The "prophets" Jesus refers to are figures recognized in the Judeo-Christian tradition, like false prophets, teachers, or leaders claiming divine authority, but whose actions or teachings are not aligned with God's true message.
Jesus is warning about false prophets within the context of Jewish religious leaders of his time or those claiming prophetic authority.
The Baha'i Faith is a distinct and independent religion. While it recognizes and reveres the spiritual truths and prophets of Judaism, Christianity, and other faiths, it has its own unique teachings, scriptures, practices, and organizational structure.
The Bible was written long before the emergence of the Baha'i Faith and was specifically composed within the context of ancient Israelite, Jewish, and early Christian communities. It is a foundational scripture for Judaism and Christianity, containing teachings, history, prophecy, and guidance relevant to those faiths.
The Bible was not written with the Baha'i Faith in mind, nor does it contain teachings explicitly about Bahá'u'lláh or the principles of the Baha'i Faith, or for it to come about into the future
The Bible is a sacred text for Judaism and Christianity, not specifically for the Baha'i Faith.’, so jumping in and hijacking verses like Matthew 7:15-20, to justify another faith, is squatting in and trying to hijack the bible to bolster a different religion
That is not good fruits
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How many of those Jesus mimics have sustained their growing communities to produce good fruits, recognised globally by all people who love Hod, like Baha'u'llah has? Not one.
First of all I think you have a typo, which is perfectly fine, as I do it all the time and understand, do you mean "God" not Hod, I'll answer on this assumption,
Sorry Kam, but I have to be straight here, either you haven't got a clue, using this notion to bolster yourself or your faith, as this is completely not true or an outright lie, as there are countless people who love God with all the mind and strength and produce good fruit, not only in the CC, but also Orthodox and Protestants too, across the board
My dear friend fruits on its own is not a religion or a faith, it takes much more.
- Religions typically involve a set of beliefs, doctrines, rituals, moral codes, and community practices centered around a spiritual or divine principle.
- Good works and moral behavior are usually seen as outcomes or expressions of faith, not the entirety of a religion.