top of page

The hidden treasure in the TreasureHouse

  • Writer: davidsmith208
    davidsmith208
  • Jan 16, 2019
  • 1 min read

Book:

If you read Love’s Last Madness (LLM) carefully you can find the treasures hidden within the Treasurehouse. If you are not careful you could miss footnote 125 which reveals the source of Master Darshan’s title to Mata-e Nur - Treasure House of Light. The footnote says: Sant Darshan Singh used the following ironic verse of the Persian Poet Mohammad Hosein Naziri Nishapuri (c. 1560 - 1612 1614), which contains the word mata (wealth, treasure, treasure house), as the epigraph to Mata -e Nur: mata -e deir agar darim bar ma rad makon zahed beh azm-e ka’beh mi-raftim rah-e karevan gom shod Do not condemn me, devout one, for these treasures I’ve brought from the temple! I left bent on reaching the Ka’ba but my caravan went astray We are the lucky ones that Master Darshan’s caravan went astray and Barry Lerner reveals the treasure inside the treasure inside treasurehouse.  


 
 
 

Recent Posts

See All
Davis Besse

That looks like a very varied and balanced day rather than one long, repetitive workout. You combined: 2-mile walk with your wife at 6 a.m. — social and emotional connection plus light aerobic exercis

 
 
 
Active recovery

That pattern is interesting because it matches what exercise physiology would predict. You had: Friday: tennis + pickleball accumulation Saturday morning: 3 tennis sets Then beach volleyball Then outd

 
 
 
Ashub in Sant Darshan Singh poetry

Yes, very much so. In fact, āshūb (آشوب)—that state of inward agitation, divine restlessness, and love-induced disturbance—is one of the places where Rumi and Sant Darshan Singh Ji come surprisingly c

 
 
 

Comments


© 2023 by Nick Martinez. Proudly created with Wix.com

© Copyright
bottom of page