Reality Magazine: Volume 1 ========================== Exported from Holy-Writings.com on 2026-06-18 1 clipping 1. V. . / b(i>6 ■r \ •r ■•fr; 'a',-.- » •!** J ■ * .:■ •.'-■' ■ '■■',», > I.-:''-!'' ^. . ‘v '*-4'- • V: :i, .J .- V s ^ V •■ REATITY >1 'K \ ' ;■:•■ / V, i'/ . :' '£P3oo ' , ' -Ki- w\ \ \ C r, ?■ f •■ > T^Wi, )>3AJv\t.i t E- r: »i-U. /(iJ (j. -f V . ■ ■/.' « c" l,:r':';. i r ’ < ■ M'.- ■ ■,! : ‘I .":i; .) *■’ «< ;r. ' V ■V. ABDUL BAHA ' : V ■ T^he Servant of God .V ■ I' ■ ‘ .' '''■ V •s i > r :- * r JN offering this little pamphlet to the Public with its great Spiritual and Human Feeling — I am fulfilling part of my. debt of gratitude to the Bahai Re­ velation for the reconstruction of rify . I own life — and it takes its MessaTge to any hungry heart — then it has succeeded in its Mission.^ THii EDITOR. ' ■ • \ • , / v,:'i • t.. .A ■' ■ • i.-- . . • i ■ ■ V ■; \ . I /* ^ f ;:::7;inT;:7nT::;riWiTnsnMMTii...iiiiiiiiiHniimtiTi'niMnjTijnni^^^^^^^ ■ V. 'v,. ' LESSED is he -who. is' charitable for he shalj inherii B Eternal Life. O' Blessed is he who o'^oks the faults of others fpi- he shall enjoy Divine Beatithde. Blessed is he who associates with all with joy and fragrance for he has obeyed the commands of BAHA’O’LLAH. .Blessed is he who is kind to his enemies for he has walked in the footsteps of Christ.' ' Blessed ijS he who proclaims the doctrine of Spiritual Brother- hbod for he s'nall be the Child of Li^ht.^ ^ ' f . Blessed is he whose heart is tender and compassionate for- he will throw ^at^nes at no one. , f ' Blessed is he“ who will speak evil of no one for hp hajhr at- . {ained to the^good pleasure of the. Lol?3; ' Blessed is'^he who will not uncover the sins 6f others for he will become favored at the Threshold‘of the Almighty. Blessed is he who hath a forgiving nature for he will win the spiritual graces of God. ' ■ ' .! Ble.ssed is he who diffuses only the sweet'fragrance of the flowera of friendship and rnutual association for\^e will obtain a goodly portion of the bounties of the Mereiful. i Blessed is he who teaches union and, concord |or he will., shine like unto a star in heaven. ' V r.y Blessed is he who practices loving kindness and co-operation for he will be encircled with celestial benediction. Blessed is he who comforts the downtrodden for he will J3e the friend of jGod. > \: -Words of ABDUL-BAHA. ^ cO 77“ ‘i7iiiimm7miiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiM|iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ■ 1 A Late Letter From Abdul Baha. To Live The Life Is— ^ To be no cause of grief to any one. 'T/ His Honor To be kind of all people and to love them with a pure spirit. David Buchanan, - Should opposition or injury happen to us, to bear it, to be Portland, Oregon. as kind as ever we can be, and-through all, to love^the people. Should calamity exist in the greatest degree, to rejoice, for these Upon him be Baha’o’llah el Abha! ' n things are the gifts and favors of God. HE IS GOD! " , To be silent concerning the faults of others, to pray for them, . and to help them, through kindness, to correct their faults. O thou who are turning thy face to tlie Kingdom of GOD!' Thy letter dated Dec. ^nd, 1918, was received. Altho the To look always at the good and not at the bad. If a man has r^resentatives of various governments are assembled in Paris, ten good qualities and one bad one, look at the ten and forget the in order to lay the foundations of Universal Peace, and thus one. And if a man has ten bad qualities and one good one, to bestow rest and comfort upon the world of humanity, yet mis­ look at the one and forget the ten. / understanding among some individuals is still predolhinant and Never to allow ourselves to .speak one unkind word about self-ihterst still prevails. '^nother,. even though that other 'be our enemy. A In such an atmosphere Universal Peace will not be pra^ic- To do all oi(r deeds in kjndness. ^ ^ able; nay rather, fresh difficulties will arise. This, is because interests are conflicting and aims are at variance. To cut our hearts from ourselves and from the world. We pray and beseech at the Divine Threshold and beg for To be humble. ' the world of humanity, rest and composure. For Universal P^e "To be servants of each other, and to-know, that we are less will not be brought alwut thru human power, and shall not shine than any one elsef ' , 7 . in full splendor unless this weighty and important matter shall be realized thru the Word of GOD, and be made to shine forth To be as one soul in many bodies; for the more we love each thru fthe influence 0^ the Kingdom of GOD. other, the nearer we shall be to God; but to know that eur love, Elventually it shall be thoroly established thru the power .qur unity," our obedience must not be by confession, but of reality. of BahaVllah. To act with cautiousness and wisdom. Vejily, his honor. President Wilson, is self-sacrificing in To be' truthful. ' \ this path, and is striving heart and soul, with perfect good will in the world of humanity. To be hospitable. Similarly the equitable government of Great Britain is ex­ To be reverent. pending a great deal of effort. To be a cause of healing for every sick one, a comforter for Undoubtedly the general condition of the people and the state every sorrowful one, a pleasant water for every thiristy one, a of small oppressed nations will not remain as before. Justice heavenly table for every hungry one, a star to every horizon, a and right; shall be fortified, but the establisment of Universal Peace will be realized fully only thru the Power of the Word of light for every lamp, a heralj} tc> every one who yearns for the GOD. ' I kingdom of God. * 7 * (Signed) ABDUL BAHA ABBAS. ^ , —ABDUL BAHA. ; r A. r.Art Incident of the Capture of Haifa and TO THE EDITOR OF REALITY How Tliey Found Abdul Baha Your publication .“Reality” desired to be Another “voice crying in the wilderness”, will, I am sure meet, with a hearty re­ sponse by the seekers of Light, and the Pilgrims who have, lost As told by his Secretary Mirza Ahmad Sohrab. th sir wsy • ■ May its columns fee alive with the words of Baha’o’llah and Abdul-Baha! J , ^ That Sun of Reality,, Baha’o’llah has indeed risen, heralding There is to be held in New York, April 26—30 inclusive, at the day of Life, of bestowal, of deeds. It.will illumine and dirwt the Hotel McAlpin a convention of t^ese people whcT call them­ the world of motive, enlighten the sphere of thought, and shed its selves Bahais whose greeting is “Alaho Abha.” They are fol­ rays of the love of God upon action. ■ A.u lowers of the Persian Prophet AbdHl' Eaha. ' \- This Sun of Redlity has risen at the appointed time,- that This is- interesting from the fact that several months ago • time foretold byi all the prophets. No night will follow its rising. Abdul Baha and his follo\Yers were found alive .and in good health “But it shall be one day which shall be known to the -Lord not day by the British upon their occupation and capture of Haifa, Syria. nor night but it shall come to pass that at evening time it shall The capture of Acca was most dramatic and inspiring, as the This Sun of Reality will illumine the West and the East, and taking of Acca and Haifa were the most brilliant and spectacular * wilf shine !*■____n__ J?____ eternally from4.1.^ the meridian of its rrlnrv glory. Tf.fl Its rflvs-arp. rays are ‘ ______ TS-Mi-v unll of the Holy Land campaign. the fire of the \de of God, that pure alchemical Kre that will refine and purify the hesirts of humanity. Through knowledge There is a'small chain of mountains just bade of these towns and the understanding of wisdom it will adorn the right hand of and upon the other side: lies an extensive plain. The British the West and the East with the mystery of the spirit of the occupied the plain and directed a bombardment over the mount­ Brotherhood of Man,, that will fulfill the purpose of God and His ains which lasted for a number of days. Then without a moment’s warning fifteen thousand British cavalry comppsed Verily His greatest harmony is in His greatest \jiversity! mostly of Colonial and Indian horsemen charged through the passes,’split into three columns artd each yelling his own battle ' A. N. JJ. C. cry surrounded the two cities, broke up into smaller columns and entered through every street. • - This was accomplished with such promptness that though the Turks had their horses ready for instant flight, over a thous­ Reality and were captured. It seems that, panor to this, all the division Commanders had been instructed that, immediately upon occupa­ By Isab^el Fraser Chamberlain. tion, Abdul Bal^ was to be found at once and that he and all his V followers were to be placed under the protection of the British The word “reality” is on the tongues of men. k. Flag. ' ‘ ' The great reality of this age is the teaching of Baha’o’llah. ' When the .Commanding General arrived at the-house of • ■ Who^s Bal)a’o’llah? , ; Abdul' Baha, he found the venerable prophet serene and undis- In the last century the reaUty of all things has been un­ 1 urbed—the General’s greeting was “Al^a Abha”—for he was covered. " a Bahais. There appeared oh earth three great beings—The Bab or^ J Herald—Baha’o’llah or Glory of God—Abdul Baha or. Station of THE SIXTH SPNSE. Servitude. The Bab foretold the coming of one through whom all nations j,nd peoples of the earth would be united. After sight, hearing and taste, after touch and smell—after \ Baha’o’llah came as prophesied and proclaimed the law for or before the five senses—inscrutably the si.xth sense reigns. No the age of peace. man but is dominated by its power. It is the image we feel ever behind our own when we gaze^to the mirror of consciousness, Abdul Baha isUhe expounder of the law. the image that never stands revealed because we ourselves are in Verily this is'the fulfillment of all the prophicies in all the the way. It is the shadow of the kiffower falling upon and de.s- Holy Books. Iroying knowledge. It is the recoiling ecstasy of remorse, those Abdul .Baha in addressing the sons of men declares that , wings feathe ed black and gold. , It is the calm majestic reces' “The Hosts of the Kingdom of Abha are drawn up in battle' sion of triumph, like the flowihg''of waters or the drawing of ‘array oiuthe plane of th^ supreme apex,and are expecting that curtains, by which the mind learns the futility of all desire save a band of volunteers step upon the field of action with the inten- the desire to be. It invokes the mo.st sensitive element in us all. rion of “service so that they may assist that band and make it whether memory or hope, will or desiref fear or love, bringing victorious and triumphant.” , • by whatever means are available an awareness of a beyond, an outside, less of place than of self; an awareness not so much knowledge as-compulsion, like the irresistable on-thrust of time. vLike sleep it comes'and goeS:—^present, it is most absent; absent, nearest at hand, Superior intelligence can more closely seize its Prayer When Assuming Daily Duties apprehension, though thought cannot bid it come. Virtue can ' ■ refine its influence and effect, though even love may not encom­ pass its flight. It levels all experience as the sun levels the hills. He is the Exalted and Truthfol! . It levels all experience by the suggestion, the promise or the threat, of one imminent experience, i'nfinitely different and I have Come to this day, 6 my God, by 'Thy Generosity, and supreme. Before that imminence^whatever life has been seems 1 depart from the-house, depending upon Thee and delivering my the shadow of nonbeing, poetry written upon water, motherhood affairs unto Thee. expended for a doll. The sixth sense in men is the sense of Send down upon me from the heavens of Thy Mercy a special mystery. blessing from Thy Presence: Then bring me bacic in peace and All motive, whether primal instinct or intellectualized con­ righteousness, as Thou hast sent me forth. . viction, flows into our pe*sonal apprehension of mystery as . The e is no God but Thee! Thou art the One bf‘Knowledge st' earns flow into the sea. It gathers every experience into its and Wi.sdom! ‘ - Own invisible deep. Experience enacts itself for each life within, a landscape friendly or ominous as each life’s contact with mys­ tery has descried. In the sense of my4te’*y our values take their I ask Thee, 0 Ruler of exi.stence and Beloved of all who. are essence and their form. For some, its light turns things evil to in the world of creation, to assist me in all conditions, that I may good. For some, its darkness turns things good to evil. The advance toward the Goal of Thy Command, and that 1 inay ever sincere witness, c”oss-examining himself, will testify at last on* show forth Thy Love among Thy creatures: Then grant me, thing only; the nature of that vision he had whCn the world of through*Thy Bounty, that which^ill benefit m’e in this world the five senses withdraw, the ^xth sense compe|ling. The sin­ and in the world to come. ’Thou art the Almighty, the Supreme, cere witnesses he who finds hiijnself beyond the range of word the Precious, the Powerful! or sign. ' ’ . ^ Rut where words and signs dominate, the, mystery with- - —From HIDDEN WORDS. ■ r drawn, they divide conviction as-the seasons divide the \ear. the pattern is upon the wall. But if he turns about, now’ to one For the sense of mystery leaves \>ehind among men two different side, now to another, and still sees the same pattern, he must impressions, by which men are stationed more truly than by mind realize that the pattern is not of the wall but of his own spectacles. or hand or blood. There comes from old the witness of the The test is w'hether the pattern moves with his moving, or re­ mystery of dice—^blind chance, without meaning, without interpre­ mains motionless in one place. But the philosophies elaborated tation, without responser More than half the symbols by which 1.0 justify intuition move constantly as experience moves. And the race has recorded its spiritual landscapes could be expressed thus since the sense of mystery accompanies thought and emotion by the gambler’s apparatus. As the dice fall, so the day and the to their farthest bound, both in the devotee of chance and in the y nian. As the dice fall, so the- days and mankind. The high and believer of spiritual truth, we know' that neither philosophy had [ the low of earth alike wait helpless before the revolving wheel. its origin nor its justification in outer fact, but each alike derives Rewards and penalties are various, but chance is one. Illusion inevitably from the quality of the consciousness to which it is has many veils, b^t reafity is one. Go to the end of your own habitual. There is but one^ustifiable form in w’hicW the ever­ (ether—but none can ever break the invisible cord. Freedom— lasting debate may be,discussed: whether consciousness itself;;^!! that is the subtlest illusion of them all. And why not? The its essence, is, a mechanical or a s^ritual thing. ■stars ride above all, the fatal stars, themselves haphazard flung And it is no slight, unimportant furtherance of inquiry to within the nothingness of space. The kipg’s robe, 'brpidered come to feel that the inquiry stands upon this particular ground. with knowledge and dream—the king’s robe, too, covers a For the external wmrld of space'and event has ever favored a be­ prisoner’s c^ain. / ■ . • lief in chance as the essence of fate. To search a lifetime Across.'the watershad, where experience flows the, opposite, throughout matters external is to become at last part of their w'ay, mystery from of old takes to itself another form. To the restless movement and actuality. It is to lose the sensitive dis­ child, music is mysterious, yet music can be learned. To the crimination testing the qualities of e.xperience by the recollection savage, mathematics are mysterious, yet from /savages mathe­ of faith-—by the recollection that faith once justified itself to the matics slowly, gradually came. And so it is that altough war ..inner guardian—and acce"pt a "standard for things offered by the follows war, and famine on famine feeds, and the world’s increas­ things themselvete. It is a fact that- the mystery of fchance a.^r ing control of nature is only matched by its increasing reckless­ dominating j;he world never came from the depths of life, but is ness of life, yet those in whom the sense of mystery has registered the glittering surface of 'concrete things and evehts permitted all not as chance but as the attainable unattained—those meet the too unwisely to blind the lustful eye. It is a fact' that w’hile two argument of fact -wdth hopeful insistence, relying upon a truth opposite mysteries seem unalterably opposed, there is but one for which no reality avails. And as scieitte shifts its attack’ mystery to which illusion itself opposes. But there is a gradual from the emptiness of space to the mechanics of heredity, these i;ransition from the sense of mystery to'the sense'of illusion " still faithful toJ;heir vision admit even their own pre-natal infer-' seemingly mysterious, a transition so gradual that any' one con- iority but exult in a superiority that knows nor birth nor death. .sciousness may pass over without awareness of the fact. It is a Let life be chemistry, if it must, yet the-seething caldron of t'-ansition downward, a subtle degradation of vital energy into consciousness has for some at least set free an element with which destructive motion—motion, .which, once released, never/can of they feel themselves familiar to an eternal God.' i itself be raised to that height of energy again.^ So to accept the Impression cannot be matched against impression, for all debate upon the grounds of truth as truth? is presented by the are equal in the democracy of truth. It is thropgh its alliance universe is for the spiritual to lose their entire cldim. It is ever\ with e.xternal fact that impression acquires currency and value. mo-e—^they join themselves, unwittingly, 'to their enemies and And so the two opposed intuitions have, throughout the ages of make a hostile cause their own. .speculation, attached them.selves to the uniye"se of sen.se and If We draw’ closely to the debate as it has gone on from school , event, brooding over it, drawing near and nearer then far and to school, w'e perceive very readily that the force behind each farther away, constantly changing their perspective in the' effort argument can be measured in terms of a certain condition in to set claim to one more weapon in the clash of minds. No-w if - social development. It is more particularly w'hert the individual »■ a man sees a pattern before him-in a dim light, he will believe mind is surrounded* by a great accumulation of treasure—w'hen, ■ I, > Its own capacity seems weak in comparsion with its inherited cannot perceive w'hence the forces come. For a new experience knowledge—^that the doctrine of chance becomes generally ac­ enters the mind by the most accesible door—and the mind judges ceptable The universe, and consciousness itself, become ap­ it by comparsion with the experience entering most often the parently mechanical and devoid of spiritual claim precisely when .same way. It is only by standing outside the personal attitude, consciousness tends least to exert its own innate power. As a and estimating the force historically, that one can perceive that merely passive force employed to register an abundant inherit­ behind the force whose influence begot confidence in the soul--- ance of art, philosophy and experience, the soul actually comes confidence to be—invariably a Messenger stood. Invariably it tt5 iustifv the mechanical theory. As society grows in institu- has been the Message that inspired the soul. It is the Message Lns, the soul diminishes by functions. It witnesses power all that awakens the soul to itself, as the lover awakens the uncon­ about itself, and the spectacle overawes its own instincts. Then scious heart of a girl. Being is a gift from without, not an the soul is caught up into the restless movement of mechanical attainment from within. . things, and the only record it leaves behind is the record of aim­ The sense of mystery in life is a harkening to the Messenger’s less wandering abroad for a happiness and a peace it left unre­ footsteps; the footsteps that echoed away long since, but surely cognized at home. ;■ to return, For all knowledge and all art, yes all wealth too, originally ^ —HORACE HOLLEY. came from active functions of the soul. The soul dismayed at the world is dismayed at/its own creation. For the soul gave these things of its own abundance to the, world; the world never The following are from the Persian •>-ave one thing to the soul. The \vorld is a dry desert filled only from the overflow of the soul. It is in this desert that so many “Hidden Words” are walking, walking, each with his cup which nevey can be filled save with.the bitterness of Salt; an eternal spring all unknown O MY SON! ■ . flowing in the deeps of his own heart. Before him rises a V , The Cohipany of the wicked increaseth sorrow, and the mirage which day after day he pursues, past the bodies of the fellowship of the righteous removetli the rust of the mind. dead, until he too lies down wearily among them, dying. The He who desires to associate with God, let him associate with glitter of the world is the glitter of a mirror, bright by the sheer . His Beloved; and he who desires to hear the word of God, perfection of its own nothingness. . . let him hear the'Words of His chosen ones. ' “/ have created thee rich, why hant thou made thyself poor? Noble have I crowned thee, why hast thou deyraded thyself?” o'fRIENDS! X, ' ' 7 . As the soul ^ibsides within itself, like a flame to ashes, the Truly I say — all that ye have, concealed in yoiir hearts,' presence of God grows incredible and remote. For God is to the is clear to Us, clear, manifest and open as the day; but the soul as heat is to the flame, and the only “proof” of God is His cause of concealment is from Our Generosity and Mercy^ not possession. God does not inhabit the world of chance; His law ■A from your merit. does not control that world; Ills traces are a^nt from it. The O SONS OF ADAM! ^ world of chance derives from men’s own ex|ferience of darknes.s “The good word”,and pure and holy deeds ^cend to the and cold. To escape that world, and enter the world where God glorious Heaven of Oneness. Strive that thy deeds may be is, one must rekindle the flame. This is of the essence of spiri­ cleansed from the dust of hypocrisy and from the tuihidness tual experience: that the realization of soul is identical with thei of self and passion, and thus enter the glorious Presence of realization of Gbd. Acceptance. For soon the Assayers of Existence, in the But there is a characteristic condition o^ society, also, when, portico of the Presence of the Worshipped One, shall accept .■the soul comes into its own. From time to time strange force.« naught except pure deeds. This is the Sun of Wisdom and blow across .the world of minds, as winds blow across the wheat. Significances which has dawned from the horizon of the • And before the.se fbfces men bow and are bent, .even while they Mouth of the.Divine.Wilh Blessed are they wfho advance. I 15 A. (,4 ciples have since been presented there, at monthly meetings, by THE STEPPING STONE iS Bahai friends, together with excellent music. THAT GATHERS NO MOSS In connection with the “Bread-line”, spontaneously organ­ ized at the two Stepping Stones, thousands have been fed. In all, about 35,000 people have been freely provided with food, Trials are stepping stones unless we make them stumbling blocks. about 3,000 with lodging, and hundreds helped along to positions. Through securing work for the “Breacjliners,” the backbone of Some seven months ago was the above sign engrossed in the “Breadline”''!^ been broken and both suffering and danger golden letters on the show' window of a modest store, No. 203 averted. East 9th Street, New York City.. \ Some thirty days ago a similar sign went up at No. Some of the Bahai friends have come forward with both Bowery, about twenty blocks away, close to Chinatown and the service and financial help, and are now paying the rent of the ori­ “Tin-Pan Market”, between Bayard and Canal Street. ginal Stepping Stone, on Nintfe; Street, contributing to its fur­ Poor Men’s Clubs are they, wherein material and spiritual nishing and decollating, as well as helping to furnish and support food is served night and day with Bahai ,1‘love and fragrance’. the Bahai Home, now being organized at No. 12 Stuyvesant Bom in Loving Service, their household desires to remain - , Street, just across the way, whero aged working-women will find unknown except as the “Servants of the Servants”. ' ’Oieir ^ founder craves but for the station of “The Shepherd s Dog at the lodging amidst loving service. Shepherd’s Feet”. / „ . i, i • And what inspired all this—the following passages of* the These are stepping stones in fact as well as in name, helping , Hidden Words: . . men to step from the lowest .of earth’s strata to the highest of The poor among ye are My trust. Therefore ^ard My heaven’s realms. x- i Trust, and be not wholly occupied with your owAease. Followmg the example of the Master, the hup^y are first fed wholesorne material food ‘ere t^iey list’ to the spiritual har- • Guidance hath ever been by words, but at this time, it '' is by deeds. That is, all. pure deeds must appear from the ' Strict vegetarianism is practiced. Neither are coffee, tea, temple of man, because all are partners in words, but pure nor condiments, served. ?moking is absolutely prohibited. ' and holy deeds belong especially to dur friends. Then strive Bahai meetings are held in t^e evehing, bringing together with your life to be distinguished among all people by deeds: the most cosmopolitan of people from all parts of the city, parti­ Thus We exhort ye in the holy and radiant Tablet. cularly frbm the East Side. . .. j > r 4- '' These Stepping Stones are, simply the Glad Tidings announc- The Message has been delivered to thousands o| eager list- ' eners of all 'creeds-, races and stations, who in turn sow the seed * ed by the Master*in a Tablet addressed ‘^To.the Ass^bled Friends in all parts of the city and country. ' in the Bowery Mission”, April 5th, 1913, in which he said: \ In co-operation with Joe Justice — Joe fhe Jew , ma­ ’ • Glad tidings be unto you, for the Doors of the Kingdom terial and spiritual food has been delivered every Wednesday ■S of God are open before your faces and the Glances olthe'^eyes night at the Midnight Mission, of the Rescue Society, at No. 5 . of Mercifulness have encircled you. • ‘ n , Doyers Street, Chinatown, and in co-operation with John Carroll, . / at the All-Night Mission, every Friday night. About 10,000 ; ‘ The noble .soul in.spired to do this Great X^ork i.s iirbain j men were thus fed.- The very bfest of vocal and instrumental Ledoux — whose name is on the lijjs of thousands who have music was, also furnished by Bahai friends. ^ .■ heard of his.Mi.ssion and whose image is engraved injoving ■- . ■ remembrance of kindness, sympathy and helpfulness or, ; By invitation of Dr. Hallimond, the Sixth Anniversary of. the ' •' ! hundreds of hearts visit of Abdul Baha at the Bowery Mission was held, at that , ' ■ (Editor’s note.!. Mission on .April'19th, 1918, and the Twelve Basic Bahai Prin- From A Worlding Eleventh Annual Mashreck El Askar r The Hope of the Multitude is in- the Spiritual Education of Bahai Congress .-VJStD the Individual. v ' WHAT IS A BAHAI? x Feast Of El-Rizwan He is the richest man on Earth—-his Heaven is Here and Now—liis home is the World—he can not be lonely—for every. ■ -' "X - * man is his Brother—he cannot be sad for the Joy of Knowledge HOTEL McALPIN — NEW YORK CITY is his—^he can not be poof for the Treasury of God is open to him April 26^-30, 1^19. —^he cannot worry for his hand is in the Hand of the Great Protector. • ' :—^ ' S.VrURDAY, APRIL 26th. A woman once told me she thought every one Iiad a soul save 5 P. M. Rec'eption In Ci>ngress Hair to all the friends. , a plumber—she did not stop to think that much of the refinement 6 P. M. Feast of EI-Bizwan — and exquisiteness of life comes from the work of a plumber. Chairman:/.Mrs. AMce Ives ,Breed. New .York City.^ r / ■ < * “ If you worry too much to-day you won’t live to worry to­ SECOND SESSION BAHAI CONGRESS ’ morrow. - SUNDAY, APRIL 27thr — .3 o’clock P. M. Chainnan: Howard MacNiitt. Brooklyn, » If you love enough and have faith enough in the Greatest Love of All you ean change your own condition and the condition SUNDAY APRIL — 8 o’clock P. M. ’ .' 7 Chairman: Mrs. Mabel Rice-Wray, Detroit. of the World. .AIONDAY, APRIL 28th, — 10 o’clock: Meeting of Masheck el A.skar Man struggles to amass a fortune—so he may “take it easy.” ■X Convention for transaction of business. ' 4 __The greatest slave on earth is the man who has to take care MONDAY, APRIL .28th, — 3 o’clock P. M. of millions. Chairman: Horace Holley, New York. Lust is like the tiger brought in its infancy from the jungle MONDAY, APRIL 28th, — 8 o’clock P. M. ' __it is sweet and playful at first^but bye and bye it turns and Chairman: Grace Oher, CamVidge, Mass. • rends you. 'I'UESDAY, APRIL 29th, - 10 o’clock A. M. Meeting of Mashreck el Askar , . Com’ention for the tran.saction of business. Hurry up and do a great work for Humanity—millionaires are dying every day and taking nothing with them—if you help TUESDAY, APRIL 29th, - 3 o’clock P. M. the needy you will take their prayer^" and if you don’t think they Chairman: Roy C. Wilhelm, New York City. •' are any good now you will When you “cross over.” TUESDAY. APRIL .29th, -.8 o’otockxP. M. Chairman: Zoraya Fraser Chariberlain, Boston. The quest for a new sensation is the most boring thing in AVEDNESDAY, APRIL 30th, - 3 o’cldck P M the world—try helping others for a while and being good,—It’s Chairman: William H. Hoar, _ Pan wood. N. J. really delightful. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 3o\h, -• 8 o’clock P.’ At! • — WANDEYNE. Chairman: -Jhliet, Thompson. New York. y ■ Observations of a Bahai Traveler. By Chas. Bound in cloth (Postage 10c. additional) ---- Constructive Principles of the Bahai Movement. By Clia-s. Mason Remey. List of Publications Bound in cloth (Po.stage 5c addithonal) ................. ............ 50.40 The Mashrak-El-Azkar. By Clias. Mason Reiney. Bound in cloth (Postage additional. This book weighs I WORDS RT BAHA'O’LLAH _r 2 pounds. For postage, see parcel post rate between your town and Chicago.) .................................................................... 5100 Tablets of Baha’ollah. ‘Postafro 10c additional) .......... Bahai Teaching. By Chas. Mason Reiney. Bound in cloth (Postage 5c additional) ................................ 50.60 Through Warring Countries ^ the Mountain of God. 'j Three Tablets of^aha'o'llah. 32 P»^. boumU paper .........$ • Bv Chas. Mason Remey. ^ Surat-ul-Hykl. ' ('J'lie discourse on the lenipl^) ■ Bound in cloth (Postage additional. This book weighs 2 ' (;:i pafres, liound in paper .......... ................................... pounds. For postage, see parcel post rate between your The Hidden Words. 102 pages, bound in paper ......................... town and Chicago.) ..............................................................—52.00 Saule bound in leather ............... ............. ............. ............ Dawn of Knowdedge and The Most Great Peace. Bv Paul Kingston Dealy. 4S pages, bound in paper; .i....».5050 The Seven Valleys. .50 pages, bound m paper ..................... ' ' Ji56 The Revelation of Baha'oTlah. By Mrs. Isabella D. Brittingham. Saiiie bound in lea;ther ........................................... .32 pages, bound in paper ...................................... . ........i.......50.15 The Hidden Words and The Seven VallBys. ' ....... Martvrdoms in Persia in 1903. By Hadji Mirza Hayder Ali. '■ Combined under one cover. \Tini Tt«ha ' 32 pages, hound in papet' .......................... ............ ......... ......50.15 ACCOUNTS OF VISITS TG ACCA.. In Galilee. By Thornton Chase. , 84 pages, bound in paper, illustrated ......................... ..........50.35 Annendix to European edition; Chapter on Strikes. S Iiage pamphlet . . . . . . . . . . . . ....^... . . The Oriental Rose. By Mary Hanford Ford. 218 pagies, bound in cloth ..........................\......... ....................50.80 tPoleSj *1.. 1^ > »■« .«■. Ten Days in the Lfght of Acca. By ^Irs. Julia M! Grundy. Ill pages, bound in paper ................. . —.—................50.35 ”‘S‘X..se 10. .0.W1OOO1' ■: ■ ■ ■ ■ Daily Lessons Received at Acca. By Mr^. Goodall and Mrs. 000001, 80 pages, bound in paper ............ ......................v’-..................50-35 My Visits to Abbas Effendi (Abdul-Baha) in 1899. - ^ . . . By Mrs. Margaret B. Peeke. 32 pages, bound in paper..... .50.20 Unity Throuipi Love. By Howard MacNntt 7 . . ' 32 pages, bound in paper ............ ............................................... 50.16 Table Talks with Abdul-Baha. By Mr. and Mrs. Geo. T. Winterbum .32 pages, bound in paper .......... i........... ^..'.1..........,............ ■..50.16 WRITINGS BY ORIENTAL AND OCCIDENTAL BAHAIS. My Visits to Acca. By Mr?. Mary L. Lucas. / 42 pages, bound in paper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Flowers from the Rose Garden of Acca. ■ "■‘'■intrrsSino .The Brilliant Proof. By Mir/.a Abul Fazl Gulpaypan. By Mr.s. Finch and Misses Knobloch. \ 40 ages, bound in paper ....................................... \-v..........50.16 Table Talks Taken in Acca in 1907. By Arthur S. 4snew. 24 pages, hound in paper ....................................... .....50.16 The^LrandT^ll^^^^ An Early Pilgrimage. By Mrs. May Maxwell. llr’pag^'’bound in cloth (Postage 15c additional) ........ H.75 .34 pages, bound in paper ........................... ...............................5050 MISCELLANEOUS. ^ ' \ ■ God's Heroeaf By Laura C. Barney. Beffre Tbr^m Was. I Am. By T^-™ten Chase. - ^ lOfi page)^ beautifully bound (Postage, ISc. additional.).. .53.00 Portfolio of Views of th^Holy Land...................... ......................51.60 The Bahai Movement: Its Spiritual Dynamic. ( ...... A repfint of a luagazine article. Ifi pago^pamphlet .........50.10 The Bahai Movement. By j S0.50 Bound in cloth (Postage 10c additional) .......................... — Reality Magazine: Volume 1 (Used by permission of the curator)