# Christ and Baha'u'llah

*Exported from [Holy-Writings.com](https://www.holy-writings.com/) on 2026-06-18 — 1 clipping.*

---

> CHRIST AND BAHA'U'LLAH by George Townshend, M.A. ================================= This etext is based on: "Christ and Baha'u'llah" by George Townshend, M.A. (Sometime Canon of St.
> 
> Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin Archdeacon of Clonfert)  GR George Ronald, Oxford Copyright 1957   All Rights Reserved First edition April 1957,Reprinted 1957 and 1963,Revised edition 1966 Reprinted 1967 and 1971 ISBN 0 85398 005 5  Availability of this etext in no way modifies the copyright status of the above publication.
> 
> This etext is freely available through anonymous internet file-sharing.================================= <p5>	I wish to acknowledge my debt to my dear son and daughter, Brian and Una, for their devotion, high enthusiasm and their manifold helpfulness in the writing of this book.
> 
> GEORGE TOWNSHEND.  <p7>                  CONTENTSChapter                                              Page     Prologue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
> 
> 9  1  God's Call to the Christians . . . . . . . . . .11  2  The Kingdom in the Bible . . . . . . . . . . . .14  3  Jesus Christ, Herald of the Kingdom . . . . . .
> 
> 20  4  The False Prophets . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
> 
> 25  5  Muhammad, Builder of Nations . . . . . . . . .
> 
> 31  6  Muhammad and the Christians . . . . . . . . . .
> 
> 40  7  The Violation of Muhammad's Covenant . . . . .
> 
> 43  8  Christianity and Islam . . . . . . . . . . . .
> 
> 45  9  The Rise of Modern Europe . . . . . . . . . . .
> 
> 50 10  The Dawn-Song of the Kingdom . . . . . . . . .
> 
> 57 11  The Bab . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
> 
> 64 12  Baha'u'llah . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
> 
> 69 13  The Proclamation to the Kings . . . . . . . . .
> 
> 79 14  'Abdu'l-Baha . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
> 
> 87 15  The Will and Testament of 'Abdu'l-Baha . . . .
> 
> 98 16  The Kingdom on Earth . . . . . . . . . . . . .
> 
> 104     Epilogue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
> 
> 111 <p8>	Since the last edition of this work, the Baha'i Faith has further extended its influence and is now represented in 135 independent nations and approximately 180 significant territories and islands, while its literature has been published in 434 languages.
> 
> These figures correct those on p.
> 
> 116.	[Presently, (1995) the Baha'i Faith has been extended to 233 countries and dependent territories with over five and one-half million members worldwide.
> 
> There are national spiritual governing councils in 174 countries. "Baha'is reside in more than 120,000 localities around the world, an expansion that reflects their dedication to the ideal of world citizenship."
> 
> The Baha'is, The Baha'i International Community, 1994, p.
> 
> 5.] <p9>	PROLOGUE	BRIEFLY but clearly, and with all possible emphasis, facts are given in this little book to prove that the Kingdom of God, as foretold in the Bible with a thousand details, has at last come with those details all fulfilled.
> 
> In all the revealed world religions the coming of the Kingdom is identified with the appearance of the Supreme world Redeemer, the Lord of Hosts, the returned Christ, the Qa'im, the new Buddha. "One fold end one shepherd" is to replace the many conflicting and separated groups of men.
> 
> This outstanding pledge, originally given thousands of years ago, has never been taken up by any of the Great Prophets until the nineteenth century, when Baha'u'llah, Founder of the Baha'i Faith, announced to the rulers and religious leaders of the world that He was this Redeemer and the Bearer of God's message to modern man.
> 
> He proclaimed that He spoke with the Voice of God Himself, that He was the Lord of Hosts, Christ come in the glory of the Father, and that this was indeed the Last Day, the Day of Judgment.
> 
> The Cause of Baha'u'llah and His martyred Forerunner, the Bab, had for twenty years suffered persecution of every form; yet without investigation the kings and ecclesiastical rulers whom He addressed ignored His message.
> 
> He died in 1892 in the Holy Land, an exile and captive of the Turks.
> 
> Yet to-day a world-wide community exists bearing His name and following His teachings. <p10>	Twentieth century thought and aspiration are deeply committed to the social and humanitarian principles which Baha'u'llah announced, though His spiritual message is, as yet, ignored and certainty no relationship is conceived between the idea of world order and the Kingdom of God.
> 
> This book is directed especially to the Christians whose age-long prayer, given by Christ Himself, is "Thy kingdom come".
> 
> Unfortunately the Christian Churches are in disagreement as to what this means and they are, therefore, powerless to meet the crisis of our times.
> 
> The message of Baha'u'llah opens to Christians the one door leading to the certain prospect of fulfillment of all that is best in their great tradition, the fairest hope of service and of redemption in the future. <p11>	CHAPTER ONE	GOD'S CALL TO THE CHRISTIANS	GOD has ordained that the Christians of the West shall be foremost among all the peoples of the world in recognizing and acknowledging the second coming of Christ in the glory of the Father and in carrying the glad tidings through the earth.1	The Kingdom of God has come!
> 
> The Lord of Hosts has appeared with all the prophesied tokens!
> 
> His teachings have gone through the earth and He has proclaimed His message to the kings and religious leaders.
> 
> But the Christians hesitate, the churches will not acknowledge not even investigate.
> 
> They do not heed nor understand the prophetic outline which Christ in Palestine gave to the disciples on the nature of the first Christian era--the period between the first and second coming--and of the special dangers and difficulties which would beset the Church during the whole of that time.
> 
> He declared that there would be no certain knowledge of Christian truth in those centuries, no agreement, but endless doubt and dispute and difficulty.
> 
> The enemies of the Church would not be open and notorious foes but would be within its own ranks.
> 
> The Christian community, He warned them, would be like a ripening cornfield, infested with masses1 Baha'u'llah, Tablet to Napoleon III.
> 
> Shoghi Effendi, America & The Most Great Peace<p12>of weeds growing so close and strong they could not be dug out but would have to be leftto do their evil work right through to the harvest time.1 Then they would reach theirhighest point.
> 
> The typical enemy of the Church would be the false prophet who wouldpervert the true meaning of the Gospel and would mystify people's minds so cunninglythat he might even deceive the very elect, at the last, at harvest, when the reaperswould gather the weeds, bind them in bundles and burn them.2 The teaching position wouldbecome so bad that men would fear the gates of hell might prevail against the truedoctrine.
> 
> Christ reassured His little flock, bade them not fear because it was theirFather's good pleasure to give them the Kingdom.
> 
> The Christians of to-day and yesterday have not noticed the accuracy of Christ'sforecast, nor do they see that the very things of which Christ warned them are happeningto-day.
> 
> Now the promised change has come.
> 
> This is the time which Christ foresaw when Heaffirmed that He had many more things to tell the disciples but He must withhold thembecause they were not mature enough to bear them At last the age of maturity has beenreached.
> 
> The time of uncertainty and doubt, of self-delusion and idle fancy and vainimaginings has gone by.
> 
> The "Spirit of Truth" has come.
> 
> A new heaven and a new earthare spread before mankind and every man is required to "prove all things" and "hold fastthat which is good".
> 
> This book is written lest Christian men and women confused by past errors andfalsities, should neglect to observe the newness of the age, to heed the warnings of1 Matt. xiii 24-30.
> 
> 2 Mark xiii 22.
> 
> Matt. xxiv 24.<p13>Christ and should fall into the snare of which He told them so often and soemphatically.
> 
> Let them not, through lack of discernment or courage, play into the handsof those who are bringing destruction.
> 
> This book is written to prove, from the undoubted facts of history, what is the trueinterpretation of Jesus' prophecies about the character of His era, to show the justiceof His warning, especially at this time when the events He foretold have reached thecrisis of their fulfilment.
> 
> May the Father, in His mercy, grant that the Christians of the West may be shakenout of their composure, may be moved before it is too late to investigate the truth andmay at last arise to meet the tremendous, unprecedented emergency which opens beforethem.<p14>CHAPTER TWOTHE KINGDOM IN THE BIBLETHE story of the coming of the Kingdom runs through the whole Bible.
> 
> It is the climaxand consummation of God's grand redemptive scheme.
> 
> The attainment of the Kingdom at theend is promised in the beginning, and gives to the Bible its note of confidentexpectation, of success and triumph.
> 
> Jesus made mention of Noah and Abraham as Divine Prophets and Revelators in thesuccession of those Who had guided mankind towards the Kingdom; but their teachingsapparently have been lost and are not given in the sacred text.
> 
> It is, therefore, not until the wonderful and famous prophecy of Moses in Deuteronomy30 that the real story of the coming of the Kingdom of God to earth begins in the Bible.
> 
> A prophecy in the full sense of the word means much more than any mere prediction.
> 
> Itrefers to-a foreview of the future seen by an inspired Prophet by the light of eternityand is a vision of the future purpose of God laid up beyond mortal ken.
> 
> Abraham had already been told of the coming of one of His descendants in whom allthe families of the earth would be blessed and Jacob similarly had foretold (Gen.
> 
> 49)the coming of Shiloh.
> 
> Moses' prophecy was more full and more exact.
> 
> He foretold that,in the distant future, the<p15>Israelites whom He was now leading from Egypt towards the Promised Land would, for adreadful crime, be plucked out of that land, and be utterly dispersed among the nations.
> 
> They would live in misery and humiliation until, in the fullness of time, the Lord God,moved with compassion, would 'return and gather" the Israelites and restore them as Hisconverted subjects, to the ancient land of their fathers, there to live in lastingpeace.        "And it shall come to pass, when all these things are come upon thee, the     blessing and the curse, which I have set before thee, and thou shalt call them to     mind among all the nations whither the Lord thy God hath driven thee,        "And shalt return unto the Lord thy God, and shalt obey his voice, according     to all that I command this day, thou and thy children, with all thine heart, and     with all thy soul,        "That then the Lord thy God will turn thy captivity, and have compassion upon     thee, and will return and gather thee from all the nations, whither the Lord thy     God hath scattered thee."  (Deut.
> 
> 30)   Moses' prediction provided the Jewish Prophets with one of their favourite and mostfamous themes.
> 
> It was the chief subject of the greatest of them all, Isaiah, of whichhe wrote in his most exalted and powerful manner.
> 
> Jeremiah and Ezekiel, Zechariah,Joel, Micah, Nahum, Habbakuk, Zephaniah shared his enthusiasm and filled out theenraptured picture which he gave of the future restoration.
> 
> Moses' prophecy of thereturn<p16>became synchronized with the final coming of the Kingdom of God through the appearanceof the        "I will give them one heart, and I will put a new spirit within you . . . that     they may walk in my statutes . . . and they shall be my people, and I will    be     their God."  (Ezekiel xi 19-20)        "I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh . . ." (Joel ii 28)        "I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts; and will     be their God, and they shall be my people."  (Jeremiah xxxi 33)        " . . . the earth shall be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters     cover the sea."                          (Isaiah xi 9 and Hab. ii 14)        "And the Lord shall be King over all the earth: in that day shall there be one     Lord, and His Name one."                          (Zech. xiv 9)   Peace will reign everywhere through the earth.
> 
> Men shall learn war no more.
> 
> Security,tranquillity of mind and<p17>plenty will follow peace.  (Isaiah ii 4; Micah iv 4-5; Isaiah xxxv 1-2; Joel iii 18).        "He shall judge among many people, and rebuke strong nations afar off, and they     shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning-hooks; .     . ."               (Micah iv 3)        "Righteousness and peace have kissed each other" adds the psalmist. (Psalm lxxxv     10)   The character of men shall be recognised for what it truly is:        "The vile person shall be no more called liberal, nor the churl said to be     bountiful." (Isaiah xxxii 5)   In the midst of this community of peaceful and friendly nations the Prophets placedthe Holy Land in a position of privilege pre-eminent.
> 
> In legislation, in religiousinstruction and in the execution of government and of justice she stands unique.     ". . . out of Zion shall go forth the law, and the word of the Lord from     Jerusalem." (Isaiah ii 3)And again     ". . .
> 
> Come ye, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord, to the house of the     God of Jacob; and he will teach us of his ways, and we will walk in his paths .     . . and he shall judge among the nations and shall rebuke many people . . ."     (Isaiah ii 3-4)     ". . . and the government shall be upon his shoulder; and his name shall be called     Wonderful, Counsellor,<p18>     The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace.        "Of the increase of his government and peace there shall be no end, upon the     throne of David, and upon his kingdom, to order it, and to establish it with     judgment and with justice from henceforth even for ever.
> 
> The zeal of the Lord of     hosts will perform this."                    (Isaiah ix 6-7)   Little wonder indeed that the Jewish people from the time of Isaiah till the presenthour should find solace and pride in the thought of the restoration of their people atthe time of the coming of the Kingdom, and should read and re-read with happiness theprophecies of the coming of the Lord of Hosts.
> 
> Another great picture of the glory of the Kingdom is given in the Bible in theRevelation of St.
> 
> John the Divine, bringing the Bible to its climax and its end.
> 
> Belonging to the Revelation of Christ this naturally is of a highly spiritual order.
> 
> It promises the presence of God as actually present in the Kingdom and dwelling amongmen.     "Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and they     shall be his people and God himself shall be with them, and be their God.
> 
> And God     shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death,     neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former     things are passed away....
> 
> And they shall see his face; and his name shall be in     their foreheads.
> 
> And there shall be no night there; and they need no1 see pages 27-8. <p19>     candle, neither light of the sun; for the Lord God giveth them light; and they     shall reign for ever and ever."       (Revelation xxi 3-4, xxii 4-5)Since it is written (Rev. xxi 24)     "And the nations of them which are saved shall walk in the light of it: and the     kings of the earth do bring their glory and honour into it",one must infer that the reference to God's presence alludes to the earthly Kingdom andthe Holy Land.<p20>CHAPTER THREEJESUS CHRIST, HERALD OF THE KINGDOMMoses had announced, and great Prophets had described in inspired language, theestablishment of the Kingdom and the restoration of the Jews.
> 
> Jesus' function was moreintimate, more constructive, more creative.
> 
> He was actually the Herald of the Kingdom,which, He said, was "at hand".
> 
> But He did not reveal it fully; "I have yet many thingsto say unto you, ye cannot bear them now."
> 
> The Kingdom, in His Revelation, becomes aliving, glowing reality, both within the believer's heart and shortly to be fulfilledin the world.
> 
> Jesus reveals its King as none had done before Him, testifies of Him as"he shall testify of me".
> 
> Jesus created a power of perceiving God which was new, and in order that it mightoperate clearly, had to cleanse the spirit of man from all worldly encumbrances.
> 
> Virtuebecome detachment from the world, sin attachment to it.
> 
> Jesus demanded this sacrifice--losing the life of the world for the lifeof the spirit, but He made God so attractive,so joyous, loving, powerful, that the Christian was ready to abandon all for Him, andfor Christ Who revealed Him.
> 
> Thus the tremendous and fearsome Deity of the Old Testament wins men's hearts in theNew.
> 
> We read of the poor sparrow whose fall was watched by a loving Father, of theflower of the field and the bird of the air, and the<p21>tenderest stories that ever have won men's hearts--the prodigal son and the goodSamaritan.
> 
> A new quality of love now characterizes the Kingdom, a love which united thebelievers not only with God, but with each other, and even extended to enemies and "themthat hate you." "That ye love one another" became the test of Christian discipleship.
> 
> The supreme ideal of this love was, as shown in John, relationship between Christand the Father, and though revealed in the most simple language and the plainest words,stands as the highest expression of Divine love in scripture.
> 
> The result was that Jesus' teachings let loose upon the soul and heart of man aspiritual power such as never had been known in the world before.
> 
> Historians have saidthat Jesus' teaching has done more to elevate human nature and civilization than allthe laws of legislators and the disquisitions of philosophers combined.
> 
> By releasingreligious energies measured to the needs of the hour and the people, He opened the wayto the Kingdom of God in men's hearts.
> 
> New affections and aspirations, hopes andloyalties were brought into being and the whole moral carried into a state of flux.
> 
> The early Christians taught the sacredness of human life and the dignity of humannature.
> 
> As soon as they could they stopped the exposure of infants at birth and thepractice of gladiatorial shows.
> 
> Later they promoted education, built hospitals andintroduced a juster system of legislation than had been in use in the Roman Statebefore.
> 
> Such changes as these they made because the seat of Christ's government wasfixed in their souls and His throne was in their hearts.
> 
> They lay open to the impress<p22>of every breath the Spirit breathed on them and had consecrated their wills to Hisservice.
> 
> A new and Christian civilization arose, cent red on Byzantium, which reachedits height in the fourth century.1   In Jesus' time there was a great company of brilliant philosophers, historians andorators, poets and scholars in Rome, all of them deeply conscious of the debasement andthe disintegration of Roman life, particularly anxious to find a way of improving itand all truly unable to do so.
> 
> The thought that the new teaching of Christ would proveequal to the task and would rebuild a new and better social order never occurred to oneof them.
> 
> They seldom mentioned Christianity and when they did, referred to it in termsof complete Contempt.
> 
> Men have marvel led at their blindness, but after alp the causeis not far to seek Jesus regards this human world as antagonistic to the divine world."Ye cannot serve God and mammon" is the cornerstone of His ethics.
> 
> Unless a man hateshis father and his mother, his wife and his home for His sake and the Gospel's he cannotbe His disciple.
> 
> He demands, therefore, that a man shall exercise a high degree ofself-control and self-discipline.
> 
> Jesus taught that this earth life is intended to bea bridge to pass over and not a home in which to take up one's abode.
> 
> The wise man,therefore, who passes this way will not attach himself to too many ties but will keephimself free so that he will be able, if some higher call of duty comes to him from thedivine world, to follow it at once.
> 
> He will seek to achieve a high standard ofself-control and self-discipline, happily conscious that the demands of the Gospel andof Christ take precedence over any earthly imperative.
> 
> 1 see Chap.
> 
> 9.<p23>The Roman philosophers on the other hand, immersed completely in the affairs, interestsand calls of the human world, has no conception whatever of any obligation to sacrificeits need to those of a higher existence.
> 
> Purity, therefore, is the cleansing of the human heart from the obscuring influenceof the mists and shadows of earth which do not enable man to see any vision of God orof Christ but keep him in comparative dakness, knowing nothing of the vision or thepower which comes to the heart that has disengaged itself from all love of Mammon.
> 
> Thewonders of Christ could never have come to pass, nor could the spiritual energies, shedso bountifully, have been released had He not been ready to sacrifice every human tieand attachment for the sake of God and God's beloved.
> 
> The mysterious power which comesof sacrifice like Christ's, and in no other way, is similar to that of a seed whichfalls into the ground and is buried in the dark.
> 
> The seed gives up its outer life andthe shell perishes; instead the inner being of the seed takes on a new life of its ownwhich spreads and expands into a very bit tree, assuming a new form in the boughs andbranches and leaves.
> 
> Analogously, Christ abandoned all that held Him to home and allthe ties of earth, and this sacrifice created the Christian community into which Hisown life passed.
> 
> He was the first to make the sacrifice His teachings demanded andGod-intoxicated apostles, following Him, went forth to transform the world and die asmartyrs.
> 
> Baha'u'llah testifies:--   ". . . that when the Son of Man yielded up His breath to God, the whole creation weptwith a great weeping.
> 
> By<p24>sacrificing Himself; however, a fresh capacity was infused into all created things.
> 
> Itsevidences, as witnessed in all the peoples of the earth, are now manifest before thee.
> 
> The deepest wisdom which the sages have uttered, the profoundest learning which any mindhath unfolded, the arts which the ablest hands have produced, the influence exerted bythe most potent of rulers, are but manifestations of the quickening power released byHis transcendent, His all-pervasive, and resplendent Spirit.   "We testify that when He came into the world, He shed the splendor of His glory uponall created things.
> 
> Through Him the leper recovered from the leprosy of perversity andignorance.
> 
> Through Him, the unchaste and wayward were healed.
> 
> Through His power, bornof Almighty God, the eyes of the blind were opened, and the soul of the sinnersanctified.   "Leprosy may be interpreted as any veil that interveneth between man and therecognition of the Lord, his God.
> 
> Who so alloweth himself to be shut out from Him isindeed a leper, who shall not be remembered in the Kingdom of God, the Mighty, theAll-Praised.
> 
> We bear witness that through the power of the Word of God every leper wascleansed, every sickness was healed, every human infirmity was banished.
> 
> He it is Whopurified the world.
> 
> Blessed is the man who, with a face beaming with light, hath turnedtowards Him."1   Wonderful is the story of Christ indeed!
> 
> Yet where is the Gospel in the world to-day?
> 
> 1 Gleanings from the Writings of Baha'u'llah, section xxxvi.<p25>CHAPTER FOURTHE FALSE PROPHETSAs Jesus had prophesied, the false prophets contrived I to change the essential meaningof the Gospel so that it became quite different from that which the Bible recorded orJesus taught.1   It has long been generally believed that Jesus Christ was a unique incarnation ofGod such as had never before appeared in religious history and would never appear again.
> 
> This tenet made the acceptance of any later Prophet impossible to a Christian.
> 
> Yet thereis nothing in Christ's own statements, as recorded in the Gospel, to support this view,and it was not generally held during His lifetime.
> 
> Jesus emphatically claimed to reveal God, Whom He called Father, but continuallydifferentiated Himself from the Father.
> 
> In many such references as "Him that sent me,""my Father is greater than I,"2 "I go to the Father,"3 "I will pray the Father,"4 "Ido nothing of myself; but as my Father hath taught me,"5 He made this abundantly clear,and even stated specifically that the Father had knowledge which was not possessed bythe Son. "But of that day and that hour knoweth no man, no, not the angels which arein heaven,1 Matt.
> 
> 15-23 and see pp.
> 
> 11, 12.
> 
> 2 John xiv 28.
> 
> 3 John xvi 16.
> 
> 4 John xiv 16.
> 
> John viii 28.<p26>neither the Son, but the Father."1 He referred to Himself as the Son, and as a Prophet,2and was so regarded,3 and related His Mission to those of Moses and Abraham before Him,and to others to come after Him, specifically "he, the Spirit of truth," who wouldreveal the things which Jesus did not.4   The followers of every world religion have invented for themselves a similar beliefin the uniqueness and finality of their own Prophet.
> 
> The result has been that noreligion has acknowledged a Prophet of a later religion.
> 
> The Hindus do not acknowledgeBuddha, the Buddhists do not acknowledge Christ, nor yet do the Zoroastrians.
> 
> The resultof this delusive belief has been that the world religions have not tended to theunifying of mankind but rather to its further division.
> 
> Another opinion which Christians universally hold about Christ is that His teachingwas absolute and final.
> 
> They believe that if the Truth were party withheld from themfor a time because they could not bear it, it was divulged at Pentecost in its fullnessand that now nothing remains to be revealed.
> 
> But there is nothing in the account ofPentecost to suggest such an interpretation and there is no one who will believe thatJesus would have named the false prophets as characteristic of His age if this warningwas to be followed by an immediate release of all Truth to the Church.
> 
> What the Bibleshows is rather a succession of teachers--Abraham, Moses and Christ, each measuring HisRevelation to the needs and maturity of His auditors:
> 
> Jesus, for example, changes thedivorce law1 Mark xiii 32.
> 
> 2 Matt. xiii 57.
> 
> Luke xiii 33.
> 
> 3 Matt. xxi 11, Luke vii 16.
> 
> 4 John xvi 12, 13. <p27>and says, "Moses gave you this because of the hardness of your hearts but from thebeginning it was not so."
> 
> Many times He says, "Ye have heard it said by them of old time. . . but I say unto you . . ."
> 
> Another universal opinion among the Christians is that Christ was the Lord of Hostsof the old Testament.
> 
> Yet the Jewish Prophets had foretold that when the Lord of Hostscame He would not find the Jews in the Holy Land, all would have been scattered amongthe nations and would have been living in misery and degradation for centuries; but whenJesus came Palestine was full of Jews and their expulsion did not begin until the year70 A.D.; it may be said to have continued till the year 1844.
> 
> To confirm orthodox Christian opinion it is customary in all churches to read onChristmas morning, as if it referred to Jesus, the passage which Isaiah wrote about theLord of Hosts (Isaiah ix 6-7)        "For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall     be upon his shoulder: and I his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The,     mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of  Peace.
> 
> Of the increase of his     government and peace I there shall be no end, upon the throne of David, and upon     his kingdom, to order it, and to establish it with judgment and with justice from     henceforth even for ever.
> 
> The zeal of the Lord of hosts will, perform this."
> 
> Yet the descriptive titles given do not belong exclusively to Christ, while some ofthem He specifically repudiated<p28>as if to make such a mistaken reference to Himself impossible.
> 
> He disclaimed being theMighty God when He called Himself "the Son of God;"l disclaimed being the Father whenHe said, "my Father is greater than I;"2 and being the Prince of Peace when He said,"I came not to send peace, but a sword."3 He disclaimed bearing the government upon Hisshoulder or that it would be His judgment and justice forever when He said, "My kingdomis not of this world."4   Many of these false interpretations involve repudiation of the Word of God in favorof the word of man.
> 
> This impious act is so craftily performed, with such an air ofhumility, that it might escape the notice of the most sincere and devout of worshipers.
> 
> Probably few churchgoers realize to-day that the Gospel of Christ as known to the fewin the pulpit is wholly different from the Gospel which Christ preached in Galilee asrecorded in the Bible.
> 
> In spite of Christ's promise of further revelation of Truth, through the Comforter,through His own return, through the Spirit of Truth, the Christian Church regards Hisrevelation as final, and itself as the sole trustee of true religion.
> 
> There is no roomfor the Supreme Redeemer of the Bible to bring in great changes for the establishmentof the Kingdom of God.
> 
> In fact this Kingdom is often described as a world-wide Church.
> 
> Having thus closed God's Covenant with the Bible, sacred history--God-directed--cameto an end, and secular history, having no sense of divine destiny nor unity, began.
> 
> 1 John v 18-47 where Jesus repudiates the charge that He claimed equality with God.
> 
> 2 John xiv 28.
> 
> 3 Matt. x 34.
> 
> 4 John xviii 36. <p29>Jesus' revelation was purely spiritual.
> 
> He taught that "My kingdom is not of this world"and that the "kingdom of heaven is within you."
> 
> His great gift to man was the knowledgeof eternal life.
> 
> He told men that they might be physically in perfect health and yetspiritually sick or even dead.
> 
> But this was a difficult truth to communicate and Jesushad to help men to realize it.
> 
> He would say that He was a spiritual physician and thatmen whom He cured of a spiritual disability were cured of blindness, deafness, lameness,leprosy and so on.
> 
> This was the real meaning of His remark at the end of a discourse,"He that hath ears to hear, let him hear."
> 
> For a hearer might hear the physical wordof Jesus and yet fail to comprehend the spiritual meaning.
> 
> Jesus, in other words, wasforever trying to heal spirituals infirmities.
> 
> He thus would be understood by Hisdisciples as a healer of spiritual ailments but by others He might be taken as relievingphysical ills only.
> 
> Doubtless Jesus could, and often did, heal bodily ills by spiritual means, but thiswas nothing to do with His real work as a Redeemer.
> 
> On the other hand these spiritualcures which He effected might be misinterpreted as physical miracles, and so were littlestressed by Him. ("See that no man know it."1)   Christ's spiritual mission was, at an early date, materialized, specifically inregard to such things as the miracles, curing the blind and deaf, raising the dead.
> 
> EvenHis own resurrection was made physical, missing the point entirely.
> 
> Moreover, none ofthe complex order, of the ceremonies, rituals and litanies of the Church can beattributed to Christ.
> 
> All are man-made, by inference or invention.
> 
> 1 Matt. ix 30. <p30>   Well might Christ warn His followers that false prophets would arise and misinterpretHis teachings so as to delude even the most earnest and intelligent of His believers:from early times Christians have disputed about Christian truth in councils, in sects,in wars.
> 
> To sum up, if Christians say "our acts may be wrong," they say truly.
> 
> If they say"however our Gospel is right" they are quite wrong.
> 
> The false prophets have corruptedthe Gospel as successfully as they have the deeds and wives of Christian people.<p31>CHAPTER FIVEMUHAMMAD, BUILDER OF NATIONSIT might seem natural to expect that the Dispensation of the Herald of the Kingdom wouldbe followed in sequence by that of the King whose Herald He was.
> 
> But this was not tobe.
> 
> It had been already so announced in the Book of Genesis.
> 
> God foretold to Abraham that the Prophetic succession was to run through Him and befulfilled not only in Isaac but in Ishmael.
> 
> In Genesis xii 1-2 it is written "Now theLord had said unto Abram, . . .
> 
> I will make of thee a great nation, and I will blessthee, and make thy name great; and thou shalt be a blessing:"
> 
> And again in Genesis xvii20 "And as for Ishmael, I have heard thee:
> 
> Behold I have blessed him, . . . and willmultiple him exceedingly; twelve princes shall he beget, and I wit make him a treatnation."
> 
> The narrative continues (Gen. xxi 20-21)  "God was with the lad; and he grew,. . . and he dwelt in the wilderness of Paran: and . . . took him a wife out of the landof Egypt."
> 
> He became the progenitor of the people of Arabia and the twelve Princes which hebegot are interpreted as the twelve Imams who followed Muhammad.
> 
> Moses confirmed this promise when He Prophesied (Dent. xviii 15) to the Israelitesthat "the Lord thy God will raise up unto thee a Prophet from the midst of hee, of thybrethren, like unto me."
> 
> This refers not only to the<p32>coming of Jesus Christ, as is usually thought, but more especially to Muhammad.
> 
> Moseswould have used the word "seed" if He had meant to refer to an Israelite, whereas theword "brethren" indicates that He alludes to Isaac's brother Ishmael.
> 
> He connects MountParan explicitly with the Prophetic line when, in His final blessing before His death,He describes the Prophets who will follow Him: "The Lord came from Sinai" (meaningHimself, and rose up from Seir . . . (meaning Jesus Christ); he shined forth from mountParan (meaning Muhammad), and he came with ten thousands of saints (meaningBaha'u'llah)."
> 
> Deut. xxxiii 2.
> 
> On the other hand Muhammad mentions in the Qur'an the prophecies of His coming madein the Bible (Sura 26 verses 192-199) and states that Abraham prayed for His coming(Sura 2 verses 118-144) and that He was foretold by Moses and described in the Law andthe Evangel.
> 
> Mankind had now had the experience of organizing the family, the tribe and the citystate.
> 
> Before humanity could proceed to the task of organizing the far superiorgovernment of the Commonwealth of Baha'u'llah a preliminary lesson in the art ofbuilding a nation had to be given.
> 
> This constituted, as the Guardian of the Baha'i Faithshows on pages 124-5 of The Promised Day is Come, the special mission of the ArabianProphet whose advent Moses had foretold. "Of old it hath been revealed: 'Love of one'scountry is an element of the Faith of God"' said Baha'u'llah with reference to thisappointed task.
> 
> The conditions of Muhammad's wife were not such as to make this mission easy Bornin Mecca, the capital city of Arabia, about 570, He found Himself in the midst of a<p33>people consisting of a hundred warlike tribes, inheriting a tradition of polytheism,who had resisted all efforts at evangelization and who regarded battle as the onlyoccupation fit for men.
> 
> Such was the race whom Muhammad was to convert to monotheismand to unify into an unbreakable band of brothers, their unity being based on theirreligious faith.
> 
> Muhammad was already about forty years old when He began to teach ethical principlessimilar to those of the Old Testament and to proclaim the succession of the Prophets,including His own succession to Jesus Christ, Whose divinity and Whose Gospel he calledHis believers to accept.
> 
> But after a few years He found Himself forced by severe andcontinuous persecution to leave His native town for Medina where He at once began theexecution oft; real mission of His life, the building of a spiritual nation.
> 
> Western scholars seem to be at one in regarding nationalism as Muhammad's real andcreative contribution to human development.
> 
> They all have recognized the extraordinaryability displayed by Him in organizing and consolidating the wild tribes of Arabia.
> 
> SirWilliam Muir for instance wrote that ". . . he, with consummate skill, devised amachinery, by the adaptive energy of which he gradually shaped the broken anddisconnected masses of the Arab race into an harmonious whole, a body politic endowedwith life and vigor . . . by unparalleled art and a rare supremacy of mind, he persuadedthe whole of Arabia, Pagan, Jew, and Christian, to follow his steps with do Isubmission." (The Life of Mahomet p. lxxxvi).1   T.W.
> 
> Arnold in The Preaching of Islam2 writes in the1 Smith, Elder & Co., London, 3rd ed.
> 
> 1894.
> 
> 2 Constable.
> 
> London.
> 
> 2nd ed.
> 
> 1913. <p34>same vein. "The Arab tribes were thus impelled to give in their submission to theProphet, not merely as the head of the strongest military force in Arabia, but as theexponent of a theory of social life that was making all others weak and ineffective.
> 
> Muhammad had succeeded in introducing into the anarchical society of his time asentiment of national unity, a consciousness of rights and duties towards one anothersuch as the Arabs had not felt before (pp.
> 
> 40-41).
> 
> The outstanding features which distinguish Muhammad's system may be summarized undernine points:
> 
> 1.
> 
> Patriotism was a part of the Faith.
> 
> 2.
> 
> Only Muslims were full citizens; minorities, such as Christians and Jews, enjoyedfreedom and protection, but not the full brotherhood of Islam.
> 
> 3.
> 
> There was one compulsory language for all, the adoption of which was made a basiccondition for citizenship in the Muhammadan empire.
> 
> 4.
> 
> There was no class distinction, and an equality of rights among all Muslims wasestablished.
> 
> 5.
> 
> There was unity in ritual and religious tradition.
> 
> 6.
> 
> There was freedom of thought and reconciliation of science and religion.
> 
> 7.
> 
> There was a judicial system with its laws and courts of justice independent ofthe will of the Government.
> 
> 8.
> 
> True and real membership in the nation was assured to every citizen as in a moderndemocracy.
> 
> 9.
> 
> It was a theocratic state.
> 
> An original combination of the two contrasted but complementary theories of theocracyand democracy<p35>seems to be the strong base of Muhammad's system and Professor de Santillana in hisessay in The Legacy of Islam explains clearly how this combination was effected.
> 
> Heshows that Muhammad swept away the former limited loyalties of tribe and family Abeliever who adopt Islam must forget and forego his own kith and kin unless they werehis companions in the Faith.
> 
> All connections depended on religion alone.
> 
> The communityof Islam was different from any other.
> 
> It was the chosen of God to whom was entrustedthe furtherance of good and the repression of evil.
> 
> It was the sole witness for Godamong the nations, the sole seat of justice and faith in the world.
> 
> Instead of theimpersonal life of the tribe there emerged the personal life of the individual whichtook its claims and its duties not from membership of the community but from adherenceto the Faith.
> 
> Patriotism was thus the element of faith.   "Islam is the direct government of Allah, the rule of God ... upon his people....
> 
> Allah is the name of the supreme power, acting in the common interest... between Allahand the believer there is no mediator:
> 
> Islam has no church, no priests, no sacraments. . .
> 
> Man is alone in the presence of God, in life and in death . . . to Whom is presentevery action, every word . . .; alone he will answer for his deeds, and alone will heface the judgment of God . . .
> 
> The most rigid protestantism is almost a sacerdotalreligion, compared with this personal monotheism, unbending, and intolerant of anyinterference between man and his Creator"1 (pp.
> 
> 286-287).
> 
> Quoting the Islamic principle that the object of1 Law and Society; The Legacy of Islam, ed.
> 
> Sir Thomas Arnold and A.
> 
> Guillaume.
> 
> O.U.P.
> 
> 1931. <p36>Government is to lead men to prosperity in this-world and to salvation in the next, "theProfessor writes that "'the white man is not above the black nor the black above theyellow; all men are equal before their Maker', said the Prophet.
> 
> Equal before God,members of a great family in which there is neither noble nor villein, but onlybelievers, Muslims are equal before the civil law; and this equality was proclaimed ata time when it was practically unknown throughout Christian society.
> 
> This law, equalfor all rests essentially on good faith.
> 
> Muslims must keep their pledges . . .
> 
> Thisconception of good faith is essentially an ethical one, and is elevated to an abstractand universal notion.
> 
> It strikes us as being more akin to our mind than the feudal andGermanic conception of good faith springing from personal fealty (p.
> 
> 304).
> 
> It was evidently the intention of Muhammad to make Islam not only a modelorganization but a model in its international relations.
> 
> The Prophet insisted that theMuslim state was to observe its treaties as sacred. "Ye who believe"
> 
> He writes in theQur'an, "be not false in your engagements, with your own knowledge....
> 
> Or if thou feartreachery from any people, throw back their treaty to them as thou fairly mayest, forGod loveth not the treacherous....
> 
> And if they lean to peace, lean thou also to it."(Sura 8 verses 27, 60, 63).
> 
> He warns his followers that if they make a treaty withinfidels and the infidels remain true to it they too must keep their engagements "withthem through the whole time of their treaty; for God loveth those who fear Him. . . .
> 
> But if after alliance made, they break their oaths and revile your religion, then dobaffle with the ring-leaders of infidelity--for no oaths are binding with them--thatthey may desist."
> 
> Sura 9 verses 4 and 12).
> 
> Muhammad Himself strictly<p37>observed the principles of justice in His public as in His private dealings.
> 
> The warswhich He waged were not like those of earthly conquerors undertaken for spoliation oraggrandizement, but were called for by the lawless conditions of the time.
> 
> They wereintended to protect the Faith and its followers and were not pursued further than wasnecessary for this protective purpose.
> 
> The originality of such practical regulations and the need for introducing andenforcing them in the anarchical international life of those days may be judged fromthe following excerpt from The Spirit of Islam, page 209:
> 
> 1   "The Roman . . . could never realize the duties of international morality or ofhumanity.
> 
> They waged war for the sole purpose of subjugating the surrounding nations...the sacredness of treaties was unknown....
> 
> The liberty of other nations was neverof the slightest importance in their estimation.
> 
> The introduction of Christianity madelittle or no change in the views entertained by its professors concerning Internationalobligations.
> 
> War was as inhuman and as exterminating as before....
> 
> Christianity did notprofess to deal with international morality, and so left its followers groping in thedark."
> 
> According to a tradition which is probably true and which in the case of the Persianking is endorsed by Baha'u'llah Himself, Muhammad sent from Medina letters offriendship, proclaiming His Prophethood, to six neighboring rulers: to the Emperor ofByzantium, the Emperor of Persia, the King of Abyssinia, the Governor of Egypt, the Kingof Hira, the Duke of Yemen in Central Arabia--and also to the Emperor of China (in 628A.D.) which was then under the Twang dynasty and1 Syed Ameer 'Ali, The Spirit of Islam, Christophers, London, Rev.
> 
> 1922. <p38>entering a golden age.
> 
> Thus did He seek kindly relationships between Himself and therulers of other peoples and took a bold initiative in setting internationalism on asound basis of law and justice.   "Let there be ln you a nation summoning unto the good" is a divine order in theQur'an.
> 
> And in spite of dissensions and civil wars, some length of time elapsed beforethe Muslim conscience countenanced any such division of nationalities as we have seento be characteristic of the Islam of our time; and the spread of one language over thewhole of the conquered territory was carried with far greater success and determinationthan the Romans ever achieved or displayed.
> 
> For at one time the Arabic languagedominated the whole Islamic area from Spain and North Africa to Central Asia; ittolerated no rival language as Latin tolerated Greek.
> 
> Syed Ameer 'Ali sums up the contribution of Islam to political science in thefollowing remarkable comment:
> 
> Islam gave to the people a code which, however archaic in its simplicity, was capableof the greatest development in accordance with the progress of material civilization.
> 
> It conferred on the State a flexible constitution, based on a just appreciation of humanrights and human duty.
> 
> It limited taxation, it made men equal in the eye of the law,it consecrated the principles of serf-government.
> 
> It established a control over thesovereign power by rendering the executive authority subordinate to the law--a law basedupon religious sanction and moral obligations. 'The excellence and effectiveness of eachof these principles", says Urquhart, "(each capable of immortalizing its founder), gavevalue to the rest; and all combined, endowed the system which they formed with a<p39>force and energy exceeding those of any other political system.
> 
> Within the lifetime ofa man, though in the hands of a population wild, ignorant, and insignificant, it spreadover a greater extent than the dominions of Rome.
> 
> While it retained its primitivecharacter, it was irresistible.'"11 Urquhart, The Spirit of the East, vol. i, intro. xxviii.
> 
> Syed Ameer 'Ali, The Spirit of Islam, p.
> 
> 277. <p40>CHAPTER SIXMUHAMMAD AND THE CHRISTIANSTo the Christians Muhammad showed the greatest kindness.
> 
> Insisting that all Muslimsshould fully accept both Jesus Christ and His Gospel and assuring them in the Qur'an(Sura 5 verse 85) that they would find the Christians nearest of all men to them inaffection, He took the Christians under his express protection.
> 
> A remarkable illustration of this is afforded by the charter which Muhammad grantedto the Christians in general and to the monks of the monastery of St.
> 
> Catherine, nearMount Sinai, in particular, the actual document itself having been faithfully preserveddown the centuries by the analysts of Islam.
> 
> Quoting this charter in The Spirit of Islam (p.
> 
> 84) Syed Ameer 'Ali remarks that it"has been justly designated as one of the noblest monuments of enlightened tolerancethat the history of the world can produce," and he calls attention to its marvelousbreadth of view and liberality of conception.1 "By it," he writes, "the Prophet securedto the Christians privileges and immunities which they did not possess even undersovereigns of their own creed; and declared that any Moslem violating and abusing what1    That this charter represented the form attitude of tolerance and goodwill which     the Prophet was accustomed to show towards Christians may be judged from the terms     of a parallel charter to the Christians of Najran is quoted by the author in the     same work on page 273.<p41>was therein ordered, should be rewarded as a violator of God's testament, a transgressorof His commandments, and a slighter of His Faith.
> 
> He undertook himself, and enjoinedon his followers, to protect the Christians, to defend their churches, the residencesof their priests, and to guard them from all injuries.
> 
> They were not to be unfairlytaxed; no bishop was to be driven out of his bishopric; no Christian was to be forcedto reject his religion; no monk was to be expelled from his monastery; no pilgrim wasto be detained from his pilgrimage.
> 
> Nor were the Christian churches to be pulled downfor the sake of building mosques or houses for the Moslems.
> 
> Christian women married toMoslems were to enjoy their own religion, and not to be subjected to compulsion orannoyance of any kind on that account.
> 
> If Christians should stand in need of assistancefor the repair of their churches or monasteries, or any other matter pertaining to theirreligion, the Moslems were to assist them.
> 
> This was not to be considered as taking partin their religion, but as merely rendering them assistance in their need, and complyingwith the ordinances of the Prophet which were made in their favor by the authority ofGod and of His Apostle.
> 
> Should the Moslems be engaged in hostilities with outsideChristians, no Christian resident among the Moslems should be treated with contempt onaccount of his creed.
> 
> Any Moslem so treating a Christian should be accountedrecalcitrant to the Prophet."
> 
> No Christian student reading Muhammad's teachings can miss the fact that His ethicalsystem corrected many of those corruptions which had crept Mao the Christian Faith ofthe seventh century.
> 
> For instance Muhammad preached an emphatic monotheism in place ofa tritutarian<p42>Godhead.
> 
> He left no room for that sacerdotalism which had so enervated and distortedthe spirit of the Gospel. ,    He encouraged and promoted in the strongest way thepursuit of science and in which had become anathema to Christian orthodoxy; He isbelieved to have said that the ink of the scholar was more holy than the blood of themartyr and to have bidden believers to go as far as China for knowledge if necessary.
> 
> Instead of endorsing celibacy Hc honored marriage, home life and home duties and by thestress He said on the oneness of all believers and the paramount duty of brotherlyloyalty He showed His horror of schism.
> 
> So kindly were the relations between the two Faiths and so strong the spiritualinfluence of Muhammad that the Christian masses were disposed to accept the Faith of theArabian Prophet.
> 
> The Bab indeed says that they were only prevented from doing so by thefailure of the clergy "for if these had believed, they would have been followed by themass of their countrymen."
> 
> Had it not been for the unfortunate divisive counsel of theseChristian priests, history would have been different indeed.<p43>CHAPTER SEVENTHE VIOLATION OFMUHAMMAD'S COVENANTMUHAMMAD completed His mission.
> 
> Out of the unpromising material presented to Him He hadcreated a spiritual nation such as the world had never seen and one which would proveitself possessed of a solidarity and effectiveness which have always been the wonderof mankind.
> 
> The future would depend on the loyalty, the understanding and sympathy ofHis followers and on the guidance given them by their readers.
> 
> Moses had appointed Joshua as His immediate successor and as long as Joshua led theIsraelites the sun of Moses shone high in the heavens.
> 
> Jesus appointed Peter to succeedHim, without notifying him as to the limit of his authority or who was to succeed himin his office, if anyone.
> 
> Muhammad, without naming him, designated 'Ali, His son-in-law,by signs so many and so striking that no one could mistake their meaning and, what ismore, Muhammad had with him a number of conversations dealing with the future of theCause and the nature of its development.
> 
> Muhammad also stated in plain terms that Hisfamily and His book were to succeed Him, thus in effect giving to 'Ali, as Hisson-in-law, the right of succession tO the place of the Prophet.
> 
> But sectional loyalties, tribal jealousies and personal ambition all conspired to defeatMuhammad's purpose. 'Ali,<p44>whose character and outstanding Ability made him conspicuously suited for the positionto which Muhammad had appointed him, was set aside,1 and Islam was thus deprived, untiltoo late, of the inspired guidance which he could have given it.
> 
> Because of thisviolation of the Covenant, the spirit and meaning of the Islamic Faith were degraded,weakened and poisoned.
> 
> Faction grew, the Prophet's family was dispossessed, and beforelong the powerful Umayyad clan, which had opposed Muhammad more bitterly than any other,gained the ascendancy, to rule Islam as an Arab em Dire with little regard for re}igionor the precepts of the Prophet.'Abdu'l-Baha describes this Don as the beast from the bottomless pit that warred againstthe spiritual life of Islam and killed it, leaving nothing of the religion of Muhammadbut the prayers and the fast; all the justice, the righteousness, the mercy and indeedall the virtues which the Prophet had enshrined in Islam were irretrievably lost.
> 
> Deprived of the guidance of Muhammad's family and ruled by descendants of Muhammad'senemies, Islam was transformed into a secular state whose rulers used religion forsecular ends.
> 
> Muhammad's plans remained unknown and so remain to this day, though itis easy to surmise their general character.
> 
> This heinous violation swept away all possibility of Muhammad's love for Christendom,so conspicuously displayed in His lifetime, from developing, and thereafter therelationship of these two chief civilizations followed its tragic course, continuingright down to our own day to disturb the order of the world and to prevent theestablishment of that unity in brotherhood which was the desire of both Christ andMuhammad.
> 
> 1 They said he was too young. <p45>CHAPTER EIGHTCHRISTIANITY AND IslamIslam, having lost a great part of its spiritual power and having to divert its manifoldenergies chiefly to secular ends, went forward on its Conquering career, driving theChristians out of Palestine, out of North Africa, out of most of Spain, but beingstopped ins France by the battle of Tours.
> 
> We stem Christendom on the other hand sankback into the Dark Ages and languished in semi-barbarism for Centuries."Omar and the Caliphs who followed him rapidly extended the Muslim empire from thePillars of Hercules to Calicut.
> 
> In the midst of a dark and stagnant world there sprangup as if by magic a brilliant civilization.
> 
> In 760 A.D. its rulers moved their capitalfrom Damascus to Baghdad and founded on the site of an ancient Christian village a citywhich became at once a world centre of culture and commerce, and so remained for fivecenturies.
> 
> All phases of civilization as then known were there found gathered togetherand renewed, and in many cases carried to heights never reached before: letters andlanguage, the arts, the sciences, both practical and abstract, trade, transport andseamanship, invention and industry, jurisprudence and the arts of government.
> 
> Becauseof the central position of the Qur'an, revered as a literary miracle, and because ofArabian pride in their language, which they held to be the one perfect tongue spokenby man and which is indeed<p46>regarded by scholars to-day as one of the greatest intellectual achievements of therace, literature in all its uses and forms was given a place of eminence.
> 
> Schools anduniversities were founded and thronged by students of many nations.
> 
> Great works wereproduced on all manner of subjects; great libraries were collected containing hundredsof thousands of volumes.
> 
> The Caliphs ransacked the earth for knowledge, sending outexpeditions of inquiry and making foreign lands and distant ages give up their lore.
> 
> An army of translators was employed, rendering Greek, Egyptian, Indian and Jewish worksinto Arabic.
> 
> Grammar and its laws were studied with great elaboration.
> 
> Dictionaries,lexicons and encyclopedias on a vast scale were prepared.
> 
> Paper was introduced fromChina; a new system of numerals (usually known as Arabic) from India.
> 
> Arabic became theuniversal language.
> 
> Caliphs would invite literary men of international repute to thecourt.
> 
> Scholars, philosophers, poets, grammarians from diverse lands wound find ameeting place in the great book shops of the capital.
> 
> The pursuit of science, practical as well as abstract, kept pace with that of letters.
> 
> In experimental science, in medicine and surgery, in chemistry and physics, in geographyas well as in mathematics and astronomy, the Arabs led the world of that day.
> 
> Theyinvented a new and exquisite form of architecture, distinguished by its combination ofairy grace with solid strength, and by its use of light.
> 
> The influence of this stylecan be traced through India as far as Java, to China, to the Sudan and to the whole ofRussia.
> 
> They developed many branches of industry and improved methods of agricultureand horticulture.
> 
> Introducing the use of the mariner's compass<p47>their ships traversed the seas while caravans maintained a trade between all provincesof the empire, carrying produce from India and China, Turkistan and Russia, from Africaand the Malayan Archipelago.
> 
> The glory of Baghdad with its mosques and palaces, its temples of learning, itsfragrant gardens, was reproduced in the lesser centres of the world of Islam: in Basra,in Bokhara, in Granada and Cordoba.
> 
> It is written of the last-named city that at theheight of its prosperity it contained more than 20,000 houses and more than a millioninhabitants and that a man after sunset might walk in a straight line for ten milesalong paved and illuminated streets--yet in Europe centuries later there was not a pavedstreet in Paris nor a public lamp in London.
> 
> Cordoba was the first University founded in Europe, and in its halls multitudes ofChristian scholars received instruction, among them being Gerbert who afterwards becameSylvester II, the brilliant Pope of Rome.
> 
> Inevitably, and in spite of the antagonism between Christendom and Islam, thisadvanced civilization influenced the course of life and thought in Europe.
> 
> Through theMuslim outpost in Sicily and the scintillating brilliance of Muslim Spain, through theintelligence of scholars and the resources of the MusJim universities, through traders,through diplomats and travelers, through soldiers, sailors and reconquered peasants,new ideas, techniques and attitudes passed from Islam to Western Europe.
> 
> Then came the day in I094 when the Pope called on the chivalry and the faithful ofChristendom to arouse themselves and Jo forth and drive the Saracen hosts out of thesacred Christian shrine, which they had seized,<p48>and reestablish the Christian Faith in its ancient home.
> 
> Europe leapt up at his wordand for well-nigh two hundred years the vicissitudes of this colossal war between Europeand Asia, the West and the East, Christian and unbeliever continued to cause the lossof millions of lives, to spread infinite misery and to squander immense treasure.
> 
> TheChristians ultimately withdrew in ignominious and complete defeat and Islam remainedin possession of all the Holy Places she had owned before.
> 
> It was Europe, however, and not Arabia which gained from the struggle, for the Crusadesprovided yet another channel through which knowledge of the Muslim civilization flowedinto Europe.
> 
> For two hundred years the leading men of Europe were constantly going toand fro between the two continents gaining not only a first-hand knowledge of the greatculture in Syria but gaining too an immense emancipation of the human spiritGradually, under, this many-pronged impulse from the East, the obscurantism of themedieval Church in Western Europe gave way and finally, at the Renaissance, went downto defeat.
> 
> The Renaissance was truly an expression of the Jove de vlvre which Europelearned from the Arabs, and from the Renaissance flowed those features of the Islamicculture with which the awakened Europeans began to build a richer, happier, more eagercivilization than they had ever before dreamed of.
> 
> Christendom has been slow to realize and to admit the debt which our Western civilizationowes to the East.
> 
> But the facts of our borrowing are written<p49>large in history and nothing but prejudice can lead us to minimize our indebtedness."Let us examine the two civilizations" wrote Seignobos in his Histoire de laCivilisation au Moyen Age, "which in the eleventh century divided the ancient world.
> 
> In the west--miserable little cities, peasants' huts and great fortresses--a countryalways troubled by a war, where one could not travel ten leagues without running therisk of being robbed; and in the Orient--Constantinople, (Cairo, Damascus, Baghdad--with their marble palaces, their workshops, their schools, their bazaars, theirvillages, and the incessant movement of merchants who travelled in peace from Spain toPersia.
> 
> There is no doubt that the mussel man and Byzantine worlds were richer, betterpoliced, better lighted than the western world.
> 
> In the eleventh century these two worldsbegan to become acquainted; the barbarous Christians came into contact with thecivilized mussel mans in two ways--by war and by commerce.
> 
> And by contact with theorientals, the occidentals became civilized."11 See The Secret of Divine Civilization by 'Abdu'l-Baha, pp.
> 
> 92-94 (Baha'i PublishingTrust, Wilmette, Illinois, 1957).
> 
> For statement of specific gains from Islam see Historyof Mediaeval Civilization by Charles Seignobos, pp.
> 
> 117-118 (Unwin, London, 1908). <p50>CHAPTER NINETHE RISE OF MODERN EUROPEIT is customary to call the civilization of modern Europe par excellence Christian andto think of it as the special trustee of Christian truth among the less enlightenedpeoples of the East.
> 
> Yet in the twentieth century when the time of spiritual harvestinghad come we find 'Abdu'l-Baha saying that the West as well as the East had "imaginedthemselves as having attained a glorious pinnacle of achievement and prosperity, whenin reality they have touched the innermost depths of heedlessness and deprivedthemselves wholly of God's bounteous gifts."
> 
> Nor can they have imagined the awfulnessof the crisis which western civilization would be called upon to face, nor the challengeand the strain to which it would be subjected.
> 
> The true Christian civilization is in fact not that of modern Europe but that of theage of Constantine, which far more perfectly mirrored the teachings of Christ and wasinspired by the religious spirit of the early Church.
> 
> Brief as that civilization wasit is described by 'Abdu'l-Baha as having been the best and most enlightened in theworld at that time.
> 
> Among its good deeds and pious acts it established infirmaries,hospitals and charitable institutions.
> 
> Most of the believers reached a degree of moralperfection, had no fear of death, longed for wisdom and justice; were ready to forsaketheir personal profit, seeking instead to please God and spending their lives in<p51>educating and instructing the people.
> 
> The Emperor Constantine himself was the first inthe Roman Empire to found a public hospital for the treatment of poor people who hadno one to care for them.
> 
> He was the first Roman Emperor to throw himself heart and soulinto the Cause of Christ.
> 
> He resolutely promulgated the principles of the Gospel andbrought justice and moderation into the methods of the Roman government which previouslyhad been noted for injustice and oppression.
> 
> But in, and after, the Dark Ages, Christianity showed more interest in rites anddoctrines than in Moran conduct.
> 
> Indeed it is said that since the time of St.
> 
> Francisof Assisi no Christian reform movement has been concerned with reform of Christianconduct but rather with doctrines and rites.
> 
> Even the Reformation itself, great, deepand enduing as its effects have been, was less concerned with the correction of moralsthan with the remedying of ritual abuses.
> 
> The whole process of building a new civilization in the West, found itself vigorouslyopposed by the Christian Church, which for centuries past had adopted a policy ofimmobility and objected to both the idea and practice of progress.
> 
> As European cultureadvanced continuously this stagnant immobility became definite reaction and the wholespirit of-the Church became hostile to all forward movement.
> 
> Before the time of Muhammadthe Church had objected to the scientific spirit as well as to investigation and logic.
> 
> Muhammad had taught and encouraged science, learning and reason, and as the Church wouldnot weaken its opposition it found itself more and more estranged from human progress.
> 
> The civilization of the West, resulting from the impact of Islam on Christendom provedto be one of enormous<p52>and ever-extending material power.
> 
> Its dominion spread to an unexampled degree over therest of the world in economic, political and military matters.
> 
> But it proved quiteunequal to spreading its spiritual influence.
> 
> Even when, during the eighteenth andnineteenth centuries, it spent large sums of money and sent out hundreds and eventhousands of missionaries, its failure to Christianize the world was as conspicuous asits success in establishing its economic suzerainty.
> 
> Viewing the whole period from thetwelfth to the twentieth century one sees the reason for this contrast.
> 
> The initiativein producing this wonderful culture was not taken by the Church nor by religiousenthusiasm as in the case of the first and real Christian civilization in the time ofConstantine.
> 
> It was a secular movement sprinting from the sudden and thoroughemancipation of the human spirit, and originated with the laity.
> 
> The Church at thebeginning of this period was still the Church of the Dark Ages.
> 
> Worldly minded men hadgot control of it and were determined to hold that control.
> 
> Uninfluenced by the changingspirit of the age they found themselves in opposition to the whole progressive movementthat was forging a new, eager, active Europe.
> 
> They would not tolerate the spirit ofenquiry or the free use of reason.
> 
> These they represented as being definitely heretical.
> 
> Though Peter wrote (I Peter iii IS) . . . "be ready always to give an answer to everyman that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you . . . ;" though Paul likewisewrote "Prove all things: hold fast that which is good" (I Thessalonians v 2I) and actedaccordingly himself when "he reasoned in the synagogue every sabbath, and persuaded theJews and the Greeks" (Acts xviii 4) and again when he "three sabbath days<p53>reasoned with them out of the scriptures" (Acts xvii 2); and though Jesus Christ Himselfdefinitely taught men to use their reason to support their faith saying Wherefore, ifGod so clothe the grass of the field, which to-day is, and to-morrow is cast into theoven, shall he not much more clothe you, O ye of little faith 2" (Matt. vi 30) yet thereligious authorities of those days (and many too of these days) regarded logic andinvestigation as wrong.
> 
> They laid it down that the deposit of faith was static.
> 
> It wasonce and for all delivered to the saints, and was not to be changed or challenged.
> 
> Under the reign of such views no Divine science, which might have balanced physicalscience and been to it a counterpart and equipoise, was ever able to arise.
> 
> Verbalisms,sterile dogmas, riddles that might evoke controversy but could not illuminate the mind,took the place of a real search for spiritual truth, a real scrutiny of the eepmysteries of human and Divine nature.
> 
> So inveterate was the hostility of the religiousauthorities of Christendom to the spirit of Truth and to the pursuit of knowledge thata careful historian wrote of it:"Until the seventeenth century, every mental disposition which philosophy pronouncesto be essential to a legitimate research was almost uniformly branded as a sin, and alarge proportion of the most deadly intellectual vices were deliberately inculcated asvirtues. . . .
> 
> In a word, there is ... scarcely a rule which reason teaches as essentialfor its attainment, that theologians did not for centuries stigmatize as oensive to theAlmighty."I1 Lecky, History of the Rise and Influence of Rationalism in Europe; chap.
> 
> 4, part iipp.
> 
> 87, 88.
> 
> Long mans, London 1872.<p54>The authorities supported their views by the use of persecution, the justification forwhich was based on the theory of the moral guilt of error.'Abdu'l-Baha once said that Reason was the throne of faith; in another place he likenedReason to a great mirror looking into the heavens but reflecting no image because itwas in darkness.
> 
> Faith, he said, was like sunlight which enabled the mirror to see andto reflect all the heavenly truths that lie before it.
> 
> These symbols express exactlythe Christian and the Baha'i view of Reason and Faith, but not the view of traditionalorthodoxy which is a purely human concept.
> 
> The whole position as regards heresy, dogma, enquiry, reason and the like was supportedby the authority of a great institution, but Jesus had revealed no specific institutionand all institutions, great and small, old or new, have been deduced by men's reasonfrom this or that phrase or text of Gospel.
> 
> No church to-day, or in any other day, canpoint to any statement in the Gospel which indicates its patter, its rule of successionby which it can silence its critics.
> 
> The whole system rests on sheer speculation.
> 
> Notone of the institutions of Christendom can say it is designed and built in directconformity with an express command of Christ in the Gospel.
> 
> All are man made.
> 
> Orthodoxy rather than detachment or moral righteousness has been the shibboleth ofreligious authorities.
> 
> Their enthusiasm has been confined largely to insistence onteachings, doctrines, speculations which, like the it own structure were devised bythemselves, and around which controversies were raised which none could finally settle.
> 
> About the main ethical injunctions of Christ and actual obedience to them there wasno such insistence.<p55>No church, for example, has ever adopted the challenging test for membership used byJesus Himself for His disciples: "By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples,f ye have love one to another." (John xiii 35).
> 
> Europe in consequence has never been tranquil, full of good will, united, but ratherfull of oppression, misery, strife and turbulence.
> 
> The cause of Religion has beensupported by the most flagrant breaches of Gospel ethics.
> 
> So far did the traditional religion of Europe, in its character and effects, differ fromthat of the Gospel, that it became the chief cause of unchristian feeling and behavior.
> 
> It promoted hatred and schism, discontent, strife, cruelty and injustice, suppressionof truth and reason.
> 
> It has conducted persecutions, burnings at the stake, exterminationof heretics, suppression of truth bye force. 'Abdu'l-Baha comments on this subject ina talk given at Green Acre, Maine on August 17th, 1912:
> 
> Nine hundred thousand martyrsto the protestant cause was the record of conflict and difference between that sect ofChristians and the catholic.
> 
> Consult history and confirm this."1But now another divergence between the attitude of the Church and that of allprogressives took shape and grew steadily more wide.
> 
> The Church objected to thatnation-building which had been the main contribution of Muhammad to human history andwhich was to be as important to the building of Western civilization as it had been toIslam.
> 
> The interests of Church and State never were harmoniously combined in Christian historyas they had been by Muhammad.
> 
> Four types of relationship have been essayed.
> 
> First, thatof Rome in which the ChurchPromulgation of Universal Peace, Baha'i Temple Unity, Chicago, 1922 (p.
> 
> 259). <p56>is above the State; second, that of Prussia in which the State is above the Church;third, that of England in which Church and State exist side by side as different aspectsof one community; and lastly, that adopted in the United States of America where Churchis regarded simply as a voluntary association of individuals and has no officialrelation to the nation at all.
> 
> Not one of these has been satisfactory.
> 
> It has remained for the Baha'i Faith alone todevelop a structure of national life in which the two can be perfectly united andharmonized.
> 
> The development of the nation state has been in Europe a great modern feat, and itsachievement has brought immense advantages to the advancement of science, the promotionof industry, the outlook of the ordinary man, and has given to the national life afreedom and a power not equal led by any earlier form of social structure.
> 
> But theseadvantages have been won in spite of the Church and in our time the final result of thestruggle is the humiliation of the Church and very often the secularization of thenational life.
> 
> Not only has the prestige and influence of the Church been thus abased but the prestigeand influence of religion with it; and at the same time materialism has beenstrengthened and exalted.
> 
> The whole progress of our Western civilization has been,therefore, not the intensifying of Christianity but the opposite. <p57>CHAPTER TENTHE DAWN-SONG OF THE KINGDOMABOUT the beginning of the eighteenth century a A new influence swept across Europeaffecting the minds of all men.
> 
> It showed itself in a spirit of confidence andenterprise, the sense of a new power.
> 
> Hitherto men had tended to look back to the pastand to old civilizations for the Golden Age, for their ideals and their models.
> 
> Scholars, historians, religionists had looked back at Greece and Rome and Palestine,but now they looked rather at the present and at the future, seeking to make the worldbetter, richer, fuller and to do this on their own initiative.
> 
> This was the age when the industrial Revolution arose, changing the fact of the worldand the lives of men.
> 
> Idealists dreamed of reform, seeking it not only in national termsbut in universal.
> 
> In all phases of life new hopes were born and sought fulfillment.
> 
> Asthe century wore on Indications of the origin and the meaning of this general impulsebegan to appear.
> 
> The Jews had, since the first and second centuries, territorially and politically ceasedto be a nation, yet no people held more grimly to the sense of nationhood than they.
> 
> Expelled from the Holy Land after the capture of Jerusalem in A.D.
> 
> 70, under Titus, andagain with more rig our about sixty years later under Hadrian, they were dispersed amongnearly all the nations of the earth and<p58>they suffered every form of humiliation and misery for well-nigh sixteen centuries.
> 
> Butnow in the eighteen}t century for the first time a national life began to assert itselfamong them.
> 
> It was the time for the Jewish Renaissance.
> 
> In Europe and America nationafter nation began to restore to them by slow degrees rights which for long centurieshad been denied them.
> 
> In 1723 Louis XV gave the Jews permission to hold real estate inFrance.
> 
> In the same year England acknowledged them as English subjects.
> 
> In 1738 CharlesVI of Denmark opened all trades to the Jews.
> 
> In 1750 Frederick It granted tolerationto the Jews in his dominion.
> 
> Joseph II of Austria in 1780 opened the schools andUniversities of the Empire to the Jews, allowing them to follow any trade or establishmanufacturing.
> 
> In the year 1788 Louis XVI of France appointed a royal commission "toremodel on principles of justice all laws concerning the Jews."
> 
> And so the tale goeson.
> 
> The United States of America was the first nation to embody in its laws the principlethat Gentiles and Jews were equal in rights and privileges before the law (A.D.
> 
> 1776).
> 
> The same process of gradual concession was continued through the nineteenth century,the year 1844 being a time of special importance, since in it the Turkish Governmentpledged to the Jews protection from persecution throughout the Ottoman Dominion,including of course the Holy Land, tough it was not until 1867 that the Sublime Portegave them the right to own real estate in the land of their fathers.
> 
> What could all this mean but the approach of the second coming of Christ?<p59>Contemporary with this eighteenth century emancipation of the Jews there swept quietlyinto the minds of European men the impulsion of a new spiritual force, an impulsion thebeginnings of which can hardly be traced but which gradually brought into men's mindsa new spirit of hope and enterprise and happiness and creative vigor and which by steadygradations at the Tom of the century and during the early years of the nineteenthcentury took the definite shape of the dawning on earth of a New Age, of thedivinely-aided appearance of a new and better world, and in Christian circles of thereturn of Christ and the descent of the Kingdom of God from heaven.
> 
> The poet Wordsworth gives an excellent contemporary account of the new creative joy thatmysteriously was wafted upon the world at that time, and of the confidence thatpossessed the hearts of men."Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive, But to be young was very Heaven!
> 
> O times, . .
> 
> When Reason seemed the most to assert her nights When most intent on making of herselfA prime enchantress--to assist the work, Which then was going forward in her name!
> 
> Notfavored spots alone, but the whole Earth, The beauty wore of promise--that which sets(As at some moments might not be unfelt Among the bowers of Paradise itself ) Thebudding rose above the rose full blown.
> 
> What temper at the prospect did not wake Tohappiness unthought of I The inert Were roused, and lively natures rapt away! . . .<p60>Did now find helpers to their hearts' desire, And stuff at hand, plastic as they couldwish,-Were called upon to exercise their skill, Not in Utopia,--subterranean fields,-Orsome secreted island, Heaven knows where!
> 
> But in the very world, which is the world Ofall of us,--the place where, in the end, We find our happiness, or not at all."
> 
> Prelude, Book XI and X   2But at the end of the eighteenth century and during the first decades of the nineteenththe intuitions of spiritual men spoke in clearer language.
> 
> A burst of lyrical greetingswelcomed the approaching coming of the Kingdom."The Night is ended and the Morning nears:
> 
> Awake, look up!
> 
> I hear the gathering soundOf coming cycles, like an ocean round; I see the glory of a thousand years Lighteningfrom bound to bound."
> 
> Frederick Tennyson (1807-98)"These things shall be: a loftier race Than ever the world hath known, shall rise, Withflame of freedom in their souls And light of knowledge in their eyes . . ."New arts shall bloom of loftier mound, And mightier music thrill the skies, And everylife shall be a song When all the earth is paradise."
> 
> J.
> 
> A.
> 
> Symonds (1840-93)1 See also Wordsworth's Excursion. <p61>"The Day of the Lord is at hand, at hand:
> 
> Its storms roll up the sky:
> 
> The nations sleepstarving on heaps of gold; All dreamers toss and sigh; The night is darkest before themorn; When the pain is sorest the child is born, And the Day of the Lord is at hand....""Who would sit down and sigh for a lost age of gold, While the Lord of all ages is here?
> 
> True hearts will leap up at the trumpet of God, And those who can suffer, can dare.
> 
> Eachold age of gold was an iron age too, And the meekest of saints may find stern work todo, In the Day of the Lord at hand."
> 
> From Charles Kingsley's                       The Day of the Lord, (written 1849).
> 
> The poets' enthusiasm crossed the Atlantic.
> 
> It touched Whittier.
> 
> It moved Julia WardHowe to write, in 1861, the Battle Hymn of the Republic:"Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord; He is trampling out thevintage where the grapes of wrath are stored; He hath loosed the fateful lightning ofHis terrible swift sword, His truth is marching on."
> 
> Apart from such verses stand apocalyptic works of Shelley; Lyrics like the Ode to theWest Wind, narratives<p62>such as The Revolt of Islam and especially his great poetical drama Prometheus Unbound,which many critics regard as the sublimes poem in the English language.
> 
> Here in the poemthe form of apocalypse does not appear, nor is any Christian imagery employed.
> 
> The themeof the drama is verily and indeed that of the actual coming of the Kingdom.
> 
> The herois a god man who, moved by love and pity for mankind, in their ignorance and error andmisery, through deliberate self sacrifice and acute suffering for their sake, challengesand finally destroys the principle of evil, hurling into the abyss the Tyrant from histhrone, thus redeeming permanently the human race.
> 
> The very universe itself rejoices toshare the universal regeneration of all living things.
> 
> Not poets alone but the generality of the people in town and in country, high and low,learned and unlearned, felt this new transcendent power stirring creation.
> 
> The time wasone of religious revival, of church building, of missionary expansion, the centralmotive being always the belief in the imminent coming of Christ.1  For a full generationand more men and women everywhere dreamed, thought, talked and discussed this Advent.
> 
> They met in church and chapel, in street and roadside, held assemblies and camp meetingsthat lasted far into the night.
> 
> In many parts of England, in Southern Wales, in manyparts of the United States from the East to the Middle West the fervor of theexpectation spread.
> 
> Adventist sects were started, a few of which remain to the presentday, such as the Latter Day Saints and the Seventh Day Adventists.
> 
> So strong was thefeeling in one shape or another that the Messianic expectation lasted through the1 See the author's The Promise of All Ages, chap v. <p63>whole of the nineteenth century and, reappearing in the apocalyptic sense of missionwhich has characterized communism and fascism, has tempted more dictators than one toregard themselves as Messianic beings.
> 
> For two centuries, it may perhaps be said, this new wave of power aected all the Westernworld except one section only, the institutions which claimed to be custodians ofreligious truth, which claimed to have a monopoly of keeping watch for Christ accordingto His command.
> 
> Toe old established, historic churches of Christendom showed themselvesirresponsive and uninterested.
> 
> The false prophets had done their deadly work with fullsuccess.
> 
> So misleading had been their interpretations of religious history that Christhad indeed come and no men had been so utterly ignorant of His presence as those whohad appointed themselves to be His special guardians.<p64>CHAPTER ELEVENTHE BABTHE Bible throughout has for its constant theme mankind s toilsome journey towards theKingdom of God and paints its promised attainment with fervor and vividness andillimitable joy.
> 
> These exquisite, pictures have been for a hundred generations and moresource of undying comfort and happiness to a struggling race.
> 
> But the Bible nowheredescribes the inwardness o that Kingdom nor develops the psychology of it, nor explainswhy the Kingdom should come at that particular stage of man's journey.
> 
> Jesus admitsexpressly that He Han other things to say and gives as His reason for withholding theknowledge that mankind in His day was not advanced and mature enough to understand itsfuture experiencesBut now the Herald of the Kingdom had come and gone.
> 
> The Seal of the Prophets hadlikewise come and gone.
> 
> The next great spiritual event was the actual coming of theKingdom which both these Revelators had announced.
> 
> With the Bab the Kingdom actually begins.
> 
> He stands both as a Revealer Prophet bringingHis own Dispensation and Laws and also as a Forerunner of One Baha'u'llah, bearing aRevelation immeasurably greater than His own.
> 
> 1 Siyyid 'Ali-Muhammad of Shiraz, a descendant of Muhammad, known to history as the Bab.
> 
> 1819-50.
> 
> He was the Qa'im of Islam and Fore-runner of Baha'u'llah, 'He Whom God Shouldmanifest." <p65>Standing at the close of the whole Prophetic Cycle His Revelation is described asincluding twenty-five out of the twenty-seven letters of all knowledge; and with whimeach and every past Prophet has a separate Covenant, concerning the One whom Heheralded, the Supreme World Redeemer.
> 
> Thus He stands at the confluence of the PropheticCycle which is closed and of the Age of Fulfillment which now open.
> 
> The Baha'i Erabegins with His Declaration on the evening of May 22nd, 1844, and ushers in theuniversal Age of Truth.
> 
> The creative energies which He imparts endow mankind with thecapacity to attain its maturity which will enable it in course of time and inconjunction with the still greater power generated by Baha'u'llah to achieve the organicunification of the human race.
> 
> To any spiritually expectant soul, the Babes declaration would have indicated that theKingdom of God had indeed come.
> 
> No earlier Manifestation, not even Jesus Christ Himselfhad issued a challenge to the rulers of the world proclaiming the SelSuff1ciency of HisCause, denouncing the vanity of their ephemeral power and calling upon them to layaside, one and all, their dominion, and deliver His Message to lands in both the Eastand the West.
> 
> But to such men as the Persian authorities, such claims merely proved theAuthor was an undoubted mountebank and probably not in his right mind and that His Causewould quickly collapse of its own weight.
> 
> The progress of the Babes teaching never kept pace with the Armour of His own desire.
> 
> His pilgrimage to Mecca bore no visible fruit, and upon His return He, Himself,1 Muhammad, the "Seal of the Prophets" was the last Prophet in the Age of Promise; theBab closed that Age and opened the Age of Fulfillment. <p66>was arrested and brought under escort to Shiraz where H was violently buffeted in opencourt and released only o parole.
> 
> His disciples carrying His Message through th countrywere everywhere opposed and often manhandles and persecuted.
> 
> Some were tortured and somekilled.
> 
> But at the same time the fire of the Babis kindles interest and enthusiasm through thecountryside and the bazaars.
> 
> The Bab's own eloquence and radiant churn warmed the heartsof many.
> 
> And when the upper officials of Church and State, at the end of two years Annmore, took stock of the situation they found that thy Bab had captivated the hearts ofhigh and low in th important Shi'ih city of Isfahan and that His Cause wa now spreadingamong the merchant class, through th Army and the landed gentry.
> 
> Thoroughly alarmed atthy result of their slackness, they formed a carefully designer plan which they wouldpursue remorselessly till this Mon. strops heresy (as they thought it) had been stampedoutIn 1847 the Bab was carried to the lonely mount air fastness of rid irbayjan and thereimprisoned first in tot castle of Mah-Ku and then in that of Chihriq, where He spent theshort remainder of His life.
> 
> Shi'ih Mulla denounced His teachings and from their pulpitsincited their congregations against all Babis, appealing to their fanatiasm.
> 
> Basis wereassaulted, their houses entered and spoiled, their women maltreated.
> 
> The courts gaveno protection, no redress.
> 
> The Babis were practically outlawed.
> 
> In three neighborhoods, those of Tabarsi, of Nayriz and of Zanjan, the Babis stood atbay and were only overcome by the King's troops using perjury and treachery as well asoverwhelming numbers.
> 
> Deeply angered by the cruet imprisonment of their<p67>beloved Lord, the Babes fought back in His name with such success that the new PrimeMinister resolved to end this conflict at once by putting the Bab to death, with orwithout legal warrant.
> 
> The Bab was brought from Chihriq to Tabriz where He was shot todeath.
> 
> The occasion of His martyrdom provides the spiritual history of martyrdom with anundoubted miracle, attested by witnesses on both sides.1 The Bab was suspended by a ropeto a beam let into the prison wall, a favored disciple being suspended across Hisbreast.
> 
> A Christian regiment was chosen to be the firing force and its colonel,horrified at the thought of raising his hand against so holy a Man, implored Him toexcuse him from committing so great a sacrilege. "Follow your instructions," said theBab, "and if your intention be sincere, the Almighty is surely able to relieve you fromyour perplexity."
> 
> Just before the execution the Bab drew aside His amanuensis, Siyyid Husayn, for aconfidential conversation in one of the rooms of the prison.
> 
> The gaoler interrupted andordered the Bab to go at once. "Not until I have said to him all those things that Iwish to say," the Bab warned the galer, "can any earthly power silence Me.
> 
> Though allthe world be armed against Me, yet shall they be powerless to deter Me from fulfilling,to the last word, My intention."
> 
> He then went with the gaoler.
> 
> The Christian regiment opened fire at the Bab and His disciple, tied to the beam ofwood, and when the smoke from seven hundred and fifty rifles had cleared away, it wasseen by ten thousand onlookers that the Bab had disappeared and the disciple wasstanding unharmed, on1  A.L.M.
> 
> Nicolas Siyyid 'Ali-Muhammad dit le Bab, p.
> 
> 375-9 The Dawnbreakers, Nabil'sNarrative, ch xxiii. <p68>the ground.
> 
> A frantic search ensued and the Bab was discovered completing His talk withHis amanuensis. "I have finished my conversation with Siyyid Husayn,"
> 
> He said, "Now youmay proceed to fulfil your intention."
> 
> The Christian regiment refused to continue the execution.
> 
> Their place was taken byMuslims and the Bab and His disciple were instantly killed.
> 
> Their bodies were thrown out in a moat but rescued by the disciples and now they restin the Holy Land in a beautiful mausoleum built by thousands of believers from all partsof the world.
> 
> The Babis refused to be discouraged, even by the execution of their Lord, and continuedto make converts to His Cause.
> 
> Two years later an effort to assassinate the Shah was made by two obscure andirresponsible youths and this gave the priests the excuse they were looking for.
> 
> Throughout the whole of Persia the Bab;s were hunted out and hounded down, and theordeal of torture and massacre did not cease till the soil of Persia was incarnadinedwith the blood of martyrs and the authorities felt absolutely assured that the Faithof the Bab was dead and could never rise again.<p69>CHAPTER TWELVEBAHA'U'LLAHBaha'u'llah was descended from Abraham by His wife Katurah, thus fulfilling the prophecyto Abraham that in Him would all the families of the earth be blessed.
> 
> It is difficult for an English reader to learn much about Baha'u'llah's early days.
> 
> Weknow, however, that He was bon1 on 12th November, 1817, two years before the Bab.
> 
> FromHis early days He showed signs of wonder and power.
> 
> His father dreamed a dream of Himwhile He was yet a child, which is recounted by Nabil."Baha'u'llah appeared to him swimming in a vast, limitless ocean.
> 
> His body shone uponthe waters with a radiance that illumined the sea.
> 
> Around His head, which coulddistinctly be seen above the waters, there radiated, in all directions, His long,jet-black locks, floating in great profusion above the waves.
> 
> As he dreamed, a multitudeof fishes gathered round Him, each holding fast to the extremity of one hair.
> 
> Fascinatedby the effulgence of His face, they followed Him in whatever direction He swam.
> 
> Greatas was their number, and however firmly they clung to His locks, not one single hairseemed to have been dctached from His head, nor did the least injury affect His person.
> 
> Free and unrestrained, He moved above the waters and they all followed Him.<p70>"The Vazir,1 greatly impressed by this dream, summoned a soothsayer, who had achievedfame in that region, and asked him to interpret it for him.
> 
> This man, as if inspiredby a premonition of the future glory of Baha'u'llah, declared: "The limitless ocean thatyou have seen in your dream, OVazir, is none other than the world of being.
> 
> Singlehandedand alone, your son will achieve supreme ascendancy over it.
> 
> Wherever He may please,He will proceed unhindered.
> 
> No one will resist His march, no one will hinder Hisprogress.
> 
> The multitude of fishes signifies the turmoil which He will arouse amidst thepeoples and kindreds of the earth.
> 
> Around Him will they gather, and to Him will theycling.
> 
> Assured of the unfailing protection of the Almighty, this tumult will never harmHis person, nor will His loneliness upon the sea of life endanger His safety.'"2Baha'u'llah loved people, especially children.
> 
> He loved to be surrounded by them andthey loved Him.
> 
> From childhood He delighted in country life, in trees, in flowers andhorseback riding.
> 
> He came of a noble and wealthy family which had long been prominent in the politicalsphere and He Himself was endowed ith a gift of eloquence like a rushing torrent.
> 
> Asthe years passed on He showed no inclination for political affairs but spent His timein looking after the needy, the poor and the sick.
> 
> When His father died He succeededto the management of a large estate and married the daughter of a well-known vazir.
> 
> Hertastes resembled His and they became known as the Father of the Poor and the Mother ofConsolation.
> 
> 1 Baha'u'llah's father.
> 
> 2 The Dawnbreakers, Nabil's Narrative, chap v. <p71>One day, when He was twenty-seven years old, a messenger brought Him a packagecontaining a manuscript which had been written by the Bab and sent by the hand of Hisfirst disciple, Mulla Husayn.
> 
> From this document He learned that the Kingdom of God,so long expected by the devout, had indeed at last come, that the Bab had declaredHimself its Prophet and was sending out through Persia His messengers to announce thebreaking of the new Day.
> 
> The document was none other than some pages of theQayyumu'l-Asma, the "first, greatest and mightiest" of the Bab's works, the firstchapter of which He had revealed on the night of His declaration.
> 
> In it He called onthe Shah and the kings and princes of the earth to acknowledge His station and He calledeven the people of the West to come forth and welcome Him.
> 
> On reading a portion of this manuscript Baha'u'llah at once discerned that the spiritualnote of the writing was the same as that of the Qur'an and He accepted its message.
> 
> Casting aside at once all thought of His personal interest, regardless of His wealth,of His social eminence, of His youth, of His talents and of the brilliant future openbefore Him, He espoused the Cause of an obscure merchantt and began to serve it withthe utmost ardour Though He must long before have realized the divinity of the stationwhich really belonged to Himself, Baha'u'llah promptly joined the Bab's followers andnever disclosed His own true rank to anyone.
> 
> During the years of the Bab's Ministry He showed Himself a loyal and devoted coadjutor,not only by His outstanding character and His extraordinary ability but also by Hisheart-whole enthusiasm and personal devotion to the Bab.
> 
> 1 The Bab was a wool-merchant, with His uncle in Shiraz. <p72> The two Prophets never met on this earth but kept in the closest touch by letter andotherwise.
> 
> Both were to suffer for the Cause and vied with one another in doing so.
> 
> Three times Baha'u'llah was scourged as a Babi, three times imprisoned, and the Bab inHis turn three times suffered the same punishments.
> 
> After the Conference at BadashtMuhammad Shah determined to put Baha'u'llah to death, but died too soon to carry outhis threat.
> 
> It was to Baha'u'llah that the Bab sent His most precious personalpossessions (His pen and His ring) when He felt His martyrdom was drawing near, and itwas Baha'u'llah Who, on the night of the Bab's execution, arranged for some of thedisciples to carry away the body from the moat into which it had been thrown and toconceal it in a safe place of hiding.
> 
> At the time of the attempt on the Shah's life Baha'u'llah was staying at Lavasan as theguest of the Grand Vizir.
> 
> Rejecting the protection and the good offices tendered Him,Baha'u'llah went to the headquarters of the Imperial Army at Niyavaran and wasconducted thence under escort and in chains, bare headed and with bare feet to Tihran.
> 
> There He was taken at once to the Siyah-Chal, the most terrible of all the dungeons inthe capital.
> 
> Baha'u'llah in His Epistle to the Son of the Wolf gives the followingdescription of the place in which He found they rise unto the exalted heights of divineunity.
> 
> With Himself: "The dungeon was wrapped in thick darkness, and Ourfellow-prisoners numbered nearly a hundred and fifty souls: thieves, assassins andhighwaymen.
> 
> Though crowded, it had no other outlet than the passage by which Weentered.
> 
> No pen can depict that place, nor any tongue describe its loathsome smell.
> 
> Most of these men had neither clothes nor bedding<p73>to lie on.
> 
> God alone knoweth what befell Us in that most foul-smelling and gloomyplace! (pp.
> 
> 10-21).
> 
> Such was the place and such the occasion which God chose for the Call o Baha'u'llah tothe office of Prophethood, and to the assumption of His Ministry.
> 
> An independent Prophet has two stations: one a divine and the other a human station.
> 
> His essential being is divine.
> 
> As such He is the Word of God.
> 
> The Kitab-i-Iqan statesof these Beings that: "These sanctified Mirrors, these Day-springs of ancient glory areone and all the Exponents on earth of Him Who is the  central Orb of the universe, itsEssence and ultimate Purpose.
> 
> From Him proceed their knowledge and power; from Him isderived their sovereignty.
> 
> The beauty of their countenance is but a reflection of Hisimage, an their revelation a sign of His deathless glory.
> 
> They are the Treasuries ofdivine knowledge, and the Repositories of celestial wisdom.
> 
> Through them is transmitteda grace that is infinite, and by them is revealed the light that can never fade." (PP.
> 
> 99-100)And agam in the same book it is written, "These ancient beings, though delivered fromthe womb of their mother, have in reality descended from the heaven of the will of God.
> 
> Though they be dwelling on this earth, yet their true habitations are the retreats ofglory in the realms above.
> 
> Whilst walking amongst mortals, they soar in the heaven ofthe divine presence.
> 
> Without feet they tread the path of the spirit, and without wingsthey rise unto the exalted heights of divine unity.
> 
> With every fleeting breath theycover the immensity of space, and at every moment traverse the kingdoms of the visibleand the invisible. . . .
> 
> They are sent forth through the transcendent power of theAncient of Days, and are raised up by the exalted will of God, the most mighty King.
> 
> This is what is meant by the words: "coming in the clouds of heaven." (p.
> 
> 67, U.S. ed.).<p74>But they undergo a very definite, moving and tremendous experience when God wills thattheir Mission should open and the full power of the sovereignty which belongs to themshall be disclosed.
> 
> Every Prophet goes through this experience and often finds italtogether overwhelming.
> 
> We read of Moses falling into a swoon, and of Muhammad runningto His home and imploring His wife, Khadijih, to envelop Him in His mantle.
> 
> Theexperience alters altogether the relation between Almighty God and the Prophet, but doesnot necessarily make any difference between the Prophet and the people until the ProphetHimself so elects.
> 
> Jesus Himself, for instance, is thought to have been called to HisMinistry at the time of His baptism by John in Jordan, but He did not openly declareHimself till His pronouncement to the Jewish Sanhedrin on the last night of His life.
> 
> Baha'u'llah describes this Call in the following words in His letter to the Shah: "OKing!
> 
> I was but a man like others, asleep upon My couch, when lo, the breezes of theAll-Glorious were wafted over Me, and taught Me the knowledge of all that hath been.
> 
> This thing is not from Me, but from One Who is Almighty and All-Knowing.
> 
> And He bade Melift up My voice between earth and heaven, and for this there befell Me what hath causedthe tears of every man of understanding to flow....
> 
> This is but a leaf which the windsof the will of Thy Lord, the Almighty, the All-Praised, have stirred."
> 
> Many years later, in His Epistle to the Son of the Wo f He tells how, "One night, ina dream, these exalted words were heard on every side: "Verily, We shall render Theevictorious by Thyself and by Thy pen.
> 
> Grieve Thou not for that which hath befallen Thee,neither be Thou afraid, for Thou art in<p75>safety.
> 
> Ere long will God raise up the treasures of the earth-men who will aid Theethrough Thyself and through Thy Name, wherewith God hath revived the hearts of such ashave recognized Him" (p.
> 
> 21).'Abdu'l-Baha pointed out that the Prophet's experience when this call comes to Him ispurely physical.
> 
> There is no change of the Prophet's individuality.
> 
> He remains preciselythe same.lThus it was that Baha'u'llah's Ministry began in the year 9 (1853 A.D., 1269 A.H.) asthe Bab had already indicated, a time which imbued the whole world with unimaginablepotentialities.
> 
> The attempt on the life of the Shah had taken place on 1Sth August,18S2; Baha'u'llah had been thrown into the Siyah-Chal almost immediately afterwards andabout the middle of October this Divine Call had come, endowing Him with the fullnessof the power of the sovereignty which went with His Divine Mission.
> 
> Two months laterHe was proved innocent of any connection with the crime, having been strongly defendedby His friends and by the Russian Ambassador.
> 
> Delivered from the Siyah-Chal Baha'u'llah found Himself still the prisoner of the Shah,reduced almost to destitution by the confiscation of all His property and under sentenceof banishment from His native land to Baghdad in 'Iraq whither He was to start withinone month.
> 
> During the ten years He spent in Baghdad His fame and personal influence reached theirhighest point.
> 
> So great was His influence that by degrees He spread among the Babischeer and hope and confidence in their Faith, not only in His neighbourhood but evenamong the lonely1 Some Answered Questions, chap. xxxix. <p76>hamlets of Persia.
> 
> Still acting as a Babi and without going beyond the Bab's teachings,He made the Faith more universal than it had been before, and bringing into prominencehigher teachings of the Bab, long disused, lifted the religion to a higher level.
> 
> Hisintuitive understanding of scripture astonished and attracted Babi pilgrims from alldirections and also drew eager Muslim students from Karbila and Najaf His modest homebecame the constant resort of enquirers on spiritual matters.
> 
> That same unique Spiritof Divine Love which suffused so much of His writings was felt by His companions in itsoriginal intensity and won Him their love and devotion to a degree which chroniclersof the time record.
> 
> Joyous feasts celebrating their love for Him were held, in spiteof poverty, and many writings still testify to His little parlour being felt as anavenue to Paradise such as men's hearts had never known before.
> 
> The ethical level ofthe Babi community was exalted beyond recognition and the good name of the Faith beganto extend itself in all directions.
> 
> His great religious revelation, the Book ofCertitude,1 written in Baghdad, summarizes in two hundred pages the grand universalscheme of Redemption and explains not only the great central truths of God's revealingmethod but those difficulties of interpretation which have always caused discord amongthe great religious systems of the world.
> 
> So rapid was Baha'u'llah's ascent to heights of brilliance and spiritual power that theecclesiastical authorities of such neighbouring cities as Karbila were moved to bitterjealousy and took counsel together how to get rid of Him.
> 
> They represented that He wasstill too near Persia to be a1 Persian Kitab-i-Iqan <p77>harmless neighbour and persuaded the Shah that He should be removed further away, andby degrees brought pressure on Turkish officials to keep Him under strictersurveillance.
> 
> Baha'u'llah's undoubted influence among the people and many leaders ofopinion in Baghdad made Him open to suspicion of personal designs.
> 
> By 1863 His enemieshad secured His sentence of exile to Constantinople.
> 
> Ten years had now elapsed since the time of His Call and the time was ripe for an opendeclaration of the power and sovereignty which for so long had been flooding His soul.
> 
> On the 21st April, for a period of twelve days, Baha'u'llah, in the beautiful Najibijjihgarden on the river banks outside Baghdad, instituted the great Feast of Ridvan whichis held as the most joyous and triumphant of all Baha'i Feasts.
> 
> He assumed before Hisfollowers and the wide world the supreme authority which He had received from the MostHigh at the time of His Call.
> 
> Now it was that Jesus Christ ascended His throne in thepower of God the Father.
> 
> Now it was that He took upon Himself the sceptre of thefullness of God's might and thus set Himself as Supreme Overlord of all that is inheaven and on earth.
> 
> The significance of that Feast for Himself and for the world is expressed by His callingit "the King of Festivals," "the Day of God."
> 
> In His own greatest work the Aqdasl Hecharacterizes it as the Day whereon "all created things were immersed in the sea ofpurification."
> 
> In another Tablet He refers to it as the day whereon "the breezes offorgiveness were wafted over the entire creation."
> 
> And again He writes, "Rejoice withexceeding gladness, O people of Baha, as ye call1 Kitab-i-Aqdas. <p78>to remembrance the Day of supreme felicity, the Day whereon the Tongue of the Ancientof Days hath spoken, as He departed from His House, proceeding to the Spot from whichHe shed upon the whole of creation the splendours of His Name, the All-Merciful."
> 
> Surely this Day must be the greatest day in the history of mankind.<p79>CHAPTER THIRTEENTHE PROCLAMATION TO THE KINGSIMMEDIATELY after His Declaration at Ridvan, Baha'u'llah and His party set out on thelong journey to Constantinople.
> 
> Here they remained only four months, the Sultan sendingthem in mid-winter and in the most severe conditions on a third journey into exile.
> 
> InAdrianople Baha'u'llah remained about four years and in 1868 was sent on His fourth andlast exile, this time to 'Akka, the dungeon city of which it was said the very birdsfell dead as they passed over it.
> 
> It was during this period and chiefly during His residence in Adrianople thatBaha'u'llah proclaimed in great Tablets His station and His mission to the rulers ofthe world.
> 
> Some of these are of especial moment to Western and Christian readers; firstHis Tablet to the Kings of the earth collectively,issuedin 1864, and secondly Hisindividual Tablets to the four chief monarchs of Europe.
> 
> The first of these is describedby the Guardian as the most momentous of all His Tablets,2 and in it He summons allthe kings and the ecclesiastical rulers of the world to turn to Him and follow hisdictates.
> 
> What sublimer exordium could there be to such a document than this:
> 
> 1 The Guardian of the Baha'i Faith, Shoghi Effendi, Baha'u'llah's great-grandson.
> 
> Seechap.
> 
> 15.
> 
> 2 Suriy-i-Muluk.<p80>"O Kings of the earth!
> 
> Give ear unto the Voice of God . . . intoning the words: "Thereis none other God but He, the Mighty, the All-Powerful, the All-Wise." . . .
> 
> Fear God,O concourse of kings, and suffer not yourselves to be deprived of this most sublimegrace.
> 
> Fling away, then, the things ye possess, and take fast hold on the Handle of God,the Exalted, the Great.
> 
> Set your hearts towards the Face of God, and abandon that whichyour desires have bidden you to follow, and be not of those who perish."
> 
> Baha'u'llah then tells them of the martyrdom of the Bab by the unjust and cruel divinesof Persia.
> 
> He holds them one and all responsible for this crime and requires that theymake amends for it.
> 
> He demands that they follow that which He speaks unto them, withtheir hearts, and calls on them to arise and set themselves towards the Holy Court ofGod.
> 
> Baha'u'llah made it clear He was going to establish the Kingdom of God throughout theworld; but He did not ask the kings to give Him any aid whatsoever in the task.
> 
> WhatHe did ask was that they should consider that their glory consisted in obedience to God,not in the width or wealth of their dominions; that they should rule their subjects withthe utmost nicety of justice, should regard the poor among them as a particular trustfrom God; that they should reduce taxation and heal their dissensions till they wereable to do without armies and their expensive upkeep except for police purposes.
> 
> Unless they obeyed the directions of this kind which He gave, He warned them thatassuredly calamities, heavy and many, would descend upon them from every direction; theywould not be able to escape but would be caught and overwhelmed.<p81>For Himself, He demanded that the kings should scrutinize the wrongs which He and Hishad had to endure through twenty years and judge justly between Him and His enemies.
> 
> He assured the kings that God had promised to exalt His Cause even if no king on earthhelped Him.
> 
> This call, however, (which as He expressly stated was that of the Most Great Peace) wasimmediately and with disdain rejected by the kings, one and all.
> 
> By an act of forgiveness Baha'u'llah made to the Christian kings of Europe a furtheroffer.
> 
> He addressed to the Emperor Napoleon III of France, to Pope Pius IX, to QueenVictoria and to Czar Alexander, individual letters in which He asked of them their aidin establishing God's Kingdom among the nations.
> 
> Napoleon was at the moment the mostpowerful and brilliant of the European sovereigns and to him Baha'u'llah offered theleadership in this great undertaking.
> 
> He called on Napoleon to introduce the newRevelation and told him that the clergy who held to the old worship and refused the newwould be as fallen stars and lose their status and authority.
> 
> He revealed to Napoleonseveral of the great new principles of the new Faith; explained the succession ofreligions, Islam succeeding Christianity, Christianity succeeding Mosaism, Mosessucceeding Abraham.
> 
> He stated that His own Mission was to regenerate and to unify thewhole human race, which was to be regarded as one great family, in fact as oneindividual, as one soul in many bodies.
> 
> He asserted that force, which had so long beenused in teaching, must be abandoned, and methods of persuasion and wisdom only shouldbe used; and that effective teaching would depend on the single-hearted<p82>sincerity of the teacher.
> 
> He said that the monks were to leave their monasteries, tomarry and mingle with the life of the people; and celibacy was not and never had beenapproved by the Almighty as a better way of life than marriage.
> 
> He called on Napoleon to give up his crown, or if he retained it, to use it only forthe service of God, and promised to assure the success of Napoleon in carrying OUt His,Baha'u'llah's programme.
> 
> He would be regarded as king of the world.
> 
> At the same time He told Napoleon that he had shown insincerity and insolence;retribution was pursuing him and if he delayed in obeying Baha'u'llah, he would beutterly humiliated and overthrown and would lose everything.
> 
> Napoleon's rejoinder was a contemptuous refusal.
> 
> Within a year he was defeated at Sedanand lost his empire and his throne.
> 
> Baha'u'llah announced to Pope Pius IX "He Who is the Lord of Lords is come," and he whois the Rock (meaning Peter), crieth out "Lo, the Father is come, and that which ye werepromised in the Kingdom is fulfilled."
> 
> He bade him "Arise in the name of thy Lord, theGod of Mercy, amidst the peoples of the earth, and seize thou the Cup of Life with thehands of confidence, and first drink thou therefrom, and proffer it then to such as turntowards it amongst the peoples of all faiths. . . . sell all the embellished ornamentsthou dost possess and expend them in the path of God....
> 
> Abandon thy kingdom unto thekings, and emerge from thy habitation . . . speak forth the praises of thy Lord betwixtearth and heaven."
> 
> Baha'u'llah added an appeal couched in language of the warmest love and longing to thefollowers of Christ,<p83>urging them to recognize and flock unto the Kingdom of God which others were alreadyentering though they had not the first right to it.
> 
> The Pope ignored the letter altogether, and the following year by a stroke lessspectacular than that which befell Napoleon, but equally significant, was by forcedeprived of the temporal rule which he had refused to surrender voluntarily, and becamethe prisoner of the Vatican.
> 
> Thus the year 1870 may be regarded as marking the disruption and decline of Westerncivilization.
> 
> To Queen Victoria Baha'u'llah revealed that the Gospel prophecies were fulfilled in Hisadvent and He offered her aprayer exquisitely tender in its feeling which she might usein turning to Him as He admonished her to do.
> 
> He commended her for two measures whichhad been recently adopted in the spirit of the new age, one the stoppage of theslave-trade, the other the extension of the franchise.
> 
> He wrote at some length to heron the divine art of government, tracing historically the causes of its failure andindicating that it was now in a dangerous condition.
> 
> Through her He sent a reprimand tO the kings for refusing the Most Great Peace andurgently advised them tO adopt the Lesser Peace which would in some degree better theircondition.
> 
> His fourth letter, addressed to Czar Alexander II was couched in warm language and Headvised the Czar to arise and make known this Cause to the nations of the world.
> 
> It is reported that Queen Victoria, on reading His letter, remarked, "If this is of God,it will stand.
> 
> Otherwise it<p84>can do no harm."
> 
> But neither she nor ally of the other Christian rulers turned to Him,nor paid any heed whatever to His counsels.
> 
> He remarked of them that they were intoxicated with pride, unable to see what was bestfor their own material interest, much less to recognize so stupendous a Revelation.
> 
> Baha'u'llah had now been rejected by all the rulers of the world and His removal to'Akka cut Him off completely from active touch with world affairs.
> 
> It should be noted,however, that in exiling Him to 'Akka, the Holy Land, the Sultan had fulfilled theancient prophecy to the effect that the Lord of Hosts would give His Revelation thereand thus made it impossible for anyone to say that Baha'u'llah had fulfilled theprophecy of His own free will.
> 
> Baha'u'llah's trust in the Christians and in their support of His teachings neverweakened.
> 
> Towards the end of His life He wrote the Holy Tablet,l an important workaddressed to them in which He rebukes them for their slowness in recognizing Him,promises He will be faithful and pours forth a succession of enthusiastic beatitudeson the Christians, who will turn to Him with loving hearts and serve His Faith.
> 
> About the same time Professor Edward Granville Browne, of Cambridge University, camein touch with the light of the Bab, became His lifelong admirer and pursued a vigorousresearch of the Bab's history which led him in the end to 'Akka where he was receivedby Baha'u'llah and was thus enabled to write, in that famous introduction to ATraveller's Narrative:
> 
> 1 Lawh-i-Aqdas. <p85>"The face of him on whom I gazed I can never forget, though I cannot describe it.
> 
> Thosepiercing eyes seemed to read one's very soul; power and authority sat on that amplebrow; while the deep lines on the forehead and face implied an age which the jet-blackhair and beard flowing down in indistinguishable luxuriance almost to the waist seemedto belie.
> 
> No need to ask in whose presence I stood, as I bowed myself before one whois the object of a devotion and love which kings might envy and emperors sigh for invain!"1And that other quotation from the lips of Baha'u'llah Himself which, when quoted at theworld parliament of religions in Chicago in 1893, proved to be the instrument ofbringing Baha'u'llah's Revelation to the knowledge of the Western world.
> 
> The words werespoken to Browne during the interview with Baha'u'llah in 'Akka."Thou hast come to see a prisoner and an exile....
> 
> We desire but the good of the worldand the happiness of the nations; yet they deem us a stirrer up of strife and seditionworthy of bondage and banishment....
> 
> That all nations should become one in faith and allmen as brothers; that the bonds of affection and unity between the sons of men shouldbe strengthened; that diversity of religion should cease, and difference of race beannulled--what harm is there in this 2 . . .
> 
> Yet so it shall be; these fruitless strifes,these ruinous wars shall pass away, and the "Most Great Peace" shall come....
> 
> Do notyou in Europe need this also 2 Is not this that which Christ foretold 2 . . .
> 
> Yet do wesee your kings and rulers lavishing their treasures more freely on means for thedestruction of the human race1 E.G.
> 
> Browne, A Traveller's Narrative, Introduction.
> 
> Cambridge. <p86>than on that which would conduce to the happiness of mankind . . .
> 
> These strfes and thisbloodshed and discord must cease, and all men be as one kindredandonefamily. ..
> 
> Let nota man glory in this, that he loves his country; let him rather glory in this, that heloves his kind...."lBaha'u'llah passed away in 1892.
> 
> Communication between America and 'Akka began soonafter 1893 and before the end of the century American pilgrims began to arrive aftera difficult and uncertain journey, by way of the sea, at the prison city where 'Abdu'l-Baha, Son of Baha'u'llah, was still immured.
> 
> 1 ibid. <p87>CHAPTER FOURTEEN'ABDU'L-BAHABaha'u'llah appointed in His written Will His son 'Abdu'l-Baha as His successor and withthis successorship joined powers to which no successor of any earlier Prophet hadattained and which give 'Abdu'l-Baha a position altogether unique in religous history.
> 
> Baha'u'llah designated Him as the Centre and pivot of-His peerless Covenant; as theperfect mirror of His life, to exemplify His teachings; as the unerring interpreter ofHis Word; as the embodiment of every Baha'i ideal and virtue.
> 
> Baha'u'llah called Him the Mystery of God and wrote further of Him, "a Word hath, asa token of Our grace, gone forth from the Most Great Tablet--a Word which God hathadorned with the ornament of His own Self; and made it sovereign over the earth and allthat is therein, and a sign of His greatness and power among its people....
> 
> Renderthanks unto God, O people,for His appearance; for verily He is the most great Favourunto you, the most perfect bounty upon you; and through Him every mouldering bone isquickened."
> 
> Such was He who was now to give a large part of His time and effort to the service ofthe Christian West.'Abdu'l-Baha was the age-fellow of the Baha'i Faith; He had been born on the sameevening as the Declaration of the Bab; had been the first to recognize, at the age ofnine, the exalted transformation of Baha'u'llah after His<p88>Call, and had gone at the same time into exile with His Father.
> 
> In 1868 He entered withHis Father the Most Great Prison of 'Akka, remaining in captivity for forty years tillthe Young Turk Revolution in the year 1908 gave Him His liberty.
> 
> In 191O, although inpoor health owing to His prison suffering, He set out to visit the West, and made twotours occupying three years.
> 
> His chief addresses given at this time are recorded in ThePromulgation of Universal Peace (Talks in America), Paris Talks and 'Abdu'l-Baha inLondon.
> 
> As He knew well, the position of the West at this time was already one of great danger,although the Christians of the West had no idea whatever of the retribution that wasconfronting them. 'Abdu'l-Baha has briefly explained what had happened in one of HisTablets which begins with the following lines:"O Army of Life!
> 
> East and West have joined to worship stars of faded splendour, and haveturned in prayer unto darkened horizons.
> 
> Both have utterly neglected the broadfoundation of God's sacred laws, and have grown unmindful of the merits and virtues ofHis religion.
> 
> They have regarded certain customs and conventions as the basis of theDivine faith, and have.firmly established themselves therein.
> 
> They have imaginedthemselves as having attained a glorious pinnacle of achievement and prosperity, whenin reality they have touched the innermost depths of heedlessness and deprivedthemselves wholly of God's bounteous gifts."
> 
> The people of Europe and America whom He addressed were not only completely obliviousof their real condition as seen by Him, but held the very opposite opinion.
> 
> They wereassured that the great and mighty civilization of the Christian West was due to theirown effort, and that it<p89>was the final product of all civilizations of the past, of the Greek and Roman and thatof Persia and India and China and Egypt, which had been preparatory only.
> 
> They had nodoubt that they at this time were the most enlightened generation of the mostenlightened age the world had ever known.
> 
> Physical science had, they thought, reachedthe limit of reality and probed all the problems and in fact knew all that was to beknown.
> 
> White man in the plenitude of his power was now established in material controlof the weaker nations of the world and would hold the economic, military and politicaldomination of the world indefinitely.
> 
> Some such views as these were probably held by every educated person in audiences towhom 'Abdu'l-Baha spoke in the West; more particularly by those in England; and thatsuch views of the achievements of the Western mind prevailed twenty years or more after'Abdu'l-Baha's visit will be suggested by the following quotation from a famoushistorical work by a brilliant and illustrious Oxford scholar:"Our civilization, then, is distinct: it is also all-pervading and preponderant.
> 
> Insuperficial area Europe is surpassed by Asia, Africa, and America, in population by thevast stable peasantry of Asia, which outnumbers not Europe only, but the rest of theworld put together.
> 
> Yet if a comprehensive survey of the globe were to be made, it wouldbe found that in almost every quarter of it there were settlements of European men, ortraces of the operation of the European mind.
> 
> The surviving aboriginal peoples in thewestern hemisphere are a small, unimportant, and dwindling element in the<p90> population.
> 
> The African negroes have been introduced by white men as an economicconvenient Northern and southern America are largely populated by colonists from Europe.
> 
> Australasia is British.
> 
> The political direction of Africa has fallen, with the ambiguousexception of the lower reaches of the Nile into European hands.
> 
> In Asia the case is notdissimilar:
> 
> The political influences of Europe are apparent, even where they are not, asin India or Palestine, embodied in direct European control.
> 
> The ideasnationality and responsible government, of free do and progress, of democracy anddemocratic education, have passed from the west to the east with revolutionary andfar-reaching consequences."It is, moreover, to European man that the world owes the incomparable gifts of modernscience.
> 
> To the conquest of nature through knowledge the contributions made by Asiaticshave been negligible and by Africans (Egyptians excluded) non-existent The printing pressand the telescope, the steam engine, the internal combustion engine and the aeroplane,the telegraph and telephone, wireless broadcasting and the cinematograph, the gramophoneand television, together with all the leading discoveries in physiology, the circulationof the blood the laws of respiration and the like, are the result of researches carriedout by white men of Europe stock.
> 
> It is hardly excessive to say that the material fabricof modern civilized life is the result of the intellectual daring and tenacity of theEuropean peoples.
> 
> 1.
> 
> H.A.L.
> 
> Fisher, A History of Europe, Introduction    pp.
> 
> 1, 2.
> 
> Edward Arnold & Co.,London, 1936. <p91>'Abdu'l-Baha, of course, knew that such opinions of the importance of Westerncivilization were utterly and cruelly illusive.
> 
> He knew that the Bab had called on thepeoples of the West to come forth from their cities and aid the Cause of God, warningall humanity of the "most terrible, the most grievous vengeance of God"; thatBaha'u'llah had said that the time for the destruction of the world and its people hadarrived. "The days are approaching their end, and yet the peoples of the earth are seensunk in grievous heedlessness, and lost in manifest error." "Great, great is the Cause!
> 
> The hour is approaching when the most great convulsion will have appeared.
> 
> I swear byHim Who is the Truth!
> 
> It shall cause separation to afflict every one, even those whocircle around Me." "Say, O concourse of the endless!
> 
> I swear by God!
> 
> The promised dayis come, the day when tormenting trials will have surged above your heads, and beneathyour feet, saying: "Taste ye what your hands have wrought!'" "The day is approachingwhen its (civilization's) flame will devour the cities, when the Tongue of Grandeur willproclaim: "The Kingdom is God's, the Almighty, the All Praised!'"
> 
> He knew that Baha'u'llah had declared that divine chastisement would assail the kingsof the earth.
> 
> He knew from the sudden doom of the Emperor Napoleon m and of the Pope,a year after the warnings given them, how sudden and terrible this retribution mightbe.
> 
> And the Christian Bible was the accepted authority as to-the coming of the Kingdomof God and of the great events that should be associated with it, and He was not likelyto forget the pronouncements of horror and doom and the abasement of man's pride thataccording to prophets like Isaiah, Joel, Zechariah and many another were to be<p92>among the signs of the Day of tic Lord.
> 
> Nor would H forget how, by prophets likeEzekiel, terrible war far and vast carnage were foretold as preceding the fin a victoryof God on earth.
> 
> He would not forget the Poe diction of Jesus that affliction such asthe world had never known would precede that victory and that no flesh would be savedunless the time were shortened.
> 
> In the book o Revelation the hosts of righteousness areshown as being led by Christ against the hosts of evil and the awfulness of the bloodshedthat would ensue is dramatically Poe tray Ed by pictures of the wine vats flowingblood-rec with the blood of the grapes.
> 
> All these Bible prophecies agreed in large and in little with the events that were nowtaking shape through thy Word of Baha'u'llah, and were in utter contrast with thecharacter and the outlook of history as the people of the West saw them.
> 
> God's Will wasthe ruling force in the Bible as man's will dominates the direction of events in theWestern mind.it would have been easy and natural for 'Abdu'l-Baha in the circumstances to havechallenged the Western fallacy, exposed its error, developed an argument brilliant andoverpowering to emphasize the agreement of His teaching with that of the Bible, and thehollowness of the Western expectation of a man-made kingdom and of materialistichegemony of one race over others.
> 
> But 'Abdu'l-Baha did nothing of the kind.
> 
> The greatideal which He held before His audiences was at all times and places one and the same:
> 
> Unity Through Love.
> 
> His Paris Talks are full throughout of a spiritual wisdom, aspontaneous warmth of heart and sweetness and winning tenderness that would be hard tomatch in the world's<p93>revealed religious literature.
> 
> His first public address was delivered in a ChristianChurch in London.
> 
> He said,"This is a new cycle of human power.
> 
> All the horizons of the world are luminous, andthe world will become indeed as a garden and a paradise....
> 
> The gift of God to thisenlightened age is the knowledge of the oneness of mankind and of the fundamentaloneness of religion.
> 
> Wars shall cease between nations, and by the will of God the MostGreat Peace shall come . . ."
> 
> This truth of a new dawning of power in the world became the master thought of all Hisspeeches throughout His work in the West.
> 
> I America, however, He addressed the Americansparticularly as Christians and made an appeal to them not to be listeners only but tobecome the reapers whom Christ had prophesied would arise in His harvest day.
> 
> He soughtnot only to instruct and illumine the minds of His audience but to awaken in them thepower of spirituality and enthusiasm which would overcome the materialism that infectedmankind and would develop in them a new loving spirituality which would enable Hismessage to get home to their hearts.
> 
> He presented a new picture of Christ in contrast to the Christ of orthodoxy, of sectand schism and dogma; one which showed that Christ's real purpose was to unite humanhearts with the power of Divine love; such a Christ as none had really conceived, eager,vigorous, bringing together people of all sorts and kinds and races arid nations andoverwhelming the prejudices and1 City Temple, Sept.
> 
> 15th, 1911.<p94>traditions which separated them.
> 
> The natural force of His own warm, buoyant, lovingnature gave power an reality to His presentation so that He was able to reveal newChrist such as the people had never realized.
> 
> His American addresses open on a note of joy, of spontaneous abounding happiness andgratification at His meeting so many radiant hearts ready to listen to to Message which,in spite of His old age and imperfect health, He had come so far to give them.
> 
> Only lovefrom God and them would have brought Him.
> 
> Heart and soul 'Abdu'l-Baha radiated atriumphant confidence, clear and strong as can be, as He extolled the glory of Christan Baha'u'llah, showing their closeness, the unity of the effort and their purpose.
> 
> His appeal was not to authority as was that of Baha'u'llah addressing the kings.
> 
> He didnot command.
> 
> His appeal rather was to reason, to logic, to faith and to facts.
> 
> Heexposed the false hopes of the arrogant white race, not by disproof but by drawing ina quite natural manner picture of the true antecedents of the Kingdom, showing it tobe involved in the original creation of man.
> 
> He drew, in many aspects, a picture of the who universe as governed by one unchanginglaw, as be in created, ruled over and directed by one universe independent, living Will.
> 
> This great, out-working Spirt actuated the affairs and movements of all creatures in toworld;-it was the one Power which animated and Dow Nat Ed all existence. 'Abdu'l-Bahaspoke on this subject of an attitude of soul as logical as it was religious, as much in themood of science as of faith.
> 
> He treated the subject not only in a broad and generalmanner but in do detail.
> 
> He traced, for example, the coursing of the atom<p95>through the kingdoms of nature--mineral, vegetable and animal-showing the changes thatit assumes in its progress, through an activity not originating by itself He showed thatthe one, living, independent Will of God which directed the transition of the atomdirected likewise the movements which led mankind from one stage to another on itsjourney to the Kingdom.
> 
> Thus He brought all nature into the same plane as man andshowed, not only the oneness of mankind but of the whole universe-everythingcontributing, each in its own way--even if it be a preparatory way--towards the onegreat spirit goal shown at its highest in the Kingdom of God.
> 
> He taught His auditors to meet the materialism of the day with reason and hard factsand He gave them Himself examples of how it could be done. 'Abdu'l-Baha's first aim in His Western teaching was, as He says Himself, to createin the minds of His hearers capacity to understand and appreciate this great newRevelation.
> 
> He did not wish them to be as the kings had shown themselves to be, soinfected by the pride of man and the haughty skepticism of the age that they Could notsee the truth when it was put plainly and clearly before them.
> 
> Christ, He reminded Hisauditors, had had the same difficulty and had spoken the parable of the sower to showit. 'Abdu'l-Baha sought, as Christ in His day had done, to transform and spiritualizethe very hearts and outlook of those to whom He spoke Unless He could do this theexposure of one error in the minds of the people would only be followed on the nextoccasion by another error.
> 
> No remedy was adequate except that of creating a realcapacity in the human heart to see and love the truth.
> 
> This and nothing less was thefirst and last aim of'Abdu'l-Baha.<p96>His own personality was His greatest argument:
> 
> He so utterly sincere, so full Himselfof truth and love that had the power to convince (it would seem) even most faithless.
> 
> In the second place His happy joyous way of present the argument appealed to those Hespoke to and has own penetrating power.
> 
> Those who knew 'Abdu'l-Baha would say they could feel His overflowing love for mankindpouring from Him in great waves, and some have told how to sit beside Him in a motor-carwas to feel oneself being charged by spiritual energy.
> 
> What strikes many in reading Hiswritings is that they possess a quality different from that which belongs to any humanbeing.
> 
> There is a cadence power in them which definitely comes from a higher world thanthat in which we live.
> 
> It is natural, thereto that His writings should be spoken of asRevelation.
> 
> Yet He was human, not a Manifestation, and His script though valid, has notthe rank of the Revelation of a full Prophet.
> 
> What explanation can there be of thisexcept that the Holy Spirit is now in this Age of Tn touching men's souls with a higherdegree of power th ever in the past.
> 
> Our age has risen from the levels of Kingdom ofMan to the heights unapproached before the Kingdom of God. 'Abdu'l-Baha, the embodimentevery Baha'i ideal, the Incarnation of every Baha'i virtue, presents man (revealed asmade in the image of God) a level higher than any we associate with man before.
> 
> Completing His Western tours, 'Abdu'l-Baha, after nine months' ceaseless lecturing inthe United States and Canada reluctantldy announced the imminent outbreak of the FirstWorld War and then went by Europe back to His home<p97>Haifa.
> 
> He had, however, published translations of a number of Baha'i Scriptures inAmerica; organized Baha'i communities in that country on a firm foundation; laid thefoundation stone of a Baha'i Temple in Wilmette on a site purchased at His direction.
> 
> His efforts, however, to spread the Glad Tidings of the new Day far and wid found alltoo little response.
> 
> After the outbreak of the First World War He tried to take thefullest advantage of the horror of war which the cam age had aroused by writing in andafter 1916, a stirring summons to all Baha'is to arouse themselves and go forth throughthe length and breadth of the world to call all nations to the Kingdom of God.
> 
> Once moreHe quoted the wonderful examples of the Apostles of Christ as a challenge toself-sacrifice.
> 
> Fourteen of these letters constitute 'Abdu'l-Baha's Divine Plan m whichHe detailed a vigorous and forthright program me for the carrying of the message of theNew Day throughout the continents and the islands of the sea,--a plan fully worked outand likely to be in use for many generations to come.
> 
> No great response was arousedamong the Baha'is by this appeal, a fact which caused 'Abdu'l-Baha poignant sorrow,compelling Him to realize how deep the suffering of the world would be which all Hisefforts had not been able to mitigate.
> 
> Broken in heart He passed to His end three yearsafter the War, foretelling that another war, fiercer than the last, would follow beforelong.
> 
> On His death the most deeply conceived and constructive of His works was published,known as The Will and Testament of 'Abdu'l-Baha.
> 
> It completed the great masterpiece ofBaha'u'llah--His book of laws--the two works together composing one complete andharmonious whole.
> 
> 1 Kitab-i-Aqdas<p98>CHAPTER FIFTEENTHE WILL AND TESTAMENT OF 'ABDU'L-BAHAJESUS CHRIST said, "My kingdom is not of thy world and Christian people have beeninclined to think that pure religion is subjective and mystical only and has little orno connection with the organization of instill tons or the making of laws or ordinances.
> 
> This idea is quo alien to the New and the Old Testaments.
> 
> Tie Kingdom of God is indeeda Kingdom, the ruler of which is not philosopher nor a teacher, but a King with lawsar subjects.
> 
> The New Jerusalem which comes down from heaven and becomes the centre ofthe Kingdom represser the Law of God, while the distinctive function of the Lou of Hostson earth is that "the government shall be up his shoulder" and that He will administer"judgment ar justice from henceforth, even forever."
> 
> The Will and Testament of 'Abdu'l-Baha sets forth the administrative order by which thisis to be accomplished, and, fathered by Baha'u'llah, provides the Baha'i Faith with itshistorically unique feature--an administrative system based on the inviolable writtenScripture, establishing and clearly defining the institutions, conferring authority,preventing schism, guarding the Revealed Word from adulteration, providing for itsauthoritative interpretation, and perpetuating the Divine guidance the Lord of HostsHimself"The creative energies released by the Law of<p99>Baha'u'llah, permeating and evolving within the mind of 'Abdu'l-Baha, have, by theirvery impact and close interaction, given birth to an Instrument which may be viewed asthe Charter of the New World Order which is at once the glory and the promise of thismost great Dispensation."1The administrative institutions of the Kingdom, revealed by Baha'u'llah and defined andsupplemented-by 'Abdu'l-Baha, include Houses of Justice at local national andInternational levels.
> 
> These bodies apply the Laws and Principles of Baha'u'llah to dailywife, but the international House of Justice is specifically empowered to legislate onmatters not provided for in the "Book," and is clearly stated by Abdu'l-Baha to be"under the care and protection of the Abha Beauty, under the shelter and unerringguidance of . . . the Exalted One . . ."
> 
> Baha'u'llah Himself says of this institution,"God wilt verily inspire them with whatsoever He willeth . . ."
> 
> This is the legislativechannel through which the rule of God will be perpetuated.
> 
> Nothing in the Will and Testament is more striking or more important Thai the immensityof the power conferred by 'Abdu'l-Baha on the Guardian, and the note of personaladmiration and affection with which the appointment of Shoghi Effendi, to be theGuardian, is characterized Baha'u'llah had already foreshadowed this institution, butit was left to 'Abdu'l-Baha, the Centre of the Covenant, to define it and establish it.'Abdu'l-Baha invokes 'salutation and praise, blessing and glory" upon Shoghi Effendi,in whom is preserved the precious life blood of the two Prophets, the Bab and1 Shoghi Effendi, The Dispensation of Baha'u'llah.<p100>Baha'u'llah, and describes him as "the most wondrous, unique and priceless pearl thatdoth gleam from out the twin surging seas," for he is "after my passing "the Dayspringof Divine guidance." "He is the expounder of the Word God and after him will succeedthe first-born of his lineal descendants."
> 
> All must "turn unto Shoghi Effendi," "Forhe is, after 'Abdu'l-Baha, the guardian of the Cause of God. "He that obeyeth him not,hath not obeyed God; he, turneth away from him, hath turned away from God and thatdenieth him hath denied the True One." "All must guidance and turn unto the Centre ofthe Cause and the House of Justice."
> 
> Interpretation of the Word, which has always been fertile source of schism in the past,is thus taken once and for all time, into His own hands by Baha'u'llah, and none otherbut His appointed Guardian, whom He guides, can fulfill this function.
> 
> This is thesecret of the unbreakable unity of the Baha'i Faith and its entire and blessed lacksects. "The mighty stronghold shall remain impregnable, and safe through obedience tohim who is the guardian of the Cause of God."
> 
> The erect of this appointment is to make the Guardian the source of continuing Divineguidance, and in such a way as to make it clear that although he would be object ofchallenge, enmity and opposition, even repudiation and denial, he would yet remain onunassailable height of sure authority.
> 
> The Guardian, company with the Universal Houseof Justice, is under the express care and protection of Baha'u'llah and unfailingguidance of the Bab.
> 
> He thus must be taken representing, while distinctly a human being,the nearest approach on earth to the Divine exaltation.
> 
> When it is<p101>written that "the government shall be upon his shoulder" the reference can only be tothe revolution by Baha'u'llah of supreme authority upon His divinely guidedinstitutions, which thus embody His Covenant.
> 
> This is the means--the Covenant--whichthe Lord of Hosts has designed to discharge His supreme mission, and the way in whichGod himself shall rule His people.
> 
> Commenting on the station of the Guardian and of Divine guidance which is so prominenta feature of the administrative order of Baha'u'llah, Shoghi Effendi writes:"Exalted as is the position and vital as is the function of the institution of theGuardianship in the Administrative Order of Baha'u'llah, and staggering as must be theweight of responsibility which it carries, its importance must, whatever be the languageof the Will, be in no wise over-emphasized.
> 
> The Guardian of the Faith must not underany circumstances, and whatever his merits or his achievements, be exalted to the rankthat will make him a co-sharer with 'Abdu'l-Baha in the unique position which the Centreof the Covenant occupies--much less to the station exclusively ordained for theManifestation of God.
> 
> So grave a departure from the established tenets of our Faith isnothing short of open blasphemy. . . ."1"No Guardian of the Faith, I feel it my solemn duty to place on record, can ever claimto be the perfect exemplar of the teachings of Baha'u'llah or the stainless mirror thatreflects His light.
> 
> Though overshadowed by the unfailing, the unerring protection ofBaha'u'llah and of the Bab, and however much he may share with 'Abdu'l-Baha the rightand obligation to interpret the Baha'i teachings, he1 The Dispensation of Baha'u'llah. <p102>remains essentially human and cannot, if he wishes to remain faithful to his trust,arrogate to himself, undo any pretense whatsoever, the rights, the privileges Annprerogatives which Baha'u'llah has chosen to confer upon His Son.
> 
> In the light of thistruth to pray to the Guardian of the Faith, to address him as lord and master to deskNATO him as his holiness, to seek his benediction, to cerebra his birthday, or tocommemorate any event associate with his life would be tantamount to a departure fromthose established truths that are enshrined within o beloved Faith.
> 
> The fact that theGuardian has been specifically endowed with such power as he may need to reveal thepurport and dispose the implications of the utterances of Baha'u'llah and of 'Abdu'l-Baha does not necessarily confer upon him a station co-equal with those Whose words heis called upon to interpret."2"Nor can the Baha'i Administrative Order be dismiss as a hard and rigid system ofunmitigated autocracy or as idle imitation of any form of absolutistic ecclesiasticalgovernment, whether it be the Papacy, the Imamate or any other similar institution, forthe obvious reason that up the international elected representatives of the followersBaha'u'llah has been conferred the exclusive right of leg Latin on matters not expresslyrevealed in the Baha'i writings.
> 
> Neither the Guardian of the Faith nor any instituteapart from the International House of Justice can ever USA this vital and essentialpower or encroach upon that sac right.
> 
> The abolition of professional priesthood withaccompanying sacraments of baptism, of communion a of confession of sins, the lawsrequiring the election by universal suffrage of all local, national, and international1  ibid. <p103>Houses of Justice, the total absence of episcopal authority with its attendantprivileges, corruptions and bureaucratic tendencies, are further evidences of thenon-autocratic character of the Baha'i Administrative Order and of its inclination todemocratic methods in the administration of its affairs."1These "twin pillars" of the Kingdom, unique in the religious history of the world,provide mankind with the fullest opportunity of ordering its own affairs through itselected representatnes, whilst conferring upon it the supreme benefit, through theDivine guidance of the Guardian, of an inviolable constitution, the house built uponthe rock of the unimpeachable, incorruptible Word of God HimselfThe dose relationship between these two Divinely guided institutions--the Guardianshipand the International House of Justice--and the consultative method of Baha'iadministration are fully dealt with by 'Abdu'l-Baha in His Will and Testament andelsewhere, though they form no part of this book.
> 
> Suffice it to say that the guidancebestowed upon the House of Justice does not descend to the personal members, while theguidance bestowed upon the Guardian is personal to the holder of the office, the "Signof God," the "Day spring of Divine guidance," the "Interpreter of the Word of God."
> 
> Thus does the Prophetic cycle come to its end with the appearance of the Kingdom,conceived, established and governed by God.
> 
> The age of fulfillment now opens whencountess generations, never bereft of Divine guidance, upraised and loved by thoseProphets Whom the Most High will, in His mercy, eternally send down, will pursue anever-advancing civilization to the full development of man and the greater glory of God.
> 
> 1 ibid. <p104>CHAPTER SIXTEENTHE KINGDOM ON EARTHWHATEVER the conception of the Kingdom of God at the end of the nineteenth century, itcertainly did not hold before Christians the same supreme objective of prayer oraspiration whiz Christ had commanded in the Lord's Prayer.
> 
> It w; rather the Kingdom ofMan than that of God--not of a men but of one race only and of certain members of th;race who had achieved for themselves supremacy ova the others.
> 
> It would mean Iworld-wide Church, to domination of the white man, of white man's civilization and itcontemplated the perpetuation of an ever-increasing trade.'Abdu'l-Baha's picture, painted in full length and glow, in color in His Westernaddresses, was different indeed He saw the coming of the Kingdom as the opening ofttreasuries of heaven,--as the throwing wide of God gates on splendors and glorieshitherto beyond the rear of human imagination.
> 
> So far were they from being divineafter-thought that they were, in fact, the originating motive of all creation, preparedbefore the foundation of the world.
> 
> All the experiences of the whole human race, allthe guidance and the education which the great Prophets had brought, all had beendesigned for and had led up to the human preparation for the Kingdom.
> 
> Now, when theProphets had completed their preliminary<p105>lessons and mankind was ready to attain maturity, God put forth His hand of power andsent the Lord of Hosts to release yet further spiritual energies and to establish atlast the Kingdom of God on earth.
> 
> It was inevitable that the Kingdom of God, so foreseen and so established, should bebuilt into a vast system in which the spiritual and material should be closelyconjoined.
> 
> Such a system has been provided by the Manifestation Himself and made moreperfect in Al respects than any previous form of government or administration.
> 
> Of itBaha'u'llah wrote, "Mankind's ordered life hath been revolutionized through the agencyof this unique, this wondrous System--the like of which mortal eyes have neverwitnessed."
> 
> Probably there is no description which so tersely and clearly gives the distinctivecharacter of the oneness of mankind and the patter of the Kingdom of God as thefollowing paragraphs from Shoghi Effendi's The Unfoldment of World Civilization."Unification of the whole of mankind is the hall-mark of the stage which human societyis now approaching.
> 
> Unity of family, of tribe, of city state, and nation have beensuccessively attempted and fully established.
> 
> World unity is the goal towards which aharassed humanity is striving...."The unity of the human race, as envisaged by Baha'u'llah, implies the establishmentof a world commonwealth in which all nations, races, creeds and classes are closely andpermanently united, and in which the autonomy of its state members and the personalfreedom and initiative of the individuals that compose them are definitely. andcompletely safeguarded.
> 
> This commonwealth must, as<p106>far as we can visualize it, consist of a world legislature whose members will, as thetrustees of the whole mankind, ultimately control the entire resources all the componentnations, and will enact such laws as shall be required to regulate the life, satisfythe needs and adjust the relationships of all races and peoples. world executive, backedby an international Force, will carry out the decisions arrived at, and apply the lawsenacted by, this world legislature, and will safeguard the organic unity of the wholecommonwealth.
> 
> A world tribunal will adjudicate and deliver its compulsory and finalverdict in all and any disputes that may arise between the various elements constitutingthis universal system. mechanism of world inter-communication will devised, embracingthe whole planet, freed from nation hindrances and restrictions, and functioning withma Venous swiftness and perfect regularity.
> 
> A world Mets polls will act as the nervecentre of a world civilization the focus towards which the unifying forces of life wconverge and from which its energizing influences w radiate.
> 
> A world language willeither be invented chosen from among the existing languages and will taught in theschools of all the federated nations as auxiliary to their mother tongue.
> 
> A worldscript, a WOI literature, a uniform and universal system of currency, weights andmeasures, will simplify and facilitate into course and understanding among the nationsand races mankind.
> 
> In such a world society, science and religion, t two most potentforces in human life, will be reconcile will co-operate and will harmoniously develop.
> 
> The pry will, under such a system, while giving full scope to t expression of thediversified views and convictions<p107>mankind, cease to be mischievously manipulated by vested interests, whether private orpublic, and will be liberated from the influence of contending governments and peoples.
> 
> The economic resources of the world will be organized, its sources of raw materials willbe tapped and fully utilized, its markets will be coordinated and developed, and thedistribution of its products will be equitably regulated."National rivalries, hatreds, and intrigues will cease, and racial animosity andprejudice will be replaced by racial amity, understanding and co-operation.
> 
> The causesof religious strife will be permanently removed, economic barriers and restrictions willbe completely abolished, and the inordinate distinction between dosses will beobliterated.
> 
> Destitution on the one hand, and gross accumulation of ownership on theother, will disappear.
> 
> The enormous energy dissipated and wasted on war, whethereconomic or political, will be consecrated to such ends as will extend the range ofhuman inventions and technical development, to the increase of the productivity ofmankind, to the extermination of disease, to the extension of scientific research, tothe raising of the standard of physical health, to the sharpening and refinement of thehuman brain, to the exploitation of the unused and unsuspected resources of the planet,to the prolongation of human life, and to the furtherance of any other agency that canstimulate the intellectual, the moral, and spiritual life of the entire human race."A world federal system, ruling the whole earth and exercising unchallengeable authorityover its unimaginably vast resources, blending and embodying the ideals of both the Eastand the West, liberated from the curse of<p108>war and its miseries, and bent on the exploitation of all the available resources of energyon the surface of the planet a system in which Force is made the servant of Justice whoselife is sustained by its universal recognition of o God and by its allegiance to onecommon Revelation --such is the goal towards which humanity, impeled by the unifying forcesof life, is moving."
> 
> The establishment of this Divine, yet earthly Kingdom had always been associated, bothin the Bible narrate and in its prophecies, with the Holy Land, which has become thehome of the Baha'i Faith.
> 
> This has not by through its own act, so that none can say itdeliberation caused fulfillment of the prophecies, but by the act of enemies, the Shah andthe Sultan, who, in 1868, brought Baha'u'llah, a Persian born in Tihran, as a prisonerand exile to 'Akka.
> 
> That city and its neighborhood, especial Mount Carmel, has sincebecome the most sacred spot in the Baha'i world.
> 
> Baha'u'llah was endowed with the creative power to regenerate the whole of humanity andunify it in a single spiritual organism--a spiritual unity which was envisaged by Godfrom the beginning and had never till now been made a reality--and it is a remarkablefact that through the agency of this Order, as yet but embryonic, the Faith ofBaha'u'llah has succeeded in preserving its unity and integrity, both in thought andin action during the most critical periods of its Heroic and Formative ages.
> 
> That sucha test Suddenly facing, as it did on the death of 'Abdu'l-Baha, a community of hundredsof thousands of believers of all classes, nations, races and traditions should be sosuccessfully met, is an achievement almost incredible Yet it is early evidence of theindubitable truth that every<p109>human being has an equal right with every other to a place in the Kingdom, which witneed the participation of all to make a perfect mirror reflecting the full splendorsof the Holy Spirit.
> 
> Hitherto mankind has been divided into two sections the good and the bad, the faithfuland the infidd, the elect and the lost,--but now with the Corning of the Kingdom allare to be treated and counted as one, and 'Abdu'l-Baha insisted that all men from nowon should treat each other so.
> 
> What now appears plain to one who approaches this divineOrder is that Baha'u'llah has provided all the means for mankind's preservation in thefortress of unity, and leads and guides man along the path to the good-pleasure of GodWho "cherisheth ln His heart the desire of beholding the entire human race as one souland one body."
> 
> Thus, the vast concourse of God's citizens at the inception of His Kingdom have beforethem the prospect of building a universal World Commonwealth which will develop in thefullness of time into a world spiritual civilization.
> 
> Of this great day 'Abdu'l-Bahahas written, gathering up all the threads of the past, "One of the treat events whichis to occur in the Day of the manifestation of that incomparable Branch is the hoistingof th Standard of God among all nations.
> 
> By this is meant that all nations and kind redswill be gathered together under the shadow of this Divine Banner, which is no other thanthe Lordly Branch itself; and will become a single nation.
> 
> Religious and sectarianantagonism, the hostility of races and peoples,anddfferences among nations, will beeliminated.
> 
> All men will adhere to one religion, will have one common faith, will beblended into one race and become a single people.
> 
> All will dwell in one commonfatherland, which is the planet itself."<p110>It is the ancient vision coming true at last, the glorious Kingdom of hope and faithdescending from heaven to encompass all the earth."And I saw a new heaven and a new earth: for thy first heaven and the first earth werepassed away and there was no more sea.
> 
> And I John saw the holy city, new Jerusalem,coming down from God out o heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband And Iheard a great voice out of heaven, saying Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men,and Hal will dwell with them, and they shall be his people and God himself shall be withthem, and be their God And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes and there shallbe no more death, neither sorrow, no crying, neither stall there be any more pain: forthy former things are passed sway." (Rev. xxi)<p111>EPILOGUEWhen no heed was given to Baha'u'llah's Declaration that His prophethood was the returnof Christ, when His appeal for the examination of His Cause and the redress of cruelwrongs inflicted on Him was ignored; when no one regarded His forecast, so forcefullyand so fully presented, that a new Dawn had broken, a New Age had come (new in aspiritual sense, in a moral sense, in an intellectual sense), an Age which would bringa new outlook and new concepts, an Age of Divine Judgment, in which tyranny would bethrown down, the rights of the people asserted, and in which the social structure ofthe human race would be changed; when no attention was paid to the vision He opened,to the opportunities He offered, to the bold challenge which He had from prison flungbefore the mighty ones of the world; then alas! the Churches as the years went by foundthemselves caught into a current which bore them irresistibly downward at an everincreasing speed and which at the end of eight decades was still to be bearing them downto lower and yet lower levels in their political standing, in their moral influence,in their intellectual prestige, in their social authority, in their numbers and theirfinancial resources, in the popular estimate of the relevancy and the reality of toereligion which they taught and even in the vigor and unity of their own witness to thebasic truth upon which the Church itself had been founded.
> 
> No comparable period of deterioration is to be found in the long records of theChristian Faith.
> 
> In all the<p112>vicissitudes of fifteen eventful centuries (and they were many); in all the misfortunes,the mistakes, the failures and the humiliations in which from time to time the Churchwas involved, no such catastrophic decline is to be traced.
> 
> The sovereignty which theChurch had wielded in the Middle Ages had indeed by the nineteenth century become inWestern Europe a thing of the past; but the diminution had been gradual and moderate.
> 
> The lost suered during the previous eight hundred years can hard!y be compared with thevital damage inflicted during the last eighty.
> 
> In past crises the foundations of faith and of western society were not shaken; hoperemained dominant, and from tradition and memory men drew inspiration.
> 
> Society remainedChristian and to that extent unified.
> 
> But now the very foundations have gone.
> 
> Reverenceand restraint are no more.
> 
> The heights of human nature are closed: its depths opened.
> 
> Substitute systems of ethics, man-made and man-regarding, are invented, dethroningconscience.
> 
> The dignity of reason and of knowledge it denied: truth itself is impugned.
> 
> The story of this calamitous decline is well known to all, and its outstanding featurescan be briefly summarized.
> 
> In the year 1870, not long after the dispatch ox Baha'u'llah's Tablet to his Holiness,the Pope way through King Victor Emmanuel's seizure of Rome deprived by force ofvirtually the whole of that temporal power which Baha'u'llah had advised him ta renouncevoluntarily.
> 
> His formal acknowledgment ol the Kingdom of Italy by the recent LateranTreaty sealed this resignation of sovereignty.
> 
> The fall of the Napoleonic Empire was followed in<p113>France by a wave of anti-clericalism which led to a complete separation of the RomanCatholic Church from the State, the secularization of education, and the suppressionand dispersal of the religious orders.in Spain, the monarchy which for so long had been in Christendom the great champion ofthe Roman Church was overthrown and the State secularized.
> 
> The dismemberment of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy caused the disappearance both of thelast remnant of the Holy Roman Empire and of the most powerful political unit that gaveto the Roman Church its spiritual and financial support.
> 
> In Soviet Russia an organized assault directed against the Greek Orthodox Church,against Christianity, and against religion, disestablished that church, massacred vastnumbers of its hundred million members, stripped it of its six and a half million acresof property, pulled down, closed or perverted to secular uses countless thousands ofplaces of worship and by "a five-year plan of godlessness" sought to eradicate allreligion from the heart,s of the people.
> 
> In every land and in all branches of the Christian Church, even where there was nosystem of Establishment, the nosing power of nationalism continually made churches moreand more subservient to the interests and the opinions of the State--a tendency broughtinto strong relief and notoriety in the first world war.
> 
> The gradual decay of the intellectual prestige of religion in Europe had extended overmany generations, but it was brought prominently before the public mind in the seventiesof the last century, largely through the controversies which followed Tyndall's Belfastaddress in 1874 The character of this decay has been epitomized<p114>Professor Whitehead, writing in 1926, thus:"Religion is tending to degenerate into a decent formula wherewith to embellish acomfortable life. . . .
> 
> For over two centuries, religion has been on the defensive, andon a weak defensive.
> 
> The period has bee one of unprecedented intellectual progress.
> 
> Inthis way series of novel situations has been produced for though Each such occasion hasfound the religious think a unprepared.
> 
> Something which has been proclaimed to be vitalhas, finally, after struggle, distress and anthem been modified and otherwiseinterpreted.
> 
> The Ned generation of religious apologists then congratulates th religiousworld on the deeper insight which has bee gained.
> 
> The result of the continued repetitionof th undignified retreat during many generations has at Lao almost entirely destroyedthe, intellectual authority c religious thinkers.
> 
> Consider this contrast; when Darwinor Einstein proclaims theories which modify our ideas, is a triumph for science.
> 
> We donot go about saying Thor is another defeat for science, because its old ideas Han beenabandoned.
> 
> We know that another step of scientific insight has been gained."
> 
> The loss in the moral and spiritual field has been eve more vital and conspicuous,especially of recent year There lS no need to enlarge upon the matter.
> 
> The sickness atthe heart of Christian life and thought which made these humiliations possible has beenthe decay of spirit amity.
> 
> Love for God, fear of God, trust in God's overrulingprovidence and ceaseless care have been no longer active forces in the world.
> 
> Thereligious thinkers find themselves baffled by the portents of the time: when men indisillusionment, in anguish and despair come to them for counsel, seek from themcomfort, hope, some intelligible<p115>idea as to what this cataclysm means and whence it came and how it should be met, theyare completely at a loss.
> 
> Though the Church for nineteen centuries has Proclaimed, andhas enshrined in its creeds, the emphatic and repeated promise of Christ that He wouldcome again in power and great glory to judge the earth, would exalt the righteous andinaugurate the Kingdom of God among mankind, yet they believe and teach that throughall hese years of deepening tribulation no Hand has been outstretched from heaven, nolight of Guidance has been shed upon the earth; that God has withheld from His childrenin their deepest need His succor, His comfort and His love; that Christ has utterlyforgotten His promise or is impotent to redeem it and has permitted His universal Churchto sink in ruin without evincing the least small sign of His interest-or His concern.
> 
> Meantime the Baha'i Message has kindled once more on earth the ancient fire of faiththat Jesus kindled long ago, the fire of spontaneous love for God and man, a love thatchanges all life and longs to show itself in deeds of devotion and of self sacrifice evento death and martyrdom.
> 
> To them who have recognized Christ's voice again in this Agehas been given in renewed freshness and beauty the vision of the Kingdom of God as Jesusand the Book of Revelation gave it--the same vision, but clearer now and on a largerscale and in more detail.
> 
> A new enthusiasm is theirs, a power that nothing can gainsayor resist.
> 
> Their words reach the hearts of men.
> 
> With a courage, a determination that onlydivine love could quicken or support they have arisen in the face of ruthlesspersecution to bear witness to their faith.
> 
> Fearless, though comparatively few, weakin themselves but invincible in God's Cause, they have now at the close of little overa hundred<p116>years carried that Faith far and wide. through the globe, entered well over two hundredand fry countries, translated their literature into three hundred and fifty languages,gathered adherents from East and West, from many races, many nations, many creeds, manytraditions, and have established themselves as a world-community, worship ping one Godunder one Name.
> 
> The Baha'i Faith to-day presents the Christian Churches with the most tremendouschallenge ever offered theme in their long history: a challenge, and an opportunity.
> 
> It is the plain duty of every earnest Christian in this illumined Age to investigatefor himself with an open. and fearless mind the purpose and the teachings of this Faithand to determine whether the collective centre for all the constructive forces of thistime be not the Messenger from God, Baha'u'llah, He and no other; and whether the wayto a better, kinder, happier world will not lie open as soon as we accept theAnnouncement our rulers: resected."O kings of the earth He Who is the sovereign Lord of all is come.
> 
> The Kingdom is God's,the omnipotent Protector, Thea Self-Subsisting.
> 
> Worship none but God, and, with radianthearts, If t up your faces unto your Lord, the Lord of all names.
> 
> This is a Revelationto which whatever ye possess can never be compared, could ye but know it."
> 
> O, Christian believers! for your own sakes and for the sake of the Churches, for thesake of all mankind, for the sake of the Kingdom, cast away your conflicting dogmas andinterpretations which have caused such disunity and led us to the verge of wholesaleself-destruction.
> 
> Recognize the age of Truth.
> 
> Recognize Christ in the glory and powerof the Father and, heart and soul, throw yourselves into His Cause.[Scanned in and corrected by a Vineyard worker.
> 
> 5/12/95.](nbm)
>
> — *Christ and Baha'u'llah*

