This is the writings and opinion of the author Dr J E Esslemont. It is not part of the Baha’i Writings and just the opinion of an individual Baha’i. It carries no more weight than anything anyone else says and looks a little dated. OTOH the first five chapters were reviewed by Abdul-Baha prior to publication so has more weight.
Nice jump. You jumped right over the part where danieldemol said to me: "If spirits had mass we could weigh them. Do you put on weight when you are visited by the Holy Spirit?"
and I said to him:
(a) Either a spirit has some property that is commonly associated with matter, be it mass, energy, or both; or it does not.
(b) If it does not, the atheists are correct: physical death puts an end to perishable beings and Paul's "imperishable beings" doctrine is nonsense, physical post-death remains dissolve into "stardust", and the entity that I am ceases to exist. In which case, there is no such thing as the afterlife.
(c) If being ceases to be in the grave, Baha'i teaching isn't even close to accurate, much less relevant, as when it prattles on about the afterlife, ...
- The measure of agreement between this view, which is founded on careful scientific research, and that of the Bahá’í teachings, is truly remarkable.
And my opinions are the least of your worries. Baha'i nonsense is your bigger problem.