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.