoration: underline">kh</hi>u’l-Islám
of that city; and finally suspension in the barrack-square of Tabríz
and the discharge of a volley of above seven hundred bullets at His
youthful breast under the eyes of a callous multitude of about ten
thousand people, culminating in the ignominious exposure of His
mangled remains on the edge of the moat without the city gate—these
were the progressive stages in the tumultuous and tragic ministry of
One Whose age inaugurated the consummation of all ages, and Whose
Revelation fulfilled the promise of all Revelations.</p>

<p>“I swear by God!” the Báb Himself in
His Tablet to Muḥammad <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh has written,
“Shouldst thou know the things which in the space of these four
years have befallen Me at the hands of thy people and thine army,
thou wouldst hold thy breath from fear of God.... Alas, alas, for the
things which have touched Me!... I swear by the Most Great Lord! Wert
thou to be told in what place I dwell, the first person to have mercy
on Me would be thyself. In the heart of a mountain is a fortress
[Mákú] ... the inmates of which are confined to two
guards and four dogs. Picture, then, My plight.... In this mountain I
have remained alone, and have come to such a pass that none of those
gone before Me have suffered what I have suffered, nor any
transgressor endured what I have endured!”</p>

<p>“How veiled are ye, O My creatures,” He,
speaking with the voice of God, has revealed in the Bayán,
“...who, without any right, have consigned Him unto a mountain
[Mákú], not one of whose inhabitants is worthy of
mention.... With Him, which is with Me, there is no one except him
who is one of the Letters of the Living of My Book. In His presence,
which is My Presence, there is not at night even a lighted lamp! And
yet, in places [of worship] which in varying degrees reach out unto
Him, unnumbered lamps are shining! All that is on earth hath been
created for Him, and all partake with delight of His benefits, and
yet they are so veiled from Him as to refuse Him even a lamp!”</p>

<p>What of Bahá’u’lláh, the germ
of Whose Revelation, as attested by the Báb, is endowed with a
potency superior to the combined forces of the Bábí
Dispensation? Was He not—He for Whom the Báb had
suffered and died in such tragic and miraculous circumstances—made,
for nearly half a century and under the domination of the two most
powerful potentates of the East, the object of a systematic and
concerted conspiracy which, in its effects and duration, is scarcely
paralleled in the annals of previous religions?</p>

<p>“The cruelties inflicted by My oppressors,”
He Himself in His anguish has cried out, “have bowed Me down,
and turned My hair white. Shouldst thou present thyself before My
throne, thou wouldst fail to recognize the Ancient Beauty, for the
freshness of His countenance is altered and its brightness hath
faded, by reason of the oppression of the infidels. I swear by God!
His heart, His soul, and His vitals are melted!” “Wert
thou to hear with Mine ear,” He also declares, “thou
wouldst hear how ‘Alí [the Báb] bewaileth Me in
the presence of the Glorious Companion, and how Muḥammad
weepeth over Me in the all-highest Horizon, and how the Spirit
[Jesus] beateth Himself upon the head in the heaven of My decree, by
reason of what hath befallen this Wronged One at the hands of every
impious sinner.” “Before Me,” He elsewhere has
written, “riseth up the Serpent of wrath with jaws stretched to
engulf Me, and behind Me stalketh the lion of anger intent on tearing
Me in pieces, and above Me, O My Well-Beloved, are the clouds of Thy
decree, raining upon Me the showers of tribulations, whilst beneath
Me are fixed the spears of misfortune, ready to wound My limbs and My
body.” “Couldst thou be told,” He further affirms,
“what hath befallen the Ancient Beauty, thou wouldst flee into
the wilderness, and weep with a great weeping. In thy grief, thou
wouldst smite thyself on the head, and cry out as one stung by the
sting of the adder.... By the righteousness of God! Every morning I
arose from My bed I discovered the hosts of countless afflictions
massed behind My door, and every night when I lay down, lo! My heart
was torn with agony at what it had suffered from the fiendish cruelty
of its foes. With every piece of bread the Ancient Beauty breaketh is
coupled the assault of a fresh affliction, and with every drop He
drinketh is mixed the bitterness of the most woeful of trials. He is
preceded in every step He taketh by an army of unforeseen calamities,
while in His rear follow legions of agonizing sorrows.”</p>

<p>Was it not He Who, at the early age of twenty-seven,
spontaneously arose to champion, in the capacity of a mere follower,
the nascent Cause of the Báb? Was He not the One Who by
assuming the actual leadership of a proscribed and harrassed sect
exposed Himself, and His kindred, and His possessions, and His rank,
and His reputation to the grave perils, the bloody assaults, the
general spoliation and furious defamations of both government and
people? Was it not He—the Bearer of a Revelation, Whose day
“every Prophet hath announced,” for which “the soul
of every Divine Messenger hath thirsted,” and in which “God
hath proved the hearts of the entire company of His Messengers and
Prophets”—was not the Bearer of such a Revelation, at the
instigation of <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>í’ih ecclesiastics and by order
of the <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh himself forced, for no less than four
months, to breathe, in utter darkness, whilst in the company of the
vilest criminals and freighted down with galling chains, the
pestilential air of the vermin-infested subterranean dungeon of
Ṭihrán—a place which, as He Himself subsequently
declared, was mysteriously converted into the very scene of the
annunciation made to Him by God of His Prophethood?</p>

<p>“We were consigned,” He wrote in His
“Epistle to the Son of the Wolf,” “for four months
to a place foul beyond comparison. As to the dungeon in which this
Wronged One and others similarly wronged were confined, a dark and
narrow pit were preferable.... The dungeon was wrapped in thick
darkness, and Our fellow prisoners numbered nearly a hundred and
fifty souls: thieves, assassins, and highwaymen. Though crowded, it
had no other outlet than the passage by which We entered. No pen can
depict that place, nor any tongue describe its loathsome smell. Most
of these men had neither clothes nor bedding to lie on. God alone
knoweth what befell Us in that most foul-smelling and gloomy place!”
“‘Abdu’l-Bahá,” writes Dr. J.E.
Esslemont, “tells how one day He was allowed to enter the
prison-yard to see His beloved Father when He came out for His daily
exercise. Bahá’u’lláh was terribly altered,
so ill He could hardly walk. His hair and beard unkempt, His neck
galled and swollen from the pressure of a heavy steel collar, His
body bent by the weight of His chains.” “For three days
and three nights,” Nabíl has recorded in his chronicle,
“no manner of food or drink was given to Bahá’u’lláh.
Rest and sleep were both impossible to Him. The place was infested
with vermin, and the stench of that gloomy abode was enough to crush
the very spirits of those who were condemned to suffer its horrors.”
“Such was the intensity of His suffering that the marks of that
cruelty remained imprinted upon His body all the days of His life.”
</p>

<p>And what of the other tribulations which, before and
immediately after this dreadful episode, touched Him? What of His
confinement in the home of one of the kad-<hi rend="text-decoration: underline">kh</hi>udás of
Ṭihrán? What of the savage violence with which He was
stoned by the angry people in the neighborhood of the village of
Níyálá? What of His incarceration by the
emissaries of the army of the <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh in Mázindarán,
and His receiving the bastinado by order, and in the presence, of the
assembled siyyids and mujtahids into whose hands He had been
delivered by the civil authorities of Ámul? What of the howls
of derision and abuse with which a crowd of ruffians subsequently
pursued Him? What of the monstrous accusation brought against Him by
the Imperial household, the Court and the people, when the attempt
was made on the life of Náṣiri’d-Dín <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh?
What of the infamous outrages, the abuse and ridicule heaped on Him
when He was arrested by responsible officers of the government, and
conducted from Níyávarán “on foot and in
chains, with bared head and bare feet,” and exposed to the
fierce rays of the midsummer sun, to the Síyáh-<hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Ch</hi>ál
of Ṭihrán? What of the avidity with which corrupt
officials sacked His house and carried away all His possessions and
disposed of His fortune? What of the cruel edict that tore Him from
the small band of the Báb’s bewildered, hounded, and
shepherdless followers, separated Him from His kinsmen and friends,
and banished Him, in the depth of winter, despoiled and defamed, to
‘Iráq?</p>

<p>Severe as were these tribulations which succeeded one
another with bewildering rapidity as a result of the premeditated
attacks and the systematic machinations of the court, the clergy, the
government and the people, they were but the prelude to a harrowing
and extensive captivity which that edict had formally initiated.
Extending over a period of more than forty years, and carrying Him
successively to ‘Iráq, Sulaymáníyyih,
Constantinople, Adrianople and finally to the penal colony of Akká,
this long banishment was at last ended by His death, at the age of
over three score years and ten, terminating a captivity which, in its
range, its duration and the diversity and severity of its
afflictions, is unexampled in the history of previous Dispensations.</p>

<p>No need to expatiate on the particular episodes which
cast a lurid light on the moving annals of those years. No need to
dwell on the character and actions of the peoples, rulers and divines
who have participated in, and contributed to heighten the poignancy
of the scenes of this, the greatest drama in the world’s
spiritual history.</p>

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<head>Features of This Moving Drama</head>

<p>To enumerate a few of the outstanding features of this
moving drama will suffice to evoke in the reader of these pages,
already familiar with the history of the Faith, the memory of those
vicissitudes which it has experienced, and which the world has until
now viewed with such frigid indifference. The forced and sudden
retirement of Bahá’u’lláh to the mountains
of Sulaymáníyyih, and the distressing consequences that
flowed from His two years’ complete withdrawal; the incessant
intrigues indulged in by the exponents of <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>í’ih
Islám in Najaf and Karbilá, working in close and
constant association with their confederates in Persia; the
intensification of the repressive measures decreed by Sulṭán
‘Abdu’l-‘Azíz which brought to a head the
defection of certain prominent members of the exiled community; the
enforcement of yet another banishment by order of that same Sulṭán,
this time to that far off and most desolate of cities, causing such
despair as to lead two of the exiles to attempt suicide; the
unrelaxing surveillance to which they were subjected upon their
arrival in Akká, by hostile officials, and the insufferable
imprisonment for two years in the barracks of that town; the
interrogatory to which the Turkish pá<hi rend="text-decoration: underline">sh</hi>á
subsequently subjected his Prisoner at the headquarters of the
government; His confinement for no less than eight years in a humble
dwelling surrounded by the befouled air of that city, His sole
recreation being confined to pacing the narrow space of His
room—these, as well as other tribulations, proclaim, on the one
hand, the nature of the ordeal and the indignities He suffered, and
point, on the other, the finger of accusation at those mighty ones of
the earth who had either so sorely maltreated Him, or deliberately
withheld from Him their succor.</p>

<p>No wonder that from the Pen of Him Who bore this anguish
with such sublime patience these words should have been revealed: “He
Who is the Lord of the seen and unseen is now manifest unto all men.
His blessed Self hath been afflicted with such harm that if all the
seas, visible and invisible, were turned into ink, and all that dwell
in the kingdom into pens, and all that are in the heavens and all
that are on earth into scribes, they would, of a certainty, be
powerless to record it.” And again: “I have been, most of
the days of My life, even as a slave, sitting under a sword hanging
on a thread, knowing not whether it would fall soon or late upon
him.” “All this generation,” He affirms, “could
offer Us were wounds from its darts, and the only cup it proffered to
Our lips was the cup of its venom. On Our neck We still bear the scar
of chains, and upon Our body are imprinted the evidences of an
unyielding cruelty.” “Twenty years have passed, O kings!”
He, addressing the kings of Christendom, at the height of His
mission, has written, “during which We have, each day, tasted
the agony of a fresh tribulation. No one of them that were before Us
hath endured the things We have endured. Would that ye could perceive
it! They that rose up against Us have put Us to death, have shed Our
blood, have plundered Our property, and violated Our honor. Though
aware of most of Our afflictions, ye, nevertheless, have failed to
stay the hand of the aggressor. For is it not your clear duty to
restrain the tyranny of the oppressor, and to deal equitably with
your subjects, that your high sense of justice may be fully
demonstrated to all mankind?”</p>

<p>Who is the ruler, may it not be confidently asked,
whether of the East or of the West, who, at any time since the dawn
of so transcendent a Revelation, has been prompted to raise his voice
either in its praise or against those who persecuted it? Which people
has, in the course of so long a captivity, felt urged to arise and
stem the tide of such tribulations? Who is the sovereign, excepting a
single woman, shining in solitary glory, who has, in however small a
measure, felt impelled to respond to the poignant call of
Bahá’u’lláh? Who amongst the great ones of
the earth was inclined to extend this infant Faith of God the benefit
of his recognition or support? Which one of the multitudes of creeds,
sects, races, parties and classes and of the highly diversified
schools of human thought, considered it necessary to direct its gaze
towards the rising light of the Faith, to contemplate its unfolding
system, to ponder its hidden processes, to appraise its weighty
message, to acknowledge its regenerative power, to embrace its
salutary truth, or to proclaim its eternal verities? Who among the
worldly wise and the so-called men of insight and wisdom can justly
claim, after the lapse of nearly a century, to have disinterestedly
approached its theme, to have considered impartially its claims, to
have taken sufficient pains to delve into its literature, to have
assiduously striven to separate facts from fiction, or to have
accorded its cause the treatment it merits? Where are the preeminent
exponents, whether of the arts or sciences, with the exception of a
few isolated cases, who have lifted a finger, or whispered a word of
commendation, in either the defense or the praise of a Faith that has
conferred upon the world so priceless a benefit, that has suffered so
long and so grievously, and which enshrines within its shell so
enthralling a promise for a world so woefully battered, so manifestly
bankrupt?</p>

<p>To the mounting tide of trials which laid low the Báb,
to the long-drawn-out calamities which rained on Bahá’u’lláh,
to the warnings sounded by both the Herald and the Author of the
Bahá’í Revelation, must be added the sufferings
which, for no less than seventy years, were endured by ‘Abdu’l-Bahá,
as well as His pleas, and entreaties, uttered in the evening of His
life, in connection with the dangers that increasingly threatened the
whole of mankind. Born in the very year that witnessed the inception
of the Bábí Revelation; baptized with the initial fires
of persecution that raged around that nascent Cause; an eyewitness,
when a boy of eight, of the violent upheavals that rocked the Faith
which His Father had espoused; sharing with Him, the ignominy, the
perils, and rigors consequent upon the successive banishments from
His native-land to countries far beyond its confines; arrested and
forced to support, in a dark cell, the indignity of imprisonment soon
after His arrival in Akká; the object of repeated
investigations and the target of continual assaults and insults under
the despotic rule of Sulṭán ‘Abdu’l-Ḥamíd,
and later under the ruthless military dictatorship of the suspicious
and merciless Jamál Pá<hi rend="text-decoration: underline">sh</hi>á—He, too,
the Center and Pivot of Bahá’u’lláh’s
peerless Covenant and the perfect Exemplar of His teachings, was made
to taste, at the hands of potentates, ecclesiastics, governments and
peoples, the cup of woe which the Báb and Bahá’u’lláh,
as well as so many of their followers, had drained.</p>

<p>With the warnings which both His pen and voice have
given in countless Tablets and discourses, during an almost lifelong
incarceration and in the course of His extended travels in both the
European and American continents, they who labor for the spread of
His Father’s Faith in the Western world are sufficiently
acquainted. How often and how passionately did He appeal to those in
authority and to the public at large to examine dispassionately the
precepts enunciated by His Father? With what precision and emphasis
He unfolded the system of the Faith He was expounding, elucidated its
fundamental verities, stressed its distinguishing features, and
proclaimed the redemptive character of its principles? How
insistently did He foreshadow the impending chaos, the approaching
upheavals, the universal conflagration which, in the concluding years
of His life, had only begun to reveal the measure of its force and
the significance of its impact on human society?</p>

<p>A co-sharer in the woeful trials and momentary
frustrations afflicting the Báb and Bahá’u’lláh;
reaping a harvest in His lifetime wholly incommensurate to the
sublime, the incessant and strenuous efforts He had exerted;
experiencing the initial perturbations of the world-shaking
catastrophe in store for an unbelieving humanity; bent with age, and
with eyes dimmed by the gathering storm which the reception accorded
by a faithless generation to His Father’s Cause was raising,
and with a heart bleeding over the immediate destiny of God’s
wayward children—He, at last, sank beneath a weight of troubles
for which they who had imposed them upon Him, and upon those gone
before Him, were soon to be summoned to a dire reckoning.</p>

<p>“Hasten, O my God!” He cried, at a time when
adversity had sore beset Him, “the days of my ascension unto
Thee, and of my coming before Thee, and of my entry into Thy
presence, that I may be delivered from the darkness of the cruelty
inflicted by them upon me, and may enter the luminous atmosphere of
Thy nearness, O my Lord, the All-Glorious, and may rest under the
shadow of Thy most great mercy.” “Yá Bahá’u’l-Abhá
[O Thou the Glory of Glories]!” He wrote in a Tablet revealed
during the last week of His life, “I have renounced the world
and the people thereof, and am heartbroken and sorely afflicted
because of the unfaithful. In the cage of this world I flutter even
as a frightened bird, and yearn every day to take my flight unto Thy
Kingdom. Yá Bahá’u’l-Abhá! Make me
to drink of the cup of sacrifice, and set me free. Relieve me from
these woes and trials, from these afflictions and troubles.”</p>

<p>Dear friends! Alas, a thousand times alas, that a
Revelation so incomparably great, so infinitely precious, so mightily
potent, so manifestly innocent, should have received, at the hands of
a generation so blind and so perverse, so infamous a treatment! “O
My servants!” Bahá’u’lláh Himself
testifies, “The one true God is My witness! This most great,
this fathomless and surging ocean is near, astonishingly near, unto
you. Behold it is closer to you than your life vein! Swift as the
twinkling of an eye ye can, if ye but wish it, reach and partake of
this imperishable favor, this God-given grace, this incorruptible
gift, this most potent and unspeakably glorious bounty.”</p>

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<head>A World Receded from Him</head>

<p>After a revolution of well nigh one hundred years what
is it that the eye encounters as one surveys the international scene
and looks back upon the early beginnings of Bahá’í
history? A world convulsed by the agonies of contending systems,
races and nations, entangled in the mesh of its accumulated
falsities, receding farther and farther from Him Who is the sole
Author of its destinies, and sinking deeper and deeper into a
suicidal carnage which its neglect and persecution of Him Who is its
Redeemer have precipitated. A Faith, still proscribed, yet bursting
through its chrysalis, emerging from the obscurity of a century-old
repression, face to face with the awful evidences of God’s
wrathful anger, and destined to arise above the ruins of a smitten
civilization. A world spiritually destitute, morally bankrupt,
politically disrupted, socially convulsed, economically paralyzed,
writhing, bleeding and breaking up beneath the avenging rod of God. A
Faith Whose call remained unanswered, Whose claims were rejected,
Whose warnings were brushed aside, Whose followers were mowed down,
Whose aims and purposes were maligned, Whose summons to the rulers of
the earth were ignored, Whose Herald drained the cup of martyrdom,
over the head of Whose Author swept a sea of unheard-of tribulations,
and Whose Exemplar sank beneath the weight of lifelong sorrows and
dire misfortunes. A world that has lost its bearings, in which the
bright flame of religion is fast dying out, in which the forces of a
blatant nationalism and racialism have usurped the rights and
prerogatives of God Himself, in which a flagrant secularism—the
direct offspring of irreligion—has raised its triumphant head
and is protruding its ugly features, in which the “majesty of
kingship” has been disgraced, and they who wore its emblems
have, for the most part, been hurled from their thrones, in which the
once all-powerful ecclesiastical hierarchies of Islám, and to
a lesser extent those of Christianity, have been discredited, and in
which the virus of prejudice and corruption is eating into the vitals
of an already gravely disordered society. A Faith Whose
institutions—the pattern and crowning glory of the age which is
to come—have been ignored and in some instances trampled upon
and uprooted, Whose unfolding system has been derided and partly
suppressed and crippled, Whose rising Order—the sole refuge of
a civilization in the embrace of doom—has been spurned and
challenged, Whose Mother-Temple has been seized and misappropriated,
and Whose “House”—the “cynosure of an adoring
world”—has, through a gross miscarriage of justice, as
witnessed by the world’s highest tribunal, been delivered into
the hands of, and violated by, its implacable enemies.</p>

<p>We are indeed living in an age which, if we would
correctly appraise it, should be regarded as one which is witnessing
a dual phenomenon. The first signalizes the death pangs of an order,
effete and godless, that has stubbornly refused, despite the signs
and portents of a century-old Revelation, to attune its processes to
the precepts and ideals which that Heaven-sent Faith proffered it.
The second proclaims the birth pangs of an Order, divine and
redemptive, that will inevitably supplant the former, and within
Whose administrative structure an embryonic civilization,
incomparable and world-embracing, is imperceptibly maturing. The one
is being rolled up, and is crashing in oppression, bloodshed, and
ruin. The other opens up vistas of a justice, a unity, a peace, a
culture, such as no age has ever seen. The former has spent its
force, demonstrated its falsity and barrenness, lost irretrievably
its opportunity, and is hurrying to its doom. The latter, virile and
unconquerable, is plucking asunder its chains, and is vindicating its
title to be the one refuge within which a sore-tried humanity, purged
from its dross, can attain its destiny.</p>

<p>“Soon,” Bahá’u’lláh
Himself has prophesied, “will the present-day order be rolled
up, and a new one spread out in its stead.” And again: “By
Myself! The day is approaching when We will have rolled up the world
and all that is therein, and spread out a new Order in its stead.”
“The day is approaching when God will have raised up a people
who will call to remembrance Our days, who will tell the tale of Our
trials, who will demand the restitution of Our rights, from them who,
without a tittle of evidence, have treated Us with manifest
injustice.”</p>

<p>Dear friends! For the trials which have afflicted the
Faith of Bahá’u’lláh a responsibility
appalling and inescapable rests upon those into whose hands the reins
of civil and ecclesiastical authority were delivered. The kings of
the earth and the world’s religious leaders alike must
primarily bear the brunt of such an awful responsibility. “Everyone
well knoweth,” Bahá’u’lláh Himself
testifies, “that all the kings have turned aside from Him, and
all the religions have opposed Him.” “From time
immemorial,” He declares, “they who have been outwardly
invested with authority have debarred men from setting their faces
towards God. They have disliked that men should gather together
around the Most Great Ocean, inasmuch as they have regarded, and
still regard, such a gathering as the cause of, and the motive for,
the disruption of their sovereignty.” “The kings,”
He moreover has written, “have recognized that it was not in
their interest to acknowledge Me, as have likewise the ministers and
the divines, notwithstanding that My purpose hath been most
explicitly revealed in the Divine Books and Tablets, and the True One
hath loudly proclaimed that this Most Great Revelation hath appeared
for the betterment of the world and the exaltation of the nations.”
“Gracious God!” writes the Báb in the
Dalá’il-i-Sab‘ih (Seven Proofs) with reference to
the “seven powerful sovereigns ruling the world” in His
day, “None of them hath been informed of His [the Báb’s]
Manifestation, and if informed, none hath believed in Him. Who
knoweth, they may leave this world below full of desire, and without
having realized that the thing for which they were waiting had come
to pass. This is what happened to the monarchs that held fast unto
the Gospel. They awaited the coming of the Prophet of God [Muḥammad],
and when He did appear, they failed to recognize Him. Behold how
great are the sums which these sovereigns expend without even the
slightest thought of appointing an official charged with the task of
acquainting them in their own realms with the Manifestation of God!
They would thereby have fulfilled the purpose for which they have
been created. All their desires have been and are still fixed upon
leaving behind them traces of their names.” The Báb,
moreover, in that same treatise, censuring the failure of the
Christian divines to acknowledge the truth of Muḥammad’s
mission, makes this illuminating statement: “The blame falleth
upon their doctors, for if these had believed, they would have been
followed by the mass of their countrymen. Behold then, that which
hath come to pass! The learned men of Christendom are held to be
learned by virtue of their safeguarding the teaching of Christ, and
yet consider how they themselves have been the cause of men’s
failure to accept the Faith and attain unto salvation!”</p>

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<head>Recipients of the Message</head>

<p>It should not be forgotten that it was the kings of the
earth and the world’s religious leaders who, above all other
categories of men, were made the direct recipients of the Message
proclaimed by both the Báb and Bahá’u’lláh.
It was they who were deliberately addressed in numerous and historic
Tablets, who were summoned to respond to the Call of God, and to whom
were directed, in clear and forcible language, the appeals, the
admonitions and warnings of His persecuted Messengers. It was they
who, when the Faith was born, and later when its mission was
proclaimed, were still, for the most part, wielding unquestioned and
absolute civil and ecclesiastical authority over their subjects and
followers. It was they who, whether glorying in the pomp and
pageantry of a kingship as yet scarcely restricted by constitutional
limitations, or entrenched within the strongholds of a seemingly
inviolable ecclesiastical power, assumed ultimate responsibility for
any wrongs inflicted by those whose immediate destinies they
controlled. It would be no exaggeration to say that in most of the
countries of the European and Asiatic continents absolutism, on the
one hand, and complete subservience to ecclesiastical hierarchies, on
the other, were still the outstanding features of the political and
religious life of the masses. These, dominated and shackled, were
robbed of the necessary freedom that would enable them to either
appraise the claims and merits of the Message proffered to them, or
to embrace unreservedly its truth.</p>

<p>Small wonder, then, that the Author of the Bahá’í
Faith, and to a lesser degree its Herald, should have directed at the
world’s supreme rulers and religious leaders the full force of
Their Messages, and made them the recipients of some of Their most
sublime Tablets, and invited them, in a language at once clear and
insistent, to heed Their call. Small wonder that They should have
taken the pains to unroll before their eyes the truths of Their
respective Revelations, and should have expatiated on Their woes and
sufferings. Small wonder that They should have stressed the
preciousness of the opportunities which it was in the power of these
rulers and leaders to seize, and should have warned them in ominous
tones of the grave responsibilities which the rejection of God’s
Message would entail, and should have predicted, when rebuffed and
refused, the dire consequences which such a rejection involved. Small
wonder that He Who is the King of kings and Vicegerent of God Himself
should, when abandoned, contemned and persecuted, have uttered this
epigrammatic and momentous prophecy: “From two ranks amongst
men power hath been seized: kings and ecclesiastics.”</p>

<p>As to the kings and emperors who not only symbolized in
their persons the majesty of earthly dominion but who, for the most
part, actually held unchallengeable sway over the multitudes of their
subjects, their relation to the Faith of Bahá’u’lláh
constitutes one of the most illuminating episodes in the history of
the Heroic and Formative Ages of that Faith. The Divine summons which
embraced within its scope so large a number of the crowned heads of
both Europe and Asia; the theme and language of the Messages that
brought them into direct contact with the Source of God’s
Revelation; the nature of their reaction to so stupendous an impact;
and the consequences which ensued and can still be witnessed today
are the salient features of a subject upon which I can but
inadequately touch, and which will be fully and befittingly treated
by future Bahá’í historians.</p>

<p>The Emperor of the French, the most powerful ruler of
his day on the European continent, Napoleon III; Pope Pius IX, the
supreme head of the highest church in Christendom, and wielder of the
scepter of both temporal and spiritual authority; the omnipotent Czar
of the vast Russian Empire, Alexander II; the renowned Queen
Victoria, whose sovereignty extended over the greatest political
combination the world has witnessed; William I, the conqueror of
Napoleon III, King of Prussia and the newly acclaimed monarch of a
unified Germany; Francis Joseph, the autocratic king-emperor of the
Austro-Hungarian monarchy, the heir of the far-famed Holy Roman
Empire; the tyrannical ‘Abdu’l-‘Azíz, the
embodiment of the concentrated power vested in the Sultanate and the
Caliphate; the notorious Náṣiri’d-Dín <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh,
the despotic ruler of Persia and the mightiest potentate of <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>í’ih
Islám—in a word, most of the preeminent embodiments of
power and of sovereignty in His day became, one by one, the object of
Bahá’u’lláh’s special attention, and
were made to sustain, in varying degrees, the weight of the force
communicated by His appeals and warnings.</p>

<p>It should be borne in mind, however, that Bahá’u’lláh
has not restricted the delivery of His Message to a few individual
sovereigns, however potent the scepters they severally wielded, and
however vast the dominions which they ruled. All the kings of the
earth have been collectively addressed by His Pen, appealed to, and
warned, at a time when the star of His Revelation was mounting its
zenith, and whilst He lay a prisoner in the hands, and in the
vicinity of the court, of His royal enemy. In a memorable Tablet,
designated as the Súriy-i-Mulúk (Súrih of Kings)
in which the Sulṭán himself and his ministers, and the
kings of Christendom, and the French and Persian Ambassadors
accredited to the Sublime Porte, and the Muslim ecclesiastical
leaders in Constantinople, and its wise men and its inhabitants, and
the people of Persia, and the philosophers of the world have been
specifically addressed and admonished, He thus directs His words to
the entire company of the monarchs of East and West:</p>

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<head>Tablets to the Kings</head>

<p>“O kings of the earth! Give ear unto the Voice of
God, calling from this sublime, this fruit-laden Tree, that hath
sprung out of the Crimson Hill, upon the holy Plain, intoning the
words: ‘There is none other God but He, the Mighty, the
All-Powerful, the All-Wise.’... Fear God, O concourse of kings,
and suffer not yourselves to be deprived of this most sublime grace.
Fling away, then, the things ye possess, and take fast hold on the
Handle of God, the Exalted, the Great. Set your hearts towards the
Face of God, and abandon that which your desires have bidden you to
follow, and be not of those who perish. Relate unto them, O servant,
the story of ‘Alí [the Báb], when He came unto
them with truth, bearing His glorious and weighty Book, and holding
in His hands a testimony and proof from God, and holy and blessed
tokens from Him. Ye, however, O kings, have failed to heed the
Remembrance of God in His days and to be guided by the lights which
arose and shone forth above the horizon of a resplendent Heaven. Ye
examined not His Cause when so to do would have been better for you
than all that the sun shineth upon, could ye but perceive it. Ye
remained careless until the divines of Persia—those cruel
ones—pronounced judgment against Him, and unjustly slew Him.
His spirit ascended unto God, and the eyes of the inmates of Paradise
and the angels that are nigh unto Him wept sore by reason of this
cruelty. Beware that ye be not careless henceforth as ye have been
careless aforetime. Return, then, unto God, your Maker, and be not of
the heedless.... My face hath come forth from the veils, and shed its
radiance upon all that is in heaven and on earth; and yet, ye turned
not towards Him, notwithstanding that ye were created for Him, O
concourse of kings! Follow, therefore, that which I speak unto you,
and hearken unto it with your hearts, and be not of such as have
turned aside. For your glory consisteth not in your sovereignty, but
rather in your nearness unto God and your observance of His command
as sent down in His holy and preserved Tablets. Should any one of you
rule over the whole earth, and over all that lieth within it and upon
it, its seas, its lands, its mountains, and its plains, and yet be
not remembered by God, all these would profit him not, could ye but
know it.... Arise, then, and make steadfast your feet, and make ye
amends for that which hath escaped you, and set then yourselves
towards His holy Court, on the shore of His mighty Ocean, so that the
pearls of knowledge and wisdom, which God hath stored up within the
shell of His radiant heart, may be revealed unto you.... Beware lest
ye hinder the breeze of God from blowing over your hearts, the breeze
through which the hearts of such as have turned unto Him can be
quickened....”</p>

<p>“Lay not aside the fear of God, O kings of the
earth,” He, in that same Tablet has revealed, “and beware
that ye transgress not the bounds which the Almighty hath fixed.
Observe the injunctions laid upon you in His Book, and take good heed
not to overstep their limits. Be vigilant, that ye may not do
injustice to anyone, be it to the extent of a grain of mustard seed.
Tread ye the path of justice, for this, verily, is the straight path.
Compose your differences, and reduce your armaments, that the burden
of your expenditures may be lightened, and that your minds and hearts
may be tranquilized. Heal the dissensions that divide you, and ye
will no longer be in need of any armaments except what the protection
of your cities and territories demandeth. Fear ye God, and take heed
not to outstrip the bounds of moderation, and be numbered among the
extravagant. We have learned that you are increasing your outlay
every year, and are laying the burden thereof on your subjects. This,
verily, is more than they can bear, and is a grievous injustice.
Decide justly between men, and be ye the emblems of justice amongst
them. This, if ye judge fairly, is the thing that behooveth you, and
beseemeth your station.</p>

<p>“Beware not to deal unjustly with anyone that
appealeth to you, and entereth beneath your shadow. Walk ye in the
fear of God, and be ye of them that lead a godly life. Rest not on
your power, your armies, and treasures. Put your whole trust and
confidence in God, Who hath created you, and seek ye His help in all
your affairs. Succor cometh from Him alone. He succoreth whom He
willeth with the hosts of the heavens and of the earth.</p>

<p>“Know ye that the poor are the trust of God in
your midst. Watch that ye betray not His trust, that ye deal not
unjustly with them and that ye walk not in the ways of the
treacherous. Ye will most certainly be called upon to answer for His
trust on the day when the Balance of Justice shall be set, the day
when unto everyone shall be rendered his due, when the doings of all
men, be they rich or poor, shall be weighed.</p>

<p>“If ye pay no heed unto the counsels which, in
peerless and unequivocal language, We have revealed in this Tablet,
Divine chastisement shall assail you from every direction, and the
sentence of His justice shall be pronounced against you. On that day
ye shall have no power to resist Him, and shall recognize your own
impotence. Have mercy on yourselves and on those beneath you, and
judge ye between them according to the precepts prescribed by God in
His most holy and exalted Tablet, a Tablet wherein He hath assigned
to each and every thing its settled measure, in which He hath given,
with distinctness, an explanation of all things, and which is in
itself a monition unto them that believe in Him.</p>

<p>“Examine Our Cause, inquire into the things that
have befallen Us, and decide justly between Us and Our enemies, and
be ye of them that act equitably towards their neighbors. If ye stay
not the hand of the oppressor, if ye fail to safeguard the rights of
the downtrodden, what right have ye then to vaunt yourselves among
men? What is it of which ye can rightly boast? Is it on your food and
your drink that ye pride yourselves, on the riches ye lay up in your
treasuries, on the diversity and the cost of the ornaments with which
ye deck yourselves? If true glory were to consist in the possession
of such perishable things, then the earth on which ye walk must needs
vaunt itself over you, because it supplieth you, and bestoweth upon
you, these very things, by the decree of the Almighty. In its bowels
are contained, according to what God hath ordained, all that ye
possess. From it, as a sign of His mercy, ye derive your riches.
Behold then your state, the thing in which ye glory! Would that ye
could perceive it! Nay! By Him Who holdeth in His grasp the kingdom
of the entire creation! Nowhere doth your true and abiding glory
reside except in your firm adherence unto the precepts of God, your
wholehearted observance of His laws, your resolution to see that they
do not remain unenforced, and to pursue steadfastly the right
course....”</p>

<p>And again in that same Tablet: “Twenty years have
passed, O kings, during which We have, each day, tasted the agony of
a fresh tribulation. No one of them that were before Us hath endured
the things We have endured. Would that ye could perceive it! They
that rose up against Us, have put Us to death, have shed Our blood,
have plundered Our property, and violated Our honor. Though aware of
most of Our afflictions, ye, nevertheless, have failed to stay the
hand of the aggressor. For is it not your clear duty to restrain the
tyranny of the oppressor, and to deal equitably with your subjects,
that your high sense of justice may be fully demonstrated to all
mankind?</p>

<p>“God hath committed into your hands the reins of
the government of the people, that ye may rule with justice over
them, safeguard the rights of the downtrodden, and punish the
wrongdoers. If ye neglect the duty prescribed unto you by God in His
Book, your names shall be numbered with those of the unjust in His
sight. Grievous, indeed, will be your error. Cleave ye to that which
your imaginations have devised, and cast behind your backs the
commandments of God, the Most Exalted, the Inaccessible, the
All-Compelling, the Almighty? Cast away the things ye possess, and
cling to that which God hath bidden you observe. Seek ye His grace,
for he that seeketh it treadeth His straight Path.</p>

<p>“Consider the state in which We are, and behold ye
the ills and troubles that have tried Us. Neglect Us not, though it
be for a moment, and judge ye between Us and Our enemies with equity.
This will, surely, be a manifest advantage unto you. Thus do We
relate to you Our tale, and recount the things that have befallen Us,
that ye might take off Our ills and ease Our burden. Let him who
will, relieve Us from Our trouble; and as to him that willeth not, my
Lord is assuredly the best of Helpers.</p>

<p>“Warn and acquaint the people, O Servant, with the
things We have sent down unto Thee, and let the fear of no one dismay
Thee, and be Thou not of them that waver. The day is approaching when
God will have exalted His Cause and magnified His testimony in the
eyes of all who are in the heavens and all who are on the earth.
Place, in all circumstances, Thy whole trust in Thy Lord, and fix Thy
gaze upon Him, and turn away from all them that repudiate His truth.
Let God, Thy Lord, be Thy sufficing Succorer and Helper. We have
pledged Ourself to secure Thy triumph upon earth and to exalt Our
Cause above all men, though no king be found who would turn his face
towards Thee....”</p>

<p>In the Kitáb-i-Aqdas (The Most Holy Book), that
priceless treasury enshrining for all time the brightest emanations
of the mind of Bahá’u’lláh, the Charter of
His World Order, the chief repository of His laws, the Harbinger of
His Covenant, the Pivotal Work containing some of His noblest
exhortations, weightiest pronouncements, and portentous prophecies,
and revealed during the full tide of His tribulations, at a time when
the rulers of the earth had definitely forsaken Him—in such a
Book we read the following:</p>

<p>“O kings of the earth! He Who is the sovereign
Lord of all is come. The Kingdom is God’s, the omnipotent
Protector, the Self-Subsisting. Worship none but God, and, with
radiant hearts, lift up your faces unto your Lord, the Lord of all
names. This is a Revelation to which whatever ye possess can never be
compared, could ye but know it. We see you rejoicing in that which ye
have amassed for others, and shutting out yourselves from the worlds
which naught except My Guarded Tablet can reckon. The treasures ye
have laid up have drawn you far away from your ultimate objective.
This ill beseemeth you, could ye but understand it. Wash your hearts
from all earthly defilements, and hasten to enter the Kingdom of your
Lord, the Creator of earth and heaven, Who caused the world to
tremble, and all its peoples to wail, except them that have renounced
all things and clung to that which the Hidden Tablet hath
ordained....”</p>

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<head>The Most Great Law Revealed</head>

<p>And further: “O kings of the earth! The Most Great
Law hath been revealed in this Spot, this Scene of transcendent
splendor. Every hidden thing hath been brought to light, by virtue of
the Will of the Supreme Ordainer, He Who hath ushered in the Last
Hour, through Whom the Moon hath been cleft, and every irrevocable
decree expounded.</p>

<p>“Ye are but vassals, O kings of the earth! He Who
is the King of Kings hath appeared, arrayed in His most wondrous
glory, and is summoning you unto Himself, the Help in Peril, the
Self-Subsisting. Take heed lest pride deter you from recognizing the
Source of Revelation; lest the things of this world shut you out as
by a veil from Him Who is the Creator of heaven. Arise, and serve Him
Who is the Desire of all nations, Who hath created you through a word
from Him, and ordained you to be, for all time, the emblems of His
sovereignty.</p>

<p>“By the righteousness of God! It is not Our wish
to lay hands on your kingdoms. Our mission is to seize and possess
the hearts of men. Upon them the eyes of Bahá are fastened. To
this testifieth the Kingdom of Names, could ye but comprehend it.
Whoso followeth his Lord, will renounce the world and all that is
therein; how much greater, then, must be the detachment of Him Who
holdeth so august a station! Forsake your palaces, and haste ye to
gain admittance into His Kingdom. This, indeed, will profit you both
in this world and in the next. To this testifieth the Lord of the
realm on high, did ye but know it.</p>

<p>“How great is the blessedness that awaiteth the
king who will arise to aid My Cause in My Kingdom, who will detach
himself from all else but Me! Such a king is numbered with the
companions of the Crimson Ark, the Ark which God hath prepared for
the people of Bahá. All must glorify his name, must reverence
his station, and aid him to unlock the cities with the keys of My
Name, the omnipotent Protector of all that inhabit the visible and
invisible kingdoms. Such a king is the very eye of mankind, the
luminous ornament on the brow of creation, the fountainhead of
blessings unto the whole world. Offer up, O people of Bahá,
your substance, nay your very lives, for his assistance.”</p>

<p>And further, this evident arraignment in that same Book:
“We have asked nothing from you. For the sake of God We,
verily, exhort you, and will be patient as We have been patient in
that which hath befallen Us at your hands, O concourse of kings!”
</p>

<p>Moreover, in His Tablet to Queen Victoria Bahá’u’lláh
thus addresses all the kings of the earth, summoning them to cleave
to the Lesser Peace, as distinct from that Most Great Peace which
those who are fully conscious of the power of His Revelation and
avowedly profess the tenets of His Faith can alone proclaim and must
eventually establish:</p>

<p>“O kings of the earth! We see you increasing every
year your expenditures, and laying the burden thereof on your
subjects. This, verily, is wholly and grossly unjust. Fear the sighs
and tears of this Wronged One, and lay not excessive burdens on your
peoples. Do not rob them to rear palaces for yourselves; nay rather
choose for them that which ye choose for yourselves. Thus We unfold
to your eyes that which profiteth you, if ye but perceive. Your
people are your treasures. Beware lest your rule violate the
commandments of God, and ye deliver your wards to the hands of the
robber. By them ye rule, by their means ye subsist, by their aid ye
conquer. Yet, how disdainfully ye look upon them! How strange, how
very strange!</p>

<p>“Now that ye have refused the Most Great Peace,
hold ye fast unto this, the Lesser Peace, that haply ye may in some
degree better your own condition and that of your dependents.</p>

<p>“O rulers of the earth! Be reconciled among
yourselves, that ye may need no more armaments save in a measure to
safeguard your territories and dominions. Beware lest ye disregard
the counsel of the All-Knowing, the Faithful.</p>

<p>“Be united, O kings of the earth, for thereby will
the tempest of discord be stilled amongst you, and your peoples find
rest, if ye be of them that comprehend. Should anyone among you take
up arms against another, rise ye all against him, for this is naught
but manifest justice.”</p>

<p>To the Christian kings Bahá’u’lláh,
moreover, particularly directs His words of censure, and, in a
language that cannot be mistaken, He discloses the true character of
His Revelation:</p>

<p>“O kings of Christendom! Heard ye not the saying
of Jesus, the Spirit of God, ‘I go away, and come again unto
you’? Wherefore, then, did ye fail, when He did come again unto
you in the clouds of heaven, to draw nigh unto Him, that ye might
behold His face, and be of them that attained His Presence? In
another passage He saith: ‘When He, the Spirit of Truth, is
come, He will guide you into all truth.’ And yet, behold how,
when He did bring the truth, ye refused to turn your faces towards
Him, and persisted in disporting yourselves with your pastimes and
fancies. Ye welcomed Him not, neither did ye seek His Presence, that
ye might hear the verses of God from His own mouth, and partake of
the manifold wisdom of the Almighty, the All-Glorious, the All-Wise.
Ye have, by reason of your failure, hindered the breath of God from
being wafted over you, and have withheld from your souls the
sweetness of its fragrance. Ye continue roving with delight in the
valley of your corrupt desires. Ye and all ye possess shall pass
away. Ye shall, most certainly, return to God, and shall be called to
account for your doings in the presence of Him Who shall gather
together the entire creation....”</p>

<p>The Báb, moreover, in the Qayyúm-i-Asmá,
His celebrated commentary on the Súrih of Joseph, revealed in
the first year of His Mission, and characterized by Bahá’u’lláh
as “the first, the greatest, and mightiest of all books”
in the Bábí Dispensation, has issued this stirring call
to the kings and princes of the earth:</p>

<p>“O concourse of kings and of the sons of kings!
Lay aside, one and all, your dominion which belongeth unto God....
Vain indeed is your dominion, for God hath set aside earthly
possessions for such as have denied Him.... O concourse of kings!
Deliver with truth and in all haste the verses sent down by Us to the
peoples of Turkey and of India, and beyond them, with power and with
truth, to lands in both the East and the West.... By God! If ye do
well, to your own behoof will ye do well; and if ye deny God and His
signs, We, in very truth, having God, can well dispense with all
creatures and all earthly dominion.”</p>

<p>And again: “Fear ye God, O concourse of kings,
lest ye remain afar from Him Who is His Remembrance [the Báb],
after the Truth hath come unto you with a Book and signs from God, as
spoken through the wondrous tongue of Him Who is His Remembrance.
Seek ye grace from God, for God hath ordained for you, after ye have
believed in Him, a Garden the vastness of which is as the vastness of
the whole of Paradise.”</p>

<p>So much for the epoch-making counsels and warnings
collectively addressed by the Báb and Bahá’u’lláh
to the sovereigns of the earth, and more particularly directed to the
kings of Christendom. I would be failing to do justice to my theme
were I to ignore, or even to dismiss briefly, those audacious,
fate-laden apostrophes to individual monarchs who, whether as kings
or emperors, have either viewed with cold indifference the
tribulations, or rejected with contempt the warnings, of the twin
Founders of our Faith. I can neither quote as fully as I should from
the two thousand and more verses that have streamed from the pen of
Bahá’u’lláh and, to a lesser extent, from
that of the Báb, addressed to individual monarchs in Europe
and Asia, nor is it my purpose to expatiate upon the circumstances
that have provoked, or the consequences that have flowed from, those
astounding utterances. The historian of the future, viewing more
widely and in fuller perspective the momentous happenings of the
Apostolic and Formative Ages of the Faith of Bahá’u’lláh,
will no doubt be able to evaluate accurately and to describe in a
circumstantial manner the causes, the implications and the effects of
these Divine Messages which, in their scope and effectiveness, have
certainly no parallel in the religious annals of mankind.</p>

<p>To the French Emperor, Napoleon III, Bahá’u’lláh
addressed these words: “O King of Paris! Tell the priest to
ring the bells no longer. By God, the True One! The Most Mighty Bell
hath appeared in the form of Him Who is the Most Great Name, and the
fingers of the will of thy Lord, the Most Exalted, the Most High,
toll it out in the heaven of Immortality, in His Name, the
All-Glorious. Thus have the mighty verses of thy Lord been again sent
down unto thee, that thou mayest arise to remember God, the Creator
of earth and heaven, in these days when all the tribes of the earth
have mourned, and the foundations of the cities have trembled, and
the dust of irreligion hath enwrapped all men, except such as thy
Lord, the All-Knowing, the All-Wise, was pleased to spare.... Give
ear, O King, unto the Voice that calleth from the Fire which burneth
in this Verdant Tree, upon this Sinai which hath been raised above
the hallowed and snow-white Spot, beyond the Everlasting City:
‘Verily, there is none other God but Me, the Ever-Forgiving,
the Most Merciful!’ We, in truth, have sent Him Whom We aided
with the Holy Spirit [Jesus], that He may announce unto you this
Light that hath shone forth from the horizon of the will of your
Lord, the Most Exalted, the All-Glorious, and Whose signs have been
revealed in the West, that ye may set your faces towards Him
[Bahá’u’lláh], on this Day which God hath
exalted above all other days, and whereon the All-Merciful hath shed
the splendor of His effulgent glory upon all who are in heaven and
all who are on earth. Arise thou to serve God and help His Cause. He,
verily, will assist thee with the hosts of the seen and unseen, and
will set thee king over all that whereon the sun riseth. Thy Lord, in
truth, is the All-Powerful, the Almighty.... Attire thy temple with
the ornament of My Name, and thy tongue with remembrance of Me, and
thine heart with love for Me, the Almighty, the Most High. We have
desired for thee naught except that which is better for thee than
what thou dost possess and all the treasures of the earth. Thy Lord,
verily, is knowing, informed of all....</p>

<p>“O King! We heard the words thou didst utter in
answer to the Czar of Russia, concerning the decision made regarding
the war [Crimean War]. Thy Lord, verily, knoweth, is informed of all.
Thou didst say: ‘I lay asleep upon my couch, when the cry of
the oppressed, who were drowned in the Black Sea, wakened me.’
This is what we heard thee say, and, verily, thy Lord is witness unto
what I say. We testify that that which wakened thee was not their
cry, but the promptings of thine own passions, for We tested thee,
and found thee wanting. Comprehend the meaning of My words, and be
thou of the discerning.... Hadst thou been sincere in thy words, thou
wouldst have not cast behind thy back the Book of God, when it was
sent unto thee by Him Who is the Almighty, the All-Wise. We have
proved thee through it, and found thee other than that which thou
didst profess. Arise, and make amends for that which escaped thee.
Erelong the world and all that thou possessest will perish, and the
kingdom will remain unto God, thy Lord and the Lord of thy fathers of
old. It behooveth thee not to conduct thine affairs according to the
dictates of thy desires. Fear the sighs of this Wronged One, and
shield Him from the darts of such as act unjustly. For what thou hast
done, thy kingdom shall be thrown into confusion, and thine empire
shall pass from thine hands, as a punishment for that which thou hast
wrought. Then wilt thou know how thou hast plainly erred. Commotions
shall seize all the people in that land, unless thou arisest to help
this Cause, and followest Him Who is the Spirit of God [Jesus] in
this, the straight Path. Hath thy pomp made thee proud? By My Life!
It shall not endure; nay, it shall soon pass away, unless thou
holdest fast by this firm Cord. We see abasement hastening after
thee, while thou art of the heedless.... Abandon thy palaces to the
people of the graves, and thine empire to whosoever desireth it, and
turn, then, unto the Kingdom. This, verily, is what God hath chosen
for thee, wert thou of them that turn unto Him.... Shouldst thou
desire to bear the weight of thy dominion, bear it then to aid the
Cause of thy Lord. Glorified be this station which whoever attaineth
thereunto hath attained unto all good that proceedeth from Him Who is
the All-Knowing, the All-Wise.... Exultest thou over the treasures
thou dost possess, knowing they shall perish? Rejoicest thou in that
thou rulest a span of earth, when the whole world, in the estimation
of the people of Bahá, is worth as much as the black in the
eye of a dead ant? Abandon it unto such as have set their affections
upon it, and turn thou unto Him Who is the Desire of the world.
Whither are gone the proud and their palaces? Gaze thou into their
tombs, that thou mayest profit by this example, inasmuch as We made
it a lesson unto every beholder. Were the breezes of Revelation to
seize thee, thou wouldst flee the world, and turn unto the Kingdom,
and wouldst expend all thou possessest, that thou mayest draw nigh
unto this sublime Vision.”</p>

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<head>Revealed to the Pope</head>

<p>To Pope Pius IX, Bahá’u’lláh
revealed the following: “O Pope! Rend the veils asunder. He Who
is the Lord of Lords is come overshadowed with clouds, and the decree
hath been fulfilled by God, the Almighty, the Unrestrained.... He,
verily, hath again come down from Heaven even as He came down from it
the first time. Beware that thou dispute not with Him even as the
Pharisees disputed with Him [Jesus] without a clear token or proof.
On His right hand flow the living waters of grace, and on His left
the choice Wine of justice, whilst before Him march the angels of
Paradise, bearing the banners of His signs. Beware lest any name
debar thee from God, the Creator of earth and heaven. Leave thou the
world behind thee, and turn towards thy Lord, through Whom the whole
earth hath been illumined.... Dwellest thou in palaces whilst He Who
is the King of Revelation liveth in the most desolate of abodes?
Leave them unto such as desire them, and set thy face with joy and
delight towards the Kingdom.... Arise in the name of thy Lord, the
God of Mercy, amidst the peoples of the earth, and seize thou the Cup
of Life with the hands of confidence, and first drink thou therefrom,
and proffer it then to such as turn towards it amongst the peoples of
all faiths....</p>

<p>“Call thou to remembrance Him Who was the Spirit
[Jesus], Who, when He came, the most learned of His age pronounced
judgment against Him in His own country, whilst he who was only a
fisherman believed in Him. Take heed, then, ye men of understanding
heart! Thou, in truth, art one of the suns of the heaven of His
names. Guard thyself, lest darkness spread its veils over thee, and
fold thee away from His light.... Consider those who opposed the Son
[Jesus], when He came unto them with sovereignty and power. How many
the Pharisees who were waiting to behold Him, and were lamenting over
their separation from Him! And yet, when the fragrance of His coming
was wafted over them, and His beauty was unveiled, they turned aside
from Him and disputed with Him.... None save a very few, who were
destitute of any power amongst men, turned towards His face. And yet
today every man endowed with power and invested with sovereignty
prideth himself on His Name! In like manner, consider how numerous,
in these days, are the monks who, in My Name, have secluded
themselves in their churches, and who, when the appointed time was
fulfilled, and We unveiled Our beauty, knew Us not, though they call
upon Me at eventide and at dawn....</p>

<p>“The Word which the Son concealed is made
manifest. It hath been sent down in the form of the human temple in
this day. Blessed be the Lord Who is the Father! He, verily, is come
unto the nations in His most great majesty. Turn your faces towards
Him, O concourse of the righteous! ...This is the day whereon the
Rock [Peter] crieth out and shouteth, and celebrateth the praise of
its Lord, the All-Possessing, the Most High, saying: ‘Lo! The
Father is come, and that which ye were promised in the Kingdom is
fulfilled!...’ My body longeth for the cross, and Mine head
waiteth the thrust of the spear, in the path of the All-Merciful,
that the world may be purged from its transgressions....</p>

<p>“O Supreme Pontiff! Incline thine ear unto that
which the Fashioner of moldering bones counseleth thee, as voiced by
Him Who is His Most Great Name. Sell all the embellished ornaments
thou dost possess, and expend them in the path of God, Who causeth
the night to return upon the day, and the day to return upon the
night. Abandon thy kingdom unto the kings, and emerge from thy
habitation, with thy face set towards the Kingdom, and, detached from
the world, then speak forth the praises of thy Lord betwixt earth and
heaven. Thus hath bidden thee He Who is the Possessor of Names, on
the part of thy Lord, the Almighty, the All-Knowing. Exhort thou the
kings and say: ‘Deal equitably with men. Beware lest ye
transgress the bounds fixed in the Book.’ This indeed becometh
thee. Beware lest thou appropriate unto thyself the things of the
world and the riches thereof. Leave them unto such as desire them,
and cleave unto that which hath been enjoined upon thee by Him Who is
the Lord of creation. Should anyone offer thee all the treasures of
the earth, refuse to even glance upon them. Be as thy Lord hath been.
Thus hath the Tongue of Revelation spoken that which God hath made
the ornament of the book of creation.... Should the inebriation of
the wine of My verses seize thee, and thou determinest to present
thyself before the throne of thy Lord, the Creator of earth and
heaven, make My love thy vesture, and thy shield remembrance of Me,
and thy provision reliance upon God, the Revealer of all power....
Verily, the day of ingathering is come, and all things have been
separated from each other. He hath stored away that which He chose in
the vessels of justice, and cast into fire that which befitteth it.
Thus hath it been decreed by your Lord, the Mighty, the Loving, in
this promised Day. He, verily, ordaineth what He pleaseth. There is
none other God save He, the Almighty, the All-Compelling.”</p>

<p>In the Tablet addressed to the Czar of Russia, Alexander
II, we read: “O Czar of Russia! Incline thine ear unto the
voice of God, the King, the Holy, and turn thou unto Paradise, the
Spot wherein abideth He Who, among the Concourse on high, beareth the
most excellent titles, and Who, in the kingdom of creation, is called
by the name of God, the Effulgent, the All-Glorious. Beware lest thy
desire deter thee from turning towards the face of thy Lord, the
Compassionate, the Most Merciful. We, verily, have heard the thing
for which thou didst supplicate thy Lord, whilst secretly communing
with Him. Wherefore, the breeze of My loving-kindness wafted forth,
and the sea of My mercy surged, and We answered thee in truth. Thy
Lord, verily, is the All-Knowing, the All-Wise. Whilst I lay chained
and fettered in the prison, one of thy ministers extended Me his aid.
Wherefore hath God ordained for thee a station which the knowledge of
none can comprehend except His knowledge. Beware lest thou barter
away this sublime station.... Beware lest thy sovereignty withhold
thee from Him Who is the Supreme Sovereign. He, verily, is come with
His Kingdom, and all the atoms cry aloud: ‘Lo! The Lord is come
in His great majesty!’ He Who is the Father is come, and the
Son [Jesus], in the holy vale, crieth out: ‘Here am I, here am
I, O Lord, My God!’, whilst Sinai circleth round the House, and
the Burning Bush calleth aloud: ‘The All-Bounteous is come
mounted upon the clouds! Blessed is he that draweth nigh unto Him,
and woe betide them that are far away.’</p>

<p>“Arise thou amongst men in the name of this
all-compelling Cause, and summon, then, the nations unto God, the
Exalted, the Great. Be thou not of them who called upon God by one of
His names, but who, when He Who is the Object of all names appeared,
denied Him and turned aside from Him, and, in the end, pronounced
sentence against Him with manifest injustice. Consider and call thou
to mind the days whereon the Spirit of God [Jesus] appeared, and
Herod gave judgment against Him. God, however, aided Him with the
hosts of the unseen, and protected Him with truth, and sent Him down
unto another land, according to His promise. He, verily, ordaineth
what He pleaseth. Thy Lord truly preserveth whom He willeth, be he in
the midst of the seas, or in the maw of the serpent, or beneath the
sword of the oppressor....</p>

<p>“Again I say: Hearken unto My voice that calleth
from My prison, that it may acquaint thee with the things that have
befallen My Beauty, at the hands of them that are the manifestations
of My glory, and that thou mayest perceive how great hath been My
patience, notwithstanding My might, and how immense My forebearance,
notwithstanding My power. By My life! Couldst thou but know the
things sent down by My Pen, and discover the treasures of My Cause,
and the pearls of My mysteries which lie hid in the seas of My names
and in the goblets of My words, thou wouldst, in thy love for My
name, and in thy longing for My glorious and sublime Kingdom, lay
down thy life in My path. Know thou that though My body be beneath
the swords of My foes, and My limbs be beset with incalculable
afflictions, yet My spirit is filled with a gladness with which all
the joys of the earth can never compare.</p>

<p>“Set thine heart towards Him Who is the Point of
adoration for the world, and say: O peoples of the earth! Have ye
denied the One in Whose path He Who came with the truth, bearing the
announcement of your Lord, the Exalted, the Great, suffered
martyrdom? Say: This is an Announcement whereat the hearts of the
Prophets and Messengers have rejoiced. This is the One Whom the heart
of the world remembereth, and is promised in the Books of God, the
Mighty, the All-Wise. The hands of the Messengers were, in their
desire to meet Me, upraised towards God, the Mighty, the
Glorified.... Some lamented in their separation from Me, others
endured hardships in My path, and still others laid down their lives
for the sake of My Beauty, could ye but know it. Say: I, verily, have
not sought to extol Mine Own Self, but rather God Himself, were ye to
judge fairly. Naught can be seen in Me except God and His Cause,
could ye but perceive it. I am the One Whom the tongue of Isaiah hath
extolled, the One with Whose name both the Torah and the Evangel were
adorned. ...Blessed be the king whose sovereignty hath withheld him
not from his Sovereign, and who hath turned unto God with his heart.
He, verily, is accounted of those that have attained unto that which
God, the Mighty, the All-Wise, hath willed. Erelong will such a one
find himself numbered with the monarchs of the realms of the Kingdom.
Thy Lord is, in truth, potent over all things. He giveth what He
willeth to whomsoever He willeth, and withholdeth what He pleaseth
from whomsoever He willeth. He, verily, is the All-Powerful, the
Almighty.”</p>

<p>To Queen Victoria Bahá’u’lláh
has written: “O Queen in London! Incline thine ear unto the
voice of thy Lord, the Lord of all mankind, calling from the Divine
Lote-Tree: Verily, no God is there but Me, the Almighty, the
All-Wise! Cast away all that is on earth, and attire the head of thy
kingdom with the crown of the remembrance of thy Lord, the
All-Glorious. He, in truth, hath come unto the world in His most
great glory, and all that hath been mentioned in the Gospel hath been
fulfilled. The land of Syria hath been honored by the footsteps of
its Lord, the Lord of all men, and north and south are both
inebriated with the wine of His presence. Blessed is the man that
inhaled the fragrance of the Most Merciful, and turned unto the
Dawning-Place of His Beauty, in this resplendent Dawn. The Mosque of
Aqsá vibrateth through the breezes of its Lord, the
All-Glorious, whilst Bathá [Mecca] trembleth at the voice of
God, the Exalted, the Most High. Whereupon every single stone of them
celebrateth the praise of the Lord, through this Great Name.</p>

<p>“Lay aside thy desire, and set then thine heart
towards thy Lord, the Ancient of Days. We make mention of thee for
the sake of God, and desire that thy name may be exalted through thy
remembrance of God, the Creator of earth and heaven. He, verily, is
witness unto that which I say. We have been informed that thou hast
forbidden the trading in slaves, both men and women. This, verily, is
what God hath enjoined in this wondrous Revelation. God hath, truly,
destined a reward for thee, because of this. He, verily, will pay the
doer of good his due recompense, wert thou to follow what hath been
sent unto thee by Him Who is the All-Knowing, the All-Informed. As to
him who turneth aside, and swelleth with pride, after that the clear
tokens have come unto him, from the Revealer of signs, his work shall
God bring to naught. He, in truth, hath power over all things. Man’s
actions are acceptable after his having recognized [the
Manifestation]. He that turneth aside from the True One is indeed the
most veiled amongst His creatures. Thus hath it been decreed by Him
Who is the Almighty, the Most Powerful.</p>

<p>“We have also heard that thou hast entrusted the
reins of counsel into the hands of the representatives of the people.
Thou, indeed, hast done well, for thereby the foundations of the
edifice of thine affairs will be strengthened, and the hearts of all
that are beneath thy shadow, whether high or low, will be
tranquilized. It behooveth them, however, to be trustworthy among His
servants, and to regard themselves as the representatives of all that
dwell on earth. This is what counseleth them, in this Tablet, He Who
is the Ruler, the All-Wise.... Blessed is he that entereth the
assembly for the sake of God, and judgeth between men with pure
justice. He, indeed, is of the blissful....</p>

<p>“Turn thou unto God and say: O my Sovereign Lord!
I am but a vassal of Thine, and Thou art, in truth, the King of
kings. I have lifted my suppliant hands unto the heaven of Thy grace
and Thy bounties. Send down, then, upon me from the clouds of Thy
generosity that which will rid me of all save Thee, and draw me nigh
unto Thyself. I beseech Thee, O my Lord, by Thy name, which Thou hast
made the king of names and the manifestation of Thyself to all who
are in heaven and on earth, to rend asunder the veils that have
intervened between me and my recognition of the Dawning-Place of Thy
signs and the Dayspring of Thy Revelation. Thou art, verily, the
Almighty, the All-Powerful, the All-Bounteous. Deprive me not, O my
Lord, of the fragrances of the Robe of Thy mercy in Thy days, and
write down for me that which Thou hast written down for Thy
handmaidens who have believed in Thee and in Thy signs, and have
recognized Thee, and set their hearts towards the horizon of Thy
Cause. Thou art truly the Lord of the worlds and of those who show
mercy the Most Merciful. Assist me, then, O my God, to remember Thee
amongst Thy handmaidens, and to aid Thy Cause in Thy lands. Accept,
then, that which hath escaped me when the light of Thy countenance
shone forth. Thou, indeed, hast power over all things. Glory be to
Thee, O Thou in Whose hand is the kingdom of the heavens and of the
earth.”</p>

<p>In the Kitáb-i-Aqdas, His Most Holy Book,
Bahá’u’lláh thus addresses the German
Emperor, William I: “Say: O King of Berlin! Give ear unto the
Voice calling from this manifest Temple: Verily, there is none other
God but Me, the Everlasting, the Peerless, the Ancient of Days. Take
heed lest pride debar thee from recognizing the Dayspring of Divine
Revelation, lest earthly desires shut thee out, as by a veil, from
the Lord of the Throne above and of the earth below. Thus counseleth
thee the Pen of the Most High. He, verily, is the Most Gracious, the
All-Bountiful. Do thou remember the one whose power transcended thy
power [Napoleon III], and whose station excelled thy station. Where
is he? Whither are gone the things he possessed? Take warning, and be
not of them that are fast asleep. He it was who cast the Tablet of
God behind him, when We made known unto him what the hosts of tyranny
had caused Us to suffer. Wherefore, disgrace assailed him from all
sides, and he went down to dust in great loss. Think deeply, O King,
concerning him, and concerning them who, like unto thee, have
conquered cities and ruled over men. The All-Merciful brought them
down from their palaces to their graves. Be warned, be of them who
reflect.”</p>

<p>And further, in that same Book, this remarkable
prophecy: “O banks of the Rhine! We have seen you covered with
gore, inasmuch as the swords of retribution were drawn against you;
and you shall have another turn. And We hear the lamentations of
Berlin, though she be today in conspicuous glory.”</p>

<p>Again in the Kitáb-i-Aqdas these words, directed
to Emperor Francis Joseph, are recorded: “O Emperor of Austria!
He who is the Dayspring of God’s Light dwelt in the prison of
Akká, at the time when thou didst set forth to visit the Aqsá
Mosque [Jerusalem]. Thou passed Him by, and inquired not about Him,
by Whom every house is exalted, and every lofty gate unlocked. We,
verily, made it [Jerusalem] a place whereunto the world should turn,
that they might remember Me, and yet thou hast rejected Him Who is
the Object of this remembrance, when He appeared with the Kingdom of
God, thy Lord and the Lord of the worlds. We have been with thee at
all times, and found thee clinging unto the Branch and heedless of
the Root. Thy Lord, verily, is a witness unto what I say. We grieved
to see thee circle round Our Name, whilst unaware of Us, though We
were before thy face. Open thine eyes, that thou mayest behold this
glorious Vision, and recognize Him Whom thou invokest in the daytime
and in the night season, and gaze on the Light that shineth above
this luminous Horizon.”</p>

<p>In the Súriy-i-Mulúk Sulṭán
‘Abdu’l-‘Azíz is addressed in the following
terms: “Hearken, O king, to the speech of Him that speaketh the
truth, Him that doth not ask thee to recompense Him with the things
God hath chosen to bestow upon thee, Him Who unerringly treadeth the
straight Path. He it is Who summoneth thee unto God, thy Lord, Who
showeth thee the right course, the way that leadeth to true felicity,
that haply thou mayest be of them with whom it shall be well.... He
that giveth up himself wholly to God, God shall, assuredly, be with
him; and he that placeth his complete trust in God, God shall,
verily, protect him from whatsoever may harm him, and shield him from
the wickedness of every evil plotter.</p>

<p>“Wert thou to incline thine ear unto My speech and
observe My counsel, God would exalt thee to so eminent a position
that the designs of no man on the whole earth could ever touch or
hurt thee. Observe, O king, with thine inmost heart and with thy
whole being, the precepts of God, and walk not in the paths of the
oppressor. Seize thou, and hold firmly within the grasp of thy might,
the reins of the affairs of thy people, and examine in person
whatever pertaineth unto them. Let nothing escape thee, for therein
lieth the highest good.</p>

<p>“Render thanks unto God for having chosen thee out
of the whole world, and made thee king over them that profess thy
faith. It well beseemeth thee to appreciate the wondrous favors with
which God hath favored thee, and to magnify continually His name.
Thou canst best praise Him if thou lovest His loved ones, and dost
safeguard and protect His servants from the mischief of the
treacherous, that none may any longer oppress them. Thou shouldst,
moreover, arise to enforce the law of God amongst them, that thou
mayest be of those who are firmly established in His law.</p>

<p>“Shouldst thou cause rivers of justice to spread
their waters amongst thy subjects, God would surely aid thee with the
hosts of the unseen and of the seen, and would strengthen thee in
thine affairs. No God is there but Him. All creation and its empire
are His. Unto Him return the works of the faithful.</p>

<p>“Place not thy reliance on thy treasures. Put thy
whole confidence in the grace of God, thy Lord. Let Him be thy trust
in whatever thou doest, and be of them that have submitted themselves
to His Will. Let Him be thy helper and enrich thyself with His
treasures, for with Him are the treasuries of the heavens and of the
earth. He bestoweth them upon whom He will, and from whom He will He
withholdeth them. There is none other God but Him, the
All-Possessing, the All-Praised. All are but paupers at the door of
His mercy; all are helpless before the revelation of His sovereignty,
and beseech His favors.</p>

<p>“Overstep not the bounds of moderation, and deal
justly with them that serve thee. Bestow upon them according to their
needs, and not to the extent that will enable them to lay up riches
for themselves, to deck their persons, to embellish their homes, to
acquire the things that are of no benefit unto them, and to be
numbered with the extravagant. Deal with them with undeviating
justice, so that none among them may either suffer want, or be
pampered with luxuries. This is but manifest justice. Allow not the
abject to rule over and dominate them who are noble and worthy of
honor, and suffer not the high-minded to be at the mercy of the
contemptible and worthless, for this is what We observed upon Our
arrival in the City [Constantinople], and to it We bear witness....</p>

<p>“Set before thine eyes God’s unerring
Balance and, as one standing in His Presence, weigh in that balance
thine actions every day, every moment of thy life. Bring thyself to
account ere thou art summoned to a reckoning, on the Day when no man
shall have strength to stand for fear of God, the Day when the hearts
of the heedless ones shall be made to tremble....</p>

<p>“Thou art God’s shadow on earth. Strive,
therefore, to act in such a manner as befitteth so eminent, so august
a station. If thou dost depart from following the things We have
caused to descend upon thee and taught thee, thou wilt, assuredly, be
derogating from that great and priceless honor. Return, then, and
cleave wholly unto God, and cleanse thine heart from the world and
all its vanities, and suffer not the love of any stranger to enter
and dwell therein. Not until thou dost purify thine heart from every
trace of such love can the brightness of the light of God shed its
radiance upon it, for to none hath God given more than one heart.
This, verily, hath been decreed and written down in His ancient Book.
And as the human heart, as fashioned by God, is one and undivided, it
behooveth thee to take heed that its affections be, also, one and
undivided. Cleave thou, therefore, with the whole affection of thine
heart, unto His love, and withdraw it from the love of anyone besides
Him, that He may aid thee to immerse thyself in the ocean of His
unity, and enable thee to become a true upholder of His oneness....</p>

</div>

<div rend="page-break-before: right">
<index index="toc" />
<index index="pdf" />
<head>Let the Oppressor Desist</head>

<p>“Let thine ear be attentive, O King, to the words
We have addressed thee. Let the oppressor desist from his tyranny,
and cut off the perpetrators of injustice from among them that
profess thy faith. By the righteousness of God! The tribulations We
have sustained are such that any pen that recounteth them cannot but
be overwhelmed with anguish. No one of them that truly believe and
uphold the unity of God can bear the burden of their recital. So
great have been Our sufferings that even the eyes of our enemies have
wept over Us, and beyond those of every discerning person. And to all
these trials have We been subjected, in spite of Our action in
approaching thee, and in bidding the people to enter beneath thy
shadow, that thou mightest be a stronghold unto them that believe in
and uphold the unity of God.</p>

<p>“Have I, O King, ever disobeyed thee? Have I, at
any time, transgressed any of thy laws? Can any of thy ministers that
represent thee in ‘Iráq produce any proof that can
establish My disloyalty to thee? No, by Him Who is the Lord of all
worlds! Not for one short moment did We rebel against thee, or
against any of thy ministers. Never, God willing, shall We revolt
against thee, though We be exposed to trials more severe than any We
suffered in the past. In the daytime and in the night season, at even
and at morn, We pray to God on thy behalf, that He may graciously aid
thee to be obedient unto Him and to observe His commandments, that He
may shield thee from the hosts of the evil ones. Do, therefore, as it
pleaseth thee, and treat Us as befitteth thy station and beseemeth
thy sovereignty. Be not forgetful of the law of God in whatever thou
desirest to achieve, now or in the days to come. Say: Praise be to
God, the Lord of all worlds!”</p>

<p>Moreover, in the Kitáb-i-Aqdas, is this vehement
apostrophe to Constantinople: “O Spot that art situate on the
shores of the two seas! The throne of tyranny hath, verily, been
stablished upon thee, and the flame of hatred hath been kindled
within thy bosom, in such wise that the Concourse on high and they
who circle around the Exalted Throne have wailed and lamented. We
behold in thee the foolish ruling over the wise, and darkness
vaunting itself against the light. Thou art indeed filled with
manifest pride. Hath thine outward splendor made thee vainglorious?
By Him Who is the Lord of mankind! It shall soon perish, and thy
daughters and thy widows and all the kindreds that dwell within thee
shall lament. Thus informeth thee the All-Knowing, the All-Wise.”
</p>

<p>As to Náṣiri’d-Dín <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh,
the Lawḥ-i-Sulṭán, despatched to him from Akká
and constituting Bahá’u’lláh’s
lengthiest Epistle to any single sovereign, proclaims: “O King!
I was but a man like others, asleep upon My couch, when lo, the
breezes of the All-Glorious were wafted over Me, and taught Me the
knowledge of all that hath been. This thing is not from Me, but from
One Who is Almighty and All-Knowing. And He bade Me lift up My voice
between earth and heaven, and for this there befell Me what hath
caused the tears of every man of understanding to flow. The learning
current amongst men I studied not; their schools I entered not. Ask
of the city wherein I dwelt, that thou mayest be well assured that I
am not of them who speak falsely. This is but a leaf which the winds
of the will of thy Lord, the Almighty, the All-Praised, have stirred.
Can it be still when the tempestuous winds are blowing? Nay, by Him
Who is the Lord of all Names and Attributes! They move it as they
list. The evanescent is as nothing before Him Who is the
Ever-Abiding. His all-compelling summons hath reached Me, and caused
Me to speak His praise amidst all people. I was indeed as one dead
when His behest was uttered. The hand of the will of thy Lord, the
Compassionate, the Merciful, transformed Me. Can anyone speak forth
of his own accord that for which all men, both high and low, will
protest against him? Nay, by Him Who taught the Pen the eternal
mysteries, save him whom the grace of the Almighty, the All-Powerful,
hath strengthened. The Pen of the Most High addresseth Me saying:
Fear not. Relate unto His Majesty the <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh that which
befell thee. His heart, verily, is between the fingers of thy Lord,
the God of Mercy, that haply the sun of justice and bounty may shine
forth above the horizon of his heart. Thus hath the decree been
irrevocably fixed by Him Who is the All-Wise.</p>

<p>“Look upon this Youth, O King, with the eyes of
justice; judge thou, then, with truth concerning what hath befallen
Him. Of a verity, God hath made thee His shadow amongst men, and the
sign of His power unto all that dwell on earth. Judge thou between Us
and them that have wronged Us without proof and without an
enlightening Book. They that surround thee love thee for their own
sakes, whereas this Youth loveth thee for thine own sake, and hath
had no desire except to draw thee nigh unto the seat of grace, and to
turn thee toward the right hand of justice. Thy Lord beareth witness
unto that which I declare.</p>

<p>“O King! Wert thou to incline thine ear unto the
shrill of the Pen of Glory and the cooing of the Dove of Eternity
which, on the branches of the Lote-Tree beyond which there is no
passing, uttereth praises to God, the Maker of all names and Creator
of earth and heaven, thou wouldst attain unto a station from which
thou wouldst behold in the world of being naught save the effulgence
of the Adored One, and wouldst regard thy sovereignty as the most
contemptible of thy possessions, abandoning it to whosoever might
desire it, and setting thy face toward the Horizon aglow with the
light of His countenance. Neither wouldst thou ever be willing to
bear the burden of dominion save for the purpose of helping thy Lord,
the Exalted, the Most High. Then would the Concourse on high bless
thee. O how excellent is this most sublime station, couldst thou
ascend thereunto through the power of a sovereignty recognized as
derived from the Name of God!...</p>

<p>“O King of the age! The eyes of these refugees are
turned towards and fixed upon the mercy of the Most Merciful. No
doubt is there whatever that these tribulations will be followed by
the outpourings of a supreme mercy, and these dire adversities be
succeeded by an overflowing prosperity. We fain would hope, however,
that His Majesty the <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh will himself examine these
matters, and bring hope to the hearts. That which We have submitted
to thy Majesty is indeed for thine highest good. And God, verily, is
a sufficient witness unto Me....</p>

<p>“O would that thou wouldst permit Me, O <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh,
to send unto thee that which would cheer the eyes, and tranquilize
the souls, and persuade every fair-minded person that with Him is the
knowledge of the Book.... But for the repudiation of the foolish and
the connivance of the divines, I would have uttered a discourse that
would have thrilled and carried away the hearts unto a realm from the
murmur of whose winds can be heard: ‘No God is there but
He!’...</p>

<p>“I have seen, O <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh, in the path of
God what eye hath not seen nor ear heard.... How numerous the
tribulations which have rained, and will soon rain, upon Me! I
advance with My face set towards Him Who is the Almighty, the
All-Bounteous, whilst behind Me glideth the serpent. Mine eyes have
rained down tears until My bed is drenched. I sorrow not for Myself,
however. By God! Mine head yearneth for the spear out of love for its
Lord. I never passed a tree, but Mine heart addressed it saying: ‘O
would that thou wert cut down in My name, and My body crucified upon
thee, in the path of My Lord!’... By God! Though weariness lay
Me low, and hunger consume Me, and the bare rock be My bed, and My
fellows the beasts of the field, I will not complain, but will endure
patiently as those endued with constancy and firmness have endured
patiently, through the power of God, the Eternal King and Creator of
the nations, and will render thanks unto God under all conditions. We
pray that, out of His bounty—exalted be He—He may
release, through this imprisonment, the necks of men from chains and
fetters, and cause them to turn, with sincere faces, towards His
Face, Who is the Mighty, the Bounteous. Ready is He to answer
whosover calleth upon Him, and nigh is He unto such as commune with
Him.”</p>

<p>In the Qayyúm-i-Asmá the Báb, for
His part, thus addresses Muḥammad <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh: “O
King of Islám! Aid thou, with the truth, after having aided
the Book, Him Who is Our Most Great Remembrance, for God hath, in
very truth, destined for thee, and for such as circle round thee, on
the Day of Judgment, a responsible position in His Path. I swear by
God, O <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh! If thou showest enmity unto Him Who is His
Remembrance, God will, on the Day of Resurrection, condemn thee,
before the kings, unto hellfire, and thou shalt not, in very truth,
find on that Day any helper except God, the Exalted. Purge thou, O
<hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh, the Sacred Land [Ṭihrán] from such
as have repudiated the Book, ere the day whereon the Remembrance of
God cometh, terribly and of a sudden, with His potent Cause, by the
leave of God, the Most High. God, verily, hath prescribed to thee to
submit unto Him Who is His Remembrance, and unto His Cause, and to
subdue, with the truth and by His leave, the countries, for in this
world thou hast been mercifully invested with sovereignty, and will,
in the next, dwell, nigh unto the Seat of Holiness, with the inmates
of the Paradise of His good pleasure. Let not thy sovereignty deceive
thee, O <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh, for ‘every soul shall taste of
death,’ and this, in very truth, hath been written down as a
decree of God.”</p>

<p>In His Tablet to Muḥammad <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh the
Báb, moreover, has revealed: “I am the Primal Point from
which have been generated all created things. I am the Countenance of
God Whose splendor can never be obscured, the Light of God Whose
radiance can never fade.... All the keys of heaven God hath chosen to
place on My right hand, and all the keys of hell on My left.... I am
one of the sustaining pillars of the Primal Word of God. Whosoever
hath recognized Me, hath known all that is true and right, and hath
attained all that is good and seemly.... The substance wherewith God
hath created Me is not the clay out of which others have been formed.
He hath conferred upon Me that which the worldly-wise can never
comprehend, nor the faithful discover....</p>

<p>“By My life! But for the obligation to acknowledge
the Cause of Him Who is the Testimony of God ... I would not have
announced this unto thee.... In that same year [year 60] I despatched
a messenger and a book unto thee, that thou mightest act towards the
Cause of Him Who is the Testimony of God as befitteth the station of
thy sovereignty....</p>

<p>“I swear by the truth of God! Were he who hath
been willing to treat Me in such a manner to know who it is whom he
hath so treated, he, verily, would never in his life be happy. Nay—I,
verily, acquaint thee with the truth of the matter—it is as if
he hath imprisoned all the Prophets, and all the men of truth, and
all the chosen ones.... Woe betide him from whose hands floweth evil,
and blessed the man from whose hands floweth good....</p>

<p>“I swear by God! I seek no earthly goods from
thee, be it as much as a mustard seed.... I swear by the truth of
God! Wert thou to know that which I know, thou wouldst forego the
sovereignty of this world and of the next, that thou mightest attain
My good pleasure, through thine obedience unto the True One.... Wert
thou to refuse, the Lord of the world would raise up one who will
exalt His Cause, and the Command of God will, verily, be carried into
effect.”</p>

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<head>God’s Vicar on Earth</head>

<p>Dear friends! How vast a panorama these gemlike, these
soul-searching divinely uttered pronouncements outspread before our
eyes! What memories they evoke! How sublime the principles they
inculcate! What hopes they engender! What apprehensions they excite!
And yet how fragmentary must these above-quoted words, suited as they
are to the immediate purpose of my theme, appear when compared with
the torrential majesty which only the reading of the full text can
disclose! He Who was God’s Vicar on earth, addressing, at the
most critical moment when His Revelation was attaining its zenith,
those who concentrated in their persons the splendor, the
sovereignty, and the strength of earthly dominion, could certainly
not subtract one jot or tittle from the weight and force which the
presentation of so historic a Message demanded. Neither the perils
which were fast closing in upon Him, nor the formidable power with
which the doctrine of absolute sovereignty invested, at that time,
the emperors of the West and the potentates of the East, could
restrain the Exile and Prisoner of Adrianople from communicating the
full blast of His Message to His twin imperial persecutors as well as
to the rest of their fellow-sovereigns.</p>

<p>The magnitude and diversity of the theme, the cogency of
the argument, the sublimity and audacity of the language, arrest our
attention and astound our minds. Emperors, kings and princes,
chancellors and ministers, the Pope himself, priests, monks and
philosophers, the exponents of learning, parliamentarians and
deputies, the rich ones of the earth, the followers of all religions,
and the people of Bahá—all are brought within the
purview of the Author of these Messages, and receive, each according
to their merits, the counsels and admonitions they deserve. No less
amazing is the diversity of the subjects touched upon in these
Tablets. The transcendent majesty and unity of an unknowable and
unapproachable God is extolled, and the oneness of His Messengers
proclaimed and emphasized. The uniqueness, the universality and
potentialities of the Bahá’í Faith are stressed,
and the purpose and character of the Bábí Revelation
unfolded. The significance of Bahá’u’lláh’s
sufferings and banishments is disclosed, and the tribulations rained
down upon His Herald and upon His Namesake recognized and lamented.
His own yearning for the crown of martyrdom, which they both so
mysteriously won, is voiced, and the ineffable glories and wonders in
store for His own Dispensation foreshadowed. Episodes, at once moving
and marvelous, at various stages of His ministry, are recounted, and
the transitoriness of worldly pomp, fame, riches, and sovereignty,
repeatedly and categorically asserted. Appeals for the application of
the highest principles in human and international relations are
forcibly and insistently made, and the abandonment of discreditable
practices and conventions, detrimental to the happiness, the growth,
the prosperity and the unity of the human race, enjoined. Kings are
censured, ecclesiastical dignitaries arraigned, ministers and
plenipotentiaries condemned, and the identification of His advent
with the coming of the Father Himself unequivocally admitted and
repeatedly announced. The violent downfall of a few of these kings
and emperors is prophesied, two of them are definitely challenged,
most are warned, all are appealed to and exhorted.</p>

<p>In the Lawḥ-i-Sulṭán (Tablet to the
<hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh of Persia) Bahá’u’lláh
declares: “Would that the world-adorning wish of His Majesty
might decree that this Servant be brought face to face with the
divines of the age, and produce proofs and testimonies in the
presence of His Majesty the <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh! This Servant is
ready, and taketh hope in God, that such a gathering may be convened
in order that the truth of the matter may be made clear and manifest
before His Majesty the <hi rend="text-decoration: underline">Sh</hi>áh. It is then for thee to
command, and I stand ready before the throne of thy sovereignty.
Decide, then, for Me or against Me.”</p>

<p>And moreover, in the Lawḥ-i-Ra’ís,
Bahá’u’lláh, recalling His conversation
with the Turkish officer charged with the task of enforcing His
banishment to the fortress-town of Akká, has written: “There
is a matter, which, if thou findest it possible, I request thee to
submit to His Majesty the Sulṭán, that for ten minutes
this Youth be enabled to meet him, so that he may demand whatsoever
he deemeth as a sufficient testimony and regardeth as proof of the
veracity of Him Who is the Truth. Should God enable Him to produce
it, let him, then, release these wronged ones, and leave them to
themselves.” “He promised,” Bahá’u’lláh
adds in that Tablet, “to transmit this message, and to give Us
his reply. We received, however, no news from him. Although it
becometh not Him Who is the Truth to present Himself before any
person, inasmuch as all have been created to obey Him, yet in view of
the condition of these little children and the large number of women
so far removed from their friends and countries, We have acquiesced
in this matter. In spite of this nothing hath resulted. Umar himself
is alive and accessible. Inquire from him, that the truth may be made
known unto you.”</p>

<p>Referring to these Tablets addressed to the sovereigns
of the earth, and which ‘Abdu’l-Bahá has acclaimed
as a “miracle,” Bahá’u’lláh has
written: “Each one of them hath been designated by a special
name. The first hath been named ‘The Rumbling,’ the
second, ‘The Blow,’ the third, ‘The Inevitable,’
the fourth, ‘The Plain,’ the fifth, ‘The
Catastrophe,’ and the others, ‘The Stunning Trumpet
Blast,’ ‘The Near Event,’ ‘The Great Terror,’
‘The Trumpet,’ ‘The Bugle,’ and their like,
so that all the peoples of the earth may know, of a certainty, and
may witness, with outward and inner eyes, that He Who is the Lord of
Names hath prevailed, and will continue to prevail, under all
conditions, over all men.... Never since the beginning of the world
hath the Message been so openly proclaimed.... Glorified be this
Power which hath shone forth and compassed the worlds! This act of
the Causer of Causes hath, when revealed, produced two results. It
hath at once sharpened the swords of the infidels, and unloosed the
tongues of such as have turned towards Him in His remembrance and
praise. This is the effect of the fertilizing winds, mention of which
hath been made aforetime in the Lawḥ-i-Haykal. The whole earth
is now in a state of pregnancy. The day is approaching when it will
have yielded its noblest fruits, when from it will have sprung forth
the loftiest trees, the most enchanting blossoms, the most heavenly
blessings. Immeasurably exalted is the breeze that wafteth from the
garment of thy Lord, the Glorified! For lo, it hath breathed its
fragrance and made all things new! Well it is with them that
comprehend. It is indubitably clear and evident that in these things
He Who is the Lord of Revelation hath sought nothing for Himself.
Though aware that they would lead to tribulations, and be the cause
of troubles and afflictive trials, He, solely as a token of His
loving-kindness and favor, and for the purpose of quickening the dead
and of manifesting the Cause of the Lord of all Names and Attributes,
and of redeeming all who are on earth, hath closed His eyes to His
own well-being and borne that which no other person hath borne or
will bear.”</p>

<p>The most important of His Tablets addressed to
individual sovereigns Bahá’u’lláh ordered
to be written in the form of a pentacle, symbolizing the temple of
man, including therein, as a conclusion, the following words which
reveal the importance He attached to those Messages, and indicate
their direct association with the prophecy of the Old Testament:
“Thus have We built the Temple with the hands of power and
might, could ye but know it. This is the Temple promised unto you in
the Book. Draw ye nigh unto it. This is that which profiteth you,
could ye but comprehend it. Be fair, O peoples of the earth! Which is
preferable, this, or a temple which is built of clay? Set your faces
towards it. Thus have ye been commanded by God, the Help in Peril,
the Self-Subsisting. Follow ye His bidding, and praise ye God, your
Lord, for that which He hath bestowed upon you. He, verily, is the
Truth. No God is there but He. He revealeth what He pleaseth, through
His words ‘Be and it is.’”</p>

<p>Referring to this same subject, He, in one of His
Tablets, thus addresses the followers of Jesus Christ: “O
concourse of the followers of the Son! Verily, the Temple hath been
built with the hands of the will of your Lord, the Almighty, the
All-Bounteous. Bear, then, witness, O people, unto that which I say:
Which is preferable, that which is built of clay, or that which is
built by the hands of your Lord, the Revealer of verses? This is the
Temple promised unto you in the Tablets. It calleth aloud: ‘O
followers of religions! Haste ye to attain unto Him Who is the Source
of all causes, and follow not every infidel and doubter.’”
</p>

<p>It should not be forgotten that, apart from these
specific Tablets in which the kings of the earth are severally and
collectively addressed, Bahá’u’lláh has
revealed other Tablets—the Lawḥ-i-Ra’ís
being an outstanding example—and interspersed the mass of His
voluminous writings with unnumbered passages, in which direct
addresses, as well as references, have been made to ministers,
governments, and their accredited representatives. I am not
concerned, however, with such addresses and references, which, vital
as they are, cannot be regarded as being endowed with that peculiar
pregnancy which direct and specific messages, voiced by the
Manifestation of God and directed to the world’s Chief
Magistrates in His day, must possess.</p>

<p>Dear friends! Enough has been said to portray the
tribulations which, for so long a time, overwhelmed the Founders of