Daily Frameworks for 05 June 2026

Istiqlál, 01 Núr (Light), 183 B.E.

Quotes for Reflection

O army of God! Praise be to God, Bahá’u’lláh hath lifted the chains from off the necks of humankind, and hath set man free from all that trammeled him, and told him: Ye are the fruits of one tree and the leaves of one branch; be ye compassionate and kind to all the human race. Deal ye with strangers the same as with friends, cherish ye others just as ye would your own. See foes as friends; see demons as angels; give to the tyrant the same great love ye show the loyal and true, and even as gazelles from the scented cities of Khatá and Khutan1 offer up sweet musk to the ravening wolf. Be ye a refuge to the fearful; bring ye rest and peace to the disturbed; make ye a provision for the destitute; be a treasury of riches for the poor; be a healing medicine for those who suffer pain; be ye doctor and nurse to the ailing; promote ye friendship, and honor, and conciliation, and devotion to God, in this world of nonexistence. — ‘Abdu’l-Bahá [1]

Question for Consideration

What encouragement can the Nine Year Plan offer those making spiritual and personal connections with family, friends, neighbors, and fellow community members along a continuum from genuinely caring about others to caring for them in their homes? [2]

Gemini/NotebookLM Response

The Nine Year Plan (2022–2031) offers profound encouragement for individuals and families seeking to build spiritual and personal connections, framing these efforts as the primary means to release the society-building power of the Faith. The Plan envisions a community characterized by mutual support, reciprocity, and service to one another, where the act of caring is translated into a systematic pattern of community life.

Drawing on the sources, the Plan’s framework encourages connectivity along a continuum in the following ways:

1. From Recognition to Intentional Association

The Plan encourages believers to look beyond superficial differences and recognize the nobility and spiritual potential in every human being.

  • Meaningful Conversation: The friends are encouraged to step outside their immediate circles to establish ties of friendship with “strangers,” engaging them in conversations that explore spiritual reality and the Person of Bahá’u’lláh.
  • The Power of the Home: The Plan emphasizes visiting the homes of others and opening one’s own home as a “social space” for collective worship and purposeful discussion. A vibrant Bahá’í home is described as a “haven and pillar to sustain all humanity,” where warm hospitality combines with spiritual quickening.

2. From Association to Mutual Accompaniment

The transition from being a well-wisher to a partner in progress is a central theme of the Plan, embodied in the concept of accompaniment.

  • Treading a Shared Path: Connectivity is strengthened as individuals accompany one another on a “path of service,” learning together how to educate children, empower youth, and manage community affairs.
  • Nurturing Resilience: In settings where community-building activities are prevalent, a “pronounced community spirit” emerges, providing a sense of belonging and mutual support that helps individuals withstand the “destructive social pathologies” of the wider world.
  • Youth Leadership: Youth are specifically encouraged to make service the foundation of meaningful friendships, taking responsibility for the moral and spiritual development of those younger than themselves.

3. Towards Sacrificial Caring and Integration

At the highest stage of the continuum, the Plan encourages a “coherent life of service” where personal interests are subordinated to the common weal.

  • Sacrifice for the Common Good: The Plan fosters a spirit where souls delight in the progress and services of others rather than their own accomplishments. Bonds of support within a dedicated family make the “wholehearted embrace” of sacrificial endeavors possible.
  • Social Action: As communities grow in capacity, they are naturally drawn to respond to the material and spiritual needs of those around them, such as addressing economic injustice or environmental concerns through unified action.
  • Consultation: The practice of consultation among families on how to manage individual and social affairs is highly encouraged, raising the community’s level of maturity and effectiveness in rendering humanitarian assistance.

Ultimately, the Nine Year Plan provides the “methods and instruments” for every soul to become a “true practitioner of peace,” extending a hand of friendship and shared service to all inhabitants of their locality. This effort is wholly reliant on the invigorating potency of the Word of God, which acts as the “mover of souls” and the “binder and regulator” of human connectivity.


Footnotes

[1] ‘Abdu’l-Bahá. SELECTIONS FROM THE WRITINGS OF ‘ABDU’L-BAHÁ. Bahá’i Reference Library. https://www.bahai.org/r/542606770

[2] Gemini/NotebookLM. “Architecture of Unity: The Nine Year Plan Framework.” Edited by Steve Bosserman. June 4, 2026. https://docs.google.com/document/d/1bki7ecptA9NQBkdX3KqwVRBCWGCSTimmq0qaSZovz9Y/edit?usp=sharing


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.

239 Days in America, Day 73: June 22, 1912 | New Jersey

Elephants in Chicago 1

THE REPUBLICAN NATIONAL CONVENTION would be over this evening. It had begun on Tuesday, June 18, 1912, at the Chicago Coliseum on Wabash Avenue. After months of campaign speeches, accusations, and rebuttals — and twelve weeks of primary elections in sixteen states — the delegates were ready to choose either President William Howard Taft or former President Theodore Roosevelt to be the Republican Presidential nominee.

Unlike almost everyone else in the building, William Jennings Bryan didn’t have any skin in the game. He was a Democrat, and had run as the Democratic candidate for President three times, in 1896, 1900, and 1908, losing each time. This week he was here not to politick, but to report. The nation wanted his viewpoint; he was in high demand. Several daily newspapers had contracted with him for his eye on each day’s proceedings. Monday morning’s dispatch evoked the early skirmishes on the convention floor:

“The delegates as they come in are badged, tagged and buttonholed,” Bryan wrote. “The prophets are revising their lists as they learn of additions or defections and the corridors of the hotels resound with the cheers of partisans. These things are to be found in every convention, but they are here in unusual abundance.”

Although he was enjoying himself (“We are having a great time”) he could also see through the hullabaloo. “There is a liberal education in a national convention,” he told the public on Monday, “but much that one learns is not useful to him afterwards.”

Talk at 309 West Seventy-eighth Street, New York, 20 June 1912 2

The great mass of humanity does not exercise real love and fellowship. The elect of humanity are those who live together in love and unity. They are preferable before God because the divine attributes are already manifest in them. The supreme love and unity is witnessed in the divine Manifestations. Among Them unity is indissoluble, changeless, eternal and everlasting. Each One is expressive and representative of all. If we deny One of the Manifestations of God, we deny all. To inflict persecution upon One is to persecute the Others. In all degrees of existence each One praises and sanctifies the Others. Each of Them holds to the solidarity of mankind and promotes the unity of human hearts. Next to the divine Manifestations come the believers whose characteristics are agreement, fellowship and love. The Bahá’í friends in Persia attained such a brotherhood and love that it really became a hindrance in the conduct of material affairs. Each one into whatever house of the friends he went considered himself the owner of the house, so to speak. There was no duality but complete mutuality of interests and love. The visiting friend would have no hesitation in opening the provision box and taking out enough food for his needs. They wore each other’s clothes as their own when necessary. If in need of a hat or cloak, they would take and use it. The owner of the clothing would be thankful and grateful that the garment had gone. When he returned home, he would perhaps be told, “So and so was here and took away your coat.” He would reply, “Praise be to God! I am so grateful to him. Praise be to God! I am so thankful I have been given this opportunity of showing my love for him.” To such an extreme degree this love and fellowship expressed itself that Bahá’u’lláh commanded that no one should take possession of another’s belongings unless presented with them. The intention is to show to what an extent unity and love prevailed among the Bahá’í friends in the East.

I hope that this same degree and intensity of love may become manifest and apparent here; that the spirit of God shall so penetrate your hearts that each one of the beloved of God shall be considered as all; that each one may become a cause of unity and center of accord and all mankind be bound together in real fellowship and love.

Saturday, June 22, 1912

In the morning ‘Abdu’l-Bahá spoke about the followers of Yahyá, saying:

“These people are following their false imaginings. They say that the letter from the Báb to Yahyá begins thus: ‘From God, the Mighty, the Beloved, to God, the Mighty, the Beloved.’ But this passage is also written at the beginning of the letter to Dayyán and to others. In Tablets revealed by the Blessed Beauty there are also many such passages. The intent is an address from the Manifestation to Himself. What does this have to do with Yahyá? In a Tablet from the Báb to Yahyá and written in Yahyá’s own handwriting, he is directed by the Báb to ascertain God’s intention by asking Siyyid Husayn, the amanuensis.”

The Master then gave various accounts of their vain imaginings and the mischief they caused in both the spiritual and material affairs of Persia. He also spoke about their malicious calumnies against the sincere and trustworthy Bahá’ís of the East and the West. He ended His talk with an exposition on the erroneous notion prevailing among some religious leaders that science is opposed to religion, a belief that leads people to false dogmas and to adhere to vain imaginings.

In the afternoon the Master gave an exposition on the words of Christ: ‘He that desireth to follow Me, must bear his own cross.’ He then mentioned the martyrs of this great Cause and, referring to ‘Abdu’l-Vahháb-i-Shírází, said:

“Before he left the prison to go to the altar of divine sacrifice, he came first and placed his head on Bahá’u’lláh’s feet and kissed them. Having embraced all the friends, he hastened to the plain of sacrifice, dancing and snapping his fingers in ecstasy.

As the Master recounted this event, His voice became so resonant and powerful that it caused the friends to tremble, and then His mood changed. His body dancing and His fingers snapping, He made such ecstatic cries it seemed that the scene of martyrdom had been reenacted before our very eyes. Afterwards, He said: ‘Compare the condition and firmness of the martyrs of this Revelation with those of the disciples of Christ, taking into account the station attained. How great is the difference between this Day and the past. How far the one is from the other.’

Friends and seekers gathered in the evening. ‘Abdu’l-Bahá’s response to Mr Edsall’s father-in-law was very inspiring and impressive. 3

’Abdu’l-Bahá in America, 1912-2012: Calling America to It’s Spiritual Destiny

Mahmud: June 22 – False beliefs and malicious calumnies of the followers of Yahya

Celebrating the Centenary: The Master in America

Curated by Anne Perry

June 22, 1912


  1. Menon, Jonathan. “Elephants In Chicago.” 239 Days in America, 22 June 2012, https://239days.com/2012/06/22/elephants-in-chicago/.
  2. ʻAbduʼl-Bahá. The Promulgation of Universal Peace: Talks Delivered by ʻAbduʼl-Bahá during His Visit to the United States and Canada in 1912. Edited by Howard MacNutt. 2nd ed. Wilmette, Ill: Baháʼí Publishing Trust, 1982, 208-209. https://www.bahai.org/library/authoritative-texts/abdul-baha/promulgation-universal-peace/14#941667385
  3. ’Abdu’l-Bahá, and Mirza Mahmud-i-Zarqani. Mahmúd’s Diary: The Diary of Mírzá Mahmúd-i-Zarqání Chronicling ’Abdu’l-Bahá’s Journey to America. Edited by Shirley Macias. Translated by Mohi Sobhani. Oxford: George Ronald, 1998. https://bahai-library.com/zarqani_mahmuds_diary&chapter=4#section90