In the question and answer epistle of Aqdas book, the Baha’ism organization has explained the reason for revising Baha’s works and tablets as being comformable with the tribe’s regulations. However, assuming the literary revision of the forged Baha’i prophet’s works, what is the Baha’ism organization’s justification for its measure while the Excellency Baha has considered measuring the divine works with the current rules as null?!
In the question and answer epistle of the Aqdas book, the Baha’ism organization has explained the reason for revising Baha’s works and tablets as being comformable with the tribe’s regulations: “Many tablets were sent down. It is ordered for them to be read and revised based on the tribe’s regulation in order for the opponents not to oppose.[1]”
As stated, assuming that the forged prophet of Baha’ism’s works has been literary revised, what does the UHJ’s justification mean when the Excellency Baha himself says[2]: “You and people like you… don’t understand that the divine words which have been sent down are total scales and the others’ aren’t scales. Each regulation which is against the divine verses isn’t valid.[3]”
Consequently, if the forged prophet’s works were divine, they needed to be revised and corrected by the Baha’ism organization?! It seems that revising the Excellency Baha’s works is a duty and a strategy for the universal house of justice in order for the deviant movement of Baha’ism to be collapsed.
[1] Hussein Ali Nouri, the “Aqdas” (the question and answer epistle), the electronic copy, pp. 59-60, question No. 57.
[2] “یا معشرالعلماء لا تزنوا کتاب الله بما عندکم من القواعد و العلوم انه لقسطاس الحق بین الخلق قد یوزن ما عندالامم بهذا القسطاس الاعظم”
“O’ people, don’t measure God’s book with the regulations and sciences which are present for you. Surely, God’s book is scale right for people. So, measure everything among nations with this great scale.”: Hussein Ali Nouri, the Aqdas, the electronic copy, p. 98, paragraph 99
[3] Hussein Ali Nouri, the collection of the Blessed Tablets, published in Egypt: Sa’adat publishing house, 1920, p. 78.