The Teaching of Hazrat Inayat Khan

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When we are in meditation, if the thought of a horse comes, or if the thought of a motorcar comes, or if the thought comes of two persons quarrelling, we must see that thought as the manifestation of God. When a person is in meditation, he at once expects to see a phenomenon. The world of phenomena is much further away from us. It is of much less use than this world. It is here that we have to live. It is here that we should see God. If we go into our room, and hold out our hands and say, "O God, all my veneration, all my devotion, all my worship is to Thee. I do not know where Thou art or who Thou art, but all my love and worship is to Thee," it serves a little, because it produces the melting of the heart, but it does not serve much.


 
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