- progressively nurture and refine essential capacities, giving rise to
- simple acts of service at first,
- leading to more elaborate patterns of action, which in turn demanded
- the development of capacities still more complex.
- In this way, a systematic process of human resource development and community building has been started in thousands of clusters—and, in many of them, become far advanced.
- The focus has not been solely on the individual believer, or the community, or the institutions of the Faith; all three inseparable participants in the evolution of the new World Order are being stimulated by the spiritual forces released through the unfoldment of the Divine Plan.
- The signs of their progress are more and more apparent:
- in the confidence that countless believers have acquired to share accounts of Bahá’u’lláh’s life and discuss the implications of His Revelation and peerless Covenant;
- in the growing contingents of souls who, as a result, have been attracted to His Cause and are contributing to the achievement of His unifying vision;
- in the ability of Bahá’ís and their friends, at the very grassroots of the community, to describe in eloquent terms their experience of a process capable of transforming character and shaping social existence;
- in the significantly larger numbers of those indigenous to a country who, as members of Bahá’í institutions and agencies, are now guiding the affairs of their communities;
- in the reliable, generous, and sacrificial giving to the Fund, so vital for sustaining the advancement of the Faith;
- in the unprecedented efflorescence of individual initiative and collective action in support of community- building activities;
- in the enthusiasm of so many selfless souls in the prime of youth who are bringing immense vigour to this work, notably by tending to the spiritual education of younger generations;
- in the enhancement of the devotional character of the community through regular gatherings for worship;
- in the rise in capacity at all levels of Bahá’í administration;
- in the readiness of institutions, agencies, and individuals to think in terms of process, to read their immediate reality and assess their resources in the places where they live, and to make plans on that basis;
- in the now familiar dynamic of study, consultation, action, and reflection that has cultivated an instinctive posture of learning;
- in the mounting appreciation for what it means to give effect to the Teachings through social action;
- in the multiplying opportunities being sought and seized to offer a Bahá’í perspective on discourses prevalent in society;
- in the awareness of a global community that, in all its endeavours, it is hastening the emergence of divine civilization by manifesting the society- building power inherent in the Cause;
- indeed, in the friends’ growing consciousness that their efforts
- to foster inner transformation,
- to widen the circle of unity,
- to collaborate with others in the field of service,
- to help populations take charge of their own spiritual, social, and economic development—and, through all such efforts,
- to bring about the betterment of the world—express the very purpose of religion itself.
- The Universal House of Justice (Ridvan 2016)