One well-known story involves teaching Mountfort Mills how to pray
bahaistories.com archive · Read original
When in Bahá'í history
'Akká (today: Acre, Israel)

One well-known story involves teaching Mountfort Mills how to pray: when ‘Abdu’l- Bahá was in New York, He called to Him an ardent Bahá’í and said, "If you will come to me at dawn tomorrow, I will teach you to pray." Delighted, Mr. M arose at four and crossed the city, arriving for his lesson at six. With what exultant expectation he must've greeted this opportunity! He found ‘Abdu’l- Bahá already at prayer, kneeling by the side of the bed. Mr. M followed suit, taking care to place himself directly across. Seeing that ‘Abdu’l- Bahá was quite lost in His own reverie, Mr. M began to pray silently for his friends, his family and finally for the crowned heads of Europe. No word was uttered by the quiet man before him. He went over all the prayers he knew then, and repeated them twice, three times still no sound broke the expectant hush. Mr. M surreptitiously rubbed one knee and wondered vaguely about his back. He began again, hearing as he did so, the birds heralding the Dawn outside the window. An hour passed, and finally two. Mr. M was quite numb now. His eyes, roving along the wall, caught sight of a large crack. He dallied with a touch of indignation but let his gaze pass again to the still figure across the bed. The ecstasy that he saw arrested him and he drank deeply of the sight. Suddenly he wanted to pray like that. Selfish desires were forgotten. Sorrow, conflict, and even his immediate surroundings were as if they had never been. He was conscious of only one thing, a passionate desire to draw near to God. Closing his eyes again he set the world firmly aside, and amazingly his heart teemed with prayer, eager, joyous, tumultuous prayer. He felt cleansed by humility and lifted by a new peace. ‘Abdu’l- Bahá had taught him to pray! The Master of Akka immediately arose and came to him. His eyes rested smilingly upon the newly humbled Mr. M. "When you pray," he said, "you must not think of your aching body, nor of the birds outside the window, nor of the cracks in the wall!" He became very serious then, and added "When you wish to pray you must first know that you are standing in the presence of the Almighty!"
Source: Earl Redman, ‘Abdu’l-Bahá in Their Midst, p. 79-80
Collected from bahaistories.com (Subject: prayer).
Cite this story
Various. *bahaistories.com archive*. https://bahaistories.com/subject/prayer
Record yourself reading this story
Recording stays on this device only. Nothing is uploaded.
Related stories
A Convention for Oneness: The Word Spoken in Washington, 1921
At 'Abdu'l-Bahá's own request, a Washington hostess with no experience in such matters set out to gather Black and white Americans together to proclaim their oneness. In May 1921 over a thousand souls of both races filled a hall for the first Convention for Amity between the Races — and there the Master's message, carried fresh from Haifa, declared that no more important gathering had been held since the beginning of time.
The Tablets of the Divine Plan Unveiled
In the spring and summer of 1919 the Star of the West gave its pages to the unveiling of the Tablets of the Divine Plan — the Master's great charter of teaching addressed to the North American believers, formally proclaimed at the New York convention in April 1919.
A delightful story is told of a Mademoiselle Letitia, who had come from a poor
A delightful story is told of a Mademoiselle Letitia, who had come from a poor family in Haifa to live in the Master's home in 'Akka to teach French to the children. She was happy there, though she was a Catholic and the nuns in the…
Better Conditions
“After two years of the strictest confinement permission was granted me to find a house so that we could live outside the prison walls but still within the fortifications. Many believers came from Persia to join us but they were not…