http://www.saibaba.ws/teachings/qa.htm

 

Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai Baba - Questions & Answers

 

Q:     Swami, sometimes, when I am home, I feel afraid and lonely without You 
near me.

Sai:  When in fear and doubt, pray to Me. Tune in to My mighty Power, which, 
compared to the power of the sun which I have placed in the heavens, is what a 
baby's breathing is to a typhoon. (1)

 

Q:     But when I leave Prasanthi, surely You will be busy and forget about me.

Sai:  No matter where you go, always know that I will be there, inside you, 
guiding every step of the way. ... You are my very own, dearer than dear to me. 
I will protect you as the eyelids protect the eyes. (2)

 

Q:     How will You know I need You, Swami?

Sai:  Call on Me in your distress; it is your right to invoke My Grace. (3) If 
you call upon Me, I shall be at your side.*** (4)

 

Q:     But, Swami, surely You save only the pure. I have been very bad recently.

Sai:  To say that you have to be pure in order to win My grace is as foolish as 
to say that you have to be healthy to receive the ministrations of a doctor! 
The pure do not need a Master! The tough do not need a doctor! (5) Why fear 
when I am here? Put all your faith in Me. I shall guide and guard you. (6)

 

Q:     But I cannot see You when I am home.

Sai:  I see [you] and I am with [you], wherever [you] may be. (7)

 

Q:     How can You help me thousands of miles away?

Sai:  Wherever you are, you are near Me. You cannot go beyond My reach. (8)

 

Q:     Swami, what happens if You do not come?

Sai:  I will not forsake you. I have come to help, to accompany, and to carry 
you. I can never forsake you. I will never fail in My duty to My children. (9) 
Nothing will harm him who turns his attention toward Me. (10) Sai Krishna will 
install Himself in the lotus of your heart. He will be ever with you, as guard 
and guide, and will shower Grace on you. He will be the Mother, Father and 
Precep­tor, the Nearest Kinsman; He will be your All. (11)

 

Q:     Even when I have been bad?

Sai:  However you are, you are Mine. I will not give you up. (12)

 

Q:     Even if I forget You for a while?

Sai:  Those who stray away will come again to me, do not doubt this. I shall 
beckon them back to me. (13)

 

Q:     Oh, Swami, You are the best friend anyone ever had!

(1)   Sathyam, Sivam, Sundaram, III, 110.
(2)   Sanathan Sarathi, 30, Feb. 1987, backcover.
(3)   Sathyam, III, 60.
(4)   Life of Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai Baba, 110.
(5)   Sathyam, III, 101.
(6)   LBSSSB, 98.
(7)   Sathya Sai Speaks, IV, 33.
(8)   Sai Vandana, 74.
(9)   Yoga of Action, 8.
(10)Shirdi Sai in LBSSSB, 188.
(11)SSS, X, 149.
(12)My Baba and I, 69.
(13)God Descends on Earth, 35.
*** [KASTURI:] It does not matter if [the one in distress] is not a devotee. In 
calling upon Baba, no particular Name is essential – Rama, Krishna, Jesus, 
Allah, Sai, be it any. All Names and Forms being His and His alone, He is only 
too ready to answer the cry of the one in distress and to avert it. (LBSSSB, 
133.)

 

These quotations are taken from the Sai Dictionary of Quotations and put 
together in a very pleasing interview form, a collaborative work of 36 Sainet 
devotees.

Q:     Swami, why was I born?

Sai:  For what purpose were you born? (1) Man has been sent into the world ... 
to realize the truth that he is not man, but God. The wave dances with the 
wind, basks in the sun, frisks in the rain, imagining it is playing on the 
breast of the sea; it does not know that it is the sea itself. Until it 
realizes the truth, it will be tossed up and down; when it knows it, it can lie 
calm and col­lected, at peace with itself. (2)

 

Q:     How am I God, Swami? I am a human being with a human body.

Sai:  You are in this body, in this recep­tacle, ... to realize the God you 
really are. This body is the cocoon that you have spun round [yourself], by 
means of your im­pulses and desires. Use it to grow wings so that you can 
escape from it! (3)

 

Q:     Do I have to reach God?

Sai:  All creatures have to reach God. (4) It is the destiny of man to jour­ney 
from human-ness to divinity, as he has already journeyed from animal-ness. (5) 
Some may ascend a plane, others may travel by car or board a bus, some may 
prefer a train journey, others may like to trudge along – but all must reach 
the goal, some day or other. (6)

 

Q:     But, Swami, where will I find Him?

Sai:  [The] Divine Principle is the very core of man. ... It is the source of 
strength which is unfailing and ir­resistible. ... The Divine is here before 
you, behind you, inside you, outside you; the Intelligence through which you 
can recognize. (7)

 

Q:     I'm sure I could find God if I lived here at Prasanthi Nilayam, with You.

Sai:  The community in which you find yourself is the arena where you can win 
the victory, the gymnasium where you develop the skill to win. (8)

 

Q:     But why must I stay in such an unhappy world, where I too am un­happy?

Sai:  You [learn] by the experience of the buffeting of the World. The World is 
a very essential part of the curricu­lum of man. (9)
The ... world is like a hotel to which we have come to experience the 
consequences of our actions in the past. The body is a room in the hotel in 
which we have to undergo the Karmic consequences. (10)

 

Q:     When I am home, many things distract me. I don't often think of finding 
God.

Sai:  Without trying to discover the Di­vinity that is in the human form, 
people are wasting their lives. If you examine the great scriptures of the 
world, you will find that they all emphasize the supreme precious­ness of being 
able to discover one's Divine nature, without which one cannot achieve real 
bliss. Man seeks worldly pleasures and pros­perity but does not seek that inner 
Divinity which will give him perma­nent happiness. (11)

 

Q:     But, Swami, isn't it a long way?

Sai:  You have got to go a long way. But do not be down-hearted. (12) I have 
come to guide [you]. (13) I am ... ready to help you from the first lesson to 
the last. (14)

 

(1)   Sathyam, Sivam, Sundaram, III, 81.
(2)   Voice of the Avatar, II, 4.
(3)   Sathya Sai Speaks, IV, 12.
(4)   SSS, I, 14.
(5)   Sathya Sai Baba: Embodiment of Love, 65.
(6)   SSS, IV, 40.
(7)   VOA, II, 10.
(8)   SSS, VIII, 5.
(9)   SSS, I, 12.
(10) Sanathana Sarathi, 30, May 1987, 122.
(11) SSS, XI, 57.
(12) SSS, I, 196.
(13) Life of Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai Baba, frontispiece.
(14) SSS, I, 196.

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Q:     Swami, the Golden Age that You have spoken about, when will it begin?

Sai:  The day when the brotherhood of man and the Fatherhood of God will shine 
bright and beautiful is dawning and drawing near. (1)

 

Q:     What will this time be like?

Sai:  This age [will be a] Golden Age for the seekers of God, for earning and 
learning Viveka. (2) [In it] falsehood will fail, truth will triumph, and 
vir­tue will reign. Character will confer power then, not knowledge or 
in­ventive skill or wealth. Wisdom will be enthroned in the Councils of 
Nations. (3)

 

Q:     What sign will You give that the Golden Age is beginning?

Sai:  The glory of Sai will spread to every part of the world. It will 
in­crease a thousandfold. (5) You will see thousands pressing along this road, 
hundreds on every rock on these hills. (6)

 

Q:     How crowded it will be!

Sai:  [That] day when millions will gather to benefit from the Avatar is fast 
coming; I am advising you to gar­ner and treasure all the Grace and all the 
Bliss you can, while you may, so that you can sustain your­selves ruminating on 
the sweet­ness of the memories and the ex­perience. (7)

 

Q:     If millions come, where will we gather?

Sai:  The time will soon come when this huge building or even vaster ones will 
be too small for the gatherings of those who are called to this place. The sky 
itself will have to be the roof of the Auditorium of the future; I will have to 
forego the car and even the airplane when I move from place to place, for the 
crowds pressing around them will be too huge; I will have to move across the 
sky; yes, that too will happen, believe Me. (8)

 

Q:     Walk across the sky, Swami. How exciting that will be! How else will the 
world know You are the Lord?

Sai:  Formerly, when the Govardhanagiri was raised aloft by the little boy, the 
Gopis and Gopalas realized that Krishna was the Lord. Now, it is not one 
Govardhanagiri, a whole range will be lifted. You will see! Have patience, have 
faith. (9)

 

Q:     It is difficult for me to imagine such a miracle!

Sai:  Do not be misled. It is not my pur­pose to strike men dumb by the display 
of miraculous might! I have come to confer the boon of bless­edness and the 
benediction of bliss as the reward for genuine spiritual endeavour and to lead 
mankind into Liberty, Light and Love. (10)

 

Q:     How very fortunate I am to be alive this day.

Sai:  Your good fortune ... is greater than that available for anchorites, 
monks, sages, saints and even personalities [embodying facets of Divine Glory]! 
(11) The fact that you are alive this day is a blessing. (12)

Q:     Swami, why have you waited so long to declare Yourself publicly? Why do 
You not declare the Golden Age now?

Sai:  Prior to that I have to bring such persons near me, who, in their 
previous lives, have been inces­santly and untiringly trying to get access to 
me through their severe sadhana. A time will come when the world will know 
about the Ava­tar through public declaration. (13)

 

Q:     Who will declare You to the world, Swami?

Sai:  Devotees of world stature, able to speak of Sai, will be present when the 
time is correct for them. (14) The Mahapurushas, the Mahatmas, the Jnanis, 
[and] the Yogis ... will all be co-operating in the task of re-establishing 
righteousness and clearing the path for the World-at­taining Santhi. (15)

 

Q:     What will the world be like when You have finished Your work?

Sai:  The world will be peaceful. ... All will be love – love, love, love 
eve­rywhere. (16)

 

Q:     Oh, Swami, what can I do to be ready for the Golden Age?

Sai:  Adhere firmly to the truth of your convictions. Be prepared to meet any 
challenges. ... Be ready to face any situation. ... Strengthen your faith in 
God. (17) Prepare for shouldering the task assigned to you – to be instruments 
dedicated [to] the mission on which the Divine has come. (18)

(1)   Sathya Sai Speaks, X, 34.
(2)   SSS, XI, 186.
(3)   Sathyam, Sivam, Sundaram, III, 21.
(4)   Spirit and the Mind, Sandweiss, 245.
(5)   Sanathana Sarathi, 36, Dec. 1993, 333.
(6)   SSS, II, 90.
(7)   SSS, VIII, 94.
(8)   SSS, II, 90-1.
(9)   SSS, III, 23.
(10) Sathyam, III, 21.
(11) SSS, VI, 211.
(12) SSS, X, 17.
(13) Sathya Sai Baba and the Nara-Narayana Gufa Ashram, I, 38.
(14) My Baba and I, 205.
(15) SSS, I, 32.
(16) MBI, 189.
(17) SS, 36, Dec. 1993, 333.
(18) SSS, IX, 94.

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Q:     Swami, You must get hungry, and yet I have never seen you eat.

Sai:  For Me, your Ananda [Bliss] is My Food. (1) I need no other food than 
[that]. I am Anandaswarupa. My nature is Ananda. (2)

 

Q:     Do you ever sleep then, Lord?

Sai:  If I needed rest I would not have incarnated. (3) I do not sleep at 
night; I remember ... the events of my past appearances, and I laugh within 
myself as memories pass across. (4) In the middle of the night, [I turn] off 
the light and [rest] in bed because if the light is on devotees gather. ... 
People think that Baba rests in the afternoon until 4 p.m. But He never rests. 
He is never tired. He is always work­ing. (5)

 

Q:     Don't you wish sometimes to travel somewhere else, just to get away from 
all this?

Sai:  I have no need to see places. I am everywhere, always! (6) I am not moved 
by the craving for a change, or for recreation, or travel. (7)

 

Q:     Do you ever worry that, with all these people here, You won't be able to 
complete Your work?

Sai:  Worry is totally alien to me. I am not aware of any difficulties, 
dis­paragement or pressures caused by others. ... (8) Nothing can hold Me up or 
agitate Me or cast a shadow on Me in this Human Form.... My Sankalpa must 
prevail; My task must be accomplished. My Mission will succeed. (9) I may 
sometimes wait until I can achieve ten things at one stroke.... But My Word 
will never fail. (10)

 

Q:     You are always at work and yet You seem so calm.

Sai:  I do not have a time schedule to adhere to nor can any law bind me. I am 
the ultimate from whom every­thing originated, in whom it is pre­served and in 
whom it will be destroyed. (11)

 

Q:     How can I know that side of You?

Sai:  Stay at Prasanthi Nilayam; move with Me and experience My company and 
conversation. Listen to Me and watch Me and then form your conclusions; get in 
and know the depth; eat and know the taste. (12) The way in which the Avathar 
has to be used for one's liberation ... is: watch His every step, observe His 
actions and activities, follow the guiding principle of which His life is an 
elaboration. Mark His Love, His Compassion, His Wisdom, try to bring them into 
your own life. (13)

 

Q:     I should not only watch You. I should also listen carefully to Your 
advice, should I not?

Sai:  You can get Anandam only by following the advice I give you and that is 
why I am particular that you should listen carefully and take to heart all that 
I say. (14) Trust in My wisdom: I do not make mistakes. Love My uncertainty! 
For it is not a mistake. It is My Intent and Will. Remember, nothing happens 
without My Will. Be still. Do not want to understand; do not ask to understand. 
Relinquish understanding. Relinquish the imperative that demands understanding. 
(15)

(1)   Sathya Sai Speaks, I, 179.
(2)   Sathyam, Sivam, Sundaram, III, 64.
(3)   Sathya Sai Baba: Embodiment of Love, 216.
(4)   Life of Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai Baba, 10.
(5)   Conversations with Sathya Sai Baba, 65.
(6)   Sathyam, III, 25.
(7)   LBSSSB, 124.
(8)   Sanathana Sarathi, 33, Sept. 1990, 245.
(9)   SSS, I, 95.
(10) SSS, I, 189.
(11) Sai Vandana, 142.
(12) LBSSSB, 202.
(13) SSS, VI, 167.
(14) SSS, I, 15.
(15) Sathyam, III, 43.

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Q:     What is the goal of human life?

Sai:  What is the goal of human life? What is the objective that man must 
realize? Is it just eating, drinking, sleeping, tasting a little joy and grief 
and finally dying, like any bird or beast? No, certainly not. A little thought 
will reveal that it is ... Brahma-Sakshathkara, the realization of the 
Absolute, of Brahman! (1) You have come from the Divine and you have to go back 
to the Divine. (2) That Divine Principle is the very core of man. Becoming 
aware of this Truth is the goal of life; it is the source of strength which is 
unfailing and irresistible. ... The Divine is here before you, behind you, 
inside you, outside you; the Intelligence through which you can recognize. It 
is also with you, but you are either blind or diseased with defective vision 
or, worse still, willfully inclined to close your eyes! (3)

 

Q:     What is the aim of all spiritual practices?

Sai:  All spiritual practices are aimed at [the complete] purification [of the 
heart]. (4) Love has an electric effect on human beings. It purifies the human 
heart. (5) Through love alone – love acquired through sadhana, and shared with 
all as sadhana – can peace be attained, by the individual as well as by the 
nation. (6) God is the very Embodiment of Love. ... God who is Love can be 
realized only through Love. (7) Unless you cleanse the mind with Love, the Full 
Moon of Spiritual Wisdom cannot shine therein. The recital of the Name, the 
observance of vows and vigils, of fasts and festivals, may scintillate on the 
Inner Sky of the mind, as stars stud the sky, but, until the Lamp of Love is 
lit, the darkness will not vanish. (8)

 

Q:     Why must I work? Why can I not simply sit under this tree and read about 
God?

Sai:  As long as you are in this world, you must be engaged in work. Work is 
very important for human beings. It is through your work and activities that 
you learn to harmonize thoughts, words and deeds. (9) Perfect freedom is not 
given to any man on earth because the very meaning of mortal life is 
relationship with and dependence on another. (10) The true Guru is not a human 
preceptor [teacher]. It is the Cosmos Itself, Prakrithi, Creation, the World 
around us. (11) You [learn] by the experience of the buffetings of the World. 
The World is a very essential part of the curriculum of man. (12) The community 
in which you find yourself is the arena where you can win the victory, the 
gymnasium where you develop the skill to win. The spiritual journey lies 
through compassion, sympathy, mutual help, and service, and these are fostered 
by society and are to be used for society. (13)

 

Q:     Are we alone in the universe? What are other beings like?

Sai:  The universe is without beginning and in it dwell an infinitude of 
'jivas' (living beings). Among these jivas, man is the most exalted being. (14) 
In all the universe there is no other planet that has human life, or a similar 
life form. ... There is life throughout the universe. [But] the expression of 
life on Earth is upward through the human to the Divine. By virtue of human 
birth, the next step is the full realization of the Divine. Human life is 
sacred and must be appreciated as having the highest value. (15)
The question about life in the universe arises because you project your own 
particular circumstances. You feel that other ways of life would be intolerable 
because such ways would be intolerable for you. In the hot, blazing Sun, for 
instance, beings are living. This life exists in circumstances considered to be 
intolerable by you. Elsewhere in the universe, life feels it is Divinity, is 
one with Divinity, and is quite happy, and feeling all is right. (16)

 

Q:     Are there other "gods" besides God? What do they do?

Sai:  Just as the ruler of a petty earthly domain has certain norms to go by in 
carrying out his duty, the Supreme Ruler of the world, the Almighty, too, [has] 
such regulations in the matter of the governance of the universe. It is puerile 
to say that God would do everything by Himself simply because He is omnipotent. 
... Even as there is a delegation of authority in the administration of a 
terrestrial kingdom by a ruler by which various functions are performed by 
several ministers who are assigned the charge of certain departments and 
portfolios, in running the affairs of the Cosmos, the Almighty God too assigns 
certain functions to certain gods like Indra, Varuna, and Rudra. Just [as] all 
earthly matters are not taken directly to a king, but are presented to the 
concerned ministers for action, all prayers of man do not reach God Himself – 
they are attended to by His 'ministers' – Indra, Varuna and others. (17) The 
Lord will not interfere in the functions of the different deities. He lets 
Brahma, Vishnu, and Easwara carry out their respective functions according to 
the cosmic laws. (18) Prayers for worldly ends do not reach God. They will 
reach only those deities who deal with such restricted spheres. But all prayers 
arising from pure love, unselfish eagerness to render service and from hearts 
that are all inclusive will reach God. (19)

 

Q:     Why do I feel happy when I see someone happy? Why do I not feel sad 
instead?

Sai:  We are not troubled when something is good, only when it is bad. This is 
because goodness is natural and evil is an aberration. We are worried and 
alarmed when someone slides into wrong or is in pain or in sorrow. This is 
because nature plans us to be right, to be happy and ever in joy. It is a pity 
that man has lost his understanding of this Truth. (20)

 

Q:     I always feel this yearning, no matter what I do. What is it?

Sai:  Man has an inborn thirst for God, an in-built yearning for the Ananda of 
the highest order which will never fail or falter. (21) The Lord has so shaped 
man that he is inclined towards God and delighted at the expansion of his 
vision and happy when he is moral and virtuous. So man must serve his best 
interests by adhering to his basic nature, by concentration on Brahma, by the 
cultivation of Sathya and the practice of Dharma. (22) The deepest yearning of 
man is to experience the One, the Basis, the Being that has Become. (23) It is 
only by drinking God that [this] thirst can be quenched; not by substitutes or 
palliatives. (24) Man can obtain Santhi only by returning to [his] native home, 
viz., God. Until then, homesickness will haunt him. (25)

 

Q:     What sets human beings apart from animals?

Sai:       Discrimination ... sets [human beings] apart from the rest of the 
animals. (26) [The] divine power is present everywhere in creation. Only man 
has the capacity to recognize this power. (27)
No other living being [than man] has been endowed with intelligence and [a] 
discriminative faculty, heightened to this degree, in order to enable it to 
visualize the Atma. This is the reason why man is acclaimed as the crown of 
creation, and why the Sastras proclaim that the chance of being born as man is 
a very rare piece of good fortune. Man has the qualifications needed to seek 
the cause of Creation; he has in him the urge and the capacity. (28)
Man alone can rise through effort to higher stages of spiritual evolution. No 
other animal can do so. Animal tamers of the circus can train a tiger to 
perform various tricks, but they cannot change his nature. They cannot make it 
live on grass and completely deprive it of meat. But man is different. His 
nature can be changed by means of his own disciplined effort. He can control, 
by his will, the evil thoughts and ideas that arise in his mind. This is why 
birth as a human being is considered a rare gift. (29)
The special instrument that God has allotted man, namely, Buddhi or the 
Intellect, has to be used by man to become masters of these down-dragging 
senses. The Intellect has to be used to judge and decide the means for the 
upliftment of the human to the Divine. It has to help man to realize God. (30)
In a world replete with ... opposites, man has to make constantly the choice 
between what is right and proper and what is wrong or undesirable. A man who 
has no such discriminating faculty is an animal. Man should not let himself be 
guided by the mind. He should follow the directions of his intelligence 
(Buddhi). As long as you follow the mind, you cannot obtain Madhava (Divinity). 
(31)

 

Q:     When I do something, do I do it or does God?

Sai:  You have to realize that little depends on your efforts alone. You can 
have proof of this in your own body. For instance, what efforts are you making 
to see that your heart beats regularly? How far are you responsible for the 
breathing process that goes on continually? What is your contribution to the 
digestive process that goes on within you? Are these the results of human 
efforts? Can you continue to live merely by wishing that you should go on 
living? Are you able to end your life when you wish it? Are you responsible for 
your birth? Not at all. When you inquire into this problem, you will realize 
that it is your sense of doership and enjoyership which is causing all 
difficulties. (32)
When [a person] performs actions, regarding himself as the doer, the actions 
become fetters that bind him. All actions which are performed with the feeling 
that they are intended as offerings to please the Divine do not lead to 
bondage. They become "desireless" (Anapeksha) actions. One has to recognize 
that it is the Divine principle in all beings which is getting actions done 
through human beings as instruments. As long as man regards himself as the doer 
(kartrutva) and enjoyer (bhoktrutva) he cannot escape from the consequences of 
his actions. (33)

 

Q:     What should I do if I see a crime?

Sai:  Today many are indulging in actions opposed to Dharma and Truth and, on 
the basis of their caste or community, are promoting strife and conflict in the 
country. Elders in the nation are remaining mere spectators of all the 
unrighteous and violent actions that are being done by the evil elements. Even 
the scholars and intellectuals are remaining silent. Persons holding high 
office are merely watching what goes on. No one, however, is making any effort 
to stop this menace. They are not resisting the evil elements. It appears as if 
all their knowledge, position and influence have been reduced to nothing. Such 
persons, though they may not be indulging in unrighteous acts, are giving 
encouragement to them. When evil and injustice and violence are being 
perpetrated, if individuals look on unconcerned, they must be regarded as 
accomplices in the crimes. In the end they also suffer as much as the 
criminals. By their passive association, they provide encouragement to the 
evil-doers. When the good are associated with the wicked and do not oppose 
them, they share responsibility for the deeds of the evil doers. The Divine 
destroys even those who either do not oppose or remain passive while injustice 
and wrong-doing are perpetrated. The Divine will not consider whether they are 
learned or ignorant, wise or unwise. If they are learned or wise, why did they 
not stand up for truth and justice? Why did they remain silent? It means they 
are tainted by the same guilt. The failure to resist evil is their offense. It 
is only when we resist acts of unrighteousness and injustice and try to put 
down malpractices in society that we can claim to be assisting in the task of 
restoring Dharma. ... Whoever may commit an offense, whether a son, a relation 
or a close associate, one will be free from the taint of being accessory to the 
crime only if he opposes the wrong action and tries to correct the offender. 
If, on the contrary, he allows it or encourages it to be done, he will be 
guilty of abatement. (34)

(1)   Dharma Vahini, 71.
(2)   Sanathana Sarathi, 30, May 1987, 121.
(3)   Voice of the Avatar, II, 10.
(4)   Conversations with Sathya Sai Baba, 44.
(5)   Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai in Amritsar, etc., 35.
(6)   Yoga of Action, 40.
(7)   Sathya Sai Speaks, XI, 68.
(8)   SSS, IX, 98.
(9)   Sai Baba Gita, 3-4.
(10) Sai Baba: The Ultimate Experience, 150.
(11) SSS, XI, 120.
(12) SSS, I, 12.
(13) SSS, VIII, 5.
(14) Summer Showers in Brindavan, 1979, 85.
(15) CSSB, 150.
(16) My Baba and I, 226.
(17) SSB, 1979, 8.
(18) SS, 38, April 1995, 87.
(19) SSS, XI, 68.
(20) SSS, X, 248.
(21) SSS, VII, 362.
(22) DV, 79.
(23) SSS, XI, 73.
(24) SSS, VII, 362.
(25) DV, 72.
(26) YOA, 41.
(27) SS, 31, Dec. 1988, 309.
(28) SSV, 1.
(29) SSS, X, 189.
(30) SSS, XI, 9.
(31) SS, 31, Mar. 1988, 70.
(32) SS, 33, Sept. 1990, 235.
(33) SS, 36, Feb. 1993, 30.
(34)Discourses by Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai Baba, I, 141-2.

  _____  

Q:     Swami, is there nothing in the universe that God did not create?

Sai:  Everything in the world is derived from God. (1) Nothing is uncaused. ... 
Every being, object, incident has been caused by the Primal Cause and its 
direction or guidance. (2)

 

Q:     What motivated God to create the world?

Sai:  [God] has willed the world as His Sport. (3) Prakrithi [the world] is 
just the leela of the Lord, set before you so that you may become aware of His 
Glory, His Splendor. (4)

 

Q:     I have heard it said that God inhabits everything. Is this so?

Sai:  The Divine dwells in the entire Universe, from the minute atom to the 
vastest star. (5) No place exists where he is not. (6)

 

Q:     But, Swami, we often say that Nature is different from God. We say, "Not 
this. Not this." Does God dwell in Nature too?

Sai:  You have to pour into the flames that rise up to destroy (for they are 
the flames of revelation, purification, discrimination) the limited vision that 
sees Nature as different from the Divine. The Divine created all this through 
the Divine and with the Divine substance. (7)

 

Q:     Then what is the key to understanding the mystery of Nature and God?

Sai:  The basic truth of Nature is the One in the many; that is the key to its 
understanding. (8) The easiest way of grasping the basic reality is to see the 
Lord in every creature; the Lord sporting in all this multiplicity, as the 
underlying reality of all. (9)

 

Q:     Swami, I find these mysteries hard to understand.

Sai:  The Divine mystery is incredibly marvelous. It is not easy for ordinary 
mortals to comprehend these mysteries. (10)

 

Q:     What prevents me from understanding them, from comprehending the 
formless God?

Sai:  The Unmanifested, Nirguna Brahman [Formless God] cognised at the climax 
of the Jnanamarga [wisdom path] cannot be grasped by the sense-centered 
individual without great travail and trouble. This is the reason why the 
Puranas dwell so much more on the Saguna aspect [the aspect of God with form] 
than on the Nirguna aspect of Godhead. First, the aspirant has to practice the 
Sadhana related to the Saguna aspect of God; this will endow him with 
concentration and later, according to the law of procedure from the gross to 
the subtle, he can merge his mind in the Nirguna Brahman. (11)

 

Q:     How could I move from being sense-centered to being God-centered in 
order to be able to know this mystery of God?

Sai:  Ponder over the ameliorative and curative advice I have given you out of 
the fullness of My Love; try to cleanse your minds through repentance of wrongs 
committed or contemplated; resolve with unshakable firmness to shape your lives 
anew, rid it of deep-rooted deleterious habits of speech, thought and action, 
and lead it in conformity with the Divine Plan, by which each of you will 
blossom into the fully Divine.(12)

(1)   Sai Baba Gita, 3.
(2)   Voice of the Avatar, II, 11.
(3)   Sathya Sai Speaks, X, 243.
(4)   SSS, III, 29.
(5)   Sanathana Sarathi, 31, Dec. 1988, 309.
(6)   SBG, 8.
(7)   Sathyam, Sivam, Sundaram, III, 65.
(8)   Sathya Sai Vahini, 11.
(9)   SSS, I, 53.
(10) SS, 38, April 1995, 88.
(11) Dharma Vahini, 67.
(12) Sathyam, Sivam, Sundaram, III, 6

  _____  

Q:     Swami, You said that everyone is here for a purpose. Why are _You_ here?

Sai:  I have come to inscribe a golden chapter in the history of humanity. (1)

 

Q:     What do You mean, Lord?

Sai:  Sai has come ... to achieve the supreme task of uplifting the entire 
mankind, as one family through the bond of brotherhood, of affirming and 
illumining the Atmic Reality of each being in order to reveal the Divine which 
is the Basis on which the entire Cosmos rests, and of instructing all to 
recognize the common Divine Heritage that binds man to man so that man can rid 
himself of the animal, and rise to the Divine, which is his goal. (2)
I want to build one humanity without any religious, caste or other barriers in 
a universal empire of love which would enable my devotees to feel the whole 
world as their family. (3)

 

Q:     How can just one being change the whole world?

Sai:  The power of Sai is limitless; It manifests for ever. All forms of 
'power' are resident in this Sai palm. (4) My Body, like all other bodies, is a 
temporary habitation but My Power is eternal, all-pervasive, ever-dominant. (5)

 

Q:     Does that mean that You can simply snap Your fingers and cure everything 
in the world?

Sai:  If I cure everything instantly, leaving the people at their present level 
of consciousness, they would soon mess up things and be at one another's 
throats again with the result that the same chaotic situation would develop in 
the world. (6) [Instead] I have to work through [people], rouse the in-dwelling 
God in them and evolve them to a higher reality in order to enable them to 
master the natural laws and forces. (7) [I will lead] the people ... to a 
higher level of consciousness to enable them to understand the truth of 
spiritual laws so that they may turn towards righteousness and steadfastly work 
for better conditions. (8)

 

Q:     Why did the Lord Himself come?

Sai:  When there is a small disturbance, a police constable is enough to put it 
down; when the trouble is threatening to develop into sizable proportions, a 
police inspector is sent; when it grows into a riot, the superintendent of 
police himself has to quell it; but when as now, all mankind is threatened with 
moral ruin, the inspector general comes down, that is, the Lord comes down with 
His army of saintly men and seekers. (9)

 

Q:     If You are the Inspector General, will You protect us from nuclear war?

Sai:  Evil is so widespread that humanity itself would be destroyed in a 
nuclear holocaust.... It is to prevent such a catastrophe that this present 
Avatar has come to raise human consciousness above the existing syndrome of 
anger, hate, violence and war and save the world from disaster. (10)
My mission is to pre-empt the fires [of thermonuclear conflagration] by 
reestablishing Dharma and the spiritual law of one God, one religion, one 
[heart] language embracing one humanity. (11)

 

Q:     Swami, why has the United Nations been unable to keep the world from war?

Sai:  Only the power of the Divine can save the world [today]. (12) [I have] to 
deal with [a] crisis which is world-wide and world-shaking. ... Immorality has 
put on the garb of morality and is enticing man into the morass of sin. Truth 
is condemned as a trap; justice is jeered at; saints are tortured as social 
enemies. Hence this Incarnation has come, to uphold the True and suppress the 
False. (13)

 

Q:     Will you destroy the wicked as you did in your Rama and Krishna 
Incarnations?

Sai:  In this Avathar, the wicked will not be destroyed; they will be corrected 
and reformed and educated and led back to the path from which they have 
strayed. (14) That is why this Avathar has come unarmed; It has come with the 
message of love. The only weapon which can transform the vile and the vicious 
is ... Love. (15)

 

Q:     There seems no question in Your mind that You will succeed.

Sai:  Even if the heavens fall, Sai's resolve will not alter. (16) Nothing can 
impede or halt [My] work. (17) The Will of God cannot be stopped. The events 
God ordains must take place. (18) The splendor of this Avathara will go on 
increasing, day by day. (19)

 

Q:     I believe You, Lord. But I fear that many will not.

Sai:  Many hesitate to believe that things will improve, that life will be 
happy for all and full of joy, and that the golden age will recur. [But] let me 
assure you that this dharmaswarupa, this divine body, has not come in vain. It 
will succeed in averting the crisis that has come upon humanity. (20)

(1)   Sathya Sai Baba: Embodiment of Love, Mason and Laing, 167.
(2)   Sathya Sai Speaks, IX, 85.
(3)   Spirit and the Mind, Sandweiss, 258.
(4)   SSS, IX, 83.
(5)   SSS, III, 122.
(6)   SM, 245.
(7)   SM, 245.
(8)   SM, 244.
(9)   Life of Bhagavan Sri Sathya Sai Baba, Kasturi, 213.
(10)SM, 239.
(11)SM, 257-8.
(12)Sanathana Sarathi, 34, Nov. 1991, 302.
(13)SSS, VI, 265.
(14)SSS, I, 22.
(15)SSS, I, 66-7.
(16)SS, 36, Dec. 1993, 334.
(17)SSS, III, 23.
(18)Eastern View of Jesus Christ, 12.
(19)SSS, III, 23.
(20)Sai Baba: Holy Man and the Psychiatrist, Sandweiss, 91

These quotations are taken from the

Sai Dictionary of Quotations,

a collaborative work of 36 Sainet devotees.

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