English, asked by rajeshti2, 10 months ago

give precis of the given passage:

Gandhiji's greatest strength was belief in god. he fought for the freedom of India because he used to say that the best way to serve god was to serve has people. and therefore. when he worked for the happiness of the Indians he was also making God happy. Many times people would put straight questions to him asking him to prove that there is god and how we can know him Gandhiji would admit frankly that he could not show god to anybody because his presence could be felt in the heart only. he was however lover of god and could not live without him. he once said "if you do not give the air and water, i am still live but if our take away may belief in god. i shall die immediately.

Answers

Answered by archana2486
6

Answer:

it tells the love of ghandhiji for god which has been expressed in indian people

Answered by roopa2000
0

Answer:

There are numerous sects of both monotheistic and polytheistic faiths all across the world. As a result, many restrictions are placed on religious adherents and those who believe in "God," as well as a restricted understanding of both. Religious division and conflict are brought on by these borders and a lack of understanding. This is especially true in the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. I wanted to investigate Mahatma Gandhi's concept of "God" in this setting. Gandhi asserted that "Truth is God" and held that there is only one God, who may be discovered through the truth. Gandhi's conception of God, which is not only global but also unlimited or unbounded, is one that I believe is useful to human civilization as a whole.

Explanation:

God's existentialism

Gandhi thought that an elusive, indescribable force governed everything. This unobservable force resists the need for proof and surpasses human perception. He employed the following justifications to refute the existence of God:

  • Gandhi saw a group of underprivileged peasants in Mysore and asked them who the monarch of Mysore was. Despite not knowing the name, the peasants said, "Some God governed it." Gandhi believed that in comparison to God, he was a very little creature. The natural rules that govern the universe are immutable and orderly. God is the source of all law, and there is only one lawgiver. When you acknowledge the presence of a greater law, life becomes simple. Although our environment is always changing, the king who produces dissolves and recreates stays constant. God is this unseen ruler or the spirit.
  • Gandhi thought that since sensory experiences are irrational and occasionally false because illusions might be taken for real, God cannot be known by the mind alone. When one realises God outside of sensory impressions, the realisation is impervious, and the person's behaviour and character change to become godly.

Truth is God, and God is Truth.

Even though God has several names in Islam and Hinduism, Gandhi believed that God is truth and truth is truth. Truth, or that which exists, is known as "Sat" in Sanskrit. The Koran and Hindu philosophy both hold that there is only one true God and nothing else. Gandhi asserts that the only way to discover "Truth as God" is via love or ahimsa and that because "means" and "goals" are concepts that can be interchanged, "God is love." Truth is the inner voice, and we each have an inner voice that speaks the truth to us. However, also makes truth subjective. Thus, there will be many different truths about any one thing. A specific life characteristic. The five vows of Satya (truth), Brahmacharya (purity or celibacy), Ahimsa (non-violence), Poverty, and (Aparigraha) Non-possession are required by Gandhi for the seeker to discover the universal truth. Truth cannot be discovered in the absence of these promises. Gandhi had the opinion that no one individual could discover the truth. Only those who are disciplined and exceedingly modest will discover the truth.

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