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The God
Who
Walks With Men
By HORACE HOLLEY
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The God
Who
Walks With
Men
By HORACE HOLLEY
1967
BAHA’JI’ PUBLISHING TRUST WILMETTE, ILLINOIS
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©COPYRIGHT 1954
BY THE NATIONAL SPIRITUAL ASSEMBLY OF THE
Bahá’ís of the United States
Printed in U.S.A.
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THE GOD WHO
WALKS WITH MEN
ROM an older day we hear there was a time when God walked with men. That ancient belief is now a faded rose that has lost its glory, but it keeps a precious fragrance which still stirs the heart with wonder and with hope.
God walked with men! The idea seems to change the world from a great, implacable machine into a place of adoration and fulfilled love. It makes us ask, do we live in a universe of mechanical atoms, of strange, perfect stars and suns looking down without feeling or pity upon our griefs and lonely failures, or can we be actually living in the compassionate heart of God?
How could such an exalted idea ever become lost and forgotten? Was it merely a beautiful but empty dream? Or was it a sublime truth we have sold for the price to pay for personal and
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selfish desires?
This world, we know too well, Without a God who walks with men, imprisons us in a vast loneliness where we have to live with our own discontent, our failure, lacking real purpose or aim. It is not enough to become at times part of some officially heralded movement pronounced necessary and noble, if the nobility does not penetrate into our own hearts and redeem us from our unsatisfying selves. But the discontent lingers and the hope occasionally returns.
What has happened to human beings that they can be so skillful in doing great things but so helpless when they turn their wonderful powers to the greater task of ordering their own hearts?
GES ago the Greeks, the Romans, the German peoples and the Scan 6
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dinavians attempted to fill this world of
loneliness with imagined gods who walked with men. Their poets invented
nearby heavens filled with deities whom
the people worshipped as gods. These
deities embodied the hopes, longings,
loves and passions of human beings. Entering their daily lives, the imaginary
gods and goddesses, fauns, elves and
sprites, empowered to punish or reward,
seemed for a long time to satisfy the upreaching heart and still the restless
mind.
The rise and spread of revealed religions, and the coming of the attitude of science which replaced the imagination of childish peoples, denuded the skies, the mountains, the forests and the fields of all these charming man—invented deities. Once more the world became a place of loneliness, unless people could find solace and healing in the proclamations of great religious doctors.
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Mighty waves of faith did spread
over the pagan world. There was something Which the disconsolate person
could find to cherish in his secret heart.
A purer love and a more ardent adoration of God gave to our fathers and
mothers a source of strength and courage—a sense of consecration to their
Creator.
The religious systems, too, have attempted to overcome the loneliness of hearts, using the genius of architects, sculptors, painters and poets to create impressive cathedrals and colorful pageants to draw men away from themselves and plunge them into the ecstasy of a high communal experience.
However deeply our fathers and mothers drank of this golden cup, they did not succeed in handing their sense of fulfillment down to us. Nor could they express the nobility of their faith through the redemption of a warring, divided society.
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II
E of today are spiritual orphans.
We cannot live as idle heirs of any fortune accumulated in the past. The precious treasure of faith has been wasted in wars, revolutions and the hideous tyrannies which have afflicted our time.
It is very plain to us now that nothing can compensate for the loss of the direct, simple, heart-transforming power of the love of God. However high men rise in their organization of formal worship of God, their work does not take the place of God. Beneath the clamor of religious systems we find with disconsolate fear that the human heart stands alone. Happiness? Yes, there are people who love us and people we love. There are many useful things to do from morning until night. Nevertheless we know there is a conscious solitude even in the happy heart. The world about us is terrifying, people become
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more and more abandoned to pleasure
as a flight from the solitude which we
know too well is the emptiness where
God has not brought His compassion,
His understanding, His strength and His
healing. It is within this emptiness at the
center of being, that our anxieties are
distilled.
Of course no one shows his anxieties to others if he can conceal them. We learn to put up a brave front in order to conceal that secret inner void. We talk about everything except the one great thing that really counts. Perhaps we conform to opinion and the public standard of manners and efficiency so successfully that after a while we regard the front as our real self. But if we do this, sooner or later some crisis overtakes us, strikes at our very heart, and makes us more conscious than ever how weak and helpless human beings are without God. What we call strength is often no more than the habit of closing
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the heart, and this is the most disastrous
weakness.
III
HEY teach us today that the universe is vast beyond comprehension. In it the little earth, our home, has become reduced to insignificance. There must be a God to create and rule this mighty universe, but can a God so majestic and powerful come down to walk with men? The beautiful old stories of God do not match the new stories of scientific discovery. The world has changed. There seems to be no connection between our modern universe and the simple spirit of pure love for which we long. Everything has become organized and technically perfected except people themselves.
Who is the God who has walked with men? When does He appear? How does He disclose Himself? Can we still seek
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and find a deathless love that will claim
our erring hearts, touch them with passion and save us from ourselves?
Today a wonderful event has taken place. People have thought that religion was something that happened centuries ago, and its story was complete and finished. Though everything has changed during the past few generations, nothing, they supposed, could change the systems of belief that have been in existence and ruled so long. The world could be uprooted, but God, they tell us, remained silent while millions suffered and the nations lost their way.
What happened was the bringing forth of a new truth about God’s love for mankind. A great being in the East has revolutionized religion. Though he was persecuted and resisted, His words have been carried slowly but steadily to all parts of the world.
This is the essence of what this heroic, sublime and inspired Person has
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told the world today. First, that the almighty God of the universe, Creator of
man, remains forever concealed, too
glorious for any human to approach.
Second, He sends His Spirit to inspire a
perfect man upon our earth and through
Him pour forth His love and His saving
truth to all who will listen and believe.
Third, God reveals His divine nature
and purpose to mankind age after age,
so that the world is never left without
His assurance of love and redemption.
This perfect being in whom the celestial Spirit enters and takes possession of the man’s own personal powers is the Prophet, or as some say, the Messenger or the Messiah. There is no way to God except through His chosen Messenger.
In His Prophet, God walks with men. Through Him, God’s passionate love for men is poured forth and His inspired guidance written or spoken as inspiration for individuals, races and nations.
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OD walks with men! Alas, that in this humble human form some of the powerful leaders have failed to recognize the Spirit of God Himself. They have always resisted and condemned Him whenever He appears in the time of the world’s greatest trouble. Though no human will can overcome God’s Will, the enemies of the Spirit have killed the Messenger and martyred those nearest and dearest to Him. Afterward, when darkened souls found that His message of love and immortality could not be suppressed, they did everything possible to alter its meaning and restrict its influence. They confined its free, universal, radiant love and living truth within a complicated system of theology, creed and ritual, which confuses all but a few, while proclaiming themselves defenders of the faith, and the champion of its mission.
But we are not concerned with sys I4
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tems and the great disputes about religion. Our longing is for the God Who
walks With men. What we pray for is
the infinite privilege of hearing His
words with our own ears, admitting His
love into our own hearts, and understanding His message with our own
minds.
All of us have been taught to revere some Prophet’s name and exalt His mission as explained to us in childhood and youth. But we have been warned that other Prophets are false messengers who arose solely to betray our inherited faith.
The sublime truth that comes to us today is that the Prophets are not hostile to each other, but identical beings all filled with the same Spirit and carrying out the same mission. Details of their Message changed from age to age because different conditions called for new treatment.
The miraculous bounty of our time
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is that through this new revelation we
can regard the religion of God as one
universal faith, which passes through
different periods of development but
always upholds the one divine love and
always works to bring people together
as members of the one great human
family.
God walks with men!
Let us fear no longer to search out for ourselves the tenderness, the ardor and the compassion of the love which God has poured forth through His
Prophets, and to learn, with new minds, ' the infinite wisdom of His counsel.
The God Who walks with men is the Father of all humanity. There is no longer any religious reason for assuming that He cherishes only one race or one creed or that there is any divine word justifying prejudice and dissension among the many diverse peoples of the human race.
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Since there is, beyond all our complicated doubting, a God Who walks
with men, let us reverently draw near
and join those throngs of people, those
fortunate individuals and those dear
companions actually standing in the
presence of the Messengers who, one by
one, stood forth, each in His own age,
as the Witnesses and Spokesmen of God
on earth. The tongues are different but
the speech is one!
V
AN the seeking heart make a better beginning of this joyous quest than
to turn to the words of that great, heroic figure, Moses? Moses, we recall, arose among an exiled and enslaved people subject to the conquering might, the arrogant pride of the ancient Egyptian Empire. There was no daily reporting of His words and no description of His presence, but the recorded words carry full conviction that He expressed
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God’s love and truth to people exactly
like ourselves.
The words are not many, but they do seem to lay a foundation for belief in one God and for love of humanity.
“Thou shalt have no other God before me . . . Thou shalt not kill . . . Love thy neighbor as thyself.” God walked with men. He pointed the way, and when they took the way they were favored; but when they turned from the way, they fell into misfortune.
This view brings religion back to the individual. God has given religion to all and not made it a monopoly for any group to dispense for a profit. “What doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?”
But though the way was so plain, the people must have lost it and become as bewildered as people are today. For we find these terrible words spoken by a later Prophet: “Behold, the days come,
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saith the Lord God, that I will send a
famine in the land, not a famine of
bread, nor a thirst for water, but of
hearing the words of the Lord; and they
shall wander from sea to sea, and from
the north even to the east, they shall
run to and fro to seek the word of the
Lord, and shall not find it.”
What were they to seek—the words which they already possessed but had forgotten, or a new way to understand these words; or was it a new word they had to await?
God walked with other races also: To His people, Zoroaster said: “To enjoy the benefits of providence is wisdom; to enable others to enjoy them is virtue. He who is indifferent to the welfare of others does not deserve to be called a man.” How this lifts the heart! “The best way of worshipping God is to allay the distress of the times and to improve the condition of mankind.”
“Have the religions of mankind no
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common ground? Is there not everywhere the same enrapturing beauty,
beaming forth from many thousand
places? Broad indeed is the carpet
which the All-Loving One has spread,
and beautiful the colors He has given I
it.” “Diversity of worship has divided
the human race into countless nations;
from all these dogmas we may select
one—Divine Love.”
Another Prophet, Muhammad, said: “God is the light of the Heavens and of the earth . . . God guideth whom He will to His light, and God setteth forth parables to men, for God knoweth all things.” He also said: “There is no compulsion in religion.” Are we not to accept truth freely and cherish it as a blessing rather than bear it as a heavy load? “We make no distinction between any of His Messengers”, Muhammad also said. Thus the different peoples, sharing their holy words, can draw closer in fellowship, acknowledging one God.
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When Buddha walked with men, He
said, “As a mother even at the risk of
her own life protects her son, her only
son, so he who has recognized the Truth
cultivates good will without measure
among all beings, unstinted, unmixed
with any feeling of making distinctions
or showing preferences.” “To him in
whom love dwells, the whole world is
but one family.” Among the Hindus
their Prophet said, “Like the body that
is made up of different limbs and organs, all mortal creatures exist depending upon one another.” “Toward all that
live, I am the same . . . Whoever devoutly worships Me, they are in Me and
I in them.”
VI
OW inspiringly God walked with men when Jesus went about among the people in His day! His spirit of compassionate understanding, poured out upon humble individuals, upon the
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sick, the blind and the erring, along with
His firm repudiation of hypocrisy and
pride, could only be a pure reflection of
the power God vested in Him. Perhaps
these healings were physical miracles
He performed, but they might also have
been Spiritual healings, to make the inwardly blind see the light of Truth and
the religiously dead arise to a new life
of faith. Certainly He attributed all His
works to the divine Power, and the religion He preached was based on worship of God, not of Himself. “Let your
light so shine before men, that they may
see your good works, and glorify your
Father which is in heaven.” When an
enemy asked Him which was the great
commandment, He said, “Thou shalt
love the Lord thy God with all thy
heart, and with all thy soul, and with
all thy mind . . . And the second is like
unto it, thou shalt love thy neighbor as
thyself.” “A new commandment I give
to you, that you love one another; even
as I have loved you, that you also love
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one another.”
His work was done among a people whose ancestors had received a religion from God through Moses. The opposers used that religion as their justification. Can God’s religion oppose itself? Or do the people abandon the spirit of their religion and exploit its outer forms and special privilege, so that a new Prophet must appear? The world of Christ’s Beatitudes is a heavenly world, full of illumination and inner peace, but it has not conquered the world of our human strife nor made peace the great law over the nations.
Is it for ever to be thus? The Prophet’s Vision a dream, and our struggles and failures the reality? A future heaven but a present chaos? “I have yet many things to say to you, but you 'cannot bear them now. When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth.”
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VII
HIS greatest challenge to the human heart has been squarely met by the Bahá’í teachings. They explain that all the Prophets came to prepare the people, race by race or nation by nation, for existence in this very age in which we were born—the age when all peoples would be brought together and have to learn how to live together or else be faced with destruction. The learning how to live together means living according to the standards set for them by all the Prophets. The being faced with destruction means attempting to solve our great, world problems without any true, religious spirit.
Stated that way, anyone can see that all our wars today are the sufferings we impose on each other as punishments for breaking the laws of God. He does not punish us—we punish ourselves.
But how can we bring such a terrible period of suffering to an end? By wor 24
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shiping the one God, the Father of all
peoples, and living according to the
laws and principles His Prophet, Bahá’u’lláh, has revealed for humanity today.
The Spirit which animated the Prophets
of ancient times has animated Bahá’u’lláh and inspired His words with such
truth that every sincere person can say
to himself, “Religion is not dead—it is
reborn. Religion is not something for
primitive people living only simple lives
—it is a world-unifying principle, a majestic World Plan for the redemption of
a stricken society.” The Bahá’í teachings call to the soul, summoning us to
serve in a supreme crusade to establish
peace and justice through divine Law.
Nothing greater can enter the heart
than this pure flame in the living God
who, once more, has walked with men.
“Love Me, that I may love thee. If thou lovest Me not, My love can in no wise reach thee.” Here speaks the very heart of religion. To the downcast soul, shrinking from its responsibilities, the
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Prophet says: “Thou art My dominion
and My dominion perisheth not, wherefore fearest thou thy perishing? Thou
art My light and My light shall never be
extinguished, why dost thou dread extinction? Thou art My glory and My
glory fadeth not; thou art My robe and
My robe shall never be outworn. Abide
then in thy love for Me, that thou mayest find Me in the realm of glory.”
Here are His words to us about brotherhood: “Know ye not why We created you all from the same dust? That no one should exalt himself over the other. Ponder at all times in your hearts how ye were created. Since We have created you all from the same substance it is incumbent on you to be even as one soul, to walk with the same feet, eat with the same mouth and dwell in the same land, that from your inmost being, by your deeds and actions, the signs of oneness and the essence of detachment may be made manifest.”
The Prophet uncovers a deep source
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of life within our personality which we
can never attain by our own effort. The
love that God offers us is universal.
When we partake of it we know that
the same transforming spirit enters all
others who believe, and therefore by
this sharing of universal love we become
united.
How this world can attain peace is proclaimed in these noble words: “The sovereign remedy and mightiest instrument for the healing of all the world is the union of all its people in one universal Cause, one common Faith.” When we grasp this divine truth we are able to make our lives count in the terrible struggle 'now going on between the way of God and the way of unregenerate man.
To accept and to assimilate truth we must prepare ourselves by willingness to give up errors, prejudice and halftruths even though, or rather especially when, these seem to have become the bulwarks of a decadent society. Truth
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cannot enter the life which consciously
profits by error. The gulf between the
words of the Prophet and human intellect is wider than this earth, but it can
be bridged by every sincere seeker.
“The time fore-ordained unto the peoples and kindreds of the earth is now come. The promises of God, as recorded in the Holy Scriptures, have all been fulfilled.”
God walks with men!
Shall we not arise and walk with Him?
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For further information contact the Bahá’í Center in your city. If none listed, write National Bahá’í Headquarters, 536 Sheridan Road. Wilmette. Illinois 60091.
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SOME BAHA’I BOOKS
Bahá’í World Faith. Selected Writings of Bahá’u’lláh and ‘Abdu’l-Bahá. A compilation of Bahá’í Sacred Writings—a World Bible revealed for men of all races and lands; a new creation which affirms and fulfills the highest assurance which, from age to age, the succession of Prophets have enkindied within the human soul. 465 pp., cloth, $2.50.
F oundations of World Unity by ‘Abdu’l-Bahá. Public addresses and letters on the theme of the spiritual foundations of world unity by the Son of the Founder of the Bahá’í Faith. 178 pp., cloth, $2.00; paper, $1.00.
Some Answered Questions by ‘Abdu’l-Bahá. This book gives the answers of a great Teacher to numerous questions which trouble modern man. It is intended for the searcher with an open and independent mind. If the search for truth is coupled with a dream for a world at peace, if the student is willing to receive an idea by which he may live meaningfully both for himself and for others, then here he can find a challenge to match that dream. 350 pp.,
cloth, $3.00.
Bahri'u’lla’h and the New Era. By J. E. Essiemont Standard introductory work on the Bahá’í Faith. 350 pp., cloth, $1.25.
A vailable from
BAHA’I PUBLISHING TRUST WILMETTE, ILLINOIS