All of my adult life I’ve been consistently physically, emotionally and spiritually sick. I’ve known it in every fiber of my being, but doctors (and busybodies) tell me that nothing’s wrong. It’s all in my head, or it’s “just” stress. Sometimes I wonder if it’s a gift from God, for the perfecting of my soul:
Suffering, of one kind or another, seems to be the portion of man in this world . . . poverty, disease, bereavement – they seem to be part of the polish God employs to make us finer, and enable us to reflect more of His attributes! (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 603)
We’re told in the Bahá’í Writings to consult doctors when we are sick. But if I truly believe that it’s a gift from God, why would I go to a doctor to rid myself of something God’s given me?
We have a set of doctors who look after our body’s physical health; and a different set of doctors who look after our mental health; but where are the doctors who look after our soul’s health?
Surely if we can’t take care of our own physical and mental health without the need for specialists, we also need specialists who help us look after our spiritual health. Perhaps it’s the Local Spiritual Assemblies in their role as loving parents, but in their embryonic state, most of them aren’t able to perform this function yet.
Of course, we have the Divine Physician, who we often forget to consult, especially when our pain is acute:
. . . the true Physician is debarred from administering the remedy, whilst unskilled practitioners are regarded with favour, and are accorded full freedom to act. (Bahá’u'lláh, Gleanings from the Writings of Bahá’u'lláh, pp. 39-40).
We’re told in the Bahá’í Writings to look for “competent physicians” when we’re sick. Two of the elements mentioned are that doctors should look to the spiritual causes of disease and take time to know their patients:
Say to [Dr.] . . . . that “he studied physical medicine and he cured physical diseases. I beg of God that he may become a spiritual physician and heal the sickness of the ignorant ones.” (Abdu’l-Baha, Tablets of Abdu’l-Baha v3, p. 507)
Consequently, the doctor must be aware of, and know, all the members and parts, as well as the constitution and state of the patient, so that he can prescribe a medicine which will be beneficial against the violent poison of the disease. In reality the doctor deduces from the disease itself the treatment which is suited to the patient, for he diagnoses the malady, and afterward prescribes the remedy for the illness. Until the malady be discovered, how can the remedy and treatment be prescribed? The doctor then must have a thorough knowledge of the constitution, members, organs and state of the patient, and be acquainted with all diseases and all remedies, in order to prescribe a fitting medicine. (Abdu’l-Baha, Some Answered Questions, p. 158)
With a health care system disintegrating, doctors are ignorant of the spiritual roots of disease and don’t have time to get to know their patients, so it’s hard to find one that’s truly “competent”.
This has led me to research alternative methods of healing, including following up on suggestions found in the Bahá’í Teachings, but like everyone else, I’ve missed the spiritual roots of my disease – sin (falling short in my obedience to God) and fear.
God wants me to be healed. It’s in His nature as the “Healer”, “the Helper”. But healing is not an “on” switch. Although God says he can make anything happen in a “twinkling of an eye”, He often doesn’t. There’s frequently a change that needs to happen in our thinking, our actions and our being before healing can take place. So we can’t be in a hurry to be healed – we need to be patient.
It was a journey becoming dis-eased and it will be a journey getting whole again. Think of a baby learning to walk. He takes tiny, tentative, hesitant steps at first, and then falls on his butt, often crying in frustration and pain in the process. But we always encourage him so that he gets up and tries once more, over and over again. I think I would rather fall down 4 times in the process of healing (relapse), and get up again 4 times, than stay down, hopeless that recovery will ever happen.
I’m impatient, though. I’ve lived without hope for so long. The only hope of a better life seems to be found in the Bahá’í teachings about the afterlife, so I want to die, so I can get there, and begin my “true life”, free from relentless emotional distress and pain. But wouldn’t it be better if I could have a perfect healing in this world, so I didn’t have to wait for the next? Is it possible? And if it is, wouldn’t that be a wonderful thing?
If I could truly be healed of my post traumatic stress symptoms; the anxiety, depression, low self esteem and low self worth which are remnants from childhood abuse, then I would be willing to live in this world, take full advantage of the opportunities it has for me, and would no longer long to die! O God, help me to have a perfect healing in this world. I know it’s possible because you tell me:
But for the unfailing grace of God — exalted be His glory — no antidote could ever cure these inveterate diseases. (Baha’u'llah, Tablets of Baha’u'llah, p. 252)
God will assist thee, through a spirit from His Presence, to heal sickness and disease. (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 112)
Turn thou toward God with thy heart beating with His love, devoted to His praise, gazing toward His Kingdom and seeking help from His Holy Spirit in a state of ecstasy, rapture, love, yearning, joy and fragrance. God will assist thee, through a Spirit from His Presence, to heal sickness and diseases. (Abdu’l-Baha, Tablets of Abdu’l-Baha v3, p. 628)
O God, guide my steps aright, through Thine inspiration!
How many of my beliefs are coming from God’s teachings and how many from my own pathways and traditions? I wanted know, so I’m taking the next three weeks to explore that question, through an online course, called “For my Life” – a biblical program based on the teachings of Henry Wright in a book called “A More Excellent Way”.
I haven’t done much sharing from the heart in this blog before – most of the postings have come from the head and not from the heart. I’ve lived my life that way for so long, that I’m only just becoming conscious of a desire to change that.
Six short years ago, I described my heart as a huge brick wall – impenetrable. Four years ago, I referred to it as a stone, and was thrilled at the progress I’d made. Now I want to clean out all the debris from my heart; remove the dust and dross; clear out the veils, so that there’s room for God to reside in the only place He wants to live, which is in my heart.
So, with a heart open to new ideas and new ways of looking at my life and the world, I had to come face to face with my relationship to God.
My purpose as a Bahá’í is to know God and to worship Him, something I say everyday in the Short Obligatory Prayer. It’s become routine, and I frequently say it by rote, so I sometimes need to stop and remind myself of what it means. I often need to ask myself how well I’m living up to my purpose.
Frequently I get caught up in the minutia of living my life, trying to control every aspect in order to feel safe, which is a remnant of years of violence and abuse in the home. I forget that God has chosen me. God is carrying the weight of the world. I don’t have to!
I am reminded that God created me because he loves me. He made me in His image. He created me noble. He created me as a “mine rich in gems of inestimable value”. This is the truth. Everything else I believe about myself is a lie.
I’m feeling sad as I write this. My heart is breaking for the me that God created, who has been lost for such a long time. O God, help me to get her back. Take my grief and transmute it into certainty and a steadfastness so strong that nothing will ever break it again.
As I Bahá’í, I know I have to love God and love my neighbor, but the abuse I experienced as a child robbed me of my ability to love myself and distanced me from God, because I truly believed I was unlovable. If I truly loved God and my neighbors the way I “love” myself (with hatred, judgment, condemnation), none of us would benefit and it would pull us all down.
I thought it was my right to hate myself. When I started this journey of self-discovery, looking at what happened in my childhood, I truly believed it was my right to hate myself because I was a “worthless piece of s***”. Fortunately God sent me an angel in the form of David Sowerby, who asked me ever so gently: “Susan, are you arguing with God?” This helped turn me around. I’ve come a long way since then, and I have a long way still to go.
God wants me to know the truth so that it can set me free and transform the world. I always thought I was unloveable. I believed it to the core of my being. The abuse taught me that. The actions of my parents and friends and a cruel world taught me that. And I believed it. And it’s a lie. I don’t want to believe a lie any longer! I need to change my beliefs to match what the Bahá’í Writings say, not the other way round.
My God is the “All-Loving”; the “Ever-Forgiving”; the “All-Compassionate”, and not the fearful, wrathful, judgmental god of my parent’s teaching.
For most of my life, I’ve lived as though I truly believed I was unloveable, despite uncontroversial evidence to the contrary. I have lots of well-wishers; lots of people who want to be my friend, and yet, something’s always stopped me from being able to feel or receive their love. That has to change, as I recognize I’m defending a position that’s indefensible. The only truth that any of us can believe is what we’re told in the Bahá’í Writings. Just because I believe something, doesn’t make it true – it just makes me sick.
God wants me to accept myself:
Regard man as a mine rich in gems of inestimable value. Education can, alone, cause it to reveal its treasures, and enable mankind to benefit therefrom. (Bahá’u'lláh, Gleanings from the Writings of Bahá’u'lláh, p. 260).
If I substitute my name, I read this quote in a way that’s more personal: Susan, regard yourself as a mine rich in gems of inestimable value. Education can, alone, cause you to reveal your treasures, and enable mankind to benefit therefrom.
Wow!
And He wants me to recognize that there is something valuable and valued in me. God created me because He loved me:
I knew My love for thee; therefore I created thee, have engraved on thee Mine image and revealed to thee My beauty. (Bahá’u'lláh, Hidden Words, Arabic 3).
Susan, I knew My love for you; therefore I created you, have engraved on you Mine image and revealed to you My beauty.
And God wants me to see myself as a noble being:
Noble have I created thee, yet thou hast abased thyself. Rise then unto that for which thou wast created. (Bahá’u'lláh, Hidden Words Arabic 22).
Noble have I created thee, Susan, yet you have abased yourself. Rise then unto that for which you were created.
Wow again! He’s telling me what He wants me to do. Anything less will not benefit mankind! Please God, let that change our interactions! Please God, let me truly believe, in the “twinkling of an eye”, with ever fiber of my being, that I am loveable.
We could all try this for ourselves. We all need to read the Bahá’í Writings to find out what God has to say about us and agree with everything He tells us, even though it might go against everything we believe to be true about ourselves. Anything less is disagreeing with the Almighty; we become dis-eased and vulnerable to disease.
So it’s time for me pay attention to the idle fancies and vain imaginings arising from my lower nature and listen to God. It’s time to open my inner ears so I can examine my thoughts and beliefs, keep the ones that are in line with the Teachings and discard all the others that are veils between me and God. I’m up for the challenge. I’m looking for a new way of being. Are you? Post your comments here:
Sometimes it’s hard for us to know what God’s will for us is. Sometimes we try to take on things before it’s time. Here are some of my favorite stories on waiting, being patient, and staying close to God, so we can know what He wants for us.
The following came to me in one of those emails that have been forwarded so many times, that the originator is anonymous, but it spoke to me and I thought you might enjoy it too. It was titled “God’s Rosebud”.

A new minister was walking with an older, more seasoned minister
In the garden one day. Feeling a bit insecure about what God had for him to do, he was asking the older preacher for some advice.
The older preacher walked up to a rosebush and handed the young preacher rosebud and told him to open it without tearing off any petals.
The young preacher looked in disbelief at the older preacher, trying to figure out what a rosebud could possibly have to do with his wanting to know the will of God for his life and ministry.
But because of his great respect for the older preacher, he proceeded to try to unfold the rose, while keeping every petal intact. It wasn’t long before he realized how impossible this was to do.
Noticing the younger preacher’s inability to unfold the rosebud without tearing it, the older preacher began to recite the following poem…
“It is only a tiny rosebud,
A flower of God’s design;
But I cannot unfold the petals
With these clumsy hands of mine.”
“The secret of unfolding flowers
Is not known to such as I.
God opens this flower so easily,
But in my hands they die.”
“If I cannot unfold a rosebud,
This flower of God’s design,
Then how can I have the wisdom
To unfold this life of mine?”
“So I’ll trust in God for leading
Each moment of my day.
I will look to God for guidance
In each step of the way.”
“The path that lies before me,
Only my Lord knows.
I’ll trust God to unfold the moments,
Just as He unfolds the rose.”
Let go, and let God unfold your life.
To add a Bahá’í perspective: Sometimes we want something before it’s the right time, and it’s best to remember:
There is one season to harrow the ground, another season to scatter the seeds, still another season to irrigate the fields and still another to harvest the crop. We must attend to these various kinds of activities in their proper seasons in order to become successful. (‘Abdu’l-Bahá, Consultation, p. 7).
Which reminds me of another of my favorite stories:

One day a man found a cocoon, and brought it home to watch it turn into a butterfly. As the butterfly inside matured, it struggled to get out of its cocoon, but couldn’t quite get free of it. One day, the man became tired of waiting and decided to help the butterfly. He removed the remaining bit of the cocoon. The butterfly was pleased, but it had a swollen body and small, wrinkled wings. As a result, the butterfly never succeeded in flying and spent its entire life crawling around.
What the man didn’t understand was that the struggle required for the butterfly to break out of its cocoon actually forced fluid from the body of the butterfly into its wings so that it would be ready for flight once it achieved its freedom. It is the struggle that causes the butterfly to develop its ability to fly.
And this one:

There was a man who was asleep one night in his cabin when suddenly his room filled with light and God appeared. God told the man He had a job for him to do, and showed him a large rock in front of his cabin. He explained that the man was to push against the rock with all his might.
This the man did, day after day. For many years he toiled from sun up to sun down, his shoulders set squarely against the cold, massive surface of the unmoving rock pushing with all his might. Each night the man returned to his cabin sore and worn out, feeling that his whole day had been spent in vain.
He started to have thoughts such as; “You have been pushing against that rock for a long time and it hasn’t budged. Why kill yourself over this? You are never going to move it?”, thus, giving the man the impression that the task was impossible and that he was a failure.
These thoughts discouraged and disheartened the man even more. “Why kill myself over this?” he thought. “I’ll just put in my time, giving just the minimum of effort and that will be good enough.” And that he planned to do until one day he decided to make it a matter of prayer and take his troubled thoughts to God.
“God” he said, “I have labored long and hard in your service, putting all my strength to do that which you have asked. Yet, after all this time, I have not even budged that rock a half a millimeter. What is wrong? Why am I failing?”
To this God responded compassionately, “My friend, when long ago I asked you to serve me and you accepted, I told you that your task was to push against the rock with all your strength, which you have done. Never once did I mention to you that I expected you to move it. Your task was to push. And now you come to me, your strength spent, thinking that you have failed. But, is that really so? Look at yourself. Your arms are strong and muscled, your back brown, your hands are callused from constant pressure, and your legs have become massive and hard. Through opposition you have grown much and your abilities now surpass that which you used to have. Yet you haven’t moved the rock.
But your calling was to be obedient, to push and to exercise your faith and trust in my wisdom. This you have done.
I, my friend, I will now move the rock.”
This is part eleven of an eleven part series on the Baha’i Perspective on Disease. In Part 1, we looked at how I got interested in this topic and looked at some quotes on prevention of disease. In Part 2, we looked at the reasons for disease. In Part 3, we looked at the physical cause of disease, in Part 4 we looked at the spiritual causes, in Part 5 we looked at the effects of disease, in Part 6 we looked at the attitudes we want to strive for, when we are diseased, in Part 7 we looked at the spiritual treatments for disease, in Part 8 we looked at the physical treatments for disease, in Part 9 we looked at why people aren’t getting better, in Part 10 we looked at Bahá’í advice for doctors and in this part we read prayers for healing.
- Thy name is my healing, O my God, and remembrance of Thee is my remedy. Nearness to Thee is my hope, and love for Thee is my companion. Thy mercy to me is my healing and my succor in both this world and the world to come. Thou, verily, art the All-Bountiful, the All-Knowing, the All-Wise. (Bahá’u'lláh, Baha’i Prayers, p. 85)
- O Thou Benevolent God, forgive my sins, grant Thy Bestowals, overlook my faults, provide for me a shelter, immerse me in the Fountain of Thy Patience and heal me of all sickness and disease. Purify and sanctify me. Give me a portion from the outpouring of holiness, so that sorrow and sadness may vanish, joy and happiness descend, despondency and hopelessness be changed into cheerfulness and trustfulness, and courage take the place of fear. Verily Thou art the Forgiver, the Compassionate, and Thou art the Generous, the Beloved! (‘Abdul-Bahá, in Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 99)
- I ask Thee by Thine Ancient Beauty, and I supplicate Thee by the manifestation of Thy Greatest Majesty, and Thy Name, around which the heavens of the Manifestations revolve; by which the waters of the oceans overflow, the full moons appear, the lights diffuse, and verily, the visible and the invisible, the mysterious and the celebrated; by which all sorrow will be turned into joy and all disease will be turned into health, and by which every sick, afflicted, unfortunate and constrained one may be healed, to suffice to heal this weary, sick-worn one of the seen and the unseen disease. Verily, Thou art the Powerful, the Conqueror, the Mighty, the Living, the Forgiver! (Compilations, Baha’i Scriptures, p. 186)
- I ask God to strengthen thee in comprehending the mysteries deposited in the reality of existence, to lift up the veil from before thee . . . so that the concealed mystery and the hidden reality become manifest as the sun at noon, and to confirm [thee] in entering the Kingdom of God, and heal thee from all physical and spiritual disease in the world of creation. (Abdu’l-Baha, Tablets of Abdu’l-Baha v1, p. 56)
- Glory be to Thee, O Lord my God! I beg of Thee by Thy Name through which He Who is Thy Beauty hath been stablished upon the throne of Thy Cause, and by Thy Name through which Thou changest all things, and gatherest together all things, and callest to account all things, and rewardest all things, and preservest all things, and sustainest all things — I beg of Thee to guard this handmaiden who hath fled for refuge to Thee, and hath sought the shelter of Him in Whom Thou Thyself art manifest, and hath put her whole trust and confidence in Thee.
She is sick, O my God, and hath entered beneath the shadow of the Tree of Thy healing; afflicted, and hath fled to the City of Thy protection; diseased, and hath sought the Fountain-Head of Thy favors; sorely vexed, and hath hasted to attain the Well-Spring of Thy tranquillity; burdened with sin, and hath set her face toward the court of Thy forgiveness.
Attire her, by Thy sovereignty and Thy loving-kindness, O my God and my Beloved, with the raiment of Thy balm and Thy healing, and make her quaff of the cup of Thy mercy and Thy favors. Protect her, moreover, from every affliction and ailment, from all pain and sickness, and from whatsoever may be abhorrent unto Thee.
Thou, in truth, art immensely exalted above all else except Thyself. Thou art, verily, the Healer, the All-Sufficing, the Preserver, the Ever-Forgiving, the Most Merciful. (Baha’u'llah, Prayers and Meditations by Baha’u'llah, p. 235)
Long Healing Prayer
He is the Healer, the Sufficer, the Helper, the All-Forgiving, the All-Merciful.
I call on Thee O Exalted One, O Faithful One, O Glorious One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Sovereign, O Upraiser, O Judge! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Peerless One, O Eternal One, O Single One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Most Praised One, O Holy One, O Helping One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One! 91
I call on Thee O Omniscient, O Most Wise, O Most Great One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Clement One, O Majestic One, O Ordaining One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Beloved One, O Cherished One, O Enraptured One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Mightiest One, O Sustaining One, O Potent One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Ruling One, O Self-Subsisting, O All-Knowing One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Spirit, O Light, O Most Manifest One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Thou Frequented by all, O Thou Known to all, O Thou Hidden from all! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Concealed One, O Triumphant One, O Bestowing One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Almighty, O Succoring One, O Concealing One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Fashioner, O Satisfier, O Uprooter! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Rising One, O Gathering One, O Exalting One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Perfecting One, O Unfettered One, O Bountiful One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Beneficent One, O Withholding One, O Creating One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Most Sublime One, O Beauteous One, O Bounteous One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Just One, O Gracious One, O Generous One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O All-Compelling, O Ever-Abiding, O Most Knowing One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Magnificent One, O Ancient of Days, O Magnanimous One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Well-guarded One, O Lord of Joy, O Desired One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Thou Kind to all, O Thou Compassionate with all, O Most Benevolent One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Haven for all, O Shelter to all, O All-Preserving One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Thou Succorer of all, O Thou Invoked by all, O Quickening One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Unfolder, O Ravager, O Most Clement One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Thou my Soul, O Thou my Beloved, O Thou my Faith! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Quencher of thirsts, O Transcendent Lord, O Most Precious One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Greatest Remembrance, O Noblest Name, O Most Ancient Way! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Most Lauded, O Most Holy, O Sanctified One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Unfastener, O Counselor, O Deliverer! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Friend, O Physician, O Captivating One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Glory, O Beauty, O Bountiful One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O the Most Trusted, O the Best Lover, O Lord of the Dawn! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Enkindler, O Brightener, O Bringer of Delight! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Lord of Bounty, O Most Compassionate, O Most Merciful One! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Constant One, O Life-giving One, O Source of all Being! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Thou Who penetratest all things, O All-Seeing God, O Lord of Utterance! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Manifest yet Hidden, O Unseen yet Renowned, O Onlooker sought by all! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
I call on Thee O Thou Who slayest the Lovers, O God of Grace to the wicked! Thou the Sufficing, Thou the Healing, Thou the Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
O Sufficer, I call on Thee, O Sufficer!
O Healer, I call on Thee, O Healer!
O Abider, I call on Thee, O Abider!
Thou the Ever-Abiding, O Thou Abiding One!
Sanctified art Thou, O my God! I beseech Thee by Thy generosity, whereby the portals of Thy bounty and grace were opened wide, whereby the Temple of Thy Holiness was established upon the throne of eternity; and by Thy mercy whereby Thou didst invite all created things unto the table of Thy bounties and bestowals; and by Thy grace whereby Thou didst respond, in thine own Self with Thy word “Yea!” on behalf of all in heaven and earth, at the hour when Thy sovereignty and Thy grandeur stood revealed, at the dawn-time when the might of Thy dominion was made manifest. And again do I beseech Thee, by these most beauteous names, by these most noble and sublime attributes, and by Thy most Exalted Remembrance, and by Thy pure and spotless Beauty, and by Thy hidden Light in the most hidden pavilion, and by Thy Name, cloaked with the garment of affliction every morn and eve, to protect the bearer of this blessed Tablet, and whoso reciteth it, and whoso cometh upon it, and whoso passeth around the house wherein it is. Heal Thou, then, by it every sick, diseased and poor one, from every tribulation and distress, from every loathsome affliction and sorrow, and guide Thou by it whosoever desireth to enter upon the paths of Thy guidance, and the ways of Thy forgiveness and grace.
Thou art verily the Powerful, the All-Sufficing, the Healing, the Protector, the Giving, the Compassionate, the All-Generous, the All-Merciful. (Bahá’u'lláh, Baha’i Prayers, p. 97)
For more in this series:
Part 1: Intro to Disease
Part 2: Reasons for Disease
Part 3: Physical Causes of Disease
Part 4: Spiritual Causes of Disease
Part 5: Effects of Disease
Part 6: Attitudes towards Disease
Part 7: Spiritual Treatment for Disease
Part 8: Physical Treatment for Disease
Part 9: Why People Aren’t Getting Better
Part 10: Advice to Doctors
This is part ten of an eleven part series on the Baha’i Perspective on Disease. In Part 1, we looked at how I got interested in this topic and looked at some quotes on prevention of disease. In Part 2, we looked at the reasons for disease. In Part 3, we looked at the physical cause of disease, in Part 4 we looked at the spiritual causes, in Part 5 we looked at the effects of disease, in Part 6 we looked at the attitudes we want to strive for, when we are diseased, in Part 7 we looked at the spiritual treatments for disease, in Part 8 we looked at the physical treatments for disease, in Part 9 we looked at why people aren’t getting better, and in this part we look at advice given to doctors.
Study medicine:
Thou shouldst endeavour to study the science of medicine. It is extremely useful and serveth as the greatest instrument for the dissemination of the Cause. It is absolutely imperative that thou acquire this bounty. Strive day and night that thou mayest become highly qualified in this science.
And research:
These investigations you have so painstakingly pursued in the field of medical science, and on a subject which is still puzzling the minds of all the leading scientists in the world, cannot but be of a captivating interest and of a great value to all medical research workers. It is significant that you as a believer should have undertaken a work of this nature, as we all know that the powers released by the Manifestation of Bahá’u'lláh in this day are destined, in the course of time, to reveal themselves through the instrumentality of His followers, and in every conceivable field of human endeavour. That you should increasingly prove, through your confirmed researches in the domain of medicine, to be one of those instruments, is the fervent hope of our beloved Guardian. (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 287)
Turn to God and ask for Help:
And when thou wishest to dispense treatment set thy heart toward the Abha Kingdom, entreating Divine confirmations. (‘Abdul-Bahá, Lights of Guidance, p. 285)
When giving medical treatment turn to the Blessed Beauty then follow the dictates of thy heart . . . Indeed, such a heavenly breath quickeneth every mouldering bone and reviveth the spirit of every sick and ailing one. (‘Abdul-Bahá, Lights of Guidance, p. 285)
Give God the credit:
Well is it with the physician who cureth ailments in My hallowed and dearly cherished Name. (Bahá’u'lláh, Lights of Guidance, p. 284)
Diagnose then prescribe:
First diagnose the disease and identify the malady, then prescribe the remedy, for such is the perfect method of the skilful physician. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 269)
Know the spiritual causes as well as the physical:
Say to [Dr.] . . . . that “he studied physical medicine and he cured physical diseases. I beg of God that he may become a spiritual physician and heal the sickness of the ignorant ones.” (Abdu’l-Baha, Tablets of Abdu’l-Baha v3, p. 507)
Know the patient as well as disease and remedies:
Consequently, the doctor must be aware of, and know, all the members and parts, as well as the constitution and state of the patient, so that he can prescribe a medicine which will be beneficial against the violent poison of the disease. In reality the doctor deduces from the disease itself the treatment which is suited to the patient, for he diagnoses the malady, and afterward prescribes the remedy for the illness. Until the malady be discovered, how can the remedy and treatment be prescribed? The doctor then must have a thorough knowledge of the constitution, members, organs and state of the patient, and be acquainted with all diseases and all remedies, in order to prescribe a fitting medicine. (Abdu’l-Baha, Some Answered Questions, p. 158)
Know the different remedies and medicines:
The skillful physician does not give the same medicine to cure each disease and each malady, but he changes remedies and medicines according to the different necessities of the diseases and constitutions. One person may have a severe illness caused by fever, and the skilled doctor will give him cooling remedies; and when at some other time the condition of this person has changed, and fever is replaced by chills, without doubt the skilled doctor will discard cooling medicine and permit the use of heating drugs. This change and alteration is required by the condition of the patient and is an evident proof of the skill of the physician. (Abdu’l-Baha, Some Answered Questions, p. 94)
Use spiritual and material forms of healing:
O thou distinguished physician!…Praise be to God that thou hast two powers: one to undertake physical healing and the other spiritual healing. Matters related to man’s spirit have a great effect on his bodily condition. For instance, thou shouldst impart gladness to thy patient, give him comfort and joy, and bring him to ecstasy and exultation. How often hath it occurred that this hath caused early recovery. Therefore, treat thou the sick with both powers. Spiritual feelings have a surprising effect on healing nervous ailments (‘Abdul-Bahá, Lights of Guidance, p. 285)
Remedy the sick by means of heavenly joy and spiritual exultation cure the sorely afflicted by imparting to them blissful glad tidings and heal the wounded through His resplendent bestowals. When at the bedside of a patient, cheer and gladden his heart and enrapture his spirit through celestial power. (‘Abdul-Bahá, Lights of Guidance, p. 285)
Circumcision:
The beloved Guardian says that the question of circumcision has nothing to do with the Bahá’í Teachings; and the believers are free to do as they please in the matter. (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 289)
Euthanasia, birth control and abortion:
We are impressed by the spirit of your letter of 15 Sultan seeking guidance concerning certain aspects of the medical profession. Your desire to avoid doing anything in your study of medicine which would be contrary to the Bahá’í Teachings is most commendable. As you have keenly observed, the Universal House of Justice may consider it untimely to make definitive rulings on certain matters to which no direct reference can be found in the Sacred Text. Among these are euthanasia and certain aspects of birth control and abortion, and until such time as rulings are made, these matters are left to the consciences of those concerned who must weigh the medical advice on the case in the light of general guidance given in the Teachings. Your National Spiritual Assembly has specific references regarding birth control and abortion which might be useful to you. (Universal House of Justice, Lights of Guidance, p. 289)
Organ Transplants:
We have not come across anything specific in the writings on transplants of hearts and other organs or regarding the time of death, and the Universal House of Justice does not wish to make any statements on these points at this time. (Universal House of Justice, Lights of Guidance, p. 289)
There is nothing in the teachings which would forbid a Bahá’í to bequeath his eyes to another person or for a hospital; on the contrary it seems a noble thing to do. (Universal House of Justice, Lights of Guidance, p. 290)
Dissection:
When dissecting a human body for the purposes of medical study, should keep in mind that since the body was once the temple of the spirit it must be treated with respect even though there is no further connection between the two. (Universal House of Justice, Lights of Guidance, p. 290)
Avoid commissions:
The Guardian feels that your attitude towards the corrupt practice of accepting commissions from fellow physicians and pharmacists is most admirable. The more upright and noble the Bahá’ís are in their conduct, the more they will impress the public with the spiritual vitality of the Faith they believe in. (Shoghi Effendi,, Lights of Guidance, p. 287)
Ethical Conduct:
Knowledge is praiseworthy when it is coupled with ethical conduct and virtuous character; otherwise it is a deadly poison, a frightful danger. A physician of evil character, and who betrayeth his trust, can bring on death, and become the source of numerous infirmities and diseases. (‘Abdul-Bahá, Scholarship, p. 21)
Bahá’í Holy Days:
He thinks it is better for Bahá’í doctors not to work on our 9 Holy Days — but, of course, that does not mean they should not attend to very sick people and emergencies on these days. (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 287)
For more in this series:
Part 1: Intro to Disease
Part 2: Reasons for Disease
Part 3: Physical Causes of Disease
Part 4: Spiritual Causes of Disease
Part 5: Effects of Disease
Part 6: Attitudes towards Disease
Part 7: Spiritual Treatment for Disease
Part 8: Physical Treatment for Disease
Part 9: Why People Aren’t Getting Better
Part 10: Advice to Doctors
Part 11: Prayers for Health
This is part nine of an eleven part series on the Baha’i Perspective on Disease. In Part 1, we looked at how I got interested in this topic and looked at some quotes on prevention of disease. In Part 2, we looked at the reasons for disease. In Part 3, we looked at the physical cause of disease, in Part 4 we looked at the spiritual causes, in Part 5 we looked at the effects of disease, in Part 6 we looked at the attitudes we want to strive for, when we are diseased, in Part 7 we looked at the spiritual treatments for disease, in Part 8 we looked at the physical treatments for disease, and in this part we look at why people aren’t getting better.
Need spiritual awakening:
‘Abdu’l-Bahá does often state that the medical science will much improve. With the appearance of every revelation a new insight is created in man and this is turn express itself in the growth of science. This has happened in past dispensations and we find its earliest fruits in our present day. What we see however is only the beginning. With the spiritual awakening of man this force will develop and marvelous results will become manifest. (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 287)
Unskilled physicians:
He hath fallen under the control of unskillful physicians who are hurried away by vain desires and are of those who stray madly. (Compilations, Baha’i Scriptures, p. 112)
And today we see him under the hands of those who are taken by the intoxification of the wine of deceits in such manner that they do not know what is best for themselves (Compilations, Baha’i Scriptures, p. 112)
Wrong motivations:
And if one of them endeavor to better his health, his intention will not be but to profit himself thereof whether by name or effect, therefore he will not be able to heal him save to a certain extent. (Compilations, Baha’i Scriptures, p. 112)
Ego:
They that are intoxicated by self-conceit have interposed themselves between it and the Divine and infallible Physician. Witness how they have entangled all men, themselves included, in the mesh of their devices. They can neither discover the cause of the disease, nor have they any knowledge of the remedy. (Commissioned by The Universal House of Justice, One Common Faith)
In one of His Tablets (Iqtiddarat, p. 85) Bahá’u'lláh mentions that a disease has afflicted many of those who, in their own estimation, have acquired a measure of knowledge and learning. The disease is that such people consider themselves to be the equal of the Manifestation of God and on the same level. He states that a great many people suffer from this disease and consequently they have deprived themselves of the bounties of God’s Revelation. (Adib Taherzadeh, The Child of the Covenant, p. 13)
For more in this series:
Part 1: Intro to Disease
Part 2: Reasons for Disease
Part 3: Physical Causes of Disease
Part 4: Spiritual Causes of Disease
Part 5: Effects of Disease
Part 6: Attitudes towards Disease
Part 7: Spiritual Treatment for Disease
Part 8: Physical Treatment for Disease
Part 9: Why People Aren’t Getting Better
Part 10: Advice to Doctors
Part 11: Prayers for Health
This is part eight of an eleven part series on the Baha’i Perspective on Disease. In Part 1, we looked at how I got interested in this topic and looked at some quotes on prevention of disease. In Part 2, we looked at the reasons for disease. In Part 3, we looked at the physical cause of disease, in Part 4 we looked at the spiritual causes, in Part 5 we looked at the effects of disease, in Part 6 we looked at the attitudes we want to strive for, when we are diseased, in Part 7 we looked at the spiritual treatments for disease, and in this part we look at physical treatments.
Use of Doctors:
In the Bahá’í Teachings it is made quite clear that when one is ill, one should seek the best available medical advice. This naturally leaves a person free to choose what they consider good in medical opinion. (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 284)
According to the explicit decree of Bahá’u'lláh one must not turn aside from the advice of a competent doctor. It is imperative to consult one even if the patient himself be a well-known and eminent physician. In short, the point is that you should maintain your health by consulting a highly-skilled physician. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 155)
It is incumbent upon everyone to seek medical treatment and to follow the doctor’s instructions, for this is in compliance with the divine ordinance, but, in reality, He Who giveth healing is God. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 155)
It is possible for a man to hold to a book of medicine and say, “I have no need of a doctor; I will act according to the book; in it every disease is named, all symptoms are explained, the diagnosis of each ailment is completely written out, and a prescription for each malady is furnished; therefore, why do I need a doctor?” This is sheer ignorance. A physician is needed to prescribe. Through his skill the principles of the book are correctly and effectively applied until the patient is restored to health. (Abdu’l-Baha, The Promulgation of Universal Peace, p. 248)
Do not neglect medical treatment when it is necessary, but leave it off when health has been restored. (Bahá’u'lláh: Bahá’u'lláh and the New Era, 1980 ed.,p. 106)
Even doctors need to consult doctors:
According to the explicit decree of Bahá’u'lláh one must not turn aside from the advice of a competent doctor. It is imperative to consult one even if the patient himself be a well-known and eminent physician. In short, the point is that you would maintain your health by consulting a highly-skilled physician. (‘Abdul-Bahá, Lights of Guidance, p. 285)
Seek the best doctors you can find:
…thou hast written about thy poor sight. According to the explicit divine text the sick must refer to the doctor. This decree is decisive and everyone bound to observe it. While thou art there thou shouldst consult the most skilled and the most famed eye specialist. (‘Abdul-Bahá, Lights of Guidance, p. 285)
Get a second opinion:
Before having any serious operation, you should consult more than one qualified physician. (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 291)
Use doctors and know that healing comes from God:
It is incumbent upon everyone to seek medical treatment and to follow the doctor’s instructions, for this is in compliance with the divine ordinance, but, in reality, He Who giveth healing is God. (‘Abdul-Bahá, Lights of Guidance, p. 284)
One must obey the command of God and submit to medical opinion. Thou hast undertaken this journey to comply with His command and not for the sake of healing, since healing is in the hand of God, not in the hand of doctors. (‘Abdul-Bahá, Lights of Guidance, p. 285)
Bahá’u'lláh tells us that in case of disease we should pray but at the same time refer to competent physicians, and abide by their considered decisions. Shoghi Effendi wishes you therefore to find whether your some has really become ill, and if he is, then follow the directions of the doctor. Being versed in the medical sciences they can treat better than even a loving mother can. You can render your assistance by praying for him and at the same time helping the physicians to treat him. (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 286)
Diet and Foods:
Treat disease through diet, by preference. (Bahá’u'lláh: Bahá’u'lláh and the New Era, 1980 ed.,p. 106)
The science of medicine is still in a condition of infancy; it has not reached maturity. But when it has reached this point, cures will be performed by things which are not repulsive to the smell and taste of man — that is to say, by aliments, fruits and vegetables which are agreeable to the taste and have an agreeable smell. (Abdu’l-Baha, Some Answered Questions, p. 256)
The Báb hath said that the people of Baha must develop the science of medicine to such a high degree that they will heal illnesses by means of foods. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 152)
It is the function of a skilled physician to determine which constituent of his patient’s body hath suffered diminution, which hath been augmented. Once he hath discovered this, he must prescribe a food containing the diminished element in considerable amounts, to re-establish the body’s essential equilibrium. The patient, once his constitution is again in balance, will be rid of his disease. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 152)
The proof of this is that while other animals have never studied medical science, nor carried on researches into diseases or medicines, treatments or cures — even so, when one of them falleth a prey to sickness, nature leadeth it, in fields or desert places, to the very plant which, once eaten, will rid the animal of its disease. The explanation is that if, as an example, the sugar component in the animal’s body hath decreased, according to a natural law the animal hankereth after a herb that is rich in sugar. Then, by a natural urge, which is the appetite, among a thousand different varieties of plants across the field, the animal will discover and consume that herb which containeth a sugar component in large amounts. Thus the essential balance of the substances composing its body is re-established, and the animal is rid of its disease. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 152)
It is, therefore, evident that it is possible to cure by foods, ailments and fruits; but as today the science of medicine is imperfect, this fact is not yet fully grasped. When the science of medicine reaches perfection, treatment will be given by foods, ailments, fragrant fruits and vegetables, and by various waters, hot and cold in temperature (Abdu’l-Bahá: Some Answered Questions, 1982 ed., 257-259)
Drugs:
Refrain from the use of drugs . . . Abstain from drugs when health is good, but administer them when necessary. (Bahá’u'lláh: Bahá’u'lláh and the New Era, 1980 ed.,p. 106)
Many of us rely on prescription medications with a long list of side effects. This can’t be good for us:
If a remedy is the cause of disease it would be better to do without the remedy. (Compilations, Baha’i Scriptures, p. 349)
Any remedy that causes disease does not come from the great and supreme Physician. (Abdu’l-Baha, Paris Talks, p. 130)
If the remedy bring on disease, then put it aside. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 248)
Now, is it possible that man’s sense of smell, the sense that differentiates odours, should find some odour repugnant, and that odour be beneficial to the human body? Absurd! Impossible! . . . Again, if the sense of taste, likewise a faculty that selecteth and rejecteth, be offended by something, that thing is certainly not beneficial; and if, at the outset, it may yield some advantage, in the long run its harmfulness will be established. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 152)
The majority of the diseases which overtake man also overtake the animal, but the animal is not cured by drugs. In the mountains, as in the wilderness, the animal’s physician is the power of taste and smell. The sick animal smells the plants that grow in the wilderness; he eats those that are sweet and fragrant to his smell and taste, and is cured. (Abdu’l-Baha, Some Answered Questions, p. 257)
Herbs
. . . if you find what is required in a single herb, do not resort to a compounded medicament… (Bahá’u'lláh: Bahá’u'lláh and the New Era, 1980 ed.,p. 106)
Homeopathy:
One of the friends of Persia wrote to Shoghi Effendi and asked this question: “Is it true that ‘Abdu’l-Bahá has said that biochemical homeopathy, which is a form of food medicine, is in conformity with the Bahá’í medical concept?” The beloved Guardian’s reply to this question in a letter dated 25th November, 1944 was as follows: “This statement is true, and the truth thereof will be revealed in the future.” The Universal House of Justice has also asked us to inform you that it does not wish the above statement to be circulated in isolation from the many and varied other texts in the Writings on medicine. However, you may share it with any of your friends who are interested. (Universal House of Justice, The Compilation of Compilations vol. I, p. 485)
Chiropractic:
There is nothing in the Teachings about chiropractic as a method of healing. People are free to turn to it if they pleas and find help through it. (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 289)
Magnets:
The other kind of healing without medicine is through the magnetic force which acts from one body on another and becomes the cause of cure. This force also has only a slight effect. (Abdu’l-Baha, Some Answered Questions, p. 254)
Laying on of hands:
Sometimes one can benefit a sick person by placing one’s hand upon his head or upon his heart. Why? Because of the effect of the magnetism, and of the mental impression made upon the sick person, which causes the disease to vanish. But this effect is also very slight and weak. (Abdu’l-Baha, Some Answered Questions, p. 254)
He who is filled with love of Bahá, and forgets all things, the Holy Spirit will be heard from his lips and the spirit of life will fill his heart. … Words will issue from his lips in strands of pearls, and all sickness and disease will be healed by the laying on of the hands. (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 112)
Strong Constitution:
A strong constitution often overcomes disease. (Abdu’l-Baha, Some Answered Questions, p. 255)
Rest:
. . . rest the body in order to do better. (Abdu’l-Baha, Baha’i World Faith, p. 384)
Thank God I see you spiritual and at rest. (Abdu’l-Baha, Abdu’l-Baha in London, p. 48)
You should certainly safeguard your nerves, and force yourself to take time, and not only for prayer meditation, but for real rest and relaxation. (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 297)
Suspend all other activities so you can focus on getting well:
Now your father has taken you to the best nerve specialists in…, and they all recommend that you should suspend all your activities until you are fully recovered. It is now your duty as a Bahá’í, and specially as a young believer who has still great services to render the Faith, to make every effort to recovery your health, and to be confident that by making such an effort you will be attracting the confirmations of Bahá’u'lláh, without which no true and lasting healing is possible. (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 291)
Sleep
There are very few people who can get along without eight hours sleep. If you are not one of those, you should protect your health by sleeping enough. The Guardian himself finds that it impairs his working capacity if he does not try and get a minimum of seven or eight hours. (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 291)
Education:
A number of development projects have also shown that people’s lives can be altered substantially by appropriate messages through the mass media, reinforce with practical activities. This is being achieved, for example, in the field of health, where communication programmes alter people’s fundamental attitudes towards diarrhoeal diseases. In some instances, people are persuaded to behave in ways opposite to their accustomed behavior (e.g., to feed children instead of withholding food during a diarrhoeal episode). (Baha’i International Community, 1988 Mar 17, Rural Women)
As a means of service:
You should always bear in mind Bahá’u'lláh’s counsel that we should take the utmost care of our health, surely not because it is an end in itself, but as a necessary means of serving His Cause. (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 291)
Euthanasia and Living Wills:
We have received your letter of March 18, 1974 in which you ask for the Bahá’í viewpoint on euthanasia and on the removal of life support in medical cases where physiological interventions prolong life in disabling illnesses. In general our teachings indicate that God, the Giver of life, can alone dispose of it as He deems best, and we have found nothing in the Sacred Text on these matters specifically but in a letter to an individual written on behalf of the beloved Guardian by his secretary regarding mercy killings, or legalized euthanasia, it is stated: “…this is also a matter which the Universal House of Justice will have to legislate.” “Until such time as the Universal House of Justice considers legislation on Euthanasia, decisions in the matters to which you refer must be left to the conscience of those responsible (Universal House of Justice, Lights of Guidance, p. 290)
As to the Bahá’í viewpoint on the removal of withholding of life support in medical cases where intervention prolongs life in disabling illnesses, nothing has been found in the Sacred Text specifically on this matter. In such cases decisions must be left to those responsible, including the patients. (Universal House of Justice, Lights of Guidance, p. 290)
The Universal House of Justice has found nothing in the Sacred Text about the matter of with-holding or removing life support in disabling or terminal illnesses where intervention prolongs life. Therefore, until such time as the House of justice considers legislation on these matters, it is left to the conscience of the individual concerned whether or not to subscribe to a “living will”. (Universal House of Justice, Lights of Guidance, p. 290)
For more in this series:
Part 1: Intro to Disease
Part 2: Reasons for Disease
Part 3: Physical Causes of Disease
Part 4: Spiritual Causes of Disease
Part 5: Effects of Disease
Part 6: Attitudes towards Disease
Part 7: Spiritual Treatment for Disease
Part 8: Physical Treatment for Disease
Part 9: Why People Aren’t Getting Better
Part 10: Advice to Doctors
Part 11: Prayers for Health
This is part seven of an eleven part series on the Baha’i Perspective on Disease. In Part 1, we looked at how I got interested in this topic and looked at some quotes on prevention of disease. In Part 2, we looked at the reasons for disease. In Part 3, we looked at the physical cause of disease, in Part 4 we looked at the spiritual causes, in Part 5 we looked at the effects of disease, in Part 6 we looked at the attitudes we want to strive for, when we are diseased, and in this part we are looking at the spiritual treatments for disease.
God is the Divine Physician and He alone has the power to give true healing:
Its sickness is approaching the stage of utter hopelessness, inasmuch as the true Physician is debarred from administering the remedy, whilst unskilled practitioners are regarded with favor, and are accorded full freedom to act. (Baha’u'llah, Gleanings from the Writings of Baha’u'llah, p. 39)
The All-Knowing Physician hath His finger on the pulse of mankind. He perceiveth the disease, and prescribeth, in His unerring wisdom, the remedy. (Baha’u'llah, Gleanings from the Writings of Baha’u'llah, p. 212)
God is the great compassionate Physician who alone has the power to give true healing. (Abdu’l-Baha, Paris Talks, p. 19)
The Prophets of God are the real Physicians. In whatever age or time They appear They prescribe for human conditions. They know the sicknesses; They discover the hidden sources of disease and indicate the necessary remedy. Whosoever is healed by that remedy finds eternal health. (Abdu’l-Baha, The Promulgation of Universal Peace, p. 204)
All is in the hands of God, and without Him there can be no health in us! (‘Abdul-Bahá, Lights of Guidance, p. 286)
Turning to God:
Continue in healing hearts and bodies and seek healing for sick persons by turning unto the Supreme Kingdom and by setting the heart upon obtaining healing through the power of the Greatest Name and by the spirit of the Love of God. (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 112)
Grace of God:
But for the unfailing grace of God — exalted be His glory — no antidote could ever cure these inveterate diseases. (Baha’u'llah, Tablets of Baha’u'llah, p. 252)
Power of the Holy Spirit:
Healing takes place through the power of the Holy Spirit. (Abdu’l-Baha, Some Answered Questions, p. 256)
The most potent means of healing is the Power of the Holy Spirit. This does not depend on contact, nor on sight, nor upon presence. … Whether the disease be light or severe, whether there be a contact of bodies or not, whether a personal connection be established between the sick person and the healer or not, this healing takes place through the power of the Holy Spirit. (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 108)
O thou pure and spiritual one! Turn thou toward God with thy heart beating with His love, devoted to His praise, gazing towards His Kingdom and seeking help from His Holy Spirit in a state of ecstasy, rapture, love, yearning, joy and fragrance. God will assist thee, through a spirit from His Presence, to heal sickness and disease. (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 112)
Bahá’u'lláh’s teachings:
Now, if thou wishest to know the divine remedy which will heal man from all sickness and will give him the health of the divine kingdom, know that it is the precepts and teachings of God. Guard them sacredly. (Abdu’l-Baha, Baha’i World Faith – Abdu’l-Baha Section, p. 376)
That which hath streamed forth from the Most Exalted Pen is . . . the sovereign remedy for every disease, could they but comprehend and perceive it. (Baha’u'llah, Tablets of Baha’u'llah, p. 73)
And if thou art looking for the divine remedy which will cure the spirit of man of all diseases and make him obtain the health of the divine Kingdom, know that it is the precepts and teachings of God. Take the greatest care of them. (Abdu’l-Baha, Tablets of Abdu’l-Baha v3, p. 653)
The people of religions find, in the teaching of His Holiness Bahá’u'lláh, the establishment of Universal Religion — a religion that perfectly conforms with present conditions, which in reality effects the immediate cure of the incurable disease, which relieves every pain, and bestows the infallible antidote for every deadly poison. (Abdu’l-Baha, Baha’i World Faith, p. 290)
Today the world of humanity will not find peace and tranquility except through these teachings and this darkness will not, otherwise, be dispelled, these chronic diseases be cured. Nay, these would, otherwise, be aggravated from day to day. (Abdu’l-Baha, Letter to Martha Root)
The people of religions find, in the teachings of His Holiness Bahá’u'lláh, . . . the immediate cure of the incurable disease, which relieves every pain and bestows the infallible antidote for every deadly poison. (Compilations, Baha’i Scriptures, p. 416)
Knowledge of laws, institutions and principles:
Praise be to Him, ye are acquainted with the various laws, institutions and principles of the world; today nothing short of these divine teachings can assure peace and tranquillity to mankind. But for these teachings, this darkness shall never vanish, these chronic diseases shall never be healed; nay, they shall grow fiercer from day to day. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 249)
Spiritual and material remedies work together:
There are two ways of healing diseases, the material and the spiritual way. The first is the remedies of the physicians; the second prayers and turning one’s self to God. Both must be practiced and followed. The diseases that happen to be caused by physical accident are cured by medical aid; others, which are due to spiritual causes, will disappear by spiritual means. For instance: For a disease due to grieving, fear, nervous impressions, the spiritual remedies will take more effect than the physical. Therefore, these two kinds of remedies must be followed; neither is an obstacle to the other. You must take care of the physical remedies. These also came from the bounty and mercy of God who revealed and made evident the science of medicine, so that His servants may also be benefited by this mode of healing. In the same way take care of the spiritual healing, because it giveth wonderful results. (Abdu’l-Baha, Tablets of Abdu’l-Baha v3, p. 653)
When the material world and the divine world are well co-related, when the hearts become heavenly and the aspirations grow pure and divine, perfect connection shall take place. Then shall this power produce a perfect manifestation. Physical and spiritual diseases will then receive absolute healing. (Abdu’l-Baha, Tablets of Abdu’l-Baha v2, p. 309)
If the heavenly benediction be upon us while we are being healed then only can we be made whole, for medicine is but the outward and visible means through which we obtain the heavenly healing. Unless the spirit be healed, the cure of the body is worth nothing. (Abdu’l-Baha, Paris Talks, p. 19)
Bahá’u'lláh recognizes the value of both material and spiritual remedies. He teaches that the science and art of healing must be developed, encouraged and perfected, so that all means of healing may be used to the best advantage, each in its appropriate sphere. (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 106)
Sometimes a material remedy is called for:
Take for instance, a cut hand; if you pray for the cut to be healed and do not stop its bleeding, you will not do much good; a material remedy is needed. (‘Abdul-Bahá, Lights of Guidance, p. 281)
Often both kinds of remedies are needed:
If the sickness is of the body, a material remedy is needed, if of the soul, a spiritual remedy. (Abdu’l-Baha, Paris Talks, p. 19)
A small disease needs a small remedy, but a disease which pervades the whole body needs a very strong remedy. (Abdu’l-Baha, Abdu’l-Baha in London, p. 59)
Unless the spirit be healed, the cure of the body is worth nothing. (‘Abdul-Bahá, Lights of Guidance, p. 286)
Education:
Education must be considered as most important: for as diseases in the world of bodies are extremely contagious, so, in the same way, qualities of spirit and heart are extremely contagious. (Compilations, Baha’i World Faith, p. 318)
Let them [mothers] also study whatever will nurture the health of the body and its physical soundness, and how to guard their children from disease.
(‘Abdul-Bahá, The Compilation of Compilations vol II, p. 372)
Obedience:
The bearing on health of these commands relating to the simple life, hygiene, abstinence from alcohol and opium, etcetera, is too obvious to call for much comment, although their vital importance is apt to be greatly underestimated. Were they to be generally observed, most of the infectious diseases and a good many others would soon vanish from among men. (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 103)
Simple obedience to the hygienic and moral commands of Moses, Buddha, Christ, Muhammad or Bahá’u'lláh would do more in the way of preventing disease than all the doctors and all the public health regulations in the world have been able to accomplish. In fact, it seems certain that were such obedience general, good health would also become general. Instead of lives being blighted by disease of cut off in infancy, youth or prime, as so frequently happens now, men would live to a ripe old age, like sound fruits that mature and mellow ere they drop from the bough. (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 104)
Chastity:
Were the commands of the Prophets concerning chastity in sexual relations generally observed, another fertile cause of disease would be eliminated. The loathsome venereal diseases, which wreck the health of so many thousands today, innocent as well as guilty, babes as well as parents, would very soon be
entirely a thing of the past. (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 104)
Forgiveness:
The breaths of forgiveness are being wafted from the region of your Lord, the Merciful; he who advanceth unto them will necessarily be purified from disobedience and from every disease and infirmity. Blessed is he who cometh unto them, and woe unto him who turneth away. (Compilations, Baha’i Scriptures, p. 105)
Love
As long as ye can strive to set aglow the hearts with love, be attracted to one another and be members of each other. Every soul of the beloved ones must adore the other and withhold not his possession and life from them, and by all means he must endeavor to make that other joyous and happy. But that other (the recipient of such love) must also be disinterested and life-sacrificing. Thus may this Sunrise flood the horizons, this melody gladden and make happy all the people, this divine remedy become the panacea for every disease, this Spirit of Reality become the cause of life for every soul. (Abdu’l-Baha, Tablets of Abdu’l-Baha v1, p. 146)
The divine remedy has been provided. The spiritual Teachings of the Religion of God alone can create this love, unity and accord in human hearts. Therefore, hold to these heavenly agencies which God has provided so that through the love of God this soul-tie may be established, this heart-attachment realized, the light of the reality of unity be reflected from you throughout the universe. (Compilations, Baha’i Scriptures, p. 445)
The love and consideration he has been shown by the friends, and by the members of your Assembly in particular, will, he feels certain, help to a marked degree in counter-acting the painful effects of the insidious disease from which he is so severely, yet so uncomplainingly suffering. (Shoghi Effendi, The Unfolding Destiny of the British Baha’i Community, p. 124)
Peace:
Peace is health and construction (Compilations, Baha’i World Faith, p. 232)
Unity:
And that which God hath made the most mighty remedy and the most complete means for its health is the union of whosoever is upon the earth in a single matter, and a single law. This can never be possible except through a skillful physician, perfect and strengthened by God. By My life, this is the truth, and aught else is nothing but evident error. (Compilations, Baha’i Scriptures, p. 112)
Bahá’u'lláh gives the assurance that, through harmonious cooperation of patients, healers and the community in general, and by appropriate use of the various means to health, material, mental and spiritual, the Golden Age may be realized, when, by the Power of God, “all sorrow will be turned into joy, and all disease into health.” (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 113)
Prayer:
Turn thou toward God with thy heart beating with His love, devoted to His praise, gazing toward His Kingdom and seeking help from His Holy Spirit in a state of ecstasy, rapture, love, yearning, joy and fragrance. 629 God will assist thee, through a Spirit from His Presence, to heal sickness and diseases. (Abdu’l-Baha, Tablets of Abdu’l-Baha v3, p. 628)
Engage thou in commemorating God at every morn and turn unto the Horizon of Mercifulness. Take some honey, recite “Yá Baha-u’l-Abha” and eat a little thereof for several days. (Abdu’l-Baha, Tablets of Abdu’l-Baha v1, p. 185)
If the heavenly benediction be upon us while we are being healed then only can we be made whole, for medicine is but the outward and visible means through which we obtain the heavenly healing. (‘Abdul-Bahá, Lights of Guidance, p. 286)
Fasting:
Verily, I say, fasting is the supreme remedy and the most great healing for the disease of self and passion. (Bahá’u'lláh, The Importance of Obligatory Prayer and Fasting)
Teaching the Faith:
Make your feet firm, make a firm compact, and in union and accord endeavor to diffuse the fragrance of the love of God and to spread the divine teachings, in order that ye may impart life to the dead body of this world, and bestow a real healing on every one diseased (in soul). (Abdu’l-Baha, Tablets of Abdu’l-Baha v1, p. 36)
It is my hope that the breaths of the Holy Spirit will so be breathed into your hearts that your tongues will disclose the mysteries, and set forth and expound the inner meanings of the Holy Books; that the friends will become physicians, and will, through the potent medicine of the heavenly Teachings, heal the long-standing diseases that afflict the body of this world; that they will make the blind to see, the deaf to hear, the dead to come alive; that they will awaken those who are sound asleep. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 274)
Service:
By Thy Power, verily, the sweetness of servitude is the food of my spirit; with the fragrance of servitude my breast will be dilated, my being refreshed, my heart delighted, my eyes brightened, my nostrils perfumed, and in it is the healing of my disease, the allaying of my burning thirst, the soothing of my pain. (Compilations, Baha’i Scriptures, p. 265)
Be isolated from the grades of self and desire, so that thou mayest succeed in that which behooveth the service of the Kingdom of God, and that thou mayest be healed from every disease and sickness. (Abdu’l-Baha, Tablets of Abdu’l-Baha v1, p. 190)
Energy dissipated by war:
The enormous energy dissipated and wasted on war . . . will be consecrated to such ends as will extend the . . . extermination of disease, to the extension of scientific research, to the raising of the standard of physical health, to the sharpening and refinement of the human brain, to the exploitation of the unused and unsuspected resources of the planet, to the prolongation of human life . . . (Baha’u'llah, The Proclamation of Baha’u'llah, p. xii)
Expectations:
The complete and perfect connection between the spiritual doctor and the sick person — that is, a connection of such a kind that the spiritual doctor entirely concentrates himself, and all the attention of the sick person is given to the spiritual doctor from whom he expects to realize health — causes an excitement of the nerves, and health is produced. But all this has effect only to a certain extent, and that not always. (Abdu’l-Baha, Some Answered Questions, p. 255)
Much more powerful effects result from the patient’s own mental states, and “suggestion” may play an important part in determining these states . . . hope, love, joy, et cetera, are correspondingly beneficial. (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 107)
Everyone has a part to play:
The work of healing the sick, however, is a matter that concerns not the patient and the practitioner only, but everyone. All must help, by sympathy and service, by right living and right thinking, and especially by prayer, for of all remedies prayer is the most potent. “Supplication and prayer on behalf of others,” says ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, “will surely be effective.” The friends of the patient have a special responsibility, for their influence, either for good or ill, is most direct and powerful. In how many cases of sickness the issue depends mainly on the ministrations of parents, friends or neighbors of the helpless sufferer! Even the members of the community at large have an influence in every case of sickness. In individual cases that influence may not appear great, yet in the mass the effect is potent. Everyone is affected by the social “atmosphere” in which he lives, by the general prevalence of faith or materialism, of virtue or vice, of cheerfulness of depression; and each individual has his share in determining the state of that social “atmosphere.” It may not be possible for everyone, in the present state of the world, to attain to perfect health, but it is possible for everyone to become a “willing channel” for the health-giving power of the Holy Spirit and thus to exert a healing, helpful influence both on his own body and on all with whom he comes in contact.
(Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 112)
Being around Healthy People:
He teaches that there are also many methods of healing without material means. There is a “contagion of health,” as well as a contagion of disease, although the former is very slow and has a small effect (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 107)
It may be that the strong health of a healthy man will alleviate a very slight malady in a sick person. (Abdu’l-Baha, Some Answered Questions, p. 254)
For more in this series:
Part 1: Intro to Disease
Part 2: Reasons for Disease
Part 3: Physical Causes of Disease
Part 4: Spiritual Causes of Disease
Part 5: Effects of Disease
Part 6: Attitudes towards Disease
Part 7: Spiritual Treatment for Disease
Part 8: Physical Treatment for Disease
Part 9: Why People Aren’t Getting Better
Part 10: Advice to Doctors
Part 11: Prayers for Health
This is part six of an eleven part series on the Baha’i Perspective on Disease. In Part 1, we looked at how I got interested in this topic and looked at some quotes on prevention of disease. In Part 2, we looked at the reasons for disease. In Part 3, we looked at the physical cause of disease, in Part 4 we looked at the spiritual causes, in Part 5 we looked at the effects of disease, and in this part we look at the attitudes to strive for, when battling disease.
No simple solutions – we need to look at all the elements:
Look on the world as the temple (body) of a man attacked by disease, whose recovery depends upon the union of all its elements. (Compilations, Baha’i Scriptures, p. 109)
Happiness:
Anybody can be happy in the state of comfort, ease, health, success, pleasure and joy; but if one will be happy and contented in the time of trouble, hardship and prevailing disease, it is the proof of nobility. (Abdu’l-Baha, Baha’i World Faith, p. 363)
For more in this series:
Part 1: Intro to Disease
Part 2: Reasons for Disease
Part 3: Physical Causes of Disease
Part 4: Spiritual Causes of Disease
Part 5: Effects of Disease
Part 6: Attitudes towards Disease
Part 7: Spiritual Treatment for Disease
Part 8: Physical Treatment for Disease
Part 9: Why People Aren’t Getting Better
Part 10: Advice to Doctors
Part 11: Prayers for Health
This is part five of an eleven part series on the Baha’i Perspective on Disease. In Part 1, we looked at how I got interested in this topic and looked at some quotes on prevention of disease. In Part 2, we looked at the reasons for disease. In Part 3, we looked at the physical cause of disease, in Part 4 we looked at the spiritual causes, and in this part we look at the effects of disease.
Plain Hell:
But when year after year a house is torn by heart-breaking emotions, shaken by scenes that leave one’s brain numb, one’s nerves decimated and one’s feelings in a turmoil, it is not simple, it is just plain hell. Before a patient lies on the operating table and the offending part is removed there is a long process of delay, of therapeutic effort to remedy the disease, of hope for recovery. (Adib Taherzadeh, The Child of the Covenant, p. 308)
Everyone suffers when someone is diseased:
If one member of the members be in distress or be afflicted with some disease all the other members must necessarily suffer. (Abdu’l-Baha, Foundations of World Unity, p. 38)
. . . were each member to be subjected to any injury or were it to become diseased, all the other members would sympathetically suffer, due to the existence of their perfect unity. (Compilations, Baha’i Scriptures, p. 280)
The effects of deprivation, disease and strife in one part of the globe are felt everywhere.” Increasingly we are becoming aware that as members of a single human family, we are all touched in some way by the suffering of every human being. Until that suffering is alleviated, no member of the family can be fully happy or at ease. (Baha’i International Community, 1994 Aug 17, Human Rights Extreme Poverty)
When a body is diseased, it’s deprived of the bounty of the spirit:
But when the body is wholly subjected to disease and misfortune, it is deprived of the bounty of the spirit; like a mirror which, when it becomes broken, or dirty, or dusty, cannot reflect the rays of the sun, nor any longer show its bounties. (Abdu’l-Baha, Baha’i World Faith, p. 327)
. . . the person, while he is in the diseased condition the manifestation of the power and might of the spirit will be prevented and concealed (Compilations, Baha’i Scriptures, p. 228)
Effects on the Spirit
The human spirit is in one condition; it neither becomes ill from the diseases of the body, nor cured by its health; it does not become sick, nor weak, nor miserable, nor poor, nor light, nor small. That is to say, it will not be injured because of the infirmities of the body, and no effect will be visible even if the body becomes weak or if the hands and feet and tongue be cut off, or if it loses the power of hearing or sight. (Compilations, Baha’i World Faith, p. 328)
Regarding your questions concerning the condition of the soul during illness. The passages in the “Gleanings” make it quite clear that physical ailments, no matter how severe, cannot bring any change in the inherent condition of the soul. As Bahá’u'lláh says: ‘The spirit is permanent and steadfast in its station’. The veil or hindrance that interposes between soul and body during physical disease is sickness itself. (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 113)
You must always remember, no matter how much you or your others may be afflicted with mental troubles and the crushing environment of these State Institutions, that your spirit is healthy, near to our Beloved, and will in the next world enjoy a happy and normal state of soul. Let us hope in the meantime scientists will find better and permanent cures for the mentally afflicted. But in this world such illness is truly a heavy burden to bear! (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 281)
For more in this series:
Part 1: Intro to Disease
Part 2: Reasons for Disease
Part 3: Physical Causes of Disease
Part 4: Spiritual Causes of Disease
Part 5: Effects of Disease
Part 6: Attitudes towards Disease
Part 7: Spiritual Treatment for Disease
Part 8: Physical Treatment for Disease
Part 9: Why People Aren’t Getting Better
Part 10: Advice to Doctors
Part 11: Prayers for Health
This is part four of an eleven part series on the Baha’i Perspective on Disease. In Part 1, we looked at how I got interested in this topic and looked at some quotes on prevention of disease. In Part 2, we looked at the reasons for disease. In Part 3, we looked at the physical cause of disease, and in this part we look at the spiritual causes of disease.
God’s will:
For these thy prevailing diseases are not on account of sins, but they are to make thee detest this world and know that there is no rest and composure in this temporal life. (Abdu’l-Baha, Tablets of Abdu’l-Baha v1, p. 185)
Whatever hath befallen you, hath been for the sake of God. This is the truth, and in this there is no doubt. You should, therefore, leave all your affairs in His Hands, place your trust in Him, and rely upon Him. He will assuredly not forsake you. In this, likewise, there is no doubt. (Bahá’u'lláh, Fire and Light, p. 10)
There have been many men who have died at last of the very disease of which they have made a special study. Aristotle, for instance, who made a special study of the digestion, died of a gastronomic malady. Aviseu was a specialist of the heart, but he died of heart disease. (Abdu’l-Baha, Paris Talks, p. 19)
Human Condition:
Suffering, of one kind or another, seems to be the portion of man in this world . . . poverty, disease, bereavement – they seem to be part of the polish God employs to make us finer, and enable us to reflect more of His attributes! (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 603)
See how dark and narrow is the physical world of man’s body, and what a prey it is to diseases and ills. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 192)
Think how narrow and dark is the material world of man, how afflicted with disease and maladies; but how bright and spacious is his Spiritual World! (Compilations, Baha’i Scriptures, p. 459)
Disobedience to God:
According to the teaching of the Prophets, disease and all other forms of calamity are due to disobedience to the Divine Commands. (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 95)
We live in a world, however, where from time immemorial obedience to the commands of the Prophets has been the exception rather than the rule; where love of self has been a more prevalent motive than love of God; where limited and party interests have taken precedence of the interests of humanity as a whole; where material possessions and sensual pleasures have been preferred to the social and spiritual welfare of mankind. Hence have arisen fierce competition and conflict, oppression and tyranny, extremes of wealth and poverty — all those conditions which breed disease, mental and physical. (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 105)
Turning away from God:
Know thou verily the Divine Food is descending from heaven, but only those taste thereof who are directed to the light of guidance, and only those can enjoy it who are endowed with a sound taste. Otherwise every diseased soul disliketh the delicious and merciful food and this is because of the sickness which hath seized him, whereby the El-Zekkum is sweet (to his taste) while he fleeth from the ripe fruit of the Tree of the Living and Pre-existent God — and there is no wonder in that. (El-Zekkum — a thorny tree so called, which bears fruit like an almond, but extremely bitter. Therefore the tree symbolizes a very severe punishment and bitter remorse for the unbelievers). (Abdu’l-Baha, Tablets of Abdu’l-Baha v1, p. 130)
Generational “Sins of the Father”:
If a man does a great injustice to another in his life, then, after his death, his son will be despised for having had such a father and in some cases the injury might be so serious that the effect would reach to the grandson, etc., or a man may, by wrong living, fall into consumption and give that disease to his children unto the third or fourth generation. “Both physically and mentally the sins of the fathers may be visited upon the children.” (‘Abdu’l-Bahá: Daily Lessons Received at ‘Akká 1979 ed., pp. 45-46)
Sin:
It is certainly the case that sins are a potent cause of physical ailments. If humankind were free from the defilements of sin and waywardness, and lived according to a natural, inborn equilibrium, without following wherever their passions led, it is undeniable that diseases would no longer take the ascendant, nor diversify with such intensity. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 152)
Gambling:
Betting on horse racing is a pernicious disease. It hath been seen in Europe what distress this hath caused. Thousands have become afflicted and distraught (Universal House of Justice, Lights of Guidance, p. 357)
Fear, Anger, Worry and Sorrow:
Sometimes if the nervous system is paralyzed through fear, a spiritual remedy is necessary . . . It often happens that sorrow makes one ill, this can be cured by spiritual means. (Abdu’l-Baha, Abdu’l-Baha in London, p. 65)
Fear, anger, worry, et cetera, are very prejudicial to health (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 107)
Before she became a Bahá’í she had been a Christian Scientist, and now she brought up the question of mental suggestion as a cure for physical disease. The Master replied that some illnesses, such as consumption and insanity, developed from spiritual causes — grief, for example — and that these could be healed by the spirit. (Misc Baha’i, The Diary of Juliet Thompson)
Jealousy:
Jealousy is a gnawing disease, as testified by Bahá’u'lláh. It destroys the one who harbours it. (H.M. Balyuzi, Abdu’l-Baha – The Centre of the Covenant, p. 55)
Lack of Love and Hatred:
The disease which afflicts the body politic is lack of love and absence of altruism. In the hearts of men no real love is found, and the condition is such that, unless their susceptibilities are quickened by some power so that unity, love and accord may develop within them, there can be no healing (Abdu’l-Baha, The Promulgation of Universal Peace, p. 171)
The disease of sectarian hatreds, if not decisively checked, threatens harrowing consequences that will leave few areas of the world unaffected. (Commissioned by The Universal House of Justice, One Common Faith)
Individualism:
No aspect of contemporary civilization is more directly challenged by Bahá’u'lláh’s conception of the future than is the prevailing cult of individualism, which has spread to most parts of the world. Nurtured by such cultural forces as political ideology, academic elitism, and a consumer economy, the “pursuit of happiness” has given rise to an aggressive and almost boundless sense of personal entitlement. The moral consequences have been corrosive for the individual and society alike – and devastating in terms of disease, drug addiction and other all-too- familiar blights of century’s end. (Baha’i International Community, 1999 Feb, Who is Writing the Future)
Disunity:
As long as the various members and parts of that organism are coordinated and cooperating in harmony, we have as a result the expression of life in its fullest degree. When these members lack coordination and harmony, we have the reverse, which in the human organism is disease, dissolution, death. (Abdu’l-Baha, The Promulgation of Universal Peace, p. 98)
The primary disease that afflicts society and generates the ills that cripple it, he says, is the disunity of a human race . . . (Baha’i International Community, 1999 Feb, Who is Writing the Future)
Few will disagree that the universal disease sapping the health of the body of humankind is that of disunity. (Commissioned by The Universal House of Justice, One Common Faith)
Disparity between rich and poor:
In much of the world, the gap between the “haves”and “have-nots”has widened and is accelerating with the persistent disparity in income levels. Social problems have not subsided. In fact, crime and disease are not just on the rise; they are also becoming endemic and more difficult to combat. (Baha’i International Community, 1995 Oct, Turning Point For All Nations)
War:
War is disease and dissolution. (Compilations, Baha’i World Faith, p. 232)
For more in this series:
Part 1: Intro to Disease
Part 2: Reasons for Disease
Part 3: Physical Causes of Disease
Part 4: Spiritual Causes of Disease
Part 5: Effects of Disease
Part 6: Attitudes towards Disease
Part 7: Spiritual Treatment for Disease
Part 8: Physical Treatment for Disease
Part 9: Why People Aren’t Getting Better
Part 10: Advice to Doctors
Part 11: Prayers for Health
This is part three of an eleven part series on the Baha’i Perspective on Disease. In Part 1, we looked at how I got interested in this topic and looked at some quotes on prevention of disease. In Part 2, we looked at the reasons for disease. and in this part we look at the physical causes of disease.
No single cause:
. . . the body of a man which was created sound and whole, but diseases have attacked him from various and divers causes and his soul is not at ease for a day, but rather his sickness increaseth, (Compilations, Baha’i Scriptures, p. 112)
Genetics:
The next challenge for WHO is to recognize that a major obstacle to enjoying the right to health is being born female. (Baha’i International Community, 1995 Aug 26, Primary Health Care Empowerment of Women)
Genetic variations occur, producing conditions which can create problems for the individual. Some conditions are of an emotional or psychological nature, producing such imbalances as quickness to anger, recklessness, timorousness, and so forth; others involve purely physical characteristics, resulting not only in unusual capacities but also in handicaps or diseases of various kinds. (From a letter written on behalf of the Universal House of Justice to the National Spiritual Assembly of the United States, Sept. 11, 1995; published in “The American Bahá’í”, Qawl 152 BE/Nov. 23, 1995, p 11.)
Imbalances:
The outer, physical causal factor in disease, however, is a disturbance in the balance, the proportionate equilibrium of all those elements of which the human body is composed. To illustrate: the body of man is a compound of many constituent substances, each component being present in a prescribed amount, contributing to the essential equilibrium of the whole. So long as these constituents remain in their due proportion, according to the natural balance of the whole — that is, no component suffereth a change in its natural proportionate degree and balance, no component being either augmented or decreased — there will be no physical cause for the incursion of disease. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 152)
For example, the starch component must be present to a given amount, and the sugar to a given amount. So long as each remaineth in its natural proportion to the whole, there will be no cause for the onset of disease. When, however, these constituents vary as to their natural and due amounts — that is, when they are augmented or diminished — it is certain that this will provide for the inroads of disease. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 152)
The basic reason for this is that if, in some component substance of the human body, an imbalance should occur, altering its correct, relative proportion to the whole, this fact will inevitably result in the onset of disease. If, for example, the starch component should be unduly augmented, or the sugar component decreased, an illness will take control. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 152)
When highly-skilled physicians shall fully examine this matter, thoroughly and perseveringly, it will be clearly seen that the incursion of disease is due to a disturbance in the relative amounts of the body’s component substances (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 152)
Sickness reveals a lack of balance in human organism, an absence of equilibrium in the forces essential for the normal functioning of the human body. (Shoghi Effendi, Lights of Guidance, p. 113)
Poor Hygiene:
The amount of illness caused by neglect of simple hygienic precautions . . . is prodigious. (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 103)
Germs:
. . . the germs are present in one’s own system, perhaps to lie dormant forever, perhaps to flare up into disease. (Ruhiyyih Khanum, The Priceless Pearl, p. 121)
Contagion:
Just as the bodily diseases like consumption and cancer are contagious, likewise the spiritual diseases are also infectious. If a consumptive should associate with a thousand safe and healthy persons, the safety and health of these thousand persons would not affect the consumptive and would not cure him of his consumptions. But when this consumptive associates with those thousand souls, in a short time the disease of consumption will infect a number of those healthy persons. This is a clear and self-evident question. (‘Abdul-Bahá, Lights of Guidance, p. 183)
The contagion of disease is violent and rapid . . . If two bodies are brought into contact with each other, it is certain that microbic particles will pass from one to the other. (Abdu’l-Baha, Some Answered Questions, p. 254)
Just as in bodily diseases we must prevent intermingling and infection and put into effect sanitary laws — because the infectious physical diseases uproot the foundation of humanity; likewise one must protect and safeguard the blessed souls from the breaths and fatal spiritual diseases; otherwise violation, like the plague, will become a contagion and all will perish. (Abdu’l-Baha, Baha’i World Faith, p. 437)
Treatment of our Body:
The body should be the servant of the soul, never its master, but it should be a willing, obedient and efficient servant, and should be treated with the consideration which a good servant deserves. If it is not properly treated, disease and disaster result, with injurious consequences to master as well as servant. (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 101)
Diet:
But man hath perversely continued to serve his lustful appetites, and he would not content himself with simple foods. Rather, he prepared for himself food that was compounded of many ingredients, of substances differing one from the other. With this, and with the perpetrating of vile and ignoble acts, his attention was engrossed, and he abandoned the temperance and moderation of a natural way of life. The result was the engendering of diseases both violent and diverse. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 152)
For the animal, as to its body, is made up of the same constituent elements as man. Since, however, the animal contenteth itself with simple foods and striveth not to indulge its importunate urges to any great degree, and committeth no sins, its ailments relative to man’s are few. We see clearly, therefore, how powerful are sin and contumacy as pathogenic factors. And once engendered these diseases become compounded, multiply, and are transmitted to others. Such are the spiritual, inner causes of sickness. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 152)
Sensual Desires:
But if the health and welfare of man be spent in sensual desires, in a life on the animal plane, and in devilish pursuits — then disease is better than such health. (Abdu’l-Baha, Baha’i World Faith, p. 376)
Drinking and Drugs:
The drinking of wine is, according to the text of the Most Holy Book, forbidden; for it is the cause of chronic diseases, weakeneth the nerves, and consumeth the mind. (‘Abdul-Bahá, The Compilation of Compilations vol II, p. 246)
The amount of illness caused by . . . indulgence in alcohol and opium is prodigious. (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 103)
Alcohol and opium affect a man’s conscience long before they affect his gait or cause obvious bodily disease (Dr. J.E. Esslemont, Baha’u'llah and the New Era, p. 104)
Smoking:
The smoker is vulnerable to many and various diseases. (Abdu’l-Baha, Selections from the Writings of Abdu’l-Baha, p. 147)
Every qualified physician hath ruled — and this hath also been proved by tests — that one of the components of tobacco is a deadly poison, and that the smoker is vulnerable to many and various diseases. (Adib Taherzadeh, The Revelation of Baha’u'llah v 3, p. 438)
For more in this series:
Part 1: Intro to Disease
Part 2: Reasons for Disease
Part 3: Physical Causes of Disease
Part 4: Spiritual Causes of Disease
Part 5: Effects of Disease
Part 6: Attitudes towards Disease
Part 7: Spiritual Treatment for Disease
Part 8: Physical Treatment for Disease
Part 9: Why People Aren’t Getting Better
Part 10: Advice to Doctors
Part 11: Prayers for Health