Sri Ramakrishna Parables
- Parable
of salt doll
- Parable of the calf
- Guru and Disciple
- Men Seeking Light
- Parable of the farmer
- Parable of Homa
Bird
- Parable of Man Seeking
- Parable of the
Chameleon
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Parable of Elephant God
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Parable of Ant & Sugar Hill
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How to deal with the Wicked
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Ocean and the ice
- Parable of the tigress
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Parable of three Robbers
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Parable of the two friends
- Parable of the two farmers
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Parable of the false ascetic
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Parable of fish and the net
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Importance of Scriptures
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Parable of Grass Eating tiger
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Elephant and the blind
Men
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Parable of the weaver Woman
Related Discourses
- Sri
Ramakrishna Quotes
-
Osho on Sri
Ramakrishna
- Sri
Ramakrishna Teachings
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Parable of the chameleon
Sri Ramakrishna:
"Listen to a story. Once a man entered a wood and saw a small animal on a tree. He came back and told another man that he had seen a creature of a beautiful red colour on a certain tree. The second man replied: 'When I went into the wood, I also saw that animal. But why do you call it red? It is green.' Another man who was present contradicted them both and insisted that it was yellow.
Presently others arrived and contended that it was grey, violet, blue, and so forth and so on. At last they started quarrelling among themselves. To settle the dispute they all went to the tree. They saw a man sitting under it. On being asked, he replied: 'Yes, I live under this tree and I know the animal very well. All your descriptions are true.
Sometimes it appears red, sometimes yellow, and at other times blue, violet, grey, and so forth. It is a chameleon. And sometimes it has no colour at all. Now it has a colour, and now it has none.' "In like manner, one who constantly thinks of God can know His real nature; he alone knows that God reveals Himself to seekers in various forms and aspects.
God has attributes; then again He has none. Only the man who lives under the tree knows that the chameleon can appear in various colours, and he knows, further, that the animal at times has no colour at all. It is the others who suffer from the agony of futile argument.
"Kabir used to say, 'The formless Absolute is my Father, and God with form is my Mother.' "God reveals Himself in the form which His devotee loves most. His love for the devotee knows no bounds. It is written in the Purana that God assumed the form of Rama for His heroic devotee, Hanuman.
Source: from book "Gospel of Sri Ramakrishna" |
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