A Warning to Prospective (and Present) Members of Baha'i
This site is intended to inform people who might be interested in joining (or remaining in) the Baha'i Faith (Religion) that not all is necessarily as it seems. The Baha'i Administrative Order has been accused of censorship, shunning, and other cult-like tactics. It behooves all current and prospective members to carefully examine the facts, and not to rely only on pro-Baha'i sources. In particular, even some Baha'is themselves complain that the original Baha'i religion has been corrupted. Some allege that this corruption is exemplified by a man named Shoghi, who is revered by the Administrative Order as being a divinely ordained "Guardian" of the religion. He died in 1957 with no successor, despite having himself declared that a successor was vital to the religion. Here is a summary of the issues concerning him, which I posted on Google Groups (talk.religion.bahai) for many years, with no adequate refutation. You are invited to consider for yourself whether this summary is valid, and whether you should look further into the matter.
To summarize the Guardian problem:
1. The station of Guardian was decreed by the Last Will and Testament
of Abdul Baha, a document which some have alleged to be a forgery.
The person appointed to this life-long position was a man by the name
of Shoghi, sometimes referred to with the appended title of respect, Effendi.
2. If the LW&T is not a forgery, then the Guardian's failure to obey
his self-described duties is contrary to what a divinely appointed
authority would be expected to do.
3. These self-described duties include the critical task of
appointing a successor guardian, who would take over after the death
or incapacitation of the preceding guardian. The successor was to
have been appointed in a manner that would leave no room for doubt as
to the validity of the successor's appointment.
4. There is no credible evidence that any successor guardian ever was
appointed in such an unambiguous manner, although there were
claimants.
5. No provision had ever been made concerning the contingency of a
guardian dying without having appointed a successor. Indeed, such a
possibility had never even been mentioned by Shoghi. That is why his
death intestate led to the crisis it did.
6. The combination of these facts decisively refutes the notion that
the Guardianship ever was a divine institution. It also demonstrates
that Shoghi himself never believed that it was. He never made any
attempt, neither to ensure a clear line of succession, nor to
anticipate the lack of a succession.
7. Upon Shoghi's unexpected death, the Hands of the Cause took it
upon themselves to resolve the matter by declaring that henceforth,
the Baha'i Faith would have no living guardian--but they had no
authority to make that declaration. That authority died with Shoghi.
8. Shoghi's death created an unresolvable discrepancy, a
contradiction, that pits the alleged divine authorship of the station
against the physical facts. One cannot have it both ways. For the
station to be of divine authorship, there must be a succession of
guardians, or absent that, some provision to account for a lack of
succession. There was neither.
9. While the Hands made the best they could of a bad situation, their
best was not enough, nor could it be. Such an irregularity could not
be explained in terms of a divinely appointed station. Shoghi had
been inexcusably, and inexplicably, derelict in his duties, duties
which he himself had repeatedly affirmed in the most emphatic manner.
10. Claimants to the succession of guardianship make such a weak and
flimsy case for their divine authority that their claims make no
improvement regarding the failure of Shoghi to be clear and unambiguous
in the appointment of a successor.
11. Attempts by the UHJ to uphold the actions of the Hands are
equally flimsy and unjustifiable. Even their most contorted
explanations do not suffice to resolve the contradictions.
power in what they thought would become a powerful world religion.
Even if it was not a forgery, it certainly had no divine authorship,
as demonstrated by its abject failure to bear the fruit which it had
promised.
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