National Spiritual Assembly
Establishment and Functions:
Regarding the establishment of "National Assemblies," it is of vital
importance that in every country, where the conditions are favorable
and the number of the friends has grown and reached a considerable
size, such as America, Great Britain and Germany, that a "National
Spiritual Assembly" be immediately established, representative of the
friends throughout that country.
Its immediate purpose is to stimulate, unify
and coordinate by frequent personal consultations, the manifold
activities of the friends as well as the local Assemblies; and by
keeping in close and constant touch with the Holy Land, initiate
measures, and direct in general the affairs of the Cause in that
country.
It serves also another purpose, no less
essential than the first, as in the course of time it shall evolve into
the National House of Justice (referred to in Abdu'l-Baha's Will as the
"secondary House of Justice"), which according to the explicit text of
the Testament will have, in conjunction with the other National
Assemblies throughout the Baha'i world, to elect directly the members
of the International House of Justice, that Supreme Council that will
guide, organize and unify the affairs of the Movement throughout the
world.
It is expressly recorded in Abdu'l-Baha's
Writings that these National Assemblies must be indirectly elected by
the friends; that is, the friends in every country must elect a certain
number of delegates, who in their turn will elect from among all the
friends in that country the members of the National Spiritual Assembly.
(Shoghi Effendi: Baha'i Administration, pp. 39-40)
In countries where the local Baha'i communities had sufficiently
advanced in number and in influence measures were taken for the
initiation of National Assemblies, the pivots round which all national
undertakings must revolve. Designated by Abdu'l-Baha in His Will as the
"Secondary Houses of Justice," they constitute the electoral bodies in
the formation of the International House of Justice, and are empowered
to direct, unify, coordinate and stimulate the activities of
individuals as well as local Assemblies within their
jurisdiction. Resting on the broad base of organized local
communities, themselves pillars sustaining the institution which must
be regarded as the apex of the Baha'i Administrative Order, these
Assemblies are elected, according to the principle of proportional
representation, by delegates representative of Baha'i local communities
assembled at Convention during the period of the Ridvan Festival; are
possessed of the necessary authority to enable them to insure the
harmonious and efficient development of Baha'i activity within their
respective spheres; are freed from all direct responsibility for their
policies and decisions to their electorates; are charged with the
sacred duty of consulting the views, of inviting the recommendations
and of securing the confidence and cooperation of the delegates and of
acquainting them with their plans, problems and actions; and are
supported by the resources of national funds to which all ranks of the
faithful are urged to contribute.
(Shoghi Effendi: God Passes By, pp. 332-333)
...it is one of the vital functions of the National Spiritual Assembly
to be always in touch with local conditions in every community and to
endeavour, through personal contacts and by means of regular
correspondence, to guide the friends, individually and collectively, in
all their activities.
(Shoghi Effendi: National Spiritual Assembly, p. 110)
The Guardian welcomes the step taken by your Assembly to increasingly
devote its meetings to the consideration of major policies and plans,
and to dwell less on matters of detail and of mere secondary
administrative character. He would, however, urge that all
decisions, unless of a trivial and insignificant nature dealing purely
with routine work, should be reached after careful and conscientious
deliberation by all the nine members. Any tendencies towards
decentralization, or the delegation of authority to any person or body
to make decisions on matters which directly and solely concern the
National Spiritual Assembly itself, would be harmful and should be
checked at the very outset. It is for this very reason, namely to
enable the National Spiritual Assembly to properly and fully discharge
its functions of consultation and deliberation on issues that concern
the national community under its jurisdiction, that its membership has
been limited to nine, so that it may not be too unwieldy for making
decisions that would often require quick action and mature deliberation
by all the members. In order to safeguard the distinctive
character of such a central and authoritative institution more frequent
gatherings would seem imperative, particularly as the problems which it
will be called upon to deal with are destined to increase in number and
importance with the steady expansion of the Faith in North America.
(Shoghi Effendi: National Spiritual Assembly, pp. 120-121)
In the Baha'i Faith there are matters of principle affecting the
operation of Baha'i institutions, which are outlined in the writings of
the Faith as well as in the Constitutions of National and Local
Spiritual Assemblies. Obviously, National Assemblies will face
situations and problems which have to be resolved but are not fully
covered by these texts. In such matters the National Assembly
should adopt its own procedures suited to the conditions and
requirements of its own national community. It may be found
useful to adopt a procedure followed by another National Spiritual
Assembly; certainly there is no objection to such a course of action,
provided it is clear that in the final analysis such issues are left to
the discretion of the National Assembly itself.
In matters of principle, therefore, there
should be uniformity, while in matters of detail and procedure not only
is diversity permitted, it is also encouraged. As conditions vary
from country to country and, indeed, can vary from community to
community within the country, Shoghi Effendi repeatedly advised the
friends that they should be uncompromising in principle but flexible in
subsidiary details.
(The Universal House of Justice: Lights of Guidance, p. 38)
Authority:
We should respect the National Spiritual Assembly and the Local
Spiritual Assembly because they are institutions founded by
Baha'u'llah. It has nothing to do with personality, but is far above it.
(Shoghi Effendi: National Spiritual Assembly, p. 96)
...the Guardian wishes me to again affirm his view that the authority
of the National Spiritual Assembly is undivided and unchallengeable in
all matters pertaining to the administration of the Faith ... and that,
therefore, the obedience of individual Baha'is, delegates, groups, and
assemblies to that authority is imperative, and should be whole-hearted
and unqualified. He is convinced that the unreserved acceptance
and complete application of this vital provision of the Administration
is essential to the maintenance of the highest degree of unity among
the believers, and is indispensable to the effective working of the
administrative machinery of the Faith in every country.
(Shoghi Effendi: Lights of Guidance, p. 36)
What the Guardian is aiming at is to remind the friends, more fully
than before, of the two cardinal principles of Baha'i Administration,
namely, the supreme and unchallengeable authority of the National
Spiritual Assembly in national affairs and working within the limits
imposed by the Declaration of Trust and By-Laws, and the untrammelled
freedom of the Convention delegates to advise, deliberate on the
actions, and appoint the successors of their National Assembly.
(Shoghi Effendi: National Spiritual Assembly, p. 102)
Appeals:
Anything whatsoever affecting the interests of the Cause and in which
the National Assembly as a body is involved should, if regarded as
unsatisfactory by Local Assemblies and individual believers, be
immediately referred to the National Assembly itself. Neither the
general body of the believers, nor any Local Assembly, nor even the
delegates to the annual Convention, should be regarded as having any
authority to entertain appeals against the decision of the National
Assembly. Should the matter be referred to the Guardian it will
be his duty to consider it with the utmost care and to decide whether
the issues involved justify him to consider it in person, or to leave
it entirely to the discretion of the National Assembly.
(Shoghi Effendi: Directives of the Guardian, p. 50)
This is indeed a clear indication of the Master's express desire that
nothing whatever should be given to the public by any individual among
the friends, unless fully considered and approved by the Spiritual
Assembly in his locality; and if this (as is undoubtedly the case) is a
matter that pertains to the general interest of the Cause in that land,
then it is incumbent upon the Spiritual Assembly to submit it to the
consideration and approval of the national body representing all the
various local assemblies. Not only with regard to publication,
but all matters without any exception whatsoever, regarding the
interests of the Cause in that locality, individually or collectively,
should be referred exclusively to the Spiritual Assembly in that
locality, which shall decide upon it, unless it be a matter of national
interest, in which case it shall be referred to the national
body. With this national body also will rest the decision whether
a given question is of local or national interest. (By national
affairs is not meant matters that are political in their character, for
the friends of God the world over are strictly forbidden to meddle with
political affairs in any way whatever, but rather things that affect
the spiritual activities of the body of the friends in that land).
(Shoghi Effendi: Unfolding Destiny, p. 8)
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