To use the Search Feature on mobile devices: scroll down to the very bottom of the page, click on View Web Version. The search box will appear on the top right corner of the screen.
8/13/13
August 13
For the Bahá'í Teachings do not only preclude the
possibility of bigamy, but also, while permitting divorce, consider it a
reprehensible act, which should be resorted to only in exceptional
circumstances, and when grave issues are involved, transcending such
considerations as physical attraction or sexual compatibility and harmony. The
institution of marriage, as established by Bahá'u'lláh, while giving due
importance to the physical aspect of marital union, considers it as subordinate
to the moral and spiritual purposes and functions with which it has been
invested by an all-wise and loving Providence. Only when these different values
are given each their due importance, and only on the basis of the subordination
of the physical to the moral, and the carnal to the spiritual can such excesses
and laxity in marital relations as our decadent age is so sadly witnessing be
avoided, and family life be restored to its original purity, and fulfil the
true function for which it has been instituted by God. (In a letter written on behalf of Shoghi Effendi, 8 May 1939 to an
individual believer who, having married his first wife out of compassion, now
wished to be permitted to marry a woman with whom he had fallen in love, saying
that his wife was agreeable to his taking this second wife; The
Compilation of Compilations vol. I, Divorce)