firedragon
Veteran Member
It is not me who claim it, it was the Bab who claimed it.
Then the bab was wrong. Again, I can't be worshiping what you say blindly. Its not gonna happen.
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It is not me who claim it, it was the Bab who claimed it.
Yes, some parts of the verses are identical to Quran. It can be seen like cut and paste by some. The claim of the Bab is however, no body can do this:Actually, its not that lengthy.
But I must say that your translation has interpolations. Right from the first verse.
Also, this book is a mix of direct cut and pastes from the Quran. Anyone who has read the Quran would know that it has been requited verbatim.
Also what anyone with any kind of knowledge in Quranic scholarship would know that the writer of this is not trying to write a book similar to the Quran, and is someone else's proclamation. This is a book that has been written as its own revelation that mixes the Qur'an within its text, from the opening chapter.
In between words like Nazzala, your translation has added words like "in truth" which is not in the arabic text. Thats interpolation and the surprising thing is, it is an unnecessary interpolation. Maybe it has some purpose in misrepresenting the text in order to make another case.
I didn't intend to go into your book sis. This is what you brought in. And it is evident you don't know anything about what you are quoting.
It is not me who claim it, it was the Bab who claimed it. Why do you care about me? My belief in the Bab and Bahaullah is not just by recognizing the Qayyoom alasma, being like Quran. It comes from many pieces of evidences. I am not here to prove anything.
Here I quote from the Bab regarding this:
"This Book We have, verily, revealed in the language of Our Remembrance and it is in truth a wondrous language. He is, verily, the eternal Truth come from God, and according to the divine judgement given in the Mother Book, He is the most distinguished among the writers of Arabic and most eloquent in His utterance. He is in truth the Supreme Talisman and is endowed with supernatural powers, as set forth in the Mother Book… 46
O people of the city! Ye have disbelieved your Lord. If ye are truly faithful to Muḥammad, the Apostle of God and the Seal of the Prophets, and if ye follow His Book, the Qur’án, which is free from error, then here is the like of it—this Book, which We have, in truth and by the leave of God, sent down unto Our Servant. If ye fail to believe in Him, then your faith in Muḥammad and His Book which was revealed in the past will indeed be treated as false in the estimation of God. If ye deny Him, the fact of your having denied Muḥammad and His Book will, in very truth and with absolute certainty, become evident unto yourselves. "
Bahá'í Reference Library - Selections From the Writings of the Báb, Pages 45-46
In the above verses, Allah is speaking, and sayin, He has revealed it to the Bab (Our Remembrance). To me it is like Quran. Allah in Quran does not allow a false prophet write anything on behalf of Allah.
Yes, some parts of the verses are identical to Quran.
See, Allah is "The God". He says "The Quran is the ahsanal Hadith" so he will not be quoting anyone's Hadith.
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I had criticised the Bahai Writings many years ago. Sometimes I thought I had found mistakes in them, but, when I investigate more, I realized the Writings were correct, but I my view or understanding was not right. I had done this criticism so much that I concluded there is no errors in them, this is why I feel confident about my belief. It is perfectly fine to criticise Holy Books, but, we need to do this fairly, without bias!I understand your point quoting the Bab and Bahaullah as God and if they say something its Gods word for you. But that is your faith statement. Its not relevant to anyone else. Its a dogmatic statement. Why do you think even the most conservative Muslims and Christians have had so much scholarship on their respective texts? Why do they criticise their own texts?
Criticise your own text. I can't be blind sis. Impossible.
No, what I mean, is, here, I can only provide information, if you ask me(as long as I have the info). But the conclusion would be yours! I am not here to prove anything, but provide info, and try to give correct and unbiased view.So basically what you say is that Bab said it, and you worship what he said blindly right? No scholarship or analysis intended whatsoever.
If you cannot see that's not relevant to others, there is something seriously wrong.
The Quran quotes many of the sayings of Jesus. Do you know which verses?
I had criticised the Bahai Writings many years ago. Sometimes I thought I had found mistakes in them, but, when I investigate more, I realized the Writings were correct, but I my view or understanding was not right. I had done this criticism so much that I concluded there is no errors in them, this is why I feel confident about my belief. It is perfectly fine to criticise Holy Books, but, we need to do this fairly, without bias!
You are resorting to Baha'i symbolism again Doc - look up the world's religious populations and you will see Sikhism listed - it has its own identity, places of worship and scriptural text and does not worship the Hindu gods - it is separate category in the national census in both the US and India - does not make it a non-religion because it needs to retro fit Baha'i beliefs -I agree Guru Nanak founded an independent movement. That could be seen as an independent religion or a movement within Hinduism influenced to reconcile Islam and Hinduism. I wouldn’t put it in the same category as Buddhism, Christianity or Islam.
Thanks Adrian, it just seems odd to have a "cycle" named after Adam, but then the religions are called "Abrahamic". The Hindus, and other religions, have their own cycles. And things that I'd call "mythology". The spiritual truths and lessons in those stories can be very important, but the story and the characters don't necessarily have to be real. That's how I see the more likely story of Adam, Noah and Abraham. They don't have to be real, but they give Jews a history of how they came to be and how their God has dealt with them in the past.Remember the Quran elaborates on Adam, Noah and Abraham. Baha’is aren’t limited to the account in Genesis. The other important consideration is how history disappears, becomes distorted or mythologised with the passing of time.
The Baha'i Faith has some very important teachings. They all sound very plausible and true. Their claims of "progressive" revelation makes so much sense... until I looked closer. Does the Baha'i Faith and their prophets The Bab and Baha'u'llah hold up to scrutiny? For me, there are some problems in some of the details of their claims and beliefs. You seem to be finding some of your own. Are they enough to go beyond just questioning, and maybe even, rejecting the Baha'i Faith? Or, is there a way to accept them as a legitimate new religion, but maybe just not for you?I am not talking about the Bahai view, I am talking about misquoting a Hadith. You already answered by saying you don't question GOD, so you can leave it at that and I can see there is no answer and are trying your best to provide some answer. Sorry but the answer is not acceptable. And you again ignored the "Seerah" of Muhammed which the mahdi is supposed to be in the same Hadith. Of course. The Hadith clearly does not mean a superficial sword or a substitute to the Quran or anything of the sort and someone has lied to you. Also, there is nothing about killing in the Hadith so you are making something up to suit your wrong answer.
Yes of course, Qayyoom al Asma is written by Shirazi. If I said otherwise I made a mistake. So what you are basically saying in your answer is that since the Bab had a book that was similar to the Quranic style Bahaullah changed the Hadith into "a scripture like the Quran"! Thats post hoc ergo propter hoc. A logical fallacy.
And excuse me? The Shia Imam's said "Your Hadiths" are Muthasabih? What do you mean "Our Hadiths"? Are you calling Shia Hadiths as "our Hadiths" as if you adopt them? No. Sorry to say this but you are opposing them.
And can you tell me which Imam you are quoting? Sorry to tell you but ahadith are called "Qabur al ahad". And the Shia imams are called "ma'soom". So please don't tell me "Ma'soom" ahadith are "Muthasabih". When you go fishing for answers to things you cannot answer this is what happens.
Sorry, but I never expected such coverup type of answers ever. I am even sorry I ever questioned very small portions of the Bahai faith. It was an utter waste of time. What I leaned is that I cannot expect honest answers. Truly taken aback.
I'd suspect that a "manifestation" of God, since he knows all, would have more clearly made the ties and the continuation between all religions more clear. Things are too vague and too contradictory. Is this really what God wanted? To make things so confusing that people would still argue and debate whether or not his alleged latest messenger really came from him?You are resorting to Baha'i symbolism again Doc - look up the world's religious populations and you will see Sikhism listed - it is separate category in the national census in both the US and India - does not make it a non-religion because it needs to retro fit Baha'i beliefs -
Where you deign to "put it" or not has no bearing on the reality outside of your worldview - I could say that the Baha's are an offshoot of Shi'a Islam and not a true independent religion - "pot calling the kettle black much?" You pretend to accept parts of the Bible and yet deny arguably one its most important pillars - the physical resurrection of Jesus - so again watch what you say - it can be thrown back at you magnified
By agreeing with me and trying to obfuscate Krishna - "plausible that he formed an independent religion" you are displaying your ignorance of the known and accepted facts or a plain denial to suit your chosen path - Krishna himself worshipped Shakti and Lord Shiva - so again you and your scriptures are out of sync with what the adherents of another faith believe
It would be better to accept the fallacies in what Baha'u'llah and Abdu'l'baha said about dharmic faiths - IMO they "knew" of Krishna and the Buddha - as I am sure you know the Buddha preached self realization and not the worship of any god IMO - another fact that your faith gets tripped over
I really do not want to get into who has the bigger one here but you need to double check what you put down - you are a respected member on these forums but gaffes like these do not enhance your reputation AFAIAC
I am done with this thread - there have been many recent comments on RF on how the Baha'i 's are slippery to argue with and will twist anything with "symbolism" to suit their beliefs - just look to see the systemic deconstruction of InvestigateTruth by firedragon in this very thread and the numerous threads where both Tony and Trailblazer have been called out for exactly that - I had hoped you were different - sorry to see that it is not so
Is there really any reason to expect a manifestation of God to know everything. I cannot imagine Jesus went about knowing everything. He learned stuff just like any other human being. If the Baha'i founder is to be understood similarly, a special divinely connected being who has been born human he to would have all the natural limitations of knowledgeI'd suspect that a "manifestation" of God, since he knows all, would have more clearly made the ties and the continuation between all religions more clear. Things are too vague and too contradictory. Is this really what God wanted? To make things so confusing that people would still argue and debate whether or not his alleged latest messenger really came from him?
Why do you think God cannot repeat exactly what He said before, or partially repeat what He said before?Wrong. Whole verses are verbatim copy pasted.
Also your translators are intentionally misleading you.
The audience that the Bab said to them, Here is a Book like Quran, were the 19th century Muslims in Persia who gave special importance to Arabic. To them it was miracle if someone wrote in the style of the Quran.I am puzzled about the above argument over whether a writing of the Bab is like the Koran. It seems to me that like is a very subjective matter unless two things are very different. If one item discusses minor league baseball and the other the chemical composition of gunpowder it is clearer to say they are unalike. Though people enthusiastic for argument may find even there elements of style to combat over.
Just to be clear I am inclined to keep some distance from the Bab's claim, its outside of my very tiny Arabic expertise.
Actually, that's my point, Baha'u'llah doesn't seem to have "all" knowledge. But, Baha'is see him a the divine physician that knows exactly what the world needs. And I think the world needed more information to decide if he is the return of every promised one of every major religion. Like with the Book of Revelation, his son only goes in depth on two chapters. I've asked Baha'is who the "Lamb" is in Revelation and they have to guess. There should be no guessing. The Lamb is the one that returns. The Lamb has to be Jesus... or, if Baha'u'llah is truly the return of Christ, then he has to be the Lamb. Instead, Baha'u'llah is said to be the third Woe. And in context, I don't see how the Three Woes can be thought to be Muhammad, The Bab, and Baha'u'llah.Is there really any reason to expect a manifestation of God to know everything. I cannot imagine Jesus went about knowing everything. He learned stuff just like any other human being. If the Baha'i founder is to be understood similarly, a special divinely connected being who has been born human he to would have all the natural limitations of knowledge
What appears interesting is the idea that the manifestation of God supplied humans with the key inspirations to move people into a better life. The invitation to respect other religious traditions could be one part of that. It does not need to know all the historical data of the past. The rough outlines found in historical tradition is adequate.
The Baha'i Faith has some very important teachings. They all sound very plausible and true. Their claims of "progressive" revelation makes so much sense... until I looked closer. Does the Baha'i Faith and their prophets The Bab and Baha'u'llah hold up to scrutiny? For me, there are some problems in some of the details of their claims and beliefs. You seem to be finding some of your own. Are they enough to go beyond just questioning, and maybe even, rejecting the Baha'i Faith? Or, is there a way to accept them as a legitimate new religion, but maybe just not for you?
The audience that the Bab said to them, Here is a Book like Quran, were the 19th century Muslims in Persia who gave special importance to Arabic. To them it was miracle if someone wrote in the style of the Quran.
Why do you think God cannot repeat exactly what He said before, or partially repeat what He said before?
It seems to me, you start as if, you know certainly the truth is, that the Book of the Bab is not from God, then you say, why He has copied it from the Quran. Eventhough there are just in some cases, the verses have same expressions as the Quran.
Why don't you start from a position that you don't know if His Book is from God or not (neutral position)
I mean, to me, you look so biased. On one hand, if His Book have similar expression and rythm as the Quran, you are saying He has copied it, and if you don't see the similarity, you are saying it is not like the Quran.