Daily Frameworks for 17 July 2026

Istiqlál, 05 Kalimát (Words), 183 B.E.

Quotes for Reflection

Alas, notwithstanding the laudable efforts, in every land, of well-intentioned individuals working to improve circumstances in society, the obstacles preventing the realization of such a vision seem insurmountable to many. Their hopes founder on erroneous assumptions about human nature that so permeate the structures and traditions of much of present-day living as to have attained the status of established fact. These assumptions appear to make no allowance for the extraordinary reservoir of spiritual potential available to any illumined soul who draws upon it; instead, they rely for justification on humanity’s failings, examples of which daily reinforce a common sense of despair. A layered veil of false premises thus obscures a fundamental truth: The state of the world reflects a distortion of the human spirit, not its essential nature. The purpose of every Manifestation of God is to effect a transformation in both the inner life and external conditions of humanity. And this transformation naturally occurs as a growing body of people, united by the divine precepts, collectively seeks to develop spiritual capacities to contribute to a process of societal change. Akin to the hard earth struck by the Master a century ago, the prevailing theories of the age may, at first, seem impervious to alteration, but they will undoubtedly fade away, and through the “vernal showers of the bounty of God”, the “flowers of true understanding” will spring up fresh and fair. — Universal House of Justice [1]

Question for Consideration

From a Bahá’í perspective, how can spiritual principles be applied in the voluntary/informal sector to find ways that work and begin to transform the public and private sectors? [2]

Perplexity Deep Research Response: Part V-b

The Mechanism of Transformation: From Voluntary to Public and Private

The Bahá’í view of how voluntary-sector experimentation translates into broader societal transformation rests on several mutually reinforcing mechanisms: [3] [4]

Individual carriers

People who develop new capacities and habits of mind in voluntary contexts carry those capacities into their professional and civic roles. A business leader who has experienced genuine consultation in a voluntary organization will approach corporate governance differently. A civil servant who has practiced service-oriented leadership in a community initiative will bring that orientation to public administration. [5] [6] [7]


Footnotes

[1] Universal House of Justice. “Riḍván 2012 – To the Bahá’ís of the World.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/139880738

[2] Perplexity Deep Research. “The Voluntary/Informal Sector as a Laboratory: Bahá’í Spiritual Principles and the Transformation of Society.” Edited by Steve Bosserman. July 16, 2026. https://www.perplexity.ai/computer/a/9ecfa362-6f2c-499e-b451-8198a188f127

[3] Universal House of Justice. THE INSTITUTION OF THE COUNSELLORS. Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/467424128

[4] Universal House of Justice. “26 November 2012 – To all National Spiritual Assemblies.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/888890110

[5] Effendi, Shoghi. THE ADVENT OF DIVINE JUSTICE. Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/802156000

[6] Effendi, Shoghi. BAHÁ’Í ADMINISTRATION. Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/837589415

[7] Universal House of Justice. “19 May 1994 – The National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá’ís of the United States.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/151711074


Be the Voice of…


Therefore, all souls should consider it incumbent upon them to investigate reality. Reality is one; and when found, it will unify all mankind. Reality is the love of God. Reality is the knowledge of God. Reality is justice. Reality is the oneness or solidarity of mankind. Reality is international peace. Reality is the knowledge of verities. Reality unifies humanity. — ‘Abdu’l-Bahá The Promulgation of Universal Peace | Bahá’í Reference Library.

Daily Frameworks for 16 July 2026

Istijlál, 04 Kalimát (Words), 183 B.E.

Quotes for Reflection

During this period, the adoption of an evolving framework for action has enabled the friends to progressively nurture and refine essential capacities, giving rise to simple acts of service at first, leading to more elaborate patterns of action, which in turn demanded the development of capacities still more complex. In this way, a systematic process of human resource development and community building has been started in thousands of clusters—and, in many of them, become far advanced. The focus has not been solely on the individual believer, or the community, or the institutions of the Faith; all three inseparable participants in the evolution of the new World Order are being stimulated by the spiritual forces released through the unfoldment of the Divine Plan. The signs of their progress are more and more apparent: in the confidence that countless believers have acquired to share accounts of Bahá’u’lláh’s life and discuss the implications of His Revelation and peerless Covenant; in the growing contingents of souls who, as a result, have been attracted to His Cause and are contributing to the achievement of His unifying vision; in the ability of Bahá’ís and their friends, at the very grassroots of the community, to describe in eloquent terms their experience of a process capable of transforming character and shaping social existence; in the significantly larger numbers of those indigenous to a country who, as members of Bahá’í institutions and agencies, are now guiding the affairs of their communities; in the reliable, generous, and sacrificial giving to the Fund, so vital for sustaining the advancement of the Faith; in the unprecedented efflorescence of individual initiative and collective action in support of community-building activities; in the enthusiasm of so many selfless souls in the prime of youth who are bringing immense vigour to this work, notably by tending to the spiritual education of younger generations; in the enhancement of the devotional character of the community through regular gatherings for worship; in the rise in capacity at all levels of Bahá’í administration; in the readiness of institutions, agencies, and individuals to think in terms of process, to read their immediate reality and assess their resources in the places where they live, and to make plans on that basis; in the now familiar dynamic of study, consultation, action, and reflection that has cultivated an instinctive posture of learning; in the mounting appreciation for what it means to give effect to the Teachings through social action; in the multiplying opportunities being sought and seized to offer a Bahá’í perspective on discourses prevalent in society; in the awareness of a global community that, in all its endeavours, it is hastening the emergence of divine civilization by manifesting the society-building power inherent in the Cause; indeed, in the friends’ growing consciousness that their efforts to foster inner transformation, to widen the circle of unity, to collaborate with others in the field of service, to help populations take charge of their own spiritual, social, and economic development—and, through all such efforts, to bring about the betterment of the world—express the very purpose of religion itself. — Universal House of Justice [1]

Question for Consideration

From a Bahá’í perspective, how can spiritual principles be applied in the voluntary/informal sector to find ways that work and begin to transform the public and private sectors? [2]

Perplexity Deep Research Response: Part V-a

The Mechanism of Transformation: From Voluntary to Public and Private

The Bahá’í view of how voluntary-sector experimentation translates into broader societal transformation rests on several mutually reinforcing mechanisms: [3]

Demonstration

When voluntary organizations visibly thrive on the basis of spiritual principles — achieving genuine human development, community cohesion, and material well-being without the pathologies of materialism — they constitute living evidence that alternatives are possible. This is not a theoretical argument but empirical proof, accumulated over time in thousands of localities. [4] [5] [6] [7]


Footnotes

[1] Universal House of Justice. “Riḍván 2016 – To the Bahá’ís of the World.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/468691680

[2] Perplexity Deep Research. “The Voluntary/Informal Sector as a Laboratory: Bahá’í Spiritual Principles and the Transformation of Society.” Edited by Steve Bosserman. July 15, 2026. https://www.perplexity.ai/computer/a/9ecfa362-6f2c-499e-b451-8198a188f127

[3] Universal House of Justice. “Riḍván 2012 – To the Bahá’ís of the World.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/139880738

[4] Mansuri, Nasim. “The Baha’i Focus on Building Community.” BahaiTeachings.org. https://bahaiteachings.org/bahai-focus-building-community/

[5] Malta Baha’i Community Staff. “Social and Economic Development.” Bahai.Org.Mt. https://bahai.org.mt/social-and-economic-development/

[6] Effendi, Shoghi. CITADEL OF FAITH. Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/864988857

[7] Universal House of Justice. “19 March 2025 – To the Bahá’ís of the World.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/260814076


Be the Voice of…


Therefore, all souls should consider it incumbent upon them to investigate reality. Reality is one; and when found, it will unify all mankind. Reality is the love of God. Reality is the knowledge of God. Reality is justice. Reality is the oneness or solidarity of mankind. Reality is international peace. Reality is the knowledge of verities. Reality unifies humanity. — ‘Abdu’l-Bahá The Promulgation of Universal Peace | Bahá’í Reference Library.

Daily Frameworks for 15 July 2026

‘Idál, 03 Kalimát (Words), 183 B.E.

Quotes for Reflection

As the process of becoming ever more involved in the life of the wider society took root in Bahá’í communities worldwide, it initially unfolded side by side with the teaching work and the development of the administration. In recent decades, however, the efforts for social action and involvement in the discourses of society have achieved marked coherence with those related to expansion and consolidation as the friends have increasingly applied the elements of the conceptual framework for action of the global Plans. As the friends labour in their clusters, they are inexorably drawn into the life of the society around them, and the learning process that propels efforts for growth and community building is extended to an expanding range of activities. Community life is increasingly characterized by its contribution to material, social, and spiritual progress as the friends cultivate their capability to understand the conditions of society around them, create spaces in which to explore concepts from Bahá’u’lláh’s Revelation and from relevant fields of human knowledge, bring insights to bear upon practical problems, and build capacity among the believers and within the wider community. As a result of this burgeoning coherence across the various areas of endeavour, the most basic grassroots activities for social and economic development grew from a few hundred in 1990 to several thousand by 2000, and to tens of thousands by 2021. Bahá’í engagement in social discourse has been met with a resoundingly affirmative response in countless settings, from neighbourhoods to nations, as a humanity baffled and divided by the manifold problems resulting from the operation of the forces of disintegration eagerly seeks new insights. At all levels of society, leaders of thought increasingly associate the Bahá’í community with fresh conceptions and approaches sorely needed by an ever more disunited and dysfunctional world. The society-building power of the Faith, mostly latent at the start of the first century of the Formative Age, is now increasingly discernible in country after country. The release of this society-building power resulting from a new consciousness and a new capacity for learning among individuals, communities, and institutions worldwide is destined to be the hallmark of the current and next several stages in the unfoldment of the Divine Plan. — Universal House of Justice [1]

Question for Consideration

From a Bahá’í perspective, how can spiritual principles be applied in the voluntary/informal sector to find ways that work and begin to transform the public and private sectors? [2]

Perplexity Deep Research Response: Part IV-d

A Framework for Applying Spiritual Principles in the Voluntary Sector

Drawing on Bahá’í experience and writings, the following framework identifies how spiritual principles can be deliberately applied in voluntary organizations to generate the learning, culture, and proof-of-concept needed to eventually transform the public and private sectors. [3]

Level 4: Contribution to Social Discourse

The fourth level at which the voluntary sector can drive transformation is that of ideas and discourse. The Bahá’í writings explicitly enjoin participation in the “discourses of society” — the ongoing public conversations through which communities, nations, and the global community define their problems and envision their futures. [4] [5]

Voluntary organizations that are rooted in spiritual principles can contribute to public discourse in distinctive ways: challenging the assumptions that underlie materialist policy frameworks, offering evidence from their own practice that alternative approaches work, and helping to redefine the very vocabulary through which progress, prosperity, and development are understood. The BIC’s concept of “spiritually based indicators” for development — proposing that equity, justice, trustworthiness, and unity be measured alongside GDP and poverty rates — is an example of this kind of discourse contribution. [6]

This is not advocacy in the conventional sense; it is the patient work of expanding the range of questions that public discourse considers relevant. Over time, this reshapes the conceptual environment within which both public and private sector actors make decisions. [7]


Footnotes

[1] Universal House of Justice. “28 November 2023 – To the Bahá’ís of the World.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/108339738

[2] Perplexity Deep Research. “The Voluntary/Informal Sector as a Laboratory: Bahá’í Spiritual Principles and the Transformation of Society.” Edited by Steve Bosserman. July 14, 2026. https://www.perplexity.ai/computer/a/9ecfa362-6f2c-499e-b451-8198a188f127

[3] Zabihi, Selvi Adaikkalam. “The Baháʼí Experience: Religious Community and Social Change.” Great Transition Initiative, November 2023. https://greattransition.org/gti-forum/movement-experiments-adaikkalam-zabihi/

[4] Research Department of the Universal House of Justice. SOCIAL ACTION. August 2020. Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/654884908

[5] Uplifting Words Staff. “Processes of Development: The Bahá’í Approach.” UpliftingWords, October 8, 2019. https://www.upliftingwords.org/post/processes-of-development-the-bahai-approach

[6] Bahá’í International Community Staff. “Valuing Spirituality in Development.” BIC.org, February 18, 1998. https://www.bic.org/statements/valuing-spirituality-development

[7] Streets, Donald T. “Social Discourse—One Soul at a Time.” BahaiTeachings.org. https://bahaiteachings.org/social-discourse-one-soul-time/


Be the Voice of…


Therefore, all souls should consider it incumbent upon them to investigate reality. Reality is one; and when found, it will unify all mankind. Reality is the love of God. Reality is the knowledge of God. Reality is justice. Reality is the oneness or solidarity of mankind. Reality is international peace. Reality is the knowledge of verities. Reality unifies humanity. — ‘Abdu’l-Bahá The Promulgation of Universal Peace | Bahá’í Reference Library.

Daily Frameworks for 14 July 2026

Fidál, 02 Kalimát (Words), 183 B.E.

Quotes for Reflection

The private initiatives of believers need not, however, be limited to business ventures. The laws of most societies allow for the establishment of nonprofit organizations which, while private, are subject to special regulations and enjoy certain privileges. Customarily a board of trustees is responsible for all the affairs of such an organization and must ensure that its income is spent for the purpose stipulated in its by-laws. This board also oversees the functioning of the projects of the organization and the work of those who are in charge of them. An increasing number of believers around the world are taking advantage of this possibility and creating organizations dedicated to the application of Bahá’u’lláh’s Teachings to the analysis and resolution of important social and economic issues. The House of Justice looks with keen interest on this growing phenomenon in the Bahá’í world. It only cautions the friends that in establishing such organizations they should exercise care not to become a burden on the institutions or unduly divert the contributions of the believers from the essential and primary tasks of supporting the Funds of the Faith and the activities of the institutions. It expects them to conduct their affairs according to Bahá’í moral and ethical principles. — Universal House of Justice [1]

Question for Consideration

From a Bahá’í perspective, how can spiritual principles be applied in the voluntary/informal sector to find ways that work and begin to transform the public and private sectors? [2]

Perplexity Deep Research Response: Part IV-c

A Framework for Applying Spiritual Principles in the Voluntary Sector

Drawing on Bahá’í experience and writings, the following framework identifies how spiritual principles can be deliberately applied in voluntary organizations to generate the learning, culture, and proof-of-concept needed to eventually transform the public and private sectors. [3]

Level 3: Institutional Models

At the institutional level, voluntary organizations can experiment with governance structures, accountability mechanisms, and organizational cultures that express spiritual principles. The Bahá’í Administrative Order itself serves as a reference model: elected institutions with no permanent individual power, decisions made through collective consultation, financial resources administered as a trust for the common good, and leadership exercised through service rather than authority. [4]

The Universal House of Justice, writing in a letter on behalf of the governing body, encouraged Bahá’ís to take advantage of the nonprofit organizational form precisely as a vehicle for applying spiritual principles to social and economic issues: “An increasing number of believers around the world are taking advantage of this possibility and creating organizations dedicated to the application of Bahá’u’lláh’s Teachings to the analysis and resolution of important social and economic issues. The House of Justice looks with keen interest on this growing phenomenon.” [1] [5]

Voluntary organizations can experiment with new models of governance that could eventually be adapted by public institutions: consensus-based decision-making, rotating leadership, radical transparency, accountability to the communities served rather than to donors or political overseers, and the explicit integration of spiritual and ethical standards into organizational evaluation. [6] [7]


Footnotes

[1] Universal House of Justice. “2 September 1993 – [To a National Spiritual Assembly].” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/476056342

[2] Perplexity Deep Research. “The Voluntary/Informal Sector as a Laboratory: Bahá’í Spiritual Principles and the Transformation of Society.” Edited by Steve Bosserman. July 13, 2026. https://www.perplexity.ai/computer/a/9ecfa362-6f2c-499e-b451-8198a188f127

[3] Zabihi, Selvi Adaikkalam. “The Baháʼí Experience: Religious Community and Social Change.” Great Transition Initiative, November 2023. https://greattransition.org/gti-forum/movement-experiments-adaikkalam-zabihi/

[4] The Bahá’ís of Papua New Guinea Office of External Affairs. “Governance with the Spirit of the Betterment of Society.” Media.Bahai.Org.PG. https://media.bahai.org.pg/2022/03/06/governance-with-the-spirit-of-the-betterment-of-society/

[5] Research Department of the Universal House of Justice. SOCIAL ACTION. August 2020. Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/654884908

[6] Universal House of Justice. “1 November 2022 – To the Followers of Bahá’u’lláh in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/144447805

[7] Universal House of Justice. “18 July 2000 – [To an individual].” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/903739505


Be the Voice of…


Therefore, all souls should consider it incumbent upon them to investigate reality. Reality is one; and when found, it will unify all mankind. Reality is the love of God. Reality is the knowledge of God. Reality is justice. Reality is the oneness or solidarity of mankind. Reality is international peace. Reality is the knowledge of verities. Reality unifies humanity. — ‘Abdu’l-Bahá The Promulgation of Universal Peace | Bahá’í Reference Library.

Daily Frameworks for 13 July 2026

Kamál, 01 Kalimát (Words), 183 B.E.

Quotes for Reflection

The accomplishments of these years of prodigious effort have not been confined to those clusters where the work of large-scale expansion and consolidation is being thus revitalized. The approach taken during the Four Year Plan, followed by the Twelve Month Plan and the previous Five Year Plan, proved instrumental in creating conditions for the believers to extend their endeavours to a wide circle of people, engaging them in various aspects of community life. The benefits of the decade-long process of capacity building in the three participants of the global Plans are now broadly apparent. Everywhere there was a need to gain an understanding of the dynamics of human resource development. Everywhere the friends had to learn the requirements of steady growth—to promote systematic action and to avoid distractions, to bring certain elements of collective decision-making close to the grassroots and to create communities with a sense of mission, to encourage universal participation and to accommodate different segments of society in their activities, particularly children and junior youth, the future champions of the Cause of God and builders of His civilization. — Universal House of Justice [1]

Question for Consideration

From a Bahá’í perspective, how can spiritual principles be applied in the voluntary/informal sector to find ways that work and begin to transform the public and private sectors? [2]

Perplexity Deep Research Response: Part IV-b

A Framework for Applying Spiritual Principles in the Voluntary Sector

Drawing on Bahá’í experience and writings, the following framework identifies how spiritual principles can be deliberately applied in voluntary organizations to generate the learning, culture, and proof-of-concept needed to eventually transform the public and private sectors. [3]

Level 2: Community-Level Culture

The second level of transformation occurs at the community level, where new norms, habits of association, and patterns of collective decision-making are developed and demonstrated. The Bahá’í model identifies three “protagonists” whose simultaneous development is necessary for genuine community transformation: the individual, local institutions, and the wider community. [4]

In the voluntary sector, communities can develop a culture of consultation — making decisions through principled dialogue rather than power dynamics — and demonstrate that this produces better outcomes than adversarial or hierarchical approaches. They can practice inclusive participation, ensuring that voices from all segments of the community inform collective decisions. They can cultivate devotional and reflective practices that sustain motivation beyond the short-term enthusiasm that burns out volunteers in purely activity-driven organizations. [5] [6]

The Bahá’í experience suggests that this cultural work is slow — it takes years, not months, to shift the norms of a community — but it is durable in a way that program-driven change is not. A community that has genuinely internalized the practices of consultation, mutual aid, and service-oriented leadership has acquired capacities that no external pressure can easily dismantle. [7]


Footnotes

[1] Universal House of Justice. Riḍván 2007 – To the Bahá’ís of the World. Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/734934417

[2] Perplexity Deep Research. “The Voluntary/Informal Sector as a Laboratory: Bahá’í Spiritual Principles and the Transformation of Society.” Edited by Steve Bosserman. July 12, 2026. https://www.perplexity.ai/computer/a/9ecfa362-6f2c-499e-b451-8198a188f127

[3] Momen, Moojan. “Building a Global Culture of Learning.” BahaiTeachings.org. https://bahaiteachings.org/building-global-culture-learning/

[4] Universal House of Justice. “30 December 2021 – To the Conference of the Continental Boards of Counsellors.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/758524476

[5] The Bahá’ís of Papua New Guinea Office of External Affairs. “Governance with the Spirit of the Betterment of Society.” Media.Bahai.Org.PG. https://media.bahai.org.pg/2022/03/06/governance-with-the-spirit-of-the-betterment-of-society/

[6] Effendi, Shoghi. BAHÁ’Í ADMINISTRATION. Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/357528683

[7] Universal House of Justice. “28 November 2023 – To the Bahá’ís of the World.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/585344994


Be the Voice of…


Therefore, all souls should consider it incumbent upon them to investigate reality. Reality is one; and when found, it will unify all mankind. Reality is the love of God. Reality is the knowledge of God. Reality is justice. Reality is the oneness or solidarity of mankind. Reality is international peace. Reality is the knowledge of verities. Reality unifies humanity. — ‘Abdu’l-Bahá The Promulgation of Universal Peace | Bahá’í Reference Library.

Daily Frameworks for 12 July 2026

Jamál, 19 Raḥmat (Mercy), 183 B.E.

Quotes for Reflection

Our call to examine the implications of the Revelation of Bahá’u’lláh for economic life is intended to reach Bahá’í institutions and communities but is directed more especially to the individual believer. If a new model of community life, patterned on the teachings, is to emerge, must not the company of the faithful demonstrate in their own lives the rectitude of conduct that is one of its most distinguishing features? Every choice a Bahá’í makes—as employee or employer, producer or consumer, borrower or lender, benefactor or beneficiary—leaves a trace, and the moral duty to lead a coherent life demands that one’s economic decisions be in accordance with lofty ideals, that the purity of one’s aims be matched by the purity of one’s actions to fulfil those aims. Naturally, the friends habitually look to the teachings to set the standard to which to aspire. But the community’s deepening engagement with society means that the economic dimension of social existence must receive ever more concentrated attention. Particularly in clusters where the community-building process is beginning to embrace large numbers, the exhortations contained in the Bahá’í Writings should increasingly inform economic relationships within families, neighbourhoods, and peoples. Not content with whatever values prevail in the existing order that surrounds them, the friends everywhere should consider the application of the teachings to their lives and, using the opportunities their circumstances offer them, make their own individual and collective contributions to economic justice and social progress wherever they reside. Such efforts will add to a growing storehouse of knowledge in this regard. — Universal House of Justice [1]

Question for Consideration

From a Bahá’í perspective, how can spiritual principles be applied in the voluntary/informal sector to find ways that work and begin to transform the public and private sectors? [2]

Perplexity Deep Research Response: Part IV-a

A Framework for Applying Spiritual Principles in the Voluntary Sector

Drawing on Bahá’í experience and writings, the following framework identifies how spiritual principles can be deliberately applied in voluntary organizations to generate the learning, culture, and proof-of-concept needed to eventually transform the public and private sectors.

Level 1: Individual Transformation

The starting point is always the individual. The Universal House of Justice has written that “every choice an individual makes — as employee or employer, producer or consumer, borrower or lender, benefactor or beneficiary — leaves a trace, and the moral duty to lead a coherent life demands that one’s economic decisions be in accordance with lofty ideals.” [3] [4]

In the voluntary sector, individuals can practice coherence between their values and their actions without the same structural pressures that constrain them in their professional roles. Voluntary service becomes a moral laboratory: a space for developing honesty, trustworthiness, generosity, and justice as lived habits rather than abstract commitments. As those habits deepen, individuals carry them across the boundary into the private and public sectors — not through explicit advocacy but through the quiet transformation of how they engage with colleagues, clients, constituents, and decision-makers. [5]

Youth are a particularly important focus. The Bahá’í understanding is that young people who are empowered to see themselves as protagonists of change — rather than passive consumers or ambitious competitors — represent the most powerful engine of civilizational transformation. Voluntary organizations that invest in the moral and intellectual formation of young people are investing in the reform of every sector those young people will eventually enter. [6] [7]


Footnotes

[1] Universal House of Justice. “1 March 2017 – To the Bahá’ís of the World.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/904550633

[2] Perplexity Deep Research. “The Voluntary/Informal Sector as a Laboratory: Bahá’í Spiritual Principles and the Transformation of Society.” Edited by Steve Bosserman. July 11, 2026. https://www.perplexity.ai/computer/a/9ecfa362-6f2c-499e-b451-8198a188f127

[3] ‘Abdu’l-Bahá. SOME ANSWERED QUESTIONS. Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/139812793

[4] Dahl, Arthur Lyon. “Rethinking Business and the Economy based on Spiritual Principles.” IEFWorld, November 20, 2018. https://iefworld.org/ddahl18k

[5] Universal House of Justice. “2 April 2010 – To the Believers in the Cradle of the Faith.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/803989823

[6] Zabihi, Selvi Adaikkalam. “The Baháʼí Experience: Religious Community and Social Change.” Great Transition Initiative, November 2023. https://greattransition.org/gti-forum/movement-experiments-adaikkalam-zabihi/

[7] The Bahá’í Faith Singapore Staff. “Junior Youth Spiritual Empowerment Program.” Bahai.Org.Sg. https://bahai.org.sg/home/jysep/


Be the Voice of…


Therefore, all souls should consider it incumbent upon them to investigate reality. Reality is one; and when found, it will unify all mankind. Reality is the love of God. Reality is the knowledge of God. Reality is justice. Reality is the oneness or solidarity of mankind. Reality is international peace. Reality is the knowledge of verities. Reality unifies humanity. — ‘Abdu’l-Bahá The Promulgation of Universal Peace | Bahá’í Reference Library.

Daily Frameworks for 11 July 2026

Jalál, 18 Raḥmat (Mercy), 183 B.E.

Quotes for Reflection

Whoso hath quaffed of the wine of divine knowledge will indeed be able to answer such questions with clear and perspicuous proofs from the world without and with manifest and luminous evidences from the world within. A different Cause, however, hath appeared in this day and a different discourse is required. Indeed, with the inception of the year nine the time for questions and answers came to an end. Thus He, hallowed and magnified be His name, saith: “This is not the day for any man to question his Lord. When thou hearest the call of God voiced by Him Who is the Dayspring of grandeur, cry out: ‘Here am I, O Lord of all names! Here am I, O Maker of the heavens! I testify that Thou hast revealed Thyself and hast revealed whatsoever Thou didst desire at Thine Own behest. Thou, in truth, art the Lord of strength and might.’” — Bahá’u’lláh [1]

Question for Consideration

From a Bahá’í perspective, how can spiritual principles be applied in the voluntary/informal sector to find ways that work and begin to transform the public and private sectors? [2]

Perplexity Deep Research Response: Part III-e

The Bahá’í Community’s Actual Practice in the Voluntary Sector

The worldwide Bahá’í community has, over several decades, developed a coherent body of practice in the voluntary sector that embodies these principles. This practice is not merely theoretical; it operates in thousands of localities on every continent and is subject to ongoing systematic learning and refinement. [3]

Participation in Public Discourse

The Bahá’í International Community (BIC) — the international advocacy organization of the worldwide Bahá’í community — engages systematically with public discourse at the United Nations and in national policy contexts. The BIC’s statements on development, governance, the environment, gender equality, and economic justice represent a sustained effort to introduce spiritual principles into public discourse without partisan advocacy. [4]

Documents such as The Prosperity of Humankind (1995), Valuing Spirituality in Development (1998), and more recently One Planet, One Habitation demonstrate a long-term strategy of influencing the conceptual frameworks through which public institutions understand development, prosperity, and progress. This is the voluntary sector working on the level of ideas — shaping the language and assumptions of public discourse rather than lobbying for specific legislation. [4] [5] [6] [7]


Footnotes

[1] Bahá’u’lláh. THE TABERNACLE OF UNITY. Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/855801133

[2] Perplexity Deep Research. “The Voluntary/Informal Sector as a Laboratory: Bahá’í Spiritual Principles and the Transformation of Society.” Edited by Steve Bosserman. July 10, 2026. https://www.perplexity.ai/computer/a/9ecfa362-6f2c-499e-b451-8198a188f127

[3] Zabihi, Selvi Adaikkalam. “The Baháʼí Experience: Religious Community and Social Change.” Great Transition Initiative, November 2023. https://greattransition.org/gti-forum/movement-experiments-adaikkalam-zabihi/

[4] Bahá’í International Community Staff. “Valuing Spirituality in Development.” BIC.org, February 18, 1998. https://www.bic.org/statements/valuing-spirituality-development

[5] Bahá’í International Community Office of Public Information. “The Prosperity of Humankind.” BIC.org, March 3, 1995. https://www.bic.org/statements/prosperity-humankind

[6] Bahá’í International Community Staff. “One Planet, One Habitation.” BIC.org, 2022. https://www.bic.org/sites/default/files/one_planet_one_habitation.pdf

[7] Bahá’í International Community Staff. “Working Toward One Planet and One Habitation.” BIC.org, 2022. https://opoh.bic.org


Be the Voice of…


Therefore, all souls should consider it incumbent upon them to investigate reality. Reality is one; and when found, it will unify all mankind. Reality is the love of God. Reality is the knowledge of God. Reality is justice. Reality is the oneness or solidarity of mankind. Reality is international peace. Reality is the knowledge of verities. Reality unifies humanity. — ‘Abdu’l-Bahá The Promulgation of Universal Peace | Bahá’í Reference Library.

Daily Frameworks for 10 July 2026

Istiqlál, 17 Raḥmat (Mercy), 183 B.E.

Commemoration of the Martyrdom of the Báb

Quotes for Reflection

You have written on the question of how the friends should proceed in their business dealings with one another. This is a question of the greatest importance and a matter that deserveth the liveliest concern. In relations of this kind, the friends of God should act with the utmost trustworthiness and integrity. To be remiss in this area would be to turn one’s face away from the counsels of the Blessed Beauty and the holy precepts of God. If a man in his own home doth not treat his relations and friends with entire trustworthiness and integrity, his dealings with the outside world—no matter how much trustworthiness and honesty he may bring to them—will prove barren and unproductive. First one should order one’s own domestic affairs, then attend to one’s business with the public. One should certainly not argue that the friends need not be treated with undue care, or that it is unnecessary for them to attach too great importance to the practice of trustworthiness in their dealings with one another, but that it is in their relations with strangers that correct behaviour is essential. Talk like this is sheer fantasy and will lead to detriment and loss. Blessed be the soul that shineth with the light of trustworthiness among the people and becometh a sign of perfection amidst all men. — ‘Abdu’l-Bahá [1]

Question for Consideration

From a Bahá’í perspective, how can spiritual principles be applied in the voluntary/informal sector to find ways that work and begin to transform the public and private sectors? [2]

Perplexity Deep Research Response: Part III-d

The Bahá’í Community’s Actual Practice in the Voluntary Sector

The worldwide Bahá’í community has, over several decades, developed a coherent body of practice in the voluntary sector that embodies these principles. This practice is not merely theoretical; it operates in thousands of localities on every continent and is subject to ongoing systematic learning and refinement. [3]

EBBF: Bridging the Voluntary and Private Sectors

The Ethical Business Building the Future (EBBF), a Bahá’í-inspired nonprofit founded in Paris in 1990, represents one of the most direct attempts to use voluntary-sector space to transform private-sector culture. EBBF describes itself as “a global learning community that accompanies mindful individuals and groups through daily work and discourse to transform business and the economy, thereby contributing to a prosperous, just and sustainable civilisation.” [4] [5]

EBBF’s seven core values — ethical business practices, social responsibility, values-based leadership, sustainable development, a new paradigm of work, partnership of women and men, and nonadversarial decision-making through consultation — are explicitly offered as alternatives to the materialist norms of contemporary business culture. When EBBF stated in 2009 that the financial crisis was “fundamentally one of trust and integrity” and called for replacing “self-centered materialism with that of service to humanity,” it was speaking from the voluntary sector directly into the discourse of the private sector. [6]

EBBF illustrates a general pattern: voluntary organizations populated by people who also work in the private or public sectors can function as transmission channels — carrying principles, practices, and proof-of-concept from the voluntary sector into boardrooms, regulatory agencies, and policy forums. [7]


Footnotes

[1] Compiled by the Research Department of the Universal House of Justice. “Trustworthiness: A Cardinal Bahá’í Virtue.” Bahá’í Reference Library. January 1987, Revised August 1990. https://www.bahai.org/r/061587563

[2] Perplexity Deep Research. “The Voluntary/Informal Sector as a Laboratory: Bahá’í Spiritual Principles and the Transformation of Society.” Edited by Steve Bosserman. July 9, 2026. https://www.perplexity.ai/computer/a/9ecfa362-6f2c-499e-b451-8198a188f127

[3] Zabihi, Selvi Adaikkalam. “The Baháʼí Experience: Religious Community and Social Change.” Great Transition Initiative, November 2023. https://greattransition.org/gti-forum/movement-experiments-adaikkalam-zabihi/

[4] Bahaipedia Staff. “Ethical Business Building the Future.” Bahaipedia.org. https://bahaipedia.org/Ethical_Business_Building_the_Future

[5] ebbf staff. “ebbf accompanies ethical people building the future.” ebbf.org. https://www.ebbf.org/about

[6] Bahá’í World News Service Staff. “Ethics at heart of economic crisis, says EBBF.” BWNS – Bahai.org, July 6, 2009. https://news.bahai.org/story/722/ethics-heart-economic-crisis-says-ebbf

[7] Miller, Lawrence M. “Ethical Leadership: Baha’i Principles at Work.” BahaiTeachings.org. https://bahaiteachings.org/ethical-leadership-bahai-principles-at-work/


Be the Voice of…


Therefore, all souls should consider it incumbent upon them to investigate reality. Reality is one; and when found, it will unify all mankind. Reality is the love of God. Reality is the knowledge of God. Reality is justice. Reality is the oneness or solidarity of mankind. Reality is international peace. Reality is the knowledge of verities. Reality unifies humanity. — ‘Abdu’l-Bahá The Promulgation of Universal Peace | Bahá’í Reference Library.

Daily Frameworks for 09 July 2026

Istijlál, 16 Raḥmat (Mercy), 183 B.E.

Quotes for Reflection

A natural outcome of the rise both in resources and in consciousness of the implications of the Revelation for the life of a population is the stirrings of social action. Not infrequently, initiatives of this kind emerge organically out of the junior youth spiritual empowerment programme or are prompted by consultations about local conditions that occur at community gatherings. The forms that such endeavours can assume are diverse and include, for example, tutorial assistance to children, projects to better the physical environment, and activities to improve health and prevent disease. Some initiatives become sustained and gradually grow. In various places the founding of a community school at the grassroots has arisen from a heightened concern for the proper education of children and awareness of its importance, flowing naturally from the study of institute materials. On occasion, the efforts of the friends can be greatly reinforced through the work of an established Bahá’í-inspired organization functioning in the vicinity. However humble an instance of social action might be at the beginning, it is an indication of a people cultivating within themselves a critical capacity, one that holds infinite potential and significance for the centuries ahead: learning how to apply the Revelation to the manifold dimensions of social existence. All such initiatives also serve to enrich participation, at an individual and collective level, in prevalent discourses of the wider community. As expected, the friends are being drawn further into the life of society—a development which is inherent in the pattern of action in a cluster from the very start, but which is now much more pronounced. — Universal House of Justice [1]

Question for Consideration

From a Bahá’í perspective, how can spiritual principles be applied in the voluntary/informal sector to find ways that work and begin to transform the public and private sectors? [2]

Perplexity Deep Research Response: Part III-c

The Bahá’í Community’s Actual Practice in the Voluntary Sector

The worldwide Bahá’í community has, over several decades, developed a coherent body of practice in the voluntary sector that embodies these principles. This practice is not merely theoretical; it operates in thousands of localities on every continent and is subject to ongoing systematic learning and refinement. [3]

Grassroots Social Action Projects

Beyond educational activities, Bahá’í communities around the world are engaged in grassroots social action projects in health, agriculture, environment, education, and women’s advancement — all conducted on a voluntary basis and designed to build local capacity rather than create dependency. The Bahá’í approach to development insists that “the desire for change must come directly from individuals and communities and cannot be imposed from the outside.” [4] [5]

This principle — locally driven, organically growing, capacity-oriented development — is one of the most significant contributions the voluntary sector can make to transforming public-sector development models, which have historically suffered from top-down imposition, expert-driven planning, and the creation of dependency rather than autonomy. [6] [7]


Footnotes

[1] Universal House of Justice. “29 December 2015 – To the Conference of the Continental Boards of Counsellors.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/334449832

[2] Perplexity Deep Research. “The Voluntary/Informal Sector as a Laboratory: Bahá’í Spiritual Principles and the Transformation of Society.” Edited by Steve Bosserman. July 8, 2026. https://www.perplexity.ai/computer/a/9ecfa362-6f2c-499e-b451-8198a188f127

[3] Momen, Moojan. “Building a Global Culture of Learning.” BahaiTeachings.org. https://bahaiteachings.org/building-global-culture-learning/

[4] Uplifting Words Staff. “Processes of Development: The Bahá’í Approach.” UpliftingWords, October 8, 2019. https://www.upliftingwords.org/post/processes-of-development-the-bahai-approach

[5] Zabihi, Selvi Adaikkalam. “The Baháʼí Experience: Religious Community and Social Change.” Great Transition Initiative, November 2023. https://greattransition.org/gti-forum/movement-experiments-adaikkalam-zabihi/

[6] Casely-Hayford, Lesley. “Stirring Up the Grass Roots: Investigation for Community Development.” IEFWorld, 1999. https://iefworld.org/dcase99c.htm

[7] Malta Baha’i Community Staff. “Social and Economic Development.” Bahai.Org.Mt. https://bahai.org.mt/social-and-economic-development/


Be the Voice of…


Therefore, all souls should consider it incumbent upon them to investigate reality. Reality is one; and when found, it will unify all mankind. Reality is the love of God. Reality is the knowledge of God. Reality is justice. Reality is the oneness or solidarity of mankind. Reality is international peace. Reality is the knowledge of verities. Reality unifies humanity. — ‘Abdu’l-Bahá The Promulgation of Universal Peace | Bahá’í Reference Library.

Daily Frameworks for 08 July 2026

‘Idál, 15 Raḥmat (Mercy), 183 B.E.

Quotes for Reflection

And now we wish to address a few words to parents, who bear the primary responsibility for the upbringing of their children. We appeal to them to give constant attention to the spiritual education of their children. Some parents appear to think that this is the exclusive responsibility of the community; others believe that in order to preserve the independence of children to investigate truth, the Faith should not be taught to them. Still others feel inadequate to take on such a task. None of this is correct. The beloved Master has said that “it is enjoined upon the father and mother, as a duty, to strive with all effort to train the daughter and the son,” adding that, “should they neglect this matter, they shall be held responsible and worthy of reproach in the presence of the stern Lord.” [1] Independent of the level of their education, parents are in a critical position to shape the spiritual development of their children. They should not ever underestimate their capacity to mold their children’s moral character. For they exercise indispensable influence through the home environment they consciously create by their love of God, their striving to adhere to His laws, their spirit of service to His Cause, their lack of fanaticism, and their freedom from the corrosive effects of backbiting. Every parent who is a believer in the Blessed Beauty has the responsibility to conduct herself or himself in such a way as to elicit the spontaneous obedience to parents to which the Teachings attach so high a value. Of course, in addition to the efforts made at home, the parents should support Bahá’í children’s classes provided by the community. It must be borne in mind, too, that children live in a world that informs them of harsh realities through direct experience with the horrors already described or through the unavoidable outpourings of the mass media. Many of them are thereby forced to mature prematurely, and among these are those who look for standards and discipline by which to guide their lives. Against this gloomy backdrop of a decadent society, Bahá’í children should shine as the emblems of a better future. — Universal House of Justice [2]

Question for Consideration

From a Bahá’í perspective, how can spiritual principles be applied in the voluntary/informal sector to find ways that work and begin to transform the public and private sectors? [3]

Perplexity Deep Research Response: Part III-b

The Bahá’í Community’s Actual Practice in the Voluntary Sector

The worldwide Bahá’í community has, over several decades, developed a coherent body of practice in the voluntary sector that embodies these principles. This practice is not merely theoretical; it operates in thousands of localities on every continent and is subject to ongoing systematic learning and refinement. [4]

Children’s Classes and Junior Youth Groups

Bahá’í children’s classes and the Junior Youth Spiritual Empowerment Program (JYSEP) represent a systematic, volunteer-led investment in the moral and spiritual formation of the next generation. The junior youth program, serving young adolescents (ages 11–15), explicitly aims to develop moral agency — the capacity to distinguish between the forces of integration and disintegration in their societies and to align their energies with constructive purposes. [5] [6] [7]

This is precisely the opposite of what a consumerist culture does to adolescents: instead of positioning them as targets for market exploitation, it invites them to see themselves as protagonists of change. The Universal House of Justice has stated that “the junior youth spiritual empowerment programme encourages thoughtful discernment at an age when the call of materialism grows more insistent.” [8] Young people who develop moral discernment in voluntary settings carry those capacities into their eventual roles in schools, businesses, governments, and civil society. [9]


Footnotes

[1] ‘Abdu’l-Bahá. SELECTIONS FROM THE WRITINGS OF ‘ABDU’L-BAHÁ. Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/925545422

[2] Universal House of Justice. “Riḍván 2000 – To the Bahá’ís of the World.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/246716299

[3] Perplexity Deep Research. “The Voluntary/Informal Sector as a Laboratory: Bahá’í Spiritual Principles and the Transformation of Society.” Edited by Steve Bosserman. July 7, 2026. https://www.perplexity.ai/computer/a/9ecfa362-6f2c-499e-b451-8198a188f127

[4] Momen, Moojan. “Building a Global Culture of Learning.” BahaiTeachings.org. https://bahaiteachings.org/building-global-culture-learning/

[5] Universal House of Justice. “27 December 2005 – To the Conference of the Continental Boards of Counsellors.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/673611695

[6] The Bahá’í Faith Singapore Staff. “Junior Youth Spiritual Empowerment Program.” Bahai.Org.Sg. https://bahai.org.sg/home/jysep/

[7] Bahá’í Seychelles Staff. “Junior Youth Spiritual Empowerment Program.” Bahai.Org.Sc. https://bahai.org.sc/junior-youth-empowerment-program/

[8] Universal House of Justice. “1 March 2017 – To the Bahá’ís of the World.” Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/963073955

[9] Dahl, Arthur Lyon. “Rethinking Business and the Economy based on Spiritual Principles.” IEFWorld, November 20, 2018. https://iefworld.org/ddahl18k


Be the Voice of…


Therefore, all souls should consider it incumbent upon them to investigate reality. Reality is one; and when found, it will unify all mankind. Reality is the love of God. Reality is the knowledge of God. Reality is justice. Reality is the oneness or solidarity of mankind. Reality is international peace. Reality is the knowledge of verities. Reality unifies humanity. — ‘Abdu’l-Bahá The Promulgation of Universal Peace | Bahá’í Reference Library.