May 19. On this date in 1994, the Universal House of Justice addressed a letter to the National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States regarding the functioning of Bahá'í Administration institutions, stating "The Counselors are members of a continental, as distinct from a national, institution, and they occupy a rank higher than that of the National Spiritual Assembly"
The Universal House of Justice
19 May 1994
The National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá’ís of the United States
Dear Bahá’í Friends,
We
recall with much joy and deep gratitude to Bahá’u’lláh your presence in
the Holy Land only a short while ago during the month of the Fast. Your
urgent request to which we acceded by meeting
with all nine of your members in intensive consultations over a period
of three days—a new fact of history in itself—initiated another phase in
the evolution of your Assembly and reinforced the bonds that bind the American Bahá’í community to the World Center of the Faith. Our hearts were touched by the candor, courage, and sincerity with which your members presented your concerns,
as well as by the spirit of optimism you displayed despite the
overwhelming challenges and burdens which prompted your request for a
meeting with us.
Having considered the
various points and queries you raised, we are now able to respond to
those which fall under the broad categories of teaching, relations
between your National Spiritual Assembly and the Continental Counselors, and the functioning of your Assembly.
Regarding
your "Vision in Action" initiative, you reported evidences of a
tremendous response, some movement, and some expansion; furthermore, the
stimulus of the recent Atlanta conference spearheaded by the Continental Counselors
caused a marked acceleration of activities. In sum, the friends have
seldom been more visibly active, but growth is slow; you feel the
community has for some time been on the threshold of a breakthrough
which remains elusive. The degeneration of society, as manifested by the
breakdown of moral standards and the alarming increase of violence, you
feel, is exerting a debilitating effect on the individual believer. You
yearn for a way to free the teaching potential which to a large extent
is locked up in the individual in the face of these dreadful
circumstances.
We
feel that an overanxiousness on your part about a breakthrough and an
undue worry over the state of society can be counterproductive. While there are opportunities for greater growth than is occurring, neither your Assembly nor the friends must burden themselves with feelings of failure at every disappointment,
for such feelings are self-fulfilling and can easily cause stagnation
in the expansion of the Cause. The tendency towards frustration,
sometimes induced by a desire for instant gratification, must be
resisted by an effort to gain deeper appreciation of the divine process.
In exhorting the individual concerning the spiritual obligation resting
upon him "to make of the mandate of teaching, so vitally binding upon
all, the all-pervading concern of his life," Shoghi Effendi said that
"every bearer of the Message of Bahá’u’lláh should consider it not only
an obligation but a privilege to scatter far and wide the seeds of His
Faith, and to rest content in the abiding knowledge that whatever be the
immediate response to that Message, and however inadequate the vehicle
that conveyed it, the power of its Author will, as He sees fit, enable
those seeds to germinate, and in circumstances which no one can foresee
enrich the harvest which the labor of His followers will gather." You
may rest assured that your particularly blessed community will not be
denied a triumphant expansion if its members remain constant and
confident in their teaching activities.
Paradoxical
as it may seem, the prospects towards the breakthrough you anticipate
in the teaching field are conspicuous in the current, distressing state
of society. You must realize that the worse conditions become, the more
plentiful are the opportunities to teach the Cause, the greater the
degree of receptivity to the Divine Message. Bahá’u’lláh certainly gave
ample foreknowledge about the radical, worldwide disturbance which His
Revelation is creating as a part of the transition towards the unity and
peace that are the ultimate goal of His Faith. Your awareness of this
inevitable transition should enable your members to detach themselves from the debilitating emotions
aroused by the turmoil which characterizes this process and to equip
your Assembly as the highest governing body of the Bahá’í community in
the United States to demonstrate to the
friends a confident outlook, which the persistence and vigor of their
teaching activities will fully justify.
Such
detachment as exemplified by your Assembly and practiced by the friends
throughout the community will, moreover, signify a spiritual
achievement which was anticipated by Shoghi Effendi in his warning to
your community, when he said: "The glowing tributes, so repeatedly and
deservedly paid to the capacity, the spirit, the conduct, and the high
rank, of the American believers, both individually and as an organic
community, must, under no circumstances, be confounded with the
characteristics and nature of the people from which God has raised them
up." In other words, by the attainment of a "sharp distinction between
that community and that people," you and the friends who rely upon your
guidance will recognize that American society cannot be exempted from
the rigors and consequences of the transition affecting all the world.
Painful
as may be the decadent scene, deep as is your sympathy for those who
suffer from the terrible decline of society, you must see the
possibilities which are thus provided for augmenting the healing forces
of an emerging World Order.
Shoghi Effendi advised the North American community plainly in this
regard. "The opportunities which the turmoil of the present age
presents, with all the sorrows which it evokes, the fears which it
excites, the disillusionment which it produces, the perplexities which
it creates, the indignation which it arouses, the revolt which it
provokes, the grievances it engenders, the spirit of restless search
which it awakens, must," he asserted, "be exploited for the purpose of
spreading far and wide the knowledge of the redemptive power of the
Faith of Bahá’u’lláh, and for enlisting fresh recruits in the
ever-swelling army of His followers."
Commenting further on the
global spectacle of upheavals, cataclysms and tribulations which the
worsening affairs of humanity evoke at the impending approach of the
Kingdom of God on earth, Shoghi Effendi addressed these words
of insight and encouragement to the North American friends: "Far from
yielding in their resolve, far from growing oblivious of their task,
they should, at no time, however much buffeted by circumstances, forget
that the synchronization of such world-shaking crises with the
progressive unfoldment and fruition of their divinely appointed task is
itself the work of Providence, the design of an inscrutable Wisdom, and
the purpose of an all-compelling Will, a Will that directs and controls,
in its own mysterious way, both the fortunes of the Faith and the
destinies of men. Such simultaneous processes of rise and of fall, of
integration and of disintegration, of order and chaos, with their
continuous and reciprocal reactions on each other, are but aspects of a greater Plan,
one and indivisible, whose Source is God, whose author is Bahá’u’lláh,
the theatre of whose operations is the entire planet, and whose ultimate
objectives are the unity of the human race and the peace of all
mankind."
Moreover,
the beloved Guardian felt that: "Reflections such as these should steel
the resolve of the entire Bahá’í community, should dissipate their
forebodings, and arouse them to rededicate themselves to every single
provision of that Divine Charter whose outline has been delineated for
them by the pen of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá." By being attuned to this divine
perspective, your Assembly will be able to assist the friends to see
that they will not merely be able to cope with the alarming incidents of social decline they are daily witnessing,
but even better than that, they will be inspired to arise with renewed
vision to recruit to Bahá’í membership an increasing number of men and
women whose minds and hearts are ready to respond to the Divine Message
and who will join them in dispelling the bewilderment and despair
gripping their fellow citizens and undermining the structure of their
country.
It is also vital for your Assembly to keep in mind that the
mental anguish which the prevailing situation induces can and must be
overcome through prayer and a conscious attention to teaching the Cause
and living the Bahá’í life with a world-embracing vision.
Certainly, the members of such a well established community as yours,
one enjoying the special favors providentially conferred upon it by the Tablets of the Divine Plan, do realize the urgency and seriousness of their task. Surely they see with what patient endurance the dear friends in the Cradle of the Faith
are meeting their God-given challenges even to the extent of
sacrificing their life’s blood so that the world may become a better
place. Undoubtedly, the highly esteemed American believers, who bear the
designation "spiritual descendants of the Dawn-breakers,"
know quite well that they must now seize their chance at this critical
time to prove their own capacity to endure that living sacrifice which,
as Shoghi Effendi said, in contrast to dying, is required of them if
they are to fulfill the glorious destiny forecast for them in the
scriptures of our Faith. May they be granted the celestial strength to
pass, over and over again, the mental tests which ‘Abdu’l-Bahá promised
He would send to them to purify them, thus enabling them to achieve
their divinely conferred potential as a force for change in the world.
In
the arena of teaching, your indispensable terms of reference and the
unerring resource to which you have ready access are the Master’s Tablets of the Divine Plan.
They invest your community with extraordinary powers shared by your
sister community in Canada. It is in reacquainting the American friends
with the special mission, both at home and abroad, assigned to them in
these seminal and timeless documents, and in relating their contents to
current conditions, that you will find the key to the revitalization of
the teaching work and the winning of outstanding victories on the home
front. In this effort you will be powerfully aided by the explanations
provided in the letters of our dear Guardian, such as The Advent of Divine Justice,
"The Challenging Requirements of the Present Hour," "American Bahá’ís
in the Time of World Peril." We have every confidence that, together
with the Continental Counselors and the Auxiliary Board
members, you can discover the way further to release the enormous
energies of the friends and to intensify the zeal which they have so
splendidly displayed in the teaching field on so many occasions in the
past.
We
were very pleased by the sense you conveyed of an ever-closer
relationship between your Assembly and the Continental Counselors,
and we were even more deeply impressed by your eagerness to know how
you might strengthen this relationship. A beginning towards achieving
your desire would be for you to obtain an integrated understanding of
the Counselors’ responsibilities and sphere of action in relation to
your own.
As you know, a distinguishing feature of the Administrative Order
is the existence of elected institutions, on the one hand, which
function corporately with vested legislative, executive and judicial
powers, and of appointed, eminent and devoted believers, on the other
hand, who function primarily as individuals for the specific purposes of
protecting and propagating the Faith under the guidance of the Head of
the Faith. The two sets of institutions collaborate in their functions
so as to ensure the progress of the Cause. You are undoubtedly aware of
the previous exposition of this subject; however, we offer the following
comments to assist your further understanding of the matter.
The
Continental Boards of Counselors and the National Spiritual Assemblies
share in the functions of propagation and protection, but the Counselors
specialize in these functions from a different level and in a different
manner. From a continental vantage point, the Counselors bring a
perspective to their functions which, when offered to a National
Assembly in the form of counsel, advice, recommendations, suggestions or
commentary, enriches the latter’s understanding, acquaints it with a
broader experience than its own, and encourages it to maintain a
world-embracing vision.
An aspect of the
difference in the manner of functioning of the Counselors derives from
the instructions given in the Will and Testament of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá to the
Hands of the Cause of God, the extension into the future of whose
functions of protection and propagation is the responsibility of the
Counselors. As appointees of the Universal House of Justice, the
Counselors assist the Head of the Faith to broaden the base, foster the
strength and ensure the security of the National Spiritual Assemblies
and the institutions and communities under their jurisdiction. Through
their Auxiliary Boards, the Continental Counselors spread the benefits
of their functions to the Local Spiritual Assemblies and the grassroots
of the community. These functions are shaped by their obligations, in
the words of the Will and Testament, "to diffuse the Divine Fragrances,
to edify the souls of men, to promote learning, to improve the character
of all men and to be, at all times and under all conditions, sanctified
and detached from earthly things." It can be seen, then, that through
their work in propagating and protecting the Faith, the Counselors play a
major role in knitting and bolstering the entire fabric of the Bahá’í
community.
The flexibility and speed with
which the Counselors and their Auxiliary Board members can respond to a
perceived need in the community—such as a need for encouragement,
explanation of plans, deepening in the Teachings, protection of the
Covenant—are elements of their functioning which distinguish them from
Spiritual Assemblies; this flexibility enables them to operate as
occasions demand, whether it is in giving counsel at a meeting, or
advising an individual in private, or helping the friends to understand
and obey a ruling of the Spiritual Assembly, or dealing with issues of
the Covenant. In such different modes these officers of the Faith are
able to draw attention to relevant Texts, to impart information, explore
situations, and acquaint themselves with conditions in ways not
possible to a Spiritual Assembly but important to the success of its
plans. They are able then to share with Spiritual Assemblies, as deemed
necessary, ideas, analyses, perceptions and advice which inevitably
enhance the ability of these Assemblies to serve their communities. They thus assist Assemblies to mature. Where Local Assemblies are new
or weak, Auxiliary Board members help them to understand their
functions, encourage them to organize their work, and rally the local
believers in support of their Assemblies’ initiatives.
Through
the various modes of their activities, the Counselors aided by their
Auxiliary Boards spark and buttress the growth and development of
Spiritual Assemblies and local and national communities. With this
perspective, Shoghi Effendi’s regarding of the Auxiliary Board members
as "a prop and mainstay to the often overworked and overburdened
National Spiritual Assemblies" becomes clear. The indispensability of
the involvement of Continental Counselors and Auxiliary Board members in
the planning stages of the teaching work and the benefits of
acquainting them with the hopes and concerns of National Spiritual
Assemblies and of seeking their advice are also obvious.
With the opening of the fourth epoch of the Formative Age,
a procedure was activated by which the goals of national plans are
formulated in joint consultations of National Spiritual Assemblies and
Continental Counselors. It initiated a new phase in the maturation of
the Administrative Order. This development ensures two significant
benefits in particular: It enables each institution to draw on the
experiences and insights particular to the other, thereby making
available to the planning process two distinct channels of information
from two levels of Bahá’í administration; and it also assures to the
Counselors a necessary familiarity with the background, rationale, and
content of national plans, which as a matter of principle they are
expected to support. Both institutions obtain strength from such
collaboration, and we are particularly pleased that the designing of the
Three Year Plan in the United States followed a pattern which involved the two arms of the administration in the manner you described to us.
While
the Counselors and their Auxiliary Boards, in addition to the discharge
of their specific responsibilities, will support the initiatives
adopted by a National Spiritual Assembly, the Assembly should recognize
that the Counselors must be free to determine, according to their own
best judgment, in what manner that support will be given. There is a
great difference between the functions of national committees and
Auxiliary Board members in this respect. Whereas
the committees may be required by the Assembly to follow particular
procedures, Auxiliary Board members are not similarly bound;
yet they should not act in a manner that undermines the operations of
the National Assembly or its agencies. This does not mean that Auxiliary
Board members may not decide, upon request or not, to participate in
the execution of a particular program or educational project devised by a
national committee, or even to contribute towards the conceptualization
and fruition of the project. It does mean, however, that their prerogative to proceed within a wider latitude than that accessible to the national committee should be respected.
By
working at the grassroots of the community, an Auxiliary Board member
is often able to satisfy a need not being met by any national or local
program, but which if dealt with by the Auxiliary Board member will
better equip the local friends to achieve the established goals of the
community. Such a flexibility on the part of the Auxiliary Board member
in dealing with immediate situations, such a freedom for independent action, should be taken for granted by all concerned.
However, a pattern of activity on the part of the Auxiliary Board
member, or even of a Counselor, which appears to the National Assembly
to be seriously diverting attention from the adopted plans of the
community should unhesitatingly be made a matter for remedial
consultation with the Counselor.
The
Counselors are members of a continental, as distinct from a national,
institution, and they occupy a rank higher than that of the National
Spiritual Assembly. Apart from any other consideration, their rank is, in a practical sense, a functional necessity
if these officers of the Faith are to be accorded freedom of the
community at all levels and their advice and other functions are to be
taken seriously. We have said in an earlier letter that "the existence
of institutions of such exalted rank, comprising individuals who play
such a vital role, who yet have no legislative, administrative or
judicial authority, and are entirely devoid of priestly functions or the
right to make authoritative interpretations, is a feature of Bahá’í
administration unparalleled in the religions of the past." It
is a difficult concept to grasp. But with the passage of time since the
first contingent of Continental Counselors was appointed, much
understanding has surely been acquired.
Shoghi Effendi stated categorically to your Assembly: "There
can be no conflict of authority, no duality under any form or
circumstances in any sphere of Bahá’í jurisdiction whether local,
national or international." The authority of a National
Assembly is therefore not diminished but, rather, enhanced by the
existence of the Continental Counselors, who are duty bound by the very
character of their responsibilities as protectors of the Faith to uphold
the rank and to support the authority of Spiritual Assemblies.
Similarly, the National Assembly must, on the basis of principle and in
its own best interest, ensure that Counselors and Auxiliary Board
members are not hampered in carrying out their sacred responsibilities
and that their right and freedom to function are upheld.
The
attitude of these two institutions towards each other should be
motivated not merely by a legalistic application of the rules of their
functional relationship. Far more is required, for they must, in the
first place, approach their joint responsibilities within the framework
of the spiritual requisites for all successful Bahá’í relationships.
Where love, respect and courtesy are genuinely and mutually expressed,
estrangement finds no accommodation and problems become soluble
challenges. Bahá’u’lláh’s admonition is highly instructive in this
regard; He says: "Abase not the station of the learned in Bahá and
belittle not the rank of such rulers as administer justice amidst you."
Achieving
a closer and more effective relationship between you and the
Continental Counselors will depend on the cultivation of an
incrementally harmonious attitude and on an openness in your dealings
with them which this attitude will certainly facilitate. The
relationship between you should be one of fellowship informed with a
sense of respect but devoid of the rigid formalities associated with so
many social organizations. When you have doubts and concerns about your
own plans, confide in the Counselors; when something they do causes you
worry, talk to them in the proper spirit of Bahá’í consultation.
Remember that they, like yourselves, are burdened with the work of the
Cause and are beset with many concerns in its service, and they need
your sympathetic understanding of the challenges they face. Open your
hearts and your minds to them; regard them as your confidants, your
loving friends. And be ever ready to extend to them your hand in
support.
The existence of a loving, trusting and informal atmosphere in your dealings with the Counselors should
not, however, be allowed to relax adherence to the rules governing the
working relationship between the Continental Board of Counselors and
their Auxiliary Boards, on the one hand, and the National Spiritual
Assembly and its committees, on the other. These matters are explained in detail in our letter of 1 October 1969, which you have published.
We
now wish to address the manner of your functioning as a National
Spiritual Assembly. Your analysis of the situation identified the issues of immediate concern about the national administration of the Faith, such issues as: overcentralization,
particularly with regard to the administration of the teaching work;
your fear that you may be exercising a level of administrative control
that may be stifling individual initiative throughout the country; and
the relation of your Assembly to the community.
You live in a society caught in the tightening grip of moral decadence on a vast scale.
But this should come as no surprise to you. It is the unavoidable
consequence of a pervasive godlessness; its symptoms and repercussions
were described in painful detail by Shoghi Effendi in several of his
letters to the Western friends. Inevitably, the American Bahá’í
community is affected by this condition to some extent. The
corrosive influence of an overbearing and rampant secularization is
infecting the style of administration of the Faith in your community and
threatening to undermine its efficacy.
The aggressiveness and competitiveness which animate a dominantly capitalist culture; the
partisanship inherent in a fervidly democratic system; the suspicion of
public-policy institutions and the skepticism towards established
authority ingrained in the political attitude of the people and which
trace their origins to the genesis of American society; the cynical
disregard of the moderating principles and rules of civilized human
relationships resulting from an excessive liberalism and its immoral
consequences—such unsavory characteristics inform entrenched habits of
American life, which imperceptibly at first but more obviously in the
long run have come to exert too great a sway over the manner of
management of the Bahá’í community and over the behavior of portions of its rank and file in relation to the Cause. This unwholesome influence must be arrested by immediate, deliberate effort—an
effort which must surely begin within your Assembly itself. Further
accommodation of it will severely impede the progress of your community,
despite the abundant possibilities of an imminent breakthrough. It was
due to this concern in particular that we anxiously welcomed your
request for a meeting with us.
The
guarantee of well-being and success in all your endeavors to serve the
Cause of God can be stated in one word: unity. It is the alpha and omega
of all Bahá’í objectives. Among the first admonitions addressed to
National Spiritual Assemblies by Shoghi Effendi was the following
assertion: "It is, I firmly believe, of the utmost urgent importance
that, with unity of purpose and action firmly established in our midst,
and with every trace of animosity and mistrust of the past banished from
our hearts, we should form one united front, and combat, wisely and
tactfully, every force that might darken the spirit of the Movement,
cause division in its ranks, and narrow it by dogmatic and sectarian
belief." He then stated that "it is primarily upon the elected members
of the National Spiritual Assemblies throughout the Bahá’í world that
this highly important duty devolves," warning that, "should such a
representative and responsible body fail to realize this fundamental
requisite for all successful achievement, the whole structure is sure to
crumble."
Unity
within the Assembly itself is, of course, of immediate importance to
the wider unity your actions are intended to foster and sustain. At no
time can any member of your Assembly afford to be unmindful of this
basic requirement nor neglect to work towards upholding it. Of
particular relevance is the attitude that the members adopt towards
their membership on that exalted body. There needs to be a recognition
on their part of the Assembly’s spiritual character and a feeling in
their hearts of respect for the institution based upon a perception of
it as something beyond or apart from themselves, as a sacred entity
whose powers they have the privilege to engage and canalize by coming
together in harmony and acting in accordance with divinely revealed
principles. With such a perspective the members will be able better to
acquire an appropriate posture in relation to the Assembly itself, to
appreciate their role as Trustees of the Merciful and to
counteract any impression that they have assumed ownership and control
of the institution in the manner of major stockholders of a business
enterprise.
Also relevant to
effecting unity is the attitude of the friends, whether serving on any
Assembly or not, towards the exercise of authority in the Bahá’í
community. People generally tend to be suspicious of those in authority.
The reason is not difficult to understand, since human history is
replete with examples of the disastrous misuse of authority and power. A
reversal of this tendency is not easily achievable, but the Bahá’í
friends must be freed of suspicion towards their institutions if the
wheels of progress are to turn with uninterrupted speed. A rigorous
discipline of thought and action on the part of both the friends and the
National Assembly will succeed in meeting this challenge; both must
live up to their responsibilities in this regard by recognizing some
fundamental realities.
The oneness of
humanity, which is the primary principle and ultimate goal of the Cause
of Bahá’u’lláh, implies, as Shoghi Effendi said, an "organic change in
the structure of present-day society." So fundamental a change in the
structural conception of society must also imply a new pattern for the
administration of community affairs in a Bahá’í context. The insights
offered by the beloved Guardian, as conveyed by his secretary in a
letter dated 14 October 1941, shed light on this critical subject:
The
friends must never mistake the Bahá’í administration for an end in
itself. It is merely the instrument of the spirit of the Faith. This
Cause is a Cause which God has revealed to humanity as a whole. It is
designed to benefit the entire human race, and the only way it can do
this is to reform the community life of mankind, as well as seeking to
regenerate the individual. The Bahá’í Administration is only the first
shaping of what in future will come to be the social life and laws of
community living.
Shoghi Effendi’s
advice to an individual in another instance provides a further
perspective: "He urges you to do all you can to promote unity and love
amongst the members of the Community there, as this seems to be their
greatest need. So often young communities, in their desire to administer
the Cause, lose sight of the fact that these spiritual relationships
are far more important and fundamental than the rules and regulations
which must govern the conduct of community affairs."
It
can therefore be deduced that the importance of the Bahá’í
administration is its value in serving as a facilitator of the emergence
and maintenance of community life in a wholly new mode, and in catering
to the requirements of the spiritual relationships which flow from love
and unity among the friends. This touches upon a distinguishing
characteristic of Bahá’í life which such spiritual relationships foster,
namely, the spirit of servitude to God, expressed in service to the
Cause, to the friends and to humanity as a whole. The attitude of the
individual as a servant, an attitude preeminently exemplified in the
life and person of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, is a dynamic that permeates the
activities of the Faith; it acquires collective, transformative force in
the normal functioning of a community. In this regard, the institutions
of the Faith stand as channels for the promotion of this salient
characteristic. It is in this framework
that the concepts of rulership and leadership, authority and power are
properly understood and actualized.
The
appearance of a united, firmly based and self-sustaining community must
be a major goal of a Spiritual Assembly. Composed of a membership
reflecting a diversity of personalities, talents, abilities and
interests, such a community requires a level of internal interaction
between the Assembly and the body of the believers based on a commonly
recognized commitment to service, and in which a sense of partnership
based on appreciation of each other’s distinctive sphere of action is
fully recognized and unfailingly upheld, and no semblance of a dichotomy
between the two appears. In such a community leadership is that
expression of service by which the Spiritual Assembly invites and
encourages the use of the manifold talents and abilities with which the
community is endowed, and stimulates and guides the diverse elements of
the community towards goals and strategies by which the effects of a
coherent force for progress can be realized.
The
maintenance of a climate of love and unity depends largely upon the
feeling among the individuals composing the community that the Assembly
is a part of themselves, that their cooperative interactions with that
divinely ordained body allow them a fair latitude for initiative and
that the quality of their relationships with both the institution and
their fellow believers encourages a spirit of enterprise invigorated by
an awareness of the revolutionizing purpose of Bahá’u’lláh’s Revelation,
by a consciousness of the high privilege of their being associated with
efforts to realize that purpose, and by a consequent, ever-present
sense of joy. In such a climate, the community is transformed from being
the mere sum of its parts to assuming a wholly new personality as an
entity in which its members blend without losing their individual
uniqueness. The possibilities for manifesting such a transformation
exist most immediately at the local level, but it is a major
responsibility of the National Assembly to nurture the conditions in
which they may flourish.
The authority to
direct the affairs of the Faith locally, nationally and
internationally, is divinely conferred on elected institutions. However,
the power to accomplish the tasks of the community resides primarily in
the mass of the believers. The
authority of the institutions is an irrevocable necessity for the
progress of humanity; its exercise is an art to be mastered.
The power of action in the believers is unlocked at the level of
individual initiative and surges at the level of collective volition. In
its potential, this mass power, this mix of individual potentialities,
exists in a malleable form susceptible to the multiple reactions of
individuals to the sundry influences at work in the world. To realize
its highest purpose, this power needs to express itself through orderly
avenues of activity.
Even though
individuals may strive to be guided in their actions by their personal
understanding of the Divine Texts, and much can be accomplished thereby,
such actions, untempered by the overall direction provided by
authorized institutions, are incapable of attaining the thrust necessary
for the unencumbered advancement of civilization.
Individual
initiative is a preeminent aspect of this power; it is therefore a
major responsibility of the institutions to safeguard and stimulate it.
Similarly, it is important for individuals to recognize and accept that
the institutions must act as a guiding and moderating influence on the
march of civilization. In this sense, the divine requirement that
individuals obey the decisions of their Assemblies can clearly be seen
as being indispensable to the progress of society. Indeed, individuals
must not be abandoned entirely to their own devices with respect to the
welfare of society as a whole, neither should they be stifled by the
assumption of a dictatorial posture by members of the institutions.
The
successful exercise of authority in the Bahá’í community implies the
recognition of separate but mutually reinforcing rights and
responsibilities between the institutions and the friends in general, a
recognition that in turn welcomes the need for cooperation between these
two interactive forces of society. As was stated in advice given by
Shoghi Effendi: "The individuals and assemblies must learn to cooperate,
and to cooperate intelligently, if they desire to adequately discharge
their duties and obligations towards the Faith. And no such cooperation
is possible without mutual confidence and trust."
Direction
comes from Assembly decisions, but its effectiveness depends not only
on the clarity with which it is given but also on a number of spiritual
and moral factors which must be blended in the general attitude of the
individual believers, on the one hand, and the manner and style of the
functioning of the Assembly, on the other. The following advice of
Shoghi Effendi, addressed in an early letter to the Western friends,
deals with these two aspects:
Let
us also bear in mind that the keynote to the Cause of God is not
dictatorial authority, but humble fellowship, not arbitrary power, but
the spirit of frank and loving consultation. Nothing short of the spirit
of a true Bahá’í can hope to reconcile the principles of mercy and
justice, of freedom and submission, of the sanctity of the right of the
individual and of self-surrender, of vigilance, discretion and prudence
on the one hand and fellowship, candor and courage on the other.
The
duties of those whom the friends have freely and conscientiously
elected as their representatives are no less vital and binding than the
obligations of those who have chosen them. Their function is not to
dictate, but to consult, and consult not only among themselves, but as
much as possible with the friends whom they represent. They must regard
themselves in no other light but that of chosen instruments for a more
efficient and dignified presentation of the Cause of God. They should
never be led to suppose that they are the central ornaments of the body
of the Cause, intrinsically superior to others in capacity or merit, and
sole promoters of its teachings and principles. They should approach
their task with extreme humility, and endeavor by their open-mindedness,
their high sense of justice and duty, their candor, their modesty,
their entire devotion to the welfare and interests of the friends, the
Cause, and humanity, to win not only the confidence and the genuine
support and respect of those whom they should serve, but also their
esteem and real affection.
These
instructions of the beloved Guardian get to the very heart of what must
be more deeply internalized by the members of your Assembly at this
time. We repeat for emphasis the terms "extreme humility,"
"open-mindedness," "candor," "modesty"; and we underscore the openness
which is implicit in candor, because the cooperation which must be
fostered between your Assembly and the friends will depend significantly
on the degree to which, with wise discretion, you share your concerns
with the community. Your greatest opportunity for this is the annual
National Convention, when the representatives of the entire community
come together to consult with you. It is not sufficient that you give
only good news and encouraging statistics to the delegates. Do as Shoghi
Effendi advised you: "Banishing every vestige of secrecy, of undue
reticence, of dictatorial aloofness, from their midst, they should
radiantly and abundantly unfold to the eyes of the delegates, by whom
they are elected, their plans, their hopes, and their cares. They should
familiarize the delegates with the various matters that will have to be
considered in the current year, and calmly and conscientiously study
and weigh the opinions and judgments of the delegates."
Even
if the delegates find themselves unable to offer useful recommendations
toward the resolution of particular issues, by your bringing them into
your confidence, they will develop an appreciation, as would be
impossible otherwise, of the serious matters confronting the Cause. With
this understanding, they will be equipped to assist the community to
respond effectively to your decisions, no matter how challenging these
may turn out to be. Moreover, it will relieve you of any overwhelming
sense of burden to know that such a responsible body of believers shares
your innermost concerns; and even more than that, the effect of your
openness will be to strengthen the delegates’ support of your authority,
which it is their sacred duty to give. Besides, as it is neither
possible nor practicable for your Assembly to meet with all the
believers, nor for the members to be constantly traveling throughout the
community, the friends’ feeling that you are remote can be ameliorated,
though not entirely removed, by the effectiveness of your interactions
with the delegates.
In
your openness and candor you will, no doubt, avoid ineptitudes that
pass as norms in the freedom of speech practiced in your nation.
In a society where "telling it like it is" employs a style of
expression which robs language of its decorum, and in a time when
stridency is commonly presumed to be a quality of leadership, candor is
crass, and authority speaks in a loud and vulgar voice. People are
frequently obliged to receive direction from their leaders in such
disrespectful modes; this is a reason for resentment and suspicion
towards those in authority. By contrast, Bahá’í institutions have the
task of accustoming the friends to recognizing the expression of
authority in language at a moderate pitch.
It
would be impossible to overestimate the obligation resting upon you to
refine your dealings with the community in the ways already described.
You cannot at any time afford to forget that the manner of the use of
authority is critical to the success of your work. With this in mind,
you must also attend seriously to the behavior of those, more
particularly your officers, who must of necessity act on your behalf in
carrying out your decisions and conveying your instructions to others. Further,
it is sometimes the case that staff members at your National Center, in
their eagerness to be exactly and completely obedient, carry out the
instruction of your Assembly with a sharpness of manner and tone that
hurts people and provokes resentment against the very body the staff are
striving to serve with loyalty and devotion. The staff should
be sensitized to the situation and made to realize, through your loving
and persistent guidance, that the spiritual requisites for good and
respectful relations with others must be conscientiously applied in
their interactions with the friends because to do so is not only
virtuous in itself but will also minimize the incidence of bad feeling
towards your Assembly.
The temperament of authority in the administration of justice varies according to the degree of the gravity of each case. Some
cases require that the Assembly take action that is firm or drastic.
Even so, Assembly members have always to be mindful that the authority
they wield must in general be expressed with love, humility and a
genuine respect for others. Thus exercised, authority strikes a natural
note and accords with that which is acceptable to spiritually attuned
and fair-minded souls. The following guidance of Shoghi
Effendi, as conveyed by his secretary, is especially relevant: "The
administrators of the Faith of God must be like unto shepherds. Their
aim should be to dispel all the doubts, misunderstandings and harmful
differences which may arise in the community of the believers. And this
they can adequately achieve provided they are motivated by a true sense
of love for their fellow-brethren coupled with firm determination to act
with justice in all cases which are submitted to them for their
consideration."
Do clearly bear in mind
that our emphasis of the spiritual requisites of your functioning is not
a mere expression of pious idealism. Far, far from it. Their exclusion
from public discourse and from the considerations of world leaders
largely accounts for the current state of society. Indeed, they are as
practical in effect as they are spiritual in essence. Employ them
consciously, constantly, confidently; and see how your actions will
attract the confirmations of the Holy Spirit in the response of the
community.
As to your worry about
overcontrolling the friends: by appreciating the nature of the power of
action which they possess, you will be able to gauge how best to guide
and direct them. A wide latitude for action must be allowed them, which
means that a large margin for mistakes must also be allowed. Your
National Assembly and the Local Assemblies must not react automatically
to every mistake, but distinguish between those that are self-correcting
with the passage of time and do no particular harm to the community and
those which require Assembly intervention. Related to this is the
tendency of the friends to criticize each other at the slightest
provocation, whereas the Teachings call upon them to encourage each
other. Such tendencies are of course motivated by a deep love for the
Faith, a desire to see it free of any flaw. But human beings are not
perfect. The Local Assemblies and the friends must be helped through
your example and through loving counsel to refrain from such a pattern
of criticism, which stunts the growth and development of the community.
You should also be fearful of laying down too many rules and
regulations. The Cause is not so fragile that a degree of mistakes
cannot be tolerated. When you feel that certain actions may become
trends with harmful consequences, you may, instead of making a new rule,
discuss the matter with the Counselors, enlisting their support in
educating the friends in a manner that will improve their understanding
and their conduct.
A new burst of energy would accrue to the operation of the Three Year Plan
if the friends, both individually and collectively, could feel a
greater sense of freedom to engage in a wide range of activities
originating with themselves. Even if you are doing nothing deliberately
to discourage such freedom, their accumulated impression of
institutional disapproval, however derived, and their fear of criticism
are, to a considerable extent, inhibiting their exercise of initiative.
At this exact time in history when the peoples of the world are weighed
down with soul-crushing difficulties and the shadow of despair threatens
to eclipse the light of hope, there must be revived among the
individual believers a sense of mission, a feeling of empowerment to
minister to the urgent need of humanity for guidance and thus to win
victories for the Faith in their own sphere of life. The community as a
whole should be involved in efforts to resolve such issues. A single
answer would, of course, be inadequate, there being so many diverse
elements and interests in the community. These matters require not only
your own independent consultation but consultation with the Counselors
as well. Although Spiritual Assemblies are good at specifying goals,
they have not yet mastered the art of making use of the talents of
individuals and rousing the mass of the friends to action in fulfillment
of such goals. Removing this deficiency would be a mark of the
maturation of these institutions. May your Assembly lead the way.
A
further decentralization of the national administration would increase
the possibility of loosening control at the top and encouraging the
involvement of individuals in the work of the community at the
grassroots. We therefore welcome your intention to take such action.
However, you may wish to do this in incremental steps rather than in one
sweeping motion. The matter is left entirely to your judgment. It may
encourage you to know that in a few countries where the challenge of
administering the teaching work and providing other administrative
services assumed formidable proportions, various approaches have been
used to achieve a measure of decentralization. A detailed description of
some of these approaches will be sent to you separately.
Having
said all the foregoing, we pause to assure you of our full awareness of
the great burdens you carry and of the ceaseless calls upon you to
render services in the absence of adequate resources. Do not despair.
Your capacity to respond will match any challenge that may confront you
in these troubled times; you have only to act on principle. Your
community’s past has been glorious; its future is great beyond
calculation. The divine promises to your community are certain; the
blessings of Bahá’u’lláh are assured as you strive to fulfill His
purpose. The wings of the beloved Master remain spread over you that you
may succeed in discharging the tasks He has especially entrusted to
your care. And our love ever surrounds you and your cherished community,
growing stronger at every moment. Step forward then to meet the
requirements of the hour with undiminished hope and confidence.
The
power released by Bahá’u’lláh works at a quickening pace, speeding the
processes of change which must usher in the new order He proclaimed. The
declining state of society demonstrates it, the global yearning for new
solutions to human problems confirms it. Much is at stake: the
fortunes of humankind hang precariously in the balance. The Bahá’í
community bears grave responsibilities toward the near and far future as
movement towards the Lesser Peace accelerates. Now is the time
for the friends to seize new opportunities to extend the range and
influence of the Faith, to reach a new level of action in expanding the
community and fortifying its foundations. It is indeed time for
audacious action undeterred by a fear of mistakes, fired by the urgency
of ministering to the pressing needs of humanity. Will the American
Bahá’í community not see its chance to meet the challenge? Will its
members not once again blaze a trail that can set in motion a myriad
victories?
Our ardent petition at the Holy Threshold is that the response of the champion-builders of the New World Order will be immediate, wholehearted and abundantly confirmed.
With loving Bahá’í greetings,
[signed: The Universal House of Justice]
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