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opinions on Baha'i

 
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Tiger Beer



Joined: 07 Feb 2003

PostPosted: Sat Nov 01, 2008 6:08 pm    Post subject: opinions on Baha'i Reply with quote

Anyone know someone who is Baha'i?

I'm not, but curious about people's opinions on Baha'i.
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itaewonguy



Joined: 25 Mar 2003

PostPosted: Sat Nov 01, 2008 6:22 pm    Post subject: Re: opinions on Baha'i Reply with quote

Tiger Beer wrote:
Anyone know someone who is Baha'i?

I'm not, but curious about people's opinions on Baha'i.


as a child I remember going to Baha'i meetings,
my mum spent 4 years in India growing up and got right into Yoga, meditation, and also felt a connection with that sort of things etc.. so for 1 or 2 she got into Baha'i,
the only thing I remember about it, was I use to make out with a girl there at the bbq's after the prayer meetings,
for a 10 year boy I thought this is cool hahahhaha so i always looked forward to going up there to see if that girl was there hahahaha and she was always there.. LOL
from what my mum said , when I asked her a couple years ago what was that 2 years about when you dragged us up to those bahai meetings,
she said well, hahaahaha
its to do with moral values more than anything else..

my personal thought on it, which frankly I was to young to even remember a word they said, but I do remember it had a hippy vibe to it
spiritual, positive look on life etc..
cant be bad right?
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Bibbitybop



Joined: 22 Feb 2006
Location: Seoul

PostPosted: Sat Nov 01, 2008 7:11 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I read some Bahai texts and it sounded like a good, peaceful religion. In Denver is stumbled across a Bahai temple and went on Sunday. I didn't find anything special about the service, maybe I was expecting something more mystical. I'd recommend it to people soul searching and looking for something new.
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twoofus



Joined: 19 Nov 2005

PostPosted: Sat Nov 01, 2008 8:21 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

My bestie grew up being Bahai. I think her parents met in the NWT and found each other through the Bahai faith - they were both a bit on the alcoholic side until they converted (I think Bahai's believe something to the effect of drugs and alcohol stealing a bit of your soul?).

She was Baha'i until she left the house and started exploring other options. Her parents divorced in part because of the religion when her dad got a bit fundamental with it and her mom opted for other pastures...

They were a bit hippie too, but it always seemed like a relatively decent religion to me - I remember that backbiting or gossiping was considered a 'sin,' which I always thought was a pretty cool belief. And at least one reason why I wouldn't be Bahai. Very Happy Yay, gossip!
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cobright



Joined: 10 Oct 2008
Location: Rochester Hills, MI

PostPosted: Sat Nov 01, 2008 8:42 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Bahai is a universalist religion. Most religions are just Gods way of reaching out to/sending messengers to different groups of people.

If I remember right they are conscientious objectors to war (could be mistaken). And they believe in a voluntary income cap and hope to redistribute wealth.

If you have a friend or family member that has suddenly started going look into it (if you care) to see if the particular church is on a cult list. If not it's a fairly safe religion as a whole. I say look into the cult list thing only because, Like the Mormons, there are many spin-offs with very different beliefs.
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NoExplode



Joined: 15 Oct 2008

PostPosted: Sat Nov 01, 2008 11:48 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I love Bahai, especially the way they do their burritos.
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tomato



Joined: 31 Jan 2003
Location: I get so little foreign language experience, I must be in Koreatown, Los Angeles.

PostPosted: Sun Nov 02, 2008 7:21 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

For a long-time, I attended informal Baha'i meetings (called "firesides," even if there wasn't a fireside.)
I thought that the Baha'i Faith might be true.

However, one of their prophesies was that by the year 2000, there would be a worldwide cataclysm "the like of which the world has never known." One-third of the world's population would be killed, including almost all of the White race.

When January 1, 2000 rolled around, I looked out the front door and didn't see anything different. That was when I decided that the Baha'i Faith was a false religion.

The Baha'i Faith claims to have safeguards against schisms. There have been splinter groups, but none of them ever attracted many members. When Shoghi Effendi, the latest individual leader, died, Mason Reemy, a guy from Quincy, Illinois, claimed to be appointed by Shoghi Effendi. When he died, his followers split in half because there were two people claiming his successor. Then when one of those contenders died, HIS followers split in half because there were two people claiming to be HIS successor. There is also a group called the Free Bahai's, which claim that the founder did not have in mind a formal organization, but rather an loosely knit circle of co-believers.

The vast majority of Baha'is follow a nine-member group called the Unversal House of Justice, which meets in Haifa, Israel.
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Adventurer



Joined: 28 Jan 2006

PostPosted: Sun Nov 02, 2008 9:43 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I am not all for the idea that Bahai is basically supposed to be the last prophet after Mohammed the prophet of Islam. It is more liberal than contemporary Islam. It does have some good ideas, but a friend of mine left the faith after he became disenchanted with it for some reason. I can't remember why.
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Tiger Beer



Joined: 07 Feb 2003

PostPosted: Mon Nov 03, 2008 5:56 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

tomato wrote:
However, one of their prophesies was that by the year 2000, there would be a worldwide cataclysm "the like of which the world has never known." One-third of the world's population would be killed, including almost all of the White race.

Wonder why so many religions do that. The world calimity thing and all.
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uberscheisse



Joined: 02 Dec 2003
Location: japan is better than korea.

PostPosted: Mon Nov 03, 2008 4:12 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

a good friend of mine is a very observant bahai and one thing she explained to me is that bahai offers a very modernist interpretation of ancient texts - which allows for all sorts of things that archaic religions such as christianity don't, i.e. homosexuality. sounds good to me.
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onepence



Joined: 04 Nov 2008

PostPosted: Wed Nov 05, 2008 9:40 pm    Post subject: Re: opinions on Baha'i Reply with quote

Tiger Beer wrote:
Anyone know someone who is Baha'i?

I'm not, but curious about people's opinions on Baha'i.


yes ... we know a few members of the Baha'i Faith ...

an interesting article ...

Who Is Writing the Future?

This statement of the Bah�'� International Community's Office of Public Information, released in February 1999, examines the events of the twentieth century in the light of Bah�'u'll�h's teachings and relates these developments to the challenges facing humanity at century's end.

http://info.bahai.org/article-1-7-3-1.html

...

Grains of sand--the most humble and ostensibly worthless of materials--metamorphosed into silicon wafers and optically pure glass, making possible the creation of worldwide communications networks. This, together with the deployment of ever more sophisticated satellite systems, has begun providing access to the accumulated knowledge of the entire human race for people everywhere, without distinction. It is apparent that the decades immediately ahead will see the integration of telephone, television, and computer technologies into a single, unified system of communication and information, whose inexpensive appliances will be available on a mass scale. It would be difficult to exaggerate the psychological and social impact of the anticipated replacement of the jumble of existing monetary systems--for many, the ultimate fortress of nationalist pride--by a single world currency operating largely through electronic impulses.

...

The conception of civilization's future course laid out in Bah�'u'll�h's writings challenges much that today imposes itself on our world as normative and unchangeable. The breakthroughs made during the century of light have opened the door to a new kind of world. If social and intellectual evolution is in fact responding to a moral intelligence inherent in existence, a great deal of the theory determining contemporary approaches to decision-making is fatally flawed. If human consciousness is essentially spiritual in nature--as the vast majority of ordinary people have always been intuitively aware--, its development needs cannot be understood or served through an interpretation of reality that dogmatically insists otherwise.

...
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tomato



Joined: 31 Jan 2003
Location: I get so little foreign language experience, I must be in Koreatown, Los Angeles.

PostPosted: Thu Nov 06, 2008 3:32 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Adventurer wrote:
I am not all for the idea that Bahai is basically supposed to be the last prophet after Mohammed the prophet of Islam.


Are you sure you understand that correctly, though?
He is the "last" prophet meaning the most recent, but not the last prophet ever.
According to the Bahai's, there will be prophets for the rest of eternity.
In other words, 지난, not 마지막.
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