The text explains Baba's nature by saying 'the seer, the seeing, and the seen do not touch him.' Can you explain this concept using Sapatnekar's story?

📖 Chapter 48

This philosophical statement describes Sai Baba's state of being merged with the Supreme Being, beyond the duality of everyday perception. In the context of Sapatnekar's story from Shri Sai Satcharitra Chapter 48, it explains how Baba could know everything about him. For Baba, there was no 'mine' and 'thine,' and the distinction between himself (the seer), the act of knowing (the seeing), and Sapatnekar's life (the seen) did not exist. He was one with the universe. He demonstrated this by narrating Sapatnekar's life not as an external observer telling a story, but as the very consciousness in which the story unfolded, proving his non-dual, all-pervading nature.


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