July 20. On this date in 1950, Shoghi Effendi messaged
North American Bahá'ís about the Seven Year Plan, urging "utmost vigor,
vigilance and consecration" and "utmost courage, perseverance,
fortitude and self-sacrifice" noting the Plan's "initial success,"
"enthusiasm which it has already engendered," "feelings of admiration
and envy it has excited," and "foreshadow the splendors of the
victories."
160.1 The new Plan
on which the American Bahá'í community has embarked, in the course of
the opening years of the second Bahá'í century, is of such vastness and
complexity as to require the utmost vigor, vigilance and consecration
on the part of both the general body of its prosecutors and those who
are called upon, as their National elected representatives, to conduct
its operation, define its processes, watch over its execution, and
ensure its ultimate success. The obstacles confronting both its
participants and organizers, particularly in the European field, are
formidable, and call for the utmost courage, perseverance, fortitude and self-sacrifice.
160.2
The precarious international situation in both Hemispheres, the
distress and preoccupation of the masses, in most of the countries to
which pioneers will soon be proceeding, with the cares of every day
life, the severe restrictions which are still imposed on visitors and
travellers in foreign lands, the religious conservatism and spiritual
lethargy which characterize the population in most of the lands where
the new pioneers are to labor, add to the challenge of the task, and render
all the more glorious the labors of the valiant community that has
arisen to achieve what posterity will regard as the greatest collective
enterprise, not only in the history of the community itself, but in the
annals of the Faith with which it stands identified.
160.3 The initial success of the enterprise which has been so auspiciously launched, the enthusiasm which it has already engendered throughout Latin America, the hopes it has aroused amid the suffering and scattered believers in war-torn Europe, the feelings of admiration and envy it has excited
throughout several communities in the Bahá'í world in both the East and
the West, augur well for the future course of its operation, and foreshadow the splendors of the victories which its consummation must witness. The forces that have been released through the birth of the Plan
must be directed into the most effective channels, the spirit that has
been kindled must be continually nourished, the facilities at the
disposal of its organizers must be fully utilized, each and every
barrier that may obstruct its expansion must be determinedly removed,
every assistance which Bahá'í communities in various lands may wish, or
be able, to offer, should be wholeheartedly welcomed, every measure that
will serve to reinforce the bonds uniting the newly fledged communities
in the Latin world, and to stimulate the movement, and raise the
spirits, of itinerant teachers and settlers laboring in the continent of
Europe, must be speedily undertaken, if the colossal task, which in the
course of seven brief years must be carried out, is to be befittingly
consummated.
160.4 The sterner the
task, the graver the responsibilities, the wider the field of exertion,
the more persistently must the privileged members of this enviable
community strive, and the loftier must be the height to which they
should aspire, in the course of their God-given Mission, and throughout every stage in the irresistible and divinely guided evolution of their community life.
160.5
Setbacks may well surprise them; trials and disappointments may tax
their patience and resourcefulness; the forces of darkness, either from
within or from without, may seek to dampen their ardor, to disrupt their
unity and break their spirit; pitfalls may surround the little band
that must act as a vanguard to the host which must, in the years to
come, spiritually raise up the sorely ravaged continent of Europe. None
of these, however fierce, sinister or unyielding they may appear, must
be allowed to deflect the protagonists of a God-impelled Plan, from the course which 'Abdu'l-Bahá has chosen for them, and which the agencies of a firmly established, laboriously erected, Administrative Order, are now enabling them to effectively pursue.
160.6
That they may press forward with undiminished fervor, with undimmed
vision, with unfaltering steps, with indivisible unity, with unflinching
determination until the shining goal is attained is my constant prayer,
my ardent hope, and the dearest wish of my heart
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