You belong to the world of purity, and are not content to live the life of the animal, spending your days in eating, drinking, and sleeping. You are indeed men! Your thoughts and ambitions are set to acquire human perfection. You live to do good and to bring happiness to others. Your greatest longing is to comfort those who mourn, to strengthen the weak, and to be the cause of hope to the despairing soul. Day and night your thoughts are turned to the Kingdom, and your hearts are full of the Love of God.— ‘Abdu’l-Bahá [1]
Question for Consideration
What are the characteristics of grassroots activities in communities mentioned in the Riḍván 2026 letter? [2]
Gemini/NotebookLM Response [3]
According to the Riḍván 2026 letter, grassroots activities within Bahá’í communities are characterized by a profound shift from merely pursuing projects to cultivating a “way of life” patterned on divine teachings. These activities are increasingly recognized by the wider society for several distinctive qualities that define their approach to social progress.
Distinctive Qualities of Grassroots Activity
The Universal House of Justice identifies several core characteristics that define how these activities are carried out at the local level:
Altruistic Motivation: All activity springs from a sincere concern for the well-being of all members of the community.
Unity and Service: The work is fundamentally oriented toward fostering unity and rendering service to others.
Principled Humility: While the community follows clear spiritual principles, it does not presume to have an immediate answer to every problem, instead adopting a posture of learning.
Collaboration and Common Endeavor: Bahá’ís seek to collaborate with their neighbors and “learn together” rather than imposing pre-packaged solutions.
Political Neutrality and Integrity: Social change is pursued without political ambition or self-interest, ensuring that the community remains clear-sighted and earnest in its relationships with those in positions of authority.
The Role of the Individual and Institutions
The letter highlights how the nature of participation is evolving, particularly as communities move into the “second, greater phase” of the Nine Year Plan:
Protagonism of the Youth: A striking feature of these activities is the emergence of groups of youth as “conspicuous protagonists”. These youth identify fruitful avenues of service and encourage the participation of their peers, often steering around obstacles like economic inequity and social division to find constructive ways forward.
Experiential Learning: Conversations within institutions are increasingly based on “direct experience of building vibrant communities” rather than on theory or assumptions.
Broadening the Conversation: These efforts are characterized by an eagerness to extend spiritual and material progress to “ever-widening circles of friends, neighbors, and other like-minded souls”.
Resilience in Turbulent Times
Consistent with our previous discussions on constructive resilience, the Riḍván 2026 letter notes that these grassroots endeavors often occur against a backdrop of “conflict and disorder”. Despite these “turbulent times,” the community is encouraged to remain “ever hopeful”. The letter points to the Bahá’ís in Iran as a “golden example” of this spirit, noting their ability to remain a “beacon of hope” and “trusted companions on the path of service” despite decades of unrelenting oppression.
In summary, grassroots activities are no longer viewed simply as the pursuit of programs, but as a collective effort to shape “actions, interactions, and aspirations” in a way that provides direction to a “troubled world in desperate need”.
Forty percent Qatar’s Bahá’í community is at risk of being deported: here’s what that number means and all the people it could hurt. pic.twitter.com/bZfvL6sofa
— Bahá'í International Community – Human Rights (@BahaiBIC_Rights) May 27, 2026
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.
We will now mention unto thee Trustworthiness and the station thereof in the estimation of God, thy Lord, the Lord of the Mighty Throne. One day of days We repaired unto Our Green Island. Upon Our arrival, We beheld its streams flowing, and its trees luxuriant, and the sunlight playing in their midst. Turning Our face to the right, We beheld what the pen is powerless to describe; nor can it set forth that which the eye of the Lord of Mankind witnessed in that most sanctified, that most sublime, that blest, and most exalted Spot. Turning, then, to the left We gazed on one of the Beauties of the Most Sublime Paradise, standing on a pillar of light, and calling aloud saying: “O inmates of earth and heaven! Behold ye My beauty, and My radiance, and My revelation, and My effulgence. By God, the True One! I am Trustworthiness and the revelation thereof, and the beauty thereof. I will recompense whosoever will cleave unto Me, and recognize My rank and station, and hold fast unto My hem. I am the most great ornament of the people of Bahá, and the vesture of glory unto all who are in the kingdom of creation. I am the supreme instrument for the prosperity of the world, and the horizon of assurance unto all beings.” Thus have We sent down for thee that which will draw men nigh unto the Lord of creation. — Bahá’u’lláh [1]
Question for Consideration
From a Bahá’í perspective, how does trust influence the effectiveness of institutions, communities, and individuals as protagonists of social transformation along the continuum of connectivity and care? [2]
Gemini/NotebookLM Response
From a Bahá’í perspective, social transformation is not achieved through top-down mandates or purely structural changes. Instead, it relies on a dynamic, collaborative interplay between three protagonists: the individual, the community, and the institutions.
Trust is the spiritual and psychological “glue” that binds these three entities together. Without it, the continuum of connectivity collapses, and effort fragments into isolation or bureaucracy.
Here is how trust uniquely influences the effectiveness of each protagonist as they move along that spectrum from caring about to caring for humanity.
1. The Individual: Moving from Goodwill to Vulnerability
For the individual, trust acts as the bridge that converts passive goodwill (caring about) into active, sacrificial service (caring for).
Trust in the Divine and the Process: Stepping into closer proximity with others requires vulnerability. An individual must trust that their sincere efforts, however small, are backed by divine assistance. This spiritual trust gives them the courage to leave their comfort zone, overcome social anxieties, and associate intentionally with people of diverse backgrounds.
Building Trustworthiness: At the level of intimate care, an individual’s effectiveness hinges entirely on their personal integrity. In the Bahá’í view, trustworthiness is “the most great ornament of the people of Bahá.” When an individual is proven trustworthy, neighbors and friends feel safe enough to share their struggles, allowing the relationship to progress to mutual accompaniment and deep, personal care.
2. The Community: Creating the Environment for Accompaniment
A Bahá’í community’s role is to cultivate an environment where meaningful relationships can flourish. Trust determines whether a community feels like a cold organization or a vibrant, supportive spiritual family.
A Culture of Non-Judgment: To move from Stage 1 (Awareness) to Stage 3 (Mutual Accompaniment), community members must trust that they will not be judged, criticized, or marginalized for their shortcomings. When a community establishes a high level of mutual trust, it becomes a safe harbor. People feel empowered to take risks, learn from mistakes, and support one another.
Collectivizing Care: True caring for can be emotionally and physically exhausting for a single individual. A trusting community creates a network of collective care. Because members trust one another’s motives, they can easily collaborate—sharing the responsibilities of visiting the sick, comforting the grieving, or educating the neighborhood’s children.
3. The Institutions: Channeling Collective Energy
Bahá’í institutions (such as Local and National Spiritual Assemblies) do not rule by power or leverage; they govern through love, consultation, and moral authority. Their effectiveness in fostering social change is directly proportional to the trust the community places in them.
Fostering Autonomy and Initiative: When institutions trust the individuals and communities they serve, they do not micromanage. Instead, they encourage grassroots initiative. This institutional trust gives individuals the confidence to express their care for their local neighborhoods in creative, organic ways.
The Reciprocity of Consultation: Bahá’í consultation—the method used for collective decision-making—requires absolute trust. The community must trust that the institution has their best interests at heart and is listening to their needs. Conversely, the institution must trust that the community will rally around its decisions, even if those decisions are experimental.
Institutional Care: When a community trusts its institutions, the institution can transition from merely caring about the community (managing statistics and properties) to truly caring for it (nurturing the spiritual well-being of every soul, resolving conflicts with tenderness, and protecting the vulnerable).
The Virtuous Cycle of Trust
When trust operates effectively among all three protagonists, it creates a powerful, self-reinforcing loop that accelerates social transformation:
[ Institutions trust the grassroots and empower initiative ] => [ Individuals feel safe to act, building trusted bonds ] => [ Communities become cohesive, enveloping souls in care ] => [ The collective trust in the system deepens, multiplying impact ]
Without trust, the individual becomes cynical, the community becomes fractured, and institutions become rigid and administrative. With trust, the continuum of care becomes a living reality, transforming social service from a duty into a joyful expression of spiritual fellowship.
Footnotes
[1] Bahá’u’lláh. TABLETS OF BAHÁ’U’LLÁH REVEALED AFTER THE KITÁB-I-AQDAS. Bahá’í Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/835705811
Dozens of Bahá'ís have been detained and jailed in recent months, as the Islamic Republic pursues an escalating campaign of brutal persecution against the religious minority.⁰⁰Simin Fahandej, BIC Representative to the United Nations in Geneva, speaks directly on the matter.… pic.twitter.com/CiWlZLGOqG
— Bahá'í International Community – Human Rights (@BahaiBIC_Rights) May 26, 2026
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.
“O friends, consort with all the people of the world with joy and fragrance. If there be to you a word or essence whereof others than you are devoid, communicate it and show it forth in the language of affection and kindness: if it be received and be effective the object is attained, and if not leave it to him, and with regard to him deal not harshly but pray. The language of kindness is the lodestone of hearts and the food of the soul; it stands in the relation of ideas to words, and is as an horizon for the shining of the Sun of Wisdom and Knowledge.” — Bahá’u’lláh [1]
Question for Consideration
To render appreciated and valued services to the world of humanity from a Bahá’í perspective requires making spiritual and personal connections with people. Such connectivity occurs along a continuum from genuinely caring about others to caring for them. Describe the characteristics of caring about and caring for and what are likely stages of connectivity between them. [2]
Gemini/NotebookLM Response
From a Bahá’í perspective, rendering service to humanity is not just a series of charitable acts; it is a spiritual practice rooted in the recognition of the oneness of humankind. Moving along the continuum from caring about others to caring for them represents a transformation from holding a noble, universal ideal to engaging in deeply personal, sacrificial action.
Here is a breakdown of the characteristics of both ends of this spectrum, followed by the stages that connect them.
1. Caring About vs. Caring For
While both are essential, they differ significantly in proximity, emotional investment, and action.
Dimension
Caring About (Universal & Concept)
Caring For (Intimate & Action)
Focus
The collective, a cause, or humanity as a whole.
The individual person and their specific reality.
Nature
Sympathy: Feeling well-wishes or sorrow from a distance.
Empathy & Accompaniment: Walking alongside someone in their struggles.
Expression
Praying for the world, donating to causes, discussing social justice.
Offering time, listening deeply, sharing burdens, physical assistance.
Bahá’í Concept
“Let your heart burn with loving kindness for all who may cross your path.” [3]
“Be a helper to every helpless one… “ [4] a home to the stranger…” [5]
The Core Difference:Caring about someone means you wish them well and value their dignity as a creation of God. Caring for someone means you have entered their reality, shared their vulnerability, and taken a degree of responsibility for their well-being.
2. The Stages of Connectivity
Transitioning from general goodwill to intimate, sacrificial service does not happen overnight. It is a process of expanding one’s capacity to love. In Bahá’í community-building efforts, this connectivity typically evolves through four distinct stages:
Stage 1: Recognition & Awareness (The Spark)
At this initial stage, you recognize the inherent worth and spiritual potential of another person. You move past superficial barriers (like race, class, or nationality) to see them as a member of the human family.
Action: Conversing with a neighbor, practicing active listening, and setting aside prejudices.
Stage 2: Intentional Association (The Bridge)
Connectivity deepens when you choose to move into closer proximity. You actively seek opportunities to interact and understand their life experiences, joys, and struggles.
Action: Inviting someone into your home, visiting them, or participating in shared community spaces (like devotional gatherings or neighborhood projects).
Stage 3: Mutual Accompaniment (The Bond)
This is a critical turning point where the relationship shifts from “helper and helped” to true partnership. You walk together on a path of spiritual and material progress. You laugh together, pray together, and consult on life’s challenges.
Action: Studying spiritual materials together, co-facilitating a children’s class, or supporting each other through personal or family crises.
Stage 4: Sacrificial Caring (The Integration)
At this highest stage of the continuum, the boundary between “self” and “other” blurs. Your love for them becomes unconditional, requiring real sacrifice of your time, comfort, and resources. You care for them as you would your own family.
Action: Providing long-term emotional or material support during a prolonged trial, prioritizing their needs, and holding their well-being as integral to your own spiritual growth.
Ultimately, this continuum reflects the Bahá’í teaching that love is not merely a sentiment, but a force that must be translated into deeds. As Bahá’u’lláh emphasized, “The language of kindness is the lodestone of hearts and the food of the soul.” It is through the gradual deepening of these stages that service becomes truly transformative for both the giver and the receiver.
Boshra Mostafavi, a pregnant Bahá’í woman from Rafsanjan, southeast Iran, is among dozens of Bahá’ís detained and jailed in recent months, as the Islamic Republic pursues an escalating campaign of brutal persecution against the religious minority.#BoshraMostafavi… pic.twitter.com/D1HUCOPXRH
— Bahá'í International Community – Human Rights (@BahaiBIC_Rights) May 23, 2026
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.
It is better to guide one soul than to possess all that is on earth, for as long as that guided soul is under the shadow of the Tree of Divine Unity, he and the one who hath guided him will both be recipients of God’s tender mercy, whereas possession of earthly things will cease at the time of death. The path to guidance is one of love and compassion, not of force and coercion. This hath been God’s method in the past, and shall continue to be in the future! He causeth him whom He pleaseth to enter the shadow of His Mercy. Verily, He is the Supreme Protector, the All-Generous. There is no paradise more wondrous for any soul than to be exposed to God’s Manifestation in His Day, to hear His verses and believe in them, to attain His presence, which is naught but the presence of God, to sail upon the sea of the heavenly kingdom of His good-pleasure, and to partake of the choice fruits of the paradise of His divine Oneness.— The Báb [1]
Question for Consideration
What does the phrase “walking a path of service” mean in a Bahá’í context? [2]
Gemini/NotebookLM Response [3]
In a Bahá’í context, the phrase “walking a path of service” is the central organizing principle for the training institute process, describing a continuous and systematic journey of individual and collective transformation. It is a metaphor for a lifelong educational process where study and action are joined to build the capacity of a population to take charge of its own spiritual and social development.
Key characteristics of this path include:
1. A Structured but Personal Journey
The “path” is described as structured and defined, yet it is not a rigid formula; it accommodates different paces and strides.
Volition: Entering and advancing on this path requires an individual’s own volition and choice.
Progression: It follows a logical progression, often starting with relatively simple tasks and becoming more challenging and complex as the individual gains experience and spiritual insight.
Commonality: While personal, it is a path that belongs to the community; individuals walk it in the company of others, fostering bonds of “loving fellowship” and “mutual encouragement”.
2. The Integration of Study and Service
Walking the path is not merely about academic learning; it is a concurrent process of study and service.
Application of Insights: Knowledge is tested in the field of action, where questions arise out of practice, and new levels of understanding are achieved through action and reflection.
Acquiring Capabilities: Participants move through a sequence of courses designed to endow them with the spiritual insights, knowledge, and practical skills needed for acts of service, such as hosting devotional meetings, teaching children’s classes, or mentoring junior youth.
3. The Ethos of Accompaniment
A distinctive feature of walking this path is accompaniment, where more experienced individuals work “shoulder to shoulder” with those taking their first steps.
Building Confidence: Experienced friends assist “tentative venturers” by working alongside them in an unfamiliar task, providing the practical help and assurance needed to gain courage.
Self-Perpetuating: The ultimate goal is for individuals to develop the capacity to carry out activities independently and then, in turn, accompany others on the same path.
4. Fulfillment of a Twofold Moral Purpose
Ultimately, walking the path of service is how a believer fulfills their twofold moral purpose: to develop their own God-given potentialities and to contribute to the transformation of society.
Service as Worship: Useful work or acts of service performed in this spirit are equated with the worship of God.
Quelling the Self: Service is intended to “quell the insistent self,” lifting the individual out of personal confines and into a dynamic process of community building.
A Life of Meaning: For many, particularly youth, setting their “footsteps firmly in the path of learning and action” provides a coherent way of life that addresses the world’s “intense need”.
In summary, walking a path of service is an ever-widening stream of activity where the individual becomes an active “protagonist” of history, dedicated to the betterment of the world and the advancement of a world spiritual civilization.
Boshra Mostafavi, a pregnant Bahá’í woman from Rafsanjan, southeast Iran, is among dozens of Bahá’ís detained and jailed in recent months, as the Islamic Republic pursues an escalating campaign of brutal persecution against the religious minority
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.
O people of the world! Build ye houses of worship throughout the lands in the name of Him Who is the Lord of all religions. Make them as perfect as is possible in the world of being, and adorn them with that which befitteth them, not with images and effigies. Then, with radiance and joy, celebrate therein the praise of your Lord, the Most Compassionate. Verily, by His remembrance the eye is cheered and the heart is filled with light. — Bahá’u’lláh [1]
Question for Consideration
One of the institutions of the Bahá’í Faith is the Mashriqu’l-Adhkár. With the dual purpose of worship of God and service to humanity, these Houses of Worship feature “dependencies” or “institutions of social service as shall afford relief to the suffering, sustenance to the poor, shelter to the wayfarer, solace to the bereaved, and education to the ignorant,” etc. for the benefit of local communities. Given the Mashriqu’l-Adhkárs are in early stages of institutional development, the capacity of these dependencies is limited to the time, energy, and personal resources (other than money, if at all possible) individual Bahá’ís and their families can offer through Social Action activities related to the Training Institute process, the unfolding Divine Plan, and the overarching spiritual principles of the Bahá’í Faith. What kind of activities can individuals and families consider that demonstrate the spirit of these dependencies in practice? [2]
Gemini/NotebookLM Response
This question strikes right at the heart of how the Bahá’í community seeks to integrate the devotional character of the Mashriqu’l-Adhkár (the House of Worship) with the practical, sacrificial service of the individual.
When material resources are limited, the real “currency” of a dependency becomes human resource—the time, energy, and spiritual focus generated by the Training Institute process. In the Bahá’í writings, dependencies are meant to be centers of learning, healing, and upliftment.
Individuals and families can translate the spirit of these institutions into grass-roots, zero-cost (or low-cost) Social Action by focusing on activities that rely purely on human connection, knowledge sharing, and mutual support.
“Education to the Ignorant” (Empowerment through Learning)
In the context of the Divine Plan, education isn’t just academic; it is the realization of human potential. Families can channel their energy into intellectual and spiritual empowerment:
Neighborhood Homework Help & Mentorship: Families can open their homes a few days a week to offer free tutoring for neighborhood children. This addresses a practical need for working parents while building strong, cross-generational bonds.
Literacy or Language Exchange Circles: If family members speak the local language fluently, they can offer informal conversational circles for immigrants or refugees in the community. Conversely, youth can help older neighbors navigate modern digital tools (digital literacy).
Enhancing the Junior Youth Spiritual Empowerment Program: Junior youth (ages 11–14) are highly sensitive to justice. Families can help junior youth groups identify, design, and execute their own local service projects, essentially turning the JYSEP into a micro-dependency of social action.
“Sustenance to the Poor & Relief to the Suffering” (Practical Mutual Aid)
Relief doesn’t always require financial capital; it often requires coordination, physical labor, and shared abundance.
Community Skill-Sharing & Tool Libraries: Families can organize a neighborhood asset-map. Who knows how to fix a leaky pipe? Who has a lawnmower others can borrow? Who can teach basic sewing or cooking? Organizing a network of shared skills and tools costs nothing but time and directly relieves the material burdens of local families.
The “Care Crop” (Community Gardening): If a family has a small yard or access to a community plot, growing food together with neighbors to share with those who lack access to fresh produce combines environmental stewardship with the relief of hunger.
Time-Banking for Childcare or Elder Care: Families can team up with neighbors to create a cooperative childcare rotation or a network to check on elderly residents—running errands for them, clearing their walkways, or simply sitting with them so they aren’t isolated.
“Shelter to the Wayfarer & Solace to the Bereaved” (Emotional & Social Sanctuary)
The Mashriqu’l-Adhkár is a haven for the soul. At the family level, this translates into radical hospitality and emotional accompaniment.
Devotional Gatherings as Spaces for Healing: Elevating a standard devotional meeting into an intentional space of solace. For instance, hosting devotionals specifically focused on comforting those experiencing grief, job loss, or anxiety, followed by space for deep, meaningful conversation.
Welcoming the “Wayfarer” Room: Creating a culture where the family home is a known safe space for people in transition—whether that is a student adjusting to a new city, a foster youth aging out of the system who needs a family dinner, or a neighbor going through a tough domestic situation who just needs a quiet place to clear their head.
Hospital and Homebound Visitation: Dedicating an afternoon a week as a family to visit local nursing homes, hospitals, or homebound neighbors. The gift of an attentive listener is one of the rarest and most valuable forms of solace.
Aligning Action with the Training Institute
The beauty of these activities is that they don’t sit outside the core activities of the Bahá’í community; they flow naturally from them. As individuals move through the Institute courses, their capacity for empathy and systematic action grows.
A Core Principle: The goal is never for the Bahá’í family to act as “charity providers” to a passive neighborhood. True Social Action in the Bahá’í framework means walking a path of service with the community, inviting neighbors to join in the planning, and collectively learning how to look after one another.
In this way, even before a physical clinic, school, or hospice can be built next to a House of Worship, the spiritual infrastructure of the dependency is already alive and breathing in the neighborhood.
Shakila Ghasemi Held for Over 100 Days in Kerman Prison
It was learned on 13 May 2026, that Ms. Shakila Ghasemi, a Baha’i detained in Kerman prison, has been kept in detention for more than 103 days without formal charges.
— Bahá'í International Community – Human Rights (@BahaiBIC_Rights) May 22, 2026
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.
Consultation bestoweth greater awareness and transmuteth conjecture into certitude. It is a shining light which, in a dark world, leadeth the way and guideth. For everything there is and will continue to be a station of perfection and maturity. The maturity of the gift of understanding is made manifest through consultation. — Bahá’u’lláh [1]
Question for Consideration
How does AI help prioritize the qualitative aspects of community building? [2]
Gemini/NotebookLM Response
In the Bahá’í framework, Artificial Intelligence (AI) is viewed as a specialized “material means” that refines the “administrative machinery” of the Cause, which is designed to canalize spiritual energies into constructive action. By serving as a “multiplier” of human effort, AI helps prioritize the qualitative aspects of community building in the following specific ways:
1. Automating Administrative “Drudgery”
A primary way AI assists is by automating routine administrative and logistical tasks. By handling the “mechanical” or “drudge” aspects of community management, AI frees individual and institutional protagonists from time-consuming coordination efforts. This shift allows believers to dedicate their limited creative and spiritual energy to the qualitative, soul-stirring aspects of community life, such as:
Spiritual education and the nurturing of deep, authentic relationships.
Engaging in meaningful conversations on themes of spiritual and social import.
Offering disinterested service to the world of humanity.
2. Enhancing Consultative Resources
AI tools strengthen the qualitative depth of Bahá’í consultation, which is the bedrock of collective decision-making. By providing immediate access to relevant Sacred Texts and historical precedents, AI ensures that consultations remain grounded in the “explicit Holy Text” rather than being swept away by materialistic philosophies or “dictates of consumerism”. This allows institutions to act with a higher degree of spiritual authority and wisdom according to the “exigencies of the time”.
3. Improving the “Reading of Reality”
Qualitative community building requires an accurate understanding of social conditions, a process known as “reading reality”. AI manages the community’s “nerves and arteries” by processing large volumes of data from diverse geographic clusters. This logistical support enables protagonists to:
Identify local social forces and needs with higher degrees of accuracy.
Move away from paternalistic models of charity toward universal participation by empowering local populations to take charge of their own development.
Ensure that social action remains responsive to the unique qualitative needs of a specific neighbourhood or village.
4. Nurturing “Active Protagonists”
By managing routine information flows and logistics, AI facilitates a shift in human identity within the community. The individual is no longer a “passive observer” or a “victim of external circumstances” but becomes an “active protagonist” of history. This empowerment allows individuals to maintain “dynamic coherence” in their lives, harmonizing their material tools with their sacred mission to carry forward an ever-advancing civilization.
Ultimately, AI acts as a “digital lamp-glass” that protects and projects the “light” of spiritual purpose. It provides the necessary infrastructure for the Bahá’í community to resist the “corrosion of ungodliness” and “crude materialism,” ensuring that technology remains a servant to the common good.
LATEST: https://t.co/UXEJnlfqT4 A pregnant Bahá’í woman from Rafsanjan, southeast Iran, is among almost 80 Bahá’ís detained and jailed in recent months, as the Islamic Republic pursues an escalating campaign of brutal persecution against the religious minority. The Bahá’í… pic.twitter.com/76ySwoFgFn
— Bahá'í International Community – Human Rights (@BahaiBIC_Rights) May 22, 2026
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.
The vitality of men’s belief in God is dying out in every land; nothing short of His wholesome medicine can ever restore it. The corrosion of ungodliness is eating into the vitals of human society; what else but the Elixir of His potent Revelation can cleanse and revive it? Is it within human power, O Ḥakím, to effect in the constituent elements of any of the minute and indivisible particles of matter so complete a transformation as to transmute it into purest gold? Perplexing and difficult as this may appear, the still greater task of converting satanic strength into heavenly power is one that We have been empowered to accomplish. The Force capable of such a transformation transcendeth the potency of the Elixir itself. The Word of God, alone, can claim the distinction of being endowed with the capacity required for so great and far-reaching a change.— Bahá’u’lláh [1]
Question for Consideration
How can AI assist protagonists with decision-making frameworks based on spiritual principles that keep materialism at bay? [2]
Gemini/NotebookLM Response
In the Bahá’í framework, Artificial Intelligence (AI) is viewed as a specialized “material means” that serves to refine the “administrative machinery” of the Cause. When harmonized with spiritual principles, AI acts as a “multiplier” of human effort, helping individual and institutional protagonists navigate complex social realities while maintaining a focus on their sacred mission.
AI can assist protagonists with decision-making frameworks that resist materialism in the following ways:
1. Grounding Decisions in Spiritual Authority
One of the primary ways AI assists decision-making is by strengthening the process of Bahá’í consultation.
Immediate Access to Guidance: AI tools provide protagonists with immediate access to relevant Sacred Texts and historical precedents.
Preventing Materialistic Drift: By ensuring that deliberations remain rooted in the “explicit Holy Text,” AI helps prevent decision-makers from being swept away by “materialist philosophies,” “ephemeral theories,” or “the dictates of consumerism”.
2. Enhancing the “Reading of Reality”
Effective social action requires an accurate understanding of local conditions, a process known as “reading reality”.
Accurate Data Processing: AI can manage the complex “nerves and arteries” of the community by processing large volumes of data from diverse clusters.
Localized Insights: It provides the logistical support needed to read social conditions with higher degrees of accuracy. This allows protagonists to identify the specific needs of a population without falling into the “traps of consumerism” or adopting “technological packages” that may be “deceptively packaged” to serve materialistic ends.
3. Freeing Energy for Qualitative Service
Materialism often reduces human purpose to “material well-being” and “material pursuits”. AI counters this by reallocating human resources toward spiritual goals.
Automating “Drudgery”: AI empowers service by automating routine administrative and logistical tasks.
Focusing on the Soul: By handling the “mechanical” aspects of community administration, AI frees protagonists to dedicate their creative and spiritual energy to qualitative service, such as spiritual education, nurturing deep relationships, and engaging in meaningful conversations on themes of spiritual import.
4. Maintaining “Dynamic Coherence”
Protagonists use AI as a “digital lamp-glass” to protect and project the “light” of spiritual purpose.
Harmonizing Dimensions: AI supports dynamic coherence by ensuring that the material tools utilized by the community remain servants to their spiritual mission.
Countering “Unbridled Technology”: The strategic use of AI helps protagonists avoid “unbridled technology” and “crude materialism,” ensuring that material progress is always directed toward the “betterment of the world” rather than mere “material distractions”.
5. Fostering “Constructive Resilience”
Adapting AI to sacred aims is itself an act of constructive resilience—the ability to maintain integrity and focus on social betterment despite a disintegrating social order.
Systematizing Knowledge: AI assists in the “generation, application, and diffusion of knowledge” at the grassroots, moving away from paternalistic models toward universal participation.
Collective Agency: It helps small communities and their institutions to think and act strategically, enabling them to become the protagonists of their own development and to resist the “corrosion of ungodliness” eating into the vitals of society.
Ultimately, for AI to assist in a way that keeps materialism at bay, its use must be governed by the principle that technology is a tool, not the “chief determinant of direction”. Protagonists must evaluate its use based on its impact on the “encounter between the reader and the revealed Word” and its contribution to the “common good”.
Anisa Fanaian Re-Arrested in Semnan to Serve Prison Sentence
On 11 May 2026 Mrs. Anisa Fanaian, a Baha’i resident of Semnan, was arrested and taken to resume serving her prison sentence.
Security agents arrested Fanaian at her home in Semnan while carrying an arrest warrant for… pic.twitter.com/ep9G7TNrLJ
— Bahá'í International Community – Human Rights (@BahaiBIC_Rights) May 21, 2026
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.
Scientific knowledge is the highest attainment upon the human plane, for science is the discoverer of realities. It is of two kinds: material and spiritual. Material science is the investigation of natural phenomena; divine science is the discovery and realization of spiritual verities. The world of humanity must acquire both. A bird has two wings; it cannot fly with one. Material and spiritual science are the two wings of human uplift and attainment. Both are necessary—one the natural, the other supernatural; one material, the other divine. By the divine we mean the discovery of the mysteries of God, the comprehension of spiritual realities, the wisdom of God, inner significances of the heavenly religions and foundation of the law. — ‘Abdu’l-Bahá [1]
Question for Consideration
Create a tailored report that explores the broader Bahá’í perspective on the harmony of science and religion and how it guides the use of modern technology. [2]
Gemini/NotebookLM Response
1. Introduction: The “Two Wings” of Progress
The advancement of human civilization is predicated on the fundamental Bahá’í principle of the harmony between science and religion—the “two wings” necessary for the flight of the collective human spirit. From the perspective of social policy and information architecture, technology functions as an enabling infrastructure and an operational framework designed to facilitate the flow of spiritual energy through administrative channels. In this context, material means are not merely tools for convenience but are intended to canalize spiritual energies into constructive social action. By harmonizing the material (science and technology) with the spiritual (purpose and ethics), society creates the capacity for a “world spiritual civilization,” where technological systems act as specialized instruments to enhance institutional efficiency and liberate human potential for qualitative service.
2. The Theology of Knowledge: God’s Greatest Gift
Knowledge is a divine bestowal, yet the Bahá’í framework distinguishes between “useful” sciences that yield fruit and those intellectual pursuits that offer no benefit to humanity. Historical precedents among the “learned” illustrate the necessity of combining scholarly excellence with spiritual devotion.
The Synthesis of Divine and Useful Knowledge: Early believers exemplified the mastery of diverse fields. Nabíl-i-Akbar, a scholar of such peerless standing that he was granted the rare rank of mujtahid by Shaykh Murtadá, combined his mastery of the philosophy of the Illuminati and theology with the “useful science” of medicine, serving as a skilled physician. Similarly, Hájí Mírzá Hasan utilized his grounded understanding of mathematics, geometry, and geography to contemplate the “movements of the stars” and the “secrets of the heavens” via telescope.
Rejecting the Dregs and the Shell: True knowledge is defined by its productivity. The Bahá’í perspective contrasts fertile sciences with the “dregs and the shell” of intellectual movements that have lost their essence. As seen in the experience of Hájí Muhammad Khán, many traditional schools of thought eventually offered nothing but “idle argument” and “windy figures of speech,” lacking the core of inner meaning required for the progress of the soul and society.
Spiritualized Scholarship as Policy: The “learned” are those who use “vast scholarly accomplishments” as a guiding lamp for others. In this architecture of knowledge, the mastery of material sciences is only complete when it clarifies spiritual truths and directs human effort toward the “wellspring of truth.”
3. Technology as the “Lamp-Glass”: Purpose and Protection
In the architecture of a spiritualized society, technology is most effective when viewed through the metaphor of a “lamp-glass.”
“Technology is most effective when viewed as a ‘lamp-glass’ that protects and projects the ‘light’ of spiritual purpose. This ensures that the material and spiritual dimensions of existence are harmonized, contributing to the birth of a ‘world spiritual civilization’ where technology serves the sacred mission of the human race.”
This metaphor provides the structural “why” for technological integration. The complexity of the modern era presents a turbulent environment that threatens to extinguish the spiritual light of community life. Technology provides operational protection for consultative principles; by managing the mechanical and data-heavy aspects of administration, it ensures that the “light” of spiritual purpose is not overwhelmed by complexity but is instead focused and projected more brightly.
4. Practical Application: Digital Tools and Artificial Intelligence
The following table illustrates how specific technological frameworks are utilized to serve the administrative and consultative needs of the global Bahá’í community.
Technological Tool
Administrative Function
Spiritual/Social Objective
AI and Automation
Managing routine logistical tasks and administrative drudgery.
Freeing human protagonists for qualitative service and community building.
Global Information Flow / SRP
Processing “nerves and arteries” of communication and cluster data.
Harmonize perspectives and enable real-time feedback from the field for informed decision-making.
Digital Texts and Databases
Providing immediate access to “Holy Text” and historical precedents.
Grounding consultation in sacred principles while addressing the “needs and requirements of the time.”
5. Technology in Service to Social Action and Community Building
The “society-building power of the Faith” is increasingly manifested through systematic grassroots learning and action. In this policy model, technology facilitates decentralization, empowering local communities to become the primary architects of their own progress.
The Statistical Report Program (SRP) serves as a critical instrument for decentralization, moving the community away from paternalistic models of development and toward universal participation. This tool enables local agency, allowing “brothers and sisters in spirit” to monitor their own milestones and respond to local needs. As pioneers and local believers apply these tools, significant progress is being witnessed in several key fields:
Education: The most rapidly multiplying field of social action.
Agriculture and Health: Initiatives focusing on both material and spiritual well-being.
Environment: Utilizing systematic learning to address the condition of the physical world.
The Arts and Empowerment: Strengthening the social fabric through cultural expression.
6. The Contrast: Spiritualized Tools vs. Unbridled Materialism
The Bahá’í use of technology is defined by “constructive resilience,” where material instruments are adapted to sacred aims. This approach ensures that technology remains a servant to humanity, contributing to the construction of the “Ark of human salvation.”
Conversely, unbridled materialism treats technology and wealth as ends in themselves, leading to a “progressive deterioration in human affairs.” The life of ‘Alí Qabl-i-Akbar and other accounts in Memorials of the Faithful emphasize that “glory gained outside the Cause of God turns to abasement” and “wealth is penury.” While materialistic technology often results in “care and sorrow,” the spiritualized application of these tools transforms them into instruments of grace, preventing the abasement of the human spirit by ensuring material progress is always anchored in spiritual value.
7. Physical and Spiritual Convergence: The House of Worship
The harmony of intellect and spirit finds its ultimate physical manifestation in the Mashriqu’l-Adhkár. The National House of Worship in Papua New Guinea—”nestled in the hills of Port Moresby”—serves as the ultimate physical node in the community’s infrastructure.
This edifice is not merely a product of architecture and technology; it is a “sacred space” where worship and service converge. By inviting diverse peoples to “gather together, and, harmoniously attuned one to another, engage in prayer,” the House of Worship forms the basis of a “rich pattern of collective life.” It functions as the physical heart of the community, where the material structure provides the haven for the spiritual reality of “unity and affection” to flourish.
8. Conclusion: Protagonists of a New World Order
The current era presents an “urgent, inescapable conclusion”: the need for individuals to transform from passive observers of a deteriorating world into protagonists of history. By harmonizing the “two wings” of science and religion, the community utilizes every available instrument—from the refinement of administrative machinery through AI to the construction of physical edifices—in the service of a grander strategy. We are not merely adopting tools; we are building the haven that will shelter humanity and constructing the “Ark of human salvation.” This is the summons of the present hour: to use every material means to foster hope, unity, and a pathway to enduring peace.
Iran intensified its persecution of Baha’is in 2026: mass arrests, torture, enforced disappearances, and property seizures. Authorities confiscated assets of 51 people in Yazd and 129 in West Azerbaijan under vague “security” accusations. https://t.co/ekwmwH4eR0pic.twitter.com/LCwgQLQVhy
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.
Every development effort can be said to represent a response to some understanding of the nature and state of society, its challenges, the institutions operating in it, the forces influencing it, and the capacities of its peoples. To read society in this way is not to explore every detail of the social reality. Nor does it necessarily involve formal studies. Conditions need to be understood progressively, both from the perspective of a particular endeavour’s purpose and in the context of a vision of humanity’s collective existence. Indeed, it is vital that the reading of society be consistent with the teachings of the Faith. That the true nature of a human being is spiritual, that every human being is a “mine rich in gems” of limitless potential, that the forces of integration and disintegration each in their own way are propelling humanity towards its destiny are but a few examples of teachings that would shape one’s understanding of social reality. Bahá’í-inspired organizations supporting relatively complex lines of action need to continually refine their reading of society, using the methods of science to the best of their abilities. — Universal House of Justice [1]
Question for Consideration
How does AI empower individual protagonists in their service? [2]
Gemini/NotebookLM Response
In the Bahá’í framework, Artificial Intelligence (AI) empowers individual protagonists by serving as a specialized “material means” that refines the “administrative machinery” designed to canalize spiritual energies into constructive action. By acting as a “multiplier” of human effort, AI transforms the individual’s role in several specific ways:
1. Freeing Creative and Spiritual Energy
A primary way AI empowers service is by automating routine administrative “drudgery” and logistical tasks. When these “mechanical” aspects are handled by technology, individuals are no longer “passive observers” but become “active protagonists” of history. This shift allows them to dedicate more time and creative energy to the qualitative, soul-stirring aspects of community building, such as:
Spiritual education and nurturing deep relationships.
Engaging in meaningful conversations on themes of spiritual import.
Offering disinterested service to humanity.
2. Enhancing Individual and Collective Agency
AI serves as a tool for “constructive resilience,” helping individuals maintain their integrity and focus on social betterment even in complex or chaotic environments. It empowers protagonists by:
Optimizing Information Flow: AI manages the “nerves and arteries” of the community, processing large volumes of data to help individuals and institutions “harmonize perspectives” and make informed decisions based on real-time feedback.
Improving the “Reading of Reality”: By providing localized insights and logistical support, AI helps small communities and individuals “read the reality” of their surroundings with higher degrees of accuracy, which is essential for effective social action.
Systematizing Knowledge: AI assists in the “generation, application, and diffusion of knowledge” at the grassroots, moving away from paternalistic models toward universal participation.
3. Strengthening Consultative Resources
AI tools empower individuals serving on institutions or in consultative groups by providing immediate access to relevant Sacred Texts and historical precedents. This ensures that collective decision-making remains grounded in the “explicit Holy Text” while remaining responsive to the “exigencies of the time”.
4. Maintaining Coherence in a Digital Age
The strategic use of AI acts as a “digital lamp-glass” that protects and projects the “light” of spiritual purpose. It empowers individuals to:
Achieve Dynamic Coherence: By harmonizing the material and spiritual dimensions of existence, individuals can ensure that technology remains a servant to their sacred mission rather than a source of “distraction” or “crude materialism”.
Fulfill the Twofold Moral Purpose: AI supports both individual transformation (refining character and skills) and social transformation (contributing to an ever-advancing civilization) by providing the infrastructure needed for “avenues productive and meritorious”.
Ultimately, AI empowers individual protagonists by providing the administrative infrastructure necessary to help humanity “establish its affairs on a foundation of spiritual principles” and move toward a “world spiritual civilization”.
Footnotes
[1] Universal House of Justice. “26 November 2012 – To all National Spiritual Assemblies.” Bahá’i Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/548166157
— Office of Public Affairs (India) – Human Rights (@Rightsopaindia) May 18, 2026
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.
An exploration of the nature of social action, undertaken from a Bahá’í perspective, must necessarily place it in the broad context of the advancement of civilization. That a global civilization which is both materially and spiritually prosperous represents the next stage of a millennia-long process of social evolution provides a conception of history that endows every instance of social action with a particular purpose: to foster true prosperity, with its spiritual and material dimensions, among the diverse inhabitants of the planet. A concept of vital relevance, then, is the imperative to achieve a dynamic coherence between the practical and spiritual requirements of life. ‘Abdu’l‑Bahá states that while “material civilization is one of the means for the progress of the world of mankind,” until it is “combined with Divine civilization, the desired result, which is the felicity of mankind, will not be attained”. [1]
Question for Consideration
How can AI help canalize spiritual energies into action? [2]
Gemini/NotebookLM Response
The integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) into the Bahá’í framework serves as a specialized “material means” to refine the “administrative machinery” of the Cause, which is specifically designed to canalize spiritual energies into constructive social action. By serving as a “multiplier” of human effort, AI can help translate spiritual potential into practical reality in several distinct ways:
1. Optimizing the “Nerves and Arteries” of the Community
AI can manage the complex information flow necessary for a global community to function as an organic whole.
Data Processing: It can process vast amounts of data from diverse geographic clusters, allowing institutions to harmonize perspectives and make decisions based on real-time feedback from the field.
Logistical Efficiency: By automating routine administrative tasks and “drudgery,” AI frees individuals and institutions to focus on the qualitative aspects of community building, such as spiritual education and nurturing relationships.
2. Enhancing Consultative Resources
AI tools can significantly strengthen the process of Bahá’í consultation, which is the bedrock of the Administrative Order.
Immediate Access to Guidance: AI can provide institutions with immediate access to relevant Sacred Texts and historical precedents.
Grounded Decision-Making: This ensures that consultations remain rooted in the “explicit Holy Text” while allowing the Universal House of Justice and other bodies to act according to the “exigencies of the time”.
3. Fostering Local Agency and Decentralization
The Bahá’í approach seeks to move away from paternalistic models of charity toward universal participation.
Empowering Protagonists: By providing localized insights and logistical support for social action projects, AI can help small communities take responsibility for their own development.
Systematizing Learning: Digital tools like the Statistical Report Program (SRP) have already demonstrated how technology can aid the systematization of knowledge at the grassroots. AI can further this by helping communities “read the reality” of their surroundings with higher degrees of accuracy.
4. A Tool for “Constructive Resilience”
Adapting material tools like AI to sacred aims is a form of constructive resilience. In this context, technology is viewed as the “lamp-glass” that protects and projects the “light” of spiritual purpose.
Transforming the Individual: When material means handle routine coordination, the individual is no longer a “passive observer” but becomes a “protagonist” of history.
Maintaining Coherence: The strategic use of AI ensures that material and spiritual dimensions of existence are harmonized, preventing technology from becoming a source of mere “distraction” or “crude materialism”.
Ultimately, AI helps canalize spiritual energies by providing the administrative infrastructure needed for institutions to guide human potential along “avenues productive and meritorious”. When technology operates as a servant to the sacred mission of the human race, it contributes to the birth of a “world spiritual civilization” where material progress is directed toward the “betterment of the world”.
Footnotes
[1] Universal House of Justice. “26 November 2012 – To all National Spiritual Assemblies.” Bahá’i Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/026955518
The Bahá’í International Community participated in the annual ECOSOC Youth Forum at the @UN Headquarters in New York. In this video, BIC Representative @CeciliaSchirmei shares some of the concepts we explored in conversation with others throughout the Forum.
— Bahá'í International Community (@BahaiBIC) May 15, 2026
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.