Skip to main content

Gleanings — §273

Arabic source with Shoghi Effendi’s authorized English translation. Paragraph 273 of 729.

Source (Arabic)

علیها صلواتي ورحمتي وتکبیري وبهائي وإنّي بنفسی لأکون دیّة إبنها وإذا في سرادق عظمتي وکبریائي بوجه تستضيء منه الحوریّات في الغرفات ثمّ أهل الفردوس وأهل مداین القدس لو یراه أحد یقول إنّ هذا إلّا ملك کریم...

Shoghi Effendi Translation

On her be My blessings, and My mercy, and My praise, and My glory. I Myself shall atone for the loss of her son — a son who now dwelleth within the tabernacle of My majesty and glory, and whose face beameth with a light that envelopeth with its radiance the Maids of Heaven in their celestial chambers, and beyond them the inmates of My Paradise, and the denizens of the Cities of Holiness. Were any eye to gaze on his face, he would exclaim: “Lo, this is no other than a noble angel!”

Translation Notes

علیها
ʿlíhá ʿ-l-y “on”

literal: on

SE rendered علیها (ʿlíhá)صلواتي (ṣlúátí)ورحمتي (wrḥmtí)وتکبیري (wtkbírí)وبهائي (wbháʾí) as “On, My blessings, My mercy, My praise, My glory”

aid 50% convulsed 50%
بنفسی
bnfsí n-f-s

literal: self; soul; souls

SE rendered ورحمتي (wrḥmtí)وتکبیري (wtkbírí)وبهائي (wbháʾí)وإنّي (wʾinní)بنفسی (bnfsí)لأکون (lʾakún)دیّة (dídh)إبنها (ʾibnhá)وإذا (wʾidhá) as “My mercy, My praise, My glory, I Myself, shall atone for the loss, her son, now”

myself 28% soul 15% one 14% man 10% anyone 8% any 8% mine 5% self 5% life 3% souls 3%
دیّة
dídh d-w-y

literal: two-hundred; blood-money; medicine/remedy

SE rendered وتکبیري (wtkbírí)وبهائي (wbháʾí)وإنّي (wʾinní)بنفسی (bnfsí)لأکون (lʾakún)دیّة (dídh)إبنها (ʾibnhá)وإذا (wʾidhá)سرادق (srádq)عظمتي (ʿẓmtí) as “My praise, My glory, I Myself, shall atone for the loss, her son, now, tabernacle, majesty”

hundred 20% salve 20% whose 20% healing 20% remedy 20%
أحد
ʾaḥd ʾ-ḥ-d

literal: one; anyone; oneness

SE rendered الفردوس (al-frdús)وأهل (wʾahl)مداین (mdáyn)القدس (al-qds)لو (lú)یراه (yráh)أحد (ʾaḥd)یقول (yqúl)ملك (mlk)کریم (krím) as “Paradise, denizens, Cities, Holiness, Were, any eye to gaze, exclaim, angel!”, noble”

one 28% any 17% anyone 15% none 13% man 13% neighbor 4% incomparable 2% alone 2% another’s 2% king 2%

Model Translations by Shoghi Effendi

Epistle to the Son of the Wolf cover

Epistle to the Son of the Wolf

Bahá’u’lláh

The last outstanding Tablet revealed by Bahá’u’lláh, written around 1891 and addressed to Shaykh Muḥammad-Taqí of Iṣfahán. It calls upon that rapacious priest to repent, quotes the most celebrated passages from Bahá’u’lláh’s own writings, and adduces proofs establishing the validity of His Cause.

268 ¶

Fire Tablet cover

Fire Tablet

Bahá’u’lláh

Revealed in late 1871 during a period of severe hardship in ‘Akká, this Tablet takes the form of an anguished dialogue between Bahá’u’lláh and God. Questions about the sufferings of the faithful are answered with divine assurances, building to a crescendo of triumph over tribulation.

50 ¶

Kitáb-i-'Ahd cover

Kitáb-i-’Ahd

Bahá’u’lláh

The Book of the Covenant — Bahá’u’lláh’s Will and Testament, written entirely in His own hand and unsealed on the ninth day after His ascension. It designates ‘Abdu’l-Bahá as His successor and establishes what Shoghi Effendi called the mightiest Covenant in all religious history.

16 ¶

Kitáb-i-Íqán cover

Kitáb-i-Íqán

Bahá’u’lláh

The principal doctrinal work of the Faith, revealed in Baghdad within the space of two days and two nights in response to questions from the Báb’s maternal uncle. Shoghi Effendi described it as occupying a position unequalled by any work except the Kitáb-i-Aqdas — a model of Persian prose, at once original, chaste, vigorous, and remarkably lucid.

291 ¶

Prayers and Meditations cover

Prayers and Meditations

Bahá’u’lláh

Published in 1938, this companion volume to Gleanings contains 184 prayers and meditations selected by Shoghi Effendi from Bahá’u’lláh’s devotional writings revealed across successive exiles from Baghdad to ‘Akká. Shoghi Effendi described it as a volume whose perusal would deepen the spirit of devotion and faith.

858 ¶

Tablet of Aḥmad cover

Tablet of Aḥmad

Bahá’u’lláh

Revealed in Adrianople and addressed to a believer named Aḥmad, this Tablet has been invested by Bahá’u’lláh with a special potency and significance. Its central imagery draws on the metaphor of fire and water: “Be thou as a flame of fire to My enemies and a river of life eternal to My loved ones.”

17 ¶

Tablet of Carmel cover

Tablet of Carmel

Bahá’u’lláh

Revealed during a visit to Mount Carmel, this Tablet addresses the mountain directly and prophesies its future as the world spiritual and administrative center of the Faith. Shoghi Effendi designated it one of three foundational Charters. Its imagery of the Ark and the dwellers therein prefigures the Universal House of Justice.

5 ¶

Tablet of the Holy Mariner cover

Tablet of the Holy Mariner

Bahá’u’lláh

Chanted aloud in the outskirts of Baghdad just weeks before the Declaration in the Garden of Riḍván, its gloomy prognostications aroused the grave apprehensions of all who heard it. Only the Arabic portion has an authorized translation; the Persian portion remains untranslated.

57 ¶

The Hidden Words cover

The Hidden Words

Bahá’u’lláh

Seventy-one Arabic and eighty-two Persian aphorisms revealed around 1858 while walking along the banks of the Tigris in Baghdad. Originally designated the “Hidden Book of Fáṭimih,” Shoghi Effendi described it as a marvelous collection of gem-like utterances occupying a position of unsurpassed preeminence among the ethical writings of the Faith.

160 ¶

Will and Testament cover

Will and Testament

‘Abdu’l-Bahá

Written by ‘Abdu’l-Bahá in three parts between 1901 and 1908, opened and read after His passing on 28 November 1921. Shoghi Effendi designated it the Charter of the New World Order — the mightiest instrument forged to ensure the continuity of the three ages of the Bahá’í Dispensation.

59 ¶