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Source: Bahá'í Library Online (bahai-library.com), curated by Jonah Winters. Used by permission of the curator. Original citation: Moojan Momen, House of Justice (Baytu'l-'Adl), New York: Columbia University, 1989, bahai-library.com.
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House of Justice (Baytu'l-'Adl)
Moojan Momen
published in Encyclopaedia IranicaVolume 3
New York: Columbia University, 1989
BAYT-AL-ʿADL (House of Justice), a Bahai administrative institution. In the Bahai faith all spiritual and administrative authority rests with institutions rather than individuals. These institutions exist in a hierarchy according to the area (local, national, and international) over which they hold jurisdiction. At present in the Bahai world, the institutions that exist at the local and national level are called Spiritual Assemblies (maḥfel-e rūḥānī), but Shoghi Effendi has stated that these will eventually evolve into and be named Houses of Justice (World Order of Bahá’u’lláh, pp. 5-7). At the international level, however, the name of the supreme authority in the Bahai world is the Universal House of Justice (bayt-al-ʿadl-e aʿẓam).
The House of Justice was first ordained in al-Ketāb al-aqdas of Bahāʾ-Allāh. In this book and other writings of Bahāʾ-Allāh, there are many statements regarding the House of Justice, but it was left to Bahāʾ-Allāh’s successors as leaders of the Bahai community to define the various levels of House of Justice and to determine which statements of Bahāʾ-Allāh relate to which level.
When copies of the al-Ketāb al-aqdas reached Iran, some of the Bahais in Tehran in 1294/1877 decided to implement the instructions and set up a House of Justice in that city. Later others were set up in other parts of Iran and in about 1900 in Chicago. But in 1902 ʿAbd-al-Bahāʾ changed this name lest the secular authorities in any country should think that an attempt was being made to set up an alternative judiciary or that any interference with the political or administrative affairs of the country was intended (Bahá’i World Faith, p. 406). During ʿAbd-al-Bahāʾ’s lifetime such names as House of Spirituality and Board of Counsel were current among the Bahais of the West and Majles-e Šūrā in the East. Later this was standardized to Maḥfel-e Rūḥānī. In his Will and Testament (p. 14; Ganjīna-ye ḥodūd, p. 214), ʿAbd-al-Bahāʾ gave instructions for the setting up of special or secondary Houses of Justice (bayt-e ʿadl-e ḵoṣūṣī) which would be established in each country and would elect the members of the general or universal House of Justice (bayt-e ʿadl-e ʿomūmī). Shoghi Effendi interpreted this to mean that Houses of Justice would eventually be established at local, national, and international levels and be proceeded, from 1923 onward, with the formation of national Spiritual Assemblies (maḥfel-e rūḥānī-e mellī), which he identified with the secondary Houses of Justice. Predecessors to these national bodies had existed in some countries from the time of ʿAbd-al-Bahāʾ with such names as the Bahai Temple Unity and the Central Spiritual Assembly (maḥfel-e rūḥānī-e markazī). Shoghi Effendi also established in 1951 a body called the International Bahai Council (Šūrā-ye bayn-al-melalī-e Bahāʾī) which he stated was a precursor of the Universal House of Justice. Following the death of Shoghi Effendi in 1957, the Hands of the Cause of God (Ayādī-e Amr Allāh), who had been designated “Chief Stewards of Baha'u’llah’s embryonic World Order” (Shoghi Effendi, Messages to the Baha’i World, p. 127), decided upon the election of the Universal House of Justice which was elected in 1963 by the members of all of the National Spiritual Assemblies. The Universal House of Justice adopted its constitution in 1972 (Bahá’í World 17, p. 287).
Read the rest of this article online at www.iranicaonline.org/articles/bayt-al-adl-house-of-justice.
According to Bahāʾ-Allāh (al-Ketāb al-aqdas, quoted in Local Spiritual Assemblies, p. 3), Houses of Justice should be composed of nine persons, although if it exceeds that number it does not matter. ʿAbd-al-Bahāʾ laid down that they should be elected bodies: the local Houses of Justice to be elected by all of the Bahais in an area, the national body through indirect election by delegates elected by the Bahais of each electoral area, and the Universal House of Justice to be elected by the national bodies.
Among the general functions of the Houses of Justice, as enunciated by Bahāʾ-Allāh, are the following: to promulgate the cause of God; to educate the souls of men; to preserve the law; to make the land prosperous; to administer social affairs; to educate the children; to take care of the old, the weak, and the ill who have fallen into poverty (Ganjīna-ye ḥodūd, p. 214).
The following statements of Bahāʾ-Allāh and ʿAbd-al-Bahāʾ are considered to relate solely to the Universal House of Justice: (a) It is under the “care and protection” of Bahāʾ-Allāh and the “shelter and unerring guidance” of the Bāb (Will and Testament, p. 11) and is “the source of all good and freed from all error” (ibid., p. 14); (b) its membership is confined to men (Selections, p. 80); (c) it can legislate laws and ordinances to cover all areas that are not expressly laid down by Bahāʾ-Allāh and may also repeal laws enacted previously by the Universal House of Justice, but it cannot alter the laws laid down by Bahāʾ-Allāh (Kalamāt-e ferdowsīya, in Majmūʿa, p. 37, tr. Tablets, p. 68; see also Will and Testament, pp. 14, 19-20); (d) it administers all religious endowments (awqāf: al-Ketāb al-aqdas quoted in Ganjīna-ye ḥodūd, p. 221); (e) it receives the religious tax of Ḥoqūq Allāh and has full authority over its expenditure (Ganjīna-ye ḥodūd, p. 107); (f) all matters of state (omūr-e sīāsīya) should be referred to this body (Lawḥ-e bešārat in Majmūʿa, p. 14; tr. Tablets, p. 27); (g) it must promote the “lesser peace” (Lawḥ-e donyā in Majmūʿa, p. 50; tr. Tablets, p. 89); (h) whosoever disobeys or opposes the House of Justice has disobeyed and opposed God (Will and Testament, p. 11).
The powers and duties of the Universal House of Justice, according to its constitution, may be summarized thus: ensuring the preservation of the sacred texts; protecting the Bahai faith from repression and persecution; propagation of the Bahai faith; expansion and consolidation of the Bahai administration; promoting spiritual qualities in the Bahai community and peace and amity among nations; enacting, abrogating, and changing according to the requirements of the time such laws and ordinances not expressly recorded in the sacred text; safeguarding the personal rights, freedom, and initiative of the individual; applying the Bahai principles and laws; developing the spiritual and administrative center of the Bahai faith in the Haifa-Acre (ʿAkkā) area; guiding and coordinating Bahai activities throughout the world; receipt and administration of the funds and endowments entrusted to its care; adjudication and arbitration of disputes referred to it; pronouncing sanctions against violations of Bahai law (Bahá’í World 17, p. 286).
Bibliography : For the constitution of the Universal House of Justice, see Bahá’í World 17, 1976-79, Haifa, 1981, pp. 285-92; also published separately Haifa, 1972. For the model declaration of trust and bylaws for a national and local Spiritual Assembly, see ibid., pp. 337-45, 361-64 respectively. For quotations from Bahāʾ-Allāh, ʿAbd-al-Bahāʾ, Shoghi Effendi, and the Universal House of Justice, see the compilations: Local Spiritual Assemblies, National Spiritual Assemblies, The Universal House of Justice, nos. 1, 5, and 16 respectively of a series of compilations issued by the Universal House of Justice, Oakham, England, 1970, 1971, 1984. For the history of the development of the administrative institutions of the Bahai faith, see R. Meḥrābḵānī, “Maḥāfel-e šawr dar ʿahd-e jamāl-e aqdas-e Abhā,” Payām-e Bahāʾī 28, February, 1982, pp. 9-11; 29, March, 1982, pp. 8-9; E. Braun, From Strength to Strength, Wilmette, 1978; P. Smith, “A Sociological Study of the Babi and Baha’i Religions,” Ph.D. thesis, University of Lancaster, England, pp. 291-95, 325-29, 338-47, 349-50. Other works referred to in the text are: Will and Testament of ʿAbdu’l-Bahā, Wilmette, 1944; Selections from the Writings of ʿAbdu’l-Bahā, Haifa, 1978; A. Ešrāq Ḵāvarī, Ganjīna-ye ḥodūd o aḥkām, Tehran, 128 Badīʿ/1971; Shoghi Effendi, World Order of Bahá’u’láh, Wilmette, 1955; Majmūʿa az alwāḥ-e jamāl-e aqdas-e Abhā, Langenheim, Germany, 138 Badīʿ/1991; tr. as Tablets of Bahá’u’lláh Revealed after the Kitáb-i-Aqdas, Haifa, 1978; Bahá’í World Faith, Wilmette, 1956; Shoghi Effendi, Messages to the Bahá’í World 1950-57, Wilmette, 1958.
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──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
House of Justice (Baytu'l-'Adl)
Moojan Momen
published in Encyclopaedia IranicaVolume 3
New York: Columbia University, 1989
BAYT-AL-ʿADL (House of Justice), a Bahai administrative institution. In the Bahai faith all spiritual and administrative authority rests with institutions rather than individuals. These institutions exist in a hierarchy according to the area (local, national, and international) over which they hold jurisdiction. At present in the Bahai world, the institutions that exist at the local and national level are called Spiritual Assemblies (maḥfel-e rūḥānī), but Shoghi Effendi has stated that these will eventually evolve into and be named Houses of Justice (World Order of Bahá’u’lláh, pp. 5-7). At the international level, however, the name of the supreme authority in the Bahai world is the Universal House of Justice (bayt-al-ʿadl-e aʿẓam).
The House of Justice was first ordained in al-Ketāb al-aqdas of Bahāʾ-Allāh. In this book and other writings of Bahāʾ-Allāh, there are many statements regarding the House of Justice, but it was left to Bahāʾ-Allāh’s successors as leaders of the Bahai community to define the various levels of House of Justice and to determine which statements of Bahāʾ-Allāh relate to which level.
When copies of the al-Ketāb al-aqdas reached Iran, some of the Bahais in Tehran in 1294/1877 decided to implement the instructions and set up a House of Justice in that city. Later others were set up in other parts of Iran and in about 1900 in Chicago. But in 1902 ʿAbd-al-Bahāʾ changed this name lest the secular authorities in any country should think that an attempt was being made to set up an alternative judiciary or that any interference with the political or administrative affairs of the country was intended (Bahá’i World Faith, p. 406). During ʿAbd-al-Bahāʾ’s lifetime such names as House of Spirituality and Board of Counsel were current among the Bahais of the West and Majles-e Šūrā in the East. Later this was standardized to Maḥfel-e Rūḥānī. In his Will and Testament (p. 14; Ganjīna-ye ḥodūd, p. 214), ʿAbd-al-Bahāʾ gave instructions for the setting up of special or secondary Houses of Justice (bayt-e ʿadl-e ḵoṣūṣī) which would be established in each country and would elect the members of the general or universal House of Justice (bayt-e ʿadl-e ʿomūmī). Shoghi Effendi interpreted this to mean that Houses of Justice would eventually be established at local, national, and international levels and be proceeded, from 1923 onward, with the formation of national Spiritual Assemblies (maḥfel-e rūḥānī-e mellī), which he identified with the secondary Houses of Justice. Predecessors to these national bodies had existed in some countries from the time of ʿAbd-al-Bahāʾ with such names as the Bahai Temple Unity and the Central Spiritual Assembly (maḥfel-e rūḥānī-e markazī). Shoghi Effendi also established in 1951 a body called the International Bahai Council (Šūrā-ye bayn-al-melalī-e Bahāʾī) which he stated was a precursor of the Universal House of Justice. Following the death of Shoghi Effendi in 1957, the Hands of the Cause of God (Ayādī-e Amr Allāh), who had been designated “Chief Stewards of Baha'u’llah’s embryonic World Order” (Shoghi Effendi, Messages to the Baha’i World, p. 127), decided upon the election of the Universal House of Justice which was elected in 1963 by the members of all of the National Spiritual Assemblies. The Universal House of Justice adopted its constitution in 1972 (Bahá’í World 17, p. 287).
Read the rest of this article online at www.iranicaonline.org/articles/bayt-al-adl-house-of-justice.
According to Bahāʾ-Allāh (al-Ketāb al-aqdas, quoted in Local Spiritual Assemblies, p. 3), Houses of Justice should be composed of nine persons, although if it exceeds that number it does not matter. ʿAbd-al-Bahāʾ laid down that they should be elected bodies: the local Houses of Justice to be elected by all of the Bahais in an area, the national body through indirect election by delegates elected by the Bahais of each electoral area, and the Universal House of Justice to be elected by the national bodies.
Among the general functions of the Houses of Justice, as enunciated by Bahāʾ-Allāh, are the following: to promulgate the cause of God; to educate the souls of men; to preserve the law; to make the land prosperous; to administer social affairs; to educate the children; to take care of the old, the weak, and the ill who have fallen into poverty (Ganjīna-ye ḥodūd, p. 214).
The following statements of Bahāʾ-Allāh and ʿAbd-al-Bahāʾ are considered to relate solely to the Universal House of Justice: (a) It is under the “care and protection” of Bahāʾ-Allāh and the “shelter and unerring guidance” of the Bāb (Will and Testament, p. 11) and is “the source of all good and freed from all error” (ibid., p. 14); (b) its membership is confined to men (Selections, p. 80); (c) it can legislate laws and ordinances to cover all areas that are not expressly laid down by Bahāʾ-Allāh and may also repeal laws enacted previously by the Universal House of Justice, but it cannot alter the laws laid down by Bahāʾ-Allāh (Kalamāt-e ferdowsīya, in Majmūʿa, p. 37, tr. Tablets, p. 68; see also Will and Testament, pp. 14, 19-20); (d) it administers all religious endowments (awqāf: al-Ketāb al-aqdas quoted in Ganjīna-ye ḥodūd, p. 221); (e) it receives the religious tax of Ḥoqūq Allāh and has full authority over its expenditure (Ganjīna-ye ḥodūd, p. 107); (f) all matters of state (omūr-e sīāsīya) should be referred to this body (Lawḥ-e bešārat in Majmūʿa, p. 14; tr. Tablets, p. 27); (g) it must promote the “lesser peace” (Lawḥ-e donyā in Majmūʿa, p. 50; tr. Tablets, p. 89); (h) whosoever disobeys or opposes the House of Justice has disobeyed and opposed God (Will and Testament, p. 11).
The powers and duties of the Universal House of Justice, according to its constitution, may be summarized thus: ensuring the preservation of the sacred texts; protecting the Bahai faith from repression and persecution; propagation of the Bahai faith; expansion and consolidation of the Bahai administration; promoting spiritual qualities in the Bahai community and peace and amity among nations; enacting, abrogating, and changing according to the requirements of the time such laws and ordinances not expressly recorded in the sacred text; safeguarding the personal rights, freedom, and initiative of the individual; applying the Bahai principles and laws; developing the spiritual and administrative center of the Bahai faith in the Haifa-Acre (ʿAkkā) area; guiding and coordinating Bahai activities throughout the world; receipt and administration of the funds and endowments entrusted to its care; adjudication and arbitration of disputes referred to it; pronouncing sanctions against violations of Bahai law (Bahá’í World 17, p. 286).
Bibliography : For the constitution of the Universal House of Justice, see Bahá’í World 17, 1976-79, Haifa, 1981, pp. 285-92; also published separately Haifa, 1972. For the model declaration of trust and bylaws for a national and local Spiritual Assembly, see ibid., pp. 337-45, 361-64 respectively. For quotations from Bahāʾ-Allāh, ʿAbd-al-Bahāʾ, Shoghi Effendi, and the Universal House of Justice, see the compilations: Local Spiritual Assemblies, National Spiritual Assemblies, The Universal House of Justice, nos. 1, 5, and 16 respectively of a series of compilations issued by the Universal House of Justice, Oakham, England, 1970, 1971, 1984. For the history of the development of the administrative institutions of the Bahai faith, see R. Meḥrābḵānī, “Maḥāfel-e šawr dar ʿahd-e jamāl-e aqdas-e Abhā,” Payām-e Bahāʾī 28, February, 1982, pp. 9-11; 29, March, 1982, pp. 8-9; E. Braun, From Strength to Strength, Wilmette, 1978; P. Smith, “A Sociological Study of the Babi and Baha’i Religions,” Ph.D. thesis, University of Lancaster, England, pp. 291-95, 325-29, 338-47, 349-50. Other works referred to in the text are: Will and Testament of ʿAbdu’l-Bahā, Wilmette, 1944; Selections from the Writings of ʿAbdu’l-Bahā, Haifa, 1978; A. Ešrāq Ḵāvarī, Ganjīna-ye ḥodūd o aḥkām, Tehran, 128 Badīʿ/1971; Shoghi Effendi, World Order of Bahá’u’láh, Wilmette, 1955; Majmūʿa az alwāḥ-e jamāl-e aqdas-e Abhā, Langenheim, Germany, 138 Badīʿ/1991; tr. as Tablets of Bahá’u’lláh Revealed after the Kitáb-i-Aqdas, Haifa, 1978; Bahá’í World Faith, Wilmette, 1956; Shoghi Effendi, Messages to the Bahá’í World 1950-57, Wilmette, 1958.
-->
METADATA
Views7662 views since posted 2002; last edit 2012;
previous at archive.org.../momen_iranica_house_justice;
URLs changed in 2010, see archive.org.../bahai-library.org
Language
English
Permission
fair use
Share
Shortlink: bahai-library.com/3467
Citation: ris/3467
select Collection:
Archives
Articles
Articles-unpublished
Audio
Bibliographies
BIC
Biographies
Books
Chronologies
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Etc
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home
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author
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