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Chase, Thornton.
Bahai Revelation, The
[LibriVox] /
Chase, Thornton.
31 sound files : digital, MP3 or Ogg files.
This is an online free audiobook and is compatible in most MP3 and iPod players.
The text for this LibriVox audiobook came from public-domain text.
Thornton Chase (1847 1912) is commonly recognized as the first convert to the Baháí Faith of Occidental background. During his life he organized many Baháí activities in Chicago and Los Angeles and was considered a prominent Baháí. In 1894, Chase met Ibrahim Kheiralla, a Baháí from Beirut who had recently come to the United States. Chase and a small group of Chicagoans began to study the Baháí Faith with him. By 1895 he had completed the class and become a Baháí. In 1907 Chase was able to go on pilgrimage. Though Chase was able to be with Abdul-Bahá in Akka for only three days, the experience transformed him. Abdul-Bahá, highly impressed by Chases qualities, conferred on him the title Thábit, "steadfast". On returning home, Chase wrote an account of his pilgrimage, which was published under the title In Galilee in 1908. The short work gives a detailed and poignant description of Abdul-Bahá's home and family in Akka, as well as a moving description of Abdul-Bahá himself. Chase then turned his thoughts to an introductory book on the Baháí Faith. Published as The Bahai Revelation in 1909, this work was one of the most comprehensive and accurate introductions to the Baháí Faith written by an early American Baháí. It continued to be reprinted until the 1920s. The work emphasized the Baháí Faith and its teachings as a vehicle for personal spiritual transformation. Shoghi Effendi, the Guardian of the Baháí Faith, later honoured him as one of the Disciples of Abdul-Bahá (also termed Heralds of the Covenant). (Adapted from Wikipedia.)
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