Chapter 12 strongly advocates for faith over intellectual pride. The text criticizes those who are "intoxicated with the pride of knowledge" and disparage the path of devotion, warning that their end "does not seem good." It describes such intellectualism as "the stiffness of dry knowledge" which is fruitless. In contrast, the chapter highlights that an ignorant person, through the power of simple, firm faith, can successfully cross the "crisis of the fear of worldly existence." The teachings in Chapter 12 make it clear that placing faith at the feet of saints is what destroys ignorance, while the riddles of proud scriptural scholars are never solved.
What is the perspective in Chapter 12 on having intellectual knowledge versus having simple faith?
π Chapter 12