GotQuestions.org: "What is the Baha'i faith?"
The Baha'i faith
is one of the newer world religions stemming originally from Shi'ite Islam in
Persia (modern-day Iran). However, it has come to achieve a unique status of
its own. The Baha'i faith has distinguished itself as a unique world religion
because of its size (5 million members), its global scale (236 countries), its
practical autonomy from its parent religion of Islam (there is little
blurriness between the two), and for its doctrinal uniqueness, being
monotheistic yet inclusive.
The Baha'i faith's earliest forerunner
was Sayid Ali Muhammad who on May 23, 1844, declared himself the Bab
("Gate"), the eighth manifestation of God and first since Muhammad.
Implicit to that statement was the denial of Muhammad as the last and greatest
prophet and a denial together of the unique authority of the Koran. Islam did not
take kindly to such thoughts. The Bab and his followers, called Babis, saw
heavy persecution and were part of great bloodshed before the Bab was executed
as a political prisoner just six years later in Tabríz, Ádhirbáyján, July 9,
1850. But before he died, the Bab spoke of a coming prophet, referred to as
"He whom God will Manifest." On April 22, 1863, Mirza Husayn Ali, one
of his followers, declared himself the fulfillment of that prophecy and the
latest manifestation of God. He donned the title Baha'u'llah ("glory of
God"). The Bab was therefore viewed as a "John the Baptist"-type
of forerunner leading up to Baha'u'llah who is the more significant
manifestation for this age. His followers are called Baha’is. The uniqueness of
this budding Baha'i faith, as it has come to be called, becomes clear in the
Baha'u'llah's declarations. Not only did he claim to be the latest prophet
foreseen in Shi'ite Islam, and not only did he claim to be a manifestation of
God, but he claimed to be the second coming of Christ, the promised Holy
Spirit, the Day of God, the Maiytrea (from Buddhism), and the Krishna (from
Hinduism). A kind of inclusivism is apparent from the early stages of the
Baha'i faith.
No other manifestation is said to have
come since Baha'u'llah, but his leadership was passed on by appointment. He
designated a successor in his son Abbas Effendi (later, Abdu'l-Baha "slave
of Baha"). While the successors could not speak inspired scripture from
God, they could interpret scripture infallibly and were viewed as the
maintenance of God's true word on earth. Abdu'l-Baha would appoint his grandson
Shoghi Effendi as successor. Shoghi Effendi, however, died before appointing a
successor. The gap was filled by an ingeniously organized governing institution
called the Universal House of Justice which remains in power today as the
governing body for the Baha'i World Faith. Today, the Baha'i faith exists as a
world religion with yearly international conferences convening at the Universal
House of Justice in Haifa, Israel.
The core doctrines of the Baha'i faith can be attractive in their simplicity:
1) Adoration of one God and the reconciliation of all major religions.
2) Appreciation of the diversity and morality of the human family and the
elimination of all prejudice.
3) The establishment of world peace, equality of women and men, and universal
education.
4) Cooperation between Science and Religion in the individual's search for
truth.
To these may be added certain implicit beliefs and practices:
5) A Universal Auxillary Language.
6) Universal Weights and Measures.
7) God who is himself unknowable nevertheless reveals himself through
manifestations.
8) These manifestations are a kind of progressive revelation.
9) No proselytizing (aggressive witnessing).
10) The study of different Scriptures besides simply Baha'i books.
11) Prayer and worship is obligatory and much of that according to specific
instructions.
The Baha'i faith is quite
sophisticated, and many of its followers today are educated, eloquent,
eclectic, politically liberal, yet socially conservative (i.e., anti-abortion,
pro-traditional family, etc.). Moreover, Baha’is are not only expected to
understand their own uniquely Baha'i scriptures, but are also expected to study
the scriptures of other world religions. Therefore, it is quite possible to
encounter a Baha'i who is more educated on Christianity than is the average
Christian. Furthermore, the Baha'i faith has a strong emphasis on education
combined with certain liberal values such as gender egalitarianism, universal
education, and harmony between science and religion.
Nonetheless, the Baha'i faith has many
theological gaps and doctrinal inconsistencies. Compared to Christianity, its
core teachings are only superficial in their commonality. The differences are
deep and fundamental. The Baha'i faith is ornate, and a full critique would be
encyclopedic. So, only a few observations are made below.
The Baha'i faith teaches that God is
unknowable in His essence. Baha’is have the difficulty of explaining how they can
have an elaborate theology about God yet assert that God is
"unknowable." And it does not help to say that prophets and
manifestations inform mankind about God because, if God is
"unknowable," then humanity has no reference point whereby to tell
which teacher is telling the truth. Christianity rightly teaches that God can
be known, as is naturally known even by non-believers, though they may not have
a relational knowledge of God. Romans 1:20 says, "For since the creation
of the world, His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by
the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead…" God is
knowable, not only through the creation, but through His Word and the presence
of the Holy Spirit, who leads and guides us and bears witness that we are His
children (Romans 8:14-16). Not only can we know Him, but we can know Him
intimately as our "Abba, Father" (Galatians 4:6). True, God may not
fit His infinity into our finite minds, but man can still have partial
knowledge of God which is entirely true and relationally meaningful.
About Jesus, the Baha'i faith teaches
that He was a manifestation of God but not an incarnation. The difference
sounds slight but is actually enormous. Baha’is believe God is unknowable;
therefore, God cannot incarnate Himself to be present among men. If Jesus is
God in the most literal sense, and Jesus is knowable, then God is knowable, and
that Baha'i doctrine is exploded. So, Baha’is teach that Jesus was a reflection
of God. Just as a person can look at a reflection of the sun in a mirror and
say, "There is the sun," so one can look at Jesus and say,
"There is God," meaning "There is a reflection of God."
Here again the problem of teaching that God is "unknowable" surfaces
since there would be no way to distinguish between true and false
manifestations or prophets. The Christian, however, can argue that Christ has
set Himself apart from all other manifestations and has confirmed His
self-attested divinity by physically rising from the dead (1 Corinthians 15), a
point which Baha’is also deny. While the resurrection would be a miracle, it is
nonetheless a historically defensible fact, given the body of evidence. Dr.
Gary Habermas, Dr. William Lane Craig, and N.T. Wright have done well in
defending the historicity of the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
The Baha'i faith also denies the sole
sufficiency of Christ and of Scripture. Krishna, Buddha, Jesus, Muhammad, the
Bab, and Baha'u'llah were all manifestations of God, and the latest of these
would have the highest authority since he'd have the most complete revelation
of God, according to the idea of progressive revelation. Here, Christian
apologetics can be employed to demonstrate the uniqueness of Christianity's
claims and its doctrinal and practical truthfulness exclusive of contrary
religious systems. The Baha'i, however, is concerned for showing that all the
world's major religions are ultimately reconcilable. Any differences would be
explained away as:
1) Social Laws—Instead of supra-cultural Spiritual Laws.
2) Early revelation—As opposed to the more “complete” later revelation.
3) Corrupted Teaching or Misinterpretation.
But even granting these qualifications,
the world's religions are too varied and too fundamentally different to be
reconciled. Given that the world's religions obviously teach and practice
contrary things, the burden is on the Baha'i to salvage the world's major
religions while dismantling almost everything foundational to those religions.
Ironically, the religions which are most inclusive—Buddhism and Hinduism—are
classically atheistic and pantheistic (respectively), and neither atheism nor
pantheism is allowed within the strictly monotheistic Baha'i faith. Meanwhile,
the religions that are least theologically inclusive of the Baha'i faith—Islam,
Christianity, Orthodox Judaism—are monotheistic, as Baha'i is.
Also, the Baha'i faith teaches a sort
of works-based salvation. The Baha'i faith is not much different from Islam in
its core teachings about how to be saved except that, for the Baha'i, little is
said about the afterlife. This earthly life is to be filled with good works
counterbalancing one's evil deeds and showing one's self deserving of ultimate
deliverance. Sin is not paid for or dissolved; rather, it is excused by a
presumably benevolent God. Man does not have a significant relationship with
God. In fact, Baha’is teach that there is no personality in God's essence, but
only in His manifestations. Thus, God does not submit easily to a relationship
with man. Accordingly, the Christian doctrine of grace is reinterpreted so that
"grace" means "God's kind allowance for man to have the
opportunity to earn deliverance." Built into this doctrine is a denial of
Christ's sacrificial atonement and a minimization of sin.
The Christian view of salvation is very
different. Sin is understood as being of eternal and infinite consequence since
it is a universal crime against an infinitely perfect God (Romans 3:10, 23).
Likewise, sin is so great that it deserves a life (blood) sacrifice and incurs
eternal punishment in the afterlife. But Christ pays the price that all owe,
dying as an innocent sacrifice for a guilty humanity. Because man cannot do
anything to unblemish himself or to deserve eternal reward, he either must die
for his own sins or believe that Christ graciously died in his place (Isaiah
53; Romans 5:8). Thus, salvation is either by God's grace through man's faith
or there is no eternal salvation.
It is no surprise then that Baha'i
faith proclaims Baha'u'llah to be the second coming of Christ. Jesus Himself
warned us in the Gospel of Matthew concerning the end times: "Then if any
one says to you, 'Lo, here is the Christ!' or 'There he is!' do not believe it.
For false Christs and false prophets will arise and show great signs and
wonders, so as to lead astray, if possible, even the elect" (Matthew
24:23-24). Interestingly, Baha’is typically deny or minimize any miracles of
Baha'u'llah. His unique spiritual claims are based on self-attested authority,
uncanny and uneducated wisdom, prolific writing, pure living, majority
consensus, and other subjective tests. The more objective tests such as
prophetic fulfillment employ heavily allegorical interpretations of Scripture
(see Thief in the Night by William Sears). The belief in Baha'u'llah
largely reduces to a point of faith—is one willing to accept him as the
manifestation of God, in the absence of objective evidence? Of course,
Christianity also calls for faith, but the Christian has strong and
demonstrable evidence along with that faith.
The Baha'i faith therefore does not
accord with classical Christianity, and it has much to answer for in its own
right. How an unknowable God could elicit such an elaborate theology and
justify a new world religion is a mystery. The Baha’i faith is weak in
addressing sin, treating it as if it were not a big problem and is surmountable
by human effort. Christ's divinity is denied, as is the evidential value and
literal nature of Christ's resurrection. And for the Baha'i faith, one of its
biggest problems is its pluralism. That is, how can one reconcile such
divergent religious without leaving them theologically gutted? It is easy to
argue that the world's religions have commonalities in their ethical teachings
and have some concept of ultimate reality. But it is another beast entirely to
try to argue unity in their fundamental teachings about what the ultimate
reality is and about how those ethics are grounded.
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