Nonviolence is an attribute of the Almighty whose ways of fulfilling Himself are inscrutable.
Man can only conceive God within the limitation of his own mind.
Man can only describe God in his own poor language.
Man in the flesh is essentially imperfect. He may be described as being made in the image of God but is far from being God.
Man should earnestly desire the well – being of all God’s creations and pray that we may have the strength to do so.
No man has ever been able to describe God fully. The same holds true of ahimsa.
The man who eats to live, who is friends with the five powers – earth, water, ether, sun and air – who is a servant of God, the Creator of all these, ought not to fall ill.
The man who fears man falls from the estate of man. Fear God alone.
When a man fasts, it is not the gallons of water he drinks that sustains him, but God.
When a man wants to make up with his Maker, he does not consult a third party.
A man cannot serve God and Mammon, nor be “temperate and furious” at the same time.
A man of God never strives after untruth and therefore he can never lose hope.
A man who is intentionally unarmed relies upon the Unseen Force called God by poets, but called the Unknown by scientists.
A person who believes in nonviolence believes in a living God. He cannot accept defeat.
Of all the myriads of God, Daridranarayana is the most sacred inasmuch as it represents the untold millions of the poor people as distinguished from the few rich people.
One is ever young in the presence of the God of Truth, or Truth which is God.
Often does good come out of evil. But that is God’s, not man’s plan.
Our prayer is a heart search. It is a reminder to ourselves that we are helpless without His support.
Outward appearance is nothing to Him if it is not an expression of the inner.
Punishment is God’s. He alone is the infallible Judge.