Monday, December 2, 2024

Paragraph 172

Notwithstanding the obviousness of this theme, in the eyes of those that have quaffed the wine of knowledge and certitude, yet how many are those who, through failure to understand its meaning, have allowed the term “Seal of the Prophets” to obscure their understanding, and deprive them of the grace of all His manifold bounties! Hath not MuḼammad, Himself, declared: “I am all the Prophets”? Hath He not said as We have already mentioned: “I am Adam, Noah, Moses, and Jesus”? Why should MuḼammad, that immortal Beauty, Who hath said: “I am the first Adam” be incapable of saying also: “I am the last Adam”? For even as He regarded Himself to be the “First of the Prophets”—that is Adam—in like manner, the “Seal of the Prophets” is also applicable unto that Divine Beauty. It is admittedly obvious that being the “First of the Prophets,” He likewise is their “Seal.”

 

Here we are at the twelfth of thirty paragraphs looking at the first of the two stations of the Manifestations of God, that of "pure abstraction and essential unity".

He begins this one by saying "Notwithstanding", which means "despite the truth of this". He has already talked about the oneness of the Messengers for many pages, and "despite the truth of this", people still use the following argument against it.

He continues by saying that this theme He is addressing is obvious. While this may come as a surprise, in retrospect it turns out that it is actually very evident. It's just that nobody thought to notice it for many centuries.

So, what is it that is actually so "obvious"? The implications of this theme.

He goes on to say that many people have allowed the phrase "Seal of the Prophets" to keep them from acknowledging another Messenger. This is exactly the same as those Christians, for example, who allow the statements, "I am the way and the truth and the light. No man comes to the Father except through me" to keep them from acknowledging any other religion. In both cases, and in many similar ones in other faith paths, people use these phrases as a validation of some sort of finality. As the Universal House of Justice said, in One Common Faith, "it is obviously the expression of the central truth of revealed religion: that access to the unknowable Reality that creates and sustains existence is possible only through awakening to the illumination shed from that Realm."

When we look at other statements, though, such as when Jesus says, "Had you believed Moses you would have believed Me", or "Before Abraham was, I am", He is implying a continuity of teachers.

When we see that all the Messengers share this "essential unity", the term "Seal of the Prophets" applies to them all, as does the "me" in that beautiful statement from Jesus.

When we turn our eyes to other faith traditions, we find similar statements of this continuity, such as when Buddha said, "In due time another Buddha will arise in the world, a Holy One, a supremely enlightened One, endowed with wisdom in conduct, auspicious, knowing the universe, an incomparable leader of men, a master of angels and mortals... He will reveal to you the same eternal truths which I have taught you. He will preach his religion, glorious in its origin, glorious at the climax and glorious at the goal, in the spirit and in the letter."

We find it also in the Mi'kmaq stories where the great teacher, Glooscap, promised to return to Mi'kma'ki whenever there was trouble.

Over and over, throughout the various religions, we find this constant promise of guidance from on high. It is, in fact, what Baha'u'llah refers to as the Greater Covenant.

Finally, while there is so much more we could write, we feel Baha'u'llah is so precise in this paragraph that we are concerned about writing too much, so we will just take a moment here to look at the phrase "those that have quaffed the wine of knowledge and certitude".

We note that it is a very particular caveat. Only those who have drunk of this wine are able to recognize the truth of what He is saying. While we understand that "certitude" is the eventual goal of this book, given its title, the word "knowledge" brings us right back to the beginning, where, in paragraph 1, we read:

No man shall attain the shores of the ocean of true understanding except he be detached from all that is in heaven and on earth.
Without this detachment, we can become too fixated on the particular messenger we follow, such as Jesus or Muhammad. Because of this love, which is both noble and appropriate, we can become blinded by their light and miss  the light shining in another messenger. We need to be detached from that "heaven", not to the point where we forget about it, but just enough that we can see it in another.

Through this detachment, as well as this perspective that Baha'u'llah is offering us, we can arrive at a better understanding of the oneness of all the messengers and arise to a far greater certainty of these truths, for we will see it in all the various paths.

Again, we could go on, but we don't want to obscure what He has made so clear. It is so clear, in fact, that He even uses the word "obvious" twice, when talking about this particular theme.

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