Dale husband was born on May, 8, 1969 Texas. He grew in Haltom city. He had been raised in the Christian family. Then he followed Baha’ism. Now, he has a pessimistic and critical view. He favors wisdom and empirical logic. He graduated at C Tarant County collage, 2000. He is working in Amazon now. He is single and hasn’t any offspring. He is struggling every day as his aim that is philanthropy. The following is his writing:
From 1995 to 2004, I was a member of a religion known as the Baha’i faith. This religion teaches that God is called by various names but is still the same all over the world, that all religions teach the same basic message, and that humanity is actually one race and is destined to unity under the banner of Baha’i faith in a new age of peace and unity.
I was eager to see and to achieve the highest goodness in my life and in the world, so this was a God sent to me! I embrace the face after attending fireside about it in Bedford, Texas and became an active teacher of it, even attempt to covert others to it!
I had been a Christian, specifically a southern Baptist, in my teens, but had become disgusted with Christianity and left that faith in my early 20’s because I saw the errors, contradictions, and failures of it. The Baha’i faith explained that away by claiming that while Jesus was indeed a messenger (or Manifestation) of God, His faith had become corrupted over time and thus most Christians were not truly following him, but the doctrines of men.
In joining the Baha’i community, I thought I was seeing what the early Christians in the Roman Empire were like, except that unlike them the Baha’is would not split into competing sects and engage in wars against each other. If only everyone in the world became Baha’i, I was told, we would be at peace and prosperity forever.
What a wonderful vision! But human nature will never allow for it! The reason is that the leadership of the Baha’i faith, from its founder, Bahaullah, to the Universal House of Justice today, claims to be infallible because it is guided by God. Yet we know that Bahaullah, his son Abdul Baha, Abdul Baha’s grandson Shoqi Effendi (the Guardian of the Faith), and the members of the universal house of Justice were/are human beings. What evidence do we have that they are infallible? None! And if you can not question the will of a leadership, what do you in fact have? Tyranny! And what does Tyranny always lead to, according to history? Corruption and injustice! And that, in turn results in the system breaking down over time. Indeed, the very idea that any human being, human run institution, or human product is infallible is sheer nonsense. It is the most dangerous idea in the world!
After a while, I finally began to see that the Baha’i faith also has errors, contradictions, and failures of its own, despite being less than 200 years old. It was my coming to understand this that finally led me to leave the faith with a heavy heart. The hypocrisies of the Baha’i faith’s own dogmas can be summed up as follows:
1. State that religion no longer needs clergy… and replace them with leaders that are as authoritarian as the clergy ever was.
2. Claim that men and women should be equal… but then deny women membership in the all-powerful leadership council of the religion.
3. Condemn as heretics those who believe in your religion but dare to challenge the claims of your religion’s current leadership, while at the same time claiming to welcome as friends the followers of other religions.
4. Claim there is harmony between science and religion, but also claim that anything you leaders say is absolutely true, even if on topics science is expected to address.
Also, there are the scandals I discovered which really disturbed me, even after I had left the faith.
Conclusion
Baha’ism that has been founded since the 19th century, is quite similar to an alectuary to which the western liberal teachings, thoughts in the political and social domains have been bonded with Babi terroristic teachings and thoughts. The bond is also similar to a hazardous venom for humanity.