Muhammad
The Baha'i View of Muhummad:
The Baha'i view on that subject is that the Dispensation of Muhammad,
like all other Divine Dispensations, has been fore-ordained, and that
as such forms an integral part of the Divine plan for the spiritual,
moral and social, development of mankind. It is not an isolated
religious phenomenon, but is closely and historically related to the
Dispensation of Christ, and those of the Bab and Baha'u'llah. It
was intended by God to succeed Christianity, and it was therefore the
duty of the Christians to accept it as firmly as they had adhered to
the religion of Christ.
(Shoghi Effendi: Lights of Guidance, p. 496)
As to Muhammad, the Apostle of God, let none among His followers who
read these pages, think for a moment that either Islam, or its Prophet,
or His Book, or His appointed Successors, or any of His authentic
teachings, have been, or are to be in any way, or to however slight a
degree, disparaged.
(Shoghi Effendi: The Promised Day is Come, p. 108)
Indeed, the essential prerequisites of admittance into the Baha'i fold
of Jews, Zoroastrians, Hindus, Buddhists, and the followers of other
ancient faiths, as well as of agnostics and even atheists, is the
wholehearted and unqualified acceptance by them all of the divine
origin of both Islam and Christianity, of the Prophetic functions of
both Muhammad and Jesus Christ, of the legitimacy of the institution of
the Imamate, and of the primacy of St. Peter, the Prince of the
Apostles.
(Shoghi Effendi: The Promised Day is Come, p. 110)
His Reality:
The purpose is that all should know of a certainty that the Seal of the
Prophets(1) - may the souls of all else but Him be offered up for His
sake - is without likeness, peer or partner in His Own station.
The Holy Ones(2) - may the blessings of God be upon them - were
created through the potency of His Word, and after Him they were the
most learned and the most distinguished among the people and abide in
the utmost station of servitude. The divine Essence, sanctified
from every comparison and likeness, is established in the Prophet, and
God's inmost Reality, exalted above any peer or partner, is manifest in
Him.
(Baha'u'llah: Tablets of Baha'u'llah, pp. 123-124)
As to the matter of names, Muhammad, Himself, declared: "I am
Jesus." He recognized the truth of the signs, prophecies, and
words of Jesus, and testified that they were all of God. In this
sense, neither the person of Jesus nor His writings hath differed from
that of Muhammad and of His holy Book, inasmuch as both have championed
the Cause of God, uttered His praise, and revealed His commandments.
(Baha'u'llah: The Kitab-i-Iqan, pp. 20-21)
Consider thou and call to mind the time when Muhammad appeared.
He said, and His word is the truth: `Pilgrimage to the House(3) is a
service due to God.'(4) And likewise are the daily prayer,
fasting, and the laws which shone forth above the horizon of the Book
of God, the Lord of the World and the true Educator of the peoples and
kindreds of the earth. It is incumbent upon everyone to obey Him
in whatsoever God hath ordained; and whosoever denieth Him hath
disbelieved in God, in His verses, in His Messengers and in His
Books. Were He to pronounce right to be wrong or denial to be
belief, He speaketh the truth as bidden by God. This is a station
wherein sins or trespasses neither exist nor are mentioned.
Consider thou the blessed, the divinely-revealed verse in which
pilgrimage to the House is enjoined upon everyone. It devolved
upon those invested with authority after Him(5) to observe whatever had
been prescribed unto them in the Book. Unto no one is given the right
to deviate from the laws and ordinances of God.
(Baha'u'llah: Tablets of Baha'u'llah, pp. 108-109)
The guidance vouchsafed to the Imams regarding the laws and
institutions of Islam was absolute and unqualified. Their
infallibility was derived directly from the Manifestation [Muhammad].
(Shoghi Effendi: Lights of Guidance, p. 497)
His Power:
Nay, by sovereignty is meant that sovereignty which in every
dispensation resideth within, and is exercised by, the person of the
Manifestation, the Day-star of Truth. That sovereignty is the
spiritual ascendancy which He exerciseth to the fullest degree over all
that is in heaven and on earth, and which in due time revealeth itself
to the world in direct proportion to its capacity and spiritual
receptiveness, even as the sovereignty of Muhammad, the Messenger of
God, is today apparent and manifest amongst the people. You are
well aware of what befell His Faith in the early days of His
dispensation. What woeful sufferings did the hand of the infidel
and erring, the divines of that age and their associates, inflict upon
that spiritual Essence, that most pure and holy Being! How
abundant the thorns and briars which they have strewn over His
path! It is evident that wretched generation, in their wicked and
satanic fancy, regarded every injury to that immortal Being as a means
to the attainment of an abiding felicity; inasmuch as the recognized
divines of that age, such as Abdu'llah-i-Ubayy, Abu-'Amir, the hermit,
Ka'b-Ibn-i-Ashraf, and Nadr-Ibn-i-Harith, all treated Him as an
impostor, and pronounced Him a lunatic and a calumniator. Such
sore accusations they brought against Him that in recounting them God
forbiddeth the ink to flow, Our pen to move, or the page to bear
them. These malicious imputations provoked the people to arise
and torment Him. And how fierce that torment if the divines of
the age be its chief instigators, if they denounce Him to their
followers, cast Him out from their midst, and declare Him a
miscreant! Hath not the same befallen this Servant, and been
witnessed by all?
For this reason did Muhammad cry out:
"No Prophet of God hath suffered such harm as I have suffered."
And in the Qur'an are recorded all the calumnies and reproaches uttered
against Him, as well as all the afflictions which He suffered.
Refer ye thereunto, that haply ye may be informed of that which hath
befallen His Revelation. So grievous was His plight, that for a
time all ceased to hold intercourse with Him and His companions.
Whoever associated with Him fell a victim to the relentless cruelty of
His enemies.
We shall cite in this connection only one
verse of that Book. Shouldst thou observe it with a discerning
eye, thou wilt, all the remaining days of thy life, lament and bewail
the injury of Muhammad, that wronged and oppressed Messenger of God.
That verse was revealed at a time when Muhammad languished weary and
sorrowful beneath the weight of the opposition of the people, and of
their unceasing torture. In the midst of His agony, the Voice of
Gabriel, calling from the Sadratu'l-Muntaha, was heard saying:
"But if their opposition be grievous to Thee - if Thou canst, seek out
an opening into the earth or a ladder into heaven."(6) The implication
of this utterance is that His case had no remedy, that they would not
withhold their hands from Him unless He should hide Himself beneath the
depths of the earth, or take His flight unto heaven.
Consider, how great is the change today!
Behold, how many are the Sovereigns who bow the knee before His
name! How numerous the nations and kingdoms who have sought the
shelter of His shadow, who bear allegiance to His Faith, and pride
themselves therein! From the pulpit-top there ascendeth today the
words of praise which, in utter lowliness, glorify His blessed name;
and from the heights of minarets there resoundeth the call that
summoneth the concourse of His people to adore Him. Even those
Kings of the earth who have refused to embrace His Faith and to put off
the garment of unbelief, none the less confess and acknowledge the
greatness and overpowering majesty of that Day-star of loving
kindness. Such is His earthly sovereignty, the evidences of which
thou dost on every side behold.
(Baha'u'llah: The Kitab-i-Iqan, pp. 107-110)
Muhammad appeared among such a people. He educated and unified
these barbarous tribes, put an end to their shedding of blood. Through
his education they reached such a degree of civilization that they
subdued and governed continents and nations. What a great
civilization was established in Spain by the Muhammadans! What a
marvelous civilization was founded in Morocco by the Moors! What
a powerful caliphate or successorship was set up in Baghdad! How
much Islam served and furthered the cause of science!
(`Abdu'l-Baha: Japan Will Turn Ablaze, p. 46)
The Faith of Islam, the succeeding link in the chain of Divine
Revelation, introduced, as Baha'u'llah Himself testifies, the
conception of the nation as a unit and a vital stage in the
organization of human society, and embodied it in its teaching.
(Shoghi Effendi: The Promised Day is Come, p. 120)
False Stories about Muhammad:
Now we come to Muhammad. Americans and Europeans have heard a
number of stories about the Prophet which they have thought to be true,
although the narrators were either ignorant or antagonistic: most
of them were clergy; others were ignorant Muslims who repeated
unfounded traditions about Muhammad which they ignorantly believed to
be to His praise.
Thus some benighted Muslims made His polygamy
the pivot of their praises and held it to be a wonder, regarding it as
a miracle; and European historians, for the most part, rely on the
tales of these ignorant people.
For example, a foolish man said to a clergyman
that the true proof of greatness is bravery and the shedding of blood,
and that in one day on the field of battle a follower of Muhammad had
cut off the heads of one hundred men! This misled the clergyman to
infer that killing is considered the way to prove one's faith to
Muhammad, while this is merely imaginary. The military
expeditions of Muhammad, on the contrary, were always defensive
actions: a proof of this is that during thirteen years, in Mecca, He
and His followers endured the most violent persecutions. At this
period they were the target for the arrows of hatred: some of His
companions were killed and their property confiscated; others fled to
foreign lands. Muhammad Himself, after the most extreme persecutions by
the Qurayshites, who finally resolved to kill Him, fled to Medina in
the middle of the night. Yet even then His enemies did not cease
their persecutions, but pursued Him to Medina, and His disciples even
to Abyssinia.
(`Abdu'l-Baha: Some Answered Questions, pp. 18-19)
1. Muhammad.
2. The Imams.
3. Mecca.
4. Qur'an 3:91.
5. Muhammad.
6. Qur'an 6:35.
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Bahá’ís
of Dana Point, California, USA - all rights reserved.