A
arthra
Guest
I don’t know when Ron may be back to follow up so please excuse my post…Hi Ron
It’s great to have you here.
The Bahai is a very interesting and wonderful one.
I have been to the temple in Delhi and there is a small Bahai group here in my hometown that are really wonderful people and good friends of mine. The mother of one of them recently wrote the Bahai section of the UK National School Religious Education curriculum.
However, I really must agree with Steve.
My biggest issue with Bahai’ism is that it is obviously a bit of a pick and mix and steal from other religions and claim that it is standing on their shoulders and that it’s the Bahais that ‘truly’ understand what all those other religion’s founders really taught.
It is a bit like Muhammed’s pinching from Christianity and Judaism in order to give his new religion more credibility.
Keep posting Ron.
God bless.
I think what you are concerned about is that the Baha’i Faith (It was called Bahaism in the early twentieth century but now usually referred to as ‘Baha’i faith’) is a mere syncratic borrowing of various religions…syncretism if you will…
and I think that’s understandable to a degree looking at it from the outside perhaps as you will see people with Christian backgrounds maybe acclimating overtime to the Faith… It takes in my view at least a year for someone who is new to the Faith to shall we say absorb it’s culture of being a Baha’i … and to understand it more fully.
Also it’s possible that someoen might assume we are only syncretists because we will sometimes in discussing the Faith agree with maybe some concepts that are known to our listeners.
The Faith is primarily based on the revelations received by Baha’u’llah, the Bab and the interpretations of Abdul-Baha and Shoghi Effendi…
reference.bahai.org/en/
So if you were to say read these you would have an idea that our primary source is the revelation rather than say some kind of planned absorbtion of other religions around us.
The revelations of Baha’u’llah and the Bab and associated interpretations were in a social and historical context … primarily in the Middle East in Iran, Iraq, Turkey and the Holy Land between 1844 and 1957…
The Faith also has it’s own Calendar, Holy Days, community and Writings that I think you’ll find are quite unique but also give due reverence to past dispensations.