Kabir — "If you want to know the truth, I tell you the truth: there is no God but the God…"
If you want to know the truth, I tell you the truth: there is no God but the God of all.
If you want to know the truth, I tell you the truth: there is no God but the God of all.
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"I am looking for the one who is looking for me."
"If you don't break, you won't know what is inside."
"The world is a dream, and life is a play. The actors are many, but the director is one."
"The river is in the ocean, and the ocean is in the river. The world is in God, and God is in the world."
"The lamp is in the house, but the blind man cannot see it."
Indian mystic poet whose verses (preserved in the Sikh Guru Granth Sahib and the Hindu Bhakti tradition) attacked both Hindu and Islamic orthodoxy. Closely associated with Guru Nanak (founder of Sikhism, who incorporated Kabir's verses). For an intellectual contrast, see Brahmanical priesthood, the ritualistic Hindu establishment of his era — Kabir's poetry is the founding text of bhakti devotional rebellion against ritualistic Hinduism — his verses ridicule caste, ritual purity, and priestly mediation as religious theatre.
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