Bahá'í Quotes on Materialism  (highlighting added)
     Consider to what a remarkable extent the spirituality of people has been overcome by materialism so that spiritual susceptibility seems to have vanished, divine civilization become decadent, and guidance and knowledge of God no longer remain.  All are submerged in the sea of materialism.  Although some attend churches and temples of worship and devotion, it is in accordance with the traditions and imitations of their fathers and not for the investigation of reality.  For it is evident they have not found reality and are not engaged in its adoration.  They are holding to certain imitations which have descended to them from their fathers and ancestors. They have become accustomed to passing a certain length of time in temple worship and conforming to imitations and ceremonies. The proof of this is that the son of every Jewish father becomes a Jew and not a Christian; the son of every Muslim becomes a follower of Islam; the son of every Christian proves to be a Christian; the son of every Zoroastrian is a Zoroastrian, etc.  Therefore, religious faith and belief is merely a remnant of blind imitations which have descended through fathers and ancestors.  Because this man's father was a Jew, he considers himself a Jew.  Not that he has investigated reality and proved satisfactorily to himself that Judaism is right - nay, rather, he is aware that his forefathers have followed this course; therefore, he has held to it himself.
     The purpose of this is to explain that the darkness of imitations encompasses the world.  Every nation is holding to its traditional religious forms.  The light of reality is obscured.  Were these various nations to investigate reality, there is no doubt they would attain to it.  As reality is one, all nations would then become as one nation.  So long as they adhere to various imitations and are deprived of reality, strife and warfare will continue and rancor and sedition prevail.  If they investigate reality, neither enmity nor rancor will remain, and they will attain to the utmost concord among themselves.
(`Abdu'l-BahaPromulgation of Universal Peace, Page: 221-222)
 
August 17th, 1912
`Abdu'l-Baha's Talk at Green Acre Bahá'í School
Eliot, Maine
(Notes by Edna McKinney)
    The physical beauty of this place is very wonderful.  We hope that a spiritual charm may surround and halo it; then its beauty will be perfect.  There is a spiritual atmosphere manifest here particularly at sunset.
     In cities like New York the people are submerged in the sea of materialism.  Their sensibilities are attuned to material forces, their perceptions purely physical.  The animal energies predominate in their activities; all their thoughts are directed to material things; day and night they are devoted to the attractions of this world, without aspiration beyond the life that is vanishing and mortal.  In schools and temples of learning knowledge of the sciences acquired is based upon material observations only; there is no realization of Divinity in their methods and conclusions - all have reference to the world of matter.  They are not interested in attaining knowledge of the mysteries of God or understanding the secrets of the heavenly Kingdom; what they acquire is based altogether upon visible and tangible evidences.  Beyond these evidences they are without susceptibilities; they have no idea of the world of inner significances and are utterly out of touch with God, considering this an indication of reasonable attitude and philosophical judgement whereof they are self-sufficient and proud.
     As a matter of fact, this supposed excellence is possessed in its superlative degree by the animals.  . . . the donkey is the greatest scientist and the cow an accomplished naturalist, for they have obtained what they know without schooling and years of laborious study in colleges, trusting implicitly to the evidence of the senses and relying solely upon intuitive virtues.  The cow, for instance, is a lover of the visible and a believer in the tangible, contented and happy when pasture is plenty, perfectly serene, a blissful exponent of the transcendental school of philosophy.  Such is the status of the material philosophers, who glory in sharing the condition of the cow, imagining themselves in a lofty station.  Reflect upon their ignorance and blindness.
     Nay, rather, the virtue of man is this:  that he can investigate the ideals of the Kingdom and attain knowledge which is denied the animal in its limitation.  The station of man is this:  that he has the power to attain those ideals and thereby differentiate and consciously distinguish himself an infinite degree above the kingdoms of existence below him.
     The station of man is great, very great.  God has created man after His own image and likeness.  He has endowed him with a mighty power which is capable of discovering the mysteries of phenomena.  Through its use man is able to arrive at ideal conclusions instead of being restricted to the mere plane of sense impressions. As he possesses sense endowment in common with the animals, it is evident that he is distinguished above them by his conscious power of penetrating abstract realities.  He acquires divine wisdom; he searches out the mysteries of creation; he witnesses the radiance of omnipotence; he attains the second birth - that is to say, he is born out of the material world just as he is born of the mother; he attains to everlasting life; he draws nearer to God; his heart is replete with the love of God.  This is the foundation of the world of humanity; this is the image and likeness of God; this is the reality of man; otherwise, he is an animal.  Verily, God has created the animal in the image and likeness of man, for though man outwardly is human, yet in nature he possesses animal tendencies.
     You must endeavor to understand the mysteries of God, attain the ideal knowledge and arrive at the station of vision, acquiring directly from the Sun of Reality and receiving a destined portion from the ancient bestowal of God.
 (`Abdu'l-Baha:  Promulgation of Universal Peace, Pages: 261-263) 

September 1st, 1912
Talk at Home of Mr. and Mrs. William Sutherland Maxwell
716 Pine Avenue West, Montreal, Canada
(From Stenographic Notes)
     I am exceedingly happy to meet you.  Praise be to God!  I see before me souls who have unusual capability and the power of spiritual advancement.  In reality, the people of this continent possess great capacity; they are the cause of my happiness, and I ever pray that God may confirm and assist them to progress in all the degrees of existence.  As they have advanced along material lines, may they develop in idealistic degrees, for material advancement is fruitless without spiritual progress and not productive of everlasting results. For example, no matter how much the physical body of man is trained and developed, there will be no real progression in the human station unless the mind correspondingly advances.  No matter how much man may acquire material virtues, he will not be able to realize and express the highest possibilities of life without spiritual graces.  God has created all earthly things under a law of progression in material degrees, but He has created man and endowed him with powers of advancement toward spiritual and transcendental kingdoms.  He has not created material phenomena after His own image and likeness, but He has created man after that image and with potential power to attain that likeness.  He has distinguished man above all other created things.  All created things except man are captives of nature and the sense world, but in man there has been created an ideal power by which he may perceive intellectual or spiritual realities.  He has brought forth everything necessary for the life of this world, but man is a creation intended for the reflection of divine virtues.  Consider that the highest type of creation below man is the animal, which is superior to all degrees of life except man.  Manifestly, the animal has been created for the life of this world.  Its highest virtue is to express excellence in the material plane of existence.  The animal is perfect when its body is healthy and its physical senses are whole.  When it is characterized by the attributes of physical health, when its physical forces are in working order, when food and surrounding conditions minister to its needs, it has attained the ultimate perfection of its kingdom.  But man does not depend upon these things for his virtues.  No matter how perfect his health and physical powers, if that is all, he has not yet risen above the degree of a perfect animal.  Beyond and above this, God has opened the doors of ideal virtues and attainments before the face of man.  He has created in his being the mysteries of the divine Kingdom.  He has bestowed upon him the power of intellect so that through the attribute of reason, when fortified by the Holy Spirit, he may penetrate and discover ideal realities and become informed of the mysteries of the world of significances.  As this power to penetrate the ideal knowledges is superhuman, supernatural, man becomes the collective center of spiritual as well as material forces so that the divine spirit may manifest itself in his being, the effulgences of the Kingdom shine within the sanctuary of his heart, the signs of the attributes and perfections of God reveal themselves in a newness of life, the everlasting glory and eternal existence be attained, the knowledge of God illumine, and the mysteries of the realm of might be unsealed.
     Man is like unto this lamp, but the effulgences of the Kingdom are like the rays of the lamp.  Man is like unto the glass, but spiritual splendors are like unto the light within the glass.  No matter how translucent the glass may be, as long as there is no light within, it remains dark.  Likewise, man, no matter how much he advances in material accomplishments, will remain like the glass without light if he is deprived of the spiritual virtues.  Material virtues are like unto a perfect body, but this body is in need of the spirit.  No matter how handsome and perfect the body may be, if it is deprived of the spirit and its animus, it is dead.  But when that same body is affiliated with the spirit and expressing life, perfection and virtue become realized in it.  Deprived of the Holy Spirit and its bounties, man is spiritually dead.
     Children, for instance, no matter how good and pure, no matter how healthy their bodies, are, nevertheless, considered imperfect because the power of intellect is not fully manifest in them.  When the intellectual power fully displays its influences and they attain to the age of maturity, they are considered as perfect.  Likewise, man, no matter how much he may advance in worldly affairs and make progress in material civilization, is imperfect unless he is quickened by the bounties of the Holy Spirit; for it is evident that until he receives that divine impetus he is ignorant and deprived.  For this reason Jesus Christ said, "Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God."  By this Christ meant that unless man is released from the material world, freed from the captivity of materialism and receiving a portion of the bounties of the spiritual world, he shall be deprived of the bestowals and favors of the Kingdom of God, and the utmost we can say of him is that he is a perfect animal.  No one can rightly call him a man.  In another place He said, "That which is born of the flesh is flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit."  The meaning of this is that if man is a captive of nature, he is like unto an animal because he is only a body physically born - that is, he belongs to the world of matter and remains subject to the law and control of nature. But if he is baptized with the Holy Spirit, if he is freed from the bondage of nature, released from animalistic tendencies and advanced in the human realm, he is fitted to enter into the divine Kingdom.  The world of the Kingdom is the realm of divine bestowals and the bounties of God.  It is attainment of the highest virtues of humanity; it is nearness to God; it is capacity to receive the bounties of the ancient Lord.  When man advances to this station, he attains the second birth.  Before his first or physical birth man was in the world of the matrix [womb].  He had no knowledge of this world; his eyes could not see; his ears could not hear.  When he was born from the world of the matrix, he beheld another world.  The sun was shining with its splendors, the moon radiant in the heavens, the stars twinkling in the expansive firmament, the seas surging, trees verdant and green, all kinds of creatures enjoying life here, infinite bounties prepared for him.  In the world of the matrix none of these things existed.  In that world he had no knowledge of this vast range of existence; nay, rather, he would have denied the reality of this world.  But after his birth he began to open his eyes and behold the wonders of this illimitable universe.  Similarly, as long as man is in the matrix of the human world, as long as he is the captive of nature, he is out of touch and without knowledge of the universe of the Kingdom.  If he attains rebirth while in the world of nature, he will become informed of the divine world.  He will observe that another and a higher world exists.  Wonderful bounties descend; eternal life awaits; everlasting glory surrounds him.  All the signs of reality and greatness are there.  He will see the lights of God.  All these experiences will be his when he is born out of the world of nature into the divine world.  Therefore, for the perfect man there are two kinds of birth:  the first, physical birth, is from the matrix of the mother; the second, or spiritual birth, is from the world of nature.  In both he is without knowledge of the new world of existence he is entering.  Therefore, rebirth means his release from the captivity of nature, freedom from attachment to this mortal and material life.  This is the second, or spiritual, birth of which Jesus Christ spoke in the Gospels.
     The majority of people are captives in the matrix of nature, submerged in the sea of materiality.  We must pray that they may be reborn, that they may attain insight and spiritual hearing, that they may receive the gift of another heart, a new transcendent power, and in the eternal world the unending bestowal of divine bounties.
     Today the world of humanity is walking in darkness because it is out of touch with the world of God.  That is why we do not see the signs of God in the hearts of men.  The power of the Holy Spirit has no influence.  When a divine spiritual illumination becomes manifest in the world of humanity, when divine instruction and guidance appear, then enlightenment follows, a new spirit is realized within, a new power descends, and a new life is given.  It is like the birth from the animal kingdom into the kingdom of man.  When man acquires these virtues, the oneness of the world of humanity will be revealed, the banner of international peace will be upraised, equality between all mankind will be realized, and the Orient and Occident will become one.  Then will the justice of God become manifest, all humanity will appear as the members of one family, and every member of that family will be consecrated to cooperation and mutual assistance.  The lights of the love of God will shine; eternal happiness will be unveiled; everlasting joy and spiritual delight will be attained.
     I will pray, and you must pray, likewise, that such heavenly bounty may be realized; that strife and enmity may be banished, warfare and bloodshed taken away; that hearts may attain ideal communication and that all people may drink from the same fountain. May they receive their knowledge from the same divine source.  May all hearts become illumined with the rays of the Sun of Reality; may all of them enter the university of God, acquire spiritual virtues and seek for themselves heavenly bounties.  Then this material, phenomenal world will become the mirror of the world of God, and within this pure mirror the divine virtues of the realm of might will be reflected.
 (`Abdu'l-Baha:  Promulgation of Universal Peace, Pages: 302-305)

     Observe how darkness has overspread the world.  In every corner of the earth there is strife, discord and warfare of some kind. Mankind is submerged in the sea of materialism and occupied with the affairs of this world.  They have no thought beyond earthly possessions and manifest no desire save the passions of this fleeting, mortal existence.  Their utmost purpose is the attainment of material livelihood, physical comforts and worldly enjoyments such as constitute the happiness of the animal world rather than the world of man.
    The honor of man is through the attainment of the knowledge of God; his happiness is from the love of God; his joy is in the glad tidings of God; his greatness is dependent upon his servitude to God.  The highest development of man is his entrance into the divine Kingdom, and the outcome of this human existence is the nucleus and essence of eternal life.  If man is bereft of the divine bestowals and if his enjoyment and happiness are restricted to his material inclinations, what distinction or difference is there between the animal and himself?  In fact, the animal's happiness is greater, for its wants are fewer and its means of livelihood easier to acquire.  Although it is necessary for man to strive for material needs and comforts, his real need is the acquisition of the bounties of God.  If he is bereft of divine bounties, spiritual susceptibilities and heavenly glad tidings, the life of man in this world has not yielded any worthy fruit.  While possessing physical life, he should lay hold of the life spiritual, and together with bodily comforts and happiness, he should enjoy divine pleasures and content.  Then is man worthy of the title man...  (`Abdu'l-Baha:  Promulgation of Universal Peace, Page: 335)

 It is certain that spirituality will defeat materialism, that the heavenly will subdue the human, and that through divine education the masses of mankind generally will take great steps forward in all degrees of life - except for those who are blind and deaf and mute and dead.  How can such as they understand the light?  Though the sun's rays illumine every darkest corner of the globe, still the blind can have no share in the glory, and though the rain of heavenly mercy come down in torrents over all the earth, no shrub or flower will bloom from a barren land.
 (`Abdu'l-Baha:  Selections from the Writings of `Abdu'l-Baha, Pages: 191-192)

Let not, therefore, those who are to participate so predominantly in the birth of that world civilization, which is the direct offspring of their Faith, imagine for a moment that for some mysterious purpose or by any reason of inherent excellence or special merit Baha'u'llah has chosen to confer upon their country [United States] and people so great and lasting a distinction.  It is precisely by reason of the patent evils which, notwithstanding its other admittedly great characteristics and achievements, an excessive and binding materialism has unfortunately engendered within it that the Author of their Faith and the Center of His Covenant have singled it out to become the standard-bearer of the New World Order envisaged in their writings.  It is by such means as this that Baha'u'llah can best demonstrate to a heedless generation His almighty power to raise up from the very midst of a people, immersed in a sea of materialism, a prey to one of the most virulent and long-standing forms of racial prejudice, and notorious for its political corruption, lawlessness and laxity in moral standards, men and women who, as time goes by, will increasingly exemplify those essential virtues of self-renunciation, of moral rectitude, of chastity, of indiscriminating fellowship, of holy discipline, and of spiritual insight that will fit them for the preponderating share they will have in calling into being that World Order and that World Civilization of which their country, no less than the entire human race, stands in desperate need.
 (Shoghi Effendi:  The Advent of Divine Justice, Pages: 19-20)

     A world, dimmed by the steadily dying-out light of religion, heaving with the explosive forces of a blind and triumphant nationalism; scorched with the fires of pitiless persecution, whether racial or religious; deluded by the false theories and doctrines that threaten to supplant the worship of God and the sanctification of His laws; enervated by a rampant and brutal materialism; disintegrating through the corrosive influence of moral and spiritual decadence; and enmeshed in the coils of economic anarchy and strife - such is the spectacle presented to men's eyes, as a result of the sweeping changes which this revolutionizing Force, as yet in the initial stage of its operation, is now producing in the life of the entire planet.
 (Shoghi Effendi:  The Advent of Divine Justice, Page: 47)
 
AMERICA PASSING THROUGH CRISIS 
     Moreover, the country of which it forms a part is passing through a crisis which, in its spiritual, moral, social and political aspects, is of extreme seriousness - a seriousness which to a superficial observer is liable to be dangerously underestimated.
     The steady and alarming deterioration in the standard of morality as exemplified by the appalling increase of crime, by political corruption in ever widening and ever higher circles, by the loosening of the sacred ties of marriage, by the inordinate craving for pleasure and diversion, and by the marked and progressive slackening of parental control, is no doubt the most arresting and distressing aspect of the decline that has set in, and can be clearly perceived, in the fortunes of the entire nation.
     Parallel with this, and pervading all departments of life - an evil which the nation, and indeed all those within the capitalist system, though to a lesser degree, share with that state and its satellites regarded as the sworn enemies of that system - is the crass materialism, which lays excessive and ever-increasing emphasis on material well-being, forgetful of those things of the spirit on which alone a sure and stable foundation can be laid for human society. It is this same cancerous materialism, born originally in Europe, carried to excess in the North American continent, contaminating the Asiatic peoples and nations, spreading its ominous tentacles to the borders of Africa, and now invading its very heart, which Baha'u'llah in unequivocal and emphatic language denounced in His Writings, comparing it to a devouring flame and regarding it as the chief factor in precipitating the dire ordeals and world-shaking crises that must necessarily involve the burning of cities and the spread of terror and consternation in the hearts of men.  Indeed a foretaste of the devastation which this consuming fire will wreak upon the world, and with which it will lay waste the cities of the nations participating in this tragic world-engulfing contest, has been afforded by the last World War, marking the second stage in the global havoc which humanity, forgetful of its God and heedless of the clear warnings uttered by His appointed Messenger for this day, must, alas, inevitably experience.  It is this same all-pervasive, pernicious materialism against which the voice of the Center of Baha'u'llah's Covenant was raised, with pathetic persistence, from platform and pulpit, in His addresses to the heedless multitudes, which, on the morrow of His fateful visit to both Europe and America, found themselves suddenly swept into the vortex of a tempest which in its range and severity was unsurpassed in the world's history.
     Collateral with this ominous laxity in morals, and this progressive stress laid on man's material pursuits and well-being, is the darkening of the political horizon, as witnessed by the widening of the gulf separating the protagonists of two antagonistic schools of thought which, however divergent in their ideologies, are to be commonly condemned by the upholders of the standard of the Faith of Baha'u'llah for their materialistic philosophies and their neglect of those spiritual values and eternal verities on which alone a stable and flourishing civilization can be ultimately established.  The multiplication, the diversity and the increasing destructive power of armaments to which both sides, in this world contest, caught in a whirlpool of fear, suspicion and hatred, are rapidly contributing; the outbreak of two successive bloody conflicts, entangling still further the American nation in the affairs of a distracted world, entailing a considerable loss in blood and treasure, swelling the national budget and progressively depreciating the currency of the state; the confusion, the vacillation, the suspicions besetting the European and Asiatic nations in their attitude to the American nation; the overwhelming accretion of strength to the arch enemy of the system championed by the American Union in consequence of the re-alignment of the powers in the Asiatic continent and particularly in the Far East - these have, moreover, contributed their share, in recent years, to the deterioration of a situation which, if not remedied, is bound to involve the American nation in a catastrophe of undreamed-of dimensions and of untold consequences to the social structure, the standard and conception of the American people and government.
     No less serious is the stress and strain imposed on the fabric of American society through the fundamental and persistent neglect, by the governed and governors alike, of the supreme, the inescapable and urgent duty - so repeatedly and graphically represented and stressed by Abdu'l-Baha in His arraignment of the basic weaknesses in the social fabric of the nation - of remedying, while there is yet time, through a revolutionary change in the concept and attitude of the average white American toward his Negro fellow citizen, a situation which, if allowed to drift, will, in the words of Abdu'l-Baha, cause the streets of American cities to run with blood, aggravating thereby the havoc which the fearful weapons of destruction, raining from the air, and amassed by a ruthless, a vigilant, a powerful and inveterate enemy, will wreak upon those same cities.
     The American nation, of which the community of the Most Great Name forms as yet a negligible and infinitesimal part, stands, indeed, from whichever angle one observes its immediate fortunes, in grave peril.  The woes and tribulations which threaten it are partly avoidable, but mostly inevitable and God-sent, for by reason of them a government and people clinging tenaciously to the obsolescent doctrine of absolute sovereignty and upholding a political system, manifestly at variance with the needs of a world already contracted into a neighborhood and crying out for unity, will find itself purged of its anachronistic conceptions, and prepared to play a preponderating role, as foretold by Abdu'l-Baha, in the hoisting of the standard of the Lesser Peace, in the unification of mankind, and in the establishment of a world federal government on this planet.  These same fiery tribulations will not only firmly weld the American nation to its sister nations in both hemispheres, but will through their cleansing effect, purge it thoroughly of the accumulated dross which ingrained racial prejudice, rampant materialism, widespread ungodliness and moral laxity have combined, in the course of successive generations, to produce, and which have prevented her thus far from assuming the role of world spiritual leadership forecast by Abdu'l-Baha's unerring pen - a role which she is bound to fulfill through travail and sorrow.
 (Shoghi Effendi:  Citadel of Faith, Pages: 124-127)

The gross materialism that engulfs the entire nation at the present hour; the attachment to worldly things that enshrouds the souls of men; the fears and anxieties that distract their minds; the pleasure and dissipations that fill their time, the prejudices and animosities that darken their outlook, the apathy and lethargy that paralyze their spiritual faculties - these are among the formidable obstacles that stand in the path of every would-be warrior in the service of Baha'u'llah, obstacles which he must battle against and surmount in his crusade for the redemption of his own countrymen.
 (Shoghi Effendi:  Citadel of Faith, Page: 149)
 
      "Already a few among the protagonists of the Christian Religion admit the gravity of the situation that confronts them.  'A wave of materialism is sweeping round the world'; is the testimony of its missionaries, as witnessed by the text of their official reports, 'the drive and pressure of modern industrialism, which are penetrating even the forests of Central Africa and the plains of Central Asia, make men everywhere dependent on, and preoccupied with, material things.  At home the Church has talked, perhaps too glibly, in pulpit or on platform of the menace of secularism; though even in England we can catch more than a glimpse of its meaning.  But to the Church overseas these things are grim realities, enemies with which it is at grips...  The Church has a new danger to face in land after land -- determined and hostile attack.  From Soviet Russia a definitely anti-religious Communism is pushing west into Europe and America, East into Persia, India, China and Japan.  It is an economic theory, definitely harnessed to disbelief in God.  It is a religious irreligion...  It has a passionate sense of mission, and is carrying on its anti-God campaign at the Church's base at home, as well as launching its offensive against its front-line in non-Christian lands.  Such a conscious, avowed, organized attack against religion in general and Christianity in particular is something new in history. Equally deliberate in some lands in its determined hostility to Christianity is another form of social and political faith - nationalism. But the nationalist attack on Christianity, unlike Communism, is often bound up with some form of national religion - with Islam in Persia and Egypt, with Buddhism in Ceylon, while the struggle for communal rights in India is allied with a revival both of Hinduism and Islam.'
      I need not attempt in this connection an exposition of the origin and character of those economic theories and political philosophies of the post-war period, that have directly and indirectly exerted, and are still exerting, their pernicious influence on the institutions and beliefs connected with one of the most widely-spread and best organized religious systems of the world.  It is with their influence rather than with their origin that I am chiefly concerned.  The excessive growth of industrialism and its attendant evils - as the aforementioned quotation bears witness - the aggressive policies initiated and the persistent efforts exerted by the inspirers and organizers of the Communist movement; the intensification of a militant nationalism, associated in certain countries with a systematized work of defamation against all forms of ecclesiastical influence, have no doubt contributed to the de-Christianization of the masses, and been responsible for a notable decline in the authority, the prestige and power of the Church.  'The whole conception of God,' the persecutors of the Christian Religion have insistently proclaimed, 'is a conception derived from the ancient oriental despotisms.  It is a conception quite unworthy of free men.'  'Religion,' one of their leaders has asserted, 'is an opiate of the people.'  'Religion,' declares the text of their official publications, 'is a brutalization of the people.  Education must be so directed as to efface from the people's minds this humiliation and this idiocy.'
     The Hegelian philosophy which, in other countries, has, in the form of an intolerant and militant nationalism, insisted on deifying the state, has inculcated the war-spirit, and incited to racial animosity, has, likewise, led to a marked weakening of the Church and to a grave diminution of its spiritual influence.  Unlike the bold offensive which an avowedly atheistic movement had chosen to launch against it, both within the Soviet union and beyond its confines, this nationalistic philosophy, which Christian rulers and governments have upheld, is an attack directed against the Church by those who were previously its professed adherents, a betrayal of its cause by its own kith and kin.  It was being stabbed by an alien and militant atheism from without, and by the preachers of a heretical doctrine from within.  Both of these forces, each operating in its own sphere and using its own weapons and methods, have moreover been greatly assisted and encouraged by the prevailing spirit of modernism, with its emphasis on a purely materialistic philosophy, which, as it diffuses itself, tends increasingly to divorce religion from man's daily life."
 (Shoghi Effendi:  World Order of Baha'u'llah, Pages: 181-183)

"People are so markedly lacking in spirituality these days that the Baha'is should consciously guard themselves against being caught in what one might call the undertow of materialism and atheism, sweeping the world these days.  Skepticism, cynicism, disbelief, immorality and hard-heartedness are rife, and as the friends are those who stand for the antithesis of all these things they should beware lest the atmosphere of the present world affects them without their being conscious of it."
(From a letter written on behalf of Shoghi Effendi to an individual, Nov. 19, 1945 -- Lights of Guidance, p. 543)

"Whoso cleaveth to justice, can, under no circumstances, transgress the limits of moderation.  He discerneth the truth in all things, through the guidance of Him Who is the All-Seeing.  The civilization, so often vaunted by the learned exponents of arts and sciences, will, if allowed to overleap the bounds of moderation, bring great evil upon men.  Thus warneth you He Who is the All-Knowing.  If carried to excess, civilization will prove as prolific a source of evil as it had been of goodness when kept within the restraints of moderation.  Meditate on this, O people, and be not of them that wander distraught in the wilderness of error.  The day is approaching when its flame will devour the cities, when the Tongue of Grandeur will proclaim:  'The Kingdom is God's, the Almighty, the All-Praised!'"    [Back to Shoghi Effendi's reference to the "devouring flame," above -- click here.]
 (Gleanings from the Writings of Baha'u'llah, Pages: 342-343)

Materialism is not equated with wealth in the Baha'i writings.  The following Baha'i quotes appear to shed light on the distinction between being wealthy and being materialistic:

          "The first Taraz and the first effulgence which hath dawned from the horizon of the Mother Book is that man should know his own self and recognize that which leadeth unto loftiness or lowliness, glory or abasement, wealth or poverty.  Having attained the stage of fulfilment and reached his maturity, man standeth in need of wealth, and such wealth as he acquireth through crafts or professions is commendable and praiseworthy in the estimation of men of wisdom, and especially in the eyes of servants who dedicate themselves to the education of the world and to the edification of its peoples. They are, in truth, cup-bearers of the life-giving water of knowledge and guides unto the ideal way.  They direct the peoples of the world to the straight path and acquaint them with that which is conducive to human upliftment and exaltation.  The straight path is the one which guideth man to the dayspring of perception and to the dawning-place of true understanding and leadeth him to that which will redound to glory, honour and greatness."
 (Baha'u'llah:  Tablets of Baha'u'llah, Pages: 34-35)

"O SON OF MAN! Thou dost wish for gold and I desire thy freedom from it.  Thou thinkest thyself rich in its possession, and I recognize thy wealth in thy sanctity therefrom.  By My life!  This is My knowledge, and that is thy fancy; how can My way accord with thine?"
 (Baha'u'llah:  Arabic Hidden Words, Page: 56)

"Know ye that by 'the world' is meant your unawareness of Him Who is your Maker, and your absorption in aught else but Him.  The 'life to come,' on the other hand, signifieth the things that give you a safe approach to God, the All-Glorious, the Incomparable. Whatsoever deterreth you, in this Day, from loving God is nothing but the world.  Flee it, that ye may be numbered with the blest.  Should a man wish to adorn himself with the ornaments of the earth, to wear its apparels, or partake of the benefits it can bestow, no harm can befall him, if he alloweth nothing whatever to intervene between him and God, for God hath ordained every good thing, whether created in the heavens or in the earth, for such of His servants as truly believe in Him.  Eat ye, O people, of the good things which God hath allowed you, and deprive not yourselves from His wondrous bounties. Render thanks and praise unto Him, and be of them that are truly thankful."
(Baha'u'llah:  Gleanings, Page: 276)

     "The second attribute of perfection is justice and impartiality. This means to have no regard for one's own personal benefits and selfish advantages, and to carry out the laws of God without the slightest concern for anything else.  It means to see one's self as only one of the servants of God, the All-Possessing, and except for aspiring to spiritual distinction, never attempting to be singled out from the others.  It means to consider the welfare of the community as one's own.  It means, in brief, to regard humanity as a single individual, and one's own self as a member of that corporeal form, and to know of a certainty that if pain or injury afflicts any member of that body, it must inevitably result in suffering for all the rest.
      The third requirement of perfection is to arise with complete sincerity and purity of purpose to educate the masses:  to exert the utmost effort to instruct them in the various branches of learning and useful sciences, to encourage the development of modern progress, to widen the scope of commerce, industry and the arts, to further such measures as will increase the people's wealth.  For the mass of the population is uninformed as to these vital agencies which would constitute an immediate remedy for society's chronic ills."
 (`Abdu'l-Baha:  Secret of Divine Civilization, Page: 39)

   "I desire distinction for you.  The Baha'is must be distinguished from others of humanity.  But this distinction must not depend upon wealth - that they should become more affluent than other people. I do not desire for you financial distinction.  It is not an ordinary distinction I desire; not scientific, commercial, industrial distinction. For you I desire spiritual distinction - that is, you must become eminent and distinguished in morals.  In the love of God you must become distinguished from all else.  You must become distinguished for loving humanity, for unity and accord, for love and justice.  In brief, you must become distinguished in all the virtues of the human world - for faithfulness and sincerity, for justice and fidelity, for firmness and steadfastness, for philanthropic deeds and service to the human world, for love toward every human being, for unity and accord with all people, for removing prejudices and promoting international peace.  Finally, you must become distinguished for heavenly illumination and for acquiring the bestowals of God.  I desire this distinction for you.  This must be the point of distinction among you."
 (`Abdu'l-Baha:  Promulgation of Universal Peace, Page: 190)
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