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"lighten and uplift
them, so that they may soar on the wings of the Divine verses"
-Baha'u'llah

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Devotional
Program - Declaration of the Bab |
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1. All majesty and glory, O my God, and all dominion and light
and grandeur and splendour be unto Thee… I bear witness that
Thou Thyself alone art the sole expression of Thine
attributes, that the praise of no one besides Thee can ever
attain to Thy holy court nor can Thine attributes ever be
fathomed by anyone other than Thyself. Glory be unto Thee,
Thou art exalted above the description of anyone save Thyself,
since it is beyond human conception to befittingly magnify Thy
virtues or to comprehend the inmost reality of Thine Essence.
Far be it from Thy glory that Thy creatures should describe
Thee or that any one besides Thyself should ever know Thee. I
have known Thee, O my God, by reason of Thy making Thyself
known unto me, for hadst Thou not revealed Thyself unto me, I
would not have known Thee. I worship Thee by virtue of Thy
summoning me unto Thee, for had it not been for Thy summons I
would not have worshipped Thee.
-The Báb:
Selections from the Báb, Pages: 202-203
2. Verily I
say, this is the Day in which mankind can behold the Face,
and hear the Voice, of the Promised One. The Call of God
hath been raised, and the light of His countenance hath been
lifted up upon men. It behoveth every man to blot out the
trace of every idle word from the tablet of his heart, and
to gaze, with an open and unbiased mind, on the signs of His
Revelation, the proofs of His Mission, and the tokens of His
glory. Great indeed is this Day! The allusions made to it in
all the sacred Scriptures as the Day of God attest its
greatness.
-Bahá'u'lláh:
Gleanings, Pages: 10-11
3. As for the
Báb - may my soul be His sacrifice! - at a youthful age,
that is to say, when He had reached the twenty-fifth year of
His blessed life, He stood forth to proclaim His Cause. It
was universally admitted by the Shi'is that He had never
studied in any school and had not acquired knowledge from
any teacher; all the people of Shiraz bear witness to this.
Nevertheless, He suddenly appeared before the people,
endowed with the most complete erudition. Although He was
but a merchant, He confounded all the ulama of Persia. All
alone, in a way which is beyond imagination, He upheld the
Cause among the Persians, who are renowned for their
religious fanaticism. This illustrious Soul arose with such
power that He shook the supports of the religion, of the
morals, the conditions, the habits and the customs of
Persia, and instituted new rules, new laws and a new
religion. Though the great personages of the State, nearly
all the clergy, and the public men arose to destroy and
annihilate Him, He alone withstood them and moved the whole
of Persia.
Many ulama and
public men, as well as other people, joyfully sacrificed
their lives in His Cause, and hastened to the plain of
martyrdom.
The government,
the nation, the doctors of divinity and the great personages
desired to extinguish His light, but they could not do so.
At last His moon arose, His star shone forth, His
foundations became firmly established, and His dawning-place
became brilliant. He imparted divine education to an
unenlightened multitude and produced marvelous results on
the thoughts, morals, customs and conditions of the
Persians. He announced the glad tidings of the manifestation
of the Sun of Bahá to His followers and prepared them to
believe.
The appearance
of such wonderful signs and great results; the effects
produced upon the minds of the people, and upon the
prevailing ideas; the establishment of the foundations of
progress; and the organization of the principles of success
and prosperity by a young merchant, constitute the greatest
proof that He was a perfect Educator.
-`Abdu'l-Bahá:
Some Answered Questions, Pages: 25-26
4. Ages rolled
away, until they attained their consummation in this, the
Lord of days, the Day whereon the Day Star of the Bayan
manifested itself above the horizon of mercy, the Day in
which the Beauty of the All-Glorious shone forth in the
exalted person of Ali-Muhammad, the Báb. No sooner did He
reveal Himself, than all the people rose up against Him. By
some He was denounced as one that hath uttered slanders
against God, the Almighty, the Ancient of Days. Others
regarded Him as a man smitten with madness, an allegation
which I, Myself, have heard from the lips of one of the
divines. Still others disputed His claim to be the
Mouthpiece of God, and stigmatized Him as one who had stolen
and used as his the words of the Almighty, who had perverted
their meaning, and mingled them with his own. The Eye of
Grandeur weepeth sore for the things which their mouths have
uttered, while they continue to rejoice upon their
seats.
"God,"
said He, "is My witness, O people! I am come to you
with a Revelation from the Lord, your God, the Lord of your
fathers of old. Look not, O people, at the things ye
possess. Look rather at the things God hath sent down unto
you. This, surely, will be better for you than the whole of
creation, could ye but perceive it. Repeat the gaze, O
people, and consider the testimony of God and His proof
which are in your possession, and compare them unto the
Revelation sent down unto you in this Day, that the truth,
the infallible truth, may be indubitably manifested unto
you. Follow not, O people, the steps of the Evil One; follow
ye the Faith of the All-Merciful, and be ye of them that
truly believe. What would it profit man, if he were to fail
to recognize the Revelation of God? Nothing whatever. To
this Mine own Self, the Omnipotent, the Omniscient, the
All-Wise, will testify."
The more He
exhorted them, the fiercer grew their enmity, till, at the
last, they put Him to death with shameful cruelty. The curse
of God be upon the oppressors!
-Bahá'u'lláh:
Gleanings, Pages: 144-147
5. This is 23
May, the anniversary of the message and Declaration of the
Báb. It is a blessed day and the dawn of manifestation, for
the appearance of the Báb was the early light of the true
morn, whereas the manifestation of the Blessed Beauty,
Bahá'u'lláh, was the shining forth of the sun. Therefore,
it is a blessed day, the inception of the heavenly bounty,
the beginning of the divine effulgence. On this day in 1844
the Báb was sent forth heralding and proclaiming the
Kingdom of God, announcing the glad tidings of the coming of
Bahá'u'lláh and withstanding the opposition of the whole
Persian nation. Some of the Persians followed Him. For this
they suffered the most grievous difficulties and severe
ordeals. They withstood the tests with wonderful power and
sublime heroism. Thousands were cast into prison, punished,
persecuted and martyred. Their homes were pillaged and
destroyed, their possessions confiscated. They sacrificed
their lives most willingly and remained unshaken in their
faith to the very end. Those wonderful souls are the lamps
of God, the stars of sanctity shining gloriously from the
eternal horizon of the will of God.
The Báb was
subjected to bitter persecution in Shiraz, where He first
proclaimed His mission and message. A period of famine
afflicted that region, and the Báb journeyed to Isfahan.
There the learned men rose against Him in great hostility.
He was arrested and sent to Tabriz. From thence He was
transferred to Maku and finally imprisoned in the strong
castle of Chihriq. Afterward He was martyred in
Tabriz.
This is merely
an outline of the history of the Báb. He withstood all
persecutions and bore every suffering and ordeal with
unflinching strength. The more His enemies endeavored to
extinguish that flame, the brighter it became. Day by day
His Cause spread and strengthened. During the time when He
was among the people He was constantly heralding the coming
of Bahá'u'lláh. In all His Books and Tablets He mentioned
Bahá'u'lláh and announced the glad tidings of His
manifestation, prophesying that He would reveal Himself in
the ninth year. He said that in the ninth year "you
will attain to all happiness"; in the ninth year
"you will be blessed with the meeting of the Promised
One of Whom I have spoken." He mentioned the Blessed
Perfection, Bahá'u'lláh, by the title "Him Whom God
shall make manifest." In brief, that blessed Soul
offered His very life in the pathway of Bahá'u'lláh, even
as it is recorded in historical writings and records. In His
first Book, the Best of Stories, He says, "O Remnant of
God! I am wholly sacrificed to Thee; I am content with
curses in Thy path; I crave nought but to be slain in Thy
love; and God, the Supreme, sufficeth as an eternal
protection."
Consider how
the Báb endured difficulties and tribulations; how He gave
His life in the Cause of God; how He was attracted to the
love of the Blessed Beauty, Bahá'u'lláh; and how He
announced the glad tidings of His manifestation. We must
follow His heavenly example; we must be self-sacrificing and
aglow with the fire of the love of God. We must partake of
the bounty and grace of the Lord, for the Báb has
admonished us to arise in service to the Cause of God, to be
absolutely severed from all else save God during the day of
the Blessed Perfection, Bahá'u'lláh, to be completely
attracted by the love of Bahá'u'lláh, to love all humanity
for His sake, to be lenient and merciful to all for Him and
to upbuild the oneness of the world of humanity. Therefore,
this day, 23 May, is the anniversary of a blessed
event.
-`Abdu'l-Bahá:
Promulgation of Universal Peace*, Pages: 138-139
6. May 23,
1844, signalizes the commencement of the most turbulent
period of the Heroic Age of the Bahá'í Era, an age which
marks the opening of the most glorious epoch in the greatest
cycle which the spiritual history of mankind has yet
witnessed. No more than a span of nine short years marks the
duration of this most spectacular, this most tragic, this
most eventful period of the first Bahá'í century. It was
ushered in by the birth of a Revelation whose Bearer
posterity will acclaim as the "Point round Whom the
realities of the Prophets and Messengers revolve," and
terminated with the first stirrings of a still more potent
Revelation, "whose day," Bahá'u'lláh Himself
affirms, "every Prophet hath announced," for which
"the soul of every Divine Messenger hath
thirsted," and through which "God hath proved the
hearts of the entire company of His Messengers and
Prophets"…
The opening
scene of the initial act of this great drama was laid in the
upper chamber of the modest residence of the son of a mercer
of Shiraz, in an obscure corner of that city. The time was
the hour before sunset, on the 22nd day of May, 1844. The
participants were the Báb, a twenty-five year old siyyid,
of pure and holy lineage, and the young Mulla Husayn, the
first to believe in Him. Their meeting immediately before
that interview seemed to be purely fortuitous. The interview
itself was protracted till the hour of dawn. The Host
remained closeted alone with His guest, nor was the sleeping
city remotely aware of the import of the conversation they
held with each other. No record has passed to posterity of
that unique night save the fragmentary but highly
illuminating account that fell from the lips of Mulla Husayn.
"I sat
spellbound by His utterance, oblivious of time and of those
who awaited me," he himself has testified, after
describing the nature of the questions he had put to his
Host and the conclusive replies he had received from Him,
replies which had established beyond the shadow of a doubt
the validity of His claim to be the promised Qa'im.
"Suddenly the call of the Mu'adhdhin, summoning the
faithful to their morning prayer, awakened me from the state
of ecstasy into which I seemed to have fallen. All the
delights, all the ineffable glories, which the Almighty has
recounted in His Book as the priceless possessions of the
people of Paradise - these I seemed to be experiencing that
night. Methinks I was in a place of which it could be truly
said: `Therein no toil shall reach us, and therein no
weariness shall touch us;' `no vain discourse shall they
hear therein, nor any falsehood, but only the cry,
"Peace! Peace!"'; `their cry therein shall be,
"Glory to Thee, O God!" and their salutation
therein, "Peace!", and the close of their cry,
"Praise be to God, Lord of all creatures!"' Sleep
had departed from me that night. I was enthralled by the
music of that voice which rose and fell as He chanted; now
swelling forth as He revealed verses of the Qayyumu'l-Asma',
again acquiring ethereal, subtle harmonies as He uttered the
prayers He was revealing. At the end of each invocation, He
would repeat this verse: `Far from the glory of thy Lord,
the All-Glorious, be that which His creatures affirm of Him!
And peace be upon His Messengers! And praise be to God, the
Lord of all beings!'"
"This
Revelation," Mulla Husayn has further testified,
"so suddenly and impetuously thrust upon me, came as a
thunderbolt which, for a time, seemed to have benumbed my
faculties. I was blinded by its dazzling splendor and
overwhelmed by its crushing force. Excitement, joy, awe, and
wonder stirred the depths of my soul. Predominant among
these emotions was a sense of gladness and strength which
seemed to have transfigured me. How feeble and impotent, how
dejected and timid, I had felt previously! Then I could
neither write nor walk, so tremulous were my hands and feet.
Now, however, the knowledge of His Revelation had galvanized
my being. I felt possessed of such courage and power that
were the world, all its peoples and its potentates, to rise
against me, I would, alone and undaunted, withstand their
onslaught. The universe seemed but a handful of dust in my
grasp. I seemed to be the voice of Gabriel personified,
calling unto all mankind: `Awake, for, lo! the morning Light
has broken. Arise, for His Cause is made manifest. The
portal of His grace is open wide; enter therein, O peoples
of the world! For He Who is your promised One is
come!'"
A more
significant light, however, is shed on this episode, marking
the Declaration of the Mission of the Báb, by the perusal
of that "first, greatest and mightiest" of all
books in the Babi Dispensation, the celebrated commentary on
the Surih of Joseph, the first chapter of which, we are
assured, proceeded, in its entirety, in the course of that
night of nights from the pen of its divine Revealer. The
description of this episode by Mulla Husayn, as well as the
opening pages of that Book attest the magnitude and force of
that weighty Declaration. A claim to be no less than the
mouthpiece of God Himself, promised by the Prophets of
bygone ages; the assertion that He was, at the same time,
the Herald of One immeasurably greater than Himself; the
summons which He trumpeted forth to the kings and princes of
the earth; the dire warnings directed to the Chief
Magistrate of the realm, Muhammad Shah; the counsel imparted
to Haji Mirza Aqasi to fear God, and the peremptory command
to abdicate his authority as grand vizir of the Shah and
submit to the One Who is the "Inheritor of the earth
and all that is therein"; the challenge issued to the
rulers of the world proclaiming the self-sufficiency of His
Cause, denouncing the vanity of their ephemeral power, and
calling upon them to "lay aside, one and all, their
dominion," and deliver His Message to "lands in
both the East and the West" - these constitute the
dominant features of that initial contact that marked the
birth, and fixed the date, of the inception of the most
glorious era in the spiritual life of mankind.
With this
historic Declaration the dawn of an Age that signalizes the
consummation of all ages had broken. The first impulse of a
momentous Revelation had been communicated to the one
"but for whom," according to the testimony of the
Kitab-i-Iqan, "God would not have been established upon
the seat of His mercy, nor ascended the throne of eternal
glory."
-Shoghi
Effendi: God Passes By, Pages: 3-8
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