- Moojan Momen. Bahá'í Sacred Texts (2019). The Baha’i Faith is a scriptural religion. Momen explains the Baha’i beliefs about sacred texts and prophets, the transmission and distribution of the scripture and its role in the community (archived copy, original offline).
- Universal House of Justice, comp. Bahá'í World, The: Volume 18 (1979-1983) (1986). Periodic volumes that survey the global activities and major achievements of the Faith.
- Brett Zamir, comp. Book Search: Jump to any page of the Sacred Writings or Primary Literature (2005). Jump to any page in any book of the Sacred Writings. See also Random page.
- Vargha Taefi. Concept of Process in the Bahá'í Writings, The (2005). Thesis is in Persian only, no English translation is available.
- United States Bahá'í Publishing Trust. Copyright Status of Bahá'í Texts (1996-11). Questions regarding copyright and posting of Sacred Writings on the Internet.
- William P. Collins. Library and Archival Resources at the Bahá'í World Centre (1985:12). Overview of the nature of the Bahá'í World Centre; historical resources at the BWC; Centre for the Study of the Holy Texts; access to BWC resources; classification schemes.
- Universal House of Justice. Geoffrey W. Marks, comp. Messages from the Universal House of Justice 1963-1986: Third Epoch of the Formative Age (1996).
- Jack McLean. Military Metaphor in Bahá'í Sacred Literature, The (2005). Martial symbology is common in the Bahá'í Writings, especially those of Shoghi Effendi, yet the Writings are expressly pacifistic. This article examines the apparent contradiction.
- Iraj Ayman, Robert Stockman. Persian, Arabic, and Provisional Translations (1999). Words relating to the titles of Bahá'í Writings, "Pure" Persian and "Pure" Arabic, and information on provisional translations.
- Robert Stockman. Scripture (1995).
- Universal House of Justice. Texts, Sacred, Permission to Distribute Electronic Copies of (2000-05-08). Sacred Writings and anything produced by the Bahá'í World Center or the Bahá'í International Community may be electronically redistributed.
- Juan Cole. Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Bahá'í Scriptures, The (1999-04). The conception of human rights arose as part of the project of modernity, and has been problematic for many religious traditions, but Bahá'u'lláh and the religion's subsequent holy figures all had a strong commitment to human rights.
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