Sacred Mythology and the Bahá'í Faith

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSubject(s): Online resources: In: The Journal of Bahá'í Studies 2, 1-15Abstract: Myths are metaphors that convey truth about the indescribable through powerful images and experiences. The mythological models synthesized by Joseph Campbell, such as the monomyth with its attendant metaphysical, cosmological, sociological and psychological purposes, underscore the fundamental unity of human spiritual experience. The Baha'i Faith employs three significant spiritual verities to fulfill the purposes of myth and to open for all Baha'is the full depth and range of the world's mythologies: The unknowable nature of the Ultimate Mystery ; the relativity of religious/cosmological truth ; and the necessity of science and the investigation of reality. The Baha'i Faith also possesses a sacred drama - history as myth - from which the Baha'i community takes its signposts for individual and collective development. All of these aspects of Baha'i mythology are the basis for a coherent mythological landscape through which each human being must travel. The mythological universe created by Bahá'u'lláh frees the soul to experience and understand all mythologies, to explore and be awed by the physical universe understood by science and reason, and to undertake the universal adventure through which all may become fully human.
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Myths are metaphors that convey truth about the indescribable through powerful images and experiences. The mythological models synthesized by Joseph Campbell, such as the monomyth with its attendant metaphysical, cosmological, sociological and psychological purposes, underscore the fundamental unity of human spiritual experience. The Baha'i Faith employs three significant spiritual verities to fulfill the purposes of myth and to open for all Baha'is the full depth and range of the world's mythologies: The unknowable nature of the Ultimate Mystery ; the relativity of religious/cosmological truth ; and the necessity of science and the investigation of reality. The Baha'i Faith also possesses a sacred drama - history as myth - from which the Baha'i community takes its signposts for individual and collective development. All of these aspects of Baha'i mythology are the basis for a coherent mythological landscape through which each human being must travel. The mythological universe created by Bahá'u'lláh frees the soul to experience and understand all mythologies, to explore and be awed by the physical universe understood by science and reason, and to undertake the universal adventure through which all may become fully human.

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