My usual question... What is the definition of a "manifestation"? I think one of them is that they are perfect reflections of God. If that is truly one of them, then I think it discounts several of the people Baha'is say are manifestations. Like Adam, Noah, Abraham, and even Moses. Maybe prophets. Maybe imperfect, ordinary people that turned to God most of the time. But not perfect reflections of God. And what else defines a manifestation? Innate knowledge, maybe? The other problem... is Baha'i don't take the Bible stories of those people literally. So Baha'u'llah has come up with his own versions of who they were and what they did. Where did he get that information? From Islam or from something God told him?
CG, all this is found in the Kitab-i-Iqan. All the thoughts I can give you would be from that book, and the many other writings supporting what is offerd in that book.
It also offered why some Mesengers are seen in a different Light.
I am more inclined to look at most things in Spiritual Metephor, especially when contemplating on this passage.from Baha'u'llah.
"The world is but a show, vain and empty, a mere nothing, bearing the semblance of reality. Set not your affections upon it. Break not the bond that uniteth you with your Creator, and be not of those that have erred and strayed from His ways. Verily I say, the world is like the vapor in a desert, which the thirsty dreameth to be water and striveth after it with all his might, until when he cometh unto it, he findeth it to be mere illusion. It may, moreover, be likened unto the lifeless image of the beloved whom the lover hath sought and found, in the end, after long search and to his utmost regret, to be such as cannot “fatten nor appease his hunger.”
"The era of the Abbasid Caliphs’ construction and rule of Baghdad is known as the
Golden Age of Islam." So the Abbasids were the true and rightful leaders of Islam? 'Cause I thought Baha'is say that both the Umayyads and Abbasids were not good guys and made them the beasts and dragons in Revelation? Do I have it wrong?
Islam did not reach the potential it had, no Faith has to date, yet they have all shaped the future we now face and the choice we have to embrace our oneness. Our ability as a world citizen to embrace what Baha'u'llah offered will also see humanity reach a collective potential in the future, which I see in this age will not be its full potential. The timing of the most Great Peace is unknown, but we have missed the full potential of this Faith, Baha’u’llah thrown away many of the writings into the tigress River, saying mankind was not ready for them.
You are correct about the book of Revelation, Islam did not reach its full potential either, God knows it all and that is how it is set in Prophecy in a way that still gives our hearts a goal to reach.
Regards Tony