End Times / Last Days / Eschatological False Prophets: on the Jehovah's Witnesses, the Baha'i, Catholics and Harold Camping

Alpha and Omega Ministries’ Dr. James White published a fascinating and sad post about the end times / last days / eschatological false prophecies of Jehovah’s Witnesses.

The following image was provided:

What this illustration illustrates is the cover of the May 15, 1984 AD publication upon which someone superimposed identification of each person in the picture by name, and gives the date when they all passed away.

But why do such a thing?

Because the claim at the time was, “1914: The Generation That Will Not Pass Away” and stated: If Jesus used ‘generation’ in that sense and we apply it to 1914, then the babies of that generation are now 70 years old or older. And others alive in 1914 are in their 80’s or 90’s, a few even having reached a hundred. There are still many millions of that generation alive. Some of them ‘will by no means pass away until all things occur.’–Luke 21:32. Dr. White notes that this is: A tremendous testimony to the status of the Watchtower Society as a false prophet–just like Harold Camping already is (1994), and will be proven yet again in about three weeks. False prophets come, false prophets go, but Christ continues to build His church, not by the popularity of His teachings, but by the changing of the heart. I previously posted a list of Jehovah’s Witnesses end times / last days / eschatological false prophecies along with quotations and citations:

Jehovah’s Witnesses – The Eschaton Strikes Again

Also, of note are the false prophecies of the Baha’i Faith:
Baha’i Faith: The Missing Prophecy

And some by Roman Catholics:
“The Fatima Crusader” and False Prophecy

Fatima: Another Gospel and False Prophecies

Bahai Faith / Baha'i Faith : The Missing Prophecy

We quote here from J. E. Esslemont’s Baha’u’llah and the New Era, a book published by the Baha’i Publishing Committee and copyrighted by the National Spiritual Assembly of the Baha’is of the USA. Originally the manuscript of Baha’u’llah and the New Era was revised and approved by `Abdu’l-Baha and after his death, by Shoghi Effendi as well as by a committee of the National Baha’i Assembly of England.1
Esslemont writes:

“In the last two verses of the Book of Daniel occur the cryptic words:-‘Blessed is he that waiteth and cometh to the thousand, three hundred and thirty-five days. But go thy way till the end be: for thou shalt rest, and stand in thy lot at the end of the days.’ Many have been the attempts of learned students to solve the problem of the significance of these words.

In a table-talk at which the writer was present, `Abdu’l-Baha said that these 1,335 days mean 1,335 solar years from the Hijrat. (Flight of Muhammad from Mecca to Medina, marking the beginning of the Muhammad era.) As the Hijrat occurred in 622 A.D. the date referred to is, therefore, 1957 (i.e. 622+1,335) A.D. Asked:

‘What shall we see at the end of the 1,335 days?’ he replied: Universal Peace will be firmly established, a Universal language promoted. Misunderstandings will pass away. The Baha’i Cause will be promulgated in all parts and the oneness of mankind established. It will be most glorious!”2 [emphasis mine]

Baha’u’llah and the New Era, the book that records the above quoted prophecy, was first published in 1923. Instead of world peace and such utopian dreams, a small sample of what we got from 1923 until 1957 was things like nation wide poverty in the Depression in the USA and World War II which yielded ten to twelve million massacred by the hands of Hitler’s army. Stalin caused the death of some twenty million people.
In fact, Shoghi Effendi himself wrote, “We who have killed some forty-five million human beings in the past thirty-five years.”3 And so there is absolutely no question that this prophecy is false. Perhaps, it should be noted that one significant event that occurred in 1957 was Shoghi Effendi’s sudden death.

Not so fast though, in later editions of the same book that records the false prophecy there is a section titled “Note on Revisions” in which the false prophecy is explained away:

“‘the end of the 1,335 days.’ The Guardian has written that in the Baha’i teachings themselves there is nothing to indicate that any definite degree of world peace will be established by 1957, nor by 1963, the one hundredth anniversary of the Declaration of Baha’u’llah.” Another Baha’ism publication has stated, “Regarding the Prophecy of Daniel: The passage in Esselmont should be changed to state that this prophecy refers to the one-hundredth anniversary of the Declaration of Baha’u’llah, in the Garden of Ridvan, Baghdad.”4 [emphasis mine]

The Guardian is Shoghi Effendi, grandson of, and third in line to, Baha’u’llah. He is one of the only two individuals to be appointed as the interpreter of Baha’u’llah’s teachings. What the Guardian does however is to contradict the teachings of `Abdu’l-Baha, son of, and second in line to, Baha’u’llah. He was the other of the only two individuals ever to be appointed as the interpreter of Baha’u’llah’s teachings.

Of `Abdu’l-Baha it is said that he is “the authorized interpreter of the teachings, and declaring that any explanations or interpretations given by Him are to be accepted as of equal validity with the words of Baha’u’llah Himself5 [my underlining]. After these two the authority of Baha’ism was given to committees, these committees alone can publish authoritative Baha’i writings, which they did so when they published the book from which we quoted the false prophecy. The 1950 edition of the book carries with it the Note on Revisions, which explains that in future editions of the book the text would be reworked and the changes would the be made with no indication that it ever contained false prophecy.6

Consulting the 1976 edition of Baha’u’llah and the New Era, pp 251-252 (or 1980 ed., p. 250) we find the new reading of this text:

“_In a table-talk at which the writer was present, `Abdu’l-Baha reckoned the fulfillment of Daniel’s prophecy from the date of the beginning of the Muhammadan era. `Abdu’l-Baha’s Tablets, make it clear that this prophecy refers to the one hundredth anniversary of the Declaration of Baha’u’llah in Baghdad, or the year 1963:-Now concerning the verse in Daniel, the interpretation whereof thou didst ask, namely, ‘Blessed is he who cometh unto the thousand, three hundred and thirty-five days.’

These days must be reckoned as solar and not lunar years. For according to this calculation a century will have elapsed from the dawn of the Sun of Truth, then will the teachings of God be firmly established upon the earth, and the Divine Light shall flood the world from the East even unto the West. Then, on this day, will the faithful rejoice!” [emphasis mine]

First, we note that Baha’u’llah and the New Era was revised in 1937, 1950, 1970, 1976, 1980 and reprinted in 1990. The Baha’i were able to do this since taking over the “copyright and other interests” from George Allen & Unwin Ltd., of London England. Also note that in 1957 the prophecy was not fulfilled, but remember that the Note on Revisions stated, “there is nothing to indicate that any definite degree of world peace will be established by 1957, nor by 1963 [emphasis mine].”

But the reworked explanation also fails because a century from the dawn of the Sun of Truth [Baha’u’llah] is 1963 and still we do not see the teachings of God be firmly established upon the earth [emphasis mine].

In conclusion, what is the meaning of the last two verses of the Book of Daniel? Apparently after two different explanations we still don’t know. Obviously what we have is an attempt to cover up a false prophecy with an equally impotent explanation that is meaningless, its only meaning is that it demonstrated some degree of Baha’i manipulation.

cover1950-0001-8560725 1950 Edition
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1976 Edition

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Text of the 1950 version

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Text of the 1976 version

Bahai Faith / Baha'i Faith : The Case of the Traveller, Part 3 of 3

Babism’s Background

In this essay we again present an excerpt from A Traveller’s Narrative. As to the authenticity or historical accuracy please see the notes at the end of essay The Case of the Traveller, Part 1. As we suggest in that essay, do not come to any conclusions without reading these.

pp. 234-244

“The founder of the Sheykhi school, with which in its origin the Babi movement is so closely connected, was Sheykh Ahmad of Ahsa (often, but apparently erroneously, written Lahsa) [1752-53-1826-27 AD]…he again visited Persia towards the end of his life, and that on this occasion he passed through Kazvin, where he paid a visit to Haji Mulla Muhammad Taki.

The latter questioned him concerning his views on the resurrection, and, after a violent altercation, declared them to be heretical. In consequence of this many other divines, who had hitherto regarded Sheykh Ahmad almost as a saint, began to look askance at him or even to display open hostility…

The chief points wherein Sheykh Ahamd’s doctrine is regarded as heterodox are stated as follows. He believed that the body of man was compounded of parts derived from each of the nine heavens and the four elements; that the grosser elemental part perished irrevocably at death; and that only the more subtle celestial portion would appear at the resurrection…he believed himself to be under the special guidance of the Imams, especially, as it would appear, the Imam Ja’far-i-Sadik.

He regarded the Imams as creative forces, quoting in support of this view the expression ~~~ ‘God, the Best of Creators,’ occurring in Kur’an xxiii, 14; ‘for,’ said he, ‘if God be the Best of Creators He cannot be the sole Creator.’ He also adduced in support of this view the tradition wherein the following words are attributed to ‘Ali:-~~~ ‘I am the Creator of the heavens and the earth’ He even went so far as to assert that in reciting the opening chapter of the Kur’an (~~~) the worshipper should fix his thoughts on ‘Ali as he repeats the words ~~~ ‘Thee do we worship’…Sheykh Ahmad Ahsa’i was succeeded at his death by his disciple Haji Seyyid Kazim of Resht [1793-94-1843-44]…

he attained such eminence that on the Sheykh’s death he was unanimously recognized as the leader of the Sheykhi school…Seyyid Kazim had not explicitly nominated a successor…A number of the late Seyyid Kazim’s immediate disciples repaired directly after his death to the mosque at Kufa, and there, with fasting, vigils and prayers, sought for God’s guidance in the choice of a spiritual director.

Having completed their religious exercises they dispersed each in his own way. Mulla Huseyn of Bushraweyh proceeded to Shiraz, and on his arrival there paid a visit to Mirza ‘Ali Muhammad [the Bab] To him first of all did the young prophet [the Bab] announce his divine mission…after a mental struggle which lasted several days, [Mulla Huseyn] became firmly convinced that the Master so eagerly sought for and so earnestly desired had at length been found…

Thus did he become the ‘Gate of the Gate’…it was from the old Sheykhi party that the most eminent supporters of the new faith were for the most part derived. It must not be supposed, however, that all the followers of the late Seyyid Kazim accepted the new doctrine.

A considerable number, headed by Haji Muhammad Karim Khan of Kirman, utterly declined to admit the Bab’s pretensions (for so they regarded his claims), and these became the bitterest and most violent of his persecutors. Of those doctors who heaped insult on the Bab during his first examination at Tabriz, and those who two years later ratified his death-warrant in the name of religion, several were Sheykhis.

Hence it is necessary to recognize clearly the difference between the relations of Babiism to the old and the new Sheykhi school. From the bosom of the former it arose, and, in great measure, derived its strength; with the latter it was ever in fiercest conflict. Of Sheykh Ahmad Ahsa’i and Seyyid Kazim of Resht both Babis and Sheykhis speak with reverence and affection; but Haji Muhammad Karim Khan and his followers are as odious in the eyes of the Babis as Mirza ‘Ali Muhammad the Bab and his adherents are execrable1 in the opinion of the modern Sheykhis.

The Bab stigmatized Haji Muhammad Karim Khan as ‘the Quintessence of Hell-fire’ (~~~) and ‘the [infernal] Tree of Zakkum’…Haji Muhammad Karim Khan wrote at least two treatises (one called ‘the crushing of Falsehood,’ ~~~) in refutation and denunciation of the Babi doctrines…a Sheykhi doctor [explained how] the Sheykhis chiefly differed from that of other Shi’ites. His answer was in substance as follows:-

‘The Balasaris [i.e. non- Sheykhi Shi’ites] hold that the ‘Supports,’ or essential principles of religion (~~~), are five…we only accept three…but to these we add another, which we call the ‘Fourth Support'(~~~), viz. (4) that there must always be amongst the Shi’ites some one perfect man (whom we call ~~~ ‘the perfect Shi’ite’) capable of serving as a channel of grace (~~~) between the Absent Imam and his church…there must always exist in the Church of the Imams some visible head who enjoys their special spiritual guidance and serves to convey their wishes and their wisdom to all true Shi’ites, than to the actual personage who fulfils this function.

Yet outside the Sheykhi circle, both amongst the Balasaris and the Babis, it certainly bears the second meaning as well; and it is commonly asserted that Haji Muhammad Karim Khan regarded himself, and was regarded by his followers, as being this ‘Fourth Support’ or Channel of Grace from the Spiritual World.

It is evidently this second meaning which the term bears in the present text, and if it bore it from the first it is evident that there was originally very little difference between the pretensions of Mirza ‘Ali Muhammad the Bab and those of Haji Muhammad Karim Khan, since both, in the first instance, claimed to be neither more nor less than intermediaries between the absent Imam and his Church, exactly in the same sense as were the four original ‘Gates’ (Abwab, or Babs) who served as a connection between the Twelfth Imam and his followers during the period of the ‘Lesser Occultation.'”

Look Both Ways Two Atheistic Logical Fallacies

Basic Layout In studying atheism, and their cooption of Darwinian evolution, I have encountered twin logical fallacies so often that I have come to coin two terms to describe them: the fallacy of validation by projection and the fallacy of validation by regression.It is important to note that when someone believes in something that is not true they cannot live in the real world. That is to say that they must talk themselves into believing in things for which there is no evidence. They have to talk themselves into believing the stories about reality that they have concocted. Surely, atheists will claim that this is precisely true of theists. Yet, nevertheless, we will provide ample evidence that supports our assertion. In order to validate their beliefs atheists look both ways, up and down, the corridors of time-to the inaccessible past and future. When, for example, atheists appeal to quaint Victorian era concepts of abiogenesis in order to explain life’s conception they must deal with the fact that abiogenesis (abiotic synthesis) is not observed anywhere and is not producible in any experiments. What is their answer? They can imagine a time, long, long ago in the Earth’s past, when everything happened just so and abiogenesis was possible. What about filling the various gaps in our knowledge? They can imagine a time in the distant future when their beliefs will be proven true. Thus, atheism is validated by projection and regression. Herein lies the fallacies: they merely regress to an unknown past in which they can imagine thing occurring that do not occur today and they can project into an equally unknown future at which time we will discover that absolute materialism is true. As long as they can imagine it, it must be true.We have referred to atheism’s cooption of Darwinian evolution and they have actually co-opted the whole of science. Here we run into another of atheism’s logical fallacies: first they claim that science does not deal with the supernatural but then they claim that science has disproved the supernatural.

What atheists have done is to remove the supernatural from the realm of possibility. Granted, they are, after all, atheists-absolutely committed to materialism. But note the nature of their worldview: they have closed the door to any evidence to the contrary. They do this by appealing to atheism’s circular logic. Since there is no supernatural there can be no evidence for the supernatural and since there is no evidence for the supernatural we do not believe in the supernatural. Yet, peradventure any evidence of the supernatural is uncovered it is to be ignored because it does not fit the materialistic worldview and because that worldview promises that all things will, some day, be explained in accordance to materialism.

Some scientists, such as Scott C. Todd from Kansas State University’s Department of Biology, have taken their belief in materialism to such an extreme that they openly proclaim that they will purposefully deny any evidence that interferes with their beliefs, “Even if all the data pointed to an intelligent designer, such a hypothesis is excluded from science because it is not naturalistic.”1

One example of validation by regression is clear in hypothesis concocted by A.I. Oparin and J.B.S. Haldane (and many, many others) who “…envisioned an ancient world with the chemical conditions and energy resources needed for the abiotic synthesis of organic molecules.”2 They envisioned a time when something that is now impossible could actually occur (incidentally all experiments in this vein have failed).

Miscellaneous Examples
In our essay Scientific Cenobites we provide many, many quotes such as the following regarding wishful speculations, storytelling, narratives, myths, ethos, and philosophizing in the name of, in the guise of, science.Franklin M. Harold, emeritus professor of biochemistry at Colorado State University, wrote:

“We should reject as a matter of principle the substitution of Intelligent Design for the dialog of chance and necessity…but we must concede that there are presently no detailed Darwinian accounts of the evolution of any biochemical system, only a variety of wishful speculations.”3

Roger Lewin referencing John Durant, Oxford University:

“‘Could it be that, like ‘primitive’ myths, theories of human evolution reinforce the value-system of their creators by reflecting historically their image of themselves and of the society in which they live?’…’Time and again,’ observes Durant, ‘ideas about human origins turn out on closer examination to tell us as much about the present as about the past, as much about our own experiences as about those of our remote ancestors’…These peaceable theories of human origins, like the best-in-man idea, become ‘a mirror which reflected back only those aspects of human experience which its authors wanted to see….This is precisely what we would expect of a scientific myth.'”4

Glynn Isaac wrote:

“If any of the rest of the scientific community is inclined to snigger at the embarrassment of paleoanthropologists over all this [the identification of theory as narrative], pause and reflect. I bet that the same basic findings would apply to the origin of mammals, or of flowering plants, or of life…or even the big bang and the cosmos.”5

David Pilbeam wrote:

“‘A major change is a growing realization that many evolutionary schemes are in fact dominated by theoretical assumptions that are largely divorced from data derived from fossils, and that many assumptions have remained implicit.’ Nevertheless, argument disguised-probably unconsciously-as objective description is still to be found in the literature.”6

Niles Eldredge and Ian Tattersall wrote:

“science is storytelling, albeit of a very special kind.”7

Richard Lewontin “does acknowledge that scientists inescapably rely on ‘rhetorical’ proofs (authority, tradition) for most of what they care about; they depend on theoretical assumptions unprovable by hard science, and their promises are often absurdly overblown.”8

Lewontin has written:

“Only the most simple-minded and philosophically naive scientist, of whom there are many, thinks that science is characterized entirely by hard inference and mathematical proofs based on indisputable data.”9

John Horgan, writing in Scientific America, makes an some interesting points about the artificiality of science as opposed to what actually occurs in nature:

“But as researchers continue to examine the RNA-world concept closely, more problems emerge. How did RNA arise initially? RNA and its components are difficult to synthesize in a laboratory under the best conditions, much less under plausible prebiotic ones…no one has yet come up with a satisfactory explanation of how phosphorous, which is a relatively rare substance in nature, became such a crucial ingredient in RNA (and DNA). Once RNA is synthesized, it can make new copies of itself only with a great deal of help from the scientist, says Joyce of the Scripps Clinic, and RNA specialist. ‘It is an inept molecule’…Rebek’s experiments [on synthetic organic molecules] have two drawbacks, according to Joyce: they only replicate in highly artificial, unnatural conditions, and, even more important, they reproduce too accurately. Without mutation, the molecules cannot evolve in the Darwinian sense. Orgel agrees. ‘What Rebek has done is very clever,’ he says, ‘but I don’t see its relevance to the origin of life.”10

Writing in the journal Nature, G.H. Curtis, Drake, T. Cerling & Hampel make the following statement in reference to the spread of dates yielded in attempts to date the KBS Tuff:

“Furthermore, the interpretation of the 40Ar/39Ar isochrons that yield multiple apparent ages from a single phase, such as Fitch and Miller have obtained on KBS sanidines, is uncertain. Their interpretations rely on oversimplified and unproved models of the diffusion of argon in solids, both in nature and in the laboratory procedure necessary to make an age determination. For this reason we feel that their results, even when they are reproducible to high precision, may be an artifact of experiential procedure, and thus not geologically meaningful.”11

Is it any wonder that Richard Lewontin (Harvard University Professor of zoology and biology) wrote?:

“It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counter-intuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated” (see here and here)12

Is it also any wonder what happens when the scientific method concludes something against which one’s preferred theory? Well, “Skeptic of the Year” and evolutionary paleontologist Dr. Paul Willis besmirches experimentation that produces results that he did not like as he referred to “Simply going to laboratory setting, in a contrived laboratory setting.” To this his debate opponent, creationist Dr. Carl Wieland, responded:

“It’s valid in science, this is the best you can come to as far as experimental evidence is concerned. Surely, people should be commended for trying to emulate in a laboratory these sorts of things.”13

Richard Dawkins
In my essay The Gap Filler we deal, in some detail, with the following statement from an interview of Richard Dawkins by Jonathan Miller.14“Um, there’s got to be a series of advantages all the way in the feather. If you can’t think of one then that’s your problem, not natural selection’s problem. Natural selection, um, well, I suppose that is a sort of matter of faith on my, on my part since the theory is so coherent and so powerful. You might mentioned feathers. I mean it’s perfectly possible that feathers began as fluffy, um, extensions of reptilian scales to act as heat insulators. And so the final perfection of the sort of, wing feathers that we see in flying birds might have come very much later. And the earliest feathers might have been a different approach to hairiness among reptiles keeping them warm.”Richard Dawkins fills the gaps in his knowledge with his faith. Since there is no evidence, we can appeal to our imagination (in the guise of respectable science). It is “perfectly possible” it “might have” and again, it “might have”-and that is proof enough.Richard Dawkins wrote:

“Human thoughts and emotions emerge from exceedingly complex interconnections of physical entities within the brain. An atheist in this sense of philosophical naturalist is somebody who believes there is nothing beyond the natural, physical world, no supernatural creative intelligence lurking behind the observable universe, no soul that outlasts the body and no miracles – except in the sense of natural phenomena that we don’t yet understand. If there is something that appears to lie beyond the natural world as it is now imperfectly understood, we hope eventually to understand it and embrace it within the natural.”15

Note the presupposition: we know that absolute materialism is true and so the supernatural is disqualified a priori. If we ever encounter a miracle, if we are exposed to evidence of a miracle, we are do disregard it as being the outworking of some materialistic phenomena that “we don’t yet understand.” But we can project and so “we hope” to “eventually” be able to explain all things according to the worldview of materialism.Richard Dawkins wrote:

“Chance, luck, coincidence, miracle…events that we commonly call miracles are not supernatural, but are part of a spectrum of more-or-less improbable natural events. A miracle, in other words, if it occurs at all, is a tremendous stroke of luck.”16

But what of his own view of origins?:

“It is as though, in our theory of how we came to exist, we are allowed to postulate a certain ration of luck.”17

He also wrote:

“If I saw a man levitating himself, before rejecting the whole of physics I would suspect that I was the victim of a hallucination or a conjuring trick.”18

Certainly, it could be a trick and one ought to investigate but it is fascinating that his reaction to being an eyewitness to something that violates his worldview, that violates absolute materialism, would be to prefer the explanation of it being a hallucination (see our essay: What Would Atheists Do If God Appeared To Them?).Richard Dawkins wrote:

“My guess is that both bats and birds evolved flight by gliding downwards from the trees. Their ancestors might have looked a little like colugos. Birds could be another matter…. Here’s one guess as to how flying got started in birds….Perhaps birds began by leaping off the ground while bats began gliding out of trees. Or perhaps birds too began by gliding out of trees…The beauty of this theory is that the same nervous circuits that were used to control the centre of gravity in the jumping ancestor would, rather effortlessly, have lent themselves to controlling the flight surfaces later in the evolutionary story.”19

More of the same, “…guess…might have…could be…guess…Perhaps…perhaps…The beauty of this theory is…the evolutionary story.”

Richard Dawkins begins the third chapter of River Out of Eden – A Darwinian View of Life by referencing a letter that he received from a former atheist who is now a Minister. The Minister became a believer in God while reading an article regarding a particular Orchid whose flowers mimic a wasp. It does not merely mimic a wasp, but a particular kind of wasp. Not merely a particular kind but the female of that particular kind. Yet, this is not simple the case of someone who “found faith through a wasp,”20 as Dawkins puts it. The Minister was captivate by thought that “No incremental steps could account for it…”21 This is because the mimicry includes at least three aspects: morphology, chemistry and anatomy. The Minister’s reasoning went on to state “…if the orchid did not look like and smell like the female wasp, and have an opening suitable for copulation with the pollen within perfect reach of the male wasp’s reproductive organ, the strategy would have been a complete failure.” Richard Dawkins then proceeds to explain his indignation for the sort of argument that would state “that complicated contrivances have to be perfect if they are to work at all.”22 Prof. Richard Dawkins’ tactic is to claim that the Orchid does not actually have to look very much like a wasp (he does not actually assert that it does not, he merely claims that it does not have to).

Richard Dawkins writes:
“Perhaps a fleeting view of a female is all a fast-flying wasp can expect to get before attempting to copulate with her. Perhaps male wasps notice only a few key stimuli anyway. There is every reason to think that wasps might be even easier to fool than humans.”

Note the qualifying terms “Perhaps…Perhaps.”

He then expends six pages offering examples of apparently poor eyesight in certain birds and insects and points out:
“The world as seen through an insect’s eyes is so alien to us that to make statements based on our own experience when discussing how ‘perfectly’ an orchid needs to mimic a female wasp’s body is human presumption.”

Interesting point, although there seems to be a bit of logical conclusion missing here: he seems to be overlooking the fact that the reason we know that an Orchid produces a flower that mimics a wasp is that it is us human beings who observe that the flower looks like a wasp (not merely in basic shape but anatomically). Why would an Orchid produce a flower that looks, to a human being, like a wasp but not so much to a wasp?

Yet, Richard Dawkins then does a 180 degree turn in stating:
“I may have done my work too well in persuading you that wasps are likely to be easy to fool_If insect eyesight is so poor, and if wasps are so easy to fool, why does the orchid bother to make its flower as wasp-like as it is? Well, wasp eyesight is not always so poor. There are situations in which wasps seem to see quite well.”23 He then provides two pages worth of examples and then concludes be regressing to his earlier point:
“a crude resemblance between orchid and female might well be sufficient. The general lesson we should learn is never to use human judgment in assessing such matters.”24

Please note that in his six pages of poor, and two of good, eyesight he never once discussed the Orchid, its flower, the wasp, or the mating/pollination. He merely made assertions based on long-shot circuitous assertions.

He most certainly did not touch upon another aspect of the issue:Somehow, a plant knows what a particular kind of wasp looks like.It knows the wasp’s mating habits.It knows that it needs to attract males.It somehow wills itself to produce a flower that looks like the female so that the male will land on the flower and assist in pollination.It produces pheromones that attract the particular kind of male wasp.It mimics the female wasps’ anatomy.

It places its pollen in the right place.

Nevertheless, Richard Dawkins states:
“Never say, and never take seriously anybody who says, ‘I cannot believe that so-and-so could have evolved by gradual selection.'”25

He does not offer one single example of how the process actually took place.

Just how does a plant have such a detailed understanding of the world that exists around it-the creatures, their anatomy, their mating habits, etc.? How does a plant conceive of, and carry out, a plan to produce a mimic of such a creature?

Not to worry, knowing something about the atheistic/materialistic cooption of science, all that is necessary is to concoct a story about how it could have happened and that is good enough. In the same chapter we have been discussing, Richard Dawkins tackles how the honeybee’s dance evolved. The dance in question is performed by a bee that has found food. Upon returning to the nest it performs a dance that is, in fact, a coded message that informs other bees in which direction and to what distance they are to travel in order to retrieve the food. We will provide the qualifying terms that are peppered throughout his story:
“plausible…suggests…would have…Perhaps…plausible…plausibility…plausible…might have…would have…It is not difficult to imagine…probably…plausible… plausible… plausible.”26 He finally states:
“The story as I have told it…may not actually be the right one. But something a bit like it surely did happen.”27

Before continuing, please take a moment to contemplate the following illustrations.

1daw-7760509Chapter 3 of Prof. Richard Dawkins’ book The Blind Watchmaker-Why the Evidence of Evolution Reveals a Universe Without Design is entitled Accumulating Small Changes. In this chapter he, unwittingly, proves that a creator, an intelligent designer, is required to even merely conceive of biological entities reproducing/evolving.He begins by stating:

“We have seen that living things are too improbable and too beautifully ‘designed’ to have come into existence by chance. How, then, did they come into existence? The answer, Darwin’s answer, is by gradual, step-by-step transformation from simple beginnings, from primordial entities sufficiently simple to have come into existence by chance.”28

Prof. Richard Dawkins’ view is that life began by pure chance and then evolved but not by chance because natural selection selects in a nonrandom manner, even though it has no foresight, no goal to which it is aiming its selections.

Richard Dawkins set out to create a world with which to test his theory of evolution. His intelligent design came in the form of a computer program that, instead of letters, would “draw pictures instead” to the end that, “Maybe we shall even see animal-like shapes evolving in the computer, by cumulative selection of mutant forms.”29 Keep in mind this prediction of seeing animal-like shapes. Richard Dawkins begins his experiment by relying on a tremendous amount of intelligence, not just his own personal education but by relying on a computer-a machine that was specifically designed by intelligent beings. Consider the millennia that was required for humanity to compile enough knowledge to build a computer, from the manipulation of the substances that make up its hardware to the foresight that makes up its software. Richard Dawkins comes to the task with “20 years’ experience of programming computers”30 under his belt.

Let us quickly survey the experiment, the intelligently designed world that Richard Dawkins calls Biomorph Land.

“…we must have…I chose one and wrote a program…what drawing rule shall we choose…are allowed to grow…when you tell the computer…rule for drawing…we wrap it up in a little computer procedure…first step towards writing this larger program…we shall modestly limit our computer model…How shall we make these genes influence development…I made…a constraint that I imposed on the DEVELOPMENT procedure. I did it partly for aesthetic reasons, partly to economize…I was hoping to evolve animal-like shapes…my mutations are all constrained…These are arbitrary conventions…two procedures called DEVELOPMENT and REPRODUCTION are written as two watertight compartments…We have assembled our two programs…bring the two modules together in the big program called EVOLUTION…This very high mutation rate is a distinctly unbiological feature of the computer model…The human eye has an active role to play in the story. It is the selecting agent…The human tells the computer which one of the current litter of progeny to breed from…I began to breed, generation after generation, form whichever child looked most like an insect…the monsters that one encounters are undersigned and unpredictable…”31

Apparently, at some point Richard Dawkins became aware of his creative actions as an intelligent designer. These include unbiological input and purposeful selection of shapes that he thought looked like what he wanted to see due to his foresight-planning and executing of a strategy in order to reach a desired goal. Thus, he attempts to deny doing what he has been admitting all along:

“I programmed EVOLUTION into the computer, but I did not plan ‘my’ insects…Yes I am piling on the drama a bit, but there is a serious point being made. The point of the story is that even though it was I that programmed the computer, telling it in great detail what to do, nevertheless I didn’t plan the animals that evolved.”32

Even so, he concludes:

“Does the powerlessness of the programmer to control or predict the course of evolution in the computer seem paradoxical? Does it mean that something mysterious, even mystical was going on inside the computer? Of course not. Nor is there anything mystical going on in the evolution of real animals and plants.”33

Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain: Richard Dawkins is indeed the creator god of his biomorphs, “my” he calls them, he created a world, its laws/rules, and its life. His chosen ones were selected for further evolution, a process that the creator manipulated towards his ends since he knows the beginning and the end. He even admits that the biomorphs were predestined, “There is a definite set of biomorphs, each permanently sitting in its own unique place in a mathematical space.”34

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But what is it exactly that Richard Dawkins created? Animals? Insects? No. He created Rorschachs. He created several intersecting lines that then became more intersecting lines. Then he, the selector, the intelligent agent, interpreted what these lines look like to him. Recall that he stated, “I was hoping to evolve animal-like shapes” and that “The human eye…is the selecting agent.” Thus, he created and manipulated a world that produced Rorschachs-perhaps a psychiatrist would have more to say about the outcome than a biologist. But Richard Dawkins did not merely “see” insects and animals in his biomorphic Rorschachs, he also saw a Lunar Lander, a man in a hat, an upside-down menorah, a precision balance, crossed sabers, a lamp, etc. He does not bother explaining how a biological entity evolves into a saber or the Lunar Lander-he miraculously intervened upon biomorph land.

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Example of Prof. Richard Dawkins’ creations with his subjective descriptions: fig 5 p. 61Richard Dawkins concludes the chapter by writing:

“…when we are prevented from making a journey in reality, the imagination is not a bad substitute. For those, like me, who are not mathematicians, the computer can be a powerful friend to the imagination. Like mathematics, it doesn’t only stretch the imagination. It also disciplines and controls it.”35

This has been our point all along-escape reality and invent advantageous fictions: when the real world will not accommodate our world-view we can invent one that will. Why can we know that there is nothing mystical going on? Because nothing mystical is going on in our imaginary world.

Ultimately, the only thing that Richard Dawkins has accomplished engaging in tautology: he proposed a theory and then concocted an experiment that allowed him to manipulate the process from beginning to end so that in the end his theory was proven true.

Sam Harris Sam Harris wrote:

“There will probably come a time when we achieve a detailed understanding of human happiness, and of ethical judgments themselves, at the level of the brain…There is every reason to believe that sustained inquiry in the moral sphere will force convergence of our various belief systems in the way that it has in every other science.”36

Again, since “There will probably come a time when_” we can project that through cumulative knowledge (“sustained inquiry”) materialistic causes for moral absolutes will be uncovered. Moreover, there is not only “every reason to believe” this but the projected event “will force convergence” to absolute materialism.Sam Harris has also written:

“If we better understood the workings of the human brain, we would undoubtedly discover lawful connections between our states of consciousness, our modes of conduct, and the various ways we use our attention. If we ever develop such a science, most of our religious texts will be no more useful to mystics than they now are to astronomers”37

Bahai Faith / Baha'i Faith: “Baha'i Propaganda in America”, part 2 of 5

It is a fascinating account of how the Baha’i Faith was presented in the North America by its early proselytizers.The notes which we began to consider in part 1 further state,

“The believers are given some mysterious name which openly they always call ‘The Greatest Name.’ It is given very privately and in a very solemn manner. They are supposed to make use of it when in need. I am sorry to say that some people have sent the letter for the sake of the rest of the teaching and for a mysterious something which they hope to get…Many things I cannot explain, for explanations were not given, but we were told that we should know in the future. That future has never come-it may be reserved for the believers. Besides the doctor requested the students to take no notes up to about the tenth lecture, when the use of pencils and paper was allowed…There is little chance for discussion at any lecture, as the doctor has an extremely funny way of telling people who oppose his view in the class that they are ‘excused.’ Of course they have to leave, and in profound silence the surprised offender arises, packs up what belongs to him and makes as graceful an exit as he can under the trying conditions…

At the first lecture the people are requested not to talk over what they are told with outsiders. An air of mystery is over the whole affair and infinitesimal things are most enormously magnified, and the way in which [some] matters are minimized in order to maximize other points in the teaching is truly remarkable; I mean interpretations of the English Bible. In lesson five it is clearly stated that Beha was a Manifestation of God, but in lesson eleven he is God Himself. I was much puzzled and asked Dr. Kheiralla about it. He very humbly attempted to explain and began by saying that Beha was a Manifestation only, but before he ended he certainly spoke of him as being God…Jesus was the greatest one ever on this planet. (A great difference is made between Jesus and Beha; God is said to have manifested through Jesus.)…

some pray and use the wrong Name; they will not receive…We communicate with God through talking with Him. Use of the right Name is the pass-word. When you become ‘believers’ the ‘Greatest Name’ will be given to you to be used in time of need. Prayers are pass-words and we have used prayers of our own making; have used the wrong pass-word; should not compose them. If we do not use the right pass-word God will hear, but He will not answer…

If you use these prayers earnestly you will have dreams or visions which will come to pass. I promise you that you will have revelations if you use them…Many have been sent by God, Noah, Moses, and others; but the teachings were all corrupted. When they become so, God sends another. At last He sent Jesus, His Beloved son. Brahmins and Buddhists do not know what their true religion is. The Mohammedan is the most corrupt of all. A few days (I’m not sure about the exact number of days) after the death of Mohammed his teaching was corrupted…

There are 27 [?28] letters called the ‘Letters of Luddon,’ and every letter signifies a great power which can only be received by special permission from head-quarters (Acre). Luddon means presence of God, or presence of the Almighty…The finite cannot comprehend the infinite; this is what is between God and us. (Read from Isaiah xlii, 10 [Browne’s footnote: “Though I have done my best to verify and correct these references to the Bible, here and in some other cases I have failed to do either, and so leave them as they stand”] and St John i, 18.) God is forever unknowable. He wished to make Himself known, and as the finite cannot comprehend the infinite He made a form, He chose a ‘Face [Wajh…a term which the Bab often applied to himself],’ that through that He might become known to us. He is not the form; it only represents Him…

The ‘face’ is called by different names; as, ‘The Chosen,’ ‘my Son David,’ etc. He came here that we might gain higher limitations. We receive the Letters of Luddon in our new limitations. Jesus had 12 powers, 8 first, then 4 (did not say what they all were). One power is to communicate without material means; another one is sight. The teacher has no power to convey to another these powers given by head-quarters…Eden means the paradise of God. It is not a place. No tree of knowledge and evil can grow in the soil; it is not a real tree (read Revelation xxii, 2 as one proof). Rivers mentioned in Genesis (ii, 10-14) are not real rivers, for you never see rivers branching into four heads. (We were told in a later lecture that the ‘Manifestation’ is the big river and the four branches are the four sons of Beha.)

There are three Adams – the race, our ancestor, and we shall know the other (Beha) when we get to the ‘pith.’ Adam spoke the Kurdish language, which has no alphabet and is a short spoken language only. Silence will prove this. Adam does not mean ‘red earth’; it means the ‘skin’ or ‘surface.’ Eve means life [In Arabic Hawwa, from the same root as hayy, ‘living,’ and hayat, ‘life.’].God gave Adam and Eve ‘coats of skin,’ to wit the body. He made but two coats of skin. The meaning of ‘coats of skin’ is His ‘image.’ Adam and Eve obeyed the law of multiplication and gave tents to other souls. They had two children, Cain and Abel. These are not material children. Cain means the material and Abel means the spiritual, and these are always at war.There are three bibles: the Hebrew, the Egyptian, and the Chaldean. The Hebrew borrowed from the Egyptian, and the Egyptian from the Chaldean. All have [the same] account from Adam to Moses. We were in Eden, the Paradise of God. The serpent, Wisdom, suggested to us that we should go higher and be as gods. We asked God for this great privilege, and we were allowed to come to earth where this great privilege is to be gained. The ‘flaming sword’ is the earth. Our will is free at all times; we can choose…Those who overcome return to Eden. The tree of knowledge and tree of life are God. When we become adopted children we eat of the tree of life. Cain, the material, is cast out. Cain’s ‘mark’ is God’s image, the skin(?) (It is the thickest kind of fog right here.) Those having the ‘mark’ never become the adopted children of God; they bring this upon themselves; it is not a punishment. Cain went to the Land of Nod [Genesis iv, 16] which means wandering. Impossible to live with God unless we have the image. All go to the Land of Nod who do not conquer. (The Prodigal Son was quoted as proof that Jesus taught these ideas.) We learn to know the good from the evil…

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Noah’s Ark.-The ark is a symbol of God, and means protection. The Temple of Solomon is the same. The clean animals ‘by sevens’ (Genesis vii, 2) are the believers; ‘by two’ means the believers’ parents, who are protected because of the believers. 70 persons went into the ark; 40 first and then 30. The translation is wrong. ‘Raven’ means calamities, and ‘dove’ peace. (A curious story was related in which a dot caused by a fly changed a character which meant husband to mean mule.)…The class were then permitted to ask questions. These are a few of the statements in answer to questions…The accounts of Creation in Genesis were given by three different persons…God made disease; it exists because of the perfection of the law; it is the result of the law. We must all die. It is possible to communicate with others without physical contact…The class were asked to give their ideas as to the meaning of the biblical references in the 9th lesson, but scarcely any one answered satisfactorily. Some said Jesus was referred to, but this was denied with great energy by Dr. Kheiralla, and Isaiah ix, 6 was given as proof. Jesus was not ‘the Almighty God, the Everlasting Father, the Prince of Peace’; he was not a ruler. The answer which seemed to give satisfaction was that a manifestation of God was foretold. Revelation i was read as evidence that Jesus bore witness to the Manifestation. Job xix, 25; Ezekiel xliii, 4; Isaiah lxiii, 1, and Jude 14 are proofs of the Manifestation…In 1852-1853 the Incarnation of God (Beha) appeared…Beha declared himself God to the world in 1866…Micah contains an account of Acre, the New Jerusalem. In 1869-1870 Beha sent tablets to the different rulers calling upon them to throw their kingdoms at his feet and worship him…The Millennium is to come in 1917; this is the Resurrection, when one out of every three will become a follower of Beha…

A message, said to be from Jesus Christ and addressed to the students in Chicago where there were about thirty, was read…In 1852-1853 God Almighty appeared. He was born in Persia among the Mohammedans; declared himself God in 1866 and departed in 1892…He married two wives [One named Nawwab, the mother of `Abbas Efendi and his sister Bahiyya; the other entitled Mahd-i-`Ulya, the mother of Muhammad `Ali, Ziya’u’llah, and Bada`u’llah]; they are the ‘anointed ones’ or ‘olive trees.’ People object to the ‘Manifestation’ because of his being married. A real man ought to marry; a monk is the invention of priests. God came as a man, had a father and mother, fulfilled…

In Isaiah xlv (9-)11 we are rebuked for thinking God should do as we think best. The greatest reason why God should marry is that the race is grafted through His having children.”1

Richard Dawkins vs. Richard Milton – genetics & Velikovsky

We conclude, from part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4, our consideration of Richard Dawkins’ review of Richard Milton’s book Shattering the Myth of Darwinism (New Statesman August 28, 1992 AD).

Dawkins continues with his generic statements with regards to recessive genes which refers to “a gene whose effect is masked by another (dominant) gene at the same locus…large stretches of chromosomes are inert – untranslated. This kind of inertness has not the smallest connection with the ‘recessive’ kind.” The generic part comes in when he merely asserts that “Milton manages the feat of confusing the two. Any slightly qualified referee would have picked up this clanger.”
I am wondering why I should be made to scour Milton’s book as a reply to Dawkins when, apparently, no one, such as a slightly qualified referee, asked him to a quotation or citation.

Dawkins notes that Milton “correctly” states “that Immanuel Velikovsky was ridiculed in his own time” but that, as Milton puts it, “Today, only forty years later, a concept closely similar to Velikovsky’s is widely accepted by many geologists – that the major extinction at the end of the Cretaceous … was caused by collision with a giant meteor or even asteroid.” Dawkins steps in not with scientific evidence to the contrary but with playing mind reader as he merely asserts that “the whole reason why Milton, with his eccentric views on the age of the earth [keeping in mind that Milton wrote “I do not believe that the Earth is only a few thousand years old], champions him) is that his collision was supposed to have happened recently; recently…The geologists’ meteorite, on the other hand, is supposed to have impacted 65 million years ago!”

Dawkins further mind reads in stating, “If Velikovsky had placed his collision tens of millions of years ago he would not have been ridiculed.” Apparently, unable to help himself, Dawkins concludes this particular criticism by writing, “To represent him [Velikovsky] as a misjudged, wilderness-figure who has finally come into his own is either disingenuous or – more charitably and plausibly – stupid.”

Failing to learn lessons from facts, Dawkins writes, that “In these post-Leakey, post-Johanson days, creationist preachers are having to learn that there is no mileage in ‘missing links.’”
He is identifying and/or correlating Richard Milton with “creationist preachers” when Milton states of himself, “I accept that there is persuasive circumstantial evidence for evolution” and “Let me make it unambiguously clear that I am not a creationist, nor do I have any religious beliefs of any kind.”

But what of missing links a concept out of which Darwinists have gone many miles. Dawkins wrote, “Far from being missing, the fossil links between modern humans and our ape ancestors now constitute an elegantly continuous series.” By this he means that hoaxes, frauds, tentative interpretation of evidence via a Darwinian worldview-philosophy are artfully reconstructed, illustrated, computer animated in a neat little line that only exists in artfully reconstructed, illustrated, computer animated elegantly continuous series.

Richard Dawkins asks “One is left wondering what a fossil has to do – what more could a fossil do – to qualify as a ‘missing link’?” This is because Milton wrote that “the only ‘missing link’ so far discovered remains the bogus Piltdown Man.” Oddly, Dawkins writes, “Australopithecus, correctly described as a human body with an ape’s head, doesn’t qualify because it is ‘really’ an ape.” Milton also writes that Homo habilis/handy man which had a brain “perhaps only half the size of the average modern human’s…is a human – not a missing link.”
Yet, Milton does not simply speak authoritatively, as does Dawkins, but notes the following along with various other references on this point, “Dr. A. J. White has pointed out, the habilines were also small in stature, so their brains were not small in relation to their body size, rather like modern pygmies.” Thus, smaller body, smaller head, smaller cranial capacity, smaller brain does not mean that they were not smaller humans.

Dawkins asserts that the real issue is not what the various fossils are but takes aim at naming conventions which is rather waste of time to bother with here.

He ends with “As for would-be purchasers, if you want this sort of silly-season drivel you’d be better off with a couple of Jehovah’s Witness tracts. They are more amusing to read, they have rather sweet pictures, and they put their religious cards on the table.” Apparently, Dawkins, still, thinks that Richard Milton is a lying crypto-creationist. He is such a conspiracy theorist that he states that Milton “pretends not to be religious himself.”
In this way, Dawkins can shrug him off with a few one liners and Darwinians-Dawkinsians can elbow each other in the ribs and walk away as if no challenge has been offered to them.

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Bahai Faith / Baha'i Faith: Is Truth True?

Shoghi Effendi wrote, “The mission of the Founder of their Faith, they conceive it to be to proclaim that religious truth is not absolute but relative.”1

“Baha’u’llah inculcates the basic principle of the relativity of religious truth.”2

“As the Messengers of God redefine what is right and wrong, new codes of civil law and behavior are born, new institutions that express new morals come into existence, and a new culture evolves into a new world order.”3

Let us clearly understand that “truth” is “true.” Religious “truth” should be no different from secular “truth.” By “truth” we aught to understand the fact that it is absolute. “Absolute” means that something is what it is regardless of what we think about it. For instance, that the Earth is round is an absolute truth regardless of whether or not we like it, whether we agree with it, or whether we would prefer that it be another shape. What about the time in history when people thought that the Earth was flat-was the Earth flat? No. They sincerely believed it with all their minds but it was still not true. Some would say that it was “their truth” but truth has no ownership; truth is what it is regardless of who is espousing it or claiming it. It was not “their truth” because it was not true, at best we could say that it was something that they “believed” or something that they “thought” was true.

There is a saying that goes; “it’s not a lie if you believe it.” This may very well be true but it does not mean that something is true simply “because” you believe it to be so. Example, a few years ago someone asked me for money and I told them that I had none. Later that day I realized that I did have some money in my wallet that I had forgotten about. Did I lie? No, because as far as I knew I had no money. But was it the truth that I had no money? No, because I did have some. Therefore, it was not a lie because I believed it to be true but it did turn out to not be true; i.e., my perception was not the same as the facts of the matter.

The general argument that states that there is no absolute truth is perhaps the strongest argument for the fact that there indeed is absolute truth. By stating that there is no absolute truth, one is instantly admitting that there is. After all, in order to make the statement, one must believe that it is absolutely true. They are saying that it is absolutely true, that there is no absolute truth. Maybe there is only one absolute truth and that is, that there is no absolute truth. How could it be absolutely true that there is no absolute truth? Therefore, we see clear proof that there is absolute truth and we humans long for it. Moreover, if truth is not absolute it must be relative yet, if it is relative then even the statement “truth is relative” is a relative statement and therefore, not necessarily true.

In conclusion, all this has been said in order to ask “why should religious truth be any different”? Certainly one problem is that such a concept would envisage the idea that there is actual factual truth and then, in another realm, there is religious truth. While this is not really true it is a convenient mythology that people believe in because it makes them feel better, important or purposeful. It is always of utmost importance to ask “why”; why would the Baha’i believe this? It is not because it makes rational, intellectual or philosophic sense but rather, because of the effect it produces. If religious truth was not relative but absolute then the Baha’i would have no way to set up Baha’ism at the top of the religious food chain; affording themselves the ability to reinterpret all religious beliefs that have come before them.