Same as any... but I still remember this weird recruiter who tried to nail me ~35 years ago who was oddly dressed and actually pointed that out in some sort of *strange and twisted way* that his dress should positively influence me to convert.
It didn't. Quite the contrary, especially with his "argument."
I am a follower of Jesus Christ. I have come across little excerpts here and there from this group and find some of it to be nice. I don't know what that means but some it just strikes me as very true, clear, and beautiful. That being said, there are many wise people in the world but there is only one Jesus Christ Messiah, Lord.
I feel they are entitled to their point of view, and of all religions, they teach love. They underwent a major persecution in Iran, and did not retaliate.
Their prophet speaks wisdom enough to convince people that he is genuine, but that is what it takes to be a false prophet.
You see, Jesus said there would be many false prophets and deceive the very elect, were that possible. They would do signs and wonders, too.
Although they are model citizens, the undercurrent of their religion is with so many others, their doctrines are setting them up to receive Satan as the God in the future.
There is more on this type of deceptions revealed when you break a hidden Bible code at WNW.revelado.org/revealed.htm
The Bahai faith is weak in addressing sin, treating it as if it were not a big problem and is surmountable by human effort. Christ's divinity is denied, as is the evidential value and literal nature of Christ's resurrection. And for the Baha'i faith, one of its biggest problems is its pluralism. That is, how can one reconcile such divergent religious without leaving them theologically gutted. It is easy to argue that the world's religions have commonalities in their ethical teachings and have some concept of ultimate reality. But it is another beast entirely to try to argue unity in their fundamental teachings about what the ultimate reality is and about how those ethics are grounded.