The Bahá'í Faith is the youngest of the world's
independent religions. Its founder, Bahá’u’lláh (1817-1892), is regarded by
Bahá'ís as the most recent in the line of Messengers of God that stretches
back beyond recorded time. In just over a century-and-a-half it has
established itself as the world's second most widespread religion (after
Christianity) and it is now the eighth-largest organised religion (these
statements come from non-Bahá'í scholars, by the way, not from us).
The central theme of Bahá'u'lláh's message
is that humanity is one single race and that the day has come for its
unification in one global society. God, Bahá'u'lláh said, has set in motion
historical forces that are breaking down traditional barriers of race,
class, creed, and nation and that will, in time, give birth to a universal
civilization. The principal challenge facing the peoples of the earth is to
accept the fact of their oneness and to assist the processes of unification.
Bahá'u'lláh taught that there is one God
whose successive revelations of His will to humanity have been the chief
civilizing force in history. The agents of this process have been the Divine
Messengers whom people have seen chiefly as the founders of separate
religious systems but whose common purpose has been to bring the human race
to spiritual and moral maturity. To find out more about the Bahá'í Faith and
its teachings go to the Links page.