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Covenant-breaker

Covenant-breaker is a term used in the Baháʼí Faith to refer to a person who has been excommunicated from the Baháʼí community for breaking the Covenant of Baháʼu'lláh, meaning actively promoting schism in the religion or otherwise opposing the legitimacy of the chain of succession of leadership.[1][2][3] Excommunication among Baháʼís is rare and not used for transgressions of community standards, intellectual dissent, or conversion to other religions.[2][4] Instead, it is the most severe punishment, reserved for suppressing organized dissent that threatens the unity of believers.[5]

Currently, the Universal House of Justice has the sole authority to declare a person a Covenant-breaker,[2][6] and once identified, all Baháʼís are expected to shun them, even if they are family members.[5] According to ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, Covenant-breaking is a contagious disease.[7] The Baháʼí writings forbid association with Covenant-breakers and Baháʼís are urged to avoid their literature, thus providing an exception to the Baháʼí principle of independent investigation of truth. Most Baháʼís are unaware of the small Baháʼí divisions that exist.[8]

Dr. Mikhail Sergeev[a] wrote about the Baháʼí practice of excommunication,

In dealing with organized dissent, and covenant-breaking as the most radical form of opposition, Baháʼís stand, as they do on many other controversial issues, somewhere between modernity and traditional religions. They are not as tolerant as the adherents of the Enlightenment ideology that institutionalizes opposition. Nor do they crush it as harshly as the fervent religious leaders of the past.[5]

The three largest attempts at alternative leadership—whose followers are considered Covenant-breakers—were from Subh-i-Azal, Mírzá Muhammad ʻAlí, and Charles Mason Remey.[10][2] Others were declared Covenant-breakers for actively opposing or disobeying the head of the religion, or maliciously attacking the Baháʼí administration after leaving it.[10][11]

Definition Edit

Covenant-breaking does not refer to attacks from non-Baháʼís or former Baháʼís.[12] Rather, it is in reference to internal campaigns of opposition where the Covenant-breaker is seen as challenging the unity of the Baháʼí Faith, causing internal division, or by claiming or supporting an alternate succession of authority or administrative structure. The central purpose of the covenant is to prevent schism and dissension.[13]

In a letter to an individual dated 23 March 1975, the Universal House of Justice wrote:[14]

When a person declares his acceptance of Baháʼu'lláh as a Manifestation of God he becomes a party to the Covenant and accepts the totality of His Revelation. If he then turns round and attacks Baháʼu'lláh or the Central Institution of the Faith he violates the Covenant. If this happens every effort is made to help that person to see the illogicality and error of his actions, but if he persists he must, in accordance with the instructions of Baháʼu'lláh Himself, be shunned as a Covenant-breaker.

The term Covenant-breaker was first used by ʻAbdu'l-Bahá to describe the partisans of his half-brother Mírzá Muhammad ʻAlí, who challenged his leadership. In ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's Will and Testament, he appointed Shoghi Effendi as the first Guardian, an institution of the religion now defined, and called for the election of the Universal House of Justice. ʻAbdul-Bahá defined in the same manner opposition to these two institutions as Covenant-breaking and advised all Baháʼís to shun anyone opposing the Covenant: "...one of the greatest and most fundamental principles of the Cause of God is to shun and avoid entirely the Covenant-breakers, for they will utterly destroy the Cause of God, exterminate His Law and render of no account all efforts exerted in the past."[15]

Categorization Edit

Included categories of people Edit

Most Covenant-breakers are involved in schismatic groups, but not always. For example, a Baháʼí who refuses to follow guidance on treatment of Covenant-breakers is at risk of being named one. One article[13] originally written for the Baháʼí Encyclopedia, characterized Covenant-breakers that have emerged in the course of Baháʼí history as belonging to one of four categories:

  1. Leadership challenge: These are persons who dispute the authority and legitimacy of the head of the religion and advance claims either for themselves or for another. The main examples of these are Mírzá Muhammad ʻAlí and Charles Mason Remey.
  2. Dissidence: Those who actively disagree with the policies and actions of the head of the faith without, however, advancing an alternative claim for leadership. This group consisted mostly of opponents of the Baháʼí administration such as Ruth White, Julia Lynch Olin and Mirza Ahmad Sohrab.
  3. Disobedience: Those who disobey certain direct instructions from the head of the religion. Mostly the instruction in question is to cease to associate with a Covenant-breaker. Examples of this type include most of the descendants of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá during Shoghi Effendi's time.
  4. Apostates who maliciously attack the Baháʼí Faith. Examples include Ávárih, Sobhi and Níkú.

Excluded categories of people Edit

Shoghi Effendi wrote to the National Spiritual Assembly of Canada in 1957:

People who have withdrawn from the Cause because they no longer feel that they can support its Teachings and Institutions sincerely, are not Covenant-breakers -- they are non-Baháʼís and should just be treated as such. Only those who ally themselves actively with known enemies of the Faith who are Covenant-breakers, and who attack the Faith in the same spirit as these people, can be considered, themselves, to be Covenant-breakers.[16]

Beyond this, many other relationships to the Baháʼí Faith exist, both positive and negative. Covenant-breaking does not apply to most of them. The following is a partial list of those who could not rightly be termed Covenant-breakers:

  • Members of other religions or no religion—with or without any particular relationship to the Baháʼí Faith.
  • Baháʼís who simply leave the religion. (see above)
  • Baháʼís who, in the estimation of the head of the religion have insufficiently understood the nature of the covenant from the start. These are sometimes "disenrolled" and are considered to have never actually been Baháʼís, given their fundamental diversion from this core Baháʼí doctrine.

Bábís Edit

Bábís are generally regarded as another religion altogether. Since Covenant-breaking presumes that one has submitted oneself to a covenant and then broken it, and Bábís never recognized or swore allegiance to Baháʼu'lláh, they are not Covenant-breakers.

Followers of Subh-i-Azal, Baháʼu'lláh's half-brother who tried to poison him, engaged in active opposition to Baháʼís, and Shoghi Effendi did inform Baháʼís that they should avoid contact with his descendants, writing that "No intelligent and loyal Baha'i would associate with a descendant of Azal, if he traced the slightest breath of criticism of our Faith, in any aspect, from that person. In fact these people should be strenuously avoided as having an inherited spiritual disease -- the disease of Covenant-breaking!".[17]

Shoghi Effendi's immediate family Edit

Through the influence of Bahíyyih Khánum, the eldest daughter of Baháʼu'lláh, everyone in the household initially rallied around Shoghi Effendi after the death of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá. For several years his brother Husayn and several cousins served him as secretaries. The only ones publicly opposing him were Mírzá Muhammad ʻAlí and his followers, who were declared Covenant-breakers by ʻAbdu'l-Bahá. Contrary to ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's specific instruction, certain family members established illicit links with those whom ʻAbdu'l-Bahá had declared Covenant-breakers. After Bahíyyih Khánum died in 1932, Shoghi Effendi's eldest sister – Ruhangiz – married Nayyer Effendi Afnan, a son of Siyyid Ali Afnan, stepson of Baháʼu'lláh though Furughiyyih.[18] The children of Furughiyyih sided with Muhammad ʻAlí and opposed ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, leaving only ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's own children as faithful among the descendants of Baháʼu'lláh. Moojan Momen describes these events as follows:

All remained quiescent until the late 1930s when the case of the House of Bahá'u'lláh (q.v.) arose in Iraq. Shoghi Effendi asked Husayn Afnán (d. 1952), the son of Sayyid `Alí, to resign a high post that he held with the Iraqi government so that he would not be placed in the position of endorsing that government's actions in the case. Husayn refused and was expelled; one-by-one his brothers Faydí, Hasan, and Nayyir (Nayyir-`Alí, d. 1952) were also expelled. Events then proceeded rapidly. A series of marriages, engineered, according to Shoghi Effendi (MB), by Nayyir, occurred, linking the grandchildren of `Abdu'l-Bahá with the expelled sons of Sayyid `Alí Afnán.[13]

These marriages caused Ruhangiz, Mehrangiz, and Thurayyá to be declared Covenant-breakers by Shoghi Effendi, though there was some delay and concealment initially in order to avoid public degradation of the family. On 2 November 1941 Shoghi Effendi sent two cables announcing the expulsion of Túbá and her children Ruhi, Suhayl, and Fu'ad for consenting to the marriage of Thurayyá to Faydi. There was also mention that Ruhi's visit to America and Fu'ad's visit to England were without approval.[19] In December 1941 he announced the expulsion of his sister Mehrangiz.[20]

Presumably[original research?] being faced with a choice between shunning their disobedient family members and being themselves disobedient to ʻAbdu'l-Bahá and Shoghi Effendi, his cousins, aunts and uncles chose the latter.

Expulsions Edit

In 1944 Shoghi Effendi announced the expulsion of Munib Shahid, the grandson of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's through Ruha, for marrying into the family of an enemy of the Baháʼís.[21] In April 1945, he announced the expulsion of Husayn Ali, his brother, for joining the other Covenant-breakers.[22] In a 1950 Shoghi Effendi sent another cable expelling the family of Ruha, another daughter of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá for showing "open defiance",[23] and in December 1951 he announced a "fourth alliance" of members of the family of Siyyid Ali marrying into Ruha's family, and that his brother Riaz was included among the Covenant-breakers.[24]

In 1953 he cabled about Ruhi Afnan corresponding with Mirza Ahmad Sohrab, selling property of Baháʼu'lláh, and publicly "misrepresenting the teachings and deliberately causing confusion in minds of authorities and the local population".[25]

Resultant groups Edit

Most of the groups regarded by the larger group of Baháʼís as Covenant-breakers originated in the claims of Charles Mason Remey to the Guardianship in 1960. The Will and Testament of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá states that Guardians should be lineal descendants of Baháʼu'lláh, that each Guardian must select his successor during his lifetime, and that the nine Hands of the Cause of God permanently stationed in the holy land must approve the appointment by majority vote. Baháʼís interpret lineal descendency to mean physical familial relation to Baháʼu'lláh, of which Mason Remey was not.

Almost all of Baháʼís accepted the determination of the Hands of the Cause that upon the death of Shoghi Effendi, he died "without having appointed his successor". There was an absence of a valid descendant of Baháʼu'lláh who could qualify under the terms of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá's will. Later the Universal House of Justice, initially elected in 1963, made a ruling on the subject that it was not possible for another Guardian to be appointed.

In 1960 Remey, a Hand of the Cause himself, retracted his earlier position, and claimed to have been coerced. He claimed to be the successor to Shoghi Effendi. He and the small number of people who followed him were expelled from the mainstream Baháʼí community by the Hands of the Cause. Those close to Remey claimed that he went senile in old age, and by the time of his death he was largely abandoned, with his most prominent followers fighting amongst themselves for leadership.

The largest group of the remaining followers of Remey, members of the "Orthodox Baháʼí Faith", believe that legitimate authority passed from Shoghi Effendi to Mason Remey to Joel Marangella. They, therefore, regard the Universal House of Justice in Haifa, Israel to be illegitimate, and its members and followers to be Covenant-breakers.

In 2009, Jeffery Goldberg and Janice Franco, both from the mainstream Baháʼí community, joined the Orthodox Baháʼí Faith. Both of them were declared as Covenant-breakers and shunned. Goldberg's wife was told to divorce her husband.[26]

The present descendants of expelled members of Baháʼu'lláh's family have not specifically been declared Covenant-breakers, though they mostly do not associate themselves with the Baháʼí religion.

A small group of Baháʼís in Northern New Mexico believe that these descendants are eligible for appointment to the Guardianship and are waiting for such a direct descendant of Baháʼu'lláh to arise as the rightful Guardian.

Enayatullah (Zabih) Yazdani was designated a Covenant-breaker in June 2005, after many years of insisting on his views that Mason Remey was the legitimate successor to Shoghi Effendi and of accepting Donald Harvey as the third guardian. He is now the fifth guardian of a small group of Baháʼís and resides in Australia.[27]

There is also a small group in Montana, originally inspired by Leland Jensen, who claimed a status higher than that of the Guardian. His failed apocalyptic predictions and unsuccessful efforts to reestablish the Guardianship and the administration were apparent by his death in 1996. A dispute among Jensen's followers over the identity of the Guardian resulted in another division in 2001.

American opposition Edit

Juan Cole, an American professor of Middle Eastern history who had been a Baháʼí for 25 years, left the religion in 1996 after being approached by a Continental Counselor about his involvement in a secret email list that was organizing opposition to certain Baháʼí institutions and policies.[4] Cole was never labeled a Covenant-breaker, because he claimed to be a Unitarian-Universalist upon leaving. He went on to publish three papers in journals in 1998,[28] 2000,[29] and 2002.[30] These heavily criticized the Baháʼí administration in the United States and suggested cult-like tendencies, particularly regarding the requirement of pre-publication review and the practice of shunning Covenant-breakers.[4] For example, Cole wrote in 1998, "Baha’is, like members of the Watchtower and other cults, shun those who are excommunicated."[28] In 2000, he wrote: "Baha'i authorities... keep believers in line by appealing to the welfare and unity of the community, and if these appeals fail then implicit or explicit threats of disfellowshipping and even shunning are invoked. ... Shunning is the central control mechanism in the Baha'i system"[29] In 2002, he wrote: "Opportunistic sectarian-minded officials may have seen this... as a time when they could act arbitrarily and harshly against intellectuals and liberals, using summary expulsion and threats of shunning".[30]

Moojan Momen, a Baháʼí author, reviewed 66 exit narratives of former Baháʼís, and identified 1996 (Cole's departure) to 2002 as a period of "articulate and well-educated" apostates that used the newly available Internet to connect with each other and form a community with its own "mythology, creed and salvation stories becoming what could perhaps be called an anti-religion".[4] According to Momen, the narrative among these apostates of a "fiercely aggressive religion where petty dictators rule" is the opposite experience of most members, who see "peace as a central teaching", "consultative decision-making", and "mechanisms to guard against individuals attacking the central institutions of the Bahá'í Faith or creating schisms."[4] On the practice of shunning, Momen writes that it is "rarely used and is only applied after prolonged negotiations fail to resolve the situation. To the best knowledge of the present author it has been used against no more than a handful of individuals in over two decades and to only the first of the apostates described below [Francesco Ficicchia] more than twenty-five years ago - although it is regularly mentioned in the literature produced by the apostates as though it were a frequent occurrence."[4]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Sergeev is a professor of religion and philosophy at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia and also Temple University. He also co-chairs and serves on the faculty of the Department of Religion, Philosophy, and Theology at a Baha'i Institute.[9]

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Hartz 2009, p. 138.
  2. ^ a b c d Smith 2000.
  3. ^ Winters 2010.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Momen 2007.
  5. ^ a b c Sergeev 2015, pp. 94–95.
  6. ^ McMullen 2015, p. 21.
  7. ^ Hejazi Martinez, Hutan (2010). Baha'ism: History, transfiguration, doxa (Thesis thesis).
  8. ^ Johnson 2020, p. xxxi-xxxv.
  9. ^ "Mikhail Yu. Sergeev, PhD". Wilmetteinstitute.org/. Retrieved 25 December 2020.
  10. ^ a b Momen 1995.
  11. ^ Adamson 2009.
  12. ^ Johnson 2020, p. 35.
  13. ^ a b c Moojan Momen, The Covenant and Covenant-breaker, Bahá’í Library Online, 1995
  14. ^ National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahá'ís of the United States (2000). "Guidance for Bahá'í Groups". Evanston, IL. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  15. ^ The Will And Testament of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá, p 20
  16. ^ Shoghi Effendi, Messages to Canada, p. 64
  17. ^ Shoghi Effendi, From letter dated 9 December 1948 to an individual believer
  18. ^ Taherzadeh 2000, p. 145.
  19. ^ Taherzadeh 1972.
  20. ^ Effendi, Shoghi (December 1981). The unfolding destiny of the British Baha'i community: Messages from the Guardian of the Baha'i Faith to the Baha'is of the British Isles. UK Baháʼí Publishing Trust. p. 149. ISBN 978-0900125430.
  21. ^ "Messages from the Guardian". Baháʼí News. No. 172. December 1944. Retrieved 8 May 2016.
  22. ^ "Messages from the Guardian". Baháʼí News. No. 174. April 1945. Retrieved 8 May 2016.
  23. ^ Effendi, Shoghi (22 February 2015). Citadel of Faith. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. p. 87. ISBN 978-1508530596.
  24. ^ Effendi, Shoghi (1999). Messages to the Baháʼí World: 1950–1957. Baha'i Publishing Trust. p. 16. ISBN 978-0877432500.
  25. ^ Messages to the Baháʼí World – 1950–1957, p. 48
  26. ^ "Baha'i court case; Robert Stockman, Janice Franco, Jeffrey Goldberg". The Honolulu Advertiser. 30 May 2009. p. 9. Retrieved 27 November 2020.
  27. ^ Naghdy, Fazel. (2012). A tutorial on the Dispensation of Bahá'u'lláh : exploring the fundamental verities of the Bahá'í faith. [San Bernardino, CA]: F. Naghdy. ISBN 978-1-4681-4531-1. OCLC 898418021.
  28. ^ a b Cole 1998.
  29. ^ a b Cole 2000.
  30. ^ a b Cole 2002.

References Edit

  • ʻAbdu'l-Bahá (1992) [1901-08]. The Will And Testament of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá. Mona Vale, N.S.W, Australia: Baháʼí Publications Australia. ISBN 0-909991-47-2.
  • Adamson, Hugh C. (2009). "Covenant Breaker". The A to Z of the Baháʼí Faith. The A to Z Guide Series, No. 70. Plymouth, UK: Scarecrow Press. pp. 117–26. ISBN 978-0-8108-6853-3.
  • Baháʼu'lláh (1992) [1873]. The Kitáb-i-Aqdas: The Most Holy Book. Wilmette, Illinois, USA: Baháʼí Publishing Trust. ISBN 0-85398-999-0.
  • Cole, Juan (June 1998). "The Bahaʼi Faith in America as Panopticon, 1963-1997". The Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. 37 (2). Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  • Cole, Juan (May 2000). "Race, Immorality and Money in the American Baha'i Community". Religion. 30 (2): 109–125. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  • Cole, Juan (March 2002). "Fundamentalism in the Contemporary U.S. Baha'i Community" (PDF). Review of Religious Research. 43 (3): 195–217. (PDF) from the original on 30 June 2003. Retrieved 27 January 2021.
  • Hartz, Paula (2009). World Religions: Baha'i Faith (3rd ed.). New York, NY: Chelsea House Publishers. ISBN 978-1-60413-104-8.
  • Balyuzi, Hasan (2000). Baháʼu'lláh, King of Glory (Paperback ed.). Oxford, UK: George Ronald. ISBN 0-85398-328-3.
  • Johnson, Vernon (2020). Baha'is in Exile: An Account of followers of Baha'u'llah outside the mainstream Baha'i religion. Pittsburgh, PA: RoseDog Books. ISBN 978-1-6453-0574-3.
  • McMullen, Michael (2015). The Baha'is of America: The Growth of a Religious Movement. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 978-1-4798-5152-2.
  • Momen, Moojan (1995). "The Covenant and Covenant-breaker". bahai-library.com. Retrieved 6 January 2020.
  • Momen, Moojan (8 June 2007). "Marginality and Apostasy in the Baha'i Community". Religion. Elsevier. 37 (3): 187–209. doi:10.1016/j.religion.2007.06.008. ISSN 0048-721X. from the original on 6 October 2010. Retrieved 3 November 2010.
  • Effendi, Shoghi (1974). Baháʼí Administration. Wilmette, Illinois, USA: Baháʼí Publishing Trust. ISBN 0-87743-166-3.
  • Effendi, Shoghi (1944). God Passes By. Wilmette, Illinois, USA: Baháʼí Publishing Trust. ISBN 0-87743-020-9.
  • Effendi, Shoghi (1976). Principles of Baháʼí Administration (4th ed.). London, UK: Baháʼí Publishing Trust. ISBN 0-900125-13-6.
  • Rabbani, Ruhiyyih, ed. (1992). The Ministry of the Custodians 1957-1963. Baháʼí World Centre. ISBN 0-85398-350-X.
  • Rabbani, Ruhiyyih (1969). The Priceless Pearl (Hardcover ed.). London, UK: Baháʼí Publishing Trust: 2000. ISBN 1-870989-91-0.
  • Sergeev, Mikhail (17 September 2015). Theory of Religious Cycles: Tradition, Modernity, and the Bahá’í Faith. Brill | Rodopi. doi:10.1163/9789004301078. ISBN 978-90-04-30107-8.
  • Smith, Peter (2000). "Covenant-breakers". A Concise Encyclopedia of the Baháʼí Faith. Oxford, UK: Oneworld Publications. pp. 115–16. ISBN 1-85168-184-1.
  • Taherzadeh, Adib (1972). The Covenant of Baháʼu'lláh. Oxford, UK: George Ronald. ISBN 0-85398-344-5.
  • Taherzadeh, Adib (2000). The Child of the Covenant. Oxford, UK: George Ronald. ISBN 0-85398-439-5.
  • Winters, Jonah (2010). "Glossary of Bahá'í terms". Baha'i Library Online.

External links Edit

  • A Compilation: Non-Association with Covenant-breakers - From the Continental Board of Counselors to the NSAs of Alaska, Canada and the US, 7 December 1999.

covenant, breaker, term, used, baháʼí, faith, refer, person, been, excommunicated, from, baháʼí, community, breaking, covenant, baháʼu, lláh, meaning, actively, promoting, schism, religion, otherwise, opposing, legitimacy, chain, succession, leadership, excomm. Covenant breaker is a term used in the Bahaʼi Faith to refer to a person who has been excommunicated from the Bahaʼi community for breaking the Covenant of Bahaʼu llah meaning actively promoting schism in the religion or otherwise opposing the legitimacy of the chain of succession of leadership 1 2 3 Excommunication among Bahaʼis is rare and not used for transgressions of community standards intellectual dissent or conversion to other religions 2 4 Instead it is the most severe punishment reserved for suppressing organized dissent that threatens the unity of believers 5 Currently the Universal House of Justice has the sole authority to declare a person a Covenant breaker 2 6 and once identified all Bahaʼis are expected to shun them even if they are family members 5 According to ʻAbdu l Baha Covenant breaking is a contagious disease 7 The Bahaʼi writings forbid association with Covenant breakers and Bahaʼis are urged to avoid their literature thus providing an exception to the Bahaʼi principle of independent investigation of truth Most Bahaʼis are unaware of the small Bahaʼi divisions that exist 8 Dr Mikhail Sergeev a wrote about the Bahaʼi practice of excommunication In dealing with organized dissent and covenant breaking as the most radical form of opposition Bahaʼis stand as they do on many other controversial issues somewhere between modernity and traditional religions They are not as tolerant as the adherents of the Enlightenment ideology that institutionalizes opposition Nor do they crush it as harshly as the fervent religious leaders of the past 5 The three largest attempts at alternative leadership whose followers are considered Covenant breakers were from Subh i Azal Mirza Muhammad ʻAli and Charles Mason Remey 10 2 Others were declared Covenant breakers for actively opposing or disobeying the head of the religion or maliciously attacking the Bahaʼi administration after leaving it 10 11 Contents 1 Definition 2 Categorization 2 1 Included categories of people 2 2 Excluded categories of people 2 3 Babis 3 Shoghi Effendi s immediate family 3 1 Expulsions 4 Resultant groups 4 1 American opposition 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Citations 8 References 9 External linksDefinition EditCovenant breaking does not refer to attacks from non Bahaʼis or former Bahaʼis 12 Rather it is in reference to internal campaigns of opposition where the Covenant breaker is seen as challenging the unity of the Bahaʼi Faith causing internal division or by claiming or supporting an alternate succession of authority or administrative structure The central purpose of the covenant is to prevent schism and dissension 13 In a letter to an individual dated 23 March 1975 the Universal House of Justice wrote 14 When a person declares his acceptance of Bahaʼu llah as a Manifestation of God he becomes a party to the Covenant and accepts the totality of His Revelation If he then turns round and attacks Bahaʼu llah or the Central Institution of the Faith he violates the Covenant If this happens every effort is made to help that person to see the illogicality and error of his actions but if he persists he must in accordance with the instructions of Bahaʼu llah Himself be shunned as a Covenant breaker The term Covenant breaker was first used by ʻAbdu l Baha to describe the partisans of his half brother Mirza Muhammad ʻAli who challenged his leadership In ʻAbdu l Baha s Will and Testament he appointed Shoghi Effendi as the first Guardian an institution of the religion now defined and called for the election of the Universal House of Justice ʻAbdul Baha defined in the same manner opposition to these two institutions as Covenant breaking and advised all Bahaʼis to shun anyone opposing the Covenant one of the greatest and most fundamental principles of the Cause of God is to shun and avoid entirely the Covenant breakers for they will utterly destroy the Cause of God exterminate His Law and render of no account all efforts exerted in the past 15 Categorization EditIncluded categories of people Edit Most Covenant breakers are involved in schismatic groups but not always For example a Bahaʼi who refuses to follow guidance on treatment of Covenant breakers is at risk of being named one One article 13 originally written for the Bahaʼi Encyclopedia characterized Covenant breakers that have emerged in the course of Bahaʼi history as belonging to one of four categories Leadership challenge These are persons who dispute the authority and legitimacy of the head of the religion and advance claims either for themselves or for another The main examples of these are Mirza Muhammad ʻAli and Charles Mason Remey Dissidence Those who actively disagree with the policies and actions of the head of the faith without however advancing an alternative claim for leadership This group consisted mostly of opponents of the Bahaʼi administration such as Ruth White Julia Lynch Olin and Mirza Ahmad Sohrab Disobedience Those who disobey certain direct instructions from the head of the religion Mostly the instruction in question is to cease to associate with a Covenant breaker Examples of this type include most of the descendants of ʻAbdu l Baha during Shoghi Effendi s time Apostates who maliciously attack the Bahaʼi Faith Examples include Avarih Sobhi and Niku Excluded categories of people Edit Shoghi Effendi wrote to the National Spiritual Assembly of Canada in 1957 People who have withdrawn from the Cause because they no longer feel that they can support its Teachings and Institutions sincerely are not Covenant breakers they are non Bahaʼis and should just be treated as such Only those who ally themselves actively with known enemies of the Faith who are Covenant breakers and who attack the Faith in the same spirit as these people can be considered themselves to be Covenant breakers 16 Beyond this many other relationships to the Bahaʼi Faith exist both positive and negative Covenant breaking does not apply to most of them The following is a partial list of those who could not rightly be termed Covenant breakers Members of other religions or no religion with or without any particular relationship to the Bahaʼi Faith Bahaʼis who simply leave the religion see above Bahaʼis who in the estimation of the head of the religion have insufficiently understood the nature of the covenant from the start These are sometimes disenrolled and are considered to have never actually been Bahaʼis given their fundamental diversion from this core Bahaʼi doctrine Babis Edit Babis are generally regarded as another religion altogether Since Covenant breaking presumes that one has submitted oneself to a covenant and then broken it and Babis never recognized or swore allegiance to Bahaʼu llah they are not Covenant breakers Followers of Subh i Azal Bahaʼu llah s half brother who tried to poison him engaged in active opposition to Bahaʼis and Shoghi Effendi did inform Bahaʼis that they should avoid contact with his descendants writing that No intelligent and loyal Baha i would associate with a descendant of Azal if he traced the slightest breath of criticism of our Faith in any aspect from that person In fact these people should be strenuously avoided as having an inherited spiritual disease the disease of Covenant breaking 17 Shoghi Effendi s immediate family EditThrough the influence of Bahiyyih Khanum the eldest daughter of Bahaʼu llah everyone in the household initially rallied around Shoghi Effendi after the death of ʻAbdu l Baha For several years his brother Husayn and several cousins served him as secretaries The only ones publicly opposing him were Mirza Muhammad ʻAli and his followers who were declared Covenant breakers by ʻAbdu l Baha Contrary to ʻAbdu l Baha s specific instruction certain family members established illicit links with those whom ʻAbdu l Baha had declared Covenant breakers After Bahiyyih Khanum died in 1932 Shoghi Effendi s eldest sister Ruhangiz married Nayyer Effendi Afnan a son of Siyyid Ali Afnan stepson of Bahaʼu llah though Furughiyyih 18 The children of Furughiyyih sided with Muhammad ʻAli and opposed ʻAbdu l Baha leaving only ʻAbdu l Baha s own children as faithful among the descendants of Bahaʼu llah Moojan Momen describes these events as follows All remained quiescent until the late 1930s when the case of the House of Baha u llah q v arose in Iraq Shoghi Effendi asked Husayn Afnan d 1952 the son of Sayyid Ali to resign a high post that he held with the Iraqi government so that he would not be placed in the position of endorsing that government s actions in the case Husayn refused and was expelled one by one his brothers Faydi Hasan and Nayyir Nayyir Ali d 1952 were also expelled Events then proceeded rapidly A series of marriages engineered according to Shoghi Effendi MB by Nayyir occurred linking the grandchildren of Abdu l Baha with the expelled sons of Sayyid Ali Afnan 13 These marriages caused Ruhangiz Mehrangiz and Thurayya to be declared Covenant breakers by Shoghi Effendi though there was some delay and concealment initially in order to avoid public degradation of the family On 2 November 1941 Shoghi Effendi sent two cables announcing the expulsion of Tuba and her children Ruhi Suhayl and Fu ad for consenting to the marriage of Thurayya to Faydi There was also mention that Ruhi s visit to America and Fu ad s visit to England were without approval 19 In December 1941 he announced the expulsion of his sister Mehrangiz 20 Presumably original research being faced with a choice between shunning their disobedient family members and being themselves disobedient to ʻAbdu l Baha and Shoghi Effendi his cousins aunts and uncles chose the latter Expulsions Edit This section may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral Please help improve it by replacing them with more appropriate citations to reliable independent third party sources December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1944 Shoghi Effendi announced the expulsion of Munib Shahid the grandson of ʻAbdu l Baha s through Ruha for marrying into the family of an enemy of the Bahaʼis 21 In April 1945 he announced the expulsion of Husayn Ali his brother for joining the other Covenant breakers 22 In a 1950 Shoghi Effendi sent another cable expelling the family of Ruha another daughter of ʻAbdu l Baha for showing open defiance 23 and in December 1951 he announced a fourth alliance of members of the family of Siyyid Ali marrying into Ruha s family and that his brother Riaz was included among the Covenant breakers 24 In 1953 he cabled about Ruhi Afnan corresponding with Mirza Ahmad Sohrab selling property of Bahaʼu llah and publicly misrepresenting the teachings and deliberately causing confusion in minds of authorities and the local population 25 Resultant groups EditMain article Attempted schisms in the Bahaʼi Faith This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Most of the groups regarded by the larger group of Bahaʼis as Covenant breakers originated in the claims of Charles Mason Remey to the Guardianship in 1960 The Will and Testament of ʻAbdu l Baha states that Guardians should be lineal descendants of Bahaʼu llah that each Guardian must select his successor during his lifetime and that the nine Hands of the Cause of God permanently stationed in the holy land must approve the appointment by majority vote Bahaʼis interpret lineal descendency to mean physical familial relation to Bahaʼu llah of which Mason Remey was not Almost all of Bahaʼis accepted the determination of the Hands of the Cause that upon the death of Shoghi Effendi he died without having appointed his successor There was an absence of a valid descendant of Bahaʼu llah who could qualify under the terms of ʻAbdu l Baha s will Later the Universal House of Justice initially elected in 1963 made a ruling on the subject that it was not possible for another Guardian to be appointed In 1960 Remey a Hand of the Cause himself retracted his earlier position and claimed to have been coerced He claimed to be the successor to Shoghi Effendi He and the small number of people who followed him were expelled from the mainstream Bahaʼi community by the Hands of the Cause Those close to Remey claimed that he went senile in old age and by the time of his death he was largely abandoned with his most prominent followers fighting amongst themselves for leadership The largest group of the remaining followers of Remey members of the Orthodox Bahaʼi Faith believe that legitimate authority passed from Shoghi Effendi to Mason Remey to Joel Marangella They therefore regard the Universal House of Justice in Haifa Israel to be illegitimate and its members and followers to be Covenant breakers In 2009 Jeffery Goldberg and Janice Franco both from the mainstream Bahaʼi community joined the Orthodox Bahaʼi Faith Both of them were declared as Covenant breakers and shunned Goldberg s wife was told to divorce her husband 26 The present descendants of expelled members of Bahaʼu llah s family have not specifically been declared Covenant breakers though they mostly do not associate themselves with the Bahaʼi religion A small group of Bahaʼis in Northern New Mexico believe that these descendants are eligible for appointment to the Guardianship and are waiting for such a direct descendant of Bahaʼu llah to arise as the rightful Guardian Enayatullah Zabih Yazdani was designated a Covenant breaker in June 2005 after many years of insisting on his views that Mason Remey was the legitimate successor to Shoghi Effendi and of accepting Donald Harvey as the third guardian He is now the fifth guardian of a small group of Bahaʼis and resides in Australia 27 There is also a small group in Montana originally inspired by Leland Jensen who claimed a status higher than that of the Guardian His failed apocalyptic predictions and unsuccessful efforts to reestablish the Guardianship and the administration were apparent by his death in 1996 A dispute among Jensen s followers over the identity of the Guardian resulted in another division in 2001 American opposition Edit Juan Cole an American professor of Middle Eastern history who had been a Bahaʼi for 25 years left the religion in 1996 after being approached by a Continental Counselor about his involvement in a secret email list that was organizing opposition to certain Bahaʼi institutions and policies 4 Cole was never labeled a Covenant breaker because he claimed to be a Unitarian Universalist upon leaving He went on to publish three papers in journals in 1998 28 2000 29 and 2002 30 These heavily criticized the Bahaʼi administration in the United States and suggested cult like tendencies particularly regarding the requirement of pre publication review and the practice of shunning Covenant breakers 4 For example Cole wrote in 1998 Baha is like members of the Watchtower and other cults shun those who are excommunicated 28 In 2000 he wrote Baha i authorities keep believers in line by appealing to the welfare and unity of the community and if these appeals fail then implicit or explicit threats of disfellowshipping and even shunning are invoked Shunning is the central control mechanism in the Baha i system 29 In 2002 he wrote Opportunistic sectarian minded officials may have seen this as a time when they could act arbitrarily and harshly against intellectuals and liberals using summary expulsion and threats of shunning 30 Moojan Momen a Bahaʼi author reviewed 66 exit narratives of former Bahaʼis and identified 1996 Cole s departure to 2002 as a period of articulate and well educated apostates that used the newly available Internet to connect with each other and form a community with its own mythology creed and salvation stories becoming what could perhaps be called an anti religion 4 According to Momen the narrative among these apostates of a fiercely aggressive religion where petty dictators rule is the opposite experience of most members who see peace as a central teaching consultative decision making and mechanisms to guard against individuals attacking the central institutions of the Baha i Faith or creating schisms 4 On the practice of shunning Momen writes that it is rarely used and is only applied after prolonged negotiations fail to resolve the situation To the best knowledge of the present author it has been used against no more than a handful of individuals in over two decades and to only the first of the apostates described below Francesco Ficicchia more than twenty five years ago although it is regularly mentioned in the literature produced by the apostates as though it were a frequent occurrence 4 See also EditCovenant of Bahaʼu llah List of former BahaʼisNotes Edit Sergeev is a professor of religion and philosophy at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia and also Temple University He also co chairs and serves on the faculty of the Department of Religion Philosophy and Theology at a Baha i Institute 9 Citations Edit Hartz 2009 p 138 a b c d Smith 2000 Winters 2010 a b c d e f Momen 2007 a b c Sergeev 2015 pp 94 95 McMullen 2015 p 21 Hejazi Martinez Hutan 2010 Baha ism History transfiguration doxa Thesis thesis Johnson 2020 p xxxi xxxv Mikhail Yu Sergeev PhD Wilmetteinstitute org Retrieved 25 December 2020 a b Momen 1995 Adamson 2009 Johnson 2020 p 35 a b c Moojan Momen The Covenant and Covenant breaker Baha i Library Online 1995 National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha is of the United States 2000 Guidance for Baha i Groups Evanston IL a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help The Will And Testament of ʻAbdu l Baha p 20 Shoghi Effendi Messages to Canada p 64 Shoghi Effendi From letter dated 9 December 1948 to an individual believer Taherzadeh 2000 p 145 Taherzadeh 1972 Effendi Shoghi December 1981 The unfolding destiny of the British Baha i community Messages from the Guardian of the Baha i Faith to the Baha is of the British Isles UK Bahaʼi Publishing Trust p 149 ISBN 978 0900125430 Messages from the Guardian Bahaʼi News No 172 December 1944 Retrieved 8 May 2016 Messages from the Guardian Bahaʼi News No 174 April 1945 Retrieved 8 May 2016 Effendi Shoghi 22 February 2015 Citadel of Faith CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform p 87 ISBN 978 1508530596 Effendi Shoghi 1999 Messages to the Bahaʼi World 1950 1957 Baha i Publishing Trust p 16 ISBN 978 0877432500 Messages to the Bahaʼi World 1950 1957 p 48 Baha i court case Robert Stockman Janice Franco Jeffrey Goldberg The Honolulu Advertiser 30 May 2009 p 9 Retrieved 27 November 2020 Naghdy Fazel 2012 A tutorial on the Dispensation of Baha u llah exploring the fundamental verities of the Baha i faith San Bernardino CA F Naghdy ISBN 978 1 4681 4531 1 OCLC 898418021 a b Cole 1998 a b Cole 2000 a b Cole 2002 References EditʻAbdu l Baha 1992 1901 08 The Will And Testament of ʻAbdu l Baha Mona Vale N S W Australia Bahaʼi Publications Australia ISBN 0 909991 47 2 Adamson Hugh C 2009 Covenant Breaker The A to Z of the Bahaʼi Faith The A to Z Guide Series No 70 Plymouth UK Scarecrow Press pp 117 26 ISBN 978 0 8108 6853 3 Bahaʼu llah 1992 1873 The Kitab i Aqdas The Most Holy Book Wilmette Illinois USA Bahaʼi Publishing Trust ISBN 0 85398 999 0 Cole Juan June 1998 The Bahaʼi Faith in America as Panopticon 1963 1997 The Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion 37 2 Retrieved 18 December 2020 Cole Juan May 2000 Race Immorality and Money in the American Baha i Community Religion 30 2 109 125 Retrieved 27 January 2021 Cole Juan March 2002 Fundamentalism in the Contemporary U S Baha i Community PDF Review of Religious Research 43 3 195 217 Archived PDF from the original on 30 June 2003 Retrieved 27 January 2021 Hartz Paula 2009 World Religions Baha i Faith 3rd ed New York NY Chelsea House Publishers ISBN 978 1 60413 104 8 Balyuzi Hasan 2000 Bahaʼu llah King of Glory Paperback ed Oxford UK George Ronald ISBN 0 85398 328 3 Johnson Vernon 2020 Baha is in Exile An Account of followers of Baha u llah outside the mainstream Baha i religion Pittsburgh PA RoseDog Books ISBN 978 1 6453 0574 3 McMullen Michael 2015 The Baha is of America The Growth of a Religious Movement New York New York University Press ISBN 978 1 4798 5152 2 Momen Moojan 1995 The Covenant and Covenant breaker bahai library com Retrieved 6 January 2020 Momen Moojan 8 June 2007 Marginality and Apostasy in the Baha i Community Religion Elsevier 37 3 187 209 doi 10 1016 j religion 2007 06 008 ISSN 0048 721X Archived from the original on 6 October 2010 Retrieved 3 November 2010 Effendi Shoghi 1974 Bahaʼi Administration Wilmette Illinois USA Bahaʼi Publishing Trust ISBN 0 87743 166 3 Effendi Shoghi 1944 God Passes By Wilmette Illinois USA Bahaʼi Publishing Trust ISBN 0 87743 020 9 Effendi Shoghi 1976 Principles of Bahaʼi Administration 4th ed London UK Bahaʼi Publishing Trust ISBN 0 900125 13 6 Rabbani Ruhiyyih ed 1992 The Ministry of the Custodians 1957 1963 Bahaʼi World Centre ISBN 0 85398 350 X Rabbani Ruhiyyih 1969 The Priceless Pearl Hardcover ed London UK Bahaʼi Publishing Trust 2000 ISBN 1 870989 91 0 Sergeev Mikhail 17 September 2015 Theory of Religious Cycles Tradition Modernity and the Baha i Faith Brill Rodopi doi 10 1163 9789004301078 ISBN 978 90 04 30107 8 Smith Peter 2000 Covenant breakers A Concise Encyclopedia of the Bahaʼi Faith Oxford UK Oneworld Publications pp 115 16 ISBN 1 85168 184 1 Taherzadeh Adib 1972 The Covenant of Bahaʼu llah Oxford UK George Ronald ISBN 0 85398 344 5 Taherzadeh Adib 2000 The Child of the Covenant Oxford UK George Ronald ISBN 0 85398 439 5 Winters Jonah 2010 Glossary of Baha i terms Baha i Library Online External links EditA Compilation Non Association with Covenant breakers From the Continental Board of Counselors to the NSAs of Alaska Canada and the US 7 December 1999 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Covenant breaker amp oldid 1156667001, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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