Chapter 28 introduces Sai Baba's famous assurance: "My person may be in distant lands, may be thousands of miles away, I will bring him like a sparrow's chick, binding a string to his feet." This powerful analogy illustrates Baba's divine power to draw His chosen devotees to Him, regardless of their physical location or circumstances. The chapter presents this teaching in the context of introducing a devotee named Laxmichand. The text explicitly calls Laxmichand "one such chick" who belonged to Baba and was inevitably drawn to Shirdi, demonstrating that Baba's divine plays worked exactly as He described, bringing His people to the fold when the time was right.
Chapter 28 mentions Baba's famous quote about pulling a devotee "like a sparrow's chick." What is the context of this statement, and who is used as an example of this phenomenon?
๐ Chapter 28