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CLIX: Consider the pettiness of men's minds. They
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Consider the pettiness of men's minds. They ask for that which injureth them, and cast away the
thing that profiteth them. They are, indeed, of those
that are far astray. We find some men desiring liberty,
and priding themselves therein. Such men are in the
depths of ignorance. |
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Liberty must, in the end, lead to sedition, whose
flames none can quench. Thus warneth you He Who
is the Reckoner, the All-Knowing. Know ye that the
embodiment of liberty and its symbol is the animal.
That which beseemeth man is submission unto such
restraints as will protect him from his own ignorance,
and guard him against the harm of the mischief-maker.
Liberty causeth man to overstep the
bounds of propriety, and to infringe on the dignity
of his station. It debaseth him to the level of extreme
depravity and wickedness. |
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Regard men as a flock of sheep that need a shepherd
for their protection. This, verily, is the truth,
the certain truth. We approve of liberty in certain
circumstances, and refuse to sanction it in others.
We, verily, are the All-Knowing. |
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Say: True liberty consisteth in man's submission
unto My commandments, little as ye know it. Were
men to observe that which We have sent down unto
them from the Heaven of Revelation, they would, of
a certainty, attain unto perfect liberty. Happy is the
man that hath apprehended the Purpose of God in
whatever He hath revealed from the Heaven of His
Will, that pervadeth all created things. Say: The
liberty that profiteth you is to be found nowhere
except in complete servitude unto God, the Eternal
Truth. Whoso hath tasted of its sweetness will refuse
to barter it for all the dominion of earth and heaven. |
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