One can rightly speak of God only after one has seen Him. He who has seen God knows really and truly that God has form and that He is formless as well. He has many other aspects that cannot be described.
Once some blind men chanced to come near an animal that someone told them was an elephant. They were asked what the elephant was like. The blind men began to feel its body.
One of them said the elephant was like a pillar; he had touched only its leg. Another said it was like a winnowing-fan; he had touched only its ear. In this way the others, having touched its tail or belly, gave their different versions of the elephant.
Just so, a man who has seen only one aspect of God limits God to that alone. It is his conviction that God cannot be anything else.
- Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna, P 191
(11 March 1883)
Once some blind men chanced to come near an animal that someone told them was an elephant. They were asked what the elephant was like. The blind men began to feel its body.
One of them said the elephant was like a pillar; he had touched only its leg. Another said it was like a winnowing-fan; he had touched only its ear. In this way the others, having touched its tail or belly, gave their different versions of the elephant.
Just so, a man who has seen only one aspect of God limits God to that alone. It is his conviction that God cannot be anything else.
- Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna, P 191
(11 March 1883)
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