john morgan wrote: Surprised that some seem to have completely forgotten or perhaps they never realised that the gems they studied are treasures from the mind of God. Study of the Murli is the highest of studies, don't trust your own partial understanding there is more ... much more to you!
I would dispute that it is the "Mind of God" in any objective sense.
You might say it is the mind of Lekhraj's inner god. He worked and studied all his life, and both consciously and unconsciously processed those thoughts, feelings and experiences that he was immersed in. He gained an insight which explained himself and his world to himself. It made sense to some other people too, including most of us, for a period of time. Wisdom is wisdom whether from a Hopi Indian or a Sindhi Indian, What each of us has to do, to honour our own "inner god," is be completely honest about whether the wisdom is (still) appropriate for our needs.
Where the one imparting wisdom is placing conditions on it, like "if you don't accept it holus-bolus (all together, unmodified), you are inferior" then one must question the motive, the actual depth of the wisdom and it's source.
If it presents itself as an objective truth, which the Murli does - then it must stand up to the rigours of objective empirical evidence, i.e. scientific method.
If it is a subjective truth, then it should allow, within its wisdom teaching, for each to determine its appropriateness to them.
The Murli fails on both counts.