Sai Baba addressed Boss Dharamsee's doubts not with words, but with a direct, personal experience. Chapter 35 explains that Dharamsee was troubled by several thoughts: his dislike for seeded grapes, his doctor's advice against eating unwashed fruit, and a deep-seated skepticism about Baba's sainthood. Instead of lecturing him, Baba orchestrated a situation that targeted these very doubts. By persistently offering the grapes that Dharamsee disliked and then miraculously turning them seedless the moment he ate them, Baba demonstrated his omniscience and power. This experience, as the text notes, made 'all his ego drop away,' effectively resolving his internal conflict and transforming his 'clinical scrutiny' into profound love and devotion.
How did Sai Baba's interaction with Boss Dharamsee address the latter's internal conflicts and doubts about faith?
๐ Chapter 35