Faith in the Bahá'í Faith

Like most religions, the Bahá'í Faith holds that having a strong belief, a personal faith, is crucial to a spiritual life. The religion specifically relates how the abilities to know the truth are related to the overall goal of developing a praiseworthy character in addition to personally being aligned with the truth.

Knowing the truth for oneself

A core teaching of the Bahá'í Faith is an unfettered search for the truth. Another core teaching of the Bahá'í Faith is that science and religion should agree and not be opposed to each other (see the religion's views on science and religion.) As in other religions, it is held that having a firm belief itself can make seemingly impossible things possible, even natural. Being disciplined about this search for truth can be seen as a philosophy, and the literature of the religion sometimes praises philosophers. According to the Bahá'i Faith, the object of all learning is to achieve the presence of God in one's life, and thereby to know ourselves.

The Bahá'í Faith suggests that several ways of learning can help lead you to that goal:[1][2]


Progression and development

The Bahá'í Faith also references the idea that like many other things, the appreciation of truth, one's belief, and one's degree of faithfulness, is progressive. Major works of the Bahá'í Faith are renderings of the overall progress of the individual: Seven Valleys, Four Valleys, Gems of Divine Mysteries, The Book of Certitude all reference stages of coming to know God and one's self. There are also significant references in various places in Bahá'í literature with respect to the goal or importance of a praiseworthy character. For example a major initiative first mentioned in the first half of the twentieth century was to engage in the Double Crusade. Speaking to the United States Bahá'í community Shoghi Effendi said :

(A) rectitude of conduct, which in all its manifestations offers a striking contrast to the deceitfulness and corruption that characterize the political life of the nation and of the partisan factions that compose it, a holiness and chastity that are diametrically opposed to the moral laxity and licentiousness which defile the character of a not inconsiderable proportion of its citizens, an interracial fellowship completely purged from the curse of racial prejudice which stigmatizes the vast majority of its people, these are the weapons which the American believers can and must wield in their Double Crusade. First, to regenerate the inward life of their own community, and next to assail the longstanding evils that have entrenched themselves in the life of their nation.

Thus half of the Double Crusade is about individual character and its issues within the religious community.

Various disciplines are mandated or suggested in the Bahá'í Faith as ways to grow, and protect, one's faith:

See also

References

  1. Ch1 - The Ways of the Search: Towards a Philosophy of Reality Eternal Quest for God: An Introduction to the Divine Philosophy of `Abdu'l-Bahá by Julio Savi, George Ronald, Publisher, 46 High Street, Kidlington, Oxford OX5 2DN, 1989
  2. Ch2 - The Beginning of All Things Eternal Quest for God: An Introduction to the Divine Philosophy of `Abdu'l-Bahá' by Julio Savi, George Ronald, Publisher, 46 High Street, Kidlington, Oxford OX5 2DN, 1989
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, January 09, 2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.