Item 5 in Bahá’í Ethical Teachings and Laws
Elimination of prejudice
Racial, national, religious and other inherited prejudices are treated as obstacles to justice.
- Position
- 5
- Form
- Mixed formulation
- Obligation
- Context-dependent
- Wording status
- Editorial paraphrase
- Intended audience
- Members of the Bahá’í Faith, with many social principles presented as relevant to humanity generally
- Last reviewed
- 28 June 2026
Names and terminology
Canonical name: Elimination of prejudice
Source wording
Editorial category or principle summary based on the linked primary and scholarly sources.
Literal meaning
Racial, national, religious and other inherited prejudices are treated as obstacles to justice.
Broader interpretation
This entry summarises a major area of the wider framework. It is not one verbatim canonical sentence or an exhaustive account of every interpretation.
Historical context
The Bahá’í Faith emerged in the nineteenth century and developed institutions intended to operate without a professional clergy. Some laws are applied universally, some gradually and some depend on social or institutional conditions.
Practical meaning
Application depends on the relevant community, role, historical setting and the specific rule or teaching involved.
Ethical purpose
The principle is assessed by the interests it protects, the harms it prevents and the conduct it encourages.
Exceptions and disputes
Scope, authority and present application are disputed. Tradition-specific interpretation should be separated from independent ethical evaluation.
Variations across schools or traditions
Bahá’í communities share a central administrative structure, but practical application of particular laws can vary according to guidance, legal setting, age, health and local conditions.
Modern application
Modern application should consider evidence, consent, equality, proportionality, human dignity and foreseeable consequences.
Criticism and difficult cases
Questions arise concerning religious authority, institutional discipline, sexual ethics, gender and eligibility for particular administrative roles. These should be distinguished from broad principles such as human unity and opposition to prejudice.
Truth By Reason analysis
The principle may contain genuine moral insight, but its authority and application must still be justified rather than assumed from tradition alone.
Ethical themes
Sources
- Gleanings from the Writings of Bahá’u’lláh Mainstream secondary source
- Selections from the Writings of ‘Abdu’l-Bahá Mainstream secondary source
- The Kitáb-i-Aqdas Mainstream secondary source