Chapter 36 portrays Sai Baba as a being of immense power and profound paradoxes. He is described as one who has "no name or village" yet possesses "infinite glory." His power is so vast that he can "turn a beggar into a king in a moment with the play of his eyebrows." Furthermore, the text calls him the "incarnation of the knowledge of Truth" who remains distant and detached from his own name while causing various events to unfold. This illustrates his nature as being both transcendent and immanent, unattached to the world yet capable of altering its very fabric to bestow grace upon his devotees.
How does Chapter 36 illustrate Sai Baba's immense power and paradoxical nature?
📖 Chapter 36