Bahai Story Library
Hidden Word, Persian 4: The Best Beloved of Hearts
“Open the eye of thine heart, that thou mayest behold thy Beloved face to face.”
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"The earth is but one country, and mankind its citizens."
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Bahai Story Library
“Open the eye of thine heart, that thou mayest behold thy Beloved face to face.”
The fourth Hidden Word in Persian is a single short summons. The believer is being invited to open a faculty that has, in most souls, lain dormant.
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> O SON OF DUST! Verily I say unto thee: Of all men the most > negligent is he that disputeth idly and seeketh to advance > himself over his brother. Say, O brethren! Let deeds, not > words, be your adorning.
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The Hidden Word here numbered does the opposite of an invitation to mystical sight: it diagnoses the soul that has allowed itself to be drawn into endless argument and into the small competitive rivalry of trying to *advance itself* over its brother. The most negligent soul, in Bahá'u'lláh's plain phrase, is the soul most absorbed in this fruitless work.
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The diagnosis is delivered not by judgment but by an alternative. *Let deeds, not words, be your adorning.* The Persian Hidden Words return again and again to this single counsel. The mark of the truly spiritual life is not the volume of its verbal output but the substance of its concrete service. A small kind deed is a more beautiful ornament on the soul than the most elaborate theological argument.
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The Hidden Word is read often in the context of the Bahá'í community's life. When discussions in a Local Spiritual Assembly threaten to become contests of advancement; when the early enthusiasm of a new believer threatens to become an exercise in defeating others rather than serving the Cause; when the believers' conversations among themselves slip from upliftment into critique — this Hidden Word is the call back to proportion. Less talking. More doing. The deed is the believer's real adornment.
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In the Persian original, the line *let deeds, not words, be your adorning* is among the most quoted of Bahá'u'lláh's injunctions. It is inscribed on the walls of Bahá'í community centres. It is woven into the closing prayers of Feast. It is held up at the consultation of every Local Assembly that suspects itself of preferring the satisfactions of speech to the disciplines of action.
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Source
by Bahá'u'lláh · 1858 · Bahá'í Publishing Trust
Read the original at www.bahai.org/library/authoritative-texts/bahaullah/hidden-w