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The Divine Essence permeates all beings yet transcends them. Shri Ram teaches this to Hanumanji in the Muktikopanishad (72)
Oh, son of the Wind! Without sound, without touch, without form, without taste, without smell, and without name or caste, as the destroyer of all misery—this form of mine you should meditate on always.
In the Bhagavad-Gita, Lord Krishna also advises Arjuna to meditate upon his form beyond the perishable and imperishable, which is Absolute and One. The Holy Koran is also filled with references to the unity of God. And the Lord's Prayer, the most common prayer of Christianity, addresses God as our Father, the Father common to us all.22 The following quotes from different saints also reaffirm the oneness of God:
Sant Kabir Sahib says:
My great Lord is one; I dare not say two. If I say two, this pleases not my Lord.
Guru Nanak Dev says:
There is only one Lord, the great Lord. By seeing His unity one is blessed with all treasures.
Sant Dadudyal says:
I found the beginning and the end within (my heart] and now this mind does not go elsewhere. Now Dadu is colored in the color of the One and is absorbed in that One.
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