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LXXXIV: Regard thou the one true God as One
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1 |
Regard thou the one true God as One Who is apart from, and immeasurably exalted above,
all created things. The whole universe reflecteth His
glory, while He is Himself independent of, and
transcendeth His creatures. This is the true meaning
of Divine unity. He Who is the Eternal Truth is the
one Power Who exerciseth undisputed sovereignty
over the world of being, Whose image is reflected in
the mirror of the entire creation. All existence is
dependent upon Him, and from Him is derived the
source of the sustenance of all things. This is what
is meant by Divine unity; this is its fundamental
principle. |
2 |
Some, deluded by their idle fancies, have conceived
all created things as associates and partners of God,
and imagined themselves to be the exponents of His
unity. By Him Who is the one true God! Such men
have been, and will continue to remain, the victims
of blind imitation, and are to be numbered with them
that have restricted and limited the conception of
God. |
3 |
He is a true believer in Divine unity who, far from
confusing duality with oneness, refuseth to allow any
notion of multiplicity to becloud his conception of
the singleness of God, who will regard the Divine
Being as One Who, by His very nature, transcendeth
the limitations of numbers. |
4 |
The essence of belief in Divine unity consisteth in
regarding Him Who is the Manifestation of God and
Him Who is the invisible, the inaccessible, the unknowable
Essence as one and the same. By this is
meant that whatever pertaineth to the former, all
His acts and doings, whatever He ordaineth or forbiddeth,
should be considered, in all their aspects,
and under all circumstances, and without any reservation,
as identical with the Will of God Himself.
This is the loftiest station to which a true believer in
the unity of God can ever hope to attain. Blessed is
the man that reacheth this station, and is of them
that are steadfast in their belief. |
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