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2/2/13
February 2
Such a chaste and holy life, with its implications of
modesty, purity, temperance, decency, and clean-mindedness, involves no less
than the exercise of moderation in all that pertains to dress, language,
amusements, and all artistic and literary avocations. It demands daily
vigilance in the control of one's carnal desires and corrupt inclinations. It
calls for the abandonment of a frivolous conduct, with its excessive attachment
to trivial and often misdirected pleasures. It requires total abstinence from
all alcoholic drinks, from opium, and from similar habit-forming drugs. It
condemns the prostitution of art and of literature, the practices of nudism and
of companionate marriage, infidelity in marital relationships, and all manner
of promiscuity, of easy familiarity, and of sexual vices. It can tolerate no
compromise with the theories, the standards, the habits, and the excesses of a
decadent age. Nay rather it seeks to demonstrate, through the dynamic force of
its example, the pernicious character of such theories, the falsity of such
standards, the hollowness of such claims, the perversity of such habits, and
the sacrilegious character of such excesses. (Shoghi Effendi, ‘The Advent of
Divine Justice’; The Compilation of Compilations, vol. I, A Chase and Holy Life)