A Bahai place of worship is called:
1) a Bahai house of worship,
2) a Bahai temple or
3) a Mashriqu'l-adhkar
These are three different names for the same thing.
It depends what you mean by "church."The "church" in the sense of a building for worship is called the Mashriqu'l-Adhkar, which is literally the place where remembance of God goes up: a plain English equivalent would be chantry. Bahais in the west call them houses of worship. There's a wiki article here:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bah%C3%A1%27%C3%AD_House_of_WorshipThe "church" in the sense of the community of believers is just called the Bahai Community or Bahai Commonwealth."The Church" in the sense of a the authorities within the community that say what's right and what's not, and what's going to happen, is called the Bahai Administrative Order. There are no priests, the authority is in the hands of elected bodies, from the local to the international level, and there are people appointed for special functions but without any general authority in the community.
Catholic, Anglican, Church of England, Bahai, LMS (London Missionary Society), Mormons, Methodist, etc, etc
The Bahai Faith does not use any code in its scriptures, which everyone is encouraged to read for themselves. See the Bahai Reference Library for a good selection of Bahai scriptures, all for free. The Bahai community today also does not use codes, secret handshakes, etc..
their are only one major branch which is called the Baha'i world faith
The Bahá'í Faith originated in a country called Persia - now known as Iran.
because the bahai religion is afraid that there are secrets that getting told to the outsideworld
The Bahai Faith does not have a Pope. The Bahai community is administered by elected counsels, called Assemblies or Houses of Justice. The local and national Assemblies are elected every year. The head of the world-wide Bahai community, the Universal House of Justice, is elected every five years. Doctrines are not decided by the Assemblies: they are based on the writings of Baha'u'llah and the explanations of them from two authorised interpreters: Abdu'l-Baha and Shoghi Effendi. There is no authorised interpreter today, and none can be appointed (Abdu'l-Baha and Shoghi Effendi were appointed in Bahai scripture).
Bahai Zoroastrianism
William McElwee Miller has written: 'Baha'ism' -- subject(s): Babism, Bahais 'The Bahai cause today' -- subject(s): Bahai Faith 'Baha'ism, its origin, history, and teachings' -- subject(s): Bahai Faith
its called the church of love.
To my knowledge, no such thing exists.
it has many but it is mainly jewish.and bahai :)