Servant in saying Jesus did not claim to be God ontologically (which we could dispute), you have admitted to my premise there is a dichotomy between us. It is not as was said before, a false dichotomy, but a real and strikingly different belief.
My friend, the only dichotomy that exists is that you claim to have ontologiocal knowledge about God, whereas I am simply saying “I am a humble human being who would never make such a claim”
How can you claim to have any ontological knowledge about God? God is by definition beyond a human description. I don’t care if the Church says this or that about God, and whether you believe that the Church is the absolute embodiment of the Holy Spirit. I would suggest that this is a “DREAM” my friend.
The moment you claim ontology, or a Church claims ontology, it automatically eliminates the whole concept of epistemology. What sort of God can be described by a human being?
Ha! Not one that I would worship. The whole premise of worship is submission to a Great One (that doesn’t imply “unloving” or “impersonal”) and if we can ontologically put our fingers on His nature, then He immediately loses His greatnes
The truth is we don’t understand the true nature of God. So how can you claim to have ontological understanding? As a result, its really not relevant to my human existence. I love and worship a God, and the only way I can even approach Him is by approaching Baha’u’llah, and worship the unique Divine attributes He manifested, thats it…anything beyond that is arrogance in the face of God in my humble opinion…
If Jesus is ontologically God, then why does a Muslims prayer get answered? Why does a Jews prayers get answered? A Jew despises Jesus for the blasphemous claims that He would make. They pray to G_d, not Jesus. They turn their backs to Jesus, yet they lead just as abundant a life as Christians. Why is that?
You have conceded we worship that which is not God. If you will continue to deny that we contradict each other, that in reality we worship the same God despite the quran telling me I’m committing shirk and going to hell for it, then I can only conclude the bahai do not care about God.
What?? How do you conclude that Baha’is do not care about God? Where is that stemming from? All we say is, were it not for Jesus and Baha’u’llah, Abraham, Moses etc, we would not even know a God existed. He does exist, but the closest we can get to Him is Jesus, Baha’u’llah, Abraham, Moses etc
Of course we contradict each other. You claim ontological knowledge. I claim epistemological knowledge. Baha’u’llah and Jesus had ontological knowledge. I can only dream of touching the shoreline of His ocean of knowledge. They created a new heaven and a new earth the moment they said “BE”…They define reality. I get a warped understanding of that reality…
They care more about being good, than recognising who and what God has done for us.
Baha’is care about what God has done for us. Where is this coming from??
I recite the prayers for thankfullness every single day
Please, try to be honest in your learnings about the Baha’i Faith
That is one of the odd things in bahai, there is no sense of the sinful self that is in rebellion against God, that we are totally dependant on God for all things. There is only the sense in the creation who can make themselves perfect, regardless of what they believe.
Again, where does this come from???

Baha’is are NOTHING without the Holy Spirit that is working through each and every one of us. We recognize the sinful self, yet, through prayer, reflection and conscious effort, we draw on the grace and confirmations of the Almighty to guide us towards a life of fulfillment, aligning ourselves to perform deeds which are in conformity with the Will of God for today.
Again, please, express what you know about the Faith, not what you assume. It makes dialogue a lot more fruitful…
As for your question which is blatantly obvious in its intent, I refuse to answer within the limited answers you have given. Neither are living according to the will of God, the Catholic who does not practice the faith, nor the Muslim who denies God.
Good answer
Faith and works are inseparable.
"These twin duties are inseparable. Neither is acceptable without the other"
…however, when an individual fulfills his duties of deeds which are in accordance with teh Will of God, empirical science and religion merge together, and FAITH develops accordingly.
Every day, I see how an atheist, or a pagan, comes and joins the ranks of servants contributing towards creating a new heaven and a new earth as envisaged by Baha’u’llah, and having empirically SEEN with their own eyes, the unique transformations that they can contribute to within society, transformations that bring about sustainable change and empowerment for the common good of all, then, and ONLY THEN, do they develop Faith in an ALMIGHTY LORD that has His hands working through His humble agents on this earth. The twin duties are thereby
fulfilled…