Some said, "He is the Ancient One." Others said, "He is the Highest of the High." The Bombay lovers said whatever came to them, whatever they took Baba to be, but they found that no matter what they said, it didn't satisfy the crowd. And they got desperate. How to answer this question? People kept asking it over and over and they didn't have any answer. So they called Baba. We were in Poona at the time, and I remember I answered the phone and they explained the situation to me and they said, "Eruch, what should we say?" So I said, "Baba is in the next room, hold on and I will ask Him." And I did.
Baba seemed amused at this situation, but He told me to tell them that when someone asked, "Who is Meher Baba," they should reply, "He is the one who provokes this question in you. The Being of all beings." Just that. ...
And that satisfied people. When the Bombayites told this to people, they felt astonished but satisfied. It made sense to them in a way that "Ancient One" and "Highest of the High" and whatnot did not. This, they could understand. Baba is the one who prompts us to seek Him out. Our curiosity to find out about God, or Truth, that itself is Baba. A Sufi saint once said that our very question to God, "Where are You?" is His answer "Here I am." That it is because we feel His presence that we are moved to search for Him and cry out in desperation, "Where are You?" When we don't feel His presence, we don't miss Him, we don't start looking for Him. What a game it all is.