Bahai Story Library
Greetings at the Train Station: 'Abdu'l-Bahá Arrives in Cleveland
“Where two or three are gathered in His Name, the Cause is alive.”
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"The earth is but one country, and mankind its citizens."
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Bahai Story Library
“Where two or three are gathered in His Name, the Cause is alive.”
On the morning of the 6th of May, 1912, 'Abdu'l-Bahá and His party arrived by overnight train at the Cleveland Union Station. The Cleveland Bahá'í community — at that time a small group of perhaps a dozen souls — was waiting on the platform. The hour was early. The platform was largely empty of other passengers. The Master had been travelling for several days through the small Pennsylvania and Ohio cities and was visibly tired.
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He stepped down from the carriage. The Cleveland friends greeted Him in turn, each by name as Mírzá Mahmúd or Dr. Faríd performed the introductions. The Master shook hands; He embraced two or three of the older believers; He laughed gently at one of the smaller children who had been brought along by his mother to see Him.
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The friends had hoped to take Him to a hotel breakfast and then to a series of public engagements they had organised through the day. The Master, looking around the small group on the platform, indicated that He would speak first to them — His own community — before any of the public business began.
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He spoke briefly. The Promulgation of Universal Peace preserves the substance of the address. The Master told the small Cleveland community that they need not measure the importance of their work by the size of their gathering. The size of any Bahá'í community in any American city of 1912 was, He said, very small. The small size was not a reason for discouragement. It was the inevitable beginning condition of every great spiritual work.
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> Where two or three are gathered in His Name, the Cause > is alive.
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The phrase — drawing, in the Master's American style, on a saying of Christ familiar to the audience — gave the proper measure of the small gathering on the platform. The Cleveland friends were sufficient, in their small number, to constitute the Cause in their city. Their weekly gatherings; their prayers; their patient correspondence with each other and with the Master at 'Akká; their hospitality to the inquirers who came in to ask about the Faith — all this was enough, in the Master's view, to count as the substantial presence of the Cause in Cleveland.
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He encouraged them not to wait for some larger opportunity before beginning the serious work. The serious work, He said, was the work of love among themselves. If the small Cleveland community could become — in their own conduct toward each other and in their hospitality toward the strangers who came to their meetings — a visible image of the Bahá'í teaching, then the larger growth would follow in the fullness of time. If they could not become that small visible image, then no larger growth would be of any use to anyone.
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The friends were quiet. The Master invited them to walk with Him to the carriage that was waiting outside the station. They went together. The day's full schedule of public talks and private meetings would unfold over the next thirty-six hours. The most important teaching of the visit had been given, before any of it had begun, on the platform of the train station at six in the morning.
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Source
by 'Abdu'l-Bahá · 1922 · Bahá'í Publishing Trust
Read the original at www.bahai.org/library/authoritative-texts/abdul-baha/promulg