I could not possibly read through the Old Testament. I read the book of
Genesis, and the chapters that followed invariably sent me to sleep But just
for the sake of being able to say that I had read it, I plodded through the
other books with much difficulty and without the least interest or
understanding. I disliked reading the book of Numbers.
But the New Testament produced a different impression, especially the Sermon on the
Mount which went straight to my heart. I compared it with the Gita. The
verses, "But I say unto you, that ye resist not evil: but whosoever shall smite
thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also. And if any man take away
thy coat let him have thy cloak too," delighted me beyond measure and put me in
mind of Shamal Bhatt's "For a bowl of water, give a goodly meal", etc.
An Autobiography,
p. 49, Edn. 1958
I have not been able to see any difference between the Sermon on the Mount and the Bhagavadgita. What the Sermon describes in a graphic manner, the Bhagavadgita reduces to a scientific formula. It may not be a scientific book in the accepted sense of the term, but it has argued out the law of love — the law of abandon as I would call it — in a scientific manner. The Sermon on the Mount gives the same law in wonderful language. The New Testament gave me comfort and boundless joy, as it came after the repulsion that parts of the Old had given me. Today supposing I was deprived of the Gita and forgot all its contents but had a copy of the Sermon, I should derive the same joy from it as I do from the Gila.
Young India,
22-12-1927
Christ, a Supreme Artist
Truth is the first thing to be sought for, and Beauty and Goodness will then be added
unto you. Jesus was, to my mind, a supreme artist because he saw and expressed
Truth; and so was Mahomed, the Koran being the most perfect composition
in all Arabic literature — at any rate, that is what scholars say. It is because
both of them strove first for Truth that the grace of expression naturally came
in and yet neither Jesus nor Mahomed wrote on art. That is the Truth and Beauty
I crave for, live for and would die for.
Young India,
20-1 1-1924