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is the man that turneth towards Thee, |
and woe betide him who standeth |
aloof from Thee, |
who denieth Thee and repudiateth Thy signs in this |
Revelation wherein the faces of the exponents of denial have turned black |
and the faces of the exponents of truthfulness have turned white, |
O Thou |
Who art the Possessor of all names and attributes, |
Who holdest in Thy |
grasp the empire of whatever hath been created in heaven and on earth! |
Praise be to Thee, |
therefore, |
O my God--such praise as Thou didst ascribe |
to Thine own Self, |
and which none except Thee can either comprehend or |
reckon. |
Thou art He, |
O my Lord, |
Who hath made known His own Self unto me, |
at a time when Thy servants have failed to recognize Thee--servants who, |
by |
virtue of the ties that bind them to Thee, |
have been ruling over all that |
dwell on earth and have been vaunting themselves over its peoples. |
Were I, |
O my God, |
to exercise from pole to pole supreme dominion over the earth, |
and were I to be offered all the treasures it containeth, |
and were I to |
expend them in Thy path, |
I would still be powerless to attain unto this |
station, |
unless I were assisted and strengthened by Thee. |
And were I to |
glorify Thee, |
O my God, |
so long as the glory of Thy majesty endureth and |
the influence of Thy sovereignty and power will last, |
such a glorification |
could never be compared with any of the praises which Thou, |
as a token of |
Thy grace, |
hast taught me, |
and wherewith Thou hast bidden me to extol Thy |
virtues. |
If such be the excellence of each one of the praises which Thou |
hast taught me, |
how immeasurably greater must be the excellence of the |
station of the One Who hath known Thee, |
Who hath entered Thy Presence, |
and |
pursued steadfastly the path of Thy Cause! |
I have clearly perceived, |
and I am wholly persuaded, |
that Thou hast from |
everlasting been immeasurably exalted above the mention of all beings, |
and |
wilt continue unto everlasting to remain far above the conception of Thy |
creatures. |
None can befittingly praise Thee except Thine own Self and such |
as are like unto Thee. |
Thou hast, |
verily, |
been at all times, |
and wilt |
everlastingly continue to remain, |
immensely exalted beyond and above all |
comparison and likeness, |
above all imagination of parity or resemblance. |
Having, |
thus, |
recognized Thee as One Who is incomparable, |
and Whose nature |
none can possess, |
it becometh incontrovertibly evident that whosoever may |
praise Thee, |
his praise can befit only such as are of his own nature, |
and |
are subject to his own limitations, |
and it can in no wise adequately |
describe the sublimity of Thy sovereignty, |
nor scale the heights of Thy |
majesty and holiness. |
How sweet, |
therefore, |
is the praise Thou givest to |
Thine own Self, |
and the description Thou givest of Thine own Being! |
I testify, |
O my God, |
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