One for all
Alex Coolman
For a long time, Jim Vinzant was unsure which religion was right for him.
He tried being a Presbyterian, a Mormon, a Baptist, restlessly shifting
from one faith to the next.
None of these options felt like a good fit to him.
But every time he gave up on one group and joined another, he noticed
something: The members of each new religion were convinced that Vinzant,
by coming into their fold, had finally found the true path.”They all just
said, ‘Thank God, you’re here, because if you’d have stayed over there
you’d have been lost forever,”’ Vinzant recalled.
The experience left an impression on the Costa Mesa resident that
eventually led to his joining the Bahai faith, a religion with about 5
million members worldwide. Their core ideas are the unity of God, the
unity of all prophets and the unity of humanity. To Vinzant, the Bahai
approach seemed to recognize the crucial links between the various creeds
he had considered, joining them together in a single, humane vision.
“It was exactly the way I’ve been living my whole life,” Vinzant said.
“The Bahai faith includes all religious groups and all people who believe
in God, and even the ones who don’t.”
He was introduced to the experience of the Bahais through a Friday
evening “fireside” meeting at the home of Masoud and Fariba Roshan, a
Corona del Mar couple who have held the meetings in their living room for
almost 20 years.The Roshans have never failed to open their home to the
community in all that time. Every Friday evening, even if they are out of
town, their home is open, dinner is available for those who attend the
meeting, and a speaker gives talks informally to the group.”Fireside”
meetings -- which may or may not involve an actual fireplace blaze -- are
a traditional form of meeting for the Bahais. The faith was developed in
Iran in the 19th century by a prophet Bahais call Baha’u’llah, which
means “the glory of God,” who was imprisoned and exiled for much of his
life. He died in 1892.
Baha’u’llah, also known as Baha Allah, taught that all historical
prophets -- from Jesus to Buddha and Muhammad -- were messengers of an
essentially unified divinity. Moreover, he said, all peoples of the world
were spiritually united, despite the divisions of language and
nationality that seemed to separate them.
The warmth and informality of the Bahai fireside sessions seek to enact,
through hospitality and community, a microcosm of the world the Bahais
believe should be created -- a world of greater unity and cooperation,
with less emphasis given to the sources of strife.
About 20 people gathered on a recent Friday
at the Roshans’ home to eat dinner, socialize and hear Howard Tangler, a
semiretired San Clemente resident and Bahai organizer, describe his
feelings about the faith.
Tangler, in a comparison that many Bahais make, likened the Earth to a
sort of space ship traveling through the universe. He emphasized the
importance of understanding “the insignificance of humans in the bigger
scheme.”
Given that humans constitute such a small piece of the universe, Tangler
contended, it is ridiculous for them to exert so much energy in
quarreling with each other.
In articulating the Bahai’s alternative vision of society, Tangler told
an anecdote about electing the spiritual advisory council for the San
Clemente Bahai group. The nine-member board consists of members who were
raised Catholic, Protestant, Muslim, Hindu and Jewish -- and other faiths
-- but who have all decided to embrace the broad vision articulated by
Baha’u’llah.
“In most parts of the world,” Tangler said, “you couldn’t get all those
people to go into a room and get them to come out alive again.”
Not everyone listening to Tangler’s comments was in perfect agreement
with the sentiments he expressed.
Costa Mesa resident Bill Johnson, who described himself as “basically an
Ayn Rand-based atheist,” had come to the Bahai meeting at the suggestion
of his co-worker, Jon Flavor of Tustin.
Johnson said he wasn’t thrilled about the idea of God, but he was
interested in the Bahai approach to science, which views the worlds of
faith and reason as fundamentally compatible and complementary.
For Johnson, who believes that “if there was such a thing as God, it
would be truth and freedom,” this take on rationality seemed like a
remarkably reasonable position.
The tenet is one that attracted Vinzant as well.
“When science and religion do not mesh and support each other, the
religion becomes superstition and the science becomes magic,” Vinzant
said.
But Vinzant does not fundamentally doubt the existence of a divinity, as
Johnson does.
During his presentation on the Bahai faith, Tangler asked the group
assembled if it was OK to take for granted the notion that some kind of
being “that, for convenience, we call God,” existed.
Johnson, alone among those assembled, raised his hand to object to the
supposition.
But Tangler’s response was very Bahai in its moderation.
“Well,” he said. “That’s OK. That’s fine. But in the Bahai faith, we do
think there’s a God.”
----
FYI
Here is more information on Bahai meetings held in our area each month,
coordinated by Jim Vinzant:
* Second and fourth Sunday in Costa Mesa’s TeWinkle park
* Friday nights at Masoud and Fariba Roshan’s Corona del Mar home, (949)
759-0999
* First and third Saturday at Vinzant’s home, (949) 650-3960
* The Rassekh family of Corona del Mar also hosts Bahai firesides, (949)
760-5360
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