Jamál, 11 Masá’il (Questions), 182 B.E.
Quotes for Reflection
Be ye God’s manifestations of trustworthiness in every land. So perfectly should ye mirror forth this quality that even were ye to travel through cities heaped with gold, your gaze would not for a single moment be seduced by its allure. This is the standard required of you, O assemblage of true believers. Assist ye your gracious Lord by your deeds so that in all the worlds of God His servants may perceive from you the sweet savours of the one true God. — Bahá’u’lláh 1
Question for Consideration
What is the standard required of “God’s manifestations of trustworthiness in every land”?
Perplexity Pro Response 2
The standard is complete inward and outward detachment from material allure, such that not even a city “heaped with gold” can attract the gaze or sway the heart of the believer. [1]
The stated standard
- Bahá’u’lláh describes the friends as “God’s manifestations of trustworthiness in every land”, and then explains the measure of this trustworthiness: that even if they journey through cities filled with gold, they are not charmed or distracted by it for a single moment. [1]
- This inner freedom from attraction to wealth is the “standard required” of the “assemblage of true believers,” meaning that the true believer’s loyalty and confidence rest entirely in God, not in riches or worldly advantage. [1]
What this implies in practice
- To “assist [the] gracious Lord by your deeds” means living in such a way that others can perceive, through conduct and character, “the sweet savours of the one true God,” rather than the scent of greed, self-interest, or attachment to material things. [1]
- In the Bahá’í writings, similar passages explain that the true servant of God is one who, passing through “cities of silver and gold,” does not even deign to look upon them, his heart remaining pure from all worldly goods and treasures; such a soul’s breath is said to be endowed with potency and his words with attraction. [1]
Follow-Up Questions Proposed by Perplexity
Questions that probe motives, actions, and effects in light of the Writings can deepen understanding of trustworthiness standards and measures. [1]
Questions about inner standard
- To what extent is the heart free from attraction to “cities heaped with gold” and from subtle forms of self-interest, praise, or power? [1]
- How does trustworthiness relate to fear of God, detachment, and contentment with “a frugal provision” as described in the Writings? [1]
Questions about outward conduct
- In which concrete situations (home, work, finances, service) do words still differ from deeds, and what specific changes would bring them into full alignment? [1]
- How would business practices, use of time, and handling of money look if “the utmost trustworthiness and integrity” were the non‑negotiable standard? [1]
Questions about measures and tests
- What “cities of gold” in present life (career, recognition, comfort, relationships) currently test detachment, and how is the soul responding to those tests? [1]
- If those closest (family, co‑workers, community) were asked to name evidence of trustworthiness, what concrete examples could they give—and what silences would be revealing? [1]
Questions about community standard
- How would a community look in which trustworthiness truly was the “primary characteristic of true believers” and the “light” of all its affairs? [1]
- What practices of the community (consultation, finance, administration, teaching) help or hinder becoming “God’s manifestations of trustworthiness in every land”? [1]
Questions about purpose and effect
- How does growing in trustworthiness assist the “gracious Lord by your deeds” and make others perceive “the sweet savours of the one true God”? [1]
- In what ways does trustworthiness serve as “the door of security,” “the foundation of all virtues,” and “the supreme instrument for the prosperity of the world” in one’s present context? [1]
Citations
- Trustworthiness: A Cardinal Bahá’í Virtue. Compiled by the Research Department of the Universal House of Justice, Revised August 1990 – Bahá’í Reference Library
Footnotes
- Research Department of the Universal House of Justice. “Trustworthiness: A Cardinal Bahá’í Virtue.” Bahá’í Reference Library, Revised August 1990. https://www.bahai.org/r/619810914. ↩︎
- Perplexity Pro. “Standard for Manifestations of Trustworthiness.” Edited by Steve Bosserman. December 20, 2025. https://www.perplexity.ai/search/be-ye-gods-manifestations-of-t-7U.orzhpTQWfnB9KNbhsbg#0. ↩︎