In response to Gilberto's question on Righteous Warfare...
part 1 of 4
`Abdu'l-Bahá - The Secret of Divine Civilization pgs. 55-59

Today we have closed our eyes to every righteous act and have
sacrificed the abiding happiness of society to our own
transitory profit. We regard fanaticism and zealotry as
redounding to our credit and honor, and not content with this,
we denounce one another and plot each other's ruin, and
whenever we wish to put on a show of wisdom and learning, of
virtue and godliness, we set about mocking and reviling this
one and that. "The ideas of such a one," we say, "are wide of
the mark, and so-and-so's behavior leaves much to be desired.
The religious observances of Zayd are few and far between, and
Amr is not firm in his faith. So-and-so's opinions smack of
Europe. Fundamentally, Blank thinks of nothing but his own
name and fame. Last night when the congregation stood up to
pray, the row was out of line, and it is not permissible to
follow a different leader. No rich man has died this month,
and nothing has been offered to charity in memory of the
Prophet. The edifice of religion has crumbled, the foundations
of faiths have been blown to the winds. The carpet of belief
has been rolled up, the tokens of certitude blotted out; the
whole world has fallen into error; when it comes to repelling
tyranny all are soft and remiss. Days and months have passed
away, and these villages and estates still belong to the same
owners as they did last year. In this town there used to be
seventy different governments functioning in good order, but
the number has steadily decreased; there are only twenty-five
left now, as a memento. It used to be that two hundred
contradictory judgments were handed down by the same mufti in
any one day, now we hardly get fifty. In those days there were
crowds of people who were all brainsick with litigation, and
now they rest in peace; today the plaintiff would be defeated
and the defendant victorious, tomorrow the plaintiff won the
case and the defendant lost it -- but now this excellent
practice has been abandoned too. What is this heathenish
religion, this idolatrous kind of error! Alas for the Law,
alas for the Faith, alas for all these calamities! O Brothers
in the Faith! This is surely the end of the world! The
Judgment is coming!"

With words such as these they assault the minds of the
helpless masses and disturb the hearts of the already
bewildered poor, who know nothing of the true state of affairs
and the real basis for all such talk, and remain completely
unaware of the fact that a thousand selfish purposes are
concealed behind the supposedly religious eloquence of certain
individuals. They imagine that speakers of this type are
motivated by virtuous zeal, when the truth is that such
individuals keep up a great hue and cry because they see their
own personal ruin in the welfare of the masses, and believe
that if the people's eyes are opened, their own light will go
out. Only the keenest insight will detect the fact that if the
hearts of these individuals were really impelled by
righteousness and the fear of God, the fragrance of it would,
like musk, be spreading everywhere. Nothing in the world can
ever be supported by words alone.

But these ill-omened owls have done a wrong,
And learned to sing as the white falcon sings.
And what of Sheba's message that the lapwing brings
If the bittern learn to sing the lapwing's song?[1]
[1 Cf. Qur'án 27:20 ff.]

The spiritually learned, those who have derived infinite
significance and wisdom from the Book of Divine Revelation,
and whose illumined hearts draw inspiration from the unseen
world of God, certainly exert their efforts to bring about the
supremacy of the true followers of God, in all respects and
above all peoples, and they toil and struggle to make use of
every agency that will conduce to progress. If any man
neglects these high purposes he can never prove acceptable in
the sight of God; he stands out with all his shortcomings and
claims perfection, and destitute, pretends to wealth.

One sluggish, blind and surly's a poor thing,
"A lump of flesh, without a foot or wing."
How far is he who apes and makes a show
From the illumined, who doth truly know.
One but an echo, though it's clear and sharp,
And one, the Psalmist David with his harp.

Knowledge, purity, devotion, discipline, independence, have
nothing to do with outer appearance and dress. Once in the
course of My travels I heard an eminent personage make the
following excellent remark, the wit and charm of which remain
in memory: "Not every cleric's turban is a proof of continence
and knowledge; not every layman's hat a sign of ignorance and
immorality. How many a hat has proudly raised the banner of
knowledge, how many a turban pulled down the Law of God!"

The third element of the utterance under discussion is,
"opposes his passions." How wonderful are the implications of
this deceptively easy, all-inclusive phrase. This is the very
foundation of every laudable human quality; indeed, these few
words embody the light of the world, the impregnable basis of
all the spiritual attributes of human beings. This is the
balance wheel of all behavior, the means of keeping all man's
good qualities in equilibrium.

For desire is a flame that has reduced to ashes uncounted
lifetime harvests of the learned, a devouring fire that even
the vast sea of their accumulated knowledge could never
quench. How often has it happened that an individual who was
graced with every attribute of humanity and wore the jewel of
true understanding, nevertheless followed after his passions
until his excellent qualities passed beyond moderation and he
was forced into excess. His pure intentions changed to evil
ones, his attributes were no longer put to uses worthy of
them, and the power of his desires turned him aside from
righteousness and its rewards into ways that were dangerous
and dark. A good character is in the sight of God and His
chosen ones and the possessors of insight, the most excellent
and praiseworthy of all things, but always on condition that
its center of emanation should be reason and knowledge and its
base should be true moderation. Were the implications of this
subject to be developed as they deserve the work would grow
too long and our main theme would be lost to view.

Continued ... part 2


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