The Bahá'í: The Religious Construction of a Global IdentityRutgers University Press, 2000 - 246 pages The Bahá'í Faith is one of the fastest growing, but least studied, of the world's religions. Adherents view themselves as united by a universal belief that transcends national boundaries. Michael McMullen examines how the Bahá'í develop and maintain this global identity. Taking the Bahá'í community in Atlanta, Georgia, as a case in point, his book is the first to comprehensively examine the tenets of this little-understood faith. McMullen notes that, to the Bahá'í, Buddha, Moses, Jesus, and Mohammed are all divinely sent teachers of 'the Truth', whose messages conform to the needs of their individual cultures and historical periods. But religion--which draws from the teaching of Bahá'u'lláh, a nineteenth-century Persian--encourages its members to think of themselves as global citizens. It also seeks to establish unity among its members through adherence to a Bahá'í worldview. By examining the Atlanta Bahá'í community, McMullen shows how this global identity is interpreted locally. He discusses such topics as: the organizational structure and authority relations in the Bahá'í "Administrative Order"; Bahá'í evangelicalism; and the social boundaries between Bahá'ís and the wider culture. |
From inside the book
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... race unity efforts of Atlanta Bahá'ís from the 1920s to the 1960s . A summary of this research can be found in chapter 8. My thanks to the Atlanta Bahá'í Archives committee for granting me access to these records . ( 3 ) To flesh out ...
... race as you rep- resent has assembled at this commemorative event is in ... unity and fellowship was reinforced not only by official events , symbols ... unity and peace outlined in Bahá'í scriptures . Bahá'ís feel that this global ...
... race unity efforts in the Atlanta context and its relationship to a global Bahá'í identity ( chapter 8 ) . Throughout the text , I have used the term " Atlanta Bahá'í community " sometimes to refer to the whole metropolitan Atlanta ...
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Contents
Carriers and Converts | 15 |
The Bahaf Administrative Order | 34 |
Authority in the Administrative Order | 56 |
Personal Devotion and Organizational Participation | 76 |
Boundaries and Identity | 109 |
Teaching the Bahaf Faith | 126 |
Thinking Globally Acting Locally | 152 |
Conclusion | 175 |
Atlanta Bahaf Questionnaire | 185 |
Historical Overview | 193 |
The Bahai Calendar | 197 |
Notes | 199 |
229 | |
243 | |
Other editions - View all
The Bahá'í: The Religious Construction of a Global Identity Michael McMullen No preview available - 2000 |