“As a Christian, you should know about Sadhu Sundar
Sighn" my guide said. He claims that “Christianity is the fulfillment
of Hinduism."
He was born into a Sikh home. That's why his last name
is Singh. All Sikhs have the last name Singh.
He visited Britain, US, and Australia in
1920 and Europe in 1922, in the saffron rob of a sadhu (wandering holy man).
He became a sadhu after being visited by Jesus,
much like Paul had experienced on the road to Damascus.
Sundar wrote “At
the Master's Feet", which was translated from Urdu in 1922. In 1926 he published
his visions
of the afterlife. His parables
includes a contrast between the mystic asceticism of Hindus and Christians:
“The Indian seer lost God in Nature; the
Christian mystic, on the other hand, finds God in Nature. The Hindu mystic
believes that God and Nature are one and the same; the Christian mystic knows
that there must be a Creator to account for the universe."
The sadhu disappeared in 1929 while traveling to Tibet on
foot with no money.
Consumingfire
notes that “even though he never heard the later vogue-word 'indigenisation,'
he had done more than any man in the first half of the twentieth century to
establish that "Jesus belongs to India." He made it clear that
Christianity is not an imported, alien, foreign religion but is indigenous to
Indian needs, aspirations, and faith."
The Sadhu differentiates true knowledge of God
from pantheism:
1. "God is our Creator and we are His creatures; He is our Father, and we
are His children." 2. "If we ourselves were divine, we would no
longer feel any desire to worship." 3. "If we want to rejoice in God
we must be different from Him; the tongue could taste no sweetness if there
were no difference between it and that which it tasted." 4. "To be
redeemed does not mean to be lost in or absorbed into God. We do not lose our
personality in God; rather we find it." 5. "Pantheism does not admit
the fact of sin, therefore we often find immoral conduct among its
followers."