Independant investigation for the truth is an important tenent of the Baha'i faith.
http://info.bahai.org/article-1-3-2-17.htmlhttp://www.bahaiprinciples.org/Independ ... /index.phpWe can't enforce the religion on our children. They must investigate on their own and decide what is the truth. The methods differ from country to country, but here in India, we Baha'is do not accept declarations from members under the age of 16. Until then, they are considered as "Baha'i children" - we can teach the religion, sure, but we can't enforce it on them. No force or pressure at all.
The day i first declared, I met a man from Iran. He told me that he declared at the age of 19, even though his parents were both Baha'i. The reason is simple - he was investigating. Similarily, I know another chap who's a pothead, and his parents are Baha'i - yet, he remains a pothead who doesn't care about religion. Of course, his parents do talk him to stop smoking, but there's no such prohibition or force involved. And, of course, no pressure to become religious - at all. It's his life, and he has the right to decide what's right and what's wrong.
And, of course, as you all know, I am an ex-Muslim transformed into a Baha'i.
"Most encyclopedias and similar sources estimate between 5 and 6 million Bahá'ís in the world in the early twenty-first century."
Your religion encourages intellectualism. It is like a plague to religions, so Baha'i will never become a large religion.