Community outreach fuels area Baha?is

Though the established Circle of Light Baha’i School at Johns Hopkins University just resumed its centralized, September-through-May rounds of Sunday devotion and instruction, the 150-year-old unity faith it promotes is stressing greater local outreach in anticipation of the day when all religions will be one.

“The ‘promised day’ is a day for unity,” said Geri Lynn Peak, a Chinquapin Park Baha’i who regularly hosts youth study groups at her home. “It’s a day for us to break down our allegiance to nations and [races] — all of the illusions that we’ve constructed — and realize that there is one humanity, one world, and that we are brothers and sisters.”

Akin to the post-tribulation millennium of world peace expected by Christians, the presently unfolding “promised day” for Baha’is offers incentive to ramp up local worship, community service and educational activities — tenets, drawn from the world’s great religions, that provide the theological basis for the faith’s unifying vision.

The writings of two central figures — Baha’u’llah, the faith’s founder and purported successor to a line of prophets that includes Moses, Jesus and Muhammad, and the Bab, Baha’u’llah’s forerunner — form the basis of this pacifist, Persia-rooted faith of 5 million in 126 countries.

Faith-based study circles, devotional meetings, informational fireside chats, virtues-based children’s classes and responsibility-themed instruction for 11- to 14-year-olds — increasingly originated in the homes of 400 or so Baha’is in the Baltimore area — provide the vehicles of its vigorous vision quest.

“The Baha’i faith is for all mankind,” said Sandra Fishman, a Bel Air-Edison Baha’i and mother of six who holds weekly devotions at her home. “So if you have a centralized meeting place, say for children, we’re not providing opportunities for neighborhood children to come to classes.”

This month, especially, Peak said, will be a time of increased local outreach, as Baha’is will celebrate the birthday of the Bab on Oct. 20.

“Groups of Baha’i communities, which we call clusters, are all doing [similar] activities, focusing on neighborhood-level spiritual transformation to bring unity to neighborhoods,” Peak said. “The point of the Baha’i faith is unity, and you can’t have unity if people don’t know about it.”

Related Content