Trailblazer
Veteran Member
No prophet wrote Genesis, it was written by men.First off, my comment was addressed to a Christian.
Nevertheless, Bahais, who try to get you to believe that all gods are just one and that he sends prophets to earth to tell people about himself, completely disavow the writings of the prophet who wrote Genesis. That's very convenient.
Nevertheless, whatever was written in the past can always be changed by God in the future, because God is omnipotent and omniscient. So even what Baha'u'llah wrote can be changed when the next prophet appears.
God is not telling us to disbelieve what Moses or the other prophets revealed (not wrote).If God tells us that we are to disbelieve what the prophets wrote 6000 years ago, then we must conclude that He will also tell us to disbelieve what Bahá'u'lláh wrote 200 years ago. Therefore, there is no reason to believe anything that Bahá'u'lláh wrote.
In the future, when another prophet is sent by God, whatever that prophet reveals will supersede what Baha'u'llah wrote but the spiritual virtues and divine qualities will always be true, because they are eternal.
“the Law of God is divided into two parts. One is the fundamental basis which comprises all spiritual things—that is to say, it refers to the spiritual virtues and divine qualities; this does not change nor alter: it is the Holy of Holies, which is the essence of the Law of Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, Christ, Muhammad, the Báb, and Bahá’u’lláh, and which lasts and is established in all the prophetic cycles. It will never be abrogated, for it is spiritual and not material truth; it is faith, knowledge, certitude, justice, piety, righteousness, trustworthiness, love of God, benevolence, purity, detachment, humility, meekness, patience and constancy. It shows mercy to the poor, defends the oppressed, gives to the wretched and uplifts the fallen......
These divine qualities, these eternal commandments, will never be abolished; nay, they will last and remain established for ever and ever. These virtues of humanity will be renewed in each of the different cycles; for at the end of every cycle the spiritual Law of God—that is to say, the human virtues—disappears, and only the form subsists.
The second part of the Religion of God, which refers to the material world, and which comprises fasting, prayer, forms of worship, marriage and divorce, the abolition of slavery, legal processes, transactions, indemnities for murder, violence, theft and injuries—this part of the Law of God, which refers to material things, is modified and altered in each prophetic cycle in accordance with the necessities of the times.” Some Answered Questions, pp. 47-48