Wednesday, September 5, 2007

The Two-Edged Sword

Today's quote from Reality is partly easy to understand (the mirror/rock analogy) and partly hard to wrap a mind around (the thing that helps a believer accept is the same thing that makes a nonbeliever reject...).

At least that's my take on it...

The excerpt mentions the Bayán which can be explored in Persian at this site and in English here.

"THE One true God may be compared unto the sun and the believer unto a mirror. No sooner is the mirror placed before the sun than it reflects its light. The unbeliever may be likened unto a stone. No matter how long it is exposed to the sunshine, it cannot reflect the sun. Thus the former layeth down his life as a sacrifice, while the latter doeth against God what he committeth. Indeed, if God willeth, He is potent to turn the stone into a mirror, but the person himself remaineth reconciled to his state Had he wished to become a crystal, God would have made him to assume crystal form. For on that Day whatever cause prompteth the believer to believe in Him, the same will also be available to the unbeliever. But when the latter suffereth himself to be wrapt in veils, the same cause shutteth him out as by a veil. Thus, as is clearly evident today, those who have set their faces toward God, the True One, have believed in Him because of the Bayán, while such as are veiled have been deprived because of it."

The Báb: Selections from the Writings of the Báb, "Excerpts from the Persian Bayán", p. 103, citing Váhid VI, Chapter 4