Abstract
The realization of universal peace is a central teaching of the Bahá’í Faith and permeates individual and collective Bahá’í practice. This article explores this teaching through the lens of culture as a constructive social process based on shared beliefs and values and their expression. It begins by outlining a Bahá’í concept of peace and then turns to the question of how Bahá’í teachings foster a culture of peace. It focuses on three elements central to a Bahá’í approach to a culture of peace, outlined as follows: (i) the beliefs people hold of themselves and the world, (ii) the importance of a sense of moral purpose as the basis of individual and collective commitment, and (iii) a framework for shared agency through individual action and community building, as illustrated by Bahá’í educational activities, participation in social discourses, and community development initiatives. The article explores each of these elements from the perspective of Bahá’í principles and practices, at the individual and collective level, in the light of the academic literature on cultures of peace, paradigm shift, and normative change, and then addresses the contribution of a Bahá’í perspective to understanding cultures of peace. It concludes with a reflection on the mode of operation of the Bahá’í community, the role of individuals, communities, institutions, and emerging cultural patterns, challenges presented by this vision of peacebuilding, and questions for future research on a Bahá’í approach to a culture of peace.
1. Introduction
The realization of universal peace as the next stage in the process of humanity’s collective maturation is the primary aim of the Bahá’í Faith. For Bahá’ís, peace entails both an end to war and the creation of a condition of wholeness of self and society, a state of wellbeing for all the peoples of the world, experienced in individual and collective lives, reinforced and secured by appropriate governance. A Bahá’í concept of peace brings together teachings for the elevation of the human soul and its relationship with the Creator, on one hand, and on the other, principles to guide the relationships human beings have with each other and with the planet. Peace is personal and political, individual and institutional, spiritual and material, requiring transformation at every level of human experience and organization. It encompasses notions of inner and outer peace (e.g., ), positive and negative peace (), peacemaking, peacebuilding, and peacelearning (). Explicitly and implicitly, peace permeates individual and collective Bahá’í thought and practice.
As the central theme of the Bahá’í Faith, peace is directly addressed in authoritative primary texts (by Bahá’u’lláh, ‘Abdu’l-Bahá, Shoghi Effendi, and the Universal House of Justice1), as well as in formal contributions to the wider public discourse on peace, including statements by the Bahá’í International Community. There is also a growing body of secondary sources, including books and articles in the academic literature that discuss a Bahá’í approach to peace from various standpoints (e.g., ; ; ; ; ; , ; ).
This article offers a consideration of the notion of peace in the Bahá’í Faith through the lens of culture, that is, with reference to social science constructs that address aspects of human collective life; specifically, it describes Bahá’í teachings as elements of a constructive social process that nurtures shared beliefs, commitments, and actions and give rise to peaceful communities and societies. It begins with a brief overview of a Bahá’í understanding of peace, to offer a sense of the centrality as well as the scope of the concept. It then focuses on three ideas derived from the academic study of culture to illustrate how Bahá’í teachings and practices serve to build a culture of peace—shared beliefs about human nature and humanity as a whole, shared commitment through a sense of moral purpose, and shared agency on the path to peace.
2. A Bahá’í Concept of Peace2
A Bahá’í concept of peace is inextricably linked to the understanding of both religion and human development. For Bahá’ís, religion is both eternal and progressive—all religions share an unchanging core that concerns human spirituality, but laws and practices necessarily change over time as divine educators bring teachings to guide human societies as they evolve. Thus, the notion of peace at this stage of human history is connected with the emergence of an age of global interconnectedness, international cooperation, the embrace of diversity, and collective responsibility for planetary wellbeing and the prosperity of humankind. Universal peace is the explicit goal of the Bahá’í Faith. Its Founder, Bahá’u’lláh, states that His object is “none other than the betterment of the world and the tranquility of its peoples” (), and that His aim is “to quench the flame of hate and enmity, that the horizon of the hearts of men may be illumined with the light of concord and attain real peace and tranquility” ().
While Bahá’u’lláh calls for “the weapons of war throughout the world” to “be converted into instruments of reconstruction and that strife and conflict may be removed from the midst of men” (), the removal of conflict is not the final measure of universal peace. From a Bahá’í perspective, the essential quality of universal peace is unity. Bahá’u’lláh clearly states that “the well-being of mankind, its peace and security, are unattainable unless and until its unity is firmly established” (). The Bahá’í writings describe the emergence of unity and the unfoldment of world peace in two stages. The first, the “Lesser Peace,” is a form of unity of nations involving international agreement for collective security and an end to war. It is described as a political unity, achieved through a secular process that requires an all-inclusive convocation of world leaders to resolve differences, devise and agree to measures for global unity, and direct attention to the use of resources to lay the foundations for peace. The second, the “Most Great Peace,” the result of a long-term society-building process and a fundamental transformation, is characterized by human flourishing in the context of the spiritualization of world civilization, in which “all the peoples of the world…reconcile their differences, and, with perfect unity and peace, abide beneath the shadow of the Tree of His care and loving-kindness” (). This stage is connected to the spread of the teachings of Bahá’u’lláh and their influence on the life of society, the application of His laws and principles, and the emergence and operation of structures of governance designated in His writings, as the framework for world unity and universal peace in its fullest sense.
‘Abdu’l-Bahá, Bahá’u’lláh’s authorized successor and interpreter, describes the qualities of the aspired condition of peace by contrasting it with the all too familiar condition of war:
“…war is destruction while universal peace is construction; war is death while peace is life; war is rapacity and bloodthirstiness while peace is beneficence and humaneness; war is an appurtenance of the world of nature while peace is of the foundation of the religion of God; war is darkness upon darkness while peace is heavenly light; war is the destroyer of the edifice of mankind while peace is the everlasting life of the world of humanity; war is like a devouring wolf while peace is like the angels of heaven; war is the struggle for existence while peace is mutual aid and cooperation among the peoples of the world and the cause of the good pleasure of the True One in the heavenly realm.”()
Peace, then, comes about as light overcomes darkness, a process that Bahá’ís believe is “not only possible but inevitable” () as humanity evolves both materially and spiritually. The conflicts and wars that have marked human history are not viewed as evidence of an insurmountable aggressive nature, but as signs of immaturity akin to the adolescent stage in the development of an individual. Two concurrent forces propel this historical process—on one hand, there is decay and disintegration of immature features of the social order, and on the other construction and integration stimulate the emergence of characteristics of maturity, culminating in the realization of the unity of humankind, the indispensable prerequisite for peace. Disintegration is evident, for example, in the decline of religion as a social force, in moral downfall and confusion, and the breakdown of political and economic structures. These forces “tend to sweep away barriers that block humanity’s progress, opening space for the process of integration to draw diverse groups together and disclosing new opportunities for cooperation and collaboration.” ()
Shoghi Effendi, designated by ʻAbduʼl-Bahá as the Guardian, interpreter of Bahá’í texts and the head of the Bahá’í Faith, further elaborates this vision of global peace:
“The ages of its infancy and childhood are past, never again to return, while the Great Age, the consummation of all ages, which must signalize the coming of age of the entire human race, is yet to come. The convulsions of this transitional and most turbulent period in the annals of humanity are the essential prerequisites, and herald the inevitable approach, of that Age of Ages, “the time of the end,” in which the folly and tumult of strife that has, since the dawn of history, blackened the annals of mankind, will have been finally transmuted into the wisdom and the tranquility of an undisturbed, a universal, and lasting peace, in which the discord and separation of the children of men will have given way to the worldwide reconciliation, and the complete unification of the divers elements that constitute human society.”()
In a message addressed to the peoples of the world, The Promise of World Peace, the Universal House of Justice further highlights the importance of understanding peace in this framework, as a source of hope and commitment to continued effort:
“A candid acknowledgement that prejudice, war and exploitation have been the expression of immature stages in a vast historical process and that the human race is today experiencing the unavoidable tumult which marks its collective coming of age is not a reason for despair but a prerequisite to undertaking the stupendous enterprise of building a peaceful world.”()
This enterprise lies at the heart of the Bahá’í Faith. It requires an orientation to peace at “the level of principle, as distinct from pure pragmatism” () and alignment with constructive processes of change and a clear focus on building unity, even as destructive forces play out and humanity continues to experience conflict and division.
A few examples serve to illustrate how contemporary published work addressing peace and the Bahá’í Faith explores various aspects of these principles as well as their practical expression, from a range of perspectives. The idea of the oneness of humanity as a prerequisite for universal peace is, of course, a central theme in this literature. () explores how the Bahá’í Faith articulates and applies the principle of unity in diversity as a framework for understanding and fostering a form of pluralism that is distinct from secular models, based on a deeper conception of unity which moves beyond tolerance and co-existence to a celebration of difference as essential to collective flourishing. (), too, presents the Bahá’í approach to oneness as distinctive and identifies it as the spiritual, moral, and practical foundation of true peace, with implications for thinking, acting, and organizing human affairs; () considers mindset, quality of relationships, orientation to power, freedom, and science and technology as aspects of the “unity paradigm” which subsequently shapes an integrative theory of peace education () and the Education for Peace integrative curriculum (). () consider oneness as the basis of moral identity and an ethic of unity that combines justice and care which provide the foundation for personal and political peace. In relation to peace and the absence of conflict, () turns to Bahá’í writings to consider violence and non-violence in the context of building a more mature global civilization, while () uses a Bahá’í perspective in a social science framework to interrogate notions of contest in contrast to mutualism as the basis of culture, and () traces the historical development of the peace concept and its relationship to the vision of peace provided in the Bahá’í writings. Adopting a broad approach, () describes the Bahá’í vision of peace as a holistic and transformative enterprise grounded in a renewed understanding of the role of religion in society, progressing through the combined effect of the disintegration of outdated structures and the construction of new forms of individual and collective life rooted in spiritual values and a unified vision for the future of humanity.
3. Through the Lens of Culture
The vision of peace described in the Bahá’í writings requires massive transformation at every level of society; it includes reform at the level of global governance to deter and arrest conflict but relies on the development of principles at the individual and community level that lay the foundation for collective wellbeing. “In essence,” writes the Universal House of Justice, “peace stems from an inner state supported by a spiritual or moral attitude, and it is chiefly in evoking this attitude that the possibility of enduring solutions can be found” () as part of a conscious process of personal and social transformation.
One way of understanding a Bahá’í concept of peace is therefore through the lens of culture, as the study of culture, too, invokes inner states and attitudes to the world finding expression in social forms. “Culture,” writes (), “is the fabric of meaning in terms of which human beings interpret their experience and guide their action” (p. 33). Whether national, ethnic, religious, or organizational, culture derives from shared “conceptions of persons, society, nature, and divinity” (). Constructs about human beings and human relations reflect a set of values that serve as “internalized guides for individuals” and “promote group survival and prosperity” (). As an overarching concept, culture is about process, not a ‘what’ but a ‘how’, that unfolds within a set of structures and potentially influences them (). As with many concepts in the social sciences, understanding of culture is evolving and increasingly complex as theoretical and methodological perspectives from various disciplines (including anthropology, sociology, psychology, political science, and economics, as well as history and the humanities and arts) merge and intersect in the context of globalization. () identifies a number of issues as central to advancing an integrated interdisciplinary understanding of culture, including globalization (historical perspectives and contemporary analysis) and the domination of nation-state framing; definitions of culture (acknowledging the instrumentalization of ‘culture’ as a concept in divisive debates); values as systems operating at multiple levels in society; assumptions about identity in relation to collective memory, heritage, and globalization; relationships with the economy, the arts (and related cultural policy), and soft power.
These general issues have a bearing on the study of cultures of peace specifically, which has a distinct literature and range of approaches dedicated to understanding the nature of peace and how it can be built and sustained. In the broad context of peace and change, the idea of fostering a new culture is a means of constructive and enduring transformation, involving “lifeways, patterns of belief, values, behavior, and accompanying institutional arrangements that promote mutual caring and wellbeing as well as equality that includes appreciation of difference, stewardship, and equitable sharing of the earth’s resources among its members and with all human beings” (). The cultural approach to peace is a proactive society-building process advanced by many engaged in peacebuilding, and notably under the auspices of the United Nations through UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) as a long-term strategy “to use education, science and culture to create a world climate in which peace will be made more probable and war less likely” (); UNESCO continues to promote and oversee the Programme of Action on a Culture of Peace through a range of initiatives (see, for example, ; ). Peace studies literature, including peace education, education for sustainability, and moral development, has evolved concepts and approaches including inner and outer peace (e.g., ), positive and negative peace (), peacemaking, peacebuilding, and peacelearning () and provides real-world evidence of and movement towards cultures of peace (e.g., ; ; ), concurrent and coherent with intergenerational value change connected to material development (e.g., ; ).
The deep process of basic cultural change takes time (). As described in the paradigm shift literature () and its application to social change (), recognition of the inadequacy of a prevailing worldview or culture does not lead immediately to its rejection. Rather, there are stages of shift, including loss of faith in existing normative patterns and structures, gradual awareness of possible alternative beliefs and ways of understanding, and eventually a collective decision to adopt a new paradigm. () describes this final step as “a special sort of change involving a certain sort of reconstruction of group commitments” (p. 180). These group commitments form the basis of new behaviors that reflect principles—in a religious context, and in the Bahá’í writings specifically, these are spiritual and moral—which over time become normative. Mapping the paradigm shift framework to a cultural model implies recognizing the potential of human agency to transform social practices from within existing structures (). Such “structurally embedded agency” (), which ultimately propels paradigm shift patterns, can be seen in explicit efforts to advance peace as an alternative to war and conflict, and also through attention to a range of specific sociopolitical issues associated with justice, equity, care, and harmony, as critical components of a culture of peace.
The Bahá’í orientation to peace at the level of spiritual principle and moral attitude as humanity moves from adolescence to maturity certainly entails a conscious paradigm shift in the normative framework that defines people’s identities, experiences and aspirations, as individuals, institutions, and communities as a deep process that takes time, and as such can be characterized as cultural. Indeed, in recent years, the Universal House of Justice has explicitly referenced the idea of culture to describe Bahá’í engagement with peacebuilding:
“Today, the spiritual duty and moral responsibility of every conscientious soul is to serve the cause of the peace and unity of the world. In this important undertaking, every member of the human family has a share. In purifying the heart and cleansing its mirror from prejudice on the one hand, and in creating the social conditions for peace and unity on the other, every individual has agency and the capacity to play a part. All souls are able to promote the culture of peace and unity in their interactions with friend and stranger alike.”()
So, what are the elements of a culture of peace from a Bahá’í perspective, in principle and in practice? The Bahá’í writings explicitly address the mindsets, commitments, and actions necessary for peace at the individual and collective levels. For example, Bahá’u’lláh writes of peace at the level of thought, a sign of drawing close to God, a condition of the soul that is connected to its attitude to both itself and humanity as a whole:
“In this glorious Day whatsoever can purge you from defilement and ensure your peace and tranquillity, that indeed is the straight Path, the Path that leadeth unto Me. To be purged from defilement is to be cleansed of that which is injurious to man and detracteth from his high station—among which is to take undue pleasure in one’s own words and deeds, however worthy they may be. True peace and tranquillity will only be realized when every soul will have become the well-wisher of all mankind.”()
In the wake of the First World War, ʻAbduʼl-Bahá elaborates on the development of this world-embracing mindset, describing a process of expanding individual consciousness in ever-widening circles of community, and ultimately global society:
“Every imperfect soul is self-centered and thinketh only of his own good. But as his thoughts expand a little he will begin to think of the welfare and comfort of his family. If his ideas still more widen, his concern will be the felicity of his fellow citizens; and if still they widen, he will be thinking of the glory of his land and of his race. But when ideas and views reach the utmost degree of expansion and attain the stage of perfection, then will he be interested in the exaltation of humankind. He will then be the well-wisher of all men and the seeker of the weal and prosperity of all lands.”()
Further, ʻAbduʼl-Bahá advances a collective, arguably cultural, concept of “unity of conscience” as essential to universal peace “so that the foundation of this matter may become secure, its establishment firm and its edifice strong” (). He offers the Bahá’í community as an example of an emerging culture of peace, in which the motivation and desire to work for peace is not merely intellectual, rather its collective commitment “is a matter of religious belief and one of the eternal foundations of the Faith of God.” “That is why,” he continues, “we strive with all our might and, forsaking our own advantage, rest, and comfort, forgo the pursuit of our own affairs; devote ourselves to the mighty cause of peace” ().
In the midst of the Second World War, alongside the decline of a world order “crashing in oppression, bloodshed, and ruin,” Shoghi Effendi describes the emergence of a new society, “an Order, divine and redemptive” that “opens up vistas of a justice, a unity, a peace, a culture, such as no age has ever seen” ().
This culture, as referred to by Shoghi Effendi, is rooted in the extensive body of the Bahá’í Faith’s spiritual and social teachings, a foundation of beliefs about human reality, social reality, and humanity’s developmental path, which find expression in values and principles that provide a constructive framework for personal behavior and collective action. These teachings form a single coherent system, interconnected, mutually dependent, and indispensable to the comprehensive vision of unity, human development, and flourishing described in the Bahá’í writings. In that sense, all Bahá’í teachings are relevant to building a culture of peace across individual, community, and institutional dimensions. With that in mind, for the purpose of this article, three concepts derived from a social change framework are used to describe Bahá’í teachings as elements of culture: first, shared beliefs or assumptions about human nature and the oneness of humanity; second, group commitments through a shared sense of spiritual and moral purpose; and third, shared agency through a set of individual and community practices.
7. A Bahá’í Contribution to Understanding of Cultures of Peace
While the principal aim of this article is to demonstrate how Bahá’í principles and practice can be understood as elements of a culture of peace, it is clear from this analysis that there is considerable resonance between the Bahá’í writings and concepts in the culture of peace literature; throughout the article, connections have been drawn between the elements of a Bahá’í perspective and contemporary research on cultures of peace, often illustrating alignment and significant intersection with this body of work. So, we may also ask, what does a Bahá’í perspective contribute to the broad conversation about cultures of peace? As noted in the introduction, the cultural approach to peace is based on an understanding that sustainable peace requires more than a cessation of violence (negative peace) and proposes that normative change in beliefs, values, attitudes, behaviors, and ways of life is necessary to eliminate the root causes of conflict and create peaceful societies conducive to individual and collective flourishing (positive peace). A Bahá’í conception of universal peace is similarly holistic and encompasses the notions of negative and positive peace as described by (), constructs which have significantly shaped approaches in peace research generally and the proactive stance of culture of peace studies and peace education particularly. Within the holistic framework, there is no shortage of questions and issues that could be considered in the light of a Bahá’í approach. This section highlights three examples of how a Bahá’í perspective contributes to contemporary understanding of cultures of peace: (i) augmentation of the local-global culture framework outlined by () with a spiritual and social evolutionary perspective and a practical framework; (ii) elaboration of ’s () notion of “peacelearning” at the individual and collective level and a wholeness-based foundation of education for peace; and (iii) engaging ’s () notion of “a human voice” with a Bahá’í approach to collective maturity, spiritual identity and moral purpose.
() describe an evolution of perspectives on cultures of peace from single to multifactored definitions, from negative to positive conceptions, and from outer peace only to both inner and outer peace. They note that there are “various interpretations of the culture of peace concept ranging from a narrow view that stresses the creation of cultural conditions that make war between states impossible, to a broad view that requires the transformation of every culture to a state that makes holistic inner-outer peace achievable” (p. 12). The collective maturation process described in Bahá’í writings, in terms of the spiritual and social evolution from the Lesser to the Most Great Peace (e.g., ) offers an interpretative framework for the observed patterns. Further, the writings explain the basis of the underlying social and cultural transformation as the expansion of human consciousness and widening of the ontological frame (). Smoker and Groff further suggest that “in our globally interdependent world, [these] positive visions of peace…need to be based on a synthesis of some of the best ideas from different cultures around the world on what, ideally, peace could and should look like” (p. 31). In this respect, the Bahá’í writings provide a systemic model of the connection between the parts and the whole. For example, () writes, “Regard ye the world as a man’s body, which is afflicted with divers ailments, and the recovery of which dependeth upon the harmonizing of all of its component elements” (pp. 79–80). Moreover, a Bahá’í approach to worldwide community-building as described in the messages of the Universal House of Justice (e.g., , ) opens a path for understanding how in practice such a global-local culture can be created, through the application of universal principles in diverse settings around the world.
() advances the construct of “peacelearning” as “the sum of reflections on all learning experiences—intellectual, social and political, ethical, aesthetic, emotional even physical” leading “us toward human wholeness” and drawing “us into efforts to restore wholeness to the world” (254) as central to peacebuilding processes. This concept clearly echoes the ontological perspectives of human nature and the oneness of humanity as the basis of peace in the Bahá’í writings. From a Bahá’í perspective, an additional spiritual dimension is essential to individual human wholeness, wholeness in the world, and to the learning process, as () states: “Regard man as a mine rich in gems of inestimable value. Education can, alone, cause it to reveal its treasures, and enable mankind to benefit therefrom. If any man were to meditate on that which the Scriptures, sent down from the heaven of God’s holy Will, have revealed, he would readily recognize that their purpose is that all men shall be regarded as one soul…” And elsewhere: “Set before thine eyes God’s unerring Balance and, as one standing in His Presence, weigh in that Balance thine actions every day, every moment of thy life” (). The notion of peacelearning as a component of a culture of peace is thus elaborated through a recognition of both the oneness of humanity and a spiritual source of authority which focuses and regulates individual and collective learning and educational processes.
The example of ’s () formulation that “the voice of care ethics is a human voice” illustrates another way Bahá’í writings can contribute to understanding a culture of peace: by providing an integrated framework that interfaces with concepts from adjacent disciplines to enrich the peacebuilding discourse. () discusses the cultural separation of mind and heart in ethics, a pattern that emerges during adolescence in both girls and boys in patriarchal society, and the consequent masking and dissociation of the “human voice” from social reality. She proposes that this dissociation not only compromises individual development and wellbeing but interferes with the capacity to see, challenge, and fight injustice. In the context of understanding gender and ethics, she urges a shift away from seeing difference to seeing humanity and argues that the true threat to human wellbeing is not the loss of subordinate identities rather the failure to realize our humanness. Though Gilligan’s work is not situated in peace culture research, there is significant scope for dialogue with peace-related concepts from a Bahá’í perspective. Interestingly, she describes a turning point during adolescence in individuals, which in a Bahá’í view applies also to the collective process of maturation on the path to peace as humanity emerges from the tumult of adolescence and “must now become imbued with new virtues and powers, new moralities, new capacities” (). Since the features of maturity are necessary for peace, from a Bahá’í perspective strengthening the capacity of the mature “human voice”—and the capacity to hear it—are part of the mindset and practice of peace. The Bahá’í writings further engage the “human voice” in the characterization of the human soul as sexless and the shared moral and spiritual imperative for every human being to develop the qualities that cultivate peace. As () explains, “In the estimation of God there is no gender. The one whose deeds are more worthy, whose sayings are better, whose accomplishments are more useful is nearest and dearest in the estimation of God, be that one male or female.”
In general terms, then, a Bahá’í view contributes both focus and breadth to the understanding of cultures of peace, invoking the spiritual dimension and providing a model of progression from the structural form of the Lesser Peace, to the deeper cultural transformation of global civilization (with further structural implications) of the Most Great Peace, asserting that this holistic peace is possible through human effort as active processes of purposeful learning effect a transformation of human social reality. It invites a re-examination of the assumptions underlying peace as a complex but attainable goal and urges a shift to a unity-based paradigm. It suggests that a comprehensive developmental vision of peace that spans the short term and the long term is important to the process of normative change, as is a systematic and clear form of global grassroots response to the challenges facing humanity through community-building. And, critically, it offers conviction that human beings are not only capable of but inclined to create cultures of peace and will ultimately succeed in achieving universal peace.
In the final analysis, culture is a lived social reality, and in this respect the Bahá’í contribution to understanding cultures of peace is unique. Beyond engaging in dialogue at the level of concept, the worldwide Bahá’í community is a case study of a culture of peace in the making, in which the shared beliefs, commitments, and forms of agency described here come together in a real-life community of practice. Indeed, in The Promise of World Peace, the Universal House of Justice explicitly offers the Bahá’í community as a model for study to “contribute in whatever measure to reinforcing hope in the unity of the human race” (), reiterated in its 2019 message on the theme of peace as it acknowledges that Bahá’ís have been “patiently refining that model and working with others around them to build up and broaden a system of social organization” based on the Bahá’í teachings and “learning how to nurture communities that embody [the] prerequisites of peace” ().
8. Conclusions
Consideration of the teachings of the Bahá’í Faith through a cultural lens illustrates how the elements of belief, commitment, and agency interact to create new ways of looking at the world, to clarify moral purpose, and prompt collective action coherent with the ultimate vision of universal peace articulated by Bahá’u’lláh. As individuals, communities, and institutions commit themselves to working towards unity as the prerequisite for peace by developing personal potential and attention to the common good, this orientation begins to influence the nature of collective life, which over time generates normative change.
For Bahá’ís, this process of cultural change is already apparent in “a mode of operation characterized by action, reflection, consultation and study—study which involves not only constant reference to the writings of the Faith but also the scientific analysis of patterns unfolding” (). In this mode, the interplay of individuals, institutions, and communities distinctively shapes and maintains the cultural norms of a holistic and unity-centered approach to peace. “Institutions,” writes the Universal House of Justice, “appreciating the need for coordinated action channeled toward fruitful ends, aim not to control but to nurture and guide the individual, who, in turn, willingly receives guidance, not in blind obedience, but with faith founded on conscious knowledge” (para. 12). In this purpose-driven culture, the actions, decisions, and communications of the institutions provide a framework for empowerment and highlight the importance of the long-term vision in everyday reality (). “The community, meanwhile, takes on the challenge of sustaining an environment where the powers of individuals, who wish to exercise self-expression responsibly in accordance with the common weal and the plans of institutions, multiply in unified action” ().
While specific forms of shared agency vary across time and place to meet the needs of diverse populations, and do not always or fully include the approaches endorsed by popular culture or social justice activism, the beliefs and commitments that drive individual and collective action and form the bedrock of culture are clearly embedded in Bahá’í texts. That said, from a Bahá’í perspective, to be a practitioner of peace within a Bahá’í framework does not depend on adherence to the Faith as a matter of religious belief; agency is open to all. A shared intention, desire, or aspiration for a better life can engage a person of any background or faith in building a culture of peace. Indeed, ʻAbduʼl-Bahá states that “the scope of universal peace must be such that all the communities and religions may find their highest wish realized in it” (). The power and the possibility to aspire, commit, and act are not connected to any subordinate identity but rather to the essential quality of human nobility. That the approach itself begins to sound very much like the goal of universal peace it seeks to promote speaks to the importance of the coherence of means and ends in a culture of peace framework; to move towards a vision of peace defined by wholeness and flourishing depends on processes that embody the same characteristics, processes that include, connect, and elevate.
Of course, this endeavor is not without challenges for individuals, communities, and institutions. For example, it demands critical attention to longstanding assumptions and existing cultural practices set by past traditions, in the light of the Bahá’í writings, to preserve diversity while still building unity. Similarly, it involves developing a form of response to issues of social justice that does not unwittingly contribute to divisiveness, neither retreats into passivity, rather focuses energy constructively on unity and the path to peace. As an outward-looking enterprise, another current challenge is to articulate Bahá’í concepts to a wider audience and to consciously participate in contemporary conversations about social and cultural change and peace from various academic perspectives, again without engaging in potentially divisive debate. There is undoubtedly much to be gained from correlation of Bahá’í concepts and practices with existing bodies of work on peace and normative change to address specific themes and questions, yet there remains a need to describe the Bahá’í Faith and its teachings in general terms as a foundation for such engagement.
This challenge is also one of the limitations of this article—it articulates the breadth of a Bahá’í perspective of a culture of peace with reference to contemporary work but does not pursue in depth particular aspects of each of the elements that could stimulate further discussion within and across relevant disciplines. Acknowledging this limitation, it is helpful to note some of the questions that could not be addressed here and would benefit from attention in future work on cultures of peace. Among the many that have come up in the course of preparing this article are: How does a Bahá’í approach to human nature relate to theories of culture and the psychology of identity? (see ); What does a Bahá’í perspective of grassroots ownership add to understanding about peace and the distribution of power in a global society? (see ); How does the idea of ever widening spheres of consciousness relate to theories of altruism and identification with all humanity? (see ; ); What is the role of the arts in fostering cultures of peace and how does a Bahá’í approach both learn from and contribute to existing research? (see ).
While many steps and many questions remain on the path to peace—and this, too, is acknowledged as part of the dynamic character of a Bahá’í approach—for Bahá’ís, to create a culture of peace individual and collective lives must always actively and consistently defend and uphold the nobility of the human spirit and the oneness of humanity. In a Bahá’í framework, the triad of shared beliefs, commitments, and agency shapes a culture of peace in a paradigm that moves beyond dichotomies to reconcile notions of the self and others, of the local and the global, of humility and courage, of spiritual and material progress, to an expansive view of unity compelling “the carrying out of our common task for the peace and regeneration of the world” () as humanity advances towards the stage of maturity, wellbeing, and prosperity.
Funding
This research received no external funding.
Institutional Review Board Statement
Not applicable.
Informed Consent Statement
Not applicable.
Data Availability Statement
No new data were created or analyzed in this study. Data sharing is not applicable to this article.
Conflicts of Interest
The author declares no conflict of interest.
Notes
1 | Bahá’u’lláh is the Founder of the Bahá’í Faith. He designated His son, ʻAbduʼl-Bahá, as His successor and authorized interpreter of His teachings. ʻAbduʼl-Bahá appointed His grandson, Shoghi Effendi, as the Guardian of the Bahá’í Faith. The Universal House of Justice, an institution described in the writings of Bahá’u’lláh, is the elected international governing body of the Bahá’í Faith. |
2 | A comprehensive treatment of the topic of peace from a Bahá’í perspective is beyond the scope of this article. Rather, this section briefly describes a Bahá’í vision of peace distilled from a selection of Bahá’í primary texts that elaborate these ideas, and an illustration of how the topic is addressed in contemporary academic publications on the Bahá’í Faith and peace, in order to provide context for the exploration of a Bahá’í approach to fostering a culture of peace. For a more detailed presentation of Bahá’í teachings related to peace from a secondary source, see (, ). |
3 | The Central Organization for a Durable Peace was formed in 1915, involving representatives from ten nations. Its focus was the prevention of future war. It effectively ceased to operate after the Treaty of Versailles, overtaken by the League of Nations (see ). |
4 | The Ruhi Institite is an educational institution based in Columbia, dedicated to spiritual, social, and cultural development based on a framework derived from the application of Bahá’í principles to the analysis of social conditions (see https://www.ruhi.org/en/, accessed on 27 July 2025). |
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