God hath imposed a fine on every adulterer and adulteress, to be paid to the House of Justice: nine mithqáls of gold, to be doubled if they should repeat the offence. Such is the penalty which He Who is the Lord of Names hath assigned them in this world; and in the world to come He hath ordained for them a humiliating torment. Should anyone be afflicted by a sin, it behoveth him to repent thereof and return unto his Lord. He, verily, granteth forgiveness unto whomsoever He willeth, and none may question that which it pleaseth Him to ordain. He is, in truth, the Ever-Forgiving, the Almighty, the All-Praised.
God hath imposed a fine on every adulterer and adulteress, to be paid to the House of JusticeAlthough the term translated here as
adultery refers, in its broadest sense, to unlawful sexual intercourse between either married or unmarried individuals (see note
36 for a definition of the term), ‘Abdu’l-Bahá has specified that the punishment here prescribed is
for sexual intercourse between persons who are unmarried. He indicates that it remains
for the Universal House of Justice to determine the penalty
for adultery committed by a married individual. (See also Q&A
49.)
In one of His Tablets, ‘Abdu’l-Bahá refers to some of the spiritual and social implications of the violation of the laws of morality and, concerning the penalty here described, He indicates that the aim of this law is to make clear to all that such an action is shameful in the eyes of God and that, in the event that the offence can be established and the fine imposed, the principal purpose is the exposure of the offenders -- that they are shamed and disgraced in the eyes of society. He affirms that such exposure is in itself the greatest punishment.
The House of Justice referred to in this verse is presumably the Local House of Justice, currently known as the Local Spiritual Assembly.
nine mithqáls of gold, to be doubled if they should repeat the offenceA mithqál is a unit of weight. The weight of the traditional mithqál used in the Middle East is equivalent to 24 nakhuds. However, the mithqál used by the Bahá’ís consists of 19 nakhuds,
“in accordance with the specification of the Bayán” (Q&A
23). The weight of nine of these mithqáls equals 32.775 grammes or 1.05374 troy ounces.
In relation to the application of the fine, Bahá’u’lláh clearly specifies that each succeeding fine is double the preceding one (Q&A
23); thus the fine imposed increases in geometrical progression. The imposition of this fine is intended
for a future condition of society, at which time the law will be supplemented and applied by the Universal House of Justice.
Question: Concerning the punishment of the adulterer and adulteress.
Answer: Nine mithqáls are payable for the first offence, eighteen for the second, thirty-six for the third, and so on, each succeeding fine being double the preceding. The weight of one mithqál is equivalent to nineteen nakhuds in accordance with the specification of the Bayán.