Lesen: Doing Baha'i Scholarship in the 1990s


Published in and html formatted by the Bahá'í Studies Review, vol. 3.2 (1993).
Mirrored with permission from
http://bahai-library.com/bsr/bsr03_2/325_lambden_scholarship.htm.
Copyright restrictions apply.


Published in the Bahá'í Studies Review, vol. 3.2 (1993)


All Bahá'ís can play, to a greater or lesser extent, directly or indirectly, a part in the carrying out of Bahá'í scholarship. All Bahá'ís can actively support or contribute to the evolution of Bahá'í scholarship. Bahá'ís at university, such as yourselves, have a special responsibility in this respect.(1)

It is the purpose of these few notes to initiate discussion; not to set forth axioms, absolute truths for Bahá'í scholarship or its methodologies. Most Bahá'ís know to a certain extent what Bahá'í scholarship is though relatively few seem to realize the importance of academically informed Bahá'í scholarship. Various Bahá'ís have written papers about Bahá'í scholarship though clarification of the nature of the field and its methodologies remains fundamental. Useful compilations have been produced.(2) Almost nothing has been communicated, however, about the concrete processes of doing Bahá'í scholarship or sketching out aspects of what needs to be done.

The following pages then, will attempt to focus upon a western intellectual approach to doing Bahá'í scholarship, informed by academic principles and highlighting some important tasks to be done.(3) Bahá'í scholarship, the Bahá'í intellectual life, is not separate from Bahá'í teaching activity. It is an indispensable part of it. The Bahá'í life, in addition to its central ethical dimensions, also has intellectual dimensions:

As the Faith emerges from obscurity the value and significance of academic Bahá'í scholarship will become much more evident. Many of us will wish we had studied more, had read more Bahá'í and non-Bahá'í books; had truly striven to become Bahá'í scholars. Striving to become a Bahá'í scholar is not a three-year job but a lifelong process. As all have the duty of sharing their vision of the Bahá'í Faith ( = "teaching") with others, they also have the duty of doing this as intelligently and effectively as possible; such is the responsibility of becoming a Bahá'í scholar. The first task of the Bahá'í scholar might be said to be, to study, meditate and pray earnestly for the realization of scholarly insights. It is not enough to rely upon others – Bahá'u'lláh abolished the "priesthood" – to passively attend "deepening classes" which are sometimes of a poor quality or 'classical' Bahá'í 'fireside talks' repeated ad infinitum. The Bahá'í scholar is one who envisions and realizes the nature of the task; who makes an effort, who is creative and enthused about scholarly endeavours. Serving the Faith through scholarship implies effort and work; sacrifices need to be made. Bahá'u'lláh made it a religious duty for the "people of Bahá" to actively seek knowledge and to make the fullest possible use of their insight and intellectual endowments. Intellectual apathy or self-satisfaction is dangerous; it must be avoided at all costs. While the Prophet Muhammad is reckoned to have exhorted His followers to "Seek after knowledge, even unto China",(4) the Bahá'í scriptures indicate that individuals should diligently seek knowledge from the cradle to the grave and beyond: ". . He [God] has chosen the reality of man and has honoured it with intellect and wisdom, the two most luminous lights in either world" ('Abdu'l-Bahá, Secret 1).

Bahá'ís believe that the "knowledge of God" is infinite. No human being can ever attain all knowledge or possess every insight. Spiritual and intellectual perfection is not viewed by Bahá'ís as a possible goal for either individuals – whether Bahá'í or not, university professor or whatever – or mankind collectively. The mysteries of the "Word of God", divine revelation, the Bahá'í scripture, can never be fully fathomed. The application and interrelationships between the "Word of God" and evolving human knowledge and insight can always be furthered. In order for the individual Bahá'í to carry forward an "ever-advancing civilization", the acquisition of knowledge and the refining of the powers of the insightful intellect is indispensable. This must be worked at, and diligently striven for. Intellectual excitement is part of the spiritual life. Fostering the intellectual development of Bahá'í communities is not alien to the Bahá'í administration.

The widespread contemporary anti-intellectualism must not be allowed to lessen the paramount importance of the Bahá'í intellectual life; the centrality of Bahá'í scholarship. Anti-intellectualism, fundamentalism and fanaticism are essentially 'negative forces' which are very much alive in the modern West. These anti-values have no place in an ideal Bahá'í world. To some extent, they have unfortunately influenced the Bahá'í community. Intellectuals and academics are sometimes wrongly marginalized; their studies viewed as peripheral to the spread of the Bahá'í Faith. Non-Bahá'í academics in their respective social and religious communities are also on many occasions unjustly criticized or ignored as the irrelevant occupants of "ivory towers" – despite the fact that a fair proportion of them truly serve humanity through their work, intellectual pursuits and important discoveries. Bahá'ís are exhorted by Bahá'u'lláh to respect possessors of learning.

The Bahá'í Faith therefore is not in any way anti-academic. In the modern West, academic knowledge and study has become indispensable to a proper dialogue with educated and thinking individuals and institutions. One can hardly dialogue with modern scientists, theologians and philosophers without some understanding of the academic literature written in these fields.(5) In order for a good many of the key tasks within Bahá'í scholarship to be carried out, it seems to me to be necessary for Bahá'í scholars to specialize. It is vital though, for every Bahá'í scholar to have a balanced overview of Bahá'í teachings. Yet it is still necessary to become especially familiar with certain subjects as understood by leading thinkers. In the contemporary world the truly polymathic Bahá'í scholar does not really exist. All Bahá'ís to a greater or lesser extent only grasp a very limited area of knowledge.

Specialization needs to be carried out systematically. Ideally, Bahá'ís should be involved in making specialized studies of modern viewpoints on specific issues, with a view to working out Bahá'í perspectives or presenting the Bahá'í position. One Bahá'í might specialize, for example, in world government theories, others in aspects of Buddhism or theories of human evolution. Every Bahá'í scholar should attempt to find an area of expertise and work diligently towards communicating a balanced Bahá'í perspective upon it in the light of the Bahá'í revelation. Consultations and seminar type discussions should be conducted to further refine research findings or theories. The publication and dissemination of Bahá'í research findings to as wide a Bahá'í and non-Bahá'í audience as possible is important. Otherwise, the findings of scholarship cannot be adequately utilized by humanity or promote human unity and understanding. Indeed, 'Abdu'l-Bahá in The Secret of Divine Civilization says it is "urgent that beneficial articles and books be written, clearly and definitely establishing what the present-day requirements of the people are, and what will conduce to the happiness and advancement of society." Further, he writes of the "publication of high thoughts" as the "dynamic power in the arteries of life," "the very soul of the world" (109).

Consulting Modern Sources

The above partially cited letter presupposes that with the advent of a new religion/Revelation "a new insight" is realized among humanity in general – both Bahá'í and non-Bahá'í. Ideally, Bahá'í perspectives need to be promulgated in humble recognition of the legitimate insights of those not members of the community of the "Greatest Name". Bahá'ís do not have a monopoly upon all avenues of human knowledge and progress. Bahá'ís can, in many areas, learn much from non-Bahá'ís. The plan of God, the Bahá'í Revelation realizes its potentialities both within and without the Bahá'í community. Divine providence is universal. The Bahá'í Revelation realizes its potentialities both within and without the Bahá'í community. Divine Providence is universal. Generally speaking Bahá'ís have paid too little attention to contemporary learning and modern science in attempting to communicate with thinking people today. More than 40 years ago Shoghi Effendi wrote a letter which highlighted the need for Bahá'ís to exhibit a "more profound and co-ordinated Bahá'í scholarship" in order to attract thinking people. At the time of the second World War he wrote that, "The world has – at least the thinking world – caught up by now with all the great and universal principles enunciated by Bahá'u'lláh over 70 years ago, and so of course it does not sound 'new' to them" (From a letter written on behalf of Shoghi Effendi to an individual believer dated 3 July 1949, cited in Deepening no. 152). This situation is even more acute today when non-Bahá'ís are writing informed volumes about major Bahá'í principles in a very attractive manner. Unfortunately, many Bahá'ís remain unaware of such scholarship and all too often present Bahá'í perspectives in a wholly outdated manner. Non-Bahá'í books are not read enough even though a proportion of them are 'very Bahá'í' in content: sometimes better researched and written than Bahá'í attempts to tackle certain perspectives. It is important that we be humble enough to consult these works. We can learn a great deal from the non-Bahá'í world. It seems that God is working 'indirectly' to further the propagation of many of the central principles of His Cause. In fact a proportion of the educated public in the modern West often has an excellent grasp of certain general Bahá'í principles and their implications for contemporary society. Non-Bahá'í presentations, however, clearly have their limitations. The deep Bahá'í insights, the spiritual teachings and moral guidelines, not to mention the spiritual power informing the "Word of God" are obviously not present. But this should in no way prevent us from diligently studying all manner of non-Bahá'í, often quasi-Bahá'í literature.

The learned tomes and tracts of past Bahá'í apologists, written in the 19th and early 20th centuries and informed by and often born out of a Shí'í Islámic 'universe of discourse', remain classic evidences of an emergent, provisional, Bahá'í scholarship. Their applicability to today's religious and social situation, to the contemporary partly secularized world is, however, limited - though works such as Mírzá Abu'l Fadl-i-Gulpáyigání's "The Book of Divine Precepts" (1st ed. 1315/1897-8. Kitábu'l-Fará'id) will remain foundational; classical evidences of early Bahá'í apologetic, of emergent Bahá'í scholarship. Aspects of Bahá'í scholarship are constantly being renewed as new research is being carried out and new insights gained. Every decade or so new Bahá'í intellectual horizons are evident. Powerful spiritual forces radiate throughout the Bahá'í and non-Bahá'í world inspiring new scientific and theological discoveries.

The fact that Bahá'ís are still publishing secondary Bahá'í books written in the 1950's or shortly thereafter highlights the still, somewhat undeveloped state of Bahá'í scholarship. The first glimmerings of the emergence of a more mature, more intellectually informed Bahá'í scholarship in the West, could be dated to the late 1960's or early 1970's. Today many more Bahá'ís need to become involved. This important endeavour cannot be bypassed for there remain countless scholarly tasks to be accomplished. Time is ridiculously short before questions will be raised within and without the Bahá'í world that require informed and well-researched answers.

Among the concrete steps that can be taken by the prospective scholar-student of contemporary learning is to accumulate comprehensive notes upon key themes through the reading of books and articles. This includes visiting libraries and buying respected and up to date books. Ideally, experts should be consulted for reading lists. Public and university libraries frequently stock a wealth of encyclopedias and periodicals which often contain material central to the enhancement of Bahá'í perspectives.(6) New periodicals are constantly appearing and old ones sometimes contain stunningly significant articles. Particularly useful for religiously informed subjects is the recent Encyclopedia of Religion edited by Mircea Eliade (16 volumes, New York: Macmillan 1987) and the multi-volume Encyclopædia Iranica edited by Ehsan Yarshater (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul/Mazda Publications, 1985.) – in progress [5 volumes to date] and containing a good many articles on Bábí and Bahá'í subjects.(7) There are numerous periodicals that can be profitably consulted on all the issues, and others besides, those mentioned in this essay. The reading of respected magazine and newspaper articles is also useful, especially for keeping up to date with national and international affairs.

Religious Studies(8)

Much work remains to be done in articulating and clarifying Bahá'í teachings relating to the major world religions, many smaller religious groups and new religious movements. Although the secularized European West tends to marginalize religion and ignore the transcendent, it is yet a tremendously important social and spiritual experience to the majority of the world's inhabitants. Note, for example, the resurgence of interest in religion following the demise of Soviet communism. In relation to major religious groups, Bahá'ís have yet, for example, to produce adequate literature directed towards Jews (18 million), Sikhs (16 million), Zoroastrians (100,000 in the world; around 5,000 in the U.K.) as well as the many millions of Confucians (almost 6 million), Shintoists (almost 3.5 million), Taoists etc. The Bahá'í literature for Hindus and Buddhists is very, very small. Work in this area has hardly begun though non-Bahá'í works of considerable interest appear from time to time – such as the volume edited by Alan Sponberg and Helen Hardacre, Maitreya, the Future Buddha.(9) No Bahá'í book has yet been written which is directed towards the vast majority of Christians, Catholics (926 million) or Orthodox Christians (160 million) – most Bahá'í books used in teaching Christians (e.g. Thief in the Night) are written from a Protestant standpoint. Bahá'í teaching work in Eastern Europe and elsewhere may well be hampered by the Protestant oriented Bahá'í teaching literature. Bahá'ís have yet to clarify their teachings about "progressive revelation" and the "[essential] oneness of religion" in the light of modern views on a "world theology" and "religious pluralism".(10) The Bahá'í teachings about Jesus' resurrection (and the resurrection appearances) need further clarification in relation to patristic and modern Christian viewpoints. The question of reincarnation – belief in which is quite widespread among Hindus, other religionists, and even a proportion of "secularized" westerners – its historical roots and place in the history of Asian and other religions needs to be clarified and addressed from the Bahá'í theological and metaphysical standpoint. Indeed, Asian religious, eschatological and ethical doctrines need to be better known and understood by European and other western Bahá'ís. Quite a number of Europeans are devotees of Asian gurus. There is a remarkable growth of Buddhist centres in the U.K., continental Europe and the U.S.A.

Many issues within the history of religions urgently need researching. In quite a number of his letters Shoghi Effendi left matters touching on the history of religions, among other research issues, to future Bahá'í scholars - sometimes depending upon their consultation of non-Bahá'í scholarly authorities. The following few selected passages must suffice to illustrate this:


Shoghi Effendi presupposed the future historical researches of Bahá'í scholars when he wrote, for example, "Of the exact circumstances attending that epoch-making Declaration [of Bahá'u'lláh] we, alas, are but scantily informed. The words Bahá'u'lláh actually uttered on that occasion, the manner of His Declaration, the reaction it produced, its impact on Mírzá Yahyá, the identity of those who were priviledged to hear Him, are shrouded in an obscurity which future historians will find it difficult to penetrate." (God Passes By 153)

In an explanation of the twin pillars of the Administrative structure - the institutions of the Guardianship and the Universal House of Justice - Shoghi Effendi writes:

Islámic Studies


Much work also remains to be done with respect to the Bahá'í approach to Muslims and the Bahá'í reinterpretation of Islámic teachings. Most Muslims (over 80%) in the world are Sunnís who are sometimes antagonistic towards Shí'í Muslims (16%) and the phenomenon of Shí'í Islám out of which the Bábí and Bahá'í religions emerged. Almost all of the oriental Bahá'í literature is written from a Shí'í perspective. Because classic Bahá'í apologetics is Shí'í rooted, utilizing Shí'í proof-texts and informed by a Shí'í 'universe of discourse', Bahá'ís worldwide need to evolve an approach to the majority Sunní Muslim world and to many non- or quasi-Shí'í Muslim groups in preparation for the time when teaching the Muslim world becomes more of a priority.

In addition to teaching the Bahá'í Faith, Shoghi Effendi gave western Bahá'ís the supplementary task of communicating the grandeur of Islám and its Prophet Muhammad to westerners.(11) It is fairly clear that a proportion of both oriental and occidental Bahá'ís, unfortunately, do not fully appreciate the grandeur of Islám or the greatness of the Qur'án. Failure to appreciate the 'world of Islám' is a severe limitation since it was from this religious background that the Bábí and Bahá'í religions were born. Shoghi Effendi hoped that western Bahá'ís would enable all too often anti-Islámic westerners to appreciate the true greatness of Islám.

The study of Arabic and Persian is also an important part of Bahá'í scholarship. Scattered throughout Bahá'u'lláh's writings are various testimonies to the importance and greatness of the Arabic and Persian languages. They indicate that Bahá'ís could thoroughly agree with the saying, "Persian is the language of Paradise, but Arabic is the language of God."(12) Bahá'u'lláh referred to the Arabic language as linguistically incomparable; a matchless tongue of unsurpassed magnitude – "most eloquent" [afsah], "most comprehensive" [absat] and "of broadest scope" [awsa']. He also not infrequently characterized Persian as an extremely "sweet" [shirín] and "beloved" [mahbúb] language. In one Persian Tablet He stated that the Arabic language is "most excellent" [ahsán] while Persian is "supremely sweet" [ahlá].(13) Like the Bible which is largely in Hebrew (a Semitic language) and Greek (an Indo-European language), the Bahá'í revelation (= a new collection of Tablets or "Books" = a "Bible") is largely in a Semitic (= Arabic) and an Indo-European (= Persian) language. Just as Biblical scholars have studied the languages of the Bible, so Bahá'ís are in general exhorted, by Bahá'u'lláh and 'Abdu'l-Bahá as well as Shoghi Effendi in many Tablets or letters, to study these twin sacred languages of revelation. Relative to Persian, Abdu'l-Bahá on one occasion wrote, "Acquire the Persian tongue, so as to learn the meanings of the Divine words and know the Divine mysteries, to develop an eloquent speech and to translate the blessed Tablets of Bahá'u'lláh. The Persian language shall become noteworthy in this cycle; nay, rather, the people shall study it in all the world."(14)

'The Age of Aquarius'

Several thousand new religious movements and new age groups (membership something in excess of 111 million persons worldwide) need to be understood by Bahá'ís.(15) There is in the West, for example, a widespread and serious interest in the 'new age', esoteric and the occult (beyond a mere dabbling with ouija boards) as a means to self-understanding. Many major bookshops in the U.K. today have relatively little stock relating to the major world religions but a plethora of volumes about many aspects of New Age and related movements. Sometimes implicit in the new age/esoteric scene is an attempt to access actaully or allegedly pre-Christian (e.g. Celtic) or "primeval" beliefs and practises, partly as a result of disenchantment with contemporary religiosity ('Churchianity'). Theory and methods of divination (I Ching, Palmistry, Tarot, Geomancy) and 'Earth Mysteries' (ley-lines, stone and crop circles) for example, often excite great enthusiasm, as do certain Asian religious teachings (methods of Yoga, meditation and reincarnation). Interest in all sorts of allegedly 'new age' paraphernalia is quite widespread, e.g. tarot, crystals etc. Such persons as Eliphas Levi (1810-1875; the probable originator of the word occultism, from the French occultisme), Madame (Helena Petrova) Blavatsky (1831-1891) and the Armenian gnostic George I. Gurdjieff (?1877-1949) among many others, are revered. Interest in all manner of esoterica is evident in certain circles today. Knowledge of the Bible, of Moses and Jesus, is often virtually non-existent while knowledge of various living or mythical 'hierophants' is fairly widespread. Such Bahá'ís as are interested in this area should become acquainted with aspects of 'new age' philosophy and Bahá'í reactions to it through the study of sensible sources. Reference to some 'anti-cult material' may, in this respect, prove valuable – though a fundamentalist Christian bias might need to be taken into account.

Publications expressive of Bahá'í spirituality targeted towards this, and other groups and expressing something of the mystical dimension of the Bahá'í Faith desperately need to be written.(16) In a letter dated 8 December 1935 through his secretary Shoghi Effendi wrote,

Bahá'í dimensions of spirituality urgently need comparative exploration. Many aspects of the Bahá'í doctrines of the soul and of life after death/human immortality invite detailed study.(17) The distinctively Bahá'í view of the future of mankind, the vision of the emerging new age again invite comprehensive analysis and research. Both the perspective regarding the immediate and the more distant future would make the subject of useful papers and volumes. In other words, Bahá'ís need to spell out, in light of Shoghi Effendi's writings and other scriptural texts, our concept of the new age and its full realisation in the future.

The Humanities and Non-Religious Ideologies

A considerable number of Bahá'ís who have embarked upon further education have, or are today studying, aspects of technology or the practical sciences – especially branches of engineering. Generally speaking the sciences have had a greater prestige than the humanities (the arts and the social sciences) in most non-European countries. Sadly, this has led to a neglect or lack of interest by Bahá'ís in many fields within the humanities. Subjects that in certain circles were once considered a 'sheer waste of time' within the humanities (i.e. philosophy, theology, sociology), although considered relatively unimportant within contemporary technocratic society, are nonetheless central to Bahá'í researches. Bahá'ís cannot afford to have countless technicians and almost no philosphers, theologians and sociologists. Bahá'í dialogue demands experts within the humanities as well as within the practical sciences. Awareness of new theories, insights and perspectives within the humanities could be said to be just as centrally important as new medical discoveries. Within the field of economics, for example, there is a fast growing appreciation of the cultural context and moral dimension of macro-economic structures.

It is important for Bahá'ís to be able to communicate their faith to non-religious persons; to be able to vindicate the importance of religion and human spirituality. While the majority of the world's inhabitants are in one way or another "religious" there remain some 836 million agnostics (nearly the same number as Hindus and Buddhists collectively) and more than 225 million atheists. The religiosity of many Europeans has ebbed away. Bahá'í literature for the many non- or anti-religious groups still needs to be written, e.g. literature directed towards actual or lapsed communists, Marxist groups and all manner of secular ideologies.

Bahá'í research informed by modern theories needs to be done in many areas; for example, feminism and feminist movements,(18) theories of evolution, the artificial language movement and notions of an international language and script,(19) theories regarding the interface between science and religion,(20) educational psychology, psychotherapy, international affairs, the rise and fall of civilizations, etc.

Ideally, Bahá'í talks that touch upon these subjects need to be well-informed – to a greater or lesser extent depending on the 'audience' – by some relevant updated knowledge; a proportion of which will be "Bahá'í-like" or "quasi-Bahá'í". One example of a book that Bahá'ís can clearly benefit from reading is Joseph Mitsuo Kitagawa's The Quest for Human Unity, A Religious History.(21) Kitagawa's lucid volume should be studied by Bahá'ís as an aid and an inspiration towards the full-blown academic articulation of that Bahá'í world theology which is implicit in Bahá'í scripture. The Quest. . . is the kind of book, the theme of which should have previously been attempted by Bahá'í academics. Had Bahá'ís heeded Shoghi Effendi's words earlier this century about the need for Bahá'í scholarship, such an academically well-researched volume might have been written by a Bahá'í scholar to the glory of the Bahá'í world.

Some areas within the humanities have been largely neglected by Bahá'ís. The various branches of theology are something about which Bahá'ís need to be aware. There is much that can be learned from modern theologians about moral, metaphysical, hermeneutical and other issues. In the preface to the 1985 reissue of his useful publication Evil and the God of Love (London: Macmillan Press Ltd, 1985), John Hick(22) writes "the sheer crushing weight of the pains suffered by men, women and children, and also by the lower animals, including that inflicted by human greed, cruelty and malevolence, undoubtedly constitutes the biggest obstacle that there is to belief in an all-powerful and loving Creator (xiii). Bahá'ís desperately need to articulate their theodicy; their vindication of the love and justice of God in creating a world in which human "evil" (the multifarious expressions of the lower human 'self') currently dominates so many areas of socio-economic and political life. Bahá'í theologians are needed to highlight the importance of theistic religion as a force for global unity and world order.

Philosophy in addition, as pointed out by Shoghi Effendi, is not at all something which merely "begins and ends in words". Being philosophically informed is particularly important for Bahá'ís who are in dialogue with persons concerned with ethical, epistemological, theological and metaphysical issues. Too few Bahá'ís have to date grappled with this complicated but vital area.(23) The following passages, among many others from the Bahá'í writings, are worth bearing in mind.

Near the beginning of his Tablet to the entomologist and social reformer, the Bahá'í Dr. August Henri Forel (1848-1931), 'Abdu'l-Bahá writes:

Among the relevant passages in letters written on behalf of Shoghi Effendi we read, As early as 6 August 1933, Shoghi Effendi's hope for Bahá'í students was expressed as follows, Finally but not exhaustively in this connection, is the fact that, a few years before his passing, Shoghi Effendi lamented the fact that ". . . at present we have not had time to evolve the Bahá'í scholars who can deal with these subjects in detail, and take upon themselves to answer the abstruse points and the many unfounded doctrines which are advanced by modern philosophers" (from a letter written on behalf of Shoghi Effendi dated 22 April 1954, cited in BSB 5:1-2 [Jan 1991]: 81). Now is undoubtedly the time for some Bahá'í scholars to come to terms with, learn from and dialogue with exponents of modern philosophy.

Bahá'í Research

The field of Bahá'í scholarly research has many dimensions. As indicated in the above quotations Bahá'í scholars have the imperative duty to prepare themselves for the defence of the Bahá'í Faith against the attacks of intellectuals, academics and the general public. Difficult issues old and new will be raised by opponents from various religious and secular backgrounds. Narrow-minded and anti-Islámic fundamentalist Christians, for example, will highlight and attack the neo-Islámic dimensions of the Bahá'í Faith as well as the claims made by Bahá'u'lláh. Secular humanists will reject the Bahá'í theophany; the need for a new religion or religious solution to the world's problems. All manner of modern groups will decry the Bahá'í position on a multitude of issues. Bahá'ís will thus find it necessary to defend and justify their laws, teachings and practises.

Many aspects of Bábí and Bahá'í studies have yet to be clarified. Detailed aspects of the life of the Founder of the Bahá'í Faith and His revelation – about which little has been written or researched (e.g. the family of Bahá'u'lláh) – will be challenged, requiring detailed answers. One hundred years after the passing of the Founder of our Faith, we remain in need of a chronologically ordered list of His major and titled Tablets (alwáh) along with, where published, their locations and partial or complete translations. The same is to some extent true of the writings of 'Abdu'l-Bahá and Shoghi Effendi.

The publication, this centennial year, of the Most Holy Book of Bahá'u'lláh, the Kitáb-i-Aqdas [1873], will cause much discussion both within and without the Bahá'í community. Bahá'í legalism and related doctrines and practices need to be studied in light of contemporary socio-economic thought and jurisprudence. Many of the legalistic and non-legalistic aspects of the Kitáb-i-Aqdas invite detailed analysis and study (cf. the Persian 'Treasurehouse of Laws and Ordinances' [Ganjinih-i-hudúd wa ahkám] by the late Ishráq Khávari [d. Tehran 1972]). A Bahá'í philosophy of law has yet to be written. Bahá'í ethical philosophy is likewise a field requiring scholastic work, as is the Bábí, Islámic and wider religious roots of the "Most Holy Book". The comparative study of Bábí-Bahá'í law is a major desideratum. In his God Passes By, Shoghi Effendi refers to the Kitáb-i-Aqdas as the "Charter" of the "New World Order" of Bahá'u'lláh (see 213ff). The implications of this and other designations of the "brightest emanation of the mind of Bahá'u'lláh", this "New Jerusalem" of Bahá'í law, again invite intellectual pilgrimage.

In summary, scholarship can make important contributions to the present and future protection of the Bahá'í community and the vindication of its teachings. The importance of specifically Bahá'í research cannot be over-emphasized. Bahá'í scriptural commentary, Bahá'í theology(ies), Bahá'í philosophy (epistemology and metaphysics), Bahá'í history, Bahá'í hermeneutics and many other intellectual dimensions of the new revelation are in their infancy. Important contributions to their gradually evolving existence and maturity can be made by all who make a sincere and disciplined effort.

Having made the foregoing points it is not at all my intention to inhibit people from Bahá'í scholarship as a result of highlighting the enormity of the work to be done. All can contribute who strive to increase their overall Bahá'í knowledge and specialize in an area they feel attracted to. Pray for guidance and insight. Meditate upon the "Word of God" and enjoy the ecstasy that is Bahá'í scholarship.




Works Cited


End Notes
  1. This paper was originally presented on my behalf at the U.K. National Bahá'í Societies Conference held in York (England) in 1992. It has been slightly revised and expanded for the purposes of this publication. I am grateful to Gillian Lambden, Robert Parry and Martin Woods for looking over various drafts of this presentation. I am also grateful to Seena Fazel for his various editorial suggestions.
  2. Among them is Peter Khan, "Bahá'í Scholarship", Bahá'í Studies Bulletin 2.1 (June 1983): 63-72; Bahá'í Scholarship, An excerpt from a letter to the Continental Boards of Counsellors from the International Teaching Centre New Zealand: N.S.A of the Bahá'ís of New Zealand, 1985. Cf. Stephen Lambden, "Some Thoughts on the Establishment of a Permanent Bahá'í Studies Centre and Research Institute", Bahá'í Studies Bulletin 3.3 (Sept. 1985): 41-87 - also partly printed in Dialogue II.2/3 (1988): 34-40.
  3. A Western academically informed approach to Bahá'í scholarship is not, it should be understood, the only legitimate one. As the title indicates, this paper is also largely written from a Religious Studies stance.
  4. The tradition is cited and referred to as a "celebrated hadíth (Holy Tradition)" by 'Abdu'l-Bahá in his The Secret of Divine Civilization (26).
  5. The utilization of academically informed methodologies and academic style is indispensable to the writing of books and papers which the non-Bahá'í intellectual world will take seriously. This does not necessitate academic training but involves learning from contemporary academic publications.
  6. See, for example, Alexander King, "The holistic path to a global society" in International Social Science Journal 131 (February 1992): 57-67.
  7. Available from Mazda Publications, P.O. Box 2603, Costa Mesa, California, U.S.A. Tel: 714-7515252; Fax. no.: 714-7514805.
  8. The statistical details given in this section are largely as found in Britannica Book of the Year cited in World Religious Statistics (299). Comp. D.B. Barrett. Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica, 1991.
  9. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988. [ISBN 0 521 34344 5]. Of possible interest to Bahá'í scholars is Peter Masefield's Divine Revelation in Pali Buddhism (London: George Allen and Unwin, 1986; ISBN 0 04 2941326) - a volume which "presents evidence which makes it clear that salvation in early Buddhism depended upon the saving intervention of the Buddha's grace and that, contrary to the now commonly accepted view of Buddha as a rationalist philosophy of self-endeavour, the picture that emerges from a careful examination of the Canonical texts is one of Buddha as a revealed religion in every sense of the term with the Buddha as every bit the divine guru" (from the jacket cover).
  10. A plethora of sometimes important books about religious pluralism and "world theology" have been published in the last decade. Notable among them are-: John Hick (Ed.), On Grading Religions, The Problems of Religious Pluralism. Basingstoke: Macmillan Press, 1985; Paul F. Knitter, No Other Name? London: SCM Press, 1985; John Hick & Paul F. Knitter (Eds.), The Myth of Christian Uniqueness. London: SCM Press, 1987 [ISBN 0-33401066-7]; Stanley Samartha, One Christ - Many Religions. Towards A Revised Christology. Maryknoll, New York: Orbis Books, 1991. [ISBN 088344-733-9]; D. J. Krieger, The New Universalism. Foundations for a Global Theology. Maryknoll, New York: Orbis Books, 1991. [ISBN 0-88344-727-4] See also Jack McLean's "Prologemena to Bahá'í Theology," in The Journal of Bahá'í Studies 5.1 (1992): 25-67.
  11. See Stephen Lambden, Muhammad and the Qur'án: Some Introductory Notes in The Bahá'í Studies Review 1.1 (1991): 8-14. A brief book list is given in this article of English language works worth studying about Muhammad and Islám. Supplementary to this list the following title should be noted, Ian Richard Netton, A Popular Dictionary of Islám. London: Curzon Press 1992. [ISBN O 7007 0233 4 / £9.99 (PBk)] and Atlantic Highlands, N.J.: Humanities Press International, 1992 [ISBN 0 391 03756 0]. Netton, conscious of the fact that "The quality of the books which deal with Islám, in both the West and the East, is . . . various, embracing the good and the bad, the profoundly bigoted and the devoutly sympathetic" (5), has produced an excellent, academically sound and informative dictionary. Bahá'ís anxious to acquire an introductory Dictionary of Islám would be well-advised to purchase this useful work.
  12. This "saying" (hadíth?) is cited in C. Glasse's entry Arabic (47) in his The Concise Encyclopedia of Islam (London: Stacey International, 1989).
  13. See Payám-i-Ásmání 108; Ganj-i-Shayigan 210ff. For further details, see F.Froughi & Stephen Lambden, 'A Tablet of Bahá'u'lláh Commenting on that verse of the Most-Holy Book [Kitáb-i-Aqdas] about the need for an International Language and Script' in BSB 4.3-4 (April 1990): 28-49.
  14. Tablets of 'Abdul Bahá Abbas, Vol. II: 306.
  15. Peter Clarke writes in his essay "Introduction to New Religious Movements" (Chapter 13 in S. Sutherland and P. Clarke (eds.), The Study of Religion, Traditional and New Religion (London: Routeledge, 1988/91), "Over four hundred 'new' religions have emerged in Britain alone since 1945 and many of these and others are to be found in the rest of Western Europe. The figure is very much higher for North America and post-war Japan has also witnessed, as have parts of sub-Saharan Africa from the 1890s, what amounts to a thriving industry in new religions" (149).
  16. A preliminary step, a basic start towards a Bahá'í approach to adherents of 'new age' and related groups is the pamphlet produced by a Warwick (England, U.K.) based group who have produced a single page leaflet entitled, The New Age (Warwick: Local Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of Warwick: n.d. [1992]).
  17. John Bowker's recent The Meanings of Death (Cambridge: CUP, 1991; ISBN 0-521-39117-2) is worthy of consultation.
  18. See Ruth R. Pearson, Women and Peace, Theoretical, Historical and Practical Perspectives (London: Croom Helm, 1987, ISBN 0-7099-4068-8). Also worth consulting in terms of modern feminism and world religions is the volume edited by Paula M. Cooey et al., After Patriarchy, Feminist Transformations of the World Religions (Maryknoll, New York: Orbis Books, 1992).
  19. A first rate appraisal of the artificial language movement is Andrew Large's, The Artificial Language Movement (Oxford: Basil Blackwell Ltd, 1985).
  20. An excellent guide to the historical relation between science and religion is John Brooke's Science and Religion: Some Historical Perspectives (Cambridge: CUP, 1991; ISBN 0-521-28324-4). The richness of the complexity of the interface between science and religion is here surveyed along with a very useful bibliographical essay. Also of interest in this respect is Ian G. Barbour, Religion in an Age of Science (= The Gifford Lectures 1989-91 Volume 1; London: SCM Press, 1990, cf. the same author's classic, Issues in Science and Religion [London: SCM, 1966]) as is Angela Tilby's Science and the Soul, New Cosmology, the Self and God (London: SPCK, 1992; ISBN 0-281-04579-8).
  21. (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1990, ISBN 0-8006-2422-X) For a review of this book see BSB 6.2-3 (Feb 1992): 108-110. Review notices printed on the jacket cover of this volume are, a) by Ninian Smart of the University of California, Santa Barbara), "This book is a vital contribution to our new global sense from Joseph Kitagawa, one of the architects and the chief sustainer of the famous Chicago history-of-religions program. Kitagawa has written a rather special history of the human quest for unity through religions. He rightly recognizes the importance of outer as well as inner religious facts, and in presenting his narrative he both informs and enlightens." b) by Annmarie Schimmel of Harvard University, "Kitagawa's book leads the reader through the history of the different religions from the beginning of the human quest for God. He shows lucidly how the elements of inner and outer meaning in each religion have manifested themselves in time and space. In the great tradition of history and phenomenology of religion, the author makes us aware of the necessity of understanding each other's tradition through respecting and recognizing the one truth that is inherent in all of them, though perhaps hidden behind the veil of time-bound external forms." Another important review by Ursula King can be found in Numen XXXVIII.2 (1992): 278-80. She commences her review by writing "The theme of this book is an important and timely one. It expresses the imperative for human unity and traces numerous attempts towards its realization through the history of religions East and West."
  22. Much can be learned from a selective reading of the numerous publications of John Hick, the Danforth Professor of the Philosophy of Religion at Claremont Graduate School (California, U.S.A.). He is one of the most significant living writers in modern theology and the philosophy of religion. A useful collection of his writings is Paul Badham (ed.), A John Hick Reader (London : Macmillan Press Ltd, 1990; ISBN 0-333-48730-3). Cf. also in this connection John Bowker's Problems of Suffering in Religions of the World (Cambridge: CUP, 1970; ISBN 0-521-09903-x).
  23. Robert Parry (a doctoral candidate in the area of philosophical theology) has recently completed an article, Philosophical Theology and Bahá'í Scholarship. BSB 6.4 -7.2 (Oct 1992): 66-91.

Holy-Writings.com v2.7 (213613) © 2005 - 2021 Emanuel V. Towfigh & Peter Hoerster | Impressum | Change Interface Language: EN