The Spirit that has incarnated itself in the institutions of a rising
Faith has, in the course of its onward march for the redemption
of the world, encountered and is now battling with such forces as
are, in most instances, the very negation of that Spirit, and whose
continued existence must inevitably hinder it from achieving its
purpose. The hollow and outworn institutions, the obsolescent doctrines
and beliefs, the effete and discredited traditions which these
forces represent, it should be observed, have, in certain instances,
been undermined by virtue of their senility, the loss of their cohesive
power, and their own inherent corruption. A few have been swept
away by the onrushing forces which the Bahá’í Faith has, at the
hour of its birth, so mysteriously released. Others, as a direct
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result of a vain and feeble resistance to its rise in the initial stages
of its development, have died out and been utterly discredited. Still
others, fearful of the pervasive influence of the institutions in which
that same Spirit had, at a later stage, been embodied, had mobilized
their forces and launched their attack, destined to sustain, in their
turn, after a brief and illusory success, an ignominious defeat.