Part Two
SOME
CHRISTIAN SUBJECTS
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OUTWARD FORMS
AND SYMBOLS
MUST BE USED TO CONVEY
INTELLECTUAL CONCEPTIONS
A subject that is essential(1) for the comprehension of the questions that we
have mentioned, and of others of which we are about to speak, so that the
essence of the problems may be understood, is this: that human knowledge is of
two kinds. One is the knowledge of things perceptible to the senses--that is to
say, things which the eye, or ear, or smell, or taste, or touch can perceive,
which are called objective or sensible. So the sun, because it can be seen, is
said to be objective; and in the same way sounds are sensible because the ear
hears them; perfumes are sensible because they can be inhaled and the sense of
smell perceives them; foods are sensible because the palate perceives their
sweetness, sourness or saltness; heat and cold are sensible because the feelings
perceive them. These are said to be sensible realities.
The other kind of
human knowledge is intellectual-- that is to say, it is a reality of the
intellect; it has no outward form and no place and is not perceptible to the
senses. For example, the power of intellect is not sensible; none of the inner
qualities of man is a sensible thing; on the contrary, they are intellectual
realities. So love is a mental reality and not sensible; for this reality the
ear does not hear, the eye does not see, the smell does not perceive, the taste
does not discern, the touch does not feel. Even
1. Lit., the
pivot.
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ethereal matter, the forces of which are said in physics to be
heat, light, electricity and magnetism, is an intellectual reality, and is not
sensible. In the same way, nature, also, in its essence is an intellectual
reality and is not sensible; the human spirit is an intellectual, not sensible
reality. In explaining these intellectual realities, one is obliged to express
them by sensible figures because in exterior existence there is nothing that is
not material. Therefore, to explain the reality of the spirit--its condition,
its station--one is obliged to give explanations under the forms of sensible
things because in the external world all that exists is sensible. For example,
grief and happiness are intellectual things; when you wish to express those
spiritual qualities you say: "My heart is oppressed; my heart is dilated,"
though the heart of man is neither oppressed nor dilated. This is an
intellectual or spiritual state, to explain which you are obliged to have
recourse to sensible figures. Another example: you say, "such an individual made
great progress," though he is remaining in the same place; or again, "such a
one's position was exalted," although, like everyone else, he walks upon the
earth. This exaltation and this progress are spiritual states and intellectual
realities, but to explain them you are obliged to have recourse to sensible
figures because in the exterior world there is nothing that is not
sensible.
So the symbol of knowledge is light, and of ignorance,
darkness; but reflect, is knowledge sensible light, or ignorance sensible
darkness? No, they are merely symbols. These are only intellectual states, but
when you desire to express them outwardly, you call knowledge light, and
ignorance darkness. You say: "My heart was gloomy, and it became enlightened."
Now, that light of knowledge, and that darkness of ignorance, are intellectual
realities, not sensible ones; but when we seek for explanations in the external
world, we are obliged to give them a sensible form.
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Then it is evident that the dove which descended upon Christ was
not a material dove, but it was a spiritual state, which, that it might be
comprehensible, was expressed by a sensible figure. Thus in the Old Testament it
is said that God appeared as a pillar of fire: this does not signify the
material form; it is an intellectual reality which is expressed by a sensible
image.
Christ says, "The Father is in the Son, and the Son is in the
Father." Was Christ within God, or God within Christ? No, in the name of God! On
the contrary, this is an intellectual state which is expressed in a sensible
figure.
We come to the explanation of the words of Bahá'u'lláh when He
says: "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."(1) This is the state of manifestation: it is not
sensible; it is an intellectual reality, exempt and freed from time, from past,
present and future; it is an explanation, a simile, a metaphor and is not to be
accepted literally; it is not a state that can be comprehended by man. Sleeping
and waking is passing from one state to another. Sleeping is the condition of
repose, and wakefulness is the condition of movement. Sleeping is the state of
silence; wakefulness is the state of speech. Sleeping is the state of mystery;
wakefulness is the state of manifestation.
For example, it is a Persian
and Arabic expression to say that the earth was asleep, and the spring came, and
it awoke; or the earth was dead, and the spring came, and it revived. These
expressions are metaphors, allegories, mystic explanations in the world of
signification.
Briefly, the Holy Manifestations have ever been, and ever
will be, Luminous Realities; no change or variation
1. Extract from
the letter to Násiri'd-Din Sháh.
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takes place in Their essence. Before declaring Their manifestation,
They are silent and quiet like a sleeper, and after Their manifestation, They
speak and are illuminated, like one who is awake.
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17
THE BIRTH OF
CHRIST
Question.--How was Christ born of the Holy Spirit? Answer.--In regard to this
question, theologians and materialists disagree. The theologians believe that
Christ was born of the Holy Spirit, but the materialists think this is
impossible and inadmissible, and that without doubt He had a human
father.
In the Qur'án it is said: "And We sent Our Spirit unto her, and
He appeared unto her in the shape of a perfect man,"(1) meaning
that the Holy Spirit took the likeness of the human form, as an image is
produced in a mirror, and he addressed Mary.
The materialists believe
that there must be marriage, and say that a living body cannot be created from a
lifeless body, and without male and female there cannot be fecundation. And they
think that not only with man, but also with animals and plants, it is
impossible. For this union of the male and female exists in all living beings
and plants. This pairing of things is even shown forth in the Qur'án: "Glory be
to Him Who has created all the pairs: of such things as the earth produceth, and
of themselves; and of things which they know not"(2)--that is
to say, men, animals and plants are all in pairs--"and of everything have We
created two kinds"--that is to say, We have created all the beings through
pairing.
Briefly, they say a man without a human father cannot be
imagined. In answer, the theologians say: "This thing
1. Cf. Qur'án
19:17.
2. Qur'án 36:35.
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is not impossible and unachievable, but it has not been seen; and
there is a great difference between a thing which is impossible and one which is
unknown. For example, in former times the telegraph, which causes the East and
the West to communicate, was unknown but not impossible; photography and
phonography were unknown but not impossible."
The materialists insist
upon this belief, and the theologians reply: "Is this globe eternal or
phenomenal?" The materialists answer that, according to science and important
discoveries, it is established that it is phenomenal; in the beginning it was a
flaming globe, and gradually it became temperate; a crust was formed around it,
and upon this crust plants came into existence, then animals, and finally
man.
The theologians say: "Then from your statement it has become evident
and clear that mankind is phenomenal upon the globe, and not eternal. Then
surely the first man had neither father nor mother, for the existence of man is
phenomenal. Is not the creation of man without father and mother, even though
gradually, more difficult than if he had simply come into existence without a
father? As you admit that the first man came into existence without father or
mother--whether it be gradually or at once--there can remain no doubt that a man
without a human father is also possible and admissible; you cannot consider this
impossible; otherwise, you are illogical. For example, if you say that this lamp
has once been lighted without wick and oil, and then say that it is impossible
to light it without the wick, this is illogical." Christ had a mother; the first
man, as the materialists believe, had neither father nor mother.(1)
1. This
conversation shows the uselessness of discussions upon such questions; the
teachings of `Abdu'l-Bahá upon the birth of Christ will be found in the
following chapter.
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18
THE GREATNESS OF
CHRIST IS DUE
TO HIS PERFECTIONS
A great man is a great man, whether born of a human father or not. If being
without a father is a virtue, Adam is greater and more excellent than all the
Prophets and Messengers, for He had neither father nor mother. That which causes
honor and greatness is the splendor and bounty of the divine perfections. The
sun is born from substance and form, which can be compared to father and mother,
and it is absolute perfection; but the darkness has neither substance nor form,
neither father nor mother, and it is absolute imperfection. The substance of
Adam's physical life was earth, but the substance of Abraham was pure sperm; it
is certain that the pure and chaste sperm is superior to
earth.
Furthermore, in the first chapter of the Gospel of John, verses 12
and 13, it is said: "But as many as received Him, to them gave He power to
become the sons of God, even to them that believed on His name:
"Which
were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man,
but of God."(1)
From these verses it is obvious that the
being of a disciple also is not created by physical power, but by the spiritual
reality. The honor and greatness of Christ is not due to the fact that He did
not have a human father, but to His perfections, bounties and divine glory. If
the greatness of Christ is His being fatherless, then Adam is greater than
Christ, for He had neither father nor mother. It is
1. Cf. John
1:12-13.
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said in the Old Testament, "And the Lord God formed man of the dust
of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life; and man became
a living soul."(1) Observe that it is said that Adam came into
existence from the Spirit of life. Moreover, the expression which John uses in
regard to the disciples proves that they also are from the Heavenly Father.
Hence it is evident that the holy reality, meaning the real existence of every
great man, comes from God and owes its being to the breath of the Holy
Spirit.
The purport is that, if to be without a father is the greatest
human glory, then Adam is greater than all, for He had neither father nor
mother. Is it better for a man to be created from a living substance or from
earth? Certainly it is better if he be created from a living substance. But
Christ was born and came into existence from the Holy Spirit.
To
conclude: the splendor and honor of the holy souls and the Divine Manifestations
come from Their heavenly perfections, bounties and glory, and from nothing
else.
1. Gen.
2:7.
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19
THE BAPTISM OF
CHRIST
Question.--It is said in the Gospel of St. Matthew, chapter 3, verses 13, 14,
15: "Then cometh Jesus from Galilee to Jordan unto John, to be baptized of him.
But John forbade Him, saying, I have need to be baptized of Thee, and comest
Thou to me? And Jesus answering said unto him, Suffer it to be so now: for thus
it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness. Then he suffered Him."
What
is the wisdom of this: since Christ possessed all essential perfection, why did
He need baptism?
Answer.--The principle of baptism is purification by
repentance. John admonished and exhorted the people, and caused them to repent;
then he baptized them. Therefore, it is apparent that this baptism is a symbol
of repentance from all sin: its meaning is expressed in these words: "O God! as
my body has become purified and cleansed from physical impurities, in the same
way purify and sanctify my spirit from the impurities of the world of nature,
which are not worthy of the Threshold of Thy Unity!" Repentance is the return
from disobedience to obedience. Man, after remoteness and deprivation from God,
repents and undergoes purification: and this is a symbol signifying "O God! make
my heart good and pure, freed and sanctified from all save Thy love."
As
Christ desired that this institution of John should be used at that time by all,
He Himself conformed to it in order to awaken the people and to complete the law
of the former religion. Although the ablution of repentance was the institution
of John, it was in reality formerly practiced
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in the religion of God.
Christ was not in need of baptism;
but as at that time it was an acceptable and praiseworthy action, and a sign of
the glad tidings of the Kingdom, therefore, He confirmed it. However, afterward
He said the true baptism is not with material water, but it must be with spirit
and with water. In this case water does not signify material water, for
elsewhere it is explicitly said baptism is with spirit and with fire, from which
it is clear that the reference is not to material fire and material water, for
baptism with fire is impossible.
Therefore, the spirit is the bounty of
God, the water is knowledge and life, and the fire is the love of God. For
material water does not purify the heart of man; no, it cleanses his body. But
the heavenly water and spirit, which are knowledge and life, make the human
heart good and pure; the heart which receives a portion of the bounty of the
Spirit becomes sanctified, good and pure--that is to say, the reality of man
becomes purified and sanctified from the impurities of the world of nature.
These natural impurities are evil qualities: anger, lust, worldliness, pride,
lying, hypocrisy, fraud, self-love, etc.
Man cannot free himself from the
rage of the carnal passions except by the help of the Holy Spirit. That is why
He says baptism with the spirit, with water and with fire is necessary, and that
it is essential--that is to say, the spirit of divine bounty, the water of
knowledge and life, and the fire of the love of God. Man must be baptized with
this spirit, this water and this fire so as to become filled with the eternal
bounty. Otherwise, what is the use of baptizing with material water? No, this
baptism with water was a symbol of repentance, and of seeking forgiveness of
sins.
But in the cycle of Bahá'u'lláh there is no longer need of this
symbol; for its reality, which is to be baptized with the spirit and love of
God, is understood and established.
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THE NECESSITY OF
BAPTISM
Question.--Is the ablution of baptism useful and necessary, or is it useless
and unnecessary? In the first case, if it is useful, why was it abrogated? And
in the second case, if it is useless, why did John practice
it?
Answer.--The change in conditions, alterations and transformations
are necessities of the essence of beings, and essential necessities cannot be
separated from the reality of things. So it is absolutely impossible to separate
heat from fire, humidity from water, or light from the sun, for they are
essential necessities. As the change and alteration of conditions are
necessities for beings, so laws also are changed and altered in accordance with
the changes and alterations of the times. For example, in the time of Moses, His
Law was conformed and adapted to the conditions of the time; but in the days of
Christ these conditions had changed and altered to such an extent that the
Mosaic Law was no longer suited and adapted to the needs of mankind; and it was,
therefore, abrogated. Thus it was that Christ broke the Sabbath and forbade
divorce. After Christ four disciples, among whom were Peter and Paul, permitted
the use of animal food forbidden by the Bible, except the eating of those
animals which had been strangled, or which were sacrificed to idols, and of
blood.(1) They also forbade fornication. They maintained
these four commandments. Afterward, Paul permitted even the eating of strangled
animals, those sacrificed to idols, and blood, and only maintained the
prohibition of fornication.
1. Acts
15:20.
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So in chapter 14, verse 14 of his Epistle to the Romans, Paul
writes: "I know, and am persuaded by the Lord Jesus, that there is nothing
unclean of itself: but to him that esteemeth any thing to be unclean, to him it
is unclean."
Also in the Epistle of Paul to Titus, chapter 1, verse 15:
"Unto the pure all things are pure: but unto them that are defiled and
unbelieving is nothing pure; but even their mind and conscience is
defiled."
Now this change, these alterations and this abrogation are due
to the impossibility of comparing the time of Christ with that of Moses. The
conditions and requirements in the later period were entirely changed and
altered. The former laws were, therefore, abrogated.
The existence of the
world may be compared to that of a man, and the Prophets and Messengers of God
to skillful doctors. The human being cannot remain in one condition: different
maladies occur which have each a special remedy. The skillful physician does not
give the same medicine to cure each disease and each malady, but he changes
remedies and medicines according to the different necessities of the diseases
and constitutions. One person may have a severe illness caused by fever, and the
skilled doctor will give him cooling remedies; and when at some other time the
condition of this person has changed, and fever is replaced by chills, without
doubt the skilled doctor will discard cooling medicine and permit the use of
heating drugs. This change and alteration is required by the condition of the
patient and is an evident proof of the skill of the physician.
Consider,
could the Law of the Old Testament be enforced at this epoch and time? No, in
the name of God! it would be impossible and impracticable; therefore, most
certainly God abrogated the laws of the Old Testament at the time of Christ.
Reflect, also, that baptism in the days of John the Baptist was used to awaken
and admonish the
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people to repent from all sin, and to watch for the appearance of
the Kingdom of Christ. But at present in Asia, the Catholics and the Orthodox
Church plunge newly born children into water mixed with olive oil, and many of
them become ill from the shock; at the time of baptism they struggle and become
agitated. In other places, the clergy sprinkle the water of baptism on the
forehead. But neither from the first form nor from the second do the children
derive any spiritual benefit. Then what result is obtained from this form? Other
peoples are amazed and wonder why the infant is plunged into the water, since
this is neither the cause of the spiritual awakening of the child, nor of its
faith or conversion, but it is only a custom which is followed. In the time of
John the Baptist it was not so; no, at first John used to exhort the people, and
to guide them to repentance from sin, and to fill them with the desire to await
the manifestation of Christ. Whoever received the ablution of baptism, and
repented of sins in absolute humility and meekness, would also purify and
cleanse his body from outward impurities. With perfect yearning, night and day,
he would constantly wait for the manifestation of Christ, and the entrance to
the Kingdom of the Spirit of God.(1)
To recapitulate: our meaning is that the
change and modification of conditions, and the altered requirements of different
centuries and times, are the cause of the abrogation of laws. For a time comes
when these laws are no longer suitably adapted to conditions. Consider how very
different are the requirements of the first centuries, of the Middle Ages, and
of modern times. Is it possible that the laws of the first centuries could be
enforced at present? It is evident that it would be impossible and
impracticable. In the same manner, after the lapse of a few centuries, the
requirements of the present time will not be the same as
1. i.e., of
Christ, Whom the Muslims frequently designate by the title of Rúhu'lláh, the
Spirit of God.
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those of the future, and certainly there will be change and
alteration. In Europe the laws are unceasingly altered and modified; in bygone
years, how many laws existed in the organizations and systems of Europe, which
are now abrogated! These changes and alterations are due to the variation and
mutation of thought, conditions and customs. If it were not so, the prosperity
of the world of humanity would be wrecked.
For example, there is in the
Pentateuch a law that if anyone break the Sabbath, he shall be put to death.
Moreover, there are ten sentences of death in the Pentateuch. Would it be
possible to keep these laws in our time? It is clear that it would be absolutely
impossible. Consequently, there are changes and modifications in the laws, and
these are a sufficient proof of the supreme wisdom of God.
This subject
needs deep thought. Then the cause of these changes will be evident and
apparent.
Blessed are those who reflect!
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21
THE SYMBOLISM OF
THE BREAD
AND THE WINE
Question.--The Christ said: "I am the living bread which came down from
heaven, that a man may eat thereof and not die."(1) What is
the meaning of this utterance?
Answer.--This bread signifies the heavenly
food and divine perfections. So, "If any man eateth of this bread" means if any
man acquires heavenly bounty, receives the divine light, or partakes of Christ's
perfections, he thereby gains everlasting life. The blood also signifies the
spirit of life and the divine perfections, the lordly splendor and eternal
bounty. For all the members of the body gain vital substance from the
circulation of the blood.
In the Gospel of St. John, chapter 6, verse 26,
it is written: "Ye seek Me, not because ye saw the miracles, but because ye did
eat of the loaves, and were filled."
It is evident that the bread of
which the disciples ate and were filled was the heavenly bounty; for in verse 33
of the same chapter it is said: "For the bread of God is He which cometh down
from heaven, and giveth life unto the world." It is clear that the body of
Christ did not descend from heaven, but it came from the womb of Mary; and that
which descended from the heaven of God was the spirit of Christ. As the Jews
thought that Christ spoke of His body, they made objections, for it is said in
the 42nd verse of the same chapter: "And they said, Is not this Jesus, the son
of Joseph, whose father and mother we
1. Cf. John 6:51,
50.
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know? how is it then that he saith, I came down from
heaven?"
Reflect how clear it is that what Christ meant by the heavenly
bread was His spirit, His bounties, His perfections and His teachings; for it is
said in the 63rd verse: "It is the spirit that quickeneth; the flesh profiteth
nothing."
Therefore, it is evident that the spirit of Christ is a
heavenly grace which descends from heaven; whosoever receives light from that
spirit in abundance--that is to say, the heavenly teachings--finds everlasting
life. That is why it is said in the 35th verse: "And Jesus said unto them, I am
the bread of life: he that cometh to Me shall never hunger; and he that
believeth on Me shall never thirst."
Notice that "coming to Him" He
expresses as eating, and "belief in Him" as drinking. Then it is evident and
established that the celestial food is the divine bounties, the spiritual
splendors, the heavenly teachings, the universal meaning of Christ. To eat is to
draw near to Him, and to drink is to believe in Him. For Christ had an elemental
body and a celestial form. The elemental body was crucified, but the heavenly
form is living and eternal, and the cause of everlasting life; the first was the
human nature, and the second is the divine nature. It is thought by some that
the Eucharist is the reality of Christ, and that the Divinity and the Holy
Spirit descend into and exist in it. Now when once the Eucharist is taken, after
a few moments it is simply disintegrated and entirely transformed. Therefore,
how can such a thought be conceived? God forbid! certainly it is an absolute
fantasy.
To conclude: through the manifestation of Christ, the divine
teachings, which are an eternal bounty, were spread abroad, the light of
guidance shone forth, and the spirit of life was conferred on man. Whoever found
guidance became living; whoever remained lost was seized by
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enduring death. This bread which came down from heaven was the
divine body of Christ, His spiritual elements, which the disciples ate, and
through which they gained eternal life.
The disciples had taken many
meals from the hand of Christ; why was the last supper distinguished from the
others? It is evident that the heavenly bread did not signify this material
bread, but rather the divine nourishment of the spiritual body of Christ, the
divine graces and heavenly perfections of which His disciples partook, and with
which they became filled.
In the same way, reflect that when Christ
blessed the bread and gave it to His disciples, saying, "This is My body,"(1) and gave
grace to them, He was with them in person, in presence, and form. He was not
transformed into bread and wine; if He had been turned into bread and wine, He
could not have remained with the disciples in body, in person and in
presence.
Then it is clear that the bread and wine were symbols which
signified: I have given you My bounties and perfections, and when you have
received this bounty, you have gained eternal life and have partaken of your
share and your portion of the heavenly nourishment.
1. Matt.
26:26.
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22
MIRACLES
Question.--It is recorded that miracles were performed by Christ. Are the
reports of these miracles really to be accepted literally, or have they another
meaning? It has been proved by exact science that the essence of things does not
change, and that all beings are under one universal law and organization from
which they cannot deviate; and, therefore, that which is contrary to universal
law is impossible.
Answer.--The Holy Manifestations are the sources of
miracles and the originators of wonderful signs. For Them, any difficult and
impracticable thing is possible and easy. For through a supernatural power
wonders appear from Them; and by this power, which is beyond nature, They
influence the world of nature. From all the Manifestations marvelous things have
appeared.
But in the Holy Books an especial terminology is employed, and
for the Manifestations these miracles and wonderful signs have no importance.
They do not even wish to mention them. For if we consider miracles a great
proof, they are still only proofs and arguments for those who are present when
they are performed, and not for those who are absent.
For example, if we
relate to a seeker, a stranger to Moses and Christ, marvelous signs, he will
deny them and will say: "Wonderful signs are also continually related of false
gods by the testimony of many people, and they are affirmed in the Books. The
Brahmans have written a book about wonderful prodigies from Brahma." He will
also say: "How can we know that the Jews and the Christians
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speak the truth, and that the Brahmans tell a lie? For both are
generally admitted traditions, which are collected in books, and may be supposed
to be true or false." The same may be said of other religions: if one is true,
all are true; if one is accepted, all must be accepted. Therefore, miracles are
not a proof. For if they are proofs for those who are present, they fail as
proofs to those who are absent.
But in the day of the Manifestation the
people with insight see that all the conditions of the Manifestation are
miracles, for They are superior to all others, and this alone is an absolute
miracle. Recollect that Christ, solitary and alone, without a helper or
protector, without armies and legions, and under the greatest oppression,
uplifted the standard of God before all the people of the world, and withstood
them, and finally conquered all, although outwardly He was crucified. Now this
is a veritable miracle which can never be denied. There is no need of any other
proof of the truth of Christ.
The outward miracles have no importance for
the people of Reality. If a blind man receives sight, for example, he will
finally again become sightless, for he will die and be deprived of all his
senses and powers. Therefore, causing the blind man to see is comparatively of
little importance, for this faculty of sight will at last disappear. If the body
of a dead person be resuscitated, of what use is it since the body will die
again? But it is important to give perception and eternal life--that is, the
spiritual and divine life. For this physical life is not immortal, and its
existence is equivalent to nonexistence. So it is that Christ said to one of His
disciples: "Let the dead bury their dead;" for "That which is born of the flesh
is flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit."(1)
Observe: those who in
appearance were physically alive, Christ considered dead; for life is the
eternal life, and existence is the real existence. Wherever in the Holy
1. Matt. 8:22;
John 3:6.
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Books they speak of raising the dead, the meaning is that the dead
were blessed by eternal life; where it is said that the blind received sight,
the signification is that he obtained the true perception; where it is said a
deaf man received hearing, the meaning is that he acquired spiritual and
heavenly hearing. This is ascertained from the text of the Gospel where Christ
said: "These are like those of whom Isaiah said, They have eyes and see not,
they have ears and hear not; and I healed them."(1)
The meaning is not
that the Manifestations are unable to perform miracles, for They have all power.
But for Them inner sight, spiritual healing and eternal life are the valuable
and important things. Consequently, whenever it is recorded in the Holy Books
that such a one was blind and recovered his sight, the meaning is that he was
inwardly blind, and that he obtained spiritual vision, or that he was ignorant
and became wise, or that he was negligent and became heedful, or that he was
worldly and became heavenly.
As this inner sight, hearing, life and
healing are eternal, they are of importance. What, comparatively, is the
importance, the value and the worth of this animal life with its powers? In a
few days it will cease like fleeting thoughts. For example, if one relights an
extinguished lamp, it will again become extinguished; but the light of the sun
is always luminous. This is of importance.
1. Cf. Matt.
13:14 and John 12:40-41.
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THE RESURRECTION
OF CHRIST
Question.--What is the meaning of Christ's resurrection after three
days?
Answer.--The resurrections of the Divine Manifestations are not of
the body. All Their states, Their conditions, Their acts, the things They have
established, Their teachings, Their expressions, Their parables and Their
instructions have a spiritual and divine signification, and have no connection
with material things. For example, there is the subject of Christ's coming from
heaven: it is clearly stated in many places in the Gospel that the Son of man
came from heaven, He is in heaven, and He will go to heaven. So in chapter 6,
verse 38, of the Gospel of John it is written: "For I came down from heaven";
and also in verse 42 we find: "And they said, Is not this Jesus, the son of
Joseph, whose father and mother we know? How is it then that he saith, I came
down from heaven?" Also in John, chapter 3, verse 13: "And no man hath ascended
up to heaven, but He that came down from heaven, even the Son of man which is in
heaven."
Observe that it is said, "The Son of man is in heaven," while at
that time Christ was on earth. Notice also that it is said that Christ came from
heaven, though He came from the womb of Mary, and His body was born of Mary. It
is clear, then, that when it is said that the Son of man is come from heaven,
this has not an outward but an inward signification; it is a spiritual, not a
material, fact. The meaning is that though, apparently, Christ was born
from
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the womb of Mary, in reality He came from heaven, from the center
of the Sun of Reality, from the Divine World, and the Spiritual Kingdom. And as
it has become evident that Christ came from the spiritual heaven of the Divine
Kingdom, therefore, His disappearance under the earth for three days has an
inner signification and is not an outward fact. In the same way, His
resurrection from the interior of the earth is also symbolical; it is a
spiritual and divine fact, and not material; and likewise His ascension to
heaven is a spiritual and not material ascension.
Beside these
explanations, it has been established and proved by science that the visible
heaven is a limitless area, void and empty, where innumerable stars and planets
revolve.
Therefore, we say that the meaning of Christ's resurrection is
as follows: the disciples were troubled and agitated after the martyrdom of
Christ. The Reality of Christ, which signifies His teachings, His bounties, His
perfections and His spiritual power, was hidden and concealed for two or three
days after His martyrdom, and was not resplendent and manifest. No, rather it
was lost, for the believers were few in number and were troubled and agitated.
The Cause of Christ was like a lifeless body; and when after three days the
disciples became assured and steadfast, and began to serve the Cause of Christ,
and resolved to spread the divine teachings, putting His counsels into practice,
and arising to serve Him, the Reality of Christ became resplendent and His
bounty appeared; His religion found life; His teachings and His admonitions
became evident and visible. In other words, the Cause of Christ was like a
lifeless body until the life and the bounty of the Holy Spirit surrounded
it.
Such is the meaning of the resurrection of Christ, and this was a
true resurrection. But as the clergy have neither understood the meaning of the
Gospels nor comprehended
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the symbols, therefore, it has been said that religion is in
contradiction to science, and science in opposition to religion, as, for
example, this subject of the ascension of Christ with an elemental body to the
visible heaven is contrary to the science of mathematics. But when the truth of
this subject becomes clear, and the symbol is explained, science in no way
contradicts it; but, on the contrary, science and the intelligence affirm
it.
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24
THE DESCENT OF
THE HOLY SPIRIT
UPON THE APOSTLES
Question.--What is the manner, and what is the meaning, of the descent of the
Holy Spirit upon the Apostles, as described in the Gospel?
Answer.--The
descent of the Holy Spirit is not like the entrance of air into man; it is an
expression and a simile, rather than an exact or a literal image. No, rather it
is like the entrance of the image of the sun into the mirror--that is to say,
its splendor becomes apparent in it.
After the death of Christ the
disciples were troubled, and their ideas and thoughts were discordant and
contradictory; later they became firm and united, and at the feast of Pentecost
they gathered together and detached themselves from the things of this world.
Disregarding themselves, they renounced their comfort and worldly happiness,
sacrificing their body and soul to the Beloved, abandoning their houses, and
becoming wanderers and homeless, even forgetting their own existence. Then they
received the help of God, and the power of the Holy Spirit became manifested;
the spirituality of Christ triumphed, and the love of God reigned. They were
given help at that time and dispersed in different directions, teaching the
Cause of God, and giving forth proofs and evidences.
So the descent of
the Holy Spirit upon the Apostles means their attraction by the Christ Spirit,
whereby they acquired stability and firmness. Through the spirit of the love of
God they gained a new life, and they saw Christ
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living, helping and protecting them. They were like drops, and
they became seas; they were like feeble insects, and they became majestic
eagles; they were weak and became powerful. They were like mirrors facing the
sun; verily, some of the light became manifest in them.
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25
THE HOLY
SPIRIT
Question. -- What is the Holy Spirit?
Answer. -- The Holy Spirit is
the Bounty of God and the luminous rays which emanate from the Manifestations;
for the focus of the rays of the Sun of Reality was Christ, and from this
glorious focus, which is the Reality of Christ, the Bounty of God reflected upon
the other mirrors which were the reality of the Apostles. The descent of the
Holy Spirit upon the Apostles signifies that the glorious divine bounties
reflected and appeared in their reality. Moreover, entrance and exit, descent
and ascent, are characteristics of bodies and not of spirits--that is to say,
sensible realities enter and come forth, but intellectual subtleties and mental
realities, such as intelligence, love, knowledge, imagination and thought, do
not enter, nor come forth, nor descend, but rather they have direct
connection.
For example, knowledge, which is a state attained to by the
intelligence, is an intellectual condition; and entering and coming out of the
mind are imaginary conditions; but the mind is connected with the acquisition of
knowledge, like images reflected in a mirror.
Therefore, as it is evident
and clear that the intellectual realities do not enter and descend, and it is
absolutely impossible that the Holy Spirit should ascend and descend, enter,
come out or penetrate, it can only be that the Holy Spirit appears in splendor,
as the sun appears in the mirror.
In some passages in the Holy Books the
Spirit is spoken
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of, signifying a certain person, as it is currently said in speech
and conversation that such a person is an embodied spirit, or he is a
personification of mercy and generosity. In this case, it is the light we look
at, and not the glass.
In the Gospel of John, in speaking of the Promised
One Who was to come after Christ, it is said in chapter 16, verses 12, 13: "I
have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now. Howbeit when
He, the Spirit of truth, is come, He will guide you into all truth: for He shall
not speak of Himself; but whatsoever He shall hear, that shall He
speak."
Now consider carefully that from these words, "for He shall not
speak of Himself; but whatsoever He shall hear, that shall He speak," it is
clear that the Spirit of truth is embodied in a Man Who has individuality, Who
has ears to hear and a tongue to speak. In the same way the name "Spirit of God"
is used in relation to Christ, as you speak of a light, meaning both the light
and the lamp.
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26
THE SECOND
COMING OF CHRIST AND
THE DAY OF JUDGMENT
It is said in the Holy Books that Christ will come again, and that His coming
depends upon the fulfillment of certain signs: when He comes, it will be with
these signs. For example, "The sun will be darkened, and the moon shall not give
her light, and the stars shall fall from heaven.... And then shall appear the
sign of the Son of man in heaven: and then shall all the tribes of the earth
mourn, and they shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven with
power and great glory."(1) Bahá'u'lláh has explained
these verses in the Kitáb-i-Iqán.(2) There is no need of
repetition; refer to it, and you will understand these sayings.
But I
have something further to say upon this subject. At His first coming Christ also
came from heaven, as it is explicitly stated in the Gospel. Christ Himself says:
"And no man hath ascended up to heaven, but He that came down from heaven, even
the Son of man which is in heaven."(3)
It is clear to all
that Christ came from heaven, although apparently He came from the womb of Mary.
At the first coming He came from heaven, though apparently from the womb; in the
same way, also, at His second coming He will come from heaven, though apparently
from the
1. Cf. Matt.
24:29-30.
2. Kitáb-i-Iqán, one of the first works of Bahá'u'lláh, written at
Baghdád, before the declaration of His manifestation.
3. John
3:13.
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womb. The conditions that are indicated in the Gospel for the
second coming of Christ are the same as those that were mentioned for the first
coming, as we said before.
The Book of Isaiah announces that the Messiah
will conquer the East and the West, and all nations of the world will come under
His shadow, that His Kingdom will be established, that He will come from an
unknown place, that the sinners will be judged, and that justice will prevail to
such a degree that the wolf and the lamb, the leopard and the kid, the sucking
child and the asp, shall all gather at one spring, and in one meadow, and one
dwelling.(1) The first coming was also under these
conditions, though outwardly none of them came to pass. Therefore, the Jews
rejected Christ, and, God forbid! called the Messiah masíkh,(2)
considered Him to be the destroyer of the edifice of God, regarded Him as the
breaker of the Sabbath and the Law, and sentenced Him to death. Nevertheless,
each one of these conditions had a signification that the Jews did not
understand; therefore, they were debarred from perceiving the truth of
Christ.
The second coming of Christ also will be in like manner: the
signs and conditions which have been spoken of all have meanings, and are not to
be taken literally. Among other things it is said that the stars will fall upon
the earth. The stars are endless and innumerable, and modern mathematicians have
established and proved scientifically that the globe of the sun is estimated to
be about one million and a half times greater than the earth, and each of the
fixed stars to be a thousand times larger than the sun. If these stars were to
fall upon the surface of the earth, how could they find place there? It would be
as though a
1. In these
conversations, as the reader will have already observed, `Abdu'l-Bahá desires
rather to indicate the meaning of certain passages of the Scriptures than to
quote the exact text.
2. Masíkh--i.e., the monster. In Arabic there is a play
upon the words Masíh, the Messiah, and masíkh, the
monster.
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thousand million of Himalaya mountains were to fall upon a grain
of mustard seed. According to reason and science this thing is quite impossible.
What is even more strange is that Christ said: "Perhaps I shall come when you
are yet asleep, for the coming of the Son of man is like the coming of a
thief."(1) Perhaps the thief will be in the house, and the
owner will not know it.
It is clear and evident that these signs have
symbolic signification, and that they are not literal. They are fully explained
in the Kitáb-i-Iqán. Refer to it.
1. Cf. 1 Thess.
5:2;2 Pet. 3:10.
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27
THE
TRINITY
Question. -- What is the meaning of the Trinity, of the Three Persons in
One?
Answer. -- The Divine Reality, which is purified and sanctified from
the understanding of human beings and which can never be imagined by the people
of wisdom and of intelligence, is exempt from all conception. That Lordly
Reality admits of no division; for division and multiplicity are properties of
creatures which are contingent existences, and not accidents which happen to the
self-existent.
The Divine Reality is sanctified from singleness, then how
much more from plurality. The descent of that Lordly Reality into conditions and
degrees would be equivalent to imperfection and contrary to perfection, and is,
therefore, absolutely impossible. It perpetually has been, and is, in the
exaltation of holiness and sanctity. All that is mentioned of the Manifestations
and Dawning-places of God signifies the divine reflection, and not a descent
into the conditions of existence.(1)
God is pure perfection, and creatures are
but imperfections. For God to descend into the conditions of existence would be
the greatest of imperfections; on the contrary, His manifestation, His
appearance, His rising are like the reflection of the sun in a clear, pure,
polished mirror. All the creatures are evident signs of God, like the earthly
beings upon all of which the rays of the sun shine. But upon the plains, the
mountains, the trees and fruits, only a portion
1. Cf.
"Pantheism," p. 290.
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of the light shines, through which they become visible, and are
reared, and attain to the object of their existence, while the Perfect Man(1) is in
the condition of a clear mirror in which the Sun of Reality becomes visible and
manifest with all its qualities and perfections. So the Reality of Christ was a
clear and polished mirror of the greatest purity and fineness. The Sun of
Reality, the Essence of Divinity, reflected itself in this mirror and manifested
its light and heat in it; but from the exaltation of its holiness, and the
heaven of its sanctity, the Sun did not descend to dwell and abide in the
mirror. No, it continues to subsist in its exaltation and sublimity, while
appearing and becoming manifest in the mirror in beauty and
perfection.
Now if we say that we have seen the Sun in two mirrors-- one
the Christ and one the Holy Spirit--that is to say, that we have seen three
Suns, one in heaven and the two others on the earth, we speak truly. And if we
say that there is one Sun, and it is pure singleness, and has no partner and
equal, we again speak truly.
The epitome of the discourse is that the
Reality of Christ was a clear mirror, and the Sun of Reality--that is to say,
the Essence of Oneness, with its infinite perfections and attributes--became
visible in the mirror. The meaning is not that the Sun, which is the Essence of
the Divinity, became divided and multiplied--for the Sun is one--but it appeared
in the mirror. This is why Christ said, "The Father is in the Son," meaning that
the Sun is visible and manifest in this mirror.
The Holy Spirit is the
Bounty of God which becomes visible and evident in the Reality of Christ. The
Sonship station is the heart of Christ, and the Holy Spirit is the station of
the spirit of Christ. Hence it has become certain and proved that the Essence of
Divinity is absolutely unique and has no equal, no likeness, no equivalent.
1. The Divine
Manifestation.
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115
This is the signification of the Three Persons of the Trinity. If
it were otherwise, the foundations of the Religion of God would rest upon an
illogical proposition which the mind could never conceive, and how can the mind
be forced to believe a thing which it cannot conceive? A thing cannot be grasped
by the intelligence except when it is clothed in an intelligible form;
otherwise, it is but an effort of the imagination.
It has now become
clear, from this explanation, what is the meaning of the Three Persons of the
Trinity. The Oneness of God is also proved.
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28
EXPLANATION OF
VERSE FIVE,
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN, OF THE GOSPEL
OF ST. JOHN
"And now, O Father, glorify Thou Me with Thine own self, with the glory which
I had with Thee before the world was."(1)
There are two kinds
of priorities: one is essential and is not preceded by a cause, but its
existence is in itself, as, for example, the sun has light in itself, for its
shining is not dependent on the light of other stars. This is called an
essential light. But the light of the moon is received from the sun, for the
moon is dependent on the sun for its light; therefore, the sun, with regard to
light, is the cause, and the moon becomes the effect. The former is the ancient,
the precedent, the antecedent, while the latter is the preceded and the
last.
The second sort of preexistence is the preexistence of time, and
that has no beginning. The Word of God is sanctified from time.(2) The
past, the present, the future, all, in relation to God, are equal. Yesterday,
today, tomorrow do not exist in the sun.
In the same way there is a
priority with regard to glory--that is to say, the most glorious precedes the
glorious. Therefore, the Reality of Christ, Who is the Word of God, with regard
to essence, attributes and glory, certainly precedes the creatures. Before
appearing in the human form, the Word of God was in the utmost sanctity
1. John
17:5.
2. i.e., the Reality of Christ.
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and glory, existing in perfect beauty and splendor in the height
of its magnificence. When through the wisdom of God the Most High it shone from
the heights of glory in the world of the body, the Word of God, through this
body, became oppressed, so that it fell into the hands of the Jews, and became
the captive of the tyrannical and ignorant, and at last was crucified. That is
why He addressed God, saying: "Free Me from the bonds of the world of the body,
and liberate Me from this cage, so that I may ascend to the heights of honor and
glory, and attain unto the former grandeur and might which existed before the
bodily world, that I may rejoice in the eternal world and may ascend to the
original abode, the placeless world, the invisible kingdom."
It is thus
that you see even in the kingdom of this world--that is to say, in the realm of
souls and countries-- that the glory and the grandeur of Christ appeared in this
earth after His ascension. When in the world of the body He was subject to the
contempt and jeers of the weakest nation of the world, the Jews, who thought it
fitting to set a crown of thorns upon His sacred head. But after His ascension
the bejeweled crowns of all the kings were humbled and bowed before the crown of
thorns.
Behold the glory that the Word of God attained even in this
world!
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29
EXPLANATION OF
VERSE TWENTY-TWO,
CHAPTER FIFTEEN, OF THE
FIRST EPISTLE OF ST. PAUL
TO
THE CORINTHIANS
Question.--In verse 22 of chapter 15 of 1 Corinthians it is written: "For as
in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive." What is the meaning
of these words?
Answer.--Know that there are two natures in man: the
physical nature and the spiritual nature. The physical nature is inherited from
Adam, and the spiritual nature is inherited from the Reality of the Word of God,
which is the spirituality of Christ. The physical nature is born of Adam, but
the spiritual nature is born from the bounty of the Holy Spirit. The first is
the source of all imperfection; the second is the source of all
perfection.
The Christ sacrificed Himself so that men might be freed from
the imperfections of the physical nature and might become possessed of the
virtues of the spiritual nature. This spiritual nature, which came into
existence through the bounty of the Divine Reality, is the union of all
perfections and appears through the breath of the Holy Spirit. It is the divine
perfections; it is light, spirituality, guidance, exaltation, high aspiration,
justice, love, grace, kindness to all, philanthropy, the essence of life. It is
the reflection of the splendor of the Sun of Reality.
The Christ is the
central point of the Holy Spirit: He is born of the Holy Spirit; He is raised up
by the Holy Spirit; He is the descendant of the Holy Spirit--that is to say,
that the Reality of Christ does not descend from
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Adam; no, it is born of the Holy Spirit. Therefore, this verse in
Corinthians, "As in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive,"
means, according to this terminology, that Adam(1) is the father of man--that
is to say, He is the cause of the physical life of mankind; His was the physical
fatherhood. He is a living soul, but He is not the giver of spiritual life,
whereas Christ is the cause of the spiritual life of man, and with regard to the
spirit, His was the spiritual fatherhood. Adam is a living soul; Christ is a
quickening spirit.
This physical world of man is subject to the power of
the lusts, and sin is the consequence of this power of the lusts, for it is not
subject to the laws of justice and holiness. The body of man is a captive of
nature; it will act in accordance with whatever nature orders. It is, therefore,
certain that sins such as anger, jealousy, dispute, covetousness, avarice,
ignorance, prejudice, hatred, pride and tyranny exist in the physical world. All
these brutal qualities exist in the nature of man. A man who has not had a
spiritual education is a brute. Like the savages of Africa, whose actions,
habits and morals are purely sensual, they act according to the demands of
nature to such a degree that they rend and eat one another. Thus it is evident
that the physical world of man is a world of sin. In this physical world man is
not distinguished from the animal.
All sin comes from the demands of
nature, and these demands, which arise from the physical qualities, are not sins
with respect to the animals, while for man they are sin. The animal is the
source of imperfections, such as anger, sensuality, jealousy, avarice, cruelty,
pride: all these defects are found in animals but do not constitute sins. But in
man they are sins.
Adam is the cause of man's physical life; but the
Reality of Christ--that is to say, the Word of God--is the cause of
1. Abu'l-bashar,
i.e., the father of man, is one of the titles given by the Muslims to
Adam.
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spiritual life. It is "a quickening spirit," meaning that all the
imperfections which come from the requirements of the physical life of man are
transformed into human perfections by the teachings and education of that
spirit. Therefore, Christ was a quickening spirit, and the cause of life in all
mankind.
Adam was the cause of physical life, and as the physical world
of man is the world of imperfections, and imperfections are the equivalent of
death, Paul compared the physical imperfections to death.
But the mass of
the Christians believe that, as Adam ate of the forbidden tree, He sinned in
that He disobeyed, and that the disastrous consequences of this disobedience
have been transmitted as a heritage and have remained among His descendants.
Hence Adam became the cause of the death of humanity. This explanation is
unreasonable and evidently wrong, for it means that all men, even the Prophets
and the Messengers of God, without committing any sin or fault, but simply
because they are the posterity of Adam, have become without reason guilty
sinners, and until the day of the sacrifice of Christ were held captive in hell
in painful torment. This is far from the justice of God. If Adam was a sinner,
what is the sin of Abraham? What is the fault of Isaac, or of Joseph? Of what is
Moses guilty?
But Christ, Who is the Word of God, sacrificed Himself.
This has two meanings, an apparent and an esoteric meaning. The outward meaning
is this: Christ's intention was to represent and promote a Cause which was to
educate the human world, to quicken the children of Adam, and to enlighten all
mankind; and since to represent such a great Cause--a Cause which was
antagonistic to all the people of the world and all the nations and kingdoms--
meant that He would be killed and crucified, so Christ in proclaiming His
mission sacrificed His life. He regarded the cross as a throne, the wound as a
balm, the poison as honey and sugar. He arose to teach and educate men,
and
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so He sacrificed Himself to give the spirit of life. He perished
in body so as to quicken others by the spirit.
The second meaning of
sacrifice is this: Christ was like a seed, and this seed sacrificed its own form
so that the tree might grow and develop. Although the form of the seed was
destroyed, its reality became apparent in perfect majesty and beauty in the form
of a tree.
The position of Christ was that of absolute perfection; He
made His divine perfections shine like the sun upon all believing souls, and the
bounties of the light shone and radiated in the reality of men. This is why He
says: "I am the bread which descended from heaven; whosoever shall eat of this
bread will not die"(1)--that is to say, that
whosoever shall partake of this divine food will attain unto eternal life: that
is, every one who partakes of this bounty and receives these perfections will
find eternal life, will obtain preexistent favors, will be freed from the
darkness of error, and will be illuminated by the light of His
guidance.
The form of the seed was sacrificed for the tree, but its
perfections, because of this sacrifice, became evident and apparent--the tree,
the branches, the leaves and the blossoms being concealed in the seed. When the
form of the seed was sacrificed, its perfections appeared in the perfect form of
leaves, blossoms and fruits.
1. Cf. John 6:41,
50, 58.
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30
ADAM AND
EVE
Question.--What is the truth of the story of Adam, and His eating of the
fruit of the tree?
Answer.--In the Bible it is written that God put Adam
in the garden of Eden, to cultivate and take care of it, and said to Him: "Eat
of every tree of the garden except the tree of good and evil, for if You eat of
that, You will die."(1) Then it is said that God caused Adam to sleep,
and He took one of His ribs and created woman in order that she might be His
companion. After that it is said the serpent induced the woman to eat of the
tree, saying: "God has forbidden you to eat of the tree in order that your eyes
may not be opened, and that you may not know good from evil."(2) Then Eve
ate from the tree and gave unto Adam, Who also ate; their eyes were opened, they
found themselves naked, and they hid their bodies with leaves. In consequence of
this act they received the reproaches of God. God said to Adam: "Hast Thou eaten
of the forbidden tree?" Adam answered: "Eve tempted Me, and I did eat." God then
reproved Eve; Eve said: "The serpent tempted me, and I did eat." For this the
serpent was cursed, and enmity was put between the serpent and Eve, and between
their descendants. And God said: "The man is become like unto Us, knowing good
and evil, and perhaps He will eat of the tree of life and live forever." So God
guarded the tree of life.(3)
1. Cf. Gen.
2:16-17.
2. Cf. Gen. 3:5.
3. Cf. Gen.
3:11-15,22.
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If we take this story in its apparent meaning, according to the
interpretation of the masses, it is indeed extraordinary. The intelligence
cannot accept it, affirm it, or imagine it; for such arrangements, such details,
such speeches and reproaches are far from being those of an intelligent man, how
much less of the Divinity--that Divinity Who has organized this infinite
universe in the most perfect form, and its innumerable inhabitants with absolute
system, strength and perfection.
We must reflect a little: if the literal
meaning of this story were attributed to a wise man, certainly all would
logically deny that this arrangement, this invention, could have emanated from
an intelligent being. Therefore, this story of Adam and Eve who ate from the
tree, and their expulsion from Paradise, must be thought of simply as a symbol.
It contains divine mysteries and universal meanings, and it is capable of
marvelous explanations. Only those who are initiated into mysteries, and those
who are near the Court of the All-Powerful, are aware of these secrets. Hence
these verses of the Bible have numerous meanings.
We will explain one of
them, and we will say: Adam signifies the heavenly spirit of Adam, and Eve His
human soul. For in some passages in the Holy Books where women are mentioned,
they represent the soul of man. The tree of good and evil signifies the human
world; for the spiritual and divine world is purely good and absolutely
luminous, but in the human world light and darkness, good and evil, exist as
opposite conditions.
The meaning of the serpent is attachment to the
human world. This attachment of the spirit to the human world led the soul and
spirit of Adam from the world of freedom to the world of bondage and caused Him
to turn from the Kingdom of Unity to the human world. When the soul and spirit
of Adam entered the human world, He came out from the paradise of freedom and
fell into the world of
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bondage. From the height of purity and absolute goodness, He
entered into the world of good and evil.
The tree of life is the highest
degree of the world of existence: the position of the Word of God, and the
supreme Manifestation. Therefore, that position has been preserved; and, at the
appearance of the most noble supreme Manifestation, it became apparent and
clear. For the position of Adam, with regard to the appearance and manifestation
of the divine perfections, was in the embryonic condition; the position of
Christ was the condition of maturity and the age of reason; and the rising of
the Greatest Luminary(1) was the condition of the perfection of the
essence and of the qualities. This is why in the supreme Paradise the tree of
life is the expression for the center of absolutely pure sanctity--that is to
say, of the divine supreme Manifestation. From the days of Adam until the days
of Christ, They spoke little of eternal life and the heavenly universal
perfections. This tree of life was the position of the Reality of Christ;
through His manifestation it was planted and adorned with everlasting
fruits.
Now consider how far this meaning conforms to the reality. For
the spirit and the soul of Adam, when they were attached to the human world,
passed from the world of freedom into the world of bondage, and His descendants
continued in bondage. This attachment of the soul and spirit to the human world,
which is sin, was inherited by the descendants of Adam, and is the serpent which
is always in the midst of, and at enmity with, the spirits and the descendants
of Adam. That enmity continues and endures. For attachment to the world has
become the cause of the bondage of spirits, and this bondage is identical with
sin, which has been transmitted from Adam to His posterity. It is because of
this attachment that men
1.
Bahá'u'lláh.
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have been deprived of essential spirituality and exalted
position.
When the sanctified breezes of Christ and the holy light of the
Greatest Luminary(1) were spread abroad, the
human realities--that is to say, those who turned toward the Word of God and
received the profusion of His bounties-- were saved from this attachment and
sin, obtained everlasting life, were delivered from the chains of bondage, and
attained to the world of liberty. They were freed from the vices of the human
world, and were blessed by the virtues of the Kingdom. This is the meaning of
the words of Christ, "I gave My blood for the life of the world"(2)--that is
to say, I have chosen all these troubles, these sufferings, calamities, and even
the greatest martyrdom, to attain this object, the remission of sins (that is,
the detachment of spirits from the human world, and their attraction to the
divine world) in order that souls may arise who will be the very essence of the
guidance of mankind, and the manifestations of the perfections of the Supreme
Kingdom.
Observe that if, according to the suppositions of the People of
the Book,(3) the meaning were taken in
its exoteric sense, it would be absolute injustice and complete predestination.
If Adam sinned by going near the forbidden tree, what was the sin of the
glorious Abraham, and what was the error of Moses the Interlocutor? What was the
crime of Noah the Prophet? What was the transgression of Joseph the Truthful?
What was the iniquity of the Prophets of God, and what was the trespass of John
the Chaste? Would the justice of God have allowed these enlightened
Manifestations, on account of the sin of Adam, to find torment in hell until
Christ came and by the sacrifice of Himself saved them from excruciating
tortures? Such an
1.
Bahá'u'lláh.
2. Cf. John 6:51.
3. Jews and
Christians.
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idea is beyond every law and rule and cannot be accepted by any
intelligent person.
No; it means what has already been said: Adam is the
spirit of Adam, and Eve is His soul; the tree is the human world, and the
serpent is that attachment to this world which constitutes sin, and which has
infected the descendants of Adam. Christ by His holy breezes saved men from this
attachment and freed them from this sin. The sin in Adam is relative to His
position. Although from this attachment there proceed results, nevertheless,
attachment to the earthly world, in relation to attachment to the spiritual
world, is considered as a sin. The good deeds of the righteous are the sins of
the Near Ones. This is established. So bodily power is not only defective in
relation to spiritual power; it is weakness in comparison. In the same way,
physical life, in comparison with eternal life in the Kingdom, is considered as
death. So Christ called the physical life death, and said: "Let the dead bury
their dead."(1) Though those souls possessed
physical life, yet in His eyes that life was death.
This is one of the
meanings of the biblical story of Adam. Reflect until you discover the
others.
Salutations be upon you.
1. Matt.
8:22.
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31
EXPLANATION OF
BLASPHEMY
AGAINST THE HOLY SPIRIT
Question. -- "Wherefore I say unto you, All manner of sin and blasphemy shall
be forgiven unto men: but the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost shall not be
forgiven unto men. And whosoever speaketh a word against the Son of man, it
shall be forgiven him: but whosoever speaketh against the Holy Ghost, it shall
not be forgiven him, neither in this world, neither in the world to come."--
(Matthew 12:31-32)
Answer. -- The holy realities of the Manifestations of
God have two spiritual positions. One is the place of manifestation, which can
be compared to the position of the globe of the sun, and the other is the
resplendency of the manifestation, which is like its light and radiance; these
are the perfections of God--in other words, the Holy Spirit. For the Holy Spirit
is the divine bounties and lordly perfections, and these divine perfections are
as the rays and heat of the sun. The brilliant rays of the sun constitute its
being, and without them it would not be the sun. If the manifestation and the
reflection of the divine perfections were not in Christ, Jesus would not be the
Messiah. He is a Manifestation because He reflects in Himself the divine
perfections. The Prophets of God are manifestations for the lordly
perfections--that is, the Holy Spirit is apparent in Them.
If a soul
remains far from the manifestation, he may yet be awakened; for he did not
recognize the manifestation of the divine perfections. But if he loathe the
divine perfections
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themselves--in other words, the Holy Spirit--it is evident that he
is like a bat which hates the light.
This detestation of the light has no
remedy and cannot be forgiven--that is to say, it is impossible for him to come
near unto God. This lamp is a lamp because of its light; without the light it
would not be a lamp. Now if a soul has an aversion for the light of the lamp, he
is, as it were, blind, and cannot comprehend the light; and blindness is the
cause of everlasting banishment from God.
It is evident that the souls
receive grace from the bounty of the Holy Spirit which appears in the
Manifestations of God, and not from the personality of the Manifestation.
Therefore, if a soul does not receive grace from the bounties of the Holy
Spirit, he remains deprived of the divine gift, and the banishment itself puts
the soul beyond the reach of pardon.
This is why many people who were the
enemies of the Manifestations, and who did not recognize Them, when once they
had known Them became Their friends. So enmity toward the Manifestation did not
become the cause of perpetual banishment, for they who indulged in it were the
enemies of the light-holders, not knowing that They were the shining lights of
God. They were not the enemies of the light, and when once they understood that
the light-holder was the place of manifestation of the light, they became
sincere friends of it.
The meaning is this: to remain far from the
light-holder does not entail everlasting banishment, for one may become awakened
and vigilant; but enmity toward the light is the cause of everlasting
banishment, and for this there is no remedy.
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32
EXPLANATION OF
THE VERSE
"FOR MANY ARE CALLED BUT
FEW ARE CHOSEN"
Question. -- In the Gospel Christ said: "Many are called, but few are
chosen," and in the Qur'án it is written: "He will confer particular mercy on
whom He pleaseth." What is the wisdom of this?
Answer.--Know that the
order and the perfection of the whole universe require that existence should
appear in numberless forms. For existing beings could not be embodied in only
one degree, one station, one kind, one species and one class; undoubtedly, the
difference of degrees and distinction of forms, and the variety of genus and
species, are necessary--that is to say, the degree of mineral, vegetable, animal
substances, and of man, are inevitable; for the world could not be arranged,
adorned, organized and perfected with man alone. In the same way, with only
animals, only plants or only minerals, this world could not show forth beautiful
scenery, exact organization and exquisite adornment. Without doubt it is because
of the varieties of degrees, stations, species and classes that existence
becomes resplendent with utmost perfection.
For example, if this tree
were entirely fruit, the vegetable perfections could not be attained; for
leaves, blossoms and fruits are all necessary so that the tree may be adorned
with utmost beauty and perfection.
In the same way consider the body of
man. It must be composed of different organs, parts and members.
Human
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beauty and perfection require the existence of the ear, the eye,
the brain and even that of the nails and hair; if man were all brain, eyes or
ears, it would be equivalent to imperfection. So the absence of hair, eyelashes,
teeth and nails would be an absolute defect, though in comparison with the eye
they are without feeling, and in this resemble the mineral and plant; but their
absence in the body of man is necessarily faulty and displeasing.
As the
degrees of existence are different and various, some beings are higher in the
scale than others. Therefore, it is by the will and wish of God that some
creatures are chosen for the highest degree, as man, and some others are placed
in the middle degree, as the vegetable, and some are left in the lowest degree,
like the mineral.
It is from the bounty of God that man is selected for
the highest degree; and the differences which exist between men in regard to
spiritual progress and heavenly perfections are also due to the choice of the
Compassionate One. For faith, which is life eternal, is the sign of bounty, and
not the result of justice. The flame of the fire of love, in this world of earth
and water, comes through the power of attraction and not by effort and striving.
Nevertheless, by effort and perseverance, knowledge, science and other
perfections can be acquired; but only the light of the Divine Beauty can
transport and move the spirits through the force of attraction. Therefore, it is
said: "Many are called, but few are chosen."(1)
But the material
beings are not despised, judged and held responsible for their own degree and
station. For example, mineral, vegetable and animal in their various degrees are
acceptable; but if in their own degree they remain imperfect, they are blamable,
the degree itself being purely perfect.
The differences among mankind are
of two sorts: one is a difference of station, and this difference is not
1. Matt.
22:14.
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blameworthy. The other is a difference of faith and assurance; the
loss of these is blameworthy, for then the soul is overwhelmed by his desires
and passions, which deprive him of these blessings and prevent him from feeling
the power of attraction of the love of God. Though that man is praiseworthy and
acceptable in his station, yet as he is deprived of the perfections of that
degree, he will become a source of imperfections, for which he is held
responsible.(1)
1. Cf. "The
Causes of Differences in the Characters of Men," p.
212.
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33
THE "RETURN"
SPOKEN OF BY
THE PROPHETS
Question.--Will you explain the subject of
Return?
Answer.--Bahá'u'lláh has explained this question fully and
clearly in the Íqán.(1) Read it, and the truth of
this subject will become apparent. But since you have asked about it, I will
explain it briefly. We will begin to elucidate it from the Gospel, for there it
is plainly said that when John, the son of Zacharias, appeared and gave to men
the glad tidings of the Kingdom of God, they asked him, "Who art thou? Art thou
the promised Messiah?" He replied, "I am not the Messiah." Then they asked him,
"Art thou Elijah?" He said, "I am not."(2) These words prove and show
that John, the son of Zacharias, was not the promised Elias. But on the day of
the transfiguration on Mount Tabor Christ said plainly that John, the son of
Zacharias, was the promised Elias.
In chapter 9, verses 11-13, of the
Gospel of Mark, it is said: "And they asked Him, saying, Why say the scribes
that Elias must first come? And He answered and told them, Elias verily cometh
first, and restoreth all things; and how it is written of the Son of man, that
He must suffer many things, and be set at nought. But I say unto you, That Elias
is indeed come, and they have done unto him whatsoever they listed, as it is
written of him."
In chapter 17, verse 13, of Matthew, it is said:
"Then
1. Cf. p. 110, n.
2.
2. Cf. John 1:19-21.
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the disciples understood that He spake unto them of John the
Baptist."
They asked John the Baptist, "Are you Elias?" He answered, "No,
I am not," although it is said in the Gospel that John was the promised Elias,
and Christ also said so clearly.(1) Then if John was Elias, why
did he say, "I am not"? And if he was not Elias, why did Christ say that he
was?
The explanation is this: not the personality, but the reality of the
perfections, is meant--that is to say, the same perfections that were in Elias
existed in John the Baptist and were exactly realized in him. Therefore, John
the Baptist was the promised Elias. In this case not the essence,(2) but the
qualities, are regarded. For example, there was a flower last year, and this
year there is also a flower; I say the flower of last year has returned. Now, I
do not mean that same flower in its exact individuality has come back; but as
this flower has the same qualities as that of last year--as it has the same
perfume, delicacy, color and form--I say the flower of last year has returned,
and this flower is the former flower. When spring comes, we say last year's
spring has come back because all that was found in last year's spring exists in
this spring. That is why Christ said, "You will see all that happened in the
days of the former Prophets."
We will give another illustration. The seed
of last year is sown, branches and leaves grow forth, blossoms and fruits
appear, and all has again returned to seed. When this second seed is planted, a
tree will grow from it, and once more those branches, leaves, blossoms and
fruits will return, and that tree will appear in perfection. As the beginning
was a seed and the end is a seed, we say that the seed has returned. When we
look at the substance of the tree, it
1. Cf. John
1:21.
2. i.e., the individuality.
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is another substance, but when we look at the blossoms, leaves and
fruits, the same fragrance, delicacy and taste are produced. Therefore, the
perfection of the tree has returned a second time.
In the same way, if we
regard the return of the individual, it is another individual; but if we regard
the qualities and perfections, the same have returned. Therefore, when Christ
said, "This is Elias," He meant: this person is a manifestation of the bounty,
the perfections, the character, the qualities and the virtues of Elias. John the
Baptist said, "I am not Elias." Christ considered the qualities, the
perfections, the character and the virtues of both, and John regarded his
substance and individuality. It is like this lamp: it was here last night, and
tonight it is also lighted, and tomorrow night it will also shine. We say that
the lamp of this night is the same light as that of last night, and that it has
returned. It refers to the light, and not to the oil, the wick or the
holder.
This subject is fully and clearly explained in the
Kitáb-i-Iqán.
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PETER'S
CONFESSION OF FAITH
Question.--In the Gospel of St. Matthew it is said: "Thou art Peter, and upon
this rock I will build My church."(1) What is the meaning of this
verse?
Answer.--This utterance of Christ is a confirmation of the
statement of Peter, when Christ asked: Whom do you believe Me to be? and Peter
answered: I believe that "Thou art the Son of the living God." Then Christ said
to him: "Thou art Peter"(2)--for Cephas in Aramaic means
rock--"and upon this rock I will build My church." For the others in answer to
Christ said that He was Elias, and some said John the Baptist, and some others
Jeremias or one of the Prophets.(1)
Christ wished by
suggestion, or an allusion, to confirm the words of Peter; so on account of the
suitability of his name, Peter, He said: "and upon this rock I will build My
church," meaning, thy belief that Christ is the Son of the living God will be
the foundation of the Religion of God, and upon this belief the foundation of
the church of God--which is the Law of God--shall be established.
The
existence of the tomb of Peter in Rome is doubtful; it is not authenticated.
Some say it is in Antioch.
Moreover, let us compare the lives of some of
the Popes with the religion of Christ. Christ, hungry and without shelter, ate
herbs in the wilderness, and was unwilling to
1. Matt.
16:18.
2. It is well known that Peter's real name was Simon, but Christ
called him Cephas, which corresponds to the Greek word petras, which means
rock.
3. Cf. Matt. 16:14-18.
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hurt the feelings of anyone. The Pope sits in a carriage covered
with gold and passes his time in the utmost splendor, amidst such pleasures and
luxuries, such riches and adoration, as kings have never had.
Christ hurt
no one, but some of the Popes killed innocent people: refer to history. How much
blood the Popes have shed merely to retain temporal power! For mere differences
of opinion they arrested, imprisoned and slew thousands of the servants of the
world of humanity and learned men who had discovered the secrets of nature. To
what a degree they opposed the truth!
Reflect upon the instructions of
Christ, and investigate the habits and customs of the Popes. Consider: is there
any resemblance between the instructions of Christ and the manner of government
of the Popes? We do not like to criticize, but the history of the Vatican is
very extraordinary. The purport of our argument is this, that the instructions
of Christ are one thing, and the manner of the Papal government is quite
another; they do not agree. See how many Protestants have been killed by the
order of the Popes, how many tyrannies and oppressions have been countenanced,
and how many punishments and tortures have been inflicted! Can any of the sweet
fragrances of Christ be detected in these actions? No! in the name of God! These
people did not obey Christ, while Saint Barbara, whose picture is before us, did
obey Christ, and followed in His footsteps, and put His commands into practice.
Among the Popes there are also some blessed souls who followed in the footsteps
of Christ, particularly in the first centuries of the Christian era when
temporal things were lacking and the tests of God were severe. But when they
came into possession of governmental power, and worldly honor and prosperity
were gained, the Papal government entirely forgot Christ and was occupied with
temporal power, grandeur, comfort and luxuries. It killed people, opposed the
diffusion of learning, tormented the
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men of science, obstructed the light of knowledge, and gave the
order to slay and to pillage. Thousands of souls, men of science and learning,
and sinless ones, perished in the prisons of Rome. With all these proceedings
and actions, how can the Vicarship of Christ be believed in?
The Papalacy
has constantly opposed knowledge; even in Europe it is admitted that religion is
the opponent of science, and that science is the destroyer of the foundations of
religion. While the religion of God is the promoter of truth, the founder of
science and knowledge, it is full of goodwill for learned men; it is the
civilizer of mankind, the discoverer of the secrets of nature, and the
enlightener of the horizons of the world. Consequently, how can it be said to
oppose knowledge? God forbid! Nay, for God, knowledge is the most glorious gift
of man and the most noble of human perfections. To oppose knowledge is ignorant,
and he who detests knowledge and science is not a man, but rather an animal
without intelligence. For knowledge is light, life, felicity, perfection, beauty
and the means of approaching the Threshold of Unity. It is the honor and glory
of the world of humanity, and the greatest bounty of God. Knowledge is identical
with guidance, and ignorance is real error.
Happy are those who spend
their days in gaining knowledge, in discovering the secrets of nature, and in
penetrating the subtleties of pure truth! Woe to those who are contented with
ignorance, whose hearts are gladdened by thoughtless imitation, who have fallen
into the lowest depths of ignorance and foolishness, and who have wasted their
lives!
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PREDESTINATION
Question.--If God has knowledge of an action which will be performed by
someone, and it has been written on the Tablet of Fate, is it possible to resist
it?
Answer.--The foreknowledge of a thing is not the cause of its
realization; for the essential knowledge of God surrounds, in the same way, the
realities of things, before as well as after their existence, and it does not
become the cause of their existence. It is a perfection of God. But that which
was prophesied by the inspiration of God through the tongues of the Prophets,
concerning the appearance of the Promised One of the Bible, was not the cause of
the manifestation of Christ.
The hidden secrets of the future were
revealed to the Prophets, and They thus became acquainted with the future events
which They announced. This knowledge and these prophecies were not the cause of
the occurrences. For example, tonight everyone knows that after seven hours the
sun will rise, but this general foreknowledge does not cause the rising and
appearance of the sun.
Therefore, the knowledge of God in the realm of
contingency does not produce the forms of the things. On the contrary, it is
purified from the past, present and future. It is identical with the reality of
the things; it is not the cause of their occurrence.
In the same way, the
record and the mention of a thing in the Book does not become the cause of its
existence. The Prophets, through the divine inspiration, knew what would come to
pass. For instance, through the divine inspiration
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They knew that Christ would be martyred, and They announced it.
Now, was Their knowledge and information the cause of the martyrdom of Christ?
No; this knowledge is a perfection of the Prophets and did not cause the
martyrdom.
The mathematicians by astronomical calculations know that at a
certain time an eclipse of the moon or the sun will occur. Surely this discovery
does not cause the eclipse to take place. This is, of course, only an analogy
and not an exact image.
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