Ridván 2010:@Bahá'í Era 167
by Universal House of Justice
To the Baháfís of the World
Dearly loved Friends,
1
With hearts filled with admiration for the
followers of Baháfuflláh, we are pleased to announce
that, as this most joyous Riḍván
season opens, there is in every continent of the globe a fresh complement of
intensive programmes of growth under way, raising the
total number worldwide over the 1,500 mark and securing the goal of the Five
Year Plan, one year in advance of its conclusion. We bow our heads in gratitude
to God for this astounding achievement, this signal victory. All who have laboured in the field will appreciate the bounty He has
bestowed on His community in granting it a full year to strengthen the pattern
of expansion and consolidation now everywhere established, in preparation for
the tasks it will be called upon to undertake in its next global enterprise—a
plan of five years' duration, the fifth in a series with the explicit aim of
advancing the process of entry by troops.
2
We feel moved, as we take pause on this
festive occasion, to make clear that what evokes such a deep sense of pride and
gratitude in our hearts is not so much the numerical feat you have achieved,
remarkable as it is, but a combination of developments at the more profound
level of culture, to which this accomplishment attests. Chief among them is the
rise we have observed in the capacity of the friends to converse with others on
spiritual matters and to speak with ease about the Person of Baháfuflláh and His Revelation. They have understood well
that teaching is a basic requirement of a life of generous giving.
3
In recent messages we have expressed joy at
witnessing the steady increase in the tempo of teaching across the globe. The
discharge of this fundamental spiritual obligation by the individual believer
has always been, and continues to be, an indispensable feature of Baháfí life. What the establishment of 1,500 intensive programmes of growth has made evident is how courageous and
deliberate the rank and file of the believers have become in stepping outside
their immediate circle of family members and friends, ready to be led by the
guiding Hand of the All-Merciful to receptive souls in whatever quarter they
may reside. Even the most modest estimates suggest that there are now tens of
thousands who participate in periodic campaigns to establish ties of
friendship, on the basis of shared understanding, with those previously
regarded as strangers.
4
In their efforts to present the essentials of the
Faith plainly and unequivocally, the believers have benefited greatly from the
illustrative example in Book 6 of the Ruhi Institute.
Where the logic underlying that presentation is appreciated, and the urge to
convert it into a formula overcome, it gives rise to a conversation between two
souls—a conversation distinguished by the depth of understanding achieved and
the nature of the relationship established. To the extent that the conversation
continues beyond the initial encounter and veritable friendships are formed, a
direct teaching effort of this kind can become a catalyst for an enduring
process of spiritual transformation. Whether the first contact with such newly
found friends elicits an invitation for them to enrol
in the Baháfí community or to participate in one of
its activities is not an overwhelming concern. More important is that every
soul feel welcome to join the community in contributing to the betterment of
society, commencing a path of service to humanity on which, at the outset or further
along, formal enrolment can occur.
5
The significance of this development should
not be underestimated. In every cluster, once a consistent pattern of action is
in place, attention needs to be given to extending it more broadly through a
network of co-workers and acquaintances, while energies are, at the same time,
focused on smaller pockets of the population, each of which should become a centre of intense activity. In an urban cluster, such a centre of activity might best be defined by the boundaries
of a neighbourhood; in a cluster that is primarily
rural in character, a small village would offer a suitable social space for
this purpose. Those who serve in these settings, both local inhabitants and
visiting teachers, would rightly view their work in terms of community
building. To assign to their teaching efforts such labels as
"door-to-door", even though the first contact may involve calling
upon the residents of a home without prior notice, would not do justice to a
process that seeks to raise capacity within a population to take charge of its
own spiritual, social and intellectual development. The activities that drive
this process, and in which newly found friends are invited to engage—meetings
that strengthen the devotional character of the community; classes that nurture
the tender hearts and minds of children; groups that channel the surging
energies of junior youth; circles of study, open to all, that enable people of
varied backgrounds to advance on equal footing and explore the application of
the teachings to their individual and collective lives—may well need to be
maintained with assistance from outside the local population for a time. It is
to be expected, however, that the multiplication of these core activities would
soon be sustained by human resources indigenous to the neighbourhood
or village itself—by men and women eager to improve material and spiritual
conditions in their surroundings. A rhythm of community life should gradually
emerge, then, commensurate with the capacity of an expanding nucleus of
individuals committed to Baháfuflláh's vision of a
new World Order.
6
Within this context, receptivity manifests
itself in a willingness to participate in the process of community building set
in motion by the core activities. In cluster after cluster where an intensive programme of growth is now in operation, the task before
the friends this coming year is to teach within one or more receptive
populations, employing a direct method in their exposition of the fundamentals
of their Faith, and find those souls longing to shed the lethargy imposed on
them by society and work alongside one another in their neighbourhoods
and villages to begin a process of collective transformation. If the friends
persist in their efforts to learn the ways and methods of community building in
small settings in this way, the long-cherished goal of universal participation
in the affairs of the Faith will, we are certain, move by several orders of
magnitude within grasp.
7
To meet this challenge, the believers and the
institutions that serve them will have to strengthen the institute process in
the cluster, increasing significantly within its borders the number of those
capable of acting as tutors of study circles; for it should be recognized that
the opportunity now open to the friends to foster a vibrant community life in neighbourhoods and villages, characterized by such a keen
sense of purpose, was only made possible by crucial developments that occurred
over the past decade in that aspect of Baháfí culture
which pertains to deepening.
8
When in December 1995 we called for the
establishment of training institutes worldwide, the pattern most prevalent in
the Baháfí community for helping individual believers
to deepen their knowledge of the Faith consisted principally of occasional
courses and classes, of varying durations, addressing a variety of subjects.
That pattern had satisfied well the needs of an emerging worldwide Baháfí community, still relatively few in number and
concerned chiefly with its geographic spread across the globe. We made clear at
the time, however, that another approach to the study of the writings would
have to take shape, one that would spur large numbers into the field of action,
if the process of entry by troops was to accelerate appreciably. In this
connection, we asked that training institutes assist ever-growing contingents
of believers in serving the Cause through the provision of courses that would
impart the knowledge, insights and skills required to carry out the many tasks
associated with accelerated expansion and consolidation.
9
To read the writings of the Faith and to
strive to obtain a more adequate understanding of the significance of Baháfuflláh's stupendous Revelation are obligations laid on
every one of His followers. All are enjoined to delve into the ocean of His
Revelation and to partake, in keeping with their capacities and inclinations,
of the pearls of wisdom that lie therein. In this light, local deepening
classes, winter and summer schools, and specially arranged gatherings in which
individual believers knowledgeable in the writings were able to share with
others insights into specific subjects emerged naturally as prominent features
of Baháfí life. Just as the habit of daily reading
will remain an integral part of Baháfí identity, so
will these forms of study continue to hold a place in the collective life of
the community. But understanding the implications of the Revelation, both in
terms of individual growth and social progress, increases manifold when study
and service are joined and carried out concurrently. There, in the field of
service, knowledge is tested, questions arise out of practice, and new levels
of understanding are achieved. In the system of distance education that has now
been established in country after country—the principal elements of which
include the study circle, the tutor and the curriculum of the Ruhi Institute—the worldwide Baháfí
community has acquired the capacity to enable thousands, nay millions, to study
the writings in small groups with the explicit purpose of translating the Baháfí teachings into reality, carrying the work of the
Faith forward into its next stage: sustained large-scale expansion and
consolidation.
10
Let no one fail to appreciate the
possibilities thus created. Passivity is bred by the forces of society today. A
desire to be entertained is nurtured from childhood, with increasing
efficiency, cultivating generations willing to be led by whoever proves skilful at appealing to superficial emotions. Even in many
educational systems students are treated as though they were receptacles
designed to receive information. That the Baháfí
world has succeeded in developing a culture which promotes a way of thinking,
studying, and acting, in which all consider themselves as treading a common
path of service—supporting one another and advancing together, respectful of
the knowledge that each one possesses at any given moment and avoiding the
tendency to divide the believers into categories such as deepened and
uninformed—is an accomplishment of enormous proportions. And therein lie the
dynamics of an irrepressible movement.
11
What is imperative is that the quality of the
educational process fostered at the level of the study circle rise markedly
over the next year so that the potential of local populations to create such
dynamics is realized. Much will fall on those who serve as tutors in this
respect. Theirs will be the challenge to provide the environment that is
envisioned in the institute courses, an environment conducive to the spiritual
empowerment of individuals, who will come to see themselves as active agents of
their own learning, as protagonists of a constant effort to apply knowledge to
effect individual and collective transformation. Failing this, no matter how
many study circles are formed in a cluster, the force necessary to propel
change will not be generated.
12
If the work of the tutor is to reach higher
and higher degrees of excellence, it must be remembered that primary
responsibility for the development of human resources in a region or country
rests with the training institute. While striving to increase the number of its
participants, the institute as a structure—from the board, to the coordinators
at different levels, to the tutors at the grassroots—must lay equal stress on
the effectiveness of the system in its entirety, for, in the final analysis,
sustained quantitative gains will be contingent on qualitative progress. At the
level of the cluster, the coordinator must bring both practical experience and
dynamism to his or her efforts to accompany those who serve as tutors. He or
she should arrange periodic gatherings for them to reflect on their endeavours. Events organized to repeat the study of
segments selected from the institute material may occasionally prove helpful,
provided they do not inculcate a need for perpetual training. The capabilities
of a tutor develop progressively as an individual enters the field of action
and assists others in contributing to the aim of the present series of global
Plans, through study of the sequence of courses and implementation of their
practical component. And as men and women of various ages move along the
sequence and complete their study of each course with the help of tutors,
others must stand ready to accompany them in acts of service undertaken
according to their strengths and interests—particularly the coordinators
responsible for children's classes, for junior youth groups and for study
circles, acts of service crucial to the perpetuation of the system itself. To
ensure that the proper measure of vitality is pulsating through this system
should continue to be the object of intense learning in every country over the
course of the next twelve months.
13
Concern for the spiritual education of
children has long been an element of the culture of the Baháfí
community, a concern that resulted in two, coexisting realities. One, emulating
the achievements of the Baháfís of Iran, was characterized by the capacity to
offer systematic classes, from grade to grade, to children from Baháfí families, generally with the aim of imparting basic
knowledge of the history and teachings of the Faith to rising generations. In
most parts of the world, the number who benefited from such classes has been
relatively small. The other reality emerged in areas where large-scale
enrolments took place, both rural and urban. A more inclusive attitude
dominated that experience. Yet while children from households of all kinds were
at once eager and welcome to attend Baháfí classes,
various factors prevented lessons from being conducted with the required degree
of regularity, year after year. How pleased we are to see this duality, a
consequence of historical circumstances, begin to fall away as friends trained
by institutes everywhere strive to offer classes, open to all, on a systematic
basis.
14
Such promising beginnings have now to be
vigorously pursued. In every cluster with an intensive programme
of growth in operation, efforts need to be made to systematize further the
provision of spiritual education to increasing numbers of children, from
families of many backgrounds—a requisite of the community-building process
gathering momentum in neighbourhoods and villages.
This will be a demanding task, one that calls for patience and cooperation on
the part of parents and institutions alike. The Ruhi
Institute has already been requested to expedite plans to complete its courses
for training children's class teachers at different levels including the
corresponding lessons, starting with youngsters aged 5 or 6 and proceeding to
those aged 10 or 11, in order to close the present gap between existing lessons
and its textbooks for junior youth, such as Spirit of Faith and the forthcoming
Power of the Holy Spirit, which provide a distinctly Baháfí
component to the programme for that age group. As
these additional courses and lessons become available, institutes in every
country will be able to prepare the teachers and the coordinators required to
put in place, grade by grade, the core of a programme
for the spiritual education of children, around which secondary elements can be
organized. Meanwhile, institutes should do their best to provide teachers with
suitable materials, from among others currently in existence, for use in their
classes with children of various ages, as necessary.
15
The International Teaching Centre has earned
our abiding gratitude for the vital impetus it lent to the efforts to secure
the early attainment of the goal of the Five Year Plan. To see the degree of
energy it brought to this worldwide enterprise, following so tenaciously the
progress in every continent and collaborating so closely with the Continental
Counsellors, was to catch a glimpse of the tremendous power inherent in the
Administrative Order. As the Teaching Centre now turns its attention with equal
vigour to questions related to the efficacy of
activities at the cluster level, it will no doubt give special consideration to
the implementation of Baháfí children's classes. We
are confident that its analysis of the experience gained in a few selected
clusters this coming year, representative of diverse social realities, will
shed light on practical issues which will make possible the establishment of
regular classes, for children of every age, in neighbourhoods
and villages.
16
The rapid spread of the programme
for the spiritual empowerment of junior youth is yet another expression of
cultural advance in the Baháfí community. While
global trends project an image of this age group as problematic, lost in the
throes of tumultuous physical and emotional change, unresponsive and
self-consumed, the Baháfí community—in the language
it employs and the approaches it adopts—is moving decidedly in the opposite
direction, seeing in junior youth instead altruism, an acute sense of justice,
eagerness to learn about the universe and a desire to contribute to the
construction of a better world. Account after account, in which junior youth in
countries all over the planet give voice to their thoughts as participants in
the programme, testifies to the validity of this
vision. There is every indication that the programme
engages their expanding consciousness in an exploration of reality that helps
them to analyse the constructive and destructive
forces operating in society and to recognize the influence these forces exert
on their thoughts and actions, sharpening their spiritual perception, enhancing
their powers of expression and reinforcing moral structures that will serve
them throughout their lives. At an age when burgeoning intellectual, spiritual
and physical powers become accessible to them, they are being given the tools
needed to combat the forces that would rob them of their true identity as noble
beings and to work for the common good.
17
That the major component of the programme explores themes from a Baháfí
perspective, but not in the mode of religious instruction, has opened the way
for its extension to junior youth in a variety of settings and circumstances.
In many such instances, then, those who implement the programme
enter confidently into the area of social action, encountering a range of
questions and possibilities, which are being followed and organized in a global
process of learning by the Office of Social and Economic Development in the
Holy Land. Already the accumulating body of knowledge and experience has given
rise to the capacity in several clusters scattered across the globe to each
sustain over one thousand junior youth in the programme.
To help others advance swiftly in this direction, the Office is establishing a
network of sites in all continents, with the assistance of a corps of
believers, that can be used to provide training to coordinators from scores
upon scores of clusters. These resource persons continue to support
coordinators upon their return to their respective clusters, enabling them to
create a spiritually charged environment in which the junior youth programme can take root.
18
Further knowledge is sure to accrue in this
area of endeavour, although a pattern of action is
already clear. Only the capacity of the Baháfí
community limits the extent of its response to the demand for the programme by schools and civic groups. Within the clusters
that today are the focus of an intensive programme of
growth, there is a wide array of circumstances, from those with a few sporadic
junior youth groups to those maintaining a number sufficient to require the
services of a dedicated coordinator, who could receive ongoing support from a
site for the dissemination of learning. To ensure that this capacity increases
across the entire spectrum of these clusters, we are calling for 32 learning
sites, each serving some twenty clusters with full-time coordinators, to be in
operation by the end of the current Plan. In all other such clusters, priority
should be given to creating the capacity over the coming year to offer the programme, multiplying the number of groups systematically.
19
The developments we have mentioned thus
far—the rise in capacity to teach the Faith directly and to enter into
purposeful discussion on themes of spiritual import with people from every walk
of life, the efflorescence of an approach to study of the writings that is
wedded to action, the renewal of commitment to provide spiritual education to
the young in neighbourhoods and villages on a regular
basis, and the spread in influence of a programme
that instils in junior youth the sense of a twofold moral purpose, to develop
their inherent potentialities and to contribute to the transformation of
society—are all reinforced, in no small measure, by yet another advance at the
level of culture, the implications of which are far-reaching indeed. This
evolution in collective consciousness is discernable in the growing frequency
with which the word "accompany" appears in conversations among the
friends, a word that is being endowed with new meaning as it is integrated into
the common vocabulary of the Baháfí community. It
signals the significant strengthening of a culture in which learning is the
mode of operation, a mode that fosters the informed
participation of more and more people in a united effort to apply Baháfuflláh's teachings to the construction of a divine
civilization, which the Guardian states is the primary mission of the Faith.
Such an approach offers a striking contrast to the spiritually bankrupt and
moribund ways of an old social order that so often seeks to harness human
energy through domination, through greed, through guilt or through
manipulation.
20
In relationships among the friends, then, this
development in culture finds expression in the quality of their interactions.
Learning as a mode of operation requires that all assume a posture of humility,
a condition in which one becomes forgetful of self, placing complete trust in
God, reliant on His all-sustaining power and confident in His unfailing assistance,
knowing that He, and He alone, can change the gnat into an eagle, the drop into
a boundless sea. And in such a state souls labour
together ceaselessly, delighting not so much in their own accomplishments but
in the progress and services of others. So it is that their thoughts are centred at all times on helping one another scale the
heights of service to His Cause and soar in the heaven of His knowledge. This
is what we see in the present pattern of activity unfolding across the globe,
propagated by young and old, by veteran and newly enrolled, working side by
side.
21
Not only does this advance in culture
influence relations among individuals, but its effects can also be felt in the
conduct of the administrative affairs of the Faith. As learning has come to
distinguish the community's mode of operation, certain aspects of decision
making related to expansion and consolidation have been assigned to the body of
the believers, enabling planning and implementation to become more responsive
to circumstances on the ground. Specifically, a space has been created, in the
agency of the reflection meeting, for those engaged in activities at the
cluster level to assemble from time to time in order to reach consensus on the
current status of their situation, in light of experience and guidance from the
institutions, and to determine their immediate steps forward. A similar space
is opened by the institute, which makes provision for those serving as tutors,
children's class teachers, and animators of junior youth groups in a cluster to
meet severally and consult on their experience. Intimately connected to this
grassroots consultative process are the agencies of the training institute and
the Area Teaching Committee, together with the Auxiliary Board members, whose joint
interactions provide another space in which decisions pertaining to growth are
taken, in this case with a higher degree of formality. The workings of this
cluster-level system, born of exigencies, point to an important characteristic
of Baháfí administration: Even as a living organism,
it has coded within it the capacity to accommodate higher and higher degrees of
complexity, in terms of structures and processes, relationships and activities,
as it evolves under the guidance of the Universal House of Justice.
22
That the institutions of the Faith at all
levels—from the local and the regional, to the national and the continental—are
able to manage such growing complexity with greater and greater dexterity is
both a sign and a necessity of their steady maturation. Evolving relationships
among administrative structures have brought the Local Spiritual Assembly to
the threshold of a new stage in the exercise of its responsibilities to diffuse
the Word of God, to mobilize the energies of the believers, and to forge an
environment that is spiritually edifying. On previous occasions we have
explained that the maturity of a Spiritual Assembly cannot be assessed by the
regularity of its meetings and the efficiency of its functioning alone. Rather
its strength must be measured, to a large extent, by the vitality of the
spiritual and social life of the community it serves—a growing community that
welcomes the constructive contributions of both those who are formally enrolled
and those who are not. It is gratifying to see that current approaches, methods
and instruments are providing the means for Local Spiritual Assemblies, even
those newly formed, to fulfil these responsibilities as they set about to
ensure that the requirements of the Five Year Plan are adequately met in their
localities. Indeed, the Assembly's proper involvement with the Plan becomes
crucial to every attempt to embrace large numbers—itself a requisite for the
manifestation of the full range of its powers and capacities.
23
The development that we are sure to witness in
Local Spiritual Assemblies over the next several years is made possible by the
growing strength of National Spiritual Assemblies, whose ability to think and
act strategically has risen perceptibly, especially as they have learned to analyse the community-building process at the grassroots
with increasing acuity and effectiveness and to inject into it, as needed,
assistance, resources, encouragement, and loving guidance. In countries where
conditions demand it, they have devolved a number of their responsibilities in
this respect to Regional Councils, decentralizing certain administrative
functions, enhancing institutional capacity in areas under their jurisdiction,
and fostering more sophisticated sets of interactions. It is no exaggeration to
say that the full engagement of National Assemblies was instrumental in
creating the final thrust required to attain the goal of the current Plan, and
we expect to see further developments in this direction as, in concert with the
Counsellors, they exert in the course of the critical, fleeting months ahead a
supreme effort to ready their communities to embark on the next five-year
enterprise.
24
Without question, the evolution of the
institution of the Counsellors constitutes one of the most significant advances
in the Baháfí Administrative Order during the past
decade. That institution had already made extraordinary leaps in its
development when, in January 2001, the Counsellors and the Auxiliary Board
members gathered in the Holy Land for the conference marking the occupation by
the International Teaching Centre of its permanent seat on Mount Carmel. There
is no doubt that the energies released by that event have propelled the
institution rapidly forward. The degree of influence the Counsellors and their
auxiliaries have exerted on the progress of the Plan demonstrates that they
have assumed their natural place in the forefront of the teaching field. We are
confident that the coming year will bind the institutions of the Administrative
Order further together in collaboration, as all strive to reinforce, each in
accordance with its evolving functions and responsibilities, the mode of
learning that has become a prominent feature of the community's
functioning—this, most urgently in those clusters experiencing intensive programmes of growth.
25
Baháfuflláh's Revelation is vast.
It calls for profound change not only at the level of the individual but also
in the structure of society. "Is not the object of every Revelation",
He Himself proclaims, "to effect a transformation in the whole character
of mankind, a transformation that shall manifest itself, both outwardly and
inwardly, that shall affect both its inner life and external conditions?"
The work advancing in every corner of the globe today represents the latest
stage of the ongoing Baháfí endeavour
to create the nucleus of the glorious civilization enshrined in His teachings,
the building of which is an enterprise of infinite complexity and scale, one
that will demand centuries of exertion by humanity to bring to fruition. There
are no shortcuts, no formulas. Only as effort is made to draw on insights from
His Revelation, to tap into the accumulating knowledge of the human race, to
apply His teachings intelligently to the life of humanity, and to consult on
the questions that arise will the necessary learning occur and capacity be
developed.
26
In this long-term process of capacity
building, the Baháfí community has devoted nearly a
decade and a half to systematizing its experience in the teaching field, learning
to open certain activities to more and more people and to sustain its expansion
and consolidation. All are welcome to enter the community's warm embrace and
receive sustenance from Baháfuflláh's life-giving
message. No greater joy is there, to be sure, than for a soul, yearning for the
Truth, to find shelter in the stronghold of the Cause and draw strength from
the unifying power of the Covenant. Yet every human being and every group of
individuals, irrespective of whether they are counted among His followers, can
take inspiration from His teachings, benefiting from whatever gems of wisdom
and knowledge will aid them in addressing the challenges they face. Indeed, the
civilization that beckons humanity will not be attained through the efforts of
the Baháfí community alone. Numerous groups and
organizations, animated by the spirit of world solidarity that is an indirect
manifestation of Baháfuflláh's conception of the
principle of the oneness of humankind, will contribute to the civilization
destined to emerge out of the welter and chaos of present-day society. It
should be clear to everyone that the capacity created in the Baháfí community over successive global Plans renders it
increasingly able to lend assistance in the manifold and diverse dimensions of
civilization building, opening to it new frontiers of learning.
27
In our Riḍván 2008
message we indicated that, as the friends continued to labour at the level of the cluster, they would find
themselves drawn further and further into the life of society and would be
challenged to extend the process of systematic learning in which they are
engaged to encompass a widening range of human endeavours.
A rich tapestry of community life begins to emerge in every cluster as acts of
communal worship, interspersed with discussions undertaken in the intimate
setting of the home, are woven together with activities that provide spiritual
education to all members of the population—adults, youth and children. Social
consciousness is heightened naturally as, for example, lively conversations
proliferate among parents regarding the aspirations of their children and
service projects spring up at the initiative of junior youth. Once human
resources in a cluster are in sufficient abundance, and the pattern of growth
firmly established, the community's engagement with society can, and indeed
must, increase. At this crucial point in the unfoldment of the Plan, when so
many clusters are nearing such a stage, it seems appropriate that the friends
everywhere would reflect on the nature of the contributions which their
growing, vibrant communities will make to the material and spiritual progress
of society. In this respect, it will prove fruitful to think in terms of two
interconnected, mutually reinforcing areas of activity: involvement in social
action and participation in the prevalent discourses of society.
Over the decades, the Baháfí
community has gained much experience in these two areas of endeavour.
There are, of course, a great many Baháfís who are engaged as individuals in
social action and public discourse through their occupations. A number of
non-governmental organizations, inspired by the teachings of the Faith and
operating at the regional and national levels, are working in the field of
social and economic development for the betterment of their people. Agencies of
National Spiritual Assemblies are contributing through various avenues to the
promotion of ideas conducive to public welfare. At the international level,
agencies such as the United Nations Office of the Baháfí
International Community are performing a similar function. To the extent
necessary and desirable, the friends working at the grassroots of the community
will draw on this experience and capacity as they strive to address the
concerns of the society around them.
28
Most appropriately conceived in terms of a
spectrum, social action can range from fairly informal efforts of limited
duration undertaken by individuals or small groups of friends to programmes of social and economic development with a high
level of complexity and sophistication implemented by Baháfí-inspired
organizations. Irrespective of its scope and scale, all social action seeks to
apply the teachings and principles of the Faith to improve some aspect of the
social or economic life of a population, however modestly. Such endeavours are distinguished, then, by their stated purpose
to promote the material well-being of the population, in addition to its
spiritual welfare. That the world civilization now on humanity's horizon must
achieve a dynamic coherence between the material and spiritual requirements of
life is central to the Baháfí teachings. Clearly this
ideal has profound implications for the nature of any social action pursued by
Baháfís, whatever its scope and range of influence. Though conditions will vary
from country to country, and perhaps from cluster to cluster, eliciting from
the friends a variety of endeavours, there are
certain fundamental concepts that all should bear in mind. One is the
centrality of knowledge to social existence. The perpetuation of ignorance is a
most grievous form of oppression; it reinforces the many walls of prejudice
that stand as barriers to the realization of the oneness of humankind, at once
the goal and operating principle of Baháfuflláh's
Revelation. Access to knowledge is the right of every human being, and
participation in its generation, application and diffusion a responsibility
that all must shoulder in the great enterprise of building a prosperous world
civilization—each individual according to his or her talents and abilities.
Justice demands universal participation. Thus, while social action may involve
the provision of goods and services in some form, its primary concern must be
to build capacity within a given population to participate in creating a better
world. Social change is not a project that one group of people carries out for
the benefit of another. The scope and complexity of social action must be
commensurate with the human resources available in a village or neighbourhood to carry it forward. Efforts best begin,
then, on a modest scale and grow organically as capacity within the population
develops. Capacity rises to new levels, of course, as the protagonists of
social change learn to apply with increasing effectiveness elements of Baháfuflláh's Revelation, together with the contents and
methods of science, to their social reality. This reality they must strive to
read in a manner consistent with His teachings—seeing in their fellow human
beings gems of inestimable value and recognizing the effects of the dual
process of integration and disintegration on both hearts and minds, as well as
on social structures.
29
Effective social action serves to enrich
participation in the discourses of society, just as the insights gained from
engaging in certain discourses can help to clarify the concepts that shape
social action. At the level of the cluster, involvement in public discourse can
range from an act as simple as introducing Baháfí
ideas into everyday conversation to more formal activities such as the
preparation of articles and attendance at gatherings, dedicated to themes of
social concern—climate change and the environment, governance and human rights,
to mention a few. It entails, as well, meaningful interactions with civic
groups and local organizations in villages and neighbourhoods.
30
In this connection, we feel compelled to raise
a warning: It will be important for all to recognize that the value of engaging
in social action and public discourse is not to be judged by the ability to
bring enrolments. Though endeavours in these two
areas of activity may well effect an increase in the size of the Baháfí community, they are not undertaken for this purpose.
Sincerity in this respect is an imperative. Moreover, care should be exercised
to avoid overstating the Baháfí experience or drawing
undue attention to fledging efforts, such as the junior youth spiritual
empowerment programme, which are best left to mature
at their own pace. The watchword in all cases is humility. While conveying
enthusiasm about their beliefs, the friends should guard against projecting an
air of triumphalism, hardly appropriate among themselves, much less in other
circumstances.
31
In describing for you these new opportunities
now opening at the level of the cluster, we are not asking you to alter in any
way your current course. Nor should it be imagined that such opportunities
represent an alternative arena of service, competing with the expansion and
consolidation work for the community's limited resources and energies. Over the
coming year, the institute process and the pattern of activity that it engenders
should continue to be strengthened, and teaching should remain uppermost in the
mind of every believer. Further involvement in the life of society should not
be sought prematurely. It will proceed naturally as the friends in every
cluster persevere in applying the provisions of the Plan through a process of
action, reflection, consultation and study, and learn as a result. Involvement
in the life of society will flourish as the capacity of the community to
promote its own growth and to maintain its vitality is gradually raised. It
will achieve coherence with efforts to expand and consolidate the community to
the extent that it draws on elements of the conceptual framework which governs
the current series of global Plans. And it will contribute to the movement of
populations towards Baháfuflláh's vision of a
prosperous and peaceful world civilization to the degree that it employs these
elements creatively in new areas of learning.
32
Dear Friends: How often did the Beloved Master
express the hope that the hearts of the believers would overflow with love for
one another, that they would abide no lines of separation but would regard all
of humanity even as one family. "See ye no strangers," is His
exhortation; "rather see all men as friends, for love and unity come hard
when ye fix your gaze on otherness." All of the developments examined in
the preceding pages are, at the most profound level, but an expression of
universal love achieved through the power of the Holy Spirit. For is it not
love for God that burns away all veils of estrangement and division and binds
hearts together in perfect unity? Is it not His love that spurs you on in the
field of service and enables you to see in every soul the capacity to know Him
and to worship Him? Are you not galvanized by the knowledge that His
Manifestation gladly endured a life of suffering out of His love for humanity?
Look within your own ranks, at your dear Baháfí
brothers and sisters in Iran. Do they not exemplify fortitude born of the love
of God and the desire to serve Him? Does not their capacity to transcend the
cruelest and most bitter persecution bespeak the capacity of millions upon
millions of oppressed people of the world to arise and take a decisive part in
building the Kingdom of God on earth? Undeterred by divisive social constructs,
press on and bring Baháfuflláh's message to waiting
souls in every urban neighbourhood, in every rural
hamlet, in every corner of the globe, drawing them to His community, the
community of the Greatest Name. Never do you leave our thoughts and prayers,
and we will continue to implore the Almighty to reinforce you with His wondrous
grace.
THE UNIVERSAL HOUSE OF JUSTICE