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Government employees

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Contents

  • 1 Duties of leaders toward fostering non-corruption in ministers and employees
    • 1.1 Hope for reward and fear of punishment must be taken into account by leaders, including fear of spiritual retribution
      • 1.1.1 See also
  • 2 From Lights of Guidance (to further subcategorize)
    • 2.1 Those Engaged in Government Service Should Perform Their Duties with Utmost Fidelity, Trustworthiness...
    • 2.2 Government Employees Should Perform Deeds and Actions of the Highest Degree of Rectitude and Honesty
    • 2.3 Those Who Are Selected to Serve the Public Should Perform Their Duties in a Spirit of the True Servitude
    • 2.4 Those Who Enter Service of the Government Should Shun All Forms of Venality and Corruption
    • 2.5 If One Abuses His Position with the Government Through Corrupt or Mercenary Behavior...
    • 2.6 If a Man Deals Faithlessly with a Just Government, He Deals Faithlessly with God
    • 2.7 Content with Wages Received, They Should Not Stain Their Character Through Acts of Bribery and Fraud nor Misappropriate a Single Penny
  • 3 See also

Duties of leaders toward fostering non-corruption in ministers and employees[edit]

Hope for reward and fear of punishment must be taken into account by leaders, including fear of spiritual retribution[edit]

"In the conduct of life, man is actuated by two main motives: `The Hope for Reward' and `The Fear of Punishment'.

"This hope and this fear must consequently be greatly taken into account by those in authority who have important posts under Government. Their business in life is to consult together for the framing of laws, and to provide for their just administration.

"The tent of the order of the world is raised and established on the two pillars of `Reward and Retribution'.

"In despotic Governments carried on by men without Divine faith, where no fear of spiritual retribution exists, the execution of the laws is tyrannical and unjust.

"There is no greater prevention of oppression than these two sentiments, hope and fear. They have both political and spiritual consequences.

"If administrators of the law would take into consideration the spiritual consequences of their decisions, and follow the guidance of religion, `They would be Divine agents in the world of action, the representatives of God for those who are on earth, and they would defend, for the love of God, the interests of His servants as they would defend their own'. If a governor realizes his responsibility, and fears to defy the Divine Law, his judgments will be just. Above all, if he believes that the consequences of his actions will follow him beyond his earthly life, and that `as he sows so must he reap', such a man will surely avoid injustice and tyranny.

"Should an official, on the contrary, think that all responsibility for his actions must end with his earthly life, knowing and believing nothing of Divine favours and a spiritual kingdom of joy, he will lack the incentive to just dealing, and the inspiration to destroy oppression and unrighteousness.

"When a ruler knows that his judgments will be weighed in a balance by the Divine Judge, and that if he be not found wanting he will come into the Celestial Kingdom and that the light of the Heavenly Bounty will shine upon him, then will he surely act with justice and equity. Behold how important it is that Ministers of State should be enlightened by religion!"

(Attributed to 'Abdu'l-Bahá, Paris Talks, pp. 157-158)

See also[edit]

  • Separation of Church and State

From Lights of Guidance (to further subcategorize)[edit]

Those Engaged in Government Service Should Perform Their Duties with Utmost Fidelity, Trustworthiness...[edit]

"As for those who are engaged in government service, they should perform their duties with the utmost fidelity, trustworthiness, rectitude, uprightness, integrity and high-mindedness. Let them not tarnish their good repute by pursuing personal interests, nor, for the sake of transient worldly benefits, make themselves objects of public odium and outcasts of the Threshold of Grandeur."

('Abdu'l-Bahá: from a previously untranslated Tablet: Trustworthiness: A Cardinal Bahá'í Virtue, A Compilation of the Universal House of Justice, January 1987, in Lights of Guidance, no. 1472)

Government Employees Should Perform Deeds and Actions of the Highest Degree of Rectitude and Honesty[edit]

"Ye who are the sincere well-wishers of the state, who are the dutiful and compliant subjects of the government, should occupy yourselves in constant service. Anyone who entereth the employ of the government should show forth in all his deeds and actions the highest degree of rectitude and honesty, of temperance and self-discipline, of purity and sanctity, of justice and equity. If, God forbid, he should be guilty of the least breach of trust, or approach his duties in a slack or desultory fashion, or extort so much as a farthing from the populace, or seek to further his own selfish interests and personal gain--then it is certain that he shall be deprived of the outpourings of God's grace."

('Abdu'l-Bahá: from a previously untranslated Tablet: Trustworthiness: A Cardinal Bahá'í Virtue, A Compilation of the Universal House of Justice, January 1987, in Lights of Guidance, no. 1473)

Those Who Are Selected to Serve the Public Should Perform Their Duties in a Spirit of the True Servitude[edit]

"Those persons who are selected to serve the public, or are appointed to administrative positions, should perform their duties in a spirit of true servitude and ready compliance. That is to say, they should be distinguished by their goodly disposition and virtuous character, content themselves with their allotted remuneration and act with trustworthiness in all their doings. They should keep themselves aloof from unworthy motives, and be far removed above covetous designs; for rectitude, probity and righteousness are among the most potent means for attracting the grace of God and securing both the prosperity of the country and the welfare of the people. Glory and honour for man are not to be found in fortunes and riches, least of all in those which have been unlawfully amassed through extortion, embezzlement and corruption practised at the expense of an exploited populace. Supreme honour, nobility and greatness in the human world, and true felicity in this life and the life to come--all consist in equity and uprightness, sanctity and detachment. If a man would seek distinction, he should suffice himself with a frugal provision, seek to better the lot of the poor of the realm, choose the way of justice and fair-mindedness, and tread the path of high-spirited service. Such a one, needy though he be, shall win imperishable riches and attain unto everlasting honour."

('Abdu'l-Bahá: from a previously untranslated Tablet: Trustworthiness: A Cardinal Bahá'í Virtue, A Compilation of the Universal House of Justice, January 1987, p. 11, in Lights of Guidance, no. 1474)

Those Who Enter Service of the Government Should Shun All Forms of Venality and Corruption[edit]

"If any of the friends should enter into service of the government, they should make their occupation a means of drawing nearer to the divine Threshold: they should act with probity and uprightness, rigorously shun all forms of venality and corruption, and content themselves with the salaries they are receiving, taking pride, rather, in the degree of sagacity, competence and judgement that they can bring to their work. If a person content himself with a single loaf of bread, and perform his duties with as much justice and fair-mindedness as lieth within his power, he will be the prince of mortals, and the most praiseworthy of men. Noble and distinguished will he be, despite his empty purse! Pre-eminent will he rank among the free, although his garb be old and worn! For man, praise and glory reside in virtuous and noble qualities; honour and distinction in nearness to the divine Threshold."

('Abdu'l-Bahá: from a previously untranslated Tablet: Trustworthiness: A Cardinal Bahá'í Virtue, A Compilation of the Universal House of Justice, January 1987, in Lights of Guidance, no. 1475)

If One Abuses His Position with the Government Through Corrupt or Mercenary Behavior...[edit]

"If one of the friends ... be appointed to a high administrative office, he should strive diligently, to perform the duties committed to his charge with perfect honesty, integrity, sincerity, rectitude and uprightness. If, however, he abuse his position through corrupt or mercenary behaviour, he will be held in detestation at the Threshold of Grandeur and incur the wrath of the Abha Beauty--nay, he shall be forsaken by the One True God and all who adore Him. So far from acting thus, he should content himself with his salary and allowance, seek out the way of righteousness, and dedicate his life to the service of state and people. Such must be the conduct and bearing of the Bahá'ís. Whoso transgresseth these bounds shall fall at length into manifest loss."

('Abdu'l-Bahá: from a previously untranslated Tablet: Trustworthiness: A Cardinal Bahá'í Virtue, A Compilation of the Universal House of Justice, January 1987, in Lights of Guidance, no. 1476)

If a Man Deals Faithlessly with a Just Government, He Deals Faithlessly with God[edit]

"All government employees, whether of high or low rank, should, with perfect integrity, probity and rectitude, content themselves with the modest stipends and allowances that are theirs. They should keep their hands unsullied and preserve their fair name from blemish.... If a man deals faithlessly with a just government he shall have dealt faithlessly with God; and if he render it faithful service he shall have rendered that service to God."

('Abdu'l-Bahá: from a previously untranslated Tablet: Trustworthiness: A Cardinal Bahá'í Virtue, A Compilation of the Universal House of Justice, January 1987, in Lights of Guidance, no. 1477)

Content with Wages Received, They Should Not Stain Their Character Through Acts of Bribery and Fraud nor Misappropriate a Single Penny[edit]

"Those souls who are employed in government departments should approach their duties with entire detachment, integrity and independence of spirit, and with complete consecration and sanctity of purpose. Content with the wages they are receiving, they should see that they do not stain their fair character through acts of bribery and fraud. Were one of the friends in this day to misappropriate so much as a single penny, the sacred mantle of God's Cause would become sullied by his action and the shame of it would attach to the whole community. Heaven forbid! Nay, rather, the government and people should come to repose such trust in the Bahá'ís as to wish to commit all affairs of state throughout the provinces into the chaste, pure hands of God's well-beloved."

('Abdu'l-Bahá: from a previously untranslated Tablet: Trustworthiness: A Cardinal Bahá'í Virtue, A Compilation of the Universal House of Justice, January 1987, in Lights of Guidance, no. 1478)

See also[edit]

  • Government
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Category:
  • Government
This page was last edited on 8 March 2025, at 03:48.
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