The Prophecies of Jesus - Michael Sours
 <<   <<   >   >>
Page 160 of  excerpts

Its significance was as under-appreciated by the world as were the early beginnings of Christianity, but its birth and growth had not gone by unnoticed. Christian missionaries set forth accounts and appraisals of circumstances in foreign lands that were widely published and read. Slowly the emergence of the Baha'i Faith began to be reported in books and missionary journals. All of the most well-known missionaries in Persia, men such as Dr George W. Holmes, P.Z. Easton, Dr Shedd, The Revd James W. Hawkes, The Revd N. Wright, The Revd J.L. Potter and many others, noted the early beginnings and emergence of the Faith and sent reports back to the West. (160:2)

These reports, often clouded by extreme prejudice, were largely inaccurate and misinformed due to reliance on hostile sources of information or, in some cases, because their missionary authors were eager to gather converts and feared the competition of a religion that was having dramatic success. For Christian missionaries, this success presented a disconcerting contrast to the failure Christian missions were experiencing in Muslim countries, a failure that was both long-standing and well known. (160:3)

Get Next Page

  The Prophecies of Jesus
  Citation Source List
: see