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4/18/13
April 18
It should not be forgotten that it was the kings of the
earth and the world’s religious leaders who, above all other categories of men,
were made the direct recipients of the Message proclaimed by both the Báb and
Bahá’u’lláh. It was they who were deliberately addressed in numerous and
historic Tablets, who were summoned to respond to the Call of God, and to whom
were directed, in clear and forcible language, the appeals, the admonitions and
warnings of His persecuted Messengers. It was they who, when the Faith was
born, and later when its mission was proclaimed, were still, for the most part,
wielding unquestioned and absolute civil and ecclesiastical authority over
their subjects and followers. It was they who, whether glorying in the pomp and
pageantry of a kingship as yet scarcely restricted by constitutional
limitations, or entrenched within the strongholds of a seemingly inviolable
ecclesiastical power, assumed ultimate responsibility for any wrongs inflicted
by those whose immediate destinies they controlled. It would be no exaggeration
to say that in most of the countries of the European and Asiatic continents
absolutism, on the one hand, and complete subservience to ecclesiastical
hierarchies, on the other, were still the outstanding features of the political
and religious life of the masses. These, dominated and shackled, were robbed of
the necessary freedom that would enable them to either appraise the claims and
merits of the Message proffered to them, or to embrace unreservedly its truth.
(Shoghi Effendi, letter dated March 28, 1941; ‘The Promised Day Is Come’)