How does the text describe the nature of death for a fully realized being like Sai Baba?

📖 Chapter 43

The text presents a profound view on death for a realized master. Chapter 43 explains that death is merely the "separation of body and senses," a process that holds no meaning for saints who have already transcended their physical form. For such beings, who have "killed death" and are free from the six-fold emotions, birth and death are described as "false imaginations." Sai Samarth is portrayed as the "complete Supreme Brahman," for whom birth and death are non-existent. The text in chapter 43 likens a saint's death to a solar eclipse, suggesting it is merely a "defect of vision" for the onlookers, not a true event for the saint, who remains in an unmanifest, blissful state.


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