
The name of the Founder of the Bahá'í
Faith is Bahá'u'lláh, which means the Glory
of
God. A Bahá'í is a follower of Bahá'u'lláh.
The words "Bahá'í" and "Bahá'u'lláh"
are pronounced exactly the same way in every language.
The
Bahá'í Faith is a world religion in three
meanings of the term "world religion:"
First.
The Bahá'í Faith is not a sect, denomination,
or branch of any other religion. It
has been long recognized by the United Nations, the Vatican,
the World Parliament of Religions and other institutions
as an independent world religion, in the same sense that
Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Buddhism and Hinduism are
also independent world religions.
Second.
The Bahá'í Faith has well-established significant
communities
in 210 countries and territories, more than any other
independent religion, with the exception of Christianity,
which has 260, according to the 1995 Encyclopedia Britannica
Yearbook.
Bahá'ís
are people from every possible religious
background: Buddhists, Jews, Muslims, Zoroastrians, Hindus,
Protestants, Catholics, traditional tribal faiths, and
those who formerly had no religious beliefs at all. Scattered
throughout the planet, more than 2,100 ethnic groups and
tribes are represented in the Faith. Its literature has
been translated into over 800 languages. There are many
millions of Bahá'ís around the world. It
has been called the fastest growing independent world
religion by the World Christian Encyclopedia.
Third.
The belief in the unity of all human beings is the pivot
of the Bahá'í Faith. Bahá'u'lláh
said, "Let your vision be world-embracing, rather
than confined to your own selves." --Bahá'u'lláh,
Gleanings, p. 94
Because
of their global vision, Bahá'ís have been
at the forefront in working for permanent world peace
and racial harmony and have been honored by the United
Nations and other international organizations for their
work.
In
spite of the diversity of their religious, ethnic, cultural,
and economic backgrounds, Bahá'ís have overcome
these barriers to celebrate both what they have in common
and what makes each individual and group unique in the
larger human family.
Through
a common devotion to the Founder of the Faith and the
principles which He taught, rich and poor mingle as equals
and work together to bring about a better world for everyone.
Their Faith has given the Bahá'ís an allegiance
to the whole of humanity. Bahá'ís have no
color line or racial segregation. In this Faith, people
of all races find equality with each other because they
are all equal before God and are of one race -- the human
race.
The
Bahá'í Faith is open to everyone. It has
no secret doctrines, no religious rituals, no professional
clergy, and it actively seeks to include all of humanity
in a peaceful and thriving human enterprise.
Bahá'u'lláh
declared that in our time religion must unite people or
else it has no social value. He asserted that religion
must show people how to build a just world.
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