Anita and I have been attending a discussion group at the Baha’i
Center. The Baha’is are really lovely people. They even accept me with my
Jesus-talk. No wonder – they accept Jesus as a man of God, according to Wikipedia:
·
Bahá'ís follow Bahá'u'lláh, a prophet whom they
consider a successor to Muhammad, Krishna, Jesus, Moses, Buddha, Zoroaster, and
Abraham.
·
In Bahá'í belief, all of the Manifestations of
God are from the same God and have the same spiritual and metaphysical nature,
and that there is absolute equality between them. The differences between the
various Manifestations of God and their teachings, Bahá'u'lláh explained, are
due to the varying needs and capacities of the civilization in which they
appeared, and not due to any differences in their level of importance or
nature.
·
The Manifestations of God all fulfill the same
purpose and perform the same function by mediating between God and creation. In
this way each Manifestation of God manifested the Word of God and taught the
same religion, with modifications for the particular audience's needs and
culture. Bahá'u'lláh wrote that since each Manifestation of God has the same
divine attributes they can be seen as the spiritual "return" of all
the previous Manifestations of God.
Although the Baha’is believe that their revelations are the
purest expression of God, they also believe that there might be further
revelations:
·
Bahá'ís do not claim that the Bahá'í revelation
is the final stage in God's direction in the course of human spiritual
evolution. The Bahá'í writings contain assurances that after 1000 years,
another Manifestation of God will appear to advance human civilization.
I was surprised to hear one Baha’i claim that he too
believed that Jesus had died for our sins. Could this possibly be? I found that
the first revelator of their faith, Abdu’l-Baha, had written (cir. 1844):
·
There are those who believe that the cause of
salvation is none other than a confession of Divine Unity. There are those who
say: This is not sufficient. Belief in Divine Unity must be combined with
righteous deeds as prescribed by the All-Merciful. There are still others who
aver that the above must be combined with a most praiseworthy character blessed
by God. And yet again there are those who assert that one must encompass all
the grades of spiritual perfection and attain the beauty of an inner conscience
before one can be truly saved. But undoubtedly, what is most certain, most sure
and incontrovertible, what the People of God cling to most confidently is that
the true cause of salvation is none other than steadfastness in the Testament
and firmness in the Covenant of the All-Merciful. This faithfulness is the
particular characteristic of our belief in the Supreme Manifestation of God in
this Day. (Provisional translation by Khazeh Fananapazir; http://bahaiteachings.org/salvation-for-one-and-all)
·
Abdu’l-Baha propounds a fascinating holistic
theory of salvation, meant to apply to each person and to all people:
The Bahai organization summarizes it as:
- “Belief in the oneness of God. (Salvific belief.)
- Good works. (Salvific action.)
- Sterling character. (Salvific sanctification.)
- Inner transformation. (Salvific beatitude.)
- Faithfulness to the Covenant. (Salvific solidarity.)”
These are “meant to apply to each person and to all people.”
However, it also seems that this organization also requires faithfulness to
their “Covenant”:
·
A corollary of this teaching is faithful
obedience to Baha’i decision-making–through elected, consultative Baha’i
councils that oversee the well-being and progress of Baha’i communities
worldwide–as well as faithful adherence to Baha’i precepts and ethics. (http://bahaiteachings.org/salvation-for-one-and-all)
Baha’i salvation is both faith-based and performance-based.
It seemed that my new Baha’i friend wanted to cover all the bases, including
faith in Jesus. While I was touched by this, I wondered whether this type of
faith was acceptable to our Lord. When I was immature in the faith and not
clear about salvation, I decided that I would play-it-safe. I would trust in
both faith and in my own performance of good works. However, this placed my
attention and hope on myself, and it was killing me. As long as I trusted in
the goodness of my performance, I was tormented. Why? I always had doubts in my
moral goodness and performance. This made me think of Paul’s teachings:
·
I, Paul, say to you that if you accept
circumcision, Christ will be of no advantage to you. I testify again to every
man who accepts circumcision that he is obligated to keep the whole law. You
are severed from Christ, you who would be justified by the law; you have fallen
away from grace. (Galatians 5:2-4 ESV)
Paul had been referring to the belief that salvation had
been wrongly taught as a matter of two things: trusting in Christ and also becoming a Jew, through
circumcision, to adequately perform the law. However, Paul put the end to such
a false hope. If our trust is based, even partially, on our performance, we “have
fallen from grace.”
There is no way that we can merit salvation through being
good enough:
·
Now we know that whatever the law says it speaks
to those who are under the law, so that every mouth may be stopped [from boasting],
and the whole world may be held accountable to God. For by works of the law no
human being will be justified in his sight, since through the law comes
knowledge of sin. (Romans 3:19-20)
Consequently, salvation had to be received as a gift
(Ephesians 2:8-9). Ankerberg and Weldon, therefore, have written:
·
Baha’is have no solution to the problem of sin.
Baha’i forgiveness of sin and salvation rests upon personal merit and law-keeping.
From a biblical perspective, there is little or no understanding of the human impossibility
of keeping God’s law or the holy wrath of God against sin. (https://www.jashow.org/articles/christian-doctrine/salvation/what-are-baha%E2%80%99is-taught-about-salvation/)
Knowing that salvation is totally the gift of God and not
based upon the slightest merit on my part has been absolutely liberating. This
understanding has enabled me to face the painful truth about myself. I don’t
deserve anything from God apart from condemnation (Romans 6:23), but that is
okay, because salvation and my eternal hope are based upon the unchanging gift
of God. Consequently, I am now free from the burden to have to obsessively
prove that I am deserving, when I am really not.
This makes me grateful that I have a God who loves me so much that He is not put off by my very evident unworthiness. Rather than making me complacent about my moral obligations, this gratitude prods me on to joyfully please the One who has died for me while I was His enemy (Romans 5:8-10).
This makes me grateful that I have a God who loves me so much that He is not put off by my very evident unworthiness. Rather than making me complacent about my moral obligations, this gratitude prods me on to joyfully please the One who has died for me while I was His enemy (Romans 5:8-10).
What then do I say to my beautiful Baha’i friends? I want to
accept them as they have accepted me. They have accepted my faith. Therefore, I
want to reciprocate by accepting their faith, but does love require this “quid
pro quo?” No! Love requires that I seek their ultimate good. How? By sharing with them the Biblical Jesus who
taught:
·
“I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No
one comes to the Father except through me.” (John 14:6 ESV)
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