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Source: Bahá'í Library Online (bahai-library.com), curated by Jonah Winters. Used by permission of the curator. Original citation: Peter J. Khan, Some Aspects of Baha'i Scholarship, bahai-library.com.
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Essay/Essai/Ensayo
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship*
Peter J. Khan
Abstract
This essay identifies four core ideas that should characterize Bahá’í
scholarship: the central position of the Creative Word in the acquisition of
knowledge; the interconnected Bahá’í model of the world; the progressive
nature of Bahá’í law; and the organic relationship of scholarship and the
Covenant. Bahá’í scholarly activity rests on the constructive interaction of faith
and reason, avoiding the extremes of materialism and superstition. Five
principal forms of Bahá’í scholarly activity are discussed: study of the Faith’s
historical origins, textual analysis, investigation of religious concepts,
application of the teachings to contemporary issues, and study of social and
historical phenomena in the growth of the Faith. Suggestions for future
research are outlined; the spiritual attributes that should characterize
individual scholars are discussed; and the article concludes with prospects for
the greater unification of knowledge in the future.
Résumé
Cet essai énonce quatre idées centrales qui devraient caractériser l’érudition
bahá’íe: la place centrale de la Parole créatrice dans l’acquisition du savoir, la
nature interrelative du modèle bahá’í de la vision du monde, la nature
progressive des lois bahá’íes, et la nature organique du rapport entre
l’érudition et l’Alliance. L’érudition bahá’íe se fonde sur une interaction
constructive entre la foi et la raison, une démarche qui évite les extrêmes
associés au matérialisme et à la superstition. L’article aborde cinq formes
essentielles d’érudition bahá’íe: l’étude des origines historiques de la Foi,
l’analyse textuelle; l’exploration de concepts religieux; les enseignements
bahá’ís et leur application aux problèmes contemporains; et l’étude des
phénomènes sociaux et historiques en cause dans la croissance de la Foi.
L’article propose des pistes de recherches futures, traite des qualités
spirituelles qui devraient caractériser les personnes qui se consacrent à
l’érudition bahá’íe, et, enfin, aborde les possibilités de parvenir à une plus
grande unification des connaissances dans l’avenir.
Resumen
Este ensayo identifica cuatro ideas esenciales que deben caracterizar la
*Transcript of a talk presented at the Bahá’í World Centre on 15 October 1999.
Copyright © 2000 Association for Bahá’í Studies. All rights reserved.
44 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
erudición bahá’í: la posición central de la Palabra creadora en la adquisición
de sabiduría; el modelo interconectado bahá’í del mundo; la naturaleza
progresiva de las leyes bahá’ís; y la relación orgánica entre la erudición y el
Convenio. La actividad erudita bahá’í descansa sobre la interacción
constructiva entre la fe y la razón, apartándose así de los extremos tanto del
materialismo como de la superstición. Se adelantan cinco formas principales de
actividad erudita bahá’í: el estudio de los orígenes históricos de la Fe, análisis
de los textos, investigación de conceptos religiosos, aplicación de las
enseñanzas a temas contemporáneos, y el estudio de los fenómenos históricos y
sociales asociados con el crecimiento de la Fe. Se hace un bosquejo para
investigaciones futuras; se refiere a los atributos espirituales que deberán
caracterizar los eruditos individualmente, y concluye el ensayo con las
perspectivas para la mayor unificación del conocimiento en el futuro.
Introduction
The title “Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship” is not intended to be any kind
of complete treatment of a subject which has many facets and ramifications. I
have deliberately chosen to focus on those aspects which I see as distinctive to
Bahá’í scholarship, as distinct from other forms of scholarship with which we
are very familiar in the world around us. In other words, I am deliberately
picking out certain points where I see Bahá’í scholarship to be different. I do
this for two reasons. First, because I think it is important that we see the
distinction, and that we appreciate the characteristics, which are unique to the
Bahá’í community in its approach to scholarly endeavor. The other reason is
because I think it is useful to us to know what kind of patterns of thought we
should avoid falling into unconsciously. Because we are in a milieu where there
are many very good people carrying out scholarly activity from their own
perspective, which differs from a Bahá’í perspective, we can quite fall into their
pattern of thinking. But if we can identify and clarify in our minds those things
which are distinctive, it can put us on our guard against unconsciously falling
into these other patterns.
In preparing this presentation, I have relied almost entirely on two booklets
that have been published recently. One is called Issues Related to the Study of
the Bahá’í Faith, a collection of excerpts from letters written on behalf of the
Universal House of Justice. The other is the Scholarship compilation prepared
by the Research Department at the Bahá’í World Centre and published in 1995.
Core Ideas
It occurred to me that there are certain core ideas that are very significant in
developing the concept of the distinctive nature of Bahá’í scholarship, and I will
discuss briefly four of them which I see to be especially pertinent. They may to
some extent be obvious, or even self-evident. However, I think it is important
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 45
that we remind ourselves of these core ideas and their significance, as it provides
a useful background to examining some of the issues we are dealing with in the
development of Bahá’í scholarship.
1. The Creative Word
The first of these core ideas is the nature of the Creative Word. Any form of
Bahá’í scholarship must necessarily be founded upon our concept of the
Creative Word of our Revelation. It is very mysterious. We could spend many
hours talking about it and we would have hardly introduced the subject. But it is
sufficient to say that to us, as Bahá’ís carrying out any form of intellectual
activity including scholarship, the Creative Word occupies a central position in
the acquisition of knowledge. Others would regard it as one factor, as one
component in whatever subject they are studying. To us, it is central; it is right
there in the middle. Bahá’u’lláh in one of His tablets refers to His Revelation,
saying that He has “proclaimed before the face of all the peoples of the world
that which will serve as the key for unlocking the doors of sciences, of arts, of
knowledge, of well-being, of prosperity and wealth” (Tablets of Bahá’u’lláh 96).
And if in fact He has provided the key for unlocking the doors to all these
things, then naturally we will accord the Creative Word a central position.
This has a number of implications. Clearly, we regard the Creative Word as
authoritative, irrespective of whether or not it conforms to prevailing trends of
thought. ‘Abdu’l-Bahá in Some Answered Questions (chap. 7) refers to the
apparent dilemma of the early Muslims who found quite categorically, in the
statements of the Qur’án, reference to a heliocentric universe with the planets
revolving around the sun. At that time the prevailing view was of a geocentric
universe with everything revolving around the earth in incredibly complex
patterns. He describes that as a very simple example of the centrality of the
Creative Word in relation to the prevailing thought which is naturally subject to
change with the passage of time.
Second, we regard the Creative Word as limitless in its meaning, of a
character radically different from any other statements, because it is the Holy
Word. It is the Word of the Manifestation of God, and it can thus convey an
infinite degree of meaning in various forms. Much more complicated is the fact
that we are told in our Writings that a true or deep understanding of the
mysteries of the Creative Word is dependent fundamentally upon our spiritual
condition. This is not the place to go into the dynamics of this process, but it is
sufficient to point out that, as Bahá’u’lláh says, “The heart must needs therefore
be cleansed from the idle sayings of men, and sanctified from every earthly
affection, so that it may discover the hidden meaning of divine inspiration, and
become the treasury of the mysteries of divine knowledge” (Kitáb-i-Íqán 70).
This now leads us into asking ourselves what are the various ways of
acquiring knowledge, when the Creative Word is accessible to us. This is a very
46 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
complex subject and the remarks I make about it will be fairly superficial,
otherwise we will never get through it tonight! ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, in S o m e
Answered Questions (chap. 83), refers to the four methods of acquiring
knowledge. Very briefly, these are: first, through the senses; second, through
the power of reason and logical deduction; third, through arguing by analogy
from generally accepted statements or traditions; and fourth, through the power
of the Holy Spirit. And if I understand correctly, He says the first three—senses,
logic, and analogy—are fallible or capable of leading to erroneous conclusions.
He uses a variety of illustrations to make His point and then He says that the
acquisition of knowledge through the power of the Holy Spirit is infallible—is
authoritative, free from error. What I find evident in that talk is that He does not
discount the value of, or forbid us from using, the first three of the four
methods. What He simply says is that they are not authoritative. But the
implication that I get from that talk is that it is perfectly all right to use these
three, provided we bear in mind His cautions about these approaches not being
authoritative.
In fact we do use these three methods productively; for example, consider the
acquisition of knowledge through the senses. The whole of experimental
sciences, observations of people and of the dynamics of society, observations of
astronomy and chemistry and biology, are made through the senses. It produces
very sound knowledge and most useful results. We use the power of reasoning
in pure mathematics, various kinds of geometry, and other deductive forms of
logic in the physical and social sciences. And it proves a very powerful and
useful tool. We use analogy in the process of scientific inference. Arguing by
analogy to discover new knowledge is considered to be very acceptable from a
Bahá’í perspective. However, we should always be clear that, as Bahá’ís, we
regard the results of all of these forms of acquiring knowledge as being
ultimately subordinate to the authority of the Creative Word, where it
illuminates the subject. The Creative Word does not speak explicitly about the
Pythagorean Theorem, or explicitly about the various theories of atomic
structure, or the nature of neutrons, protons, or electrons. But where there is any
apparent explicit conflict of view, the Creative Word must be given priority.
In applying this principle one learns that nothing is very simple and nothing is
very obvious. What we find is that in our use of the authority of the Creative
Word we have to avoid some very intriguing extremes. One extreme is that of
narrowness, reflected in the erroneous view that we need only the Revelation of
Bahá’u’lláh and that all secular knowledge is wrong. The physical sciences are
stigmatized as being incorrect because they take no account of the spiritual
dimension of creation. Psychology is condemned because most theories appear
not to take into account the spiritual nature of man. Economics is dismissed as
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 47
appearing not to accommodate a spiritual solution to economic problems.
Evolution and the Darwinian perspective are condemned as being contrary to
the belief in God. Philosophy is regarded as being a waste of time, criticized as
being largely unrelated to religion. We Bahá’ís have to be on our guard against
this kind of thinking creeping into our Bahá’í discourse. It is dangerous, very
narrow, and quite wrong. When I was a youth, growing up in a Bahá’í
community, I decided to study at a university. A number of very well-meaning
and very good people were very troubled that I would do so, and pointed out to
me the passage in the Kitáb-i-Íqán where it says that “Knowledge is one point,
which the foolish have multiplied” (Kitáb-i-Íqán 184). The idea of going to
university for ten years, as I did, to acquire expertise in a fairly narrow area
seemed to them to be a prime case of somebody multiplying ignorance, whereas
I had before me the Revelation of Bahá’u’lláh which contained all knowledge.
Fortunately, I managed to avoid this pernicious line of thinking. But I saw
around me, and I have seen later, in both Australia and the United States, a
number of very capable and sincere people who severed their connection with
the Faith because of their exposure to this narrow line of thinking. Even here in
the Holy Land, one does occasionally see this line of thinking appearing in
disguise from time to time. Sometimes the disguise is very attractive, using
pilgrim notes and assertions about calamities to create a mind-set which rejects
the wider society. We must always be on our guard against this crypto-
fundamentalist thinking, which can lead us into error through a narrow
approach to the Writings and to the centrality of the Creative Word.
Another extreme, which is also to be avoided, is that of unwarranted
inference based on the Writings. For example, the Writings point out to us that
the universe is without beginning and without end. One of the very fashionable
theories of the origins of the universe is the so-called big bang theory, which
maintains that everything was compressed into a singularity and then it all went
bang and the universe, with its galaxies and systems of galaxies, was created. I
think we have to be very careful to avoid categorical statements such as “The
big bang theory is definitely wrong, because Bahá’u’lláh says the universe is
without beginning and end!” I regard this as an unwarranted inference. The
question of the creation of the universe is far more complex because the big
bang theory raises all kinds of questions about space and time, and about the
implications of the general theory of relativity.
Another example arises from the question of the creation of life in the test
tube. ‘Abdu’l-Bahá has said, in Some Answered Questions (chap. 47), that
attempts at the artificial creation of life will be unsuccessful because it is an
unnatural approach. We have to be careful in making inferences from that
statement about the ultimate success or failure of attempts to create life in the
48 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
test tube. I was alerted to that by seeing the response of the House of Justice to a
question about the possible synthesis of an elementary life form. The House of
Justice gave a very cautious response, referring to certain key phrases in the
statement of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá and pointing out that their implications will only
become clear as biological science advances. My impression was that the House
of Justice was simply indicating the danger of unwarranted inference in
comparing the authority of the Text with prevailing views. The same caution
should apply to the question of life on other planets, and to questions of the existence
of the ether, in relation to nineteenth-century physics, the Michelson-Morley
experiment, quantum mechanics, and relativity.
2. Interconnectedness
The second core idea concerns the concept of interconnectedness. My
understanding is that the Bahá’í model of the world is one of interconnectedness,
and of mutual and reciprocal actions. This may become a little clearer when I
give you some examples. What I see as the Bahá’í model, in both the spiritual
and the material aspects of creation, is entities and processes which interconnect
with each other—a dynamic model of interrelationships, rather than a static
model. These relationships may be of a positive feedback form, mutually
constructive for growth, or of a negative feedback form, operating to preserve
equilibrium.
Let me use some examples. My reading of the Writings is that the concept of
individual spiritual development is intimately related to social development, the
development of society. This is, I think, the underlying basis for having an
Administrative Order and provides insight into the spiritual consequences of the
Administrative Order. We see individual and social development as interacting
in a mutually supportive and constructive manner. A message of the House of
Justice on universal participation written in September 1964 (Messages 19)
develops that concept in a very interesting way from the organic model—the
model of interconnectedness. This stands in contrast to the prevailing view,
which embraces what we could describe as a false dichotomy: the view that
individual spiritual development occurs by going off into a cave, or in the
desert, or withdrawing to a monastery, and working on yourself in isolation, and
when you get yourself into a shining, polished condition, then you come out
into society. The concept of the Bahá’í Faith is not of withdrawal from the
world in order to perfect one’s spirituality, but rather doing so interactively with
society. We see this separation of individual from society for spiritual
development as a false dichotomy.
A similar invalid separation applies to the concepts of spiritual and material.
They are, in the society around us, regarded as antithetical. The conventional
view is that the more spiritual you are, the less materially involved you should
be. People who are rich are, by definition, considered to be unspiritual, as are
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 49
people who are involved in commerce. Conversely, some societies in the world
are regarded as highly spiritual, as opposed to the Western world which is
stigmatized as being corrupt and materialistic, despite the fact that these
societies are filthy dirty, with dispirited and apathetic people living in a
degraded condition, their womenfolk are suppressed and denied education, and
there is no aspiration to education or material development. People of such
societies are considered as spiritual by the conventional standards of the world
around us. All this, I think, is an example of what I would regard as another
false dichotomy.
A comprehensive understanding of the interaction of spiritual and material is
obviously far beyond our conception. ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, for example, in the Tablet
of Purity (Selections 129), refers to cleanliness as having a spiritual effect.
There is obviously a mysterious aspect of the interaction between internal and
external environments. The Guardian, in often-quoted passage, refers to the
interaction of the internal environment within the individual and the external
environment in the larger society around us, and describes them as mutually
supportive and interactive rather than being unrelated or in conflict with each
other. When the Terraces on Mount Carmel are dedicated and the Arc Project
buildings are complete, and when the world becomes more clearly aware of
them, we will be asked why we have spent so much money on beautiful gardens
and marble-clad buildings at a time when people are starving. A fundamental
answer to those questions will include our development of the concept of the
relationship between the internal and the external environments and their
mutually supportive, reciprocal nature.
Several implications arise from this sense of interconnectedness. One is that
we might best look at any spiritual concept with which we are dealing from a
holistic or systems perspective. Elements interact with each other and processes
influence each other; therefore, we cannot accurately get a comprehensive view
of any one entity in the Bahá’í model of the universe by looking at it on its own.
One also has to look at it in its interaction with other elements of our model of
the universe in order to appreciate it. This becomes much more challenging
and much more difficult than in traditional scholarship and it requires a more
global perspective.
The second implication is that we can profitably draw on analogies and
insights from an organic body—from biology, zoology, physiology, and the
like—in order to illuminate certain aspects of the Bahá’í model because our
concept of the world, with its spiritual and material components, is basically
organic. All kinds of interaction, some of a mysterious nature and others more
obvious in the universe around us, arise from its organic characteristics. For
example, in biology there is the concept called homeostasis, whereby the body
has a tendency to use negative feedback to return to equilibrium when subject to
perturbation. If the temperature of the body rises as a result of an external
50 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
stimulus, certain mechanisms come into play which are designed to return the
temperature to the normal 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. This is a very interesting
biological concept, well known to those who study physiology. It has very
important implications for the study of Bahá’í law enforcement in the
functioning of the Administrative Order, because one can show that the Bahá’í
approach to law enforcement, dealing with people who violate Bahá’í law, is
intrinsically homeostatic. It is designed to return the body of the community to
equilibrium, and to a proper healthy condition. One can get greater insight into
the Bahá’í administrative processes, and make a number of aspects of Bahá’í
law enforcement palatable to those who may be skeptical about it, by appealing
to the homeostatic analogy from biology.
3. The Nature of Bahá’í Law
The third of the four core ideas concerns Bahá’í law. As you might expect, a certain
amount of Bahá’í scholarship is concerned with the analysis of Bahá’í law. This is
partly because law is a means of defining a community and its functioning, with the
interrelationship between its members of the community as well as with the larger
society; and also because people are quite naturally interested in relating the laws
of the Bahá’í Faith to the precepts of other religions or to the laws of civil society.
In this discussion of the distinctive nature of Bahá’í scholarship, we should bear in
mind the fact that Bahá’í law is a very unusual entity, having three characteristics
that are quite different from the prevailing systems of law in the rest of the world,
particularly those in other religious communities. This is discussed more fully in
the book on Advancement of Women, but we can review it briefly here.
One of these is the concept of progressive clarification. Rather than Bahá’í law
being given to us in one great big document, all together in one place, and indexed
and codified, it is progressively clarified. If you look at the structure of the
teachings, there are statements in an early stage of the Revelation, such as Hidden
Words, that are ambiguous and susceptible to many meanings if taken in isolation.
They become clearer when considered in the light of subsequent components of the
Revelation or its authoritative interpretation. This can lead critics to imagine they
have found contradictions, or to claim that changes were made for reasons of
expediency or pressure. The concept of progressive clarification is intrinsic to the
structure of the Bahá’í law, and also relates to the organic nature of the
development of the community. It is analogous to embryology, where the
components of the embryo progressively become more differentiated with the
progression of its evolution.
The second distinctive characteristic of Bahá’í law is its progressive application
in a gradual manner, when the House of Justice so decides. For example, the law of
Huqúqu’lláh was enunciated by Bahá’u’lláh, but only in recent years has its
universal application come into being. There are a number of laws of the Aqdas
which are not applied in all parts of the world at the present time but will be applied
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 51
in due course. This, of course, opens the way to those wanting to criticize the Faith
to misrepresent progressive application as arising from fear, expediency, or
pressure. It is more properly viewed from an evolutionary perspective as the Bahá’í
community develops.
The third feature of Bahá’í law is that there are laws which are not found in the
explicit Text. These are laws made by the Universal House of Justice, operating
with its defined sphere of validity, in legislating on matters not covered in the
Writings. The House of Justice has done this very rarely and very infrequently. As
the Dispensation continues, presumably it will do more of this. But there are some
examples where the House of Justice has made pronouncements on matters not
covered in the Writings, for example, its condemnation of the deplorable practice
of female genital mutilation.
4. Organizational Issues
I believe that one cannot legitimately separate the Covenant from any form of
Bahá’í activity including that of Bahá’í scholarship. One cannot say, “Today we
are going to work on these aspects of the teachings and next week we will
tackle the Covenant and see how it all fits in.” The Bahá’í teachings are organic,
forming an integrated whole, and hence one cannot separate the Covenant from
any other part of the Faith, most especially Bahá’í scholarship. Why do I make
so sweeping and so categorical a statement? There are several reasons. One is
the crucial role of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá and Shoghi Effendi, acting under the
provisions of the Covenant, in providing authoritative clarification of the
statements of Bahá’u’lláh. Although their stations are radically different—the
Guardian from ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, and ‘Abdu’l-Bahá from the Manifestation—
nevertheless, the authority is the same. This is discussed with precision by
Shoghi Effendi in “The Dispensation of Bahá’u’lláh” in the book The World
Order of Bahá’u’lláh.
An example of this arises with the statements of Bahá’u’lláh in the Kitáb-i-
Aqdas about monogamy. The wording in the Kitáb-i-Aqdas (par. 63) can be
regarded as equivocal, if taken in isolation, and could be considered as
permitting bigamy. It seems deliberately to have been ambiguous, leaving to
‘Abdu’l-Bahá to provide authoritative interpretation which makes it absolutely
clear that it refers to monogamy, not bigamy. Beyond that, Shoghi Effendi in
God Passes By states that the Kitáb-i-Aqdas prescribes monogamy. Unless one
is oriented to the provisions of the Covenant, one could be inclined to question
this statement, saying, “I read the words of the Aqdas, and I don’t see it
prescribing monogamy;I see a very ambiguous statement, which could include
bigamy. And yet Shoghi Effendi says that the Kitáb-i-Aqdas p r e s c r i b e s
monogamy!” This simple example shows how, unless one includes the
provisions of the Covenant, one can be led to incorrect conclusions.
A few years ago a small group of people initiated something called a “back to
52 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
Bahá’u’lláh” movement. This approach asserted rather self-righteously that it
would go back to Bahá’u’lláh with no reference to the Covenant and focus only
on His statements. As one might expect, it led to all kinds of strange
conclusions, which were grossly erroneous, and even self-contradictory,
because it was based on a conscious attempt to ignore the authoritative
clarifications of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá and the Guardian. The same processes apply to
the Bahá’í teachings forbidding homosexual conduct, with the statements in the
Aqdas (par. 107) progressively clarified through the authoritative interpretation
of the Guardian.
The role of the Universal House of Justice, in elucidating matters that are
obscure or cause differences, is also an example of the provisions of the
Covenant impinging on Bahá’í scholarship. We are all free as individuals to
offer to the world the benefit of our creative thinking, but in the last resort it is
the Universal House of Justice that has the function, prescribed in the Will and
Testament of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, to provide elucidation.
There are other ways in which the Covenant affects Bahá’í scholarship. An
important aspect of the Covenant is that it forbids priesthood. When you look at
the way priesthood arose in Islam, and to a large extent in Christianity, it came
about incrementally, almost unobtrusively. In these early years of the
development of the Bahá’í Faith, we have the danger of attempts to create a
quasi-priesthood from any group either claiming to have authority or being
given an unwarranted status as an authority—because they are older or appear
smarter or perhaps have higher academic qualifications, are from renowned
families, are male rather than female, or are from a particular country or cultural
background. So the forbidding of priesthood has implications far beyond the
literal or the obvious. Another aspect is the tendency of humanity to want to
give allegiance to a strong leader on a white horse, behind whom you can
march. And so one finds occasionally an attempt to maneuver Bahá’ís who are
prominent, or who have eminent positions in the Administrative Order, into
acting in a quasi-priestly manner and to become gurus. And those who see
themselves as disciples of that particular person go around quoting what they
heard him say, with the clear implication that it must be right because he said it.
So this is also a very important element of Bahá’í scholarship—that we avoid
ourselves being maneuvered into being cast as gurus or priests, and also that we
avoid the tendency of anybody or any particular class or group of people to
claim a quasi-priestly position in relation to knowledge and understanding of
the teachings.
Our treatment of this subject would be incomplete if we did not take these
rulings against priesthood, which are a part of our Writings, in conjunction with
the fact that we seek creative expression and freedom of thought in the Bahá’í
community. We also seek respect for accomplishment or achievement. We are
not seeking to create a hyper-egalitarian community. We recognize that some
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 53
people are very good at certain functions; some are outstanding musicians,
some are distinguished at craftsmanship, some are highly accomplished in other
activities. We are expected to recognize, and show respect for, highly
outstanding accomplishments in various areas. So our Bahá’í community does
not seek to become a uniform gray mass, but it does balk at going beyond
respect to the point of according authority to individuals beyond the provisions
of the Covenant.
Forms of Bahá’í Scholarly Activity
Bahá’í scholarly activity rests on the foundation of the constructive interplay
between reason and faith expressed through our concept of the complementarity
of religion and science. Upon this foundation, we seek mechanisms for the
advance of truth by drawing upon this interaction of faith and reason, noting
that faith and reason are elements of both religion and science.
We have gone beyond the days where matters appeared simple, that religious
people were those of faith and scientific people were those of reason. Many
scientists have called attention to the role of faith in scientific endeavor, in the
regularity of the operation of scientific principles and in the reproducibility of
experimental results. So we see the interplay of faith and reason as occurring in
both religion and science. We should value both religion and science. We have
to avoid the danger I mentioned earlier of saying that because we are religious
people, religion is all we need and anything else is just superfluous. Religion
provides a comprehensive nonmaterialistic worldview, which includes the
operation of spiritual forces and the central role of the Manifestations. This has
implications for our approach to science. It moderates the tendency of science to
be materialistic or to rely entirely on the observations of the senses. Conversely,
science can aid us to avoid the involuntary infusion of superstition and anti-
intellectualism into religion, while accepting that religion is transrational and
has a mystic core.
My reading of history is that once a religion feels that it is not in danger of
being obliterated, and feels confident, that is the time that it is susceptible to
anti-intellectualism. Historically, the religion sees itself surrounded by a hostile
world, people seem to be getting by very well without adhering to it, even to be
thriving and flourishing—and so the followers decide to put the wagons in a
circle and keep those unbelieving people out, and it becomes anti-intellectual. In
the Bahá’í Faith, the provisions of the Covenant protect us from following the
historical precedent, but one does find occasional tendencies to anti-
intellectualism even within the Bahá’í community. By reliance upon the
constructive interaction of faith and reason, we can augment our religious
understanding as well as contribute to science.
I have come to the personal conclusion that there are five principal forms of
Bahá’í scholarly activity. Let me go through them one by one.
54 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
1. Historical Origins
The first is scholarly investigation of the historical origins of the Faith; for
example, its relationship to Islam and the influence of the Islamic matrix from
which the Faith grew. It could well include historical issues related to the early
days of the Faith and the progressive disclosure to which I have referred earlier;
the relationship between the Bábí and Bahá’í Dispensations, which of course
would include study of the laws of the Bábí Faith, the reason for their apparent
severity and their harshness or even impracticality, and the legitimacy of such
laws in a Dispensation ordained by God; the study of some of the
misrepresentations about the early days of the Faith and of the accusations of
dissimulation, expediency, inconsistency, and political involvement leveled
against it.
Particularly interesting is the study of accusations of delusion or
megalomania. If you look at the statements of Bahá’u’lláh about the
preeminence of His knowledge, His station, and His position, we quite properly
accept these statements as deriving from the exalted position of Bahá’u’lláh as
the Promised One of all ages. But skeptics could also inquire whether such
remarks arise from delusion or insanity. Rather than taking exception to anyone
daring to make such an offensive statement, we can react calmly and show on
rational grounds that such assertions are invalid. I have seen very good papers
written by Bahá’ís, which address this theme in terms of the self-consistency,
the impeccable logic, the insight into human nature, and the wisdom shown in
the statements of the Revelation. Much more remains to be done in sound
scholarly study of historical origins.
2. Textual Analysis
This refers to the study of the original documents of the Faith. The clarification
of authenticity is a very complex realm in which the Bahá’í scholars will find a
lot to occupy them probably for centuries. The clarification of what is authentic,
what is of dubious nature, and what is spurious may well be a very challenging
task and there may be gradations between the indubitably authentic and the
clearly spurious.
The context in which statements were made, or passages revealed by the
Manifestation or ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, is certainly an important subject for Bahá’í
scholarship. The historical and intellectual climate in which the Revelation
appeared is of great interest to us. The answers given to certain questions are
best appreciated in the context of the original question and the milieu in which
that question arose. This is an important area but some caution is needed.
Fundamentally we look upon the Kitáb-i-Íqán in the way the Guardian
describes, as the preeminent doctrinal work of Bahá’u’lláh. As we know from
the history of the Faith, the revelation of the Kitáb-i-Íqán was triggered by
questions addressed to Him by a maternal uncle of the Báb. That is interesting
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 55
to note historically, but it is not intrinsically necessary for understanding the
wisdom of the Kitáb-i-Íqán. The same applies, perhaps to an even greater
extent, to the Epistle to the Son of the Wolf. Essentially, we do not really care
who was the individual stigmatized as the Son of the Wolf. What we care about
most of all are the things Bahá’u’lláh says in that book. Certain passages are
clarified by knowing who that person was and what were his misdeeds, but
fundamentally Bahá’u’lláh seemed to be addressing the community of Bahá’ís
of this generation, and untold future generations in the distant future, rather
than devoting Himself to the revelation of so weighty a document to a non-
entity who vanished from the scene within a few years. So contextualization is
useful but also has its limitations; carried to excess it can narrow our focus to an
unwarranted extent.
In this realm of contextual analysis, one could profitably study the allusions
to literary and religious works and concepts, for example, in the passages where
Bahá’u’lláh quotes from Jalálu’d-Dín Rúmí and from H. áfiz. and from other
great poets. The relationship of the Seven Valleys to seven stages or stations
described in Muslim mystic literature several centuries ago is a very interesting
and very significant area to be explored.
The time sequence of the revelation of various passages of our Sacred Text is
a significant aspect of contextual analysis. The accuracy of translation and the
relationship between translation and interpretation, in terms of clarification of
meaning, is an extremely complicated area, which merits exploration. Since any
form of translation involves a degree of interpretation, the interpretations of the
Guardian play a crucial role, and much can be learned from a careful study of
his approach to translation. This is also an area for scholarly endeavor in the
future.
3. Investigation of Religious Concepts
The third area of the five is the study of religious concepts. We can obtain
greater insight through the power of intellectual inquiry, carried out in the
proper way with respect for the authority of the Manifestation and the centrality
of the Text, in studying certain religious concepts. The concept of a
Manifestation of God is one that we Bahá’ís take for granted. We are very
comfortable with it, but the world around us regards it as very strange that we
regard this Person, who came from Iran in the nineteenth century, with such
authority that every statement He makes is taken to be infallible truth. The
phenomenon of the Manifestation of God can well be examined, in a very
useful way, and with a proper degree of respect and authority, from the
perspective of history, and in relation to human experience.
The process of revelation is a truly fascinating phenomenon. There are
passages in the Bahá’í literature about people being present when Bahá’u’lláh
revealed a tablet and they experienced a tremendous sense of power and light.
56 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
There is a story in the Star of the West (23:73–74) about a young man named
Azízu’lláh Varqá, who was present when Bahá’u’lláh appeared to be chanting
passages from previously revealed Writings. After a few minutes, he had a
sense of power and light filling the room and he fainted. When he woke up,
people were putting cold water and rose water on his forehead. He asked, “What
happened to me?” and was told, “You were present when Bahá’u’lláh was
revealing a tablet!” This is part of the mystery of revelation. I remember in my
pre-Bahá’í days, I was very intrigued to read eyewitness accounts of the effect
upon Muh. ammad when revelation came to Him; there was intense physical
stress and a sense of power. On one occasion, eyewitnesses reported that He
was on a camel and the power of the revelation was so great that the camel was
forced to its knees. Those of you here tonight who have had anything to do with
the camels in the Negev desert know how difficult it is to get them to do
anything! So this is a very mysterious process.
The concept of human nature, with its spiritual and material components, is
an important subject in the study of the phenomenon of religion. Our view of
creation and evolution, the concept of spirit in its various forms, and insights
into other religions are all interesting areas for scholarly inquiry. Of great
interest are the psychological and sociological implications of the Covenant; we
bind ourselves voluntarily to the concept of the Covenant and its apparent
restrictions on thought because we see it as a channel for the liberation of the
human individual’s creative thought processes and for human happiness. But
one needs to show this, not only from the Text, but with support also from a
highly insightful study into human nature.
4. Application to Contemporary Issues
The application of the Bahá’í teachings to contemporary issues is very much
pertinent to the present day, when so much of our energy is occupied with
teaching the Faith. The Guardian says, in a letter written on his behalf, that “If
the Bahá’ís want to be really effective in teaching the Cause they need to be much
better informed and able to discuss intelligently, intellectually, the present
condition of the world and its problems. We need Bahá’í scholars, not only
people far, far more deeply aware of what our teachings really are, but also well
read and well educated people, capable of correlating our teachings to the current
thoughts of the leaders of society.” (Shoghi Effendi, in Importance of Deepening,
no. 153). So the fourth of the five areas is the correlation between the Bahá’í
teachings and contemporary thought. It is very important, but this does not
mean one should necessarily concentrate only on this aspect of Bahá’í scholarly
activity and neglect the other four. There is no limit to the kinds of things one
can do in this area.
Shoghi Effendi has pointed out, and it has been reiterated by the Universal
House of Justice, that the true relationship between the study of the Bahá’í texts
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 57
and academic study is mutually constructive and mutually supportive, rather
than being antagonistic. One can get insights into academic studies through the
Bahá’í Writings, as we all realize. However, the Guardian and also the
Universal House of Justice point out the converse applies as well, that academic
studies can give new insights into the Bahá’í teachings if approached with the
correct attitude.
I recall some time ago visiting the University of Western Australia campus
where the Bahá’í students had been very active and had proclaimed the Faith to
a senior university administrator, who was a professor of political science, and
had persuaded him to read something about the Bahá’í Administrative Order.
After I was introduced to him as a Bahá’í who was a professor from the
University of Queensland, he invited me to lunch. We had a very fascinating
discussion of the Bahá’í Administrative Order from a political science
perspective. I found to my amazement that this person, who was not a Bahá’í,
had a degree of insight into it beyond my own, to the extent I found myself
learning from him. From his political science perspective, he could clearly see
the necessity for the interlocking nature of the various provisions of the
Administrative Order and their contribution to the strength and the integrity of
the whole system. To my knowledge, he never became a Bahá’í, but certainly
his professional expertise gave him a fresh insight into, and admiration for, the
Bahá’í Administrative Order.
Let me present a highly incomplete list of possible areas for scholarly study in
this aspect of Bahá’í scholarship, for the purpose of stimulating your own
thinking about other possibilities.
• Theories of personality, motivation, and creativity; the nature of
creativity—a very mysterious subject in relation to what our teachings say
about the creative power of the spirit and about meditation.
• The dynamics of group decision making, which we call consultation and
which has a great many profound implications for the way people make
decisions in marriage, family relationships, and also in the business setting
and in management science.
• Social organization and governance from a Bahá’í perspective, particularly
useful at this time when the prevailing approaches in the wider society are
being seen to be defective.
• The role of values and motives in economic functioning.
• Theories of history and the role of religion in the events of history.
58 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
• A theory of environmental development. This would be very interesting
because on the one hand we have a great respect for the environment and
we regard ourselves as its custodians for the future generations, yet on the
other hand we are also committed to the creation of an ever-advancing
civilization. How do we reconcile these two apparent opposites? How do
we avoid turning the earth into a giant parking lot, paved in concrete, and
how do we advance a civilization while maintaining respect for nature and
for environmental balance? Our commitment to beauty and the preservation
of nature is apparent in Bahá’í monumental edifices and gardens. This is a
very complex subject and we will ultimately have Bahá’ís developing a
coherent and comprehensive theory which does not have contradictions
within it.
• Criminology and the rehabilitation of criminals. I know of a few Bahá’í
criminologists working in this area but much more work is needed. The
whole theory of the rehabilitation of criminals is susceptible to a vast
amount of illumination from Bahá’ís, who can examine the laws of the
Aqdas relating to the spectrum of penalties for various crimes, in context
with the other Bahá’í teachings including our concepts of mercy,
forgiveness, and spiritual development as explained by ‘Abdu’l-Bahá in
Some Answered Questions (chap. 77). Through this approach, Bahá’í
criminologists can make an original contribution to their professional field
and also provide new insight into this aspect of the Bahá’í teachings.
• Conflict resolution, which is of course central to our religion. The various
theories of conflict resolution which are prevalent in our society can be
usefully related to Bahá’í concepts and insights.
• Marriage and family development, in which we have a unique contribution
to make from our principle of the equality of the sexes.
• Concepts in physics and astrophysics. The Bahá’í teachings can illuminate a
number of concepts about the nature of matter and of creation, the evolution
of the universe, and can stimulate creative thought about the influence of
other galactic entities, such as comets, on life here. Nonlinear phenomena,
such as chaotic behavior, fractals, and nonequilibrium thermodynamics
provide useful models for systems falling within Bahá’í purview.
• Peace studies, and the means by which peace can be established and
maintained in the face of aggressive conduct by nations, terrorist groups, or
alienated segments of the society.
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 59
5. Social and Historical Phenomena
The final of the five areas is the study of social and historical phenomena in the
growth of the Bahá’í Faith. Among the subjects in which Bahá’í scholarly
activity could usefully be carried out are:
• Examination of the way in which the Bahá’í Faith has addressed racial
problems, and the degree of success it has thus far attained in dealing with
racial issues in the United States between African Americans and the
majority of the population, in breaking down tribal prejudices in various
places in Africa, and in achieving the integration and flourishing within the
European Bahá’í community of gypsy or Romani people. There is room for
quite a lot of useful study here. We will have to be careful that we retain
intellectual honesty in such studies, and that we adopt a systems
perspective in assessing the ultimate effect of processes we are initiating
now. Our work is incomplete in the eradication of prejudices, and we have
not always had shining successes. But I believe we can show to the world
that we have done some very interesting, and very important, things in this
area.
• A similar approach applies to examination of the effect of the Bahá’í
community in breaking down class prejudices in societies which have
traditionally been ridden with it, including England, Iran, India, and
Polynesia.
• The results we have thus far achieved in the implementation of the
principle of the equality of men and women. What have we actually
accomplished beyond the simple enunciation of this principle? What
barriers have we broken down? What successes can we point to? What are
the challenges we have faced and still do face, psychological and
sociological? These, I think, are very interesting and important areas for
scholarly investigation.
• There is also the question of modeling of the factors involved in growth
and in forecasting. This is an area I find particularly fascinating because
there is a lot of good work going on in the wider society in modeling and in
study of the dynamics of growth. I remember talking about this subject to a
Bahá’í scientist who was visiting the World Centre. He pointed out to me
that he felt there was an existing body of mathematics which could be
applied in its entirety to a Bahá’í theory of modeling of community growth,
if we could identify the variables. This was the mathematics of
epidemiology, since the process of the spread of the Faith is similar to that
60 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
of an epidemic. I was left with the thought that I would have to choose my
words very carefully in discussing this matter with others, since people
would feel that we are comparing the spread of the Faith to that of an
epidemic, which in some ways it is!
Prescribed Attributes
One of the interesting features of Bahá’í scholarship is the emphasis placed on
the spiritual attributes of the individual carrying it out. This is quite unusual
when, for example, compared with scholarship in the wider society. If we are
looking at the work of Einstein, it would be of minor interest whether he was
modest or arrogant, whether he rode a bicycle, or whether he remembered to get
a haircut. The emphasis is very different in Bahá’í scholarship, for reasons which
derive from the nature of the Creative Word, to which I referred early in my talk.
The practice of Bahá’í scholarship calls upon the individual practitioner to
have due regard for personal humility and modesty about his own
achievements. Let me call your attention to some fascinating passages in the
Kitáb-i-Aqdas where Bahá’u’lláh warns us very strongly against the absence of
modesty and humility in such areas of scholarship and the acquisition of
knowledge. It states in the Aqdas, “Amongst the people is he whose learning
hath made him proud, and who hath been debarred thereby from recognizing
My Name, the Self-Subsisting; who, when he heareth the tread of sandals
following behind him, waxeth greater in his own esteem than Nimrod” (par.
41). You can see what He is talking about—the person who becomes puffed up
because he hears followers behind him, the tread of their sandals making him
feel that he is a guru with this whole motley crowd worshiping him and
following him wherever he leads them. He is waxing greater in his esteem than
Nimrod. And then Bahá’u’lláh goes on: “Say: O rejected one! Where now is his
abode? By God, it is the nethermost fire.” As you can see, Bahá’u’lláh does not
mince His words here.
Of a different degree of subtlety is Bahá’u’lláh’s statement that “Amongst the
people is he who seateth himself amid the sandals by the door whilst coveting in
his heart the seat of honour” (Kitáb-i-Aqdas par. 36). This is a person who
presents himself as self-effacing, so very humble, almost apologizing for even
breathing in your presence and using up some of the oxygen; deep down this
individual thinks: I am actually quite an important person; you know, I present
myself as a nonentity, but I am really very knowledgeable and eventually these
ignorant people around me will recognize my worth! And to him Bahá’u’lláh
says, “What manner of man art thou, O vain and heedless one, who wouldst
appear as other than thou art? And among the people is he who layeth claim to
inner knowledge, and still deeper knowledge concealed within this knowl-
edge.” And then Bahá’u’lláh condemns him also and says, “Say: Thou speakest
false! . . . What thou dost possess is naught but husks which We have left to
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 61
thee as bones are left to dogs.” (Kitáb-i-Aqdas par. 36). So again, He is not
mincing his words. These are very strong statements. We ourselves would not
make them, as individuals, but Bahá’u’lláh, as the Manifestation of God, makes
these statements in the Kitáb-i-Aqdas to warn us against pride, arrogance, and
hypocrisy in the pursuit of knowledge.
Our personal attributes should also include a nonexclusive and nonadversarial
attitude to others. For example, we are encouraged not to get preoccupied with
defining who is a scholar and who is not, or whether that Bahá’í scholar is of a
higher level than you are, and whether this is scholarship and that is not. This is
a very important matter because some scholarly areas in the wider society are
riven by this sense of definition and competition. I have endured many battles
between pure and applied mathematicians: the pure mathematicians feel that
applied mathematicians get their hands dirty, have to make approximations and
assumptions, and can never be sure of their conclusions; the applied math-
ematicians respond by pointing out that the entire pure mathematical structure is
built upon a set of axioms, some of which defy common sense in fields such
as projective geometry. So there can be antagonism and jockeying for power
and status in university departments where these attitudes exist. A similar
situation can apply in such fields as psychology, economics, physics, and even
biology. This does not occur everywhere, and there are many wonderful
people working in these areas. We must take care that scholarly activity in the
Bahá’í community is not afflicted with sterile controversies over what is, or is
not, Bahá’í scholarship, or what activities are of higher intellectual content
than others.
The Bahá’í attitude towards those who have trouble grasping something
should always be uppermost in the minds of scholars. There are beautiful
passages in the Writings where Bahá’u’lláh calls for kindness, gentleness, and
consideration towards anybody who has trouble understanding something,
rather than expressions of superiority or condemnation.
Respect for the accomplishment of others and an orientation to service to
the Faith are also enjoined upon all Bahá’ís, especially those engaged in
scholarly work.
The Future
A passage written on behalf of the Universal House of Justice in August 1977,
published in the Bahá’í Scholarship compilation, discloses to us a vision of the
future, particularly useful to us now as we struggle to build the World Order of
Bahá’u’lláh. It states:
As the Bahá’í community grows it will acquire experts in numerous fields—both by
Bahá’ís becoming experts and by experts becoming Bahá’ís. As these experts bring
their knowledge and skill to the service of the community and, even more, as they
transform their various disciplines by bringing to bear upon them the light of the
62 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
Divine Teachings, problem after problem now disrupting society will be answered. . . .
Paralleling this process, Bahá’í institutional life will also be developing, and as it
does so the Assemblies will draw increasingly upon scientific and expert knowledge—
whether of Bahá’ís or of non-Bahá’ís—to assist in solving the problems of their
communities.
In time great Bahá’í institutions of learning, great international and national projects
for the betterment of human life will be inaugurated and flourish. (no. 39)
This indicates where we are going with our first halting, and indeed
rudimentary, steps in Bahá’í scholarship. We are heading towards a Bahá’í
community which will be composed of individuals who are active rather than
passive; a community of people oriented towards the development of the
powers of the mind, reveling in the statements made by ‘Abdu’l-Bahá in Secret
of Divine Civilization, where He praises the powers of the mind and celebrates
its capability for contributing to human progress. It will be a community in
which the members are mutually encouraging, free from jockeying for
position and from an obsessive desire for status and position. It will be
disciplined but open-minded. It will be at the forefront of progressive ideas
and it will be the leaven for the creation of a new civilization. The process of
civilizing humanity, and of sustaining an advancing civilization, will be
fueled by those future Bahá’ís who have drawn on insights from the Bahá’í
Writings.
Conclusion
My concluding remarks are of a highly speculative nature concerning the more
distant future. It seems to me that we can envisage ultimately a greater
unification of knowledge. The first rudimentary steps taken into
interdisciplinary studies are no more than a beginning towards a unification of
knowledge, perhaps in a distant part of the Dispensation of Bahá’u’lláh.
In the message titled “The Unfoldment of World Civilization,” in the book
The World Order of Bahá’u’lláh, the Guardian refers to the great advances in
knowledge which will occur in that period. The notes to the Kitáb-i-Aqdas also
mention a statement of Bahá’u’lláh about the emergence of a science which He
calls “divine philosophy” at the time of “the coming of age of the human race”
(Kitáb-i-Aqdas 250). My speculation is that the fusion of various forms of
knowledge will occur in this more distant time. We will at that time have a far
deeper insight into the nature of matter and its relationship to spirit.
‘Abdu’l-Bahá identifies spirit with the power of attraction at the mineral level
(Bahá’í World Faith 338) and relates it to one aspect of a generalized
characteristic of the world of creation, which He describes by the term “love”
(Promulgation of Universal Peace 255). When, at a distant time, we obtain a
deeper understanding into the nature of matter and its relationship with spirit,
we can expect that it will yield greater insight into such things as:
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 63
• The interaction between physical medicine and attitudes of mind in
promoting the healing process, which is intrinsically a question of matter
and spirit, with the human spirit interacting with matter
• Questions of psychology, creativity, motivation, and the nature of human
beings
• Particle physics, now confronted with a bewildering array of subatomic
particles, and the various endeavors to develop a unified field theory
• Issues in astrophysics, such as the interconnectedness of the elements of the
universe
• The nature of life
‘Abdu’l-Bahá speaks of the influence of the remote elements of the universe
on life on earth, and of the influence of the Revelation of Bahá’u’lláh being
unconstrained, as far as its effect in the universe. At some future time our
concept of matter and spirit will include a comprehensive understanding of the
interaction of the very distant parts of the physical universe with life on this
earth, perhaps through fields and particles, and it will prove to be far more
mysterious and subtle than we can imagine today, and far beyond the pseudo-
scientific assertions of astrology.
We have intriguing statements of Bahá’u’lláh that “every fixed star hath its
own planets, and every planet its own creatures, whose number no man can
compute” (Gleanings 163). Now, we can take this narrowly and anticipate that
the Mars Lander will meet little green men on that planet. Or we can take it at a
more fundamental level and ask ourselves, what does this say about life? What
does Bahá’u’lláh mean by this term? What is the nature of the evolution of life
in the universe? I think this subject will be illuminated in the more distant
future, as our knowledge of matter and spirit grows.
Finally, we can well envisage what Bahá’u’lláh foreshadows as a sign of the
coming of age of mankind—a new approach to the transmutation of elements.
This must await that time of maturity when we have a deeper understanding of
interaction of matter and energy and have developed that “divine philosophy,”
the nature of which is beyond our comprehension—just as scientists in 1900
could not comprehend, to even the slightest extent, the progress which has been
made in this century in semiconductors, optical communication, computers,
electron microscopy, surgical techniques, genetic engineering, molecular
biology, and medical diagnosis. How much greater will be the progress in the
future, and how great will be the wonders of the ever-advancing civilization
which is the destiny of humanity.
64 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
Works Cited
‘Abdu’l-Bahá. The Secret of Divine Civilization . Trans. Marzieh Gail.
Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1957.
———. The Promulgation of Universal Peace: Talks Delivered by ‘Abdu’l-
Bahá during His Visit to the United States and Canada in 1912. Comp.
Howard MacNutt. 2d ed. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1982.
———. Some Answered Questions. Comp. and trans. Laura Clifford Barney.
4th ed. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1981.
Bahá’u’lláh. Tablets of Bahá’u’lláh Revealed after the Kitáb-i-Aqdas. Haifa:
Bahá’í World Centre, 1978.
———. Gleanings from the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh. Trans. Shoghi Effendi. 2d
ed. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1976.
———. The Kitáb-i-Aqdas: The Most Holy Book. Haifa: Bahá’í World Centre,
1992.
— — — . The Kitáb-i-Íqán: The Book of Certitude. Trans. Shoghi Effendi.
Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1950.
Bahá’u’lláh and ‘Abdu’l-Bahá. Bahá’í World Faith: Selected Writings of
Bahá’u’lláh and ‘Abdu’l-Bahá. Rev. ed. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í Publishing
Trust, 1976.
The Importance of Deepening Our Knowledge and Understanding of the Faith:
Extracts from the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh, ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, and Shoghi Effendi.
Comp. Universal House of Justice. Thornhill, Ont.: Bahá’í Community of
Canada, 1983.
Khan, Janet A., and Peter J. Khan. Advancement of Women: A Bahá’í
Perspective. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1998.
Scholarship: Extracts from the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh and ‘Abdu’l-Bahá and
the Universal House of Justice.Comp. Research Department of the Universal
House of Justice. Mona Vale: Bahá’í Publications Australia, 1995.
Shoghi Effendi. God Passes By. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1957.
———. The World Order of Bahá’u’lláh. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í Publishing
Trust, 1955.
Universal House of Justice. Messages from the Universal House of Justice:
1963–1986 The Third Epoch of the Formative Age. Comp. Geoffry W.
Marks. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1996.
———. Issues Related to the Study of the Bahá’í Faith. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í
Publishing Trust, 1999.
──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
Essay/Essai/Ensayo
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship*
Peter J. Khan
Abstract
This essay identifies four core ideas that should characterize Bahá’í
scholarship: the central position of the Creative Word in the acquisition of
knowledge; the interconnected Bahá’í model of the world; the progressive
nature of Bahá’í law; and the organic relationship of scholarship and the
Covenant. Bahá’í scholarly activity rests on the constructive interaction of faith
and reason, avoiding the extremes of materialism and superstition. Five
principal forms of Bahá’í scholarly activity are discussed: study of the Faith’s
historical origins, textual analysis, investigation of religious concepts,
application of the teachings to contemporary issues, and study of social and
historical phenomena in the growth of the Faith. Suggestions for future
research are outlined; the spiritual attributes that should characterize
individual scholars are discussed; and the article concludes with prospects for
the greater unification of knowledge in the future.
Résumé
Cet essai énonce quatre idées centrales qui devraient caractériser l’érudition
bahá’íe: la place centrale de la Parole créatrice dans l’acquisition du savoir, la
nature interrelative du modèle bahá’í de la vision du monde, la nature
progressive des lois bahá’íes, et la nature organique du rapport entre
l’érudition et l’Alliance. L’érudition bahá’íe se fonde sur une interaction
constructive entre la foi et la raison, une démarche qui évite les extrêmes
associés au matérialisme et à la superstition. L’article aborde cinq formes
essentielles d’érudition bahá’íe: l’étude des origines historiques de la Foi,
l’analyse textuelle; l’exploration de concepts religieux; les enseignements
bahá’ís et leur application aux problèmes contemporains; et l’étude des
phénomènes sociaux et historiques en cause dans la croissance de la Foi.
L’article propose des pistes de recherches futures, traite des qualités
spirituelles qui devraient caractériser les personnes qui se consacrent à
l’érudition bahá’íe, et, enfin, aborde les possibilités de parvenir à une plus
grande unification des connaissances dans l’avenir.
Resumen
Este ensayo identifica cuatro ideas esenciales que deben caracterizar la
*Transcript of a talk presented at the Bahá’í World Centre on 15 October 1999.
Copyright © 2000 Association for Bahá’í Studies. All rights reserved.
44 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
erudición bahá’í: la posición central de la Palabra creadora en la adquisición
de sabiduría; el modelo interconectado bahá’í del mundo; la naturaleza
progresiva de las leyes bahá’ís; y la relación orgánica entre la erudición y el
Convenio. La actividad erudita bahá’í descansa sobre la interacción
constructiva entre la fe y la razón, apartándose así de los extremos tanto del
materialismo como de la superstición. Se adelantan cinco formas principales de
actividad erudita bahá’í: el estudio de los orígenes históricos de la Fe, análisis
de los textos, investigación de conceptos religiosos, aplicación de las
enseñanzas a temas contemporáneos, y el estudio de los fenómenos históricos y
sociales asociados con el crecimiento de la Fe. Se hace un bosquejo para
investigaciones futuras; se refiere a los atributos espirituales que deberán
caracterizar los eruditos individualmente, y concluye el ensayo con las
perspectivas para la mayor unificación del conocimiento en el futuro.
Introduction
The title “Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship” is not intended to be any kind
of complete treatment of a subject which has many facets and ramifications. I
have deliberately chosen to focus on those aspects which I see as distinctive to
Bahá’í scholarship, as distinct from other forms of scholarship with which we
are very familiar in the world around us. In other words, I am deliberately
picking out certain points where I see Bahá’í scholarship to be different. I do
this for two reasons. First, because I think it is important that we see the
distinction, and that we appreciate the characteristics, which are unique to the
Bahá’í community in its approach to scholarly endeavor. The other reason is
because I think it is useful to us to know what kind of patterns of thought we
should avoid falling into unconsciously. Because we are in a milieu where there
are many very good people carrying out scholarly activity from their own
perspective, which differs from a Bahá’í perspective, we can quite fall into their
pattern of thinking. But if we can identify and clarify in our minds those things
which are distinctive, it can put us on our guard against unconsciously falling
into these other patterns.
In preparing this presentation, I have relied almost entirely on two booklets
that have been published recently. One is called Issues Related to the Study of
the Bahá’í Faith, a collection of excerpts from letters written on behalf of the
Universal House of Justice. The other is the Scholarship compilation prepared
by the Research Department at the Bahá’í World Centre and published in 1995.
Core Ideas
It occurred to me that there are certain core ideas that are very significant in
developing the concept of the distinctive nature of Bahá’í scholarship, and I will
discuss briefly four of them which I see to be especially pertinent. They may to
some extent be obvious, or even self-evident. However, I think it is important
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 45
that we remind ourselves of these core ideas and their significance, as it provides
a useful background to examining some of the issues we are dealing with in the
development of Bahá’í scholarship.
1. The Creative Word
The first of these core ideas is the nature of the Creative Word. Any form of
Bahá’í scholarship must necessarily be founded upon our concept of the
Creative Word of our Revelation. It is very mysterious. We could spend many
hours talking about it and we would have hardly introduced the subject. But it is
sufficient to say that to us, as Bahá’ís carrying out any form of intellectual
activity including scholarship, the Creative Word occupies a central position in
the acquisition of knowledge. Others would regard it as one factor, as one
component in whatever subject they are studying. To us, it is central; it is right
there in the middle. Bahá’u’lláh in one of His tablets refers to His Revelation,
saying that He has “proclaimed before the face of all the peoples of the world
that which will serve as the key for unlocking the doors of sciences, of arts, of
knowledge, of well-being, of prosperity and wealth” (Tablets of Bahá’u’lláh 96).
And if in fact He has provided the key for unlocking the doors to all these
things, then naturally we will accord the Creative Word a central position.
This has a number of implications. Clearly, we regard the Creative Word as
authoritative, irrespective of whether or not it conforms to prevailing trends of
thought. ‘Abdu’l-Bahá in Some Answered Questions (chap. 7) refers to the
apparent dilemma of the early Muslims who found quite categorically, in the
statements of the Qur’án, reference to a heliocentric universe with the planets
revolving around the sun. At that time the prevailing view was of a geocentric
universe with everything revolving around the earth in incredibly complex
patterns. He describes that as a very simple example of the centrality of the
Creative Word in relation to the prevailing thought which is naturally subject to
change with the passage of time.
Second, we regard the Creative Word as limitless in its meaning, of a
character radically different from any other statements, because it is the Holy
Word. It is the Word of the Manifestation of God, and it can thus convey an
infinite degree of meaning in various forms. Much more complicated is the fact
that we are told in our Writings that a true or deep understanding of the
mysteries of the Creative Word is dependent fundamentally upon our spiritual
condition. This is not the place to go into the dynamics of this process, but it is
sufficient to point out that, as Bahá’u’lláh says, “The heart must needs therefore
be cleansed from the idle sayings of men, and sanctified from every earthly
affection, so that it may discover the hidden meaning of divine inspiration, and
become the treasury of the mysteries of divine knowledge” (Kitáb-i-Íqán 70).
This now leads us into asking ourselves what are the various ways of
acquiring knowledge, when the Creative Word is accessible to us. This is a very
46 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
complex subject and the remarks I make about it will be fairly superficial,
otherwise we will never get through it tonight! ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, in S o m e
Answered Questions (chap. 83), refers to the four methods of acquiring
knowledge. Very briefly, these are: first, through the senses; second, through
the power of reason and logical deduction; third, through arguing by analogy
from generally accepted statements or traditions; and fourth, through the power
of the Holy Spirit. And if I understand correctly, He says the first three—senses,
logic, and analogy—are fallible or capable of leading to erroneous conclusions.
He uses a variety of illustrations to make His point and then He says that the
acquisition of knowledge through the power of the Holy Spirit is infallible—is
authoritative, free from error. What I find evident in that talk is that He does not
discount the value of, or forbid us from using, the first three of the four
methods. What He simply says is that they are not authoritative. But the
implication that I get from that talk is that it is perfectly all right to use these
three, provided we bear in mind His cautions about these approaches not being
authoritative.
In fact we do use these three methods productively; for example, consider the
acquisition of knowledge through the senses. The whole of experimental
sciences, observations of people and of the dynamics of society, observations of
astronomy and chemistry and biology, are made through the senses. It produces
very sound knowledge and most useful results. We use the power of reasoning
in pure mathematics, various kinds of geometry, and other deductive forms of
logic in the physical and social sciences. And it proves a very powerful and
useful tool. We use analogy in the process of scientific inference. Arguing by
analogy to discover new knowledge is considered to be very acceptable from a
Bahá’í perspective. However, we should always be clear that, as Bahá’ís, we
regard the results of all of these forms of acquiring knowledge as being
ultimately subordinate to the authority of the Creative Word, where it
illuminates the subject. The Creative Word does not speak explicitly about the
Pythagorean Theorem, or explicitly about the various theories of atomic
structure, or the nature of neutrons, protons, or electrons. But where there is any
apparent explicit conflict of view, the Creative Word must be given priority.
In applying this principle one learns that nothing is very simple and nothing is
very obvious. What we find is that in our use of the authority of the Creative
Word we have to avoid some very intriguing extremes. One extreme is that of
narrowness, reflected in the erroneous view that we need only the Revelation of
Bahá’u’lláh and that all secular knowledge is wrong. The physical sciences are
stigmatized as being incorrect because they take no account of the spiritual
dimension of creation. Psychology is condemned because most theories appear
not to take into account the spiritual nature of man. Economics is dismissed as
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 47
appearing not to accommodate a spiritual solution to economic problems.
Evolution and the Darwinian perspective are condemned as being contrary to
the belief in God. Philosophy is regarded as being a waste of time, criticized as
being largely unrelated to religion. We Bahá’ís have to be on our guard against
this kind of thinking creeping into our Bahá’í discourse. It is dangerous, very
narrow, and quite wrong. When I was a youth, growing up in a Bahá’í
community, I decided to study at a university. A number of very well-meaning
and very good people were very troubled that I would do so, and pointed out to
me the passage in the Kitáb-i-Íqán where it says that “Knowledge is one point,
which the foolish have multiplied” (Kitáb-i-Íqán 184). The idea of going to
university for ten years, as I did, to acquire expertise in a fairly narrow area
seemed to them to be a prime case of somebody multiplying ignorance, whereas
I had before me the Revelation of Bahá’u’lláh which contained all knowledge.
Fortunately, I managed to avoid this pernicious line of thinking. But I saw
around me, and I have seen later, in both Australia and the United States, a
number of very capable and sincere people who severed their connection with
the Faith because of their exposure to this narrow line of thinking. Even here in
the Holy Land, one does occasionally see this line of thinking appearing in
disguise from time to time. Sometimes the disguise is very attractive, using
pilgrim notes and assertions about calamities to create a mind-set which rejects
the wider society. We must always be on our guard against this crypto-
fundamentalist thinking, which can lead us into error through a narrow
approach to the Writings and to the centrality of the Creative Word.
Another extreme, which is also to be avoided, is that of unwarranted
inference based on the Writings. For example, the Writings point out to us that
the universe is without beginning and without end. One of the very fashionable
theories of the origins of the universe is the so-called big bang theory, which
maintains that everything was compressed into a singularity and then it all went
bang and the universe, with its galaxies and systems of galaxies, was created. I
think we have to be very careful to avoid categorical statements such as “The
big bang theory is definitely wrong, because Bahá’u’lláh says the universe is
without beginning and end!” I regard this as an unwarranted inference. The
question of the creation of the universe is far more complex because the big
bang theory raises all kinds of questions about space and time, and about the
implications of the general theory of relativity.
Another example arises from the question of the creation of life in the test
tube. ‘Abdu’l-Bahá has said, in Some Answered Questions (chap. 47), that
attempts at the artificial creation of life will be unsuccessful because it is an
unnatural approach. We have to be careful in making inferences from that
statement about the ultimate success or failure of attempts to create life in the
48 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
test tube. I was alerted to that by seeing the response of the House of Justice to a
question about the possible synthesis of an elementary life form. The House of
Justice gave a very cautious response, referring to certain key phrases in the
statement of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá and pointing out that their implications will only
become clear as biological science advances. My impression was that the House
of Justice was simply indicating the danger of unwarranted inference in
comparing the authority of the Text with prevailing views. The same caution
should apply to the question of life on other planets, and to questions of the existence
of the ether, in relation to nineteenth-century physics, the Michelson-Morley
experiment, quantum mechanics, and relativity.
2. Interconnectedness
The second core idea concerns the concept of interconnectedness. My
understanding is that the Bahá’í model of the world is one of interconnectedness,
and of mutual and reciprocal actions. This may become a little clearer when I
give you some examples. What I see as the Bahá’í model, in both the spiritual
and the material aspects of creation, is entities and processes which interconnect
with each other—a dynamic model of interrelationships, rather than a static
model. These relationships may be of a positive feedback form, mutually
constructive for growth, or of a negative feedback form, operating to preserve
equilibrium.
Let me use some examples. My reading of the Writings is that the concept of
individual spiritual development is intimately related to social development, the
development of society. This is, I think, the underlying basis for having an
Administrative Order and provides insight into the spiritual consequences of the
Administrative Order. We see individual and social development as interacting
in a mutually supportive and constructive manner. A message of the House of
Justice on universal participation written in September 1964 (Messages 19)
develops that concept in a very interesting way from the organic model—the
model of interconnectedness. This stands in contrast to the prevailing view,
which embraces what we could describe as a false dichotomy: the view that
individual spiritual development occurs by going off into a cave, or in the
desert, or withdrawing to a monastery, and working on yourself in isolation, and
when you get yourself into a shining, polished condition, then you come out
into society. The concept of the Bahá’í Faith is not of withdrawal from the
world in order to perfect one’s spirituality, but rather doing so interactively with
society. We see this separation of individual from society for spiritual
development as a false dichotomy.
A similar invalid separation applies to the concepts of spiritual and material.
They are, in the society around us, regarded as antithetical. The conventional
view is that the more spiritual you are, the less materially involved you should
be. People who are rich are, by definition, considered to be unspiritual, as are
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 49
people who are involved in commerce. Conversely, some societies in the world
are regarded as highly spiritual, as opposed to the Western world which is
stigmatized as being corrupt and materialistic, despite the fact that these
societies are filthy dirty, with dispirited and apathetic people living in a
degraded condition, their womenfolk are suppressed and denied education, and
there is no aspiration to education or material development. People of such
societies are considered as spiritual by the conventional standards of the world
around us. All this, I think, is an example of what I would regard as another
false dichotomy.
A comprehensive understanding of the interaction of spiritual and material is
obviously far beyond our conception. ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, for example, in the Tablet
of Purity (Selections 129), refers to cleanliness as having a spiritual effect.
There is obviously a mysterious aspect of the interaction between internal and
external environments. The Guardian, in often-quoted passage, refers to the
interaction of the internal environment within the individual and the external
environment in the larger society around us, and describes them as mutually
supportive and interactive rather than being unrelated or in conflict with each
other. When the Terraces on Mount Carmel are dedicated and the Arc Project
buildings are complete, and when the world becomes more clearly aware of
them, we will be asked why we have spent so much money on beautiful gardens
and marble-clad buildings at a time when people are starving. A fundamental
answer to those questions will include our development of the concept of the
relationship between the internal and the external environments and their
mutually supportive, reciprocal nature.
Several implications arise from this sense of interconnectedness. One is that
we might best look at any spiritual concept with which we are dealing from a
holistic or systems perspective. Elements interact with each other and processes
influence each other; therefore, we cannot accurately get a comprehensive view
of any one entity in the Bahá’í model of the universe by looking at it on its own.
One also has to look at it in its interaction with other elements of our model of
the universe in order to appreciate it. This becomes much more challenging
and much more difficult than in traditional scholarship and it requires a more
global perspective.
The second implication is that we can profitably draw on analogies and
insights from an organic body—from biology, zoology, physiology, and the
like—in order to illuminate certain aspects of the Bahá’í model because our
concept of the world, with its spiritual and material components, is basically
organic. All kinds of interaction, some of a mysterious nature and others more
obvious in the universe around us, arise from its organic characteristics. For
example, in biology there is the concept called homeostasis, whereby the body
has a tendency to use negative feedback to return to equilibrium when subject to
perturbation. If the temperature of the body rises as a result of an external
50 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
stimulus, certain mechanisms come into play which are designed to return the
temperature to the normal 98.6 degrees Fahrenheit. This is a very interesting
biological concept, well known to those who study physiology. It has very
important implications for the study of Bahá’í law enforcement in the
functioning of the Administrative Order, because one can show that the Bahá’í
approach to law enforcement, dealing with people who violate Bahá’í law, is
intrinsically homeostatic. It is designed to return the body of the community to
equilibrium, and to a proper healthy condition. One can get greater insight into
the Bahá’í administrative processes, and make a number of aspects of Bahá’í
law enforcement palatable to those who may be skeptical about it, by appealing
to the homeostatic analogy from biology.
3. The Nature of Bahá’í Law
The third of the four core ideas concerns Bahá’í law. As you might expect, a certain
amount of Bahá’í scholarship is concerned with the analysis of Bahá’í law. This is
partly because law is a means of defining a community and its functioning, with the
interrelationship between its members of the community as well as with the larger
society; and also because people are quite naturally interested in relating the laws
of the Bahá’í Faith to the precepts of other religions or to the laws of civil society.
In this discussion of the distinctive nature of Bahá’í scholarship, we should bear in
mind the fact that Bahá’í law is a very unusual entity, having three characteristics
that are quite different from the prevailing systems of law in the rest of the world,
particularly those in other religious communities. This is discussed more fully in
the book on Advancement of Women, but we can review it briefly here.
One of these is the concept of progressive clarification. Rather than Bahá’í law
being given to us in one great big document, all together in one place, and indexed
and codified, it is progressively clarified. If you look at the structure of the
teachings, there are statements in an early stage of the Revelation, such as Hidden
Words, that are ambiguous and susceptible to many meanings if taken in isolation.
They become clearer when considered in the light of subsequent components of the
Revelation or its authoritative interpretation. This can lead critics to imagine they
have found contradictions, or to claim that changes were made for reasons of
expediency or pressure. The concept of progressive clarification is intrinsic to the
structure of the Bahá’í law, and also relates to the organic nature of the
development of the community. It is analogous to embryology, where the
components of the embryo progressively become more differentiated with the
progression of its evolution.
The second distinctive characteristic of Bahá’í law is its progressive application
in a gradual manner, when the House of Justice so decides. For example, the law of
Huqúqu’lláh was enunciated by Bahá’u’lláh, but only in recent years has its
universal application come into being. There are a number of laws of the Aqdas
which are not applied in all parts of the world at the present time but will be applied
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 51
in due course. This, of course, opens the way to those wanting to criticize the Faith
to misrepresent progressive application as arising from fear, expediency, or
pressure. It is more properly viewed from an evolutionary perspective as the Bahá’í
community develops.
The third feature of Bahá’í law is that there are laws which are not found in the
explicit Text. These are laws made by the Universal House of Justice, operating
with its defined sphere of validity, in legislating on matters not covered in the
Writings. The House of Justice has done this very rarely and very infrequently. As
the Dispensation continues, presumably it will do more of this. But there are some
examples where the House of Justice has made pronouncements on matters not
covered in the Writings, for example, its condemnation of the deplorable practice
of female genital mutilation.
4. Organizational Issues
I believe that one cannot legitimately separate the Covenant from any form of
Bahá’í activity including that of Bahá’í scholarship. One cannot say, “Today we
are going to work on these aspects of the teachings and next week we will
tackle the Covenant and see how it all fits in.” The Bahá’í teachings are organic,
forming an integrated whole, and hence one cannot separate the Covenant from
any other part of the Faith, most especially Bahá’í scholarship. Why do I make
so sweeping and so categorical a statement? There are several reasons. One is
the crucial role of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá and Shoghi Effendi, acting under the
provisions of the Covenant, in providing authoritative clarification of the
statements of Bahá’u’lláh. Although their stations are radically different—the
Guardian from ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, and ‘Abdu’l-Bahá from the Manifestation—
nevertheless, the authority is the same. This is discussed with precision by
Shoghi Effendi in “The Dispensation of Bahá’u’lláh” in the book The World
Order of Bahá’u’lláh.
An example of this arises with the statements of Bahá’u’lláh in the Kitáb-i-
Aqdas about monogamy. The wording in the Kitáb-i-Aqdas (par. 63) can be
regarded as equivocal, if taken in isolation, and could be considered as
permitting bigamy. It seems deliberately to have been ambiguous, leaving to
‘Abdu’l-Bahá to provide authoritative interpretation which makes it absolutely
clear that it refers to monogamy, not bigamy. Beyond that, Shoghi Effendi in
God Passes By states that the Kitáb-i-Aqdas prescribes monogamy. Unless one
is oriented to the provisions of the Covenant, one could be inclined to question
this statement, saying, “I read the words of the Aqdas, and I don’t see it
prescribing monogamy;I see a very ambiguous statement, which could include
bigamy. And yet Shoghi Effendi says that the Kitáb-i-Aqdas p r e s c r i b e s
monogamy!” This simple example shows how, unless one includes the
provisions of the Covenant, one can be led to incorrect conclusions.
A few years ago a small group of people initiated something called a “back to
52 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
Bahá’u’lláh” movement. This approach asserted rather self-righteously that it
would go back to Bahá’u’lláh with no reference to the Covenant and focus only
on His statements. As one might expect, it led to all kinds of strange
conclusions, which were grossly erroneous, and even self-contradictory,
because it was based on a conscious attempt to ignore the authoritative
clarifications of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá and the Guardian. The same processes apply to
the Bahá’í teachings forbidding homosexual conduct, with the statements in the
Aqdas (par. 107) progressively clarified through the authoritative interpretation
of the Guardian.
The role of the Universal House of Justice, in elucidating matters that are
obscure or cause differences, is also an example of the provisions of the
Covenant impinging on Bahá’í scholarship. We are all free as individuals to
offer to the world the benefit of our creative thinking, but in the last resort it is
the Universal House of Justice that has the function, prescribed in the Will and
Testament of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, to provide elucidation.
There are other ways in which the Covenant affects Bahá’í scholarship. An
important aspect of the Covenant is that it forbids priesthood. When you look at
the way priesthood arose in Islam, and to a large extent in Christianity, it came
about incrementally, almost unobtrusively. In these early years of the
development of the Bahá’í Faith, we have the danger of attempts to create a
quasi-priesthood from any group either claiming to have authority or being
given an unwarranted status as an authority—because they are older or appear
smarter or perhaps have higher academic qualifications, are from renowned
families, are male rather than female, or are from a particular country or cultural
background. So the forbidding of priesthood has implications far beyond the
literal or the obvious. Another aspect is the tendency of humanity to want to
give allegiance to a strong leader on a white horse, behind whom you can
march. And so one finds occasionally an attempt to maneuver Bahá’ís who are
prominent, or who have eminent positions in the Administrative Order, into
acting in a quasi-priestly manner and to become gurus. And those who see
themselves as disciples of that particular person go around quoting what they
heard him say, with the clear implication that it must be right because he said it.
So this is also a very important element of Bahá’í scholarship—that we avoid
ourselves being maneuvered into being cast as gurus or priests, and also that we
avoid the tendency of anybody or any particular class or group of people to
claim a quasi-priestly position in relation to knowledge and understanding of
the teachings.
Our treatment of this subject would be incomplete if we did not take these
rulings against priesthood, which are a part of our Writings, in conjunction with
the fact that we seek creative expression and freedom of thought in the Bahá’í
community. We also seek respect for accomplishment or achievement. We are
not seeking to create a hyper-egalitarian community. We recognize that some
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 53
people are very good at certain functions; some are outstanding musicians,
some are distinguished at craftsmanship, some are highly accomplished in other
activities. We are expected to recognize, and show respect for, highly
outstanding accomplishments in various areas. So our Bahá’í community does
not seek to become a uniform gray mass, but it does balk at going beyond
respect to the point of according authority to individuals beyond the provisions
of the Covenant.
Forms of Bahá’í Scholarly Activity
Bahá’í scholarly activity rests on the foundation of the constructive interplay
between reason and faith expressed through our concept of the complementarity
of religion and science. Upon this foundation, we seek mechanisms for the
advance of truth by drawing upon this interaction of faith and reason, noting
that faith and reason are elements of both religion and science.
We have gone beyond the days where matters appeared simple, that religious
people were those of faith and scientific people were those of reason. Many
scientists have called attention to the role of faith in scientific endeavor, in the
regularity of the operation of scientific principles and in the reproducibility of
experimental results. So we see the interplay of faith and reason as occurring in
both religion and science. We should value both religion and science. We have
to avoid the danger I mentioned earlier of saying that because we are religious
people, religion is all we need and anything else is just superfluous. Religion
provides a comprehensive nonmaterialistic worldview, which includes the
operation of spiritual forces and the central role of the Manifestations. This has
implications for our approach to science. It moderates the tendency of science to
be materialistic or to rely entirely on the observations of the senses. Conversely,
science can aid us to avoid the involuntary infusion of superstition and anti-
intellectualism into religion, while accepting that religion is transrational and
has a mystic core.
My reading of history is that once a religion feels that it is not in danger of
being obliterated, and feels confident, that is the time that it is susceptible to
anti-intellectualism. Historically, the religion sees itself surrounded by a hostile
world, people seem to be getting by very well without adhering to it, even to be
thriving and flourishing—and so the followers decide to put the wagons in a
circle and keep those unbelieving people out, and it becomes anti-intellectual. In
the Bahá’í Faith, the provisions of the Covenant protect us from following the
historical precedent, but one does find occasional tendencies to anti-
intellectualism even within the Bahá’í community. By reliance upon the
constructive interaction of faith and reason, we can augment our religious
understanding as well as contribute to science.
I have come to the personal conclusion that there are five principal forms of
Bahá’í scholarly activity. Let me go through them one by one.
54 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
1. Historical Origins
The first is scholarly investigation of the historical origins of the Faith; for
example, its relationship to Islam and the influence of the Islamic matrix from
which the Faith grew. It could well include historical issues related to the early
days of the Faith and the progressive disclosure to which I have referred earlier;
the relationship between the Bábí and Bahá’í Dispensations, which of course
would include study of the laws of the Bábí Faith, the reason for their apparent
severity and their harshness or even impracticality, and the legitimacy of such
laws in a Dispensation ordained by God; the study of some of the
misrepresentations about the early days of the Faith and of the accusations of
dissimulation, expediency, inconsistency, and political involvement leveled
against it.
Particularly interesting is the study of accusations of delusion or
megalomania. If you look at the statements of Bahá’u’lláh about the
preeminence of His knowledge, His station, and His position, we quite properly
accept these statements as deriving from the exalted position of Bahá’u’lláh as
the Promised One of all ages. But skeptics could also inquire whether such
remarks arise from delusion or insanity. Rather than taking exception to anyone
daring to make such an offensive statement, we can react calmly and show on
rational grounds that such assertions are invalid. I have seen very good papers
written by Bahá’ís, which address this theme in terms of the self-consistency,
the impeccable logic, the insight into human nature, and the wisdom shown in
the statements of the Revelation. Much more remains to be done in sound
scholarly study of historical origins.
2. Textual Analysis
This refers to the study of the original documents of the Faith. The clarification
of authenticity is a very complex realm in which the Bahá’í scholars will find a
lot to occupy them probably for centuries. The clarification of what is authentic,
what is of dubious nature, and what is spurious may well be a very challenging
task and there may be gradations between the indubitably authentic and the
clearly spurious.
The context in which statements were made, or passages revealed by the
Manifestation or ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, is certainly an important subject for Bahá’í
scholarship. The historical and intellectual climate in which the Revelation
appeared is of great interest to us. The answers given to certain questions are
best appreciated in the context of the original question and the milieu in which
that question arose. This is an important area but some caution is needed.
Fundamentally we look upon the Kitáb-i-Íqán in the way the Guardian
describes, as the preeminent doctrinal work of Bahá’u’lláh. As we know from
the history of the Faith, the revelation of the Kitáb-i-Íqán was triggered by
questions addressed to Him by a maternal uncle of the Báb. That is interesting
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 55
to note historically, but it is not intrinsically necessary for understanding the
wisdom of the Kitáb-i-Íqán. The same applies, perhaps to an even greater
extent, to the Epistle to the Son of the Wolf. Essentially, we do not really care
who was the individual stigmatized as the Son of the Wolf. What we care about
most of all are the things Bahá’u’lláh says in that book. Certain passages are
clarified by knowing who that person was and what were his misdeeds, but
fundamentally Bahá’u’lláh seemed to be addressing the community of Bahá’ís
of this generation, and untold future generations in the distant future, rather
than devoting Himself to the revelation of so weighty a document to a non-
entity who vanished from the scene within a few years. So contextualization is
useful but also has its limitations; carried to excess it can narrow our focus to an
unwarranted extent.
In this realm of contextual analysis, one could profitably study the allusions
to literary and religious works and concepts, for example, in the passages where
Bahá’u’lláh quotes from Jalálu’d-Dín Rúmí and from H. áfiz. and from other
great poets. The relationship of the Seven Valleys to seven stages or stations
described in Muslim mystic literature several centuries ago is a very interesting
and very significant area to be explored.
The time sequence of the revelation of various passages of our Sacred Text is
a significant aspect of contextual analysis. The accuracy of translation and the
relationship between translation and interpretation, in terms of clarification of
meaning, is an extremely complicated area, which merits exploration. Since any
form of translation involves a degree of interpretation, the interpretations of the
Guardian play a crucial role, and much can be learned from a careful study of
his approach to translation. This is also an area for scholarly endeavor in the
future.
3. Investigation of Religious Concepts
The third area of the five is the study of religious concepts. We can obtain
greater insight through the power of intellectual inquiry, carried out in the
proper way with respect for the authority of the Manifestation and the centrality
of the Text, in studying certain religious concepts. The concept of a
Manifestation of God is one that we Bahá’ís take for granted. We are very
comfortable with it, but the world around us regards it as very strange that we
regard this Person, who came from Iran in the nineteenth century, with such
authority that every statement He makes is taken to be infallible truth. The
phenomenon of the Manifestation of God can well be examined, in a very
useful way, and with a proper degree of respect and authority, from the
perspective of history, and in relation to human experience.
The process of revelation is a truly fascinating phenomenon. There are
passages in the Bahá’í literature about people being present when Bahá’u’lláh
revealed a tablet and they experienced a tremendous sense of power and light.
56 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
There is a story in the Star of the West (23:73–74) about a young man named
Azízu’lláh Varqá, who was present when Bahá’u’lláh appeared to be chanting
passages from previously revealed Writings. After a few minutes, he had a
sense of power and light filling the room and he fainted. When he woke up,
people were putting cold water and rose water on his forehead. He asked, “What
happened to me?” and was told, “You were present when Bahá’u’lláh was
revealing a tablet!” This is part of the mystery of revelation. I remember in my
pre-Bahá’í days, I was very intrigued to read eyewitness accounts of the effect
upon Muh. ammad when revelation came to Him; there was intense physical
stress and a sense of power. On one occasion, eyewitnesses reported that He
was on a camel and the power of the revelation was so great that the camel was
forced to its knees. Those of you here tonight who have had anything to do with
the camels in the Negev desert know how difficult it is to get them to do
anything! So this is a very mysterious process.
The concept of human nature, with its spiritual and material components, is
an important subject in the study of the phenomenon of religion. Our view of
creation and evolution, the concept of spirit in its various forms, and insights
into other religions are all interesting areas for scholarly inquiry. Of great
interest are the psychological and sociological implications of the Covenant; we
bind ourselves voluntarily to the concept of the Covenant and its apparent
restrictions on thought because we see it as a channel for the liberation of the
human individual’s creative thought processes and for human happiness. But
one needs to show this, not only from the Text, but with support also from a
highly insightful study into human nature.
4. Application to Contemporary Issues
The application of the Bahá’í teachings to contemporary issues is very much
pertinent to the present day, when so much of our energy is occupied with
teaching the Faith. The Guardian says, in a letter written on his behalf, that “If
the Bahá’ís want to be really effective in teaching the Cause they need to be much
better informed and able to discuss intelligently, intellectually, the present
condition of the world and its problems. We need Bahá’í scholars, not only
people far, far more deeply aware of what our teachings really are, but also well
read and well educated people, capable of correlating our teachings to the current
thoughts of the leaders of society.” (Shoghi Effendi, in Importance of Deepening,
no. 153). So the fourth of the five areas is the correlation between the Bahá’í
teachings and contemporary thought. It is very important, but this does not
mean one should necessarily concentrate only on this aspect of Bahá’í scholarly
activity and neglect the other four. There is no limit to the kinds of things one
can do in this area.
Shoghi Effendi has pointed out, and it has been reiterated by the Universal
House of Justice, that the true relationship between the study of the Bahá’í texts
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 57
and academic study is mutually constructive and mutually supportive, rather
than being antagonistic. One can get insights into academic studies through the
Bahá’í Writings, as we all realize. However, the Guardian and also the
Universal House of Justice point out the converse applies as well, that academic
studies can give new insights into the Bahá’í teachings if approached with the
correct attitude.
I recall some time ago visiting the University of Western Australia campus
where the Bahá’í students had been very active and had proclaimed the Faith to
a senior university administrator, who was a professor of political science, and
had persuaded him to read something about the Bahá’í Administrative Order.
After I was introduced to him as a Bahá’í who was a professor from the
University of Queensland, he invited me to lunch. We had a very fascinating
discussion of the Bahá’í Administrative Order from a political science
perspective. I found to my amazement that this person, who was not a Bahá’í,
had a degree of insight into it beyond my own, to the extent I found myself
learning from him. From his political science perspective, he could clearly see
the necessity for the interlocking nature of the various provisions of the
Administrative Order and their contribution to the strength and the integrity of
the whole system. To my knowledge, he never became a Bahá’í, but certainly
his professional expertise gave him a fresh insight into, and admiration for, the
Bahá’í Administrative Order.
Let me present a highly incomplete list of possible areas for scholarly study in
this aspect of Bahá’í scholarship, for the purpose of stimulating your own
thinking about other possibilities.
• Theories of personality, motivation, and creativity; the nature of
creativity—a very mysterious subject in relation to what our teachings say
about the creative power of the spirit and about meditation.
• The dynamics of group decision making, which we call consultation and
which has a great many profound implications for the way people make
decisions in marriage, family relationships, and also in the business setting
and in management science.
• Social organization and governance from a Bahá’í perspective, particularly
useful at this time when the prevailing approaches in the wider society are
being seen to be defective.
• The role of values and motives in economic functioning.
• Theories of history and the role of religion in the events of history.
58 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
• A theory of environmental development. This would be very interesting
because on the one hand we have a great respect for the environment and
we regard ourselves as its custodians for the future generations, yet on the
other hand we are also committed to the creation of an ever-advancing
civilization. How do we reconcile these two apparent opposites? How do
we avoid turning the earth into a giant parking lot, paved in concrete, and
how do we advance a civilization while maintaining respect for nature and
for environmental balance? Our commitment to beauty and the preservation
of nature is apparent in Bahá’í monumental edifices and gardens. This is a
very complex subject and we will ultimately have Bahá’ís developing a
coherent and comprehensive theory which does not have contradictions
within it.
• Criminology and the rehabilitation of criminals. I know of a few Bahá’í
criminologists working in this area but much more work is needed. The
whole theory of the rehabilitation of criminals is susceptible to a vast
amount of illumination from Bahá’ís, who can examine the laws of the
Aqdas relating to the spectrum of penalties for various crimes, in context
with the other Bahá’í teachings including our concepts of mercy,
forgiveness, and spiritual development as explained by ‘Abdu’l-Bahá in
Some Answered Questions (chap. 77). Through this approach, Bahá’í
criminologists can make an original contribution to their professional field
and also provide new insight into this aspect of the Bahá’í teachings.
• Conflict resolution, which is of course central to our religion. The various
theories of conflict resolution which are prevalent in our society can be
usefully related to Bahá’í concepts and insights.
• Marriage and family development, in which we have a unique contribution
to make from our principle of the equality of the sexes.
• Concepts in physics and astrophysics. The Bahá’í teachings can illuminate a
number of concepts about the nature of matter and of creation, the evolution
of the universe, and can stimulate creative thought about the influence of
other galactic entities, such as comets, on life here. Nonlinear phenomena,
such as chaotic behavior, fractals, and nonequilibrium thermodynamics
provide useful models for systems falling within Bahá’í purview.
• Peace studies, and the means by which peace can be established and
maintained in the face of aggressive conduct by nations, terrorist groups, or
alienated segments of the society.
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 59
5. Social and Historical Phenomena
The final of the five areas is the study of social and historical phenomena in the
growth of the Bahá’í Faith. Among the subjects in which Bahá’í scholarly
activity could usefully be carried out are:
• Examination of the way in which the Bahá’í Faith has addressed racial
problems, and the degree of success it has thus far attained in dealing with
racial issues in the United States between African Americans and the
majority of the population, in breaking down tribal prejudices in various
places in Africa, and in achieving the integration and flourishing within the
European Bahá’í community of gypsy or Romani people. There is room for
quite a lot of useful study here. We will have to be careful that we retain
intellectual honesty in such studies, and that we adopt a systems
perspective in assessing the ultimate effect of processes we are initiating
now. Our work is incomplete in the eradication of prejudices, and we have
not always had shining successes. But I believe we can show to the world
that we have done some very interesting, and very important, things in this
area.
• A similar approach applies to examination of the effect of the Bahá’í
community in breaking down class prejudices in societies which have
traditionally been ridden with it, including England, Iran, India, and
Polynesia.
• The results we have thus far achieved in the implementation of the
principle of the equality of men and women. What have we actually
accomplished beyond the simple enunciation of this principle? What
barriers have we broken down? What successes can we point to? What are
the challenges we have faced and still do face, psychological and
sociological? These, I think, are very interesting and important areas for
scholarly investigation.
• There is also the question of modeling of the factors involved in growth
and in forecasting. This is an area I find particularly fascinating because
there is a lot of good work going on in the wider society in modeling and in
study of the dynamics of growth. I remember talking about this subject to a
Bahá’í scientist who was visiting the World Centre. He pointed out to me
that he felt there was an existing body of mathematics which could be
applied in its entirety to a Bahá’í theory of modeling of community growth,
if we could identify the variables. This was the mathematics of
epidemiology, since the process of the spread of the Faith is similar to that
60 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
of an epidemic. I was left with the thought that I would have to choose my
words very carefully in discussing this matter with others, since people
would feel that we are comparing the spread of the Faith to that of an
epidemic, which in some ways it is!
Prescribed Attributes
One of the interesting features of Bahá’í scholarship is the emphasis placed on
the spiritual attributes of the individual carrying it out. This is quite unusual
when, for example, compared with scholarship in the wider society. If we are
looking at the work of Einstein, it would be of minor interest whether he was
modest or arrogant, whether he rode a bicycle, or whether he remembered to get
a haircut. The emphasis is very different in Bahá’í scholarship, for reasons which
derive from the nature of the Creative Word, to which I referred early in my talk.
The practice of Bahá’í scholarship calls upon the individual practitioner to
have due regard for personal humility and modesty about his own
achievements. Let me call your attention to some fascinating passages in the
Kitáb-i-Aqdas where Bahá’u’lláh warns us very strongly against the absence of
modesty and humility in such areas of scholarship and the acquisition of
knowledge. It states in the Aqdas, “Amongst the people is he whose learning
hath made him proud, and who hath been debarred thereby from recognizing
My Name, the Self-Subsisting; who, when he heareth the tread of sandals
following behind him, waxeth greater in his own esteem than Nimrod” (par.
41). You can see what He is talking about—the person who becomes puffed up
because he hears followers behind him, the tread of their sandals making him
feel that he is a guru with this whole motley crowd worshiping him and
following him wherever he leads them. He is waxing greater in his esteem than
Nimrod. And then Bahá’u’lláh goes on: “Say: O rejected one! Where now is his
abode? By God, it is the nethermost fire.” As you can see, Bahá’u’lláh does not
mince His words here.
Of a different degree of subtlety is Bahá’u’lláh’s statement that “Amongst the
people is he who seateth himself amid the sandals by the door whilst coveting in
his heart the seat of honour” (Kitáb-i-Aqdas par. 36). This is a person who
presents himself as self-effacing, so very humble, almost apologizing for even
breathing in your presence and using up some of the oxygen; deep down this
individual thinks: I am actually quite an important person; you know, I present
myself as a nonentity, but I am really very knowledgeable and eventually these
ignorant people around me will recognize my worth! And to him Bahá’u’lláh
says, “What manner of man art thou, O vain and heedless one, who wouldst
appear as other than thou art? And among the people is he who layeth claim to
inner knowledge, and still deeper knowledge concealed within this knowl-
edge.” And then Bahá’u’lláh condemns him also and says, “Say: Thou speakest
false! . . . What thou dost possess is naught but husks which We have left to
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 61
thee as bones are left to dogs.” (Kitáb-i-Aqdas par. 36). So again, He is not
mincing his words. These are very strong statements. We ourselves would not
make them, as individuals, but Bahá’u’lláh, as the Manifestation of God, makes
these statements in the Kitáb-i-Aqdas to warn us against pride, arrogance, and
hypocrisy in the pursuit of knowledge.
Our personal attributes should also include a nonexclusive and nonadversarial
attitude to others. For example, we are encouraged not to get preoccupied with
defining who is a scholar and who is not, or whether that Bahá’í scholar is of a
higher level than you are, and whether this is scholarship and that is not. This is
a very important matter because some scholarly areas in the wider society are
riven by this sense of definition and competition. I have endured many battles
between pure and applied mathematicians: the pure mathematicians feel that
applied mathematicians get their hands dirty, have to make approximations and
assumptions, and can never be sure of their conclusions; the applied math-
ematicians respond by pointing out that the entire pure mathematical structure is
built upon a set of axioms, some of which defy common sense in fields such
as projective geometry. So there can be antagonism and jockeying for power
and status in university departments where these attitudes exist. A similar
situation can apply in such fields as psychology, economics, physics, and even
biology. This does not occur everywhere, and there are many wonderful
people working in these areas. We must take care that scholarly activity in the
Bahá’í community is not afflicted with sterile controversies over what is, or is
not, Bahá’í scholarship, or what activities are of higher intellectual content
than others.
The Bahá’í attitude towards those who have trouble grasping something
should always be uppermost in the minds of scholars. There are beautiful
passages in the Writings where Bahá’u’lláh calls for kindness, gentleness, and
consideration towards anybody who has trouble understanding something,
rather than expressions of superiority or condemnation.
Respect for the accomplishment of others and an orientation to service to
the Faith are also enjoined upon all Bahá’ís, especially those engaged in
scholarly work.
The Future
A passage written on behalf of the Universal House of Justice in August 1977,
published in the Bahá’í Scholarship compilation, discloses to us a vision of the
future, particularly useful to us now as we struggle to build the World Order of
Bahá’u’lláh. It states:
As the Bahá’í community grows it will acquire experts in numerous fields—both by
Bahá’ís becoming experts and by experts becoming Bahá’ís. As these experts bring
their knowledge and skill to the service of the community and, even more, as they
transform their various disciplines by bringing to bear upon them the light of the
62 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
Divine Teachings, problem after problem now disrupting society will be answered. . . .
Paralleling this process, Bahá’í institutional life will also be developing, and as it
does so the Assemblies will draw increasingly upon scientific and expert knowledge—
whether of Bahá’ís or of non-Bahá’ís—to assist in solving the problems of their
communities.
In time great Bahá’í institutions of learning, great international and national projects
for the betterment of human life will be inaugurated and flourish. (no. 39)
This indicates where we are going with our first halting, and indeed
rudimentary, steps in Bahá’í scholarship. We are heading towards a Bahá’í
community which will be composed of individuals who are active rather than
passive; a community of people oriented towards the development of the
powers of the mind, reveling in the statements made by ‘Abdu’l-Bahá in Secret
of Divine Civilization, where He praises the powers of the mind and celebrates
its capability for contributing to human progress. It will be a community in
which the members are mutually encouraging, free from jockeying for
position and from an obsessive desire for status and position. It will be
disciplined but open-minded. It will be at the forefront of progressive ideas
and it will be the leaven for the creation of a new civilization. The process of
civilizing humanity, and of sustaining an advancing civilization, will be
fueled by those future Bahá’ís who have drawn on insights from the Bahá’í
Writings.
Conclusion
My concluding remarks are of a highly speculative nature concerning the more
distant future. It seems to me that we can envisage ultimately a greater
unification of knowledge. The first rudimentary steps taken into
interdisciplinary studies are no more than a beginning towards a unification of
knowledge, perhaps in a distant part of the Dispensation of Bahá’u’lláh.
In the message titled “The Unfoldment of World Civilization,” in the book
The World Order of Bahá’u’lláh, the Guardian refers to the great advances in
knowledge which will occur in that period. The notes to the Kitáb-i-Aqdas also
mention a statement of Bahá’u’lláh about the emergence of a science which He
calls “divine philosophy” at the time of “the coming of age of the human race”
(Kitáb-i-Aqdas 250). My speculation is that the fusion of various forms of
knowledge will occur in this more distant time. We will at that time have a far
deeper insight into the nature of matter and its relationship to spirit.
‘Abdu’l-Bahá identifies spirit with the power of attraction at the mineral level
(Bahá’í World Faith 338) and relates it to one aspect of a generalized
characteristic of the world of creation, which He describes by the term “love”
(Promulgation of Universal Peace 255). When, at a distant time, we obtain a
deeper understanding into the nature of matter and its relationship with spirit,
we can expect that it will yield greater insight into such things as:
Some Aspects of Bahá’í Scholarship 63
• The interaction between physical medicine and attitudes of mind in
promoting the healing process, which is intrinsically a question of matter
and spirit, with the human spirit interacting with matter
• Questions of psychology, creativity, motivation, and the nature of human
beings
• Particle physics, now confronted with a bewildering array of subatomic
particles, and the various endeavors to develop a unified field theory
• Issues in astrophysics, such as the interconnectedness of the elements of the
universe
• The nature of life
‘Abdu’l-Bahá speaks of the influence of the remote elements of the universe
on life on earth, and of the influence of the Revelation of Bahá’u’lláh being
unconstrained, as far as its effect in the universe. At some future time our
concept of matter and spirit will include a comprehensive understanding of the
interaction of the very distant parts of the physical universe with life on this
earth, perhaps through fields and particles, and it will prove to be far more
mysterious and subtle than we can imagine today, and far beyond the pseudo-
scientific assertions of astrology.
We have intriguing statements of Bahá’u’lláh that “every fixed star hath its
own planets, and every planet its own creatures, whose number no man can
compute” (Gleanings 163). Now, we can take this narrowly and anticipate that
the Mars Lander will meet little green men on that planet. Or we can take it at a
more fundamental level and ask ourselves, what does this say about life? What
does Bahá’u’lláh mean by this term? What is the nature of the evolution of life
in the universe? I think this subject will be illuminated in the more distant
future, as our knowledge of matter and spirit grows.
Finally, we can well envisage what Bahá’u’lláh foreshadows as a sign of the
coming of age of mankind—a new approach to the transmutation of elements.
This must await that time of maturity when we have a deeper understanding of
interaction of matter and energy and have developed that “divine philosophy,”
the nature of which is beyond our comprehension—just as scientists in 1900
could not comprehend, to even the slightest extent, the progress which has been
made in this century in semiconductors, optical communication, computers,
electron microscopy, surgical techniques, genetic engineering, molecular
biology, and medical diagnosis. How much greater will be the progress in the
future, and how great will be the wonders of the ever-advancing civilization
which is the destiny of humanity.
64 THE JOURNAL OF BAHÁ’Í STUDIES 9.4.1999
Works Cited
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———. The Promulgation of Universal Peace: Talks Delivered by ‘Abdu’l-
Bahá during His Visit to the United States and Canada in 1912. Comp.
Howard MacNutt. 2d ed. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1982.
———. Some Answered Questions. Comp. and trans. Laura Clifford Barney.
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———. Gleanings from the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh. Trans. Shoghi Effendi. 2d
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Trust, 1976.
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Canada, 1983.
Khan, Janet A., and Peter J. Khan. Advancement of Women: A Bahá’í
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the Universal House of Justice.Comp. Research Department of the Universal
House of Justice. Mona Vale: Bahá’í Publications Australia, 1995.
Shoghi Effendi. God Passes By. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1957.
———. The World Order of Bahá’u’lláh. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í Publishing
Trust, 1955.
Universal House of Justice. Messages from the Universal House of Justice:
1963–1986 The Third Epoch of the Formative Age. Comp. Geoffry W.
Marks. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í Publishing Trust, 1996.
———. Issues Related to the Study of the Bahá’í Faith. Wilmette, Ill.: Bahá’í
Publishing Trust, 1999.
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