One point of difference between Hinduism and other religions is that in Hinduism we pass from truth to truth-from a lower truth to a higher truth-and never from error to truth.
I believe Buddhism to be a simplification of Hinduism and Islam to be a simplification of Xianity.
I should have been glad to acquire some sort of idea of Hindu theology,. . . but the difficulties were too great.
My Hinduism teaches me to respect all religions. In this lies the secret of Ramarajya.
Sri Krishna refers, of course, to this world as a joyless, transient world. Obviously, he's never been to Disneyland.
It made me high. It really did.
Hinduism dies if untouchability lives, and untouchability has to die if Hinduism is to live.
I love Christianity, Islam and many other faiths - through Hinduism.
The more I study Hindu scriptures, and the more I discuss them with Brahmins, the more I feel convinced that untouchability is the greatest blot upon Hinduism.
My respectful study of other religions has not abated my reverence for or my faith in the Hindu scriptures.
The untouchability of Hinduism is probably worse than that of the modern imperialists.
If Hinduism teaches hatred of Islam or of non-Hindus, it is doomed to destruction.
Being dissatisfied and properly dissatisfied with the husk of Hinduism, you are in danger of losing even the kernel, life itself.
The central fact of Hinduism is cow protection.
Mind delineates experience, and through the filter of mind, experience becomes something else; it becomes knowledge in tantra.
Hinduism has absorbed the best of all the faiths of the world and in that sense Hinduism is not an exclusive religion.
My Hinduism must be a very poor thing if it cannot flourish even under the most adverse influence.
Once you have personally experienced enlightenment, you will see beyond the ocean of death to the everlasting shores of immortality.
In Hinduism we have got an admirable foot-rule to measure every shastra and every rule of conduct, and that is truth.
Men like me feel that untouchability is no integral part of Hinduism, it is an excrescence.