From: Baha'is to Remember...
Yet another
Hand of the Cause was the revered Mullá ‘Alí-Akbar, upon him be the glory of
God, the All-Glorious. Early in life, this illustrious man attended
institutions of higher learning and labored diligently, by day and night, until
he became thoroughly conversant with the learning of the day, with secular
studies, philosophy, and religious jurisprudence. He frequented the gatherings
of philosophers, mystics, and Shaykhís, thoughtfully traversing
those areas of knowledge, intuitive wisdom, and illumination; but he thirsted
after the wellspring of truth, and hungered for the bread that comes down from
Heaven. No matter how he strove to perfect himself in those regions of the
mind, he was never satisfied; he never reached the goal of his desires; his
lips stayed parched; he was confused, perplexed, and felt that he had wandered
from his path. The reason was that in all those circles he had found no
passion; no joy, no ecstasy; no faintest scent of love. And as he went deeper
into the core of those manifold beliefs, he discovered that from the day of the
Prophet Muhammad’s advent until our own times, innumerable sects have arisen:
creeds differing among themselves; disparate opinions, divergent goals,
uncounted roads and ways. And he found each one, under some plea or other,
claiming to reveal spiritual truth; each one believing
that it alone followed the true path—this although the Muhammedic sea could
rise in one great tide, and carry all those sects away to the ocean floor. “No
cry shalt thou hear from them, nor a whisper even.” [Qur’án 19:98]
(‘Abdu’l-Baha, ‘Memorials of the Faithful’)