Bhagavadgita English
Bhagavadgita English
Bhagavadgita English
GURU VANDANA
(Salutations to the guru)
|| Om Shree Sadguru Dev Bhagwan Ki Jai ||
Jai Sadgurudevam, Paramaanandam,
amar shariram avikari |
Nigurna nirmulam, dhaari sthulam,
kaatan shulam bhavbhaari ||
Surat nij soham, kalimal khoham,
janman mohan chhavidhaari |
Amraapur vaasi, sab sukh raashi,
sadaa ekraasi nirvikaari ||
Anubhav gambhira, mati ke dhira,
alakh fakira avtaari |
Yogi advaishta, trikaal drashta,
keval pad anandkaari ||
Chitrakutahi aayo, advait lakhaayo,
anusuia asan maari |
Sri paramhans svami, antaryaami,
hain badnaami sansaari ||
Hansan hitkaari, jad pagudhaari,
garva prahaari upkaari |
Sat-panth chalaayo, bharam mitaayo,
rup lakhaayo kartaari ||
Yeh shishya hai tero, karat nihoro,mo
par hero prandhaari |
Jai Sadguru .. bhari ||
|| OM||
VANDANA
Bhavsagar-taran karan he,
ravinandan-bandhan-khandan he
sharnagat kinkar bhit mane,
gurudev daya kar din jane
Hridi-kandar-tamas-bhaskar he,
tum vishnu prajapati shankar he
parbrahma paratpar ved bhane,
gurudev daya kar din jane
man-vaaran-kaaran ankush he,
nar tran kare hari chakshush he
gun-gaan-paraayan devgane,
gurudev daya kar din jane
kul-kundalini tum bhanjak he,
hridi-granth vidaaran kaaran he
mahima tav gochar shuddha mane,
gurudev daya kar din jane
abhiman-praabhav-vimardak he,
ati hin jane tum rakshak he
man-kampit-vanchit-bhakti-ghane,
gurudev daya kar din jane
Ripusudan mangalnayak he,
sukh-shanti-varaabhai daayak he
bhay-taap hare tav naam gune,
gurudev daya kar din jane ll
Tav naam sada sukh-saadhak he,
patitaadham-maanav paavak he
mam maanas chanchal raatri dine,
gurudev daya kar din jane
Jai sadguru! Ishvar Praapak he!
Bhavrog-vikaar vinaashak he l
man lin rahe tav shri charne,
Gurudev daya kar din jane
ll Om Shree Sadguru Dev Bhagwan Ki Jai ||
<
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
KNOWLEDGE :
7.
18.
19.
2/40
10.
YAGYA:
11.
PERFORMER OF YAGYA :
4/27,29
12.
4/31
13.
11/54
14.
2/29
15.
2/24
8/16
7/20
16.
THE IGNOBLE :
ORDAINED PROCEDURES :
"He who departs from the body intoning OM, which is 17/5-6
GOD in word, and remembering me, attains to salvation."
The intoning of OM, which is the synonym for eternal
Brahm, remembering only the sole Supreme Being and
worshipful meditation is guidance of enlightened sage.
18.
SCRIPTURE :
GEETA IS SCRIPTURE
"So scripture is the authority on what ought and
ought not to be done, and having learnt that you have the
ability to act according to the provisions laid down by the
scripture."
8/13
19.
DHARM :-
"Grieve not, for I shall free you from all sins if you 15/20
abandon all other obligations (dharm) and seek refuge in
me alone."
After giving up all the confusing ups and downs, and
interpretations (he who shall take refuge in ME, means who
shall completely surrender to the sole Supreme Being), the
ordained action to achieve ultimate bliss is the real conduct
of DHARMA (2/40) and even if man of the most depraved 16/24
conduct if performs, is worthy of being regarded as a Saint
(9/30).
20.
PLACE OF ATTAINMENT :
A HUMBLE APPEAL
Since quite a good number of Sanskrit words had to be included in the
English rendering of Yathartha Geeta it is useful to explain briefly why and how
they have been used:
(I) To take some more prominent examples, words such as dharm, yog,
yagya, sanskar, varn, sattwa, rajas, tamas, varnsankar, karm, kshetra,
kshetragya, and pranayam, which occur through the whole book, are
really untranslatable into English. Dharm, for instance, is not "religion;"
and karm is something more then "action." Despite this, however,
approximate English equivalents have been used wherever possible, but
only, of course, if they do not distort or misrepresent the original meaning.
So "action," "property," and "sphere" have been used for karm, varn, and
kshetr respectively. Approximate English equivalents have also been used
for sattwa, rajas, and tamas, taking care that they do not obstruct the flow
or rhythm of language. But it was not found possible to have English
substitutes for dharm, yog, yagya, sanskar, and varnsankar, and these
words as well as many others have been used as they are. But since the
meaning of all Sanskrit words used in the rendering (whether with or
without English equivalents) is fully clarified in either footnotes or the text
itself, readers who have no familiarity with Sanskrit or Hindi will find no
difficulty in comprehending them. The main object in this translation has
been to use the unavoidable Sanskrit words or their English substitutes in
such a way that they do not look like patchwork and obstruct reading in
any way.
(II) As for the English transcription of these Sanskrit words, normal English
alphabet has been used. Phonetic script and diacritical marks have been
strictly dispensed with because they discourage readers and keep them
away from Indological books. So laLdkj has been transcribed as sanskar
(that is how the word is spoken) rather than as sanskara; and . . as yagya
(that is how it is pronounced) rather than as yajna. The same principle of
transcribing Sanskrit words in normal English alphabet with a close
proximity to the way these words are actually spoken has been followed
throughout the book. I believe that this way makes for easier, smoother
reading.
(III) Without meaning any offence to other scholarly writers, in deference
to the same principle of transcribing Sanskrit words in the normal English
alphabet with a close proximity to their actual pronunciation I have also
dispensed with the practice of adding an "a" to the last pure consonants of
English transcripts of Sanskrit words. So I have transcribed d`.k as Krishn
instead of Krishna, .vtqZu as Arjun instead of Arjuna, egkHkkjr as
Mahabharat instead of Mahabharata, ;ksx as yog instead of yoga, /keZ as
dharm instead of dharma, deZ as karm instead of karma, and so on. The
argument that the sound of the ultimate pure consonant is incomplete
unless an "a" is added to it is untenable, for had this been the case, the
entire system of spelling in English would have to be changed. If the last
"m" in "farm" is a complete consonant sound, why should dharm be
transcribed as dharma? Keeping this in view, one cannot but conclude
that people who have acted upon the illogical premise have done a
singular disservice to Sanskrit (their own language) by introducing a
system of transcription that has led to the distortion of the pronunciation of
such a large number of commonly used words. So, whatever be the
assumption behind the practice of adding an "a" to the ultimate pure
consonant of Sanskrit/Indian words in their English transcription, in actual
practice this "appendix" is treated as a full vowel with the sound of "a" as
in "father" or "rather" or "bath" rather than as a part of the consonant itself.
(IV) Just because Sanskrit or Hindi words are transcribed in English
alphabet they do not become English. So application of the usual English
practice of using an "s" to make plurals to these words is improper. The
plural of karm is karm, not karms. The plural of ved is ved, not veds. So "s"
has not been used to make plurals of Sanskrit nouns in this translation.
One of Swamijis disciples
PREFACE
It appears that there is no need of any further exposition of the
Geeta. Hundreds of commentaries, out of which more than fifty
are in Sanskrit, have been attempted so far. But, although there
are scores of interpretations, they have a common basis- the Geeta,
which is only one. Why, then one may wonder, are there all these
divergent opinions and controversies when Yogeshwar Krishns
message must of necessity have been only one? The proclaimer
verily speaks of truth that is only one, but if there are ten listeners
they construe his meaning in ten different ways. Our grasp of what
has been said is determined by the extent to which we are under
the domination of one of the three properties of nature, namely,
sattwa (moral virtue and goodness), rajas (passion and moral
blindness), and tamas (ignorance and darkness). We cannot
comprehend beyond the limitations imposed by these properties.
So it is logical that there should be all these disputes about the
import of the Geeta-The Lords Song.
Men fall prey to doubts, not only because many different views
are held on a given subject, but also because of the fact that the
same principle is often enunciated in different ways and styles at
different times. Quite a good many existing commentaries on the
Geeta are touched by the current of truth, and yet if one of themeven a just and correct interpretation-is placed among a thousand
other interpretations it is almost impossible to recognize it for what
it is. Identification of truth is an onerous task, for even falsehood
wears the brows of truth. The many expositions of the Geeta all
profess that they represent truth even though they may not have
any inkling of it. As against this, even when quite a good many
interpreters did succeed in coming by this truth, for a number of
reasons they were prevented from giving a public utterance to it.
The much too common inability to get at the meaning of the
Geeta in its true perspective may be attributed to the fact that
Krishn was a yogi, an enlightened sage. Only another great and
from all prejudices and preconceived notions. And then we will indeed
find it a pillar of light.
To regard the Geeta as just a sacred book is not enough. A
book is at best a sign-post that guides readers to knowledge. It is
said that one who has known the truth of the Geeta is a knower of
the Ved-which literally means knowledge of God. In the Upanishad
Brihadaranyak, Yagnvalkya calls the Ved the breath of the Eternal.
But all the knowledge and all the wisdom that the Geeta embodies,
we must always remember, comes to consciousness only within
the worshippers heart.
The great sage Vishwamitr, we are told, was absorbed in
meditative penance. Pleased with this, Brahma appeared and-said
to him, From this day you are a sage (rishi). But not satisfied with
this, the hermit went on with his intent contemplation. After a while
Brahma, now accompanied by other gods, returned and said,
From today you are a royal sage (rajarshi). But since Vishwamitrs
wish was yet unfulfilled, he continued with his incessant penance.
Attended upon by gods, virtuous impulses that constitute the
treasure of divinity, Brahma came back again and told Vishwamitr
that from that day he was a supreme sage (maharshi). Vishwamitr
then said to the oldest of all gods, No, I wish to be called a
brahmarshi (Brahmin sage) who has conquered his senses. Brahma
protested that it could not be because he had not yet subdued his
senses. So Vishwamitr resumed his penance, so rigorously this
time that the smoke of the fire of penance began to rise from his
head. Gods then entreated Brahma and the Lord of creation once
more appeared before Vishwamitr and said, Now you are a
brahmarshi. Thereupon Vishwamitr rejoined, If I am a brahmarshi,
let the Ved wed me. His prayer was granted and the Ved was
awakened in his heart. The unknown essence-all the mysterious
knowledge and wisdom of the Ved-now became known. This direct
apprehension of truth rather than a book is Ved. So wherever
Vishwamitr-an enlightened sage-is, the Ved abide there.
Krishn has also revealed in the Geeta that the world is like
an indestructible Peepal tree whose root above is God and whose
branches spreading below are nature. The one who cuts this tree
down with the axe of renunciation and knows God is a knower of
the Ved. So the perception of God that comes after the cessation
dogmatists and blind followers of creeds insist that this or that holy
book alone is a repository of truth. So we have people who say that
only the Koran is a revelation of truth and that its visionary experience
cannot be had again. There are others who hold forth that no man
can go to heaven without placing his faith in Jesus Christ, the one
Son of God. We often hear people say, There cannot be such a
sage or seer or prophet again. But all this is nothing but blind,
irrational orthodoxy. The essence perceived by all true sages is the
same.
Its universality makes the Geeta unique among the eminent
sacred works of the entire world. That also makes it a yardstick by
which the veracity of other holy books can be tested and judged.
So the Geeta is that touchstone that vindicates the substance of
truth in other scriptures and also resolves disputes arising from
their sometimes incompatible or even contradictory assertions. As
it has been pointed cut, almost all holy books abound in provisions
for worldly life and sustenance, and also in directives for religious
rites and ceremonies. There are also introduced into them-in order
to make them more attractive-sensational and even dreadful
accounts of what ought or ought not to be done. It is so unfortunate
that people blindly accept all these superficial matters as the
essence of dharm, forgetting that regulations and modes of worship
that have been laid down for the conduct and sustenance of physical
life are bound to undergo change with place, time, and situation.
This really is behind all our communal and religious disharmony.
The uniqueness of the Geeta is that it rises above temporal
questions and reveals the dynamic way by which man may achieve
perfection of the Self and final absolution. There is not a single
verse in the whole composition that is concerned with sustenance
of physical life. On the contrary, each verse of the Geeta demands
of its disciples that they equip themselves and get ready for the
inner war-the discipline of worship and meditation. Instead of
embroiling us, like other sacred books, in the irreconcilable
contradictions of heaven and hell, it is concerned exclusively with
demonstrating the way by which the Soul may attain the immortal
state after which there are no shackles of birth and death.
Every sage-teacher-like a writer-has his own style and certain
favourite expressions. Besides choosing a poetic medium,
...
TRUTH?
SANATAN?
...
...
SANATAN DHARM?
...
WAR?
...
KSHETR?
...
GYAN?
...
YOG?
...
GYAN YOG?
...
...
...
BY KRISHN?
YAGYA?
...
KARM?
...
VARN?
...
VARNSANKAR?
...
GODS?
...
AVATAR?
...
VIRAT DARSHAN?
...
...
the Kaurav and the Pandav in the great Indian epics Ramayan and
Mahabharat.
Where is the battleground on which this war is fought? The
Dharmkshetr and Kurukshetr of the Geeta are no geographical
locations.
As the poet of the Geeta has made Krishn reveal to Arjun, the
physical, human body itself is the sphere-the patch of earth-on
which the sown seeds of good and evil sprout as sanskar. The ten
organs of sense, mind, intellect, sensibility, ego, the five primary
substances, and the three nature-born properties are said to be
constituents of the whole extension of this sphere. Helplessly driven
by the three properties-sattwa, rajas, and tamas-man is compelled
to act. He cannot survive for even a moment without undertaking
action. Kurukshetr is the sphere where, since times immemorial,
we have been undergoing repeated birth, repeated death, and
repeated conception in the mothers womb. When, through the
agency of a noble teacher-preceptor, the seeker embarks on the
true way of worship and meditation and begins gradually to make
his way towards the Supreme Being-embodiment of the most
sublime dharm, Kurukrhetr (sphere of action) is transformed into
Dharmkshetr (sphere of righteousness).
Within this human body, in its mind and heart-the innermost
seats of thought and feeling-there have always dwelt the two
distinct, primordial tendencies-the divine and the devilish. Pandu,
the image of virtue, and Kunti, the type of dutiful conduct, are
parts of the treasure of divinity. Before the awakening of
righteousness in a mans heart, with his deficient understanding
he regards whatever he does as an obligation. But, in truth, he is
incapable of doing what is worthwhile because there cannot be
an awareness of proper duty without the advent of moral virtue
and goodness. Karn, who spends all his life fighting the Pandav, is
the only acquisition of Kunti before she is wedded to Pandu. And
the most formidable enemy of her other sons-the Pandav-is this
Karn. Karn is thus the type of action that is hostile to the essentially
divine character of the Self. He stands for traditions and usages
which bind and hinder men from getting rid of false, misguided
rites and ceremonies. With the awakening of virtue, however, there
is the gradual emergence of Yudhisthir, the embodiment of dharm;
When the seeker takes refuge in a sage who has perceived the
essence, there is a gradual but steady ascent of virtuous impulses
on the one hand while, on the other, there is a decline and then the
final destruction of evil impulses. When there remains no malady
and the mind is perfectly restrained, even the restrained mind at
last ceases to be and there is no longer any need of even the
treasure of divinity. Arjun has the vision that following after the
Kaurav army, even the Pandav warriors are hurling themselves
into the fiery mouth of the Omnipresent and getting annihilated.
Even pious impulses are thus dissolved with final attainment and
the ultimate consequence then issues forth. If the accomplished
sage undertakes any enterprise after this final dissolution, it is
only for the guidance and edification of his less fortunate fellowmen
and disciples.
Aiming at amelioration of the world, sages have devised
concrete, tangible metaphors to represent subtle abstractions. So
it is that characters of the Geeta are all symbolic-mere metaphorsfor formless, unmanifest inclinations and abilities. Some thirty to
forty characters are named in the first chapter, one-half of whom
epitomize forces of piety whereas the others stand for forces of
impiety. The first half are Pandav, while the others belong to the
Kaurav camp. About half a dozen of these characters are again
alluded to on the occasion of Arjuns vision of the all-pervading
God. Apart from these two chapters, there is no other mention of
these characters anywhere else in the Geeta. Out of them Arjun
alone is present before Yogeshwar Krishn from the beginning to
the end. And this Arjun too is, as we are about to see, nothing
more than a type. Rather than a three- dimensional individual, he
is the type of affectionate devotion.
At the outset Arjun is deeply agitated at the fancied prospect
of loss of what he mistakenly assumes to be the timeless and
eternal dharm of his family. But the Yogeshwar points out to him
that grief and irresolution are an offshoot of ignorance, for the
Soul alone is eternal and indestructible. The body is perishable
and Arjun is exhorted to fight because it is so. But it is not clear
from Krishns exhortation whether Arjun has to slay the Kaurav
alone. If he has to destroy bodies, are the Pandav also not physical
beings? Is it not that Arjuns kinsmen are on both sides? Is it
vision of the Supreme Spirit was meant for Arjun alone, and the
Geeta then is apparently of no use for us. But doesnt Sanjay have
the same vision along with Arjun? And hasnt Krishn given the
assurance earlier that, enlightened and redeemed by the yagya of
knowledge, many sages have been blessed with a direct perception
of him? What after all does Yogeshwar Krishn intend to
communicate? Arjun is a personification of affection and dedication,
and these are feelings shared by all mankind. No man devoid of
these sentiments has seen the coveted God before and no man
devoid of these sentiments can see him in the future. In Goswami
Tulsidass words, Ram cannot be realized without loving faith despite
endless recitation, yog, and relinquishment. So Arjun is a symbolic
figure. And if it is not so, it would be wiser of us to keep the Geeta
aside, for in that case Arjun alone was entitled to perception of
God.
At the end of the same chapter (i.e., 11), Krishn assures his
friend and devotee, O Arjun, scorcher of enemies, a worshipper
can know this form of mine directly, acquire its essence, and even
become one with it by total and unswerving devotion. Intent
devotion is only another expression for tender affection. And that
is the distinguishing mark of Arjun. He is also a symbol of seeking.
An avatar, too, is symbolical and so are also all the other characters
of the Geeta so that we may be enabled to see in the great war of
Kurukshetr the battle-field of the Soul.
Irrespective of whether there were actual historical
personages such as Arjun and Krishn, and of whether there was an
actual war called the Mahabharat, the Geeta is by no means a
portrayal of physical warfare. Standing on the brink of that historical
war, it was not his army but Arjun who was unnerved. The army
was fully in readiness to fight. Doesnt it imply, then, that by
preaching to Arjun, Krishn had only conferred on his beloved friend
and disciple the ability to be worthy of his army? In fact, the whole
of the means for spiritual accomplishment cannot be put down in
black and white. Even after one has gone through the Geeta several
times, there is yet the necessity of actually traversing the path of
God-realization that the Lord has charted. This is the necessitywhich Yatharth Geeta is all about.
Shree Gurupurnima
July 24, 1983
Swami Adgadanand
CHAPTER 1
THE YOG OF
IRRESOLUTION AND GRIEF
1. Dhritrashtr said, Assembled at Kurukshetr1, at Dharmkshetr,
and eager for combat, O Sanjay, what did my and Pandus
sons do?
Dhritrashtr is the very image of ignorance; and Sanjay is the
embodiment of self-restraint. Ignorance lurks at the core of the
objective, the outward-looking, mind. With his mind enveloped in
darkness, Dhritrashtr is blind since birth, but he sees and hears
through Sanjay, the epitome of self-control. He knows that God
alone is real, but as long as his infatuation for Duryodhan born from
ignorance lasts, his inner eye will be focused on the Kaurav, who
symbolize the ungodly forces of negative, sinful impulses.
The human body is a field for combat. When there is abundance
of divinity in the realm of the heart, the body is transmuted into a
Dharmkshetr ( field of dharm ), but it degenerates into a Kurukshetr
when it is infested with demoniacal powers. Kuru means do; the
word is an imperative. As Krishn has said, Driven by the three
properties2 born out of prakriti (nature) man is compelled to act;
YVamQ> CdmM
Y_j{{ Hw$j{{ g_d{Vm `w`wgd:$&
_m_H$m: [mS>dmMd oH$_Hw$dV gO`$&&1$&&
1. The field or sphere of dharm. Dharm is not only moral virtues and good
works, but the essential character that enables a thing or being to be its own
back
Self.
2. Sattwa, tamas and rajas, the three gun or properties or constituent qualities
of all material objects and beings. Sattwa is virtue or the quality of goodness;
back
tamas is ignorance or darkness, and rajas is passion or moral blindness.
3. The ten organs of sense :five of perception (gyanendriani) and five organs of
back
action (karmendriani).
back
4. Primary substances.
gO` CdmM
Q>dm Vw [mS>dmZrH$ `yT> Xw`m}YZVXm$&
AmMm`_w[gJ` amOm dMZ_]drV$ &&2$&&
5. The Sanskrit equivalent here is guru: an ideal teacher. The function of such a
teacher, as it is understood in Hindu thought, is twofold. He, of course,
elucidates the scriptures, but, what is more important, he also teaches by
back
the example of his life.
6. To grasp the spirit of the Geeta it is important to keep in mind that Krishn is a
mortal as well as God (Vishnu, equivalent to Brahm- the Supreme Spirit, in
back
his eighth incarnation).
7. Yog : that which unites the Self with the Supreme Spirit. Yogeshwar is an adept
back
in yog.
8. Your venerable self, Bheeshm and Karn, and also Kripavictor in wars, Ashwatthama and Vikarn, as well as
Saumdutti (Bhurishrawa, son of Somdutt).
The commander-in-chief is Dronacharya himself, symbolizing
dual conduct. And then there is the grandsire Bheeshm, the very
image of delusion. Delusion is the fountainhead of deviation from
the ideal state. Since it survives till the very end, delusion is the
grandsire. The whole army has perished, but Bheeshm yet lives on.
He lies unconscious on his bed of arrows and still continues to
breathe. Like Bheeshm, too, are Karn, a betrayer of the sacred
character of Self, and the conquering warrior Kripacharya.
Kripacharya represents the act of compassion by the seeker in the
state before Self-realization. God is the mine of compassion and
the sage attains to the same state after fulfillment. But during the
period up to accomplishment, so long as the worshipper is removed
from God and God is removed from him, when the uncongenial
impulses are still alive and strong, and he is besieged by delusionif the seeker feels compassion at this stage, he is destroyed. For
acting with pity, Sita had to undergo penance in Lanka for years8A.
cannot even defend him self? What complicates the matter even
more is that the Kaurav are also wholly dependent on him. So they
have to devise all possible measures of defence for him. This is
certainly no physical warrior. Bheeshm is delusion. So long as
delusion is alive, unrighteous impulses cannot be vanquished.
Invincible here means difficult to vanquish rather than impossible
to vanquish. As Goswami Tulsidas has said, The most difficult to
conquer is the hostile world of matter and the one who subdues it is
indeed heroic.
If delusion ceases, ignorance too ceases to exist and the
residues of negative feelings such as excessive attachment hasten
to a quick demise. Bheeshm is blessed with death by wish. So the
death of desire and death of delusion are one and the same. This
idea has been so lucidly expressed by Sant Kabir: Since desire is
the maker of birth and illusion, and it is desire that creates the
material world, he who abandons desire is the one who cannot be
conquered.
That which is free from delusion is eternal and unmanifest.
Desire is illusion and progenitor of the world. In Kabirs view, the
Self which achieves freedom from desire is united with the
fathomless, eternal, boundless reality. One who is free from desire
dwells within the Self and never falls from grace, for he has his
being in the Supreme Spirit. At the beginning there are numerous
desires, but eventually there remains only a longing for the
realization of God. The fulfillment, too, of this wish also marks the
end of desire. Had there been something higher, greater, or more
precious than God, one, would surely have craved for it. But when
there is nothing beyond or above him, what else can be desired?
When all things that can be had are achieved, the very roots of
desire are destroyed and delusion perishes utterly. This is Bheeshms
death by wish. Thus, defended by Bheeshm, Duryodhans army is
invincible in every respect. Ignorance is present as long as there is
delusion. When delusion is dead, ignorance also dies.
The Pandav army, on the contrary, defended as it is by Bheem,
is easy to conquer. Bheem is the very image of sentiment. God
dwells in feeling. Krishn has described it as devotion. It lays hold
renunciation of the material world is the right step for one who quests
for Self-realization. Worldly inclinations are like a mirage-a mere
shadow of ignorance, and the Kaurav have nothing to declare against
this. Numerous conches from their side are trumpeted simultaneously,
but they altogether inspire no other feeling except fear. Fear, although
in varying degrees, is born out of each perversion. Similar is also the
message of the conches of the other Kaurav chiefs.
13. Then there abruptly arose a tumult of conches and
kettledrums, tabors, drums, and cow-horns.
After Bheeshms blowing of his conch, numerous other conches,
drums, and trumpets are sounded together, and they make an
awesome noise. The Kaurav have no message other than that of
fear. Intoxicated with a sense of false success, the outward-looking
impulses that offend and demean the human Soul render the bonds
of infatuation yet stronger.
Now the Pandav, representing righteous impulses that are in
harmony with the divine character of the Self, respond to the Kaurav
challenge with their own declarations, the first of which is made by
Yogeshwar Krishn himself.
14. Then, too, Madhav (Krishn) and Pandus son (Arjun),
seated in the magnificent chariot to which white steeds
were yoked, blew their celestial conches.
After the Kaurav, Krishn and Arjun, riding in their magnificent,
sacred chariot drawn by flawlessly white horses (white symbolizes
purity), also blow their celestial conches. Celestial means beyond
the material world. Yogeshwar Krishns transcendental message is
a promise to render unto souls the most auspicious, unworldly
existence that is beyond the worlds of both mortals and gods, and
verily the whole universe (Brahmlok),12 which are all afflicted with
the fear of birth and death. The chariot under his charge is not
made of gold and silver and wood; everything about him is celestial,
the chariot, the conch and, therefore, also his message. Beyond
these worlds there is only the one unique and indescribable God.
Krishns message is of establishing a direct contact with this
Supreme Being. But how will he effect this state?
15. While Hrishikesh (Krishn) blew his conch Panchjanya and
Dhananjay (Arjun) the conch named Devdutt, Vrikodar13
(Bheem) of awesome deeds blew the great conch Paundr.
So Hrishikesh (lord of the senses), who knows all the mysteries
of the human heart, blows the conch Panchjanya. This is a
declaration of his intent to restrain the five organs of perception
which correspond to word, touch, form, taste, and smell, and to
transmute their inclinations into devotion. Exerting control on the
wild senses and disciplining them into faithful servitors is the gift
from an accomplished teacher; the gift, indeed, from the admired
God. Krishn is a yogi, an ideal teacher. As Arjun says in the Geeta,
Lord, I am thy disciple. It is only an accomplished teacher; who
can make us relinquish all objects of sensual pleasure, and to see
and listen to and touch nothing except the coveted God.
Dhananjay (the victor of wealth) is the affectionate devotion that
attains to the state of divine exaltation. This devotion is a feeling of
tenderness for the desired object, which includes within itself all
the experiences of devotees, even pangs of separation and
occasional disenchantment and tears. There should be nothing for
a devotee except the longed-for God. If the devotion to him is perfect,
it embraces the virtues that provide access to the Supreme Spirit.
Dhananjay is another name of this faculty. One kind of wealth is
the external riches which are needed for physical sustenance,
Vrikodar is literally interpreted, the one with a wolfs belly which is never full.
back
Likewise, a devotees heart longing for God is never satiated.
but that has nothing to do with the Self. The really lasting wealth of
man, which he can truly call his own, is realization of his Self, the
God within. In the Brihadaranyak Upanishad, Yagnavalkya teaches
the same to his wife Maitreyi when she asks him, My lord, if this
whole earth belonged to me with all its riches, should I through its
possession attain immortality? The sage replies, No, your life would
be like that of the wealthy. None can possibly hope to be immortal
through wealth.
Bheem of awesome deeds blows his great conch Paundr, which
denotes sentiment. The heart is the spring as well as the habitat of
feeling. This is why Bheem is called Vrikodar, the large-hearted.
You are attached to a child, but that attachment belongs essentially
to your heart. It only manifests itself in the child. Sentiment is
fathomless and mighty, and this sentiment is Bheems great conch
that is now blown. The affection that he represents is embodied in
sentiment. That is why Bheem blows the conch named Paundr.
However, although sentiment is mighty, it can be so only through
the medium of love. Goswami Tulsidas admits that he has known
the omnipresence of God only through its manifestation in love.
16. King Yudhisthir, the son of Kunti, blew the conch
Anantvijay, whereas Nakul and Sahdev blew their conches
Sughosh and Manipushpak.
King Yudhisthir blows the conch Anantvijay (endless conquest).
Kunti is the very image of dutifulness; and Yudhisthir, the
embodiment of dharm (natural piety). If ones adherence to dharm
is steady, Anantvijay will bring about the absorption of the Self in
the boundless God. The one who is firm in battle is Yudhisthir: one
who is unshaken by the conflicts between Self and the material
world-between the body and the transcendental Soul, and to whom
the essence of the sphere of action has been revealed. He is enabled
eventually, by God who alone is real, ceaseless, and immutable, to
overcome all the contradictions.
14.
15.
16.
The great tumult, echoing through heaven and earth, rends the
hearts of Dhritrashtrs sons. There is the Pandav army, too, but the
hearts that are rent are only those of Dhritrashtrs sons. When the
manna of Panchjanya, made up of true knowledge, realization of
the infinite, destruction of evil, and affirmation of piety, begins to
flow, the Kaurav hearts with their unrighteous and outward-looking
impulses cannot but be rent. Their power wanes by and by. And if
the process meets with success, infatuation ceases to exist
altogether.
20-22. Then, O King, after viewing the sons of Dhritrashtr in
array, when the discharge of missiles was about to
commence, Kuntis son (Arjun), whose ensign bore the
image of Hanuman, raised his bow and spoke to Hrishikesh
thus: O Achyut (Krishn), keep my chariot between the two
armies so that I may watch those who are formed up for
combat and know whom I have to fight in the ensuing
battle.
Sanjay, an epitome of self restraint, endeavours to enlighten
the mind lying under a pall of ignorance by pointing out that apart
from the other exemplary captains of the Pandav army there is the
Hanuman-ensign of Arjun. Hanuman, a symbol of true renunciation.
Disenchantment with the world and the desire to renounce it are
the mark of Arjuns battle-standard. Some interpreters have named
this standardmonkey-ensign because of its frenzied fluttering. But
this is unacceptable, for the primate exhibited on the ensign is no
common monkey but Hanuman himself who has risen above all
distinctions. To him honour and dishonour are the same. Giving
AW `dpWVmQ>dm YmVamQ>mH$o[dO:$&
dm{ e g[mV{ YZw` [mS>d:$&&20$&&
frH{$e VXm dm`o_X_mh _hr[V{$&
AOwZ CdmM: g{Z`m{^`m{_`{ aW Wm[` _{@`wV$&&21$&&
`mdX{Vmoarj@h `m{xH$m_mZdpWVmZ$&
H$_`m gh `m{`_p_Z aUg_w_{$&&22$&&
back
An epithet of Vishnu, the first deity of the Hindu Trinity, meaning Killer of the
back
demon Madhu and also destroyer of arrogance.
but all these we have only as long as there is attachment. All such
ties are demolished when there is no attachment. That is why even
sworn enemies now appear to Arjun as kinsmen. He asks Krishn
how they can be happy by killing their kinsmen. Without ignorance
and attachment the idea of family cannot exist. Paradoxically,
however, it is this ignorance that also provides the initial urge for
knowledge. Some great men like Bhartrihari and Tulsidas were driven
to renunciation by their spouses, whereas there are examples of
many others who have gone the same way because of their
disillusionment with the conduct of a stepmother.
38-39. Although, with their minds vitiated by greed, they (the
Kaurav) have no awareness of the evil they do in destroying
families and in being treacherous to friends, why should
we, O Janardan, who know that it is evil to destroy families,
not turn away from the sinful act?
Straying from righteousness because of their arrogance and
avarice, the Kaurav are blind to the sin they commit by destroying
families and practising treachery against friends. This is their error.
But why, Arjun wishes to know from Krishn, should they themselves,
knowing the evils of destroying families, not desist from the crime?
What deserves special notice here is Arjuns belief that not only
he, but Krishn, too, is about to make the same error. So he also
indirectly accuses Krishn. Every novice taking refuge in an
accomplished teacher reasons in the same way. Arjun is under the
impression that perhaps the problem that is bothering him has not
yet occurred to, Krishn. All the same, they are both reasonable
men and it is required of them to think of the evil consequences of
destroying a family.
CHAPTER 2
CURIOSITY
ABOUT ACTION
In the nature of a preface, Chapter 1 presents the seekers
doubts and confusions. The participants in the war include all of
the Kaurav and Pandav, but Arjun alone is subject to misgivings.
However, Arjun is the very embodiment of devotion as a wayfarer
on the path of spiritual quest. It is his love for God that inspires him
to get ready for the war between matter and spirit. The initial stage
is thus of love, adoration. My revered teacher used to say, Believe
that adoration of the Supreme Spirit has commenced when, even
while one is leading the life of a householder,1 there are signs of
weariness and tears, and sentiment so powerful that it chokes the
throat. Manifold strands are entwined in love: of dharm, precept,
restraint, pious association, and sentiment.
In the first stage of spiritual seeking, attachment to the family
looms as an obstacle. At the outset everyone wishes to achieve
the ultimate reality, but the worshipper is overtaken by despair
when he realizes that after going a certain length of the way he will
have to sever all his ties of attachment to the family. So he learns
to be contented with whatever customs he had followed earlier.
He even cites prevailing customs to justify his infatuation, just as
Arjun does when he insists that family rites are Sanatan Dharm.
The war will cause the extinction of the Sanatan Dharm itself and,
along with that, destruction of families and loss of civilized ways.
Far from being an independent view of Arjun, his ideas only
1. Garhastya : the second of the four stages in the traditional Hindu life, the
back
other three being brahmcharya, vanprasth, and sanyas.
gO` CdmM:
V VWm H$[`modQ>_lw[yUmHw$c{jU_$&
odfrXVo_X dm`_wdmM _YwgyXZ:$&&1$&&
back
Krishn uses the term visham for the place where Arjun and
he are at the time. Besides meaning difficult or dangerous, the
word also means unique or unequalled. So Krishn really wishes
to know that which has caused spiritual ignorance (agyan)3 in Arjun
in this unusual, unparalleled setting. The setting is one, the like of
which, can be found nowhere else in the entire world, because it is
the sphere of spiritual striving towards an unworldly, celestial goal.
In such a universal and undisputed setting, how has spiritual
ignorance come over Arjun? Why does Krishn call Arjuns views
spiritual ignorance? Has Arjun not said categorically that it is his
heartfelt wish to defend Sanatan Dharm ? Is it spiritual ignorance
to be resolved, body and soul, to protect what Arjun believes to be
the immutable, eternal dharm? According to Krishn it is so, for it
has not been the practice of those who truly deserve to be called
men. Neither does it provide access to heaven. It is also not
conducive to glory. The one who keeps firmly to the path of
righteousness is an Arya. In Hindu scriptures, instead of referring
to any race or stock, Arya denotes an exceptionally cultivated
man who adheres scrupulously to dharm. If dying for ones family
were not an instance of ignorance, Krishn adds, sages would have
practised it. Had family traditions been the ultimate reality, they
would have been used as a ladder for climbing up to heaven and
salvation. When Meera sang her songs of divine adoration, people
declared her insane and her mother-in-law condemned her as a
lr^JdmZwdmM:
3.
Agyan: the ignorance which makes a man consider himself as distinct and
back
separate from the Supreme Spirit and the material world as truly existing.
destroyer of the family. But no one today remembers the mother-inlaw for shedding copious tears of concern about the well-being of
her family and safety of its honour, while the whole world cherishes
the memory of Meera. After all, how long can we remember the
man who is concerned only about his family? Is it not evident then
that customs which bring neither glory nor sublime happiness, and
which have at no time been accepted by an Arya (a man of dharm),
must be a kind of ignorance? Krishn says to Arjun:
3.
give up his social attachments, for they are mere frailties. At this
Arjun raises his third question:
4.
AOwZ CdmM
H$W ^r__h g`{ m{U M _YwgyXZ$&
Bfwo^: oV `m{`mo_ [yOmhmdnagyXZ$&&4$&&
But Arjun is yet far from that state and at present he exploits even
the teachers office as a shield to ward off participation in the war.
5.
Arjun prefers the life of a beggar who lives on alms to killing his
teachers. Rather than meaning to beg for livelihood (for the
sustenance of the body), begging here denotes soliciting great
men-through rendering even a half-hearted service to them-for
the favour of propitious fortune. Food is the only God, after partaking
of which the Souls hunger is assuaged for ever.4 That he should,
even though in small measures, continue to taste the manna of
Gods excellence by serving and soliciting a sage, without having
to part with his family, is the craving behind Arjuns tearful appeal.
Dont most of us do the same? It is our aspiration that we should
gradually, at some point, achieve spiritual liberation without having
to destroy the ties of familial love and attachment. But there is no
such way for the seeker who has achieved a higher level of
accomplishment than this and is strong enough to face the war
raging on the battlefield of his heart. Soliciting and imploring like
an almsman rather than doing something on ones own is like
begging for food like a mendicant.
In the Dhamnadayad Sutt of Majjhim Nikaya, Mahatma Buddh
has also declared the food obtained by begging inferior because
it is like flesh received as alms.
With his heart enfeebled by pity and his mind clouded with
infatuation in regard to dharm, Arjun begs Krishn to tell him the
means that will definitely be the most conducive to what is supremely
propitious for him. But why should Krishn do this? According to
Arjun, it is Krishns duty to show him the right path because he
(Arjun) is a disciple who has found shelter under him.
Furthermore, he needs not only instruction but also support
when he stumbles. He is like the man requesting a helper to place
the load on his back, help him in securing it there, and also to
come along with him, for who will put back the load in place again
if it slips down. Such is Arjuns abject submission to Krishn.
At this point Arjuns surrender is complete. Until now he had
thought himself an equal of Krishn in merit and, in fact, even superior
to him in certain skills. But now he really puts himself at the mercy
of his charioteer. An accomplished teacher dwells in his disciples
heart and is always by his side until the goal is reached. If he is
not there by his side, the pupil may falter in his quest. Like the
guardians of a maiden who protect her till her marriage, an
accomplished teacher acts as a charioteer who skilfully manoeuvers
his disciples Soul safely across the perilous valleys of nature.
Arjun now makes one more submission:
8.
gO` CdmM:
lr^JdmZwdmM:
Krishn tells Arjun that while he grieves for those who are
unworthy of such grief, he also speaks words of wisdom, but men
of discernment mourn neither for those whose souls have departed
nor for the ones who are living. They do not grieve for the living
because they shall also die. That means that Arjun only talks like a
wise man; he does not know the reality, since12. It is not that either you or I, or all these kings, did not
exist in the past, nor is it that our being will come to an
end in the future.
It is not, Krishn explains, that he, the accomplished teacher, or
Arjun-the devoted pupil, or all these kings with the vanity that is
characteristic of rulers of men, did not exist at any time in the ages
to come. The accomplished teacher is for ever, and so are
affectionate disciples as well as rulers who symbolize the
perversions of passion and moral blindness. Here, besides throwing
light on the permanence of Yog in general, Yogeshwar Krishn has
particularly stressed its existence in the future. Explaining why the
dead should not be mourned over, he says:
13. Since the embodied Spirit passes through infancy, youth,
and old age in the body, and then transmigrates into
another body, men with steadfast minds do not grieve
over his passing away.
As the embodied soul waxes from childhood to youth, then
wanes to old age, and assumes one new body after another, wise
men are not prey to infatuation. At some time a man is a boy and
then he grows into a young man. But does he die by this? Then
he grows old. The Self is ever the same; only the condition of the
physical body in which he resides goes on changing. There is no
crack in him when he changes over to a new body. This change
from one physical body to another will continue until the Soul is
united with the Supreme Spirit who alone is beyond all change.
14. There are sensations of heat and cold, and of pain and
pleasure, O son of Kunti, as senses meet their objects.
Bear them patiently, O Bharat, because they have a
beginning and an end, and are transient.
The contact of senses and their objects, which generates
pleasure and pain, and feelings of cold and warmth, is occasional
and momentary. Arjun should, therefore, abandon them. But instead
of that, he is shaken by the mere thought of pleasures that are
derived from the union of senses and their objects. The family for
the sake of whom we yearn for pleasures and the teacher whom
we revere both represent the attachment of senses. But the causes
of this attachment are momentary, false and perishable. Neither
shall our senses always meet with objects they enjoy, nor shall
they always be capable of enjoyment. So Arjun is counselled to
give up sensual pleasures and learn to withstand the demands of
his senses. But why is Arjun counselled thus? Is it a Himalayan
war in which he has to endure cold? Or is it a desert war in which
he has to suffer heat? As knowledgeable people say, the actual
Kurukshetr has a moderate climate. During the mere eighteen
days that is the total duration of the Mahabharat war, is it possible
that seasons will change: that winter and summer will come and
go? The truth is that endurance of cold and heat, of happiness
and sorrow, of honour and dishonour, depends upon the seekers
spiritual endeavour. The Geeta is, as we have seen more than
once, an externalization of the inner conflict that rages within the
mind. This war is the war between the gross physical body and the
Self which is aware of his identity with God. It is a conflict in which
ultimately even the forces of divinity grow inert after they have
subdued unrighteous impulses and enabled the Self to become
one with God. When there remains no impiety, what else is there
for pious impulses to fight? The Geeta is thus a picturization of
inner conflict that rages within the mind. What advantages, however,
will the recommended sacrifice of senses and their pleasures bring?
What is gained by this? Krishn speaks of this:
15. So, O the noblest of men (Arjun), one who is possessed
of equanimity in pain and pleasure, and firm, and
untormented by these (feelings produced by the meeting
of senses with their objects), deserves (to taste) the nectar
of immortality.
The steadfast man, who regards sorrow and happiness with
equipoise and is not troubled by his senses and their association
with objects, is worthy of the state of immortality that realization of
the Supreme Spirit brings. Here Krishn refers to an attainment,
namely amrit, literally the drink of immortality. Arjun had thought
that in return for the war he would be rewarded with either a
heavenly abode or the authority to rule over the earth. But now
Krishn tells him that his prize will be amrit rather than the pleasures
of heaven or earthly power. What is this amrit?
16. The unreal has no being and the real has no non-being;
and the truth about both has also been seen by men who
know the reality.
The unreal has no existence; it has no being and so bringing it
to an end is out of the question. On the other hand, there is no
The Self and Brahm (God) are synonymous, And who are you ? A
worshipper of the eternal Dharm. What is immutable? The Self, of
course. That is to say that you and I all are adorers of the Self? But
if we are not familiar with the spiritual path to the eternal truth, the
way of following the dictates of the Self until he is one with the
Supreme Spirit, we have nothing that is worthy of being described
as changeless and everlasting. We are on trial for the final absolution
and in close proximity to God if we pine for him, but we cannot be
deemed as having been admitted as long as we are credulous
enough to accept blindly one wrong convention or the other
masquerading as Sanatan Dharm.
Be it in India or any other country, the Soul in all is identical.
So, if anywhere on the earth there is a man who is aware of the
true nature of Self and his ultimate goal, and who is eager to take
to the way which will eventually lead his Self to the Supreme Spirit,
be he a professed Christian, Muslim, Jew, or anything else, he
undoubtedly also belongs to the fold of Sanatan Dharm-the
changeless and eternal.
21. How can he, O Parth, who is conscious of the Soul within
as imperishable, permanent, birthless, and immutable, kill
or move another to kill?
Arjun is addressed as Parth, for he has made a chariot of the
earth-made body and is preparing to take a perfect aim at the
Supreme Spirit. The man who knows that the embodied Soul is
indestructible, permanent, beyond birth, and unmanifest-how can
he make others slay or be a slayer himself? Destruction of what is
indestructible is impossible. And, being beyond birth, the Self is
also never born. So why grieve for the body? This idea is further
elaborated in the following verse:
AN>{m{@`_Xmm{@`_c{m{@em{` Ed M$&
oZ`: gdJV: WmUwaMcm{@` gZmVZ:$&&24$&&
making money was their only dharm. The Kshatriya were absorbed
in the laudatory songs of minstrels. No sooner did their masters
sword flash than there was lightning and the throne of Delhi began
to shake. If honour came from muscle power, the Kshatriya thought,
why should they study and learn? What had they, wielders of arms,
to do with dharm. Dharm had thus turned into a monopoly of the
Brahmin. Not only were they framers of religious laws as well as
their interpreters, they had also appointed themselves the final
arbiters of right and wrong-of the true and the false. Such was the
countrys moral and spiritual degradation in the medieval times. As
against this, in ancient India, not only the Brahmin but members of
all classes and even women had been entitled to study of the Ved.
Sages of different schools had then composed the Vedic verses
and participated in spiritual discourses and debates. Ancient Indian
rulers are known to have severely punished those who propagated
pretence and affectation in the name of dharm. They had also paid
due respect to the scriptures of religions other than their own.
But in medieval India, ignorant of the spirit of Sanatan Dharm,
the Kshatriya of the village of our sad story slunk one after the
other into a corner like frightened sheep, shuddering with the
unbearable agony of the thought that they had lost their dharm.
Some of them even committed suicide. But, of course, all of them
could not be expected to kill themselves. Men of staunch faith,
they yet looked for an alternative because of their mistaken belief.
Even today the Muslims of the Hamirpur village solemnize their
weddings like Hindus. Only at the end of the ceremony a mullah is
brought in to perform the nikah ceremony. All of them were once
faithful Hindus and all of them are now faithful Muslims.
The catastrophe, as we have seen, was brought about by
nothing more than the prevailing Hindu belief that their water would
be defiled if it was touched by a Muslim. The misguided villagers
were convinced that they had lost their dharm by using defiled
water. So that is what dharm had been reduced to in medieval
India. It had turned into something like the plant whose leaves
shrink and droop at being touched. We call this plant Lajwanti (the
shy one). Its leaves contract if you just touch them, but they expand
and firm up when you remove your hand. What a great pity that a
mere plant revives as soon as the hand that touched it moves
away, but the dharm of the Hamirpur villagers withered so irreversibly
that it could never revive again. Their dharm was dead, and also
gone for them forever were their Ram, their Krishn, and their God.
The powers that they had taken as for ever now ceased to exist for
them. That is how the ignorant villagers looked at the question. The
truth is, however, that the power that was dead was only certain
stupid customs which people had taken for dharm out of their
spiritual ignorance. Dharm protects us and is, therefore, stronger
than us. But whereas even the mortal body needs some kind of a
weapon to be killed, the peculiar dharm of the gullible Hindu was
destroyed by a mere touch. What kind of dharm was it, we wonder,
for it is man-made customs which die, nor that which is eternal and
immutable ?
That which is eternal is so strong and impregnable that arms
cannot pierce it, fire cannot burn it, and water cannot wet it. Nothing
that belongs to the material world can touch it, let alone food and
drink.
Some such misguided traditions had prevailed at the time of
Arjun, too, and he was obviously one of their victims. So he tearfully
whines to Krishn about the eternal nature of family rites and
customs. The war, he says, will destroy Sanatan Dharm, and when
this is lost, all the members of the family are bound to end up in
hell. It is evident that what Arjun is talking about is some customary
beliefs of his time. That is why the spiritually adept Krishn refutes
him and points out that the Self alone is perpetual. If we do not
know the way to this embodied God, we are yet uninitiated into the
spirit of Sanatan Dharm. Knowing that this immutable, eternal
Self pervades all, what should we look for? This is what Krishn
speaks of now:
A`Vm{@`_oM`m{@`_odH$m`m}@`_w`V{$&
V_mX{d odoXdZ ZmZwem{oMVw_hog$&&25$&&
AW MZ oZ`OmV oZ` dm _`g{ _V_$&
VWmo[ d _hm]mhm{ Zd em{oMVw_hog$&&26$&&
27. Since this also proves the certain death of what is born
and the certain birth of what dies, you ought not to grieve
over the inevitable.
Even the assumption that the Self is ever-born and ever-dying
only goes to establish that the born must die and the dead must
be born. So Arjun ought not to grieve over what must be, for
sorrowing over something which is inevitable is inviting yet another
sorrow.
28. Why grieve over the matter, O Bharat (Arjun), when all
beings, disembodied before birth and disembodied after
death, appear to possess a body only between the two
events?
All beings are body-less before birth and also body-less after
death. They can be seen neither before birth nor after death. It is
only between birth and death that they assume the form of a body.
So why grieve uselessly over this change? But who can see this
Self? Krishn answers the question thus:
29. Only a seer views the Soul as a marvel, another one
describes him as a marvel, and yet another one hears
him as marvel. While there are some who hear him and
yet know him not.
Krishn has said before that only enlightened, realized, sages
have viewed the Self. Now he elaborates the rareness of this vision.
Only a rare sage sees the Self-views him directly rather than
just hear of him. Similarly, another rare sage speaks of his
substance. Only he who has seen the Self can describe him. Yet
another rare seeker hears him as a wonder, for even hearing the
voice of the Self is not possible for all because it is meant only for
men of high spiritual attainment. There are people who hear the
Self and yet know him not, because they are incapable of treading
the spiritual path. A man may listen to, countless words of wisdom,
split hairs, and be eager to acquire the highest wisdom. But his
attachments are possessed of irresistible might and after only a
short while he finds himself reversed to worldly business.
So at last Krishn gives his verdict:
30. Since the Self dwelling in all bodies is unslayable, O
Bharat, it does not befit you to grieve for living beings.
Arjun ought not to mourn for living beings because the Self, in
whatever body he is, can be neither slain nor pierced through.
Duly expounded and treated with authority, the point at issue that
the Self is eternal is concluded here.
But there arises another question at this point. How to realize
and fulfil the Self? In the whole of the Geeta only two ways are
suggested for this, first the Way of Selfless Action (Nishkam Karm
Yog) and, secondly, the Way of Discernment (Gyan Yog).
The required action for both the ways is the same. Stressing the
necessity of this action, Yogeshwar Krishn says:
31. In view of your own dharm, too, it is unworthy of you to
fear, for there is nothing more propitious for a Kshatriya
than a righteous war.
It does not befit Arjun to be hesitant even if he just keeps his
dharm in view, because there is no greater good for a Kshatriya
than a war of piety. It has been repeatedly said that the Self is
immutable, that the Self is eternal, and that the Self is the only
real dharm. Now what is this dharm of the Self (swadharm)? The
Self is the only dharm, although the capacity to engage in this
dharm varies from individual to individual. This ability arising from
ones disposition has been named swadharm or the inherent
dharm.
Ancient sages divided the travellers on the eternal path of the
Self into four classes, Shudr, Vaishya, Kshatriy, and Brahmin,
according to their innate abilities. In the primary stage of
accomplishment every seeker is a Shudr, meaning one who is
deficient in knowledge. He spends hours on worship and adoration
of God, and yet fails to render even ten minutes of his time truly
beneficial to his spiritual quest. He is unable to cut through the
illusory facade of the material world. Sitting devoutly at the feet of
a realized Sage, an accomplished teacher, at this stage helps in
the cultivation of virtues in his nature. With this he is promoted to
the level of a seeker of the Vaishya class. Gradually realizing that
accomplishments of the Self are the only true accomplishments,
he becomes adept in seizing and protecting his senses. Passion
and wrath are fatal to the senses, whereas discrimination and
renunciation protect them, but they are by themselves incapable
of annihilating seeds of the material world. Gradually, then, as the
worshipper progresses further, his heart and mind grow strong
enough to carve their way through the three properties of nature.
This is the inborn quality of a Kshatriy. At this point the worshipper
acquires the ability to destroy the world of nature and its
perversions. So this is the point of commencement of the war. By
further refinement after this, the worshipper is slowly elevated to
the category of a Brahmin. Some of the virtues that now grow in
the seeker are control of the mind and senses, incessant
contemplation, simplicity, perception, and knowledge. By slowly
perfecting these qualities, then, he ultimately attains to God, and
at this stage he ceases to be even a Brahmin.
back
has thus been divided. Properties are variable. The correct mode of
worship can elevate one from the lowest property of ignorance to
that of passion and moral blindness, and hence to virtue, or the
quality of goodness. So through gradual cultivation of the inherent
property, any individual can evolve himself into a Brahmin. He is,
then, possessed of all the qualities that are essential to the
attainment of and union with the Supreme Spirit.
Krishn lays down that even if the inherent ability, by which a
man participates in this dharm, is of the unmeritorious and ignorant
Shudr level, it is beneficial in the highest sense, because it is the
starting point from where he can set out on the path of Selfcultivation. However, the worshipper is destroyed if he imitates the
manner of higher classes. Arjun is a worshipper of the Kshatriy
class. That is why Krishn enjoins him to remember his ability to
wage war, because through it he will know that irresolution and grief
are unworthy of him. There is no better task than this for a Kshatriy.
Clarifying the point further, the Yogeshwar says:
32. Blessed indeed, O Parth, are the Kshatriy who, without
seeking, come upon such a war which is like an open
door to heaven.
The perfect marksman Arjun has made a chariot of the temporal
body itself. Only the most for tunate among Kshatriy
get an opportunity to fight in a war of righteousness that provides
fighters with an open gateway to heaven. The worshipper of the
Kshatriy class is strong enough to subdue all the three properties
of matter. The door to heaven is open to him because he has stored
an abundance of divine riches in his heart. He is qualified for the
enjoyment of celestial existence. This is the open way to heaven.
Only the fortunate among the Kshatriy, the ones who have the
capacity to wage war, are able to know the significance of the
incessant struggle that goes on between matter and spirit.
35. Even the great warriors who have a high regard for you
will then scorn you for having turned your back upon the
war out of fear.
The mighty warriors, in whose esteem Arjun will then fall from
honour to dishonour, will believe that he had retreated from the war
due to cowardice. Who are these other great warriors? They, too,
are seekers who make their way strenuously along the path of
spiritual realization. The other formidable warriors who oppose them
are, on the contrary, desire for sensual pleasure, anger, greed, and
attachment, that drag the worshipper with equal tenacity towards
ignorance. Arjun will be disgraced in the eyes of the very people
who now hold him in high esteem as a worthy seeker. Apart from
this,
36. There can be nothing more painful for you than the
disparaging and improper words your adversaries will
speak against your valour.
His enemies will malign Arjun and utter words about him that
should not be spoken. A single blemish is sufficient to bring upon
one a shower of slander and abuse from all directions. Even words,
improper for speech, are spoken. Can there be a greater grief than
being an object of such calumny? So Krishn tells Arjun:
37. Rise up with determination for the war because if you die
in it you will attain to heaven and, if you win, you will
attain to the most exalted glory.
If Arjun loses his life in the war, he will go to heaven and be
with Swar - the indestructible God. The impulses that guide one
towards the world of matter that is external to the Self will be
retarded. And his heart will then overflow with the divine qualities
that enable one to realize the Supreme Spirit. In case he wins,
however, he will attain to the state of redemption, the noblest
accomplishment. So Krishn exhorts Arjun to get up determinedly
and prepare for war.
Usually by the verse under examination it is understood that if
Arjun dies in the war, he will be privileged to live in heaven, but that
if he is victorious he will be rewarded with enjoyment of worldly
pleasures. But we cannot but remember that Arjun has told Krishn
that, in neither a realm made up of all the three worlds, nor even in
an Indr-like lordship over gods, can he see the means that can
remedy the grief that is wearing out his senses. If he is to achieve
only all this, he has said, he will not fight at any cost. Nevertheless,
Krishn exhorts him to fight. What greater reward than domination
over the earth in case of victory and celestial pleasures in case of
defeat does Krishn promise Arjun in order to make him fight? Arjun
is, in fact, a disciple aiming at the truth and excellence that lie
beyond earthly and heavenly joys. Knowing this, Krishn, the
accomplished teacher, tells him that even if the time allotted to his
body expires in the course of the war and he does not succeed in
reaching his goal, imbued with divine riches he will gain an existence
in Swar, the changeless and eternal. If, on the other hand, he
succeeds in the struggle while his temporal body is still alive, he
will achieve the sublimity of God and thus attain to the state of the
highest glory. He will thus be a winner both ways: if he conquers he
will attain to the highest state; and if he loses he will find an abode
in heaven and enjoy godly pleasures. There is profit in victory and
there is profit too in defeat. The point is reiterated:
38. You will not incur sin if you get up and fight the war,
treating victory and defeat, profit and loss, and happiness
and sorrow, alike.
weapon, which can destroy it. The material world can only cover it
up momentarily and hide it for a while, but it cannot wipe out the
initial inspiration, the seed, of the act of spiritual accomplishment.
According to Krishn, even the gravest of sinners can doubtlessly
cross over by the ark of knowledge. He means exactly this when
he says that if the seed of selfless action is just planted, it is
imperishable. It does not even have any adverse outcome in so
much as it does not abandon us midway after showing us how we
can progress towards spiritual attainment. Even if we give it up, it
works doggedly on for our final liberation. This is why selfless action,
even in a small measure, provides freedom from the great dread
of birth and death. Once planted, even after repeated birth, the
seed of such action takes us to the realization of God and to
emancipation alike from pleasure and from pain. The question is
what we have to do if we choose the Way of Selfless Action.
41. On this auspicious path, O Kurunandan (Arjun), the
resolute mind is one, but the minds of the ignorant are
divided and many.
The mind which is earnestly and firmly oriented to selfless
action is unified. Selfless action is only one and its outcome is also
one. Spiritual accomplishment is the only true achievement, The
gradual realization of this attainment by fighting against forces of
the material world is an enterprise. This enterprise and resolute
action, with a single goal are also one and the same. Then what
about those who propagate more than one mode of action? In
Krishns view they are not true worshippers. The minds of such
men are endlessly divided and that is why they conjure up endless
ways.
^m{J`gVmZm V`m[VM{Vgm_$&
`dgm`mp_H$m ]wo: g_mYm Z odYr`V{$&&44$&&
Jw`odf`m oZ`gdWm{ oZ`m}Jj{_ Am_dmZ$&
oZXXdm{ oZ`gdWm{ oZ`m}Jj{_ Am_dmZ$&&45$&&
advises Arjun to liberate himself from the conflicts of joy and sorrow,
concentrate on the one changeless reality, and desire neither the
unobtained nor the obtained; so that he may devote himself singlemindedly to the indwelling Self. This is how he can rise above the
Ved. But is there any precedence of anyone going beyond them?
Krishn says that as a man transcends the Ved, even so he comes
face to face with the Supreme Spirit, and that the man who is
aware of him is a true Vipr, a Brahmin.
46. After the final absolution a man does not need the Ved,
just as we do not need a pond when there is the allstretching ocean (around).
When a man is surrounded by the ocean on all sides, he has
no use for a pond. Just so a Brahmin who has gained knowledge
of the Supreme Spirit has no use for the Ved. That means that the
one who knows God transcends the Ved, and that man is a
Brahmin. So Krishn counsels Arjun to rise above the Ved and be
a Brahmin.
Arjun is a Kshatriy and Krishn is exhorting him to be a Brahmin.
Brahmin and Kshatriy are, among others, names of qualities that
are inherent in the dispositions of different varn (or what are now
more commonly known as castes). But the varn-tradition is
originally, as we have already seen, action-oriented rather than a
social provision determined by birth. What use has he for a petty
pond who has availed himself of the crystal current of the Ganga?
Some use a pond for ablution, while others wash their cattle in it. A
sage who has known God by direct perception has the same kind
of use for the Ved. They are undoubtedly useful. The Ved exists for
stragglers who lag behind. Further elucidation of the problem begins
from this point. Subsequently Krishn expounds the precautions to
be observed in the performance of action.
Stoic minds give up both the sacred and the sinful in this life
itself. They adopt an attitude of detachment to both. So Arjun should
strive for the equanimity of mind that is derived from the Way of
Knowledge. Yog is the skill of acting with equipoise.
Two attitudes towards action prevail in the world. If people do a
work, they also wish for its fruits. If there are no rewards, they may
not even like to work. But Yogeshwar Krishn regards such action
as bondage and states that worship of the one God is the only
worthwhile action. In the present chapter he has only named action.
Its definition is given in the ninth verse of Chapter 3; and its nature
is dwelt upon at length in Chapter 4. In the verse about to be quoted,
the skill of acting in freedom from worldly customs is that we should
perform action and do it with dedication, but at the same time with
voluntary renunciation of any right to its fruits. However, it is but
natural to be curious about what will become of these fruits. But, of
course, there is no doubt that selfless action is the right way of
action. The whole energy of the desireless worshipper is then
directed to his action. The human body is meant for worship of
God. At the same time, though, one would like to know whether
one has just always to go on acting or whether the performed action
will also produce some result. Krishn now dwells upon this problem:
51. Renouncing all desire for the fruits of their action and
(thus) freed from the bondage of birth, wise men who are
skilled in the way of equanimity and discrimination
achieve the pure, immortal state.
Wise men endowed with the yog of discrimination renounce
the fruits arising from their action and are liberated from the bondage
of birth and death. They achieve the pure, immortal state of oneness
with God.
Application of intellect is categorized here into three kinds.
Firstly by the way of discrimination (in verses 31-39). This yields
two results : Divine riches and ultimate bliss. Secondly by the way
of selfless Action (in verse 39-51) which produces only one
consequence-liberation from the dire terror of repeated birth and
death by attaining immaculate indestructible oneness with god.
These are the only two ways described for the yog. The third type
of application of intellect is done by the ignorants who are engaged
in other endless modes of actions and who fall into the cycles of
repeated birth and death according to their deeds.
Arjuns vision is limited only to acquisition of sovereignty over
the three worlds and even over Gods. But even for the sake of
these he is not inclined to war. At this point, Krishn reveals to him
the truth that a man can attain to the immortal state through
selfless action. The Way of Selfless Action also provides access
to the state of being which death cannot break into. At what point,
though, will a man be inclined to the performance of such action?
52. At the time when your mind has successfully made its
way across the swamp of attachment, you will be capable
of the renunciation which is worth hearing of and which
you have heard.
AOwZ CdmM:
lr^JdmZwdmM:
the same doubt. But then he had an intuition that he had been an
ascetic during his last seven births. During the first four of these he
had only roamed about garbed in a holy mans paraphernalia, with a
sandal paste mark on his forehead, ash rubbed on his body, and
carrying the water pot used by ascetics. He had then lived in
ignorance of yog. But during the last three births he had been a true
saint, as such a Soul should be; and there was now the awakening
of the way of yog in him. In the last life final liberation had been
almost at hand and the end was in view, but a couple of his desires
had remained. Although he had firmly controlled his outward body,
there were these passions within him. That was why he had to go
through yet another birth. And in this birth within a limited time God
had freed him from all his passions, rendered him two resounding
slaps as it were by providing him with all sights and sounds, and
made him a true sadhu.
Krishn means precisely the same when he proclaims that
although a mans association with objects of sense ends when he
restrains them from reacting to these objects, he is rid of desire for
these objects only when he knows his own Self as the identical
God through meditation. So we have to act until we have achieved
this perception. Goswami Tulsidas has also said that at first there
are passions in the heart, which are swept away only by true
devotion to God.
Krishn speaks about how difficult it is to withdraw the senses
from their objects:
60-61.O son of Kunti, men ought to subdue their senses which
seize forcibly even wise and striving minds, and devote
themselves to me with perfect concentration, because only
that mans mind is unwavering who has achieved control
of his senses.
amJ{fod`wVVw odf`moZp`aZ$&
Am_d`odY{`m_m gmX_oYJN>oV$&&64$&&
CHAPTER 3
URGING THE
ENEMYS DESTRUCTION
In Chapter 2, Krishn told Arjun that the knowledge he had
discoursed upon was related to the Way of Knowledge. And what
is that knowledge except that Arjun ought to fight? If he is a victor
he will be rewarded with the most exalted state and, even in defeat,
he will have a godly existence in heaven. There is everything in
victory, including success, and godhood even in defeat. More or
less, in either case there is some gain and absolutely no loss.
Krishn then explained the same knowledge in relation to the Way
of Selfless Action, by which Arjun could be completely free from
the compulsions of action. He also indicated the characteristic
features of the way and stressed the essential precautions that
have to be observed in the course of such action. Arjun will be
liberated from the fetters of action if he does not desire its fruits
and engages in it selflessly, but without any weakening of his
dedication to its performance. However, although ultimately there
will be absolution, this way-the Way of Selfless Action-is one on
which Arjun could not see the continuance of his own individual
being.
So he thought the Way of Knowledge easier and more readily
accessible than the Way of Selfless Action and wished to know
why Krishn was urging him, although he himself believed the Way
of Knowledge to be superior to the Way of Selfless Action, to engage
in such a dreadful act as killing his own kinsmen. It was a reasonable
query. If we really have to go somewhere to which there are two
ways, we shall surely try to find which one of the two is less
hazardous. If we do not ask this question, we are not true way
fares-not true seekers. So Arjun turns to Krishn.
1AA
2AA
3. The Lord said, I told you before, O the sinless (Arjun), two
ways of spiritual discipline, the Way of Discrimination or
Knowledge for sages and the Way of Selfless Action for
men of action.
Before here does not mean a bygone era (yug) like the Golden
or Treta Age.1 It rather refers to the last chapter in which Krishn had
spoken of the two ways, recommending the Way of Knowledge for
men of wisdom and the Way of Selfless Action for those who are
actively engaged in the task that will finally make them one with
God. In both the ways, action has to be performed. So action is an
essential.
4. Man neither attains to the final state of actionlessness by
desisting from work, nor does he achieve Godlike perfection
by just renunciation of work.
There is no escape from action. A man cannot achieve the
state of actionlessness by not commencing work, nor can he attain
to the state of divine perfection by merely giving up an undertaken
task. So, whether Arjun prefers the Way of Knowledge or the Way of
Selfless Action, he has to toil alike for each of them.
Usually, at this point, seekers on the way to God begin to look
for shortcuts and escapes. We have to be on our guard against the
common misconception that we become selfless doers just
because we do not undertake any work. That is why Krishn
emphasizes the point that one does not achieve the state of
actionlessness by just not beginning work. The point where both
good and evil deeds cease completely, where alone there is true
actionlessness, can be reached only through action. There are
the misguided ones, on the other hand, who believe that they are
In Hindu thought there are four ages (yug) of the world, Satya Treta, Dwapar,
and Kali (the present age). The first and the last are also known as Golden
back
and Iron respectively.
profess that they are intellectuals, while others earn their living by
manual labour. Some take up social service, while others serve the
country. And for all these activities people have also invented
contexts of selfishness and selflessness. But according to Krishn,
they simply are not what he means by action. Whatever other than
yagya is done is only a form of worldly bondage, not true action.
The performance of yagya is the only real action. But instead of
explaining what yagya is, he now dwells upon its genesis.
10.At the beginning of kalp-the course of self-realization4
Prajapati Brahma shaped yagya along with mankind and
enjoined on them to ascend by yagya which could give
them what their hearts aspired to.
Prajapati5 Brahma, the god presiding over creation, made
mankind along with yagya at the beginning and told men to
progress through yagya. This yagya, wholly propitious, was
prescribed or ordained as the action which would satisfy their
hunger for realization of the eternal God.
Who was the creator of mankind along with yagya? Was it
Brahma and who is he? Is he, as it is believed, the God with four
heads and eight eyes? According to Krishn there are no beings
like gods. The sage who has realized and become one with the
Supreme Spirit, the fountainhead from which all mankind has
arisen, is prajapati. Wisdom that results from knowledge of God
is itself Brahma. At the moment of this realization the mind becomes
a mere instrument. It is God himself who then speaks through the
voice of the sage.
Usually meaning 1000 yug (ages), making up a period of 432 million years
of mortals, kalp also signifies a process of treatment for restoration of health
back
(kayakalp). So kalp here means the whole course of self-realization.
5.
13.The wise who partake of what is left over from yagya are
rid of all evil, but the sinners who cook only for the
sustenance of their bodies partake of nothing but sin.
They who subsist on the food derived from yagya are absolved
of all sins. The moment of achievement in the course of augmenting
the divine plenty is also the moment of its completion. When yagya
is complete, the leftover is God himself.6 The same has been said
by Krishn in a different way: the one who feeds on what is generated
by yagya merges into the Supreme Spirit. The sage who feeds on
Gods manna that issues from yagya is liberated from all sins or, in
other words, from birth and death. Sages eat for liberation, but a
sinner eats for the sake of the body that is born through the medium
of attachment. He feeds on evil. He may have sung hymns, known
the way of worship, and also made a little bit of the way, but despite
all this there arises in him a cloying desire that he should achieve
something for the body and its objects of attachment. And it is
quite likely that he will also get what he desires. But then, after this
joy, he will find himself stationary at the very point from which he
had begun his spiritual quest. What greater loss can there be than
this? When the body itself is destructible, how long can its pleasures
and joys be with us? So, irrespective of their divine adoration, such
men partake only of sin.
They are not destroyed, but they do not progress on the way.
That is why Krishn stresses action (worship) undertaken in a selfeffacing spirit. He has so far said that the practice of yagya confers
the highest glory and that it is a creation of accomplished realized
sages. But why do such sages undertake the shaping and
refinement of mankind?
;KfkVkfku% lUrks eP;Urs loZ f dfYckS % A
Hkq trs rs Ro?ka ikik ;s ipUR;kRedkj.kkr~ AA 13AA
6.
Food represents the lowest form in which the Supreme Spirit is manifested.
The idea of God as food recurs through the Upanishad. In the Upanishad
Prashn, the sage Pippalad says, Food is Pran (the primal energy) and Rayi
(the giver of form). From food grows seed, and from seed are born all
creatures. According to the Upanishad Taittiriya, Out of Brahm (God),
who is the Self, came ether; out of ether, air; out of air, fire; out of fire, water;
out of water, earth; out of earth, vegetation; out of vegetation, food; out of
back
food, the body of man.
14.All beings get their life from food, food grows from rain,
rain emerges from yagya, and yagya is an outcome of
action.
15.Be it known to you that action arose from the Ved and the
Ved from the indestructible Supreme Spirit, so that the allpervasive, imperishable God is ever present in yagya.
All creatures are born from food. Food Is God himself whose
breath is life. A man turns to yagya with his mind fixed on that
divine manna. Food results from rain: not the rain that falls from
clouds, but the shower of grace. The yagya which have been
undertaken and stored earlier themselves come down as a shower
of grace. Todays worship is given back to us as grace the next day.
That is why yagya is said to generate rain. If an indiscriminate
oblation or offering to all of the so-called gods and burning of barley
grains and oil seeds could produce rain, why should deserts have
remained barren? Thus rain here is the shower of grace that is an
outcome of yagya. This yagya, again, arises from action and is
indeed brought to completion by action.
Arjun is told to remember that this action is born from the Ved.
The Ved is the voice of sages who live in God. The vivid perception,
rather than cramming of certain verses, of the unmanifest essence
is named Ved. The Ved is born from the imperishable God.7 The
truths of the Ved have been proclaimed by great souls, but, since
they have become one with God, the imperishable God himself
speaks through them. It is for this that the Ved is said to be of
divine origin. The Ved came from God. And the sages, being one
with Him, are only instruments. It is he whose spokesmen they
are. God manifests himself to them when they have restrained the
desires of their mind by yagya. The omnipresent, ultimate, and
imperishable God is, therefore, always present in yagya. So yagya
is the only way to attain to him. This is what Krishn tells Arjun:
vUukofUr Hkw r kfu itZ U ;knUulEHko% A
;Kkofr itZ U ;ks ;K% deZ l eq o% AA 14AA
deZ cz ks oa fof) cz k{kjleq oe~ A
rLekRloZ x ra cz fuR;a ;Ks iz f rfBre~ AA 15AA
7.
The man who has known his Self, and who finds joy and
contentment in his embodied Soul, has nothing to gain from action
nor anything to lose from inaction. But, on the other hand, there
are instances of men of true attainment such as Janak and others
who were assiduously engaged in action. In the following verse,
Krishn also unobtrusively compares himself with those great men
to suggest: I, too, am a great Soul like them.
22.Although, O Parth, there is no task in all the three worlds
which I have to do, and neither is there any worthwhile object
which I have not achieved, I am yet engaged in action.
Like other sages of attainment, Krishn has also nothing
remaining to do. He said a little earlier that sages have no duty to
perform to other beings. Similarly, in all the three worlds he has
nothing to do and there is not even the least desirable object that
he does not have. And yet he is earnestly engaged in action.
23.For should I not be diligent in the performance of my task,
O Parth, other men will follow my example in every way.
If he is not careful about the due performance of his assigned
task, other men will also behave like him. Does it mean that even
emulating Krishn (God) may be an error? By his own admission, he
will set a bad example if he does not act.
24.If I do not perform my action well, the whole world will
perish and I Shall be the cause of varnsankar and so a
destroyer of mankind.
If he does not acquit himself of his task with caution, not only
will all the worlds stray, but he will also bring about varnsankar and
so the destruction of all mankind. If the enlightened,
u es ikFkZfLr drZO;a f=kq yksdskq fdapu A
ukuokIreokIrO;a orZ ,o p deZ f .k AA 22AA
;fn ;sga u orsZ;a tkrq deZ.;rfUnr% A
ee oRekZuqorZUrs euq;k% ikFkZ loZk% AA 23AA
mRlhns;qfjes yksdk u dq;kZa deZ psnge~A
la d jL; p drkZ L;keq i gU;kfeek% iz t k% AA 24AA
A
AA 26AA
The guru (noble teacher), teaching not only by precept but by the example of
back
his own life.
gave away his ascetics stick and water pot to another holy man,
and went about all nude. When he came back after a while, he saw
that Parmanand Ji was also talking with people and even abusing
them (he had a divine command that he rebuke and even condemn
his disciples if necessary for the sake of their good-that he watch
over the travellers on the spiritual path). In imitation of the great
man, the other holy man also began to speak abusively. But people
retaliated with angry and unpleasant words, and the poor impostor
was left wondering why people retorted to him whereas no one
spoke a word of protest to the Paramhans Ji
When he again returned after two years, he saw Parmanand
Ji sitting on a thick and soft mattress and people fanning him. So
the helpless man had a wooden seat brought to the forest, got a
mattress spread over it, and hired a couple of men to fan him.
Crowds of people began to flock to him on Mondays when the holy
man practised his miracles: charging fifty rupees if someone
wanted a son and twenty-five rupees for a daughter. But he had to
run away within a month because he was exposed as a liar. So
imitation does not help when we tread on the spiritual path. The
seeker has to practise his own dharm.
What is this ones own dharm (swadharm)? In Chapter 2, Krishn
had named it and told Arjun that even with his own dharm in view
it was his duty to wage war. There was no more blessed a way for
a Kshatriya. From the point of view of his innate property, the
inherent dharm, Arjun was declared a Kshatriya. Krishn told Arjun
that for the Brahmin, truly devout men possessed with knowledge
of the Supreme Spirit, instruction in the Ved was like taking a bather
to a mere puddle. But Arjun was urged to learn the Ved and grow
into a Brahmin. In other words the inherent dharm is subject to
change. However, the really significant point is that the inherent
dharm is the most conducive to ones well-being. But this does not
mean that Arjun should imitate a Brahmin, and dress and look like
him.
The same path of action has been divided by the sage into
four parts: the lowest, medium, good, and excellent. Krishn has
named the seekers treading on these paths respectively Shudr,
Vaishya, Kshatriya, and Brahmin. Action begins at the level of the
lowest, but in the course of his spiritual quest the same seeker
can evolve into a Brahmin. Further than this, when he is united with
God, there remains neither Brahmin, nor Kshatriya, nor Vaishya,
nor Shudr, but only pure intelligence, the eternal and changeless
Supreme Spirit. He then transcends all these classes. Krishn says
that he has created the four classes. But, as it was pointed out
earlier, the classification was on the basis of action rather than
according to birth. But what is that action which forms its basis? Is
it what is usually done in and for the world? Krishn contradicts this
and speaks of the ordained task or action.
As we have seen, this ordained action is the process called
yagya, in which one breath is offered as sacrifice to another and
all the senses are restrained, all of which is in a true sense the
practice of yog and meditation. The special exercise which takes
one to the adored God is meditation. Varn are a division of this act
of meditation itself into four categories. A man should begin his
quest at the level of his natural ability. This is the inherent dharm.
If the seeker imitates those who are superior to and ahead of him,
he will be only burdened with fear. He will not be destroyed
completely, for in the spiritual enterprise the seed is indestructible.
But he will be overwhelmed by terror and impoverished under the
burden of material world. If a student of primary level sits in graduate
classes, he cannot become a graduate although for sure he will
forget even the alphabet. Why, Arjun asks, does man then not act
according to his inherent dharm?
36.Arjun said, What, O Varshneya (Krishn), is that which drives
man, forced against his will as it were and with reluctance,
to act impiously?
Why does a man, although like one who is dragged to something
which he despises, act in sinful ways? Why does he not conduct
himself according to the precepts laid down by Krishn? Krishns
answer to the question is provided in the following verse.
37. The Lord said, Know that desire arising out of the
emotional property of nature (rajas) and insatiable as fire
is the same as wrath; and learn to recognize it as your
most wicked enemy in this world.
Desire and wrath that spring from the natural property of passion
have an insatiable appetite for sensual pleasure and are the most
sinful desire and wrath are the complements of attachment and
repugnance. So Arjun is warned that he must regard them as his
most dangerous enemies. And now their deleterious effects are
dwelt upon.
38. As fire is enveloped by smoke, a mirror clouded with dust,
and a foetus hidden by the womb, even so knowledge is
engulfed by desire.
Discrimination is obscured by the mantle of desire and wrath. If
we burn damp wood, there is only smoke. There is fire, but it
cannot leap into flame. A dust-covered mirror cannot give a clear
image. Just so, when there exist the perversions known as desire
and wrath, the mind cannot have a clear perception of God.
39. And, O son of Kunti, even wise mens discrimination is
engulfed by desire, insatiable like fire and their perpetual
enemy
So far Krishn has named two enemies, desire and wrath, but in
the thirty-ninth verse he mentions only one of them, namely, desire.
In truth, the feeling of anger lies within desire. When a task is
successfully completed anger subsides, but when desire is
obstructed anger reappears. So anger resides at the heart of desire.
It is important to know where the enemy hides, for knowing this will
facilitate a total destruction of the enemy. Krishn expresses his
view on the problem.
dke ,k ks/k ,k jtksxq.kleqn~Hko% A
egkkuks egkikEik fon~/;sufeg ofj.ke AA 37AA
/kwesukfoz;rs ofu;ZFkknkksZ eysu p A
;FkksYCksukorks xHkZLrFkk rsusnekore~ AA 38AA
vkora Kkuesrsu Kkfuuks fuR;oSfj.kk A
dke#is.k dkSUrs; nqiwjs.kkuysu p AA 39AA
40. Since the senses, mind, and intellect are the seats of
desire, it is through them that it deludes a being by
clouding-his faculty of discrimination.
So we have the answer. Our worst foe dwells within our own
senses, mind, and intellect. It is through them that desire envelops
knowledge and deludes the embodied Soul.
41. So, O the best of Bharat (Arjun), first subdue the senses
and kill determinedly this desire, the heinous destroyer of
both spiritual and physical knowledge.
Above all, Arjun must control the senses because his enemy
lies concealed within them. The enemy is within us and it will be
futile to look for him outside. The war that has to be waged is
internal; it has to be fought within the mind and heart. So Arjun
must subdue his senses and kill this sinful desire which ravages
both knowledge of the unmanifest Spirit and knowledge of the
physical world. However, he cannot storm them directly; he has
first to lay siege to the stronghold of moral perversions itself by
vanquishing the senses.
But to restrain the senses and mind is most difficult. The success
of this endeavour always appears doubtful. Krishn dispels this
pessimistic attitude by pointing out the many weapons at his disposal
which a man can use to fight against the enemy.
42. Above senses there is the mind and above mind there is
the intellect, and the one which lies above all of them is
the Soul within, supremely powerful and yet subtle.
So man is not so helpless after all. He has an armoury of plentiful
arms with which he can wage war with strength and confidence. He
can use his mind against the senses, his intellect
bfUnz ; kf.k euks cq f )jL;kf/kBkueq P ;rs A
,rS f oZ e ks g ;R;s k KkuekoR; ns f gue~ AA 40AA
rLekofefUnz ; k.;knkS fu;E; HkjrkZ H k A
ikIekua iz t fg ;s u a KkKkuukkue~ AA 41AA
bfUnz ; kf.k ijk.;kgq f jfUnz ; s H ;% ija eu% A
eulLrq ijk cqf);ksZ cq)s% ijrLrq l% AA 42AA
against the mind, and above all these there is his Soul, all powerful
and yet unmanifest. That Soul is the real us, and so we are strong
enough to subdue not only our senses, but also our mind and
intellect.
43. Therefore, O the mighty-armed, knowing the Soul-subtle
and in every respect mighty and meritorious, restrain the
mind with your intellect and kill this desire, your most
formidable enemy.
Possessed of knowledge of the unmanifest and yet mighty Soul
that is beyond intellect, and after a due appraisal of his innate
strength and restraining the mind with his intellect, Arjun must slay
desire, his worst enemy. Arjun has to kill this enemy after a proper
scrutiny of his inherent capacity. Desire is a terrible foe, for it deludes
the Soul through the senses. So knowing his strength and with
confidence in the might of his Soul, Arjun should kill this desire-his
enemy. Of course, this enemy is internal and the war to be waged
against it is also internal- of the sphere of the mind and heart.
*****
CHAPTER 4
ELUCIDATION OF
THE DEED OF YAGYA
In Chapter 3, Yogeshwar Krishn had given the assurance that
if a man followed his precept, free from delusion and with sincere
devotion, he would be liberated from the bondage of action. Yog
(both of knowledge and action) has the power to effect liberation
from this servitude. The idea of waging war is embodied in yog. In
the present chapter he points out who the author of yog is, as well
as the stages by which this discipline has evolved.
1
The Lord said, It was I who taught the eternal yog to the
Sun- (Vivaswat), who then taught it to Manu, who taught
it to Ikshwaku.
lr^JdmZwdmM
B_ odddV{ `m{J m{VdmZh_``_$&
odddm_Zd{ mh _ZwnadmH$d{@]drV$&&1$&&
the way of God-realization.1 God is the one light that gives light to
all.
Yog is everlasting. Krishn has said earlier that the inception,
the seed, of this process is indestructible. If it is but begun, it does
not cease until it has achieved perfection. The body is cured by
medicines, but worship is the remedy for the Soul. The beginning
of worship is the beginning of Self-cure. This act of devotion and
meditation is also the creation of an accomplished sage. To the
primitive man lying unconscious in the night of ignorance, who
has not given a thought to yog, is brought to the perfection of yog
when he meets with a sage-just by looking at the great man, by
listening to his voice, by rendering albeit an inadequate service to
him, and by associating with him. Goswami Tulsidas has also said
this: Ultimate bliss is granted to the man who has perceived God
as well as to the man who has been noticed by God.
Krishn says that at the beginning he taught yog to the Sun. If a
realized sage just casts a glance at a devotee, the refinement of
yog is transmitted into the life-breath of the lucky Soul. All beings
that live are animated by the sun-by God who is subject to himself
alone. Since light is life or breath, it is ordained that the Supreme
Spirit can be attained only by the regulation of life-breath.
Transmission of pious instincts into early man is the imparting of
knowledge of yog to the Sun, after which in due time the seed of
this perfection sprouts in the mind. This is how gods pass on the
knowledge to Manu. After the seed has sprouted in the mind, there
will arise a wish for the realization of the sages utterance. If the
mind has something in it, there is also the desire to achieve it. This
is Manus preaching yog to Ikshwaku. There will be a longing, or
aspiration to do that ordained act which is eternal and which
liberates from the bondage of action. If it is so, there is the will to
act and worship is quickened. Krishn now speaks about the point
to which yog takes us after it has been set in motion.
1.
In the Upanishad Prashn we find this: The wise know him who assumes all
forms, who is radiant, who is omniscient, and who is the one light that gives
light to all. He rises as the sun of a thousand rays and abides in infinite
places.
2.
AOwZ CdmM:
lr^JdmZwdmM:
3.
In Ram Charit Manas, the devotional retelling and translation of thirty other
Indian epics, the Ramayan, by the great poet Tulsidas, Goswami Tulsidas
has defined maya thus: Whereas I and these are mine, you and those
are yours. This notion is maya, of which all creatures are victims. It is
twofold, made up first of ignorance and then of enlightenment. The first is a
notorious rogue because it entraps every creature in the pitfalls of birth and
death. On the contrary, although the other is reputed as the only fountain of
virtues, it is wholly animated by the God within and has no power of its own.
The process of enlightenment is called vidya-maya. Since it unites the
individual Soul with the Infinite, it is also named yog-maya. And because it
enables the Soul to attain to his highest glory, it is also known as atm-maya.
After accomplishment a yogi is blessed with the power that enables him to
look after thousands of his disciples at once. This power, called atm-maya,
is the one that is used here.
that makes one accept the reality of the material world, and which
is the cause of rebirth in low and inferior forms. The other maya is
that which Krishn calls yog-maya, of which we are unaware. This is
the maya of Self that provides access to the Soul and leads to
awareness of the Supreme Spirit. It is by the operation of this yogmaya that Krishn subdues his three-propertied nature and manifests
himself.
People usually say that they will have a vision of God when he
manifests himself through an incarnation. According to Krishn,
however, there is no such incarnation as may be seen by others.
God is not born in a corporal form. It is only by gradual stages that
he controls his three-propertied nature by the exercise of yog-maya
and manifests himself. But what are the circumstances of such
manifestation?
7 Whenever, O Bharat, righteousness (dharm) declines and
unrighteousness is rampant, I manifest myself.
Krishn tells the devout Arjun that when hearts fall into inertia in
regard to the Supreme Spirit, the most sublime dharm, and when
the pious are unable to see how to cross safely to the other bank,
he begins to shape his form in order to manifest himself. Such a
feeling of weariness had come to Manu. Goswami Tulsidas has
written of his grief-laden heart because his life had passed without
contemplation of God. When despairing tears flow from the eyes
of loving worshippers because of their overpowering feeling of
helplessness at their inability to steer across unrighteousness, God
begins to mould his form into a manifest shape. But that also implies
that God manifests himself to only loving worshippers and only for
their well-being.
Gods incarnation comes about only within the heart of a
blessed worshipper. But what does the manifest God do?
later in this chapter. The outcome of this action is oneness with the
eternal God, the supreme goal: the state of total actionlessness.
Krishn says that men who follow his way, worship gods for the
attainment of actionlessness, that is, they strengthen the divine
impulses within.
Krishn said in Chapter 3 that Arjun ought to practise yagya to
foster gods-to strengthen his righteous impulses. He will progress
more and more as these impulses are gradually strengthened and
augmented. Thus, advancing step by step, he will at last achieve
the ultimate bliss. This is the final stage of the process of spiritual
advancement that has to be gone through from the beginning to
the end. Stressing the point, Krishn says that they who follow him,
even though aspiring for accomplishment of action in their human
bodies, tend the righteous impulses which quicken the advent of
the state of actionlessness. Never failing, the process invariably
succeeds. What is the meaning of quickly or soon here? Is it
that no sooner do we commence action that we are rewarded with
the final achievement? According to Krishn, it is decreed that this
height can be only gradually conquered, moving step by step. No
one can leap across to the summit at once and bring about a miracle
like the revelations that teachers of divinity nowadays claim for
abstract meditation. Let us now see how it is.
13. Although I have created the four classes (varn )-Brahmin,
Kshatriya, Vaishya and Shudr-according to innate
properties and actions, know me the immutable as a nondoer.
Krishn represents himself as the maker of the four classes.
Does it mean that he has divided men into four rigid categories
determined by birth? The truth is rather that he has divided actions
into four classes on the basis of inherent properties. All the same,
as he tells Arjun, he-the imperishable God-is a non-agent and
should be known as such. The innate property (gun) of a being or
of a thing is a measure, a yardstick. If the dominant property is
Not only here but in the whole of the Geeta, wherever the preposition vi
is prefixed to a root, it denotes excellence.
this ability to see non-action has been mastered and the continuity
of action is unbroken, should one believe that action is proceeding
in the right direction. The man with this insight is a wise man. verily
a yogi, endowed with the means by which the individual Soul is
united with the Supreme Spirit, and a doer of perfect action. There
is not even the slightest error in his performance of action.
Briefly, then, worship is action. A man should practise it and
yet see non-action in it, that is, realize that he is just an instrument
while the real doer is the underlying property. When we know that
we are non-doers and there is yet constant and unimpeded action,
only then is made possible the performance of that action which
results in the ultimate good. My noble teacher, the revered Maharaj
Ji, used to say to us, Until God runs into a charioteer to restrain
and guide, real worship does not begin. Whatever is done before
this stage is no more than a preliminary attempt to be admitted to
the way of action. The whole weight of the yoke rests on the oxen
and yet the ploughman is the one who drives them, and the
ploughing of the field is said to be his accomplishment Even so
although all the burden of worship is borne by the worshipper, the
real worshipperis God because he is always by the devote, urging
and guiding him. Until God delivers his judgement, we cannot even
know what has been done through us. Are we yet settled in the
Supreme Spirit or are we just roaming about in the wilderness of
nature? The worshipper who thus goes ahead on the spiritual path
under Gods guidance, and who acts with constant belief that he
is a non-doer, is truly wise; he knows the reality and he is indeed a
yogi. However, is the worshipper to go on acting for ever or will
there ever be a point of respite? Yogeshwar Krishn speaks about
this next.
But, before we come to the next verse, let us recall briefly, for
the sake of better understanding, what Krishn has said about action
and yagya, so far. What is usually done in the name of action, he
has said, is not action. Action is a prescribed undertaking-the
performance of yagya. Whatever else besides it is done is not action.
According to Krishn anything apart from this that is done is worldly
bondage rather than action. From what Krishn has spoken about
the nature of yagya, it is evident that it is a particular mode of
worship which guides the devotee to the adored God and effects
his dissolution in Him.
and love and animosity, free from any negative feeling, and abiding
with equanimity in attainment and nonattainment, he is not fettered
by action even though he appears to be engaged in it. Since the
goal he had aimed at is now achieved and it will not ever desert
him, he is freed from the terror of defeat. Looking alike at
achievement and non-achievement this man acts, but without
infatuation. And what he does is nothing other than yagya, the act
of supreme sacrifice. Reiterating the concept, Krishn adds:
23. When a man is free from attachment, his mind rests firmly
in the knowledge of God, and when his actions are like
the yagya made to God, he is truly emancipated and all
his actions cease to be.
Performance of yagya itself is action and direct perception of
God is knowledge. Acting in the spirit of sacrifice and dwelling in
the knowledge achieved from direct perception of God, all the
actions of this liberated man who is devoid of attachment and desire
undergo a process of dissolution. Now his actions are of no
consequence to the worshipper, because God, the goal he had
striven for, is no longer away from him. Now, what other fruit will
grow from a fruit? Therefore, such liberated mens need of action
for themselves comes to an end. Yet they act as messiahs, but
even while doing this they remain untouched by what they do. Krishn
accounts for this in the following verse :
24. Since both the dedication and the oblation itself are God,
and it is the Godlike teacher who offers the oblation to
the fire which is also God, the attainment, too, of the man
whose mind is set on Godlike action is God himself.
The emancipated mans yagya is God, what he offers as oblation
is God, and the sacred fire to which the sacrifice is made is also
God. That is to say that what is offered by the Godlike worshipper
to the sacred fire that is an embodiment of God is also God himself.
l{`m`_`mkmkmZ`k: [aV[$&
gd H$_moIc [mW kmZ{ [nag_m`V{$&& 33$&&
The sage of Pippalad says, in the Prashn Upanishad, that they who desire
children and are given to rites, considering them the highest
accomplishment, attain to the world of the Moon (Rayi) and are born again
on earth, but they who are devoted to the worship of the Self, by means of
austerity, continence, faith, and knowledge, go by the northern path and
attain the world of the Sun. (Pran)
Isnt Arjun standing directly before the Lord? Then why does
Krishn ask him to go to a seer? In truth, the meaning of Krishn who
was a yogi-indeed a Yogeshwar-is that today the worshipper is with
him, but he may be confused in future when he is no longer present
to guide him. Ah me! Arjun will say, Krishn has gone and I
dont know to whom to turn now for guidance. That is why Krishn
tells Arjun categorically that he should approach seers who will
instruct him in true knowledge.
35. Knowing which, O son of Pandu, you will never again be a
prey like this to attachment, and equipped with this
knowledge you will see all beings within yourself and then
within me.
After acquiring this knowledge from sages Arjun will be rid of
all attachment. Possessed of this knowledge he will perceive all
beings in his Self, that is, he will see the extension of the same
Self everywhere, and only then can he become one with God.
Thus the means of attaining to that God is the sage who has
perceived reality.
36. Even if you are the most heinous sinner, the ark of
knowledge will carry you safely across all evils.
We should not make the error of concluding from this that we
will know salvation even with committing more and yet more sin.
Krishn rather intends to say by this that we should not be under the
mistaken impression that we are such great sinners that there cannot
be salvation for us. So this is Krishns message of hope and courage
to Arjun and to everybody: that despite being the doer of sins greater
than the sins of all sinners he will sail across sins successfully, by
the ark of knowledge acquired from seers. Thus-
`WYmog go_m{@o^_gmHw$V{@OwZ$&
kmZmo gdH$_moU ^_gmHw$V{ VWm$&& 37$&&
Z oh kmZ{Z ge [odo_h odV{$&
Vd` `m{Jgog: H$mc{Zm_oZ odXoV$&& 38$&&
lmdmc^V{ kmZ V[a: g`Vm{p`:$&
kmZ cdm [am empV_oMa{UmoYJN>oV$&& 39$&&
42. So, O Bharat, dwell in yog and stand up to cut down this
irresolution that has entered into your heart because of
ignorance with the steel of knowledge.
Arjun has to fight. But the enemy-irresolution-is within his own
heart, not outside. When we proceed on the way of devotion and
contemplation, it is but natural that feelings of doubt and passion
will arise as obstacles before us. These enemies launch a fearful
assault. To fight them and overcome them, through the destruction
of uncertainties by the practice of the ordained yagya, is the war
that Arjun has to wage, and the result of this war for him will be
absolute peace and victory after which there is no possibility of
defeat.
V_mXkmZg^yV W kmZmogZm_Z:$&
oN>dZ ge` `m{J_moVR>m{omR> ^maV$&& 42$&&
bind him, and just so they who have attained to the same state are
not bound by action. It was with realization of this truth that earlier
men desiring salvation set out on the path of action to reach that
state, and the man who has known what Krishn knows from his
elevated position, and Arjun, too, desiring salvation, will be what
Krishn is. This attainment is assured if yagya is performed. Krishn
has then told us the nature of this yagya and that the final outcome
of this exercise is realization of the highest reality-of the ultimate
tranquillity. But where to go in order to know the way of knowledge?
Krishn has advised Arjun to approach sages and win them over
with reverence, humble inquiry, and guileless solicitation. He has
also said unambiguously that this knowledge he can acquire only
by his own action rather than through the conduct or action of others.
Also, it will come to him when his yog is in an accomplished stage
rather than at the outset. Perception of knowledge will be within the
sphere of heart, not outside. And it comes only to those who are
dedicated, determined, in control of their senses, and free from all
doubt. So finally Arjun is advised to sever the irresolution in his
heart with the sword of renunciation. Thus war is within the heart.
The war of the Geeta is quite unconcerned with any external conflict.
In this chapter, Krishn has thus mainly elaborated and explained
the nature and form of yagya, and added that the deed of
accomplishing it is action.
Thus concludes the Fourth Chapter, in the Upanishad of the
Shreemad Bhagwad Geeta, on the Knowledge of the
Supreme Spirit, the Science of Yog, and the Dialogue
between Krishn and Arjun, entitled:
Yagya Karma-Spashtikaran or
Elucidation of the Deed of Yagya.
Thus concludes Swami Adgadanands exposition of the
Fourth Chapter of the Shreemad Bhagwad Geeta in
Yatharth
Geeta
HARI OM TATSAT
CHAPTER 5
AOwZ CdmM:
If both the ways are equally effective in bringing about the final
absolution, why is the Way of Selfless Action described as superior? This is what Krishn has to say about it.
3.
The one who is free alike from love and animosity is a sanyasi,
a man of renunciation, irrespective of whether he has chosen the
Way of Knowledge or the Way of Selfless Action. Emancipated
from both attachment and repugnance, he is happily released from
the great fear of repeated births.
4.
Only they who know but inadequately of spiritual life find the
two ways divergent, because the final outcome of both is the same,
namely, attainment of God.
lr^JdmZwdmM:
5.
That man perceives reality who regards the Way of Knowledge and the Way of Selfless Action as identical, because
the liberation attained by knowledge is also achieved by
selfless action.
But, O the mighty-armed, renunciation is well highly impossible to achieve without selfless action, but the one
whose mind is set on God is soon united with him.
The giving up of all that we have is most painful without selfless action. It is indeed impossible if selfless action has not been
initiated at all. Therefore, the sage who reflects on the identical
God, and whose mind and senses are stilled, soon attains to that
God by the performance of selfless action.
It is but evident that selfless action has also to be practised on
the Way of Knowledge, because the requisite action for both the
ways is the same. This is the act of yagya, which precisely means
worship. The difference between the two ways is only a matter of
the worshippers attitude. Whereas one devotes himself to the deed
after a thorough appraisal of his own ability and with self-dependence, the other-the doer of selfless action-engages in the task
with total reliance upon the adored God. So, whereas the former is
like a student who studies for an examination privately, the other is
like one who is enrolled in a school or college. Both of them have
an accomplished teacher to master the same course, take the
12. The sage who sacrifices the fruits of his action to God
attains to his state of sublime repose, but the man who
desires rewards of action is chained by desire.
The man who is blessed with the final outcome of selfless
action and who dwells in God-the root of all beings, and who has
forsaken desire for the fruits of action because the God who was
the goal of his action is no longer distant from him, achieves the
state of sublime peace beyond which there is no greater peace and
beyond which he will never again know restlessness. But the wayfarer, who is still on his way and attached (he has to be attached
because the fruit of his action, God, is still unattained) to the
consequence of his action, is fettered by it. So desires continue to
arise until the moment of attainment, and the worshipper has to be
on his guard right till that point. My most revered teacher, Maharaj
Ji, used to say, Mark me, maya prevails if we are even in the least
removed from God and he is removed from us. Even if the attainment is to be tomorrow, today the worshipper is at best only an
ignorant man. So the questing worshipper ought not to be
careless. Let us see what is further said about this.
13. The man who is in perfect control of his heart and mind,
and acts accordingly , dwells blissfully in the abode of his
body with its nine apertures1 because he neither acts himself nor makes others act.
The man who is in perfect control of himself and dwells, beyond his body, mind, intellect, and material nature, in his own Selfthis man of restraint undoubtedly neither acts nor is a cause of
action. Even prompting the men left behind to act does not affect
his serenity. This man who has realized his Self and abides in him,
and who has subdued all his organs which provide him with objects
VX]w`VXm_mZVoR>mV[am`Um:$&
JN>`[wZamdom kmZoZYyVH$_fm:$&& 17$&&
odmodZ`g[{ ]mU{ Jmod hpVoZ$&
ewoZ Md [mH{$ M [pS>Vm: g_XoeZ$&& 18$&&
19. They who achieve the state of equality conquer the whole
world within the mortal life itself, because they rest in God
who is also unblemished and impartial.
Sages with perfectly poised minds are freed from material nature during their worldly life itself. But what is the relation between
an even mind and conquest of nature? When the world itself is
annihilated, what is the position of the Self? In Krishns view, since
God is immaculate and impartial, the minds of sages who have
known Him are also freed from all blemishes and inequalities. The
sage becomes one with God. This is the ultimate birthless state
and it is acquired when the ability to overcome the enemy, the
world of appearances, is fully developed. This ability is there when
the mind is controlled and when one has achieved the state of
equality, for the world of appearances, is but an extension of the
mind. Krishn then speaks of the distinctive marks of the sage who
has known God and merged into him:
20. That equal-minded man dwells in God who is neither
delighted by what others love nor offended by what others scorn, who is free from doubt, and who has perceived
Him
Such a man transcends feelings of love and hatred. He does
not go wild with joy when he gets something which is cherished
and admired by others. In the same way, he is also not repelled by
what others find distasteful. With such a constant mind, free from
doubt, and endowed with knowledge of the divine Self, he always
dwells in God. In other words, he is a man of attainment, and21. That man becomes one with God and enjoys eternal bliss
who is single-mindedly dedicated to him and whose heart
is free from desire for worldly joys.
The man who has renounced desire for the pleasure of objects of
the external world attains to the felicity of God. His Self is united
with God and the resulting happiness is therefore eternal. But this
happiness comes only to him who is unattached to pleasures.
22. Since the pleasures arising from the association of senses
with their objects are a cause of grief and are transitory, O
son of Kunti, men of wisdom do not desire them.
Not only the skin, but all senses feel the sensation of touch
contact. Seeing is the touch of the eye as hearing is the touch of
the ear. Although seeming pleasant to experience, all the enjoyment arising form these contacts of senses with their objects only
leads to miserable births. Moreover, these sensual gratifications
are also transient and destructible. So Arjun is told that men of
discrimination are not entangled in them. Krishn then enlightens
him on the evil that is embodied by attachment to these pleasures.
23. That man in this world is a true and blessed yogi who,
even before the death of his mortal body, acquires the
ability to withstand the onslaughts of passion and anger,
and conquers them for ever.
He is the real man (nara=na+raman)-one who is not given to
physical dalliance. Even while he is living in the mortal body, he is
capable of facing the fierce urges of passion and anger, and of
destroying them. He has achieved selfless action in the world and
he is happy. He has won the happiness of identity with God in
which there is no grief. According to divine ordinance, this happiness is acquired in this mortal, worldly life itself and not after the
death of the physical body. This is what Sant Kabir intends to convey when he counsels his disciples to place their hope in this life.
The assurance that salvation comes after death is false and given
only by unworthy and selfish teachers. Krishn also says that the
man who succeeds in overcoming his passion and anger in this life
`m{@V:gwIm{@Vamam_VWmV`m}oVa{d `:$&
g `m{Jr ]oZdmU ]^yVm{@oYJN>oV$&& 24$&&
c^V{ ]oZdmU_f`: jrUH$_fm:$&
oN>Ym `Vm_mZ: gd^yVohV{ aVm:$&& 25$&&
26. Men who are free from passion and wrath, who have conquered their mind, and who have had a direct perception
of God, see the all-tranquil Supreme Self wherever they
look.
Krishn thus repeatedly stresses the distinctive features of the
character and life of doers of selfless action in order to motivate
and encourage Arjun and, through him, all his other disciples. The
question is now almost resolved. To conclude his argument, however, Krishn reverts to the necessity of contemplating the incoming and outgoing breath for the realization of this sages state. In
Chapter 4, he told us of offering pran to apan, of sacrificing apan to
pran, and of the regulation of both the life winds while giving his
account of the process of yagya. The same subject is taken up
again at the end of the present chapter.
27-28. That sage is liberated for ever who shuts out of his
mind all objects of sensual pleasure, keeps his eyes centered between the two brows, regulates his pran and apan,
conquers his senses, mind and intellect, and whose mind
is fixed on salvation.
Krishn reminds Arjun of the vital need of excluding from the
mind all thoughts of external objects as well as of keeping the eyes
fixed steadily between the two brows. Keeping the eyes between
the brows does not simply mean concentrating them at something.
It is rather that while the worshipper is sitting erect, his eyes should
be pointed ahead in a straight line from the midpoint between the
brows; they should not wander about restlessly and look right
and left. Keeping the eyes aligned with the ridge of the nosewe must be careful that we do not start watching the nose-and
balancing pran against apan and keeping the eyes steadily fixed
all the while, we should direct the vision of mind, the Soul, to the
breath and let him watch it: when does the breath go in, how long is
it held-if it is held in for only half a second, we should not try to
prolong it by force, and how long does it stay out? It is hardly
necessary to say that the name in the breath will ring audibly. Thus
when the vision of mind learns to concentrate steadily on the inhaled and exhaled breath, breathing will gradually become constant, firm, and balanced. There will be then neither generation of
inner desires nor assaults on the mind and heart by desires from
external sources. Thoughts of external pleasure have already been
shut out; now there will not even arise inner desires. Contemplation
then stands steady and straight like a stream of oil. A stream of oil
does not descend like water, drop by drop; it comes down in a
constant, unbroken line. Similar to this is the motion of the breath
of a sage of attainment. So the man, who has balanced his pran
and apan, conquered his senses, mind and intellect, freed himself
from desire, and fear and anger, perfected contemplative discipline, and taken refuge in salvation, is ever-liberated. Krishn finally
discourses upon where this sage goes after liberation and what he
achieves.
29. Knowing the truth that it is I who enjoy the offerings of
yagya and penances, that I am God of all the worlds, and
that l am the selfless benefactor of all beings, he attains to
final tranquillity.
This liberated man, who knows that Krishn-God of the gods of
all worlds-is the recipient and enjoyer of the offerings of all yagya
and penances, and that he is the selfless well-wisher of all beingsknowing all this he achieves the ultimate repose. Krishn says that
he is the enjoyer of the worshippers yagya of inhaled and exhaled
breath as well as of austerities. He is the one in whom yagya and
penances are at last dissolved and so their doer comes to Him, the
ultimate serenity that results from the completion of yagya. The
worshipper, liberated from desire by selfless action, knows Krishn
and realizes him as soon as he is blessed with this knowledge.
CHAPTER 6
THE YOG
OF MEDITATION
Whenever there is rank growth, in the name of dharm, of too
many customs and practices, of forms of worship and prayer, and
of schools and sects, some great Soul appears, makes his advent
to demolish them, and to install and strengthen the one and only
God, as also to broaden the path of action that leads to him. The
practice of renouncing action and thus of being known for wisdom
were also all too prevalent in the age of Krishn. That explains why
he affirms, for the fourth time, at the beginning of this chapter, that
action is an essential, inevitable requirement of the Ways of both
Knowledge and Selfless Action.
He told Arjun in Chapter 2 that there was no more propitious a
way for a Kshatriy than to fight. If he loses the war, he will be
rewarded with godly existence, while victory will bring him ultimate
bliss. Knowing this, he should fight. Krishn further pointed out to
him that he had imparted this precept to him in regard to the Way
of Knowledge: the precept that he should wage war. The Way of
Knowledge does not imply inactivity. While it is true that the initial
urge comes from an accomplished teacher himself, the follower of
knowledge has to engage in action after self-appraisal and due
judgement of the pros and cons, and of his strength. Fighting is
thus unavoidable on the Way of Knowledge.
In Chapter 3, Arjun asked Krishn why, when he thought the
Way of Knowledge superior to that of Selfless Action, he was
prompting him to sinful acts. In the prevailing circumstance he found
the Way of Selfless Action more hazardous. Thereupon he was
told by Krishn that he had imparted both the ways, but according
to the provisions of neither of them is it allowed to go along without
The Lord said, The man who performs the ordained task
without desiring its fruits, rather than the one who just
gives up (lighting) the sacred fire or action, is a sanyasi
and a yogi.
Krishn insists that only that man has made true renunciation or
achieved yog who engages in the one action that is worthy of doing
with absolutely no desire for any rewards. No one becomes a sanyasi
or a yogi by just desisting from the ordained action. There are many
kinds of work, but out of them the action which is fit to be undertaken
and which is ordained is only one. And this one action is yagya
which means worship, the one means for the attainment of God.
The practice of it is action; and the man who does it is a sanyasi
and a yogi. If a man has just stopped lighting fire or tells himself
complacently that he has no use for action because he possesses
Self-knowledge, he is neither a sanyasi nor a doer of selfless
action. Krishn further speaks about this:
lr^JdmZwdmM:
2.
5.
To the man who has vanquished his mind and senses, the
Soul within is a friend, but to the man who has not subdued his
mind and senses, he is an enemy.
In the fifth and sixth verses Krishn thus insists repeatedly that
a man should redeem his Self by his own effort. He must not
degrade him, because the Self is a friend. Besides him, besides
the Self, there is neither any friend nor any enemy. It is so because,
if a man has restrained his mind and senses, his Soul acts as a
friend and brings him the highest good. But, if a mans mind and
senses are not restrained, his Soul turns into an enemy that drags
him to re- birth in lower forms of life and to endless misery. Men
are fond of saying, I am Soul. So there is nothing for us to worry
about. We cite evidence from the Geeta itself. Isnt it said there, we
ask, that weapons cannot pierce and fire cannot burn and wind
cannot wither the Self? He, the deathless, immutable and universal,
is therefore me. Believing so, we pay little heed to the warning in
the Geeta that this Soul within us can also descend to an inferior,
degraded level. Fortunately, however, he can also be saved and
elevated; and Krishn has made known to Arjun the action which is
worthy of being done and which leads the Soul to absolution. The
following verse indicates the qualities of a benign, friendly Self.
Ca{XmV_Zm_mZ Zm_mZ_dgmX`{V$&
Am_d m_Zm{ ]Ywam_d na[wam_Z:$&& 5 &&
]Ywam_m_ZV` `{Zm_dm_Zm oOV:$&
AZm_ZVw ewd{ dV}Vm_d ewdV$&& 6 &&
7.
God dwells inextricably in the heart of the man who rests in his
own Self and reacts evenly to the dualities of nature such as heat
and cold, pain and pleasure, and honour and humiliation. Perfect
repose flows through one who has conquered the mind along with
the senses. This is the stage when the Soul is liberated.
8.
After perceptions of God, a sage is both equal and evenminded. Krishn said in the last chapter that sages who are blessed
with knowledge and discrimination regard with an impartial eye a
Brahmin, an outcast, and animals so diverse as a cow, a dog, and
an elephant. The verse under discussion complements what was
said before. That man is doubtlessly a man of excellence who looks
equally at all kinds of people, from the highest to the lowest, from
the most virtuous to the most wicked, and from the most loving to
the most malicious, irrespective of their feelings for him. He looks
at the course of Souls within them rather than at their external
deeds. The only difference he, therefore, sees between diverse
beings is that while some have ascended to higher steps and gotten
close to the state of purity, others have lagged behind and are still
lingering on the lower steps. All the same, he sees the capacity for
salvation in all.
In the next five verses, Krishn describes how a man comes to
the possession of yog, how he practises yagya, the nature of the
place where the deed is performed, the seat and the posture of
the worshipper, the laws which regulate his food and recreation,
and sleep and wakefulness, and the quality of effort required for
the accomplishment of yog. The Yogeshwar has done this, so that
we too are enabled to perform the appointed deed of yagya by
following his precepts.
gwp_m`wXmgrZ_`W{`]Ywfw$&
gmYwdo[ M [m[{fw g_]woodoe`V{$&& 9 &&
is, it should be firm, and neither too high nor too low. The intent
behind all this is that something should be spread on the ground to
cover it; it may be anything-skin, a mat, a piece of any kind of
cloth, or even a wooden plank. It is important that the seat is not
shaky. Again, it should be neither too high from the ground nor too
low. My revered teacher, Maharaj Ji, used to sit on an about fiveinch high seat. Once it so happened that some devotees got him a
marble seat that was about a foot high. Maharaj Ji sat on it only
once and said, No, this is too high. A sadhu should not sit too
high. It only makes them vain. That does not mean, though, that
they should sit too low either, for that gives rise to a sense of
inferiority-of contempt for oneself. So he had the marble seat put
away in the forest. Maharaj Ji never went there, and neither does
anybody else now. That really was an exercise in a practical lesson
by the great man. So the seat of a worshipper should not be too
high. If it is too high, vanity will overtake him even before he
commences the task of divine adoration. After thus cleaning a spot
and making a firm and reasonably elevated seat on it,12. He should then sit on it and practise yog, concentrating
his mind and restraining the senses, for self-purification.
Next, then, the posture of sitting (according to the provision,
meditation is done in a sitting posture )-the manner in which the
worshipper should sit while engaged in contemplation-is taken up.
13. Holding his body, head, and neck firmly erect, his eyes
should concentrate on the tip of the nose, looking neither
right nor left.
In the course of meditation, the worshipper should keep his
body, neck, and head straight, steady, and unmoving, like a column
of wood as it were. Sitting erect and firm like this, he should keep
his eyes fixed on the tip of his nose. Rather than meaning that he
should watch the tip of the nose, the directive is that the eyes
should look straight in line with the nose. The tendency of eyes of
restlessly flitting here and there must be curbed. Looking straight
in line with the nose, the worshipper should sit unmoving, and14. Abiding in continence, fearless, serene at heart, alert and
restrained in mind, he should surrender himself firmly to
me.
What actually does continence (brahmcharya vrat)-celibacymean? People usually say that it is restraint of the sexual urge. But
it has been the experience of sages that such restraint is impossible
so long as the mind is associated with objects, sights, touch, and
sounds which inflame the urge. A true celibate ( brahmchari ) is
rather one who is engaged in the task of realizing God ( Brahm ).
The brahmchari is a man of Brahm-like conduct: a doer of the
appointed task of yagya that leads men to attainment and ultimate
dissolution in the eternal, immutable God. While doing it, the external
sensations of touch and of all such contacts of the mind and other
senses have to be excluded in order to concentrate the mind on
contemplation of God, on the incoming and the outgoing breath,
and on meditation. There are no external memories when the mind
rests on God. So long as these memories last, the absorption in
God is incomplete. Currents of deviation flow through the mind,
not through the body. When the mind is wholly occupied with its
adoration of God, not only does the sexual urge but all the other
physical urges also cease. So dwelling in conduct that will take
him to God, free from fear, in a state of repose, and with a restrained
mind, the devoted worshipper should surrender himself totally to
an accomplished teacher. But what is the outcome of all this?
15. The yogi with a restrained mind who thus meditates on
me incessantly at last attains to the sublime peace that
dwells in me.
gwI_m`pVH$ `mX]woJm_Vrp`_$&
d{om ` Z Mdm` pWVcoV VdV:$&& 21 &&
` cdm Mm[a cm^ _`V{ ZmoYH$ VV:$&
`p_pWVm{ Z Xw:I{Z JwUmo[ odMm`V{$&& 22 &&
26. Doing away with the causes that make the inconstant and
fickle wander among worldly objects, he should devote
his mind to God alone.
Strictly keeping out all allurements that tempt the changeable
and restless mind to associate with worldly objects, the worshipper
should try repeatedly to confine it to the Self. It is often contended
that the mind should be let free to go wherever it tends to go. After
all, where else can it go except to nature, which is also a creation
of God? So if it roams amidst nature, it is not transgressing the
bounds of God. But according to Krishn this is a misconception.
There is no room for such beliefs in the Geeta. It is Krishns
injunction that the very organs through which the mind strays here
and there should be curbed in order to devote it solely to God.
Restraint of mind is possible. But what is the consequence of this
restraint?
27. The most sublime happiness is the lot of the yogi whose
mind is at peace, who is free from evil, whose passion
and moral blindness have been dispelled, and who has
become one with God.
Nothing is superior to the happiness that comes to this yogi,
for this is the happiness that results from identity with God; and
this ultimate bliss comes only to that man who is perfectly at peace
in his heart and mind, free from sin, and whose property of passion
and moral blindness has been subdued. The same idea is stressed
again.
28. Thus constantly dedicating his Self to God, the
immaculate yogi experiences the eternal bliss of
realization..
The yogi who realizes the unity of the individual Soul and the
Supreme Spirit has risen above plurality and known the unity that
binds the whole universe. With this unified vision he contemplates
God and none else, for there is no one except God left for him.
Whatever mantle of ignorance covered him is now dissolved. So
whatever he does, he does with the thought of God.
32. The worshipper, O Arjun, who perceives all things as
identical and regards happiness and sorrow as identical,
is thought to be the most accomplished yogi.
The man who realizes that this Self is also the Self of all other
creatures, who makes no difference between himself and others,
and for whom joy and grief are the same, is the one for whom
there are no longer any distinctions nor discriminations. So, he is
rightly regarded as a yogi who has attained to the highest excellence
in his discipline.
But no sooner has Krishn concluded his discourse on the
consequences of perfect mental restraint than Arjun expresses a
fresh misgiving.
33. Arjun said, Since the mind is so restless, I cannot see,
O Madhusudan, that it can dwell steadily and long in the
Way of Knowledge which you have expounded to me as
equanimity.
Arjun feels helpless. With his fickle and inconstant mind, he
can foresee no prospect of a steady and constant adherence to
the Path of Knowledge which Krishn has represented to him as
the capacity to view all things equally.
AOwZ CdmM:
lr^JdmZwdmM:
AOwZ CdmM:
lr^JdmZwdmM:
4. The Sanskrit equivalent used here is tatah, which is a term of love and
endearment.
had been told by his inner voice: Today you are going to meet one
who has fallen from yog. He has been groping about for several
births. This is his name and this is how he looks. Accept him when
he comes, impart the knowledge of God to him, and support him in
his journey along the path. So he accepted only these chosen few.
That his intuitions were correct may be seen from the fact that
from among his chosen disciples we have now a sage living at
Dharkundi, another one at Ansuiya, and two or three others who
are engaged in the service of mankind elsewhere. They are all men
who were admitted as pupils to the family of an accomplished
teacher. To be blessed with a birth which provides such opportunity
is indeed a most rare event.
43. He naturally bears with him into his new birth the noble
impressions (sanskar) of yog from his previous existence,
and by dint of this he strives well for perfection (that
comes from the realization of God).
The merits he had earned in his previous body are spontaneously
restored to him in his new birth, by virtue of which he sets out to
achieve the ultimate excellence, that is God.
44. Although he is lured by objects of sense, the merits of
his previous life indeed draw him towards God and his
aspiration for yog enables him to go beyond the material
rewards promised by the Ved.
If he is born in a noble or thriving household and is subject to
the influence of sense-objects, the traces of virtuous deeds
inherited from his previous life yet draw him to the way that leads
to God, and even with inadequate endeavour, he is enabled to rise
above the fruits mentioned by Vedic compositions and attain to the
state of salvation. This is the way of achieving the ultimate liberation.
But this cannot be within a single life.
45. The yogi, who has purified his heart and mind through
several births by intense meditation and thus rid himself
of all sins, attains to the ultimate state of realizing God.
Only an endeavour made over a number of lives effects this
ultimate accomplishment. The yogi who practises diligent meditation
is well rid of all kinds of impiety and then attains to the final beatitude.
This is the way of attainment. Setting out on the path of yog with
but a feeble effort and initiated into it when the mind is yet restless,
he is admitted to the family of an accomplished teacher and, with
the undertaking of meditation in life after life, he at last arrives at
the point called salvation-the state in which the Soul is merged into
God. Krishn also said before that the seed of this yog is never
annihilated. If we just take a couple of steps, the merits earned
from them are never destroyed. A man of true faith can embark
upon the ordained action in every circumstance of worldly life.
Whether you are a woman or a man, of whatever race or culture, if
you are simply a human being, the Geeta is for you. The Geeta is
for all mankind-for the man devoted to his family and the sanyasi,
the educated and the unlettered, and for everyone. It is not only for
that unique creature called a hermit (sadhu). This indeed is Lord
Krishns pronouncement.
46. Since yogi is superior to men who do penance, or
men who follow the path of discrimination, or men who desire
the fruits of action, O Kurunandan, you should be a doer of
selfless action.
A yogi, doer of selfless action, surpasses all ascetics, men of
knowledge as well as those of action. So Krishns final counsel to
Arjun is that he should be a yogi. This necessitates an appraisal of
what all these types are
The ASCETIC is one who practises severe austerities and
mortification of the body, mind, and senses to shape the yog which
has not yet started flowing through him like an unimpeded current..
47. Among all yogi I think that one the best who is dedicated
to me and who, abiding in the Self, always adores me.
Krishn regards, among all yogi-doers of selfless action, that
one as the best who, immersed in his feeling of devotion, always
adores him. Worship is not a matter of display or exhibition. Society
may approve of such display, but God is offended. Worship is a
secret, private activity, and it is undertaken within the heart. The
ascent and descent of worship are events that belong to the
innermost seats of thought and feeling.
CHAPTER 7
IMMACULATE
KNOWLEDGE
The foregooing chapters contain almost all the main issues
that are brought up in the Geeta. There has been an elaborate
presentation of the Way of Selfless Action and the Way of
Knowledge; of the nature of action and yagya as well as the mode
of the performance and their consequence, of the meaning of yog
and its outcome; and of divine manifestation and varnasankar. The
importance of waging war-of-action for the welfare of mankind even
by men who abide in God has been stressed at length. In the Next
chapters Krishn will take up some other supplementary questions,
in the context of subjects that have already been touched upon,
and whose resolution will be of assistance in the act of worship.
In the last verse of Chapter 6, the Yogeshwar himself laid the
basis of a question by stating that the best yogi is one whose Self
abides in God. What does abiding firmly in God mean? Many a
yogi attain to God, but they feel something missing somewhere.
When does that stage appear at which there is not even the least
imperfection? When does perfect knowledge of God come about?
Krishn now speaks the state in which such knowledge is
attainted to.
1.
lr ^JdmZwdmM
_`mgV_Zm: [mW `wO_Xml`:$&
Age` g_J _m `Wm km`og VN>Uw$&&1$&&
1 shall fully teach you this knowledge as well as the allpervasive action that results from realization of God
(vigyan), after which there remains nothing better in the
world to know.
I am the creator of all nature with its eight divisionsearth, water, fire, wind, ether, mind, intellect, and ego.
From Krishn, God, has arisen nature with all its components.
This nature with its eight parts is the lower nature.
5.
The nature with eight parts is Gods lower nature, dull and
insensible. But, along with this, there is his conscious nature which
impregnates and gives life to the whole world. But the individual
Soul too is nature because it is associated with the other, lower
nature.
6.
Know that all beings arise from these two natures and
that I am both the creator and the end of whole world.
towering, furious waves of the sea hurtling on to him from all sides.
Terrible fishes leapt from the waves. He scurried here and there to
save himself. The sky, the sun, the moon, heaven itself, and all the
constellations were drowned in the flood. In the meantime he saw
a Banyan tree with an infant on one of its leaves. As the child
breathed in, Markandeya Ji was drawn inside him by the inrushing
air, and there he discovered his hermitage along with the solar
system and the whole universe alive and intact. Soon after, he
was cast out with an exhalation. When his eyes opened at last,
Markandeya Ji found him self safe on his seat in his hermitage. So
whatever he had seen was but a dream- a vision.
It is evident that the sage had this divine, transcendental visionthis intuitive experience - only after worship spread over years
beyond reckoning. It was a perception by his Soul; everything
outside was the same as before. So doom, too, is an event that is
revealed by God within the heart of a yogi. When at the completion
of the process of worship, worldly influences cease to be and only
God remains in the yogis mind-that is doom. This dissolution is
not an external phenomenon. Final doom is the inexpressible state
of the total identity of Soul with God while the body yet is. This is
something that can be felt through action alone. Whether it is you
or me, we are victims of delusion if we judge by the mind alone.
This is what we are told now.
7.
8.
God is all these and all knowledge; and the whole wisdom of
the Ved has been breathed forth from him.6 He is also much more.
9.
God pervades the whole universe, the earth, the fire, all
creatures and even the severe spiritual austerities that are practised
by ascetics. He dwells in every atom.
10. Since I am also the intellect in wise men and the
magnificence of men of glory, know you, O Arjun, that I
am the eternal fountainhead of all beings.
God is the seed from which all creatures are born. Moreover11. I am, O the best of Bharat, the selfless power of the strong
and I, too, am th aspiration for realization in all beings
that is never hostile to God.
God is the righteous aspiration of the mighty and also their
strength which is free from all desire. Doesnt everyone in the world
wish to be strong? Some endeavour to achieve it through physical
exercise and some through the amassing of nuclear weapons. But
Krishn affirms that he is the stength that is beyond all desire and
attachment. This is true strength. He is also in all beings the
aspiration that is propitious for dharm. God alone is the real dharm.
The immortal Soul that holds all within himself is dharm. And God
is also that craving which is not inimical to dharm. Krishn had
prompted Arjun earlier to aspire to the realization of God. All desires
are forbidden, but yearning for the attaiment of God is essential
because we cannot be inclined to worship in its absence. This
hunger for God is also a gift from Krishn.
12. And know that although all the properties of nature
(tamas, rajas and sattwa) have arisen from me, they neither
dwell in me nor do I dwell in them
All the properties of nature, ignorance, passion and virtue are
born from God. Yet, however, he is not in them and they are not in
him; he is not absorbed in them and they cannot enter into him
because he is unattached to and unsullied by them. He has to gain
nothing from nature or its properties, and so they cannot taint him.
Despite this, however, as the bodys hunger and thirst are caused
by the Soul and yet the Soul is wholly unconcerned with food and
water, even so although nature arises from God, he is untouched
by its properties and activities.
13. Since the whole world is deluded by feelings resulting
from the operation of the three properties, it is unaware of
my imperishable essence that is beyond them.
Blinded by feelings associated with the operation of tamas,
rajas and sattwa, men fail to perceive the indestructible and the
one reality that is God-quite beyond the properties of nature. So he
cannot be known if there is even the slightest trace of these
properties. So long as these properties envelop the worshippers
mind, his journey is incomplete. He has still to go along, he is still
on the way.
23. But the rewards of these deluded men are finite because
they only attain to the gods they worship, whereas the man
who worships me howsoever he does it - realizes me.
The prizes won by these ignorant men are destructible. They
are impermanent because they are worldly pleasures which have
a beginning and an end.
The pleasures that are with us today slip away from us tomorrow.
Men who worship other gods acquire powers that are themselves
perishable. The whole world, from the level of divinities to that of
the lowest creatues, is mutable and subject to death. On the contrary,
the man who worships God attains to him and so to the ineffable
peace that descends on the Soul after he is united with God.
Yogeshwar Krishn had exhorted Arjun earlier to foster gods,
that is pious impulses, through the observance of yagya. Good
fortune accrues from an increases and strengthening of these
riches. And ultimately, with gradual progress, there is the attaintment
of perception and supreme peace. In this context gods represent
forces of piety by which the divinity of God is secured. These godly
impulses that have to be fostered are the means for salvation and
their twenty-four attributes are enumerated in Chapter-16.
The righteousness which garners the sanctity of God within
the worshippers heart is named god. It was at the outset
something internal, but with the passage of time people began to
visualize these qualities in palpable forms. So idols were made,
the karmkand7 was devised, and truth was lost sight of. Krishn has
attempted to refute the misconception about gods and goddesses
in verses 20-23 of the present chapter. Naming other gods for the
first time here in the Geeta, he has emphatically said that they do
not exist. Whenever faith declines or grows feeble, it is he who
supports it and makes it firm, and it is also he who provides rewards
for this faith. But these rewards are finite and perishable.
ordained action, and the deed of yagya, worship and adore him to
achieve redemption.
Here it is evident beyond any doubt that the way to God-ralization
is according to Krishn only through an accomplished teacher. One
who performs the ordained task under the guidance of such a mentor
acquires mastery of spiritual capacity as well as perfect action.
This is also further illustrated in the following verses.
29. Only they who strive for liberation from the cycle of birth
and death by finding shelter under me succeed in knowing
God, spiritual wisdom and all action.
Knowledge of God, of the kinship of the individual and Universal
Soul, and of all actions prepares a man spiritually to take refuge in
God and seek the ultimate liberation. Along with this30. They who know me as the presiding Spirit in all beings
(adhibhut) and gods (adhidaiv), and in yagya (adhiyagya),
and whose minds are fixed on me, know me at the end.
Men who know Krishn also know the Supreme Spirit that
animates all beings, all gods and yagya. They, whose minds are
absorbed in him, know the God in Krishn, dwell in him and attain to
him for ever. In verses 26-27, Krishn has said that men do not know
him because they are ignorant. But they who aspire to be rid of
delusion know him along with God, the embodiment of perfection,
the identity between him and the individual Soul as well as the
material universe, and perfect action in brief, the immaculate nature
of the Spirit that dwells in all beings, gods and yagya. The source of
all this is a seer : one who has realized the truth. So it is not that
this awareness is impossible to acquire. But there is an appointed
know him perfectly. They know him along with the all- pervasive
God, perfect action, adhyatm, adhidaiv, and yagya.
They dwell in him and remember him at the end, so that they
never lose his memory thereafter. The chapter may thus be
summed up as a discourse on the perfect knowledge of God, or
what we may call immaculate knowledge.
CHAPTER 8
YOG WITH
THE IMPERISHABLE GOD
At the end of Chapter 7, Krishn said that yogi who do pious
deeds are released from all sin and know the all-pervading God. So
action is something that brings knowledge of the Supreme Spirit.
They who do it know him (Krishn) along with the omnipresent Godthe adhidaiv, adhibhoot, adhiyagya, perfect action and Adhyatma1.
So action is that which apprises us of them. Men who know them
are aware, at the end, of Krishn alone, and this knowledge is never
blotted out.
Repeating Krishns own words Arjun raises a question :
1.
Depeg&ve GJeee
efkeb leoddyee efkeceOeelceb efkeb kece& heg<eesece~
~1~~
ece~~1~~
DeefOeYetleb e efkeb eeseceefOeowJeb efkecegeles~~1~~
DeefOee%e
keLeb
kees$e
osnsefmcevceOegmetove~
~1~~
ve~~1~~
eeeCekeeues e keLeb %eseesefme efveeleelceefYe~~2~~
1.
And, at last, how does a man with a fully controlled mind know
Krishn at the end? So there are seven questions in all and Krishn
proceeds to answer them in that order.
3. The Lord said, The one who is imperishable is the
Supreme Spirit (Brahm); abiding in a body he is adhyatm;
and the cessation of properties in beings which produce
something or the other is action.
The one who is indestructible, who never dies, is the Supreme
Spirit. Steady devotion to the Self-dominance of the Soul-is
adhyatm. Before this stage everyone is ruled by maya, but when a
man dwells firmly in God and so in his own Self, he is infused with
the sense of supremacy of his Self. This is the culmination of
adhyatm. The ceasing-the discontinuance-of the will of beings which
results in the creation of both good and evil is, on the other hand,
the crowning point of action. This is the perfect action which Krishn
had spoken of earlier as known to yogi. Action is now complete
and henceforth there is no further need of it. Action is perfected
when the desires of beings which create sanskar that are propitious
as well as unpropitious are stilled. Beyond this there is not further
need of action. So true action is that which brings an end to desires.
Such action, therefore, means worship and contemplation that are
inherent in yagya.
3. Adhibhoot is all that is subject to birth and death; the
Supreme Spirit is adhidaiv, and O the unparalleled among
men (Arjun), I (Vasudev) am the adhiyagya in the body.
Until the state of immortality is achieved, all the transient
destructible desires are adhibhoot or in other words spheres of beings.
They are the source of the origin of beings. And the Supreme Spirit
who is beyond nature is adhidaiv, the creator of all gods, that is
righteous impulses- the divine treasure that is finally dissolved in
him. Vasudev-Krishn-is adhiyagya in the human body, the
eerYeieJeevegJeee
De#ejb yee hejceb mJeYeeJeesOeelcecegeles~~~
YetleYeeJeesJekejes efJemeie& kece&meef_%ele~~3~~
DeefOeYetleb #ejes YeeJe heg<eeeefOeowJeleced~~1~~
DeefOee%eesncesJee$e osns osnYe=leeb Jej~~4~
________________________________________________________
performer of all yagya. Thus God himself, dwelling as the
unmanifest Soul in the body, is adhiyagya. Krishn was a yogi, the
enjoyer of all oblations. And all yagya are at last absorbed in him.
That is the moment of realization of the Supreme Soul. Six of
Arjuns questions have now been answered. At last, Krishn takes
up the question of how he is known at the end and never forgotten
thereafter.
5.
That accounts for Krishns assertion that the man who finally,
that is when he has perfect control over his mind and when even
this mind is dissolved, severs his relationship with the body and
departs from it with remembrance of him, surely achieves total
oneness with him
Death of the body is not the final end, for the sucession of
bodies continues even after death. It is only when the last crust of
earned merits or demerits (sanskar) has disintegrated, and so also
the restrained mind along with it, that the final end comes, and after
that the Soul does not have to assume a new body. But this is a
process of action and it cannot be rendered comprehensible by just
words. As long as the transfer from one body to another, like a
change of clothes, persists, there is no real end of the physical
person. But even while the body it yet alive, with control of the
mind and dissolution of the restrained mind itself, physical
relationship are sundered. If this state were possible after the
event of death, even Krishn could not be perfect. He has said that
only by worship carried on through innumerable births does a sage
gain identity with him. There is then not even the least distance
between them. But his achievement is made during a physical life.
When the Soul does not have to assume a new body that is the real
end of the physical body.
H$qd [wamU_ZwogVma_Um{aUr`mg_Zw_a{:$&
gd` YmVma_oM`[_moX`dU V_g: [aVmV$&&9&&
`mUH$mc{ _ZgmMc{Z ^`m `wVm{ `m{J]c{Z Md$&
^wdm{_`{ mU_md{` g`H$ g V [a [wf_w[oV oX`_$&&10$&&
the night of ignorance falls and when the day of knowledge dawns,
and also the limits of the dominance of time-the point to which it can
pursue us.
The sages of yore described the inner realm as thought or
sometimes as intellect. In the course of time, functions of the mind
were divided into four categories which came to be known as mind,
intellect, thought and ego, although impulses are in fact endless. It
is within the mind that there are the night of ignorance and also the
day of knowledge. These are the days and nights of Brahma. In the
mortal world, which is a form of darkness, all beings lie in a state
of insensibility. Roaming about amidst nature, their mind fails to
perceive the radiant God. But they who practise yog have woken
up from the slumber of insensibility and begun to make their way
towards God.
According to Goswami Tulsidas in the Ram Charit Manas, his
version of the Ramayana, even the mind possessed of knowledge
is degraded to the state of ignorance by evil association. But it is
re-imbued with light by virtuous company. This alternation of spiritual
ascendancy and decline continues till the moment of attainment.
After realization of the ultimate goal, however, there are no Brahma,
no mind, no night, and no day. Brahmas day and night are just
metaphors. There is neither a night nor a day of a thousand years,
nor even a Brahma with four faces. The brahmvitt, brahmvidwar,
brahmvidwariyan, and brahmvidwarisht, four successive stages of
mind, are his four faces, and the four main divisions of the mind
are his four ages (yug). Day and night abide in the tendencies and
operations of the mind. Men who know this secret understand the
mystery of time- how far it pursues us and who can transcend it.
Krishn then goes on to explain the deeds that belong to day as
also those that belong to night : what is done in the state of
knowledge and that which is done in the obscruity of ignorance.
18. All manifest beings are born from the subtle body of
Brahma at the outset of his day and are also dissolved in
the same unmanifest body at the fall of his night.
With the dawning of a day of Brahmas, that is, with the inception
of knowledge, all beings come awake in their unmanifest mind, and
it is within the same subtle, unmanifest mind that they lapse into
unconsciousness. They are unable to see the Supreme Spirit, but
they have an existence. The mind, unmanifest and invisible, is the
medium of both consciousness and unconsciousness, of both
knowledge and nescience (the lack of knowledge).
19. The beings who thus wake up into consciousness are
compelled by nature to relapse into unconsciousness with
the coming of night and they are then, O Parth, reborn
with the advent of day.
As long as the mind persists, the succession of knowledge
and ignorance goes on. So long as this continues, the seeker is
only a worshipper rather than an accomplished sage.
20. But beyond the unmanifest Brahma there is the eternal,
unmanifest God who is not destroyed even after the
destruction of all beings.
On the one hand, the mind that is Brahma is imperceptible. It
cannot be known by the senses. On the other, there is the eternal,
unmanifest Supreme Spirit who is not destroyed even with the
destruction of physical beings, or of the invisible Brahma (mind)
which gains consciousness with the arising of knowledge and sinks
into unconsciousness with the setting of knowledge into the
darkness of ignorance. God exists even after the destruction of
inclinations of the mind which wake up in the light of day and fall
back into insensibility in the darkness of night. These upward and
downward motions of the mind cease only after the attainment of
God who is the ultimate abode. With the realization of the Supreme
Spirit, the mind is coloured by him and becomes what he is. This is
the point when the mind is annihilated and in its place only the
eternal, unmanifest God remains.
intellect are the six months of the ascendant motion of the sun.
The state of upward motion is the progress of the sun to the north
of the equator. Enlightened by knowledge of the reality which is
quite beyond nature, sages attain to God and they are then not
reborn. But what happen to the worshippers who do not realize this
state of divine magnificence in spite of their devotion?
25. Dying during prevalence of the darkness of a gloomy
night, the dark half of a lunar month, and the six months
of the downward course of the sun, the yogi who desires
fruits of his action attains to the dim light of the moon3
and is reborn after enjoying his rewards in heaven.
That Soul is yet far removed from God who departs from the
body when the sacred fire of his yagya is smothered by smoke,
when the night of ignorance prevails, when the moon is waning in
the dark half of a month, when gloom prevails on all sides and the
outward looking mind is infested with the six vices of passion,
wrath greed, delusion, vanity and malice and he is reborn. Does it
mean, however, that along with his body the worship, too, of this
seeker is destroyed?
26. The way of brightness (that leads to God) and the way of
darkness that takes one to the afterworld (the world of
Manes to which departed ancestors have gone) are the
two eternal ways in the world. One who takes the first
achieves birthlessness, whereas the treader on the second
is subject to repeated birth and death.
Both the ways, of light and darkness, of knowledge and
ignorance, have been forever. But the merits of worship are never
destroyed. The one who dies in the state of knowledge and
brightness achieves ultimate salvation, but the one who departs
from the body in the state of ignorance and obscurity has to come
back and undergo yet another birth. And this succession of one
birth after another goes on until there is perfect light; until that
moment the seeker has to carry on his worship. The problem is
fully resolved at this point and Krishn then dwells upon the means
which are essential for the attainment of final liberation.
27. You should always rest upon yog, O Parth, for the yogi
who knows the reality of the two ways is never deceived.
Knowing the two ways well, the yogi is aware that his act of
worship will not be destroyed even if he is reborn because of dying
in ignorance. Both the ways have also been forever. So Arjun should
at all time practise yog and devote himself to worship, for28. Knowing this secret, the yogi transcends the rewards of
Vedic study, sacrificial rites, penance, and charity and so
achieves salvation.
By his contemplation of God, the fruit of yagya, the yogi who
comes to know the identical Supreme Spirit by direct perception
rather than by just belief or assumption goes beyond the promised
rewards, and is liberated for ever. This direct perception of the
Supreme Spirit is named Ved that which has been directly revealed
by God himself. So when that unmanifest essence itself is known,
there remains nothing more to know. After this even the need for
the Ved is therefore done away with, for the knower is now no
different from him who had revealed it to their seer-composers.
Yagya or the appointed task was a necessity earlier, but once the
reality is known there remains nothing else to pray for. To subject
the senses along with the mind to austerities is penance, but even
that is unnecessary now. A total self surrender, in thought, speech
and action, is charity. And the auspicious fruit of all these is the
attainment of God. And all these are now unnecessary because
the desired goal is no longer away from the seeker. The yogi who
has realized God transcends the rewards of all these virtuous actsyagya, penance, charity and others and achieves absolution.
forever. The worshipper then merges into the Supreme Spirit and is
not reborn thereafter.
According to Krishn remembrance is the way to this realization.
So Arjun should constantly keep him in mind and wage war. How is
it possible to do both at once ? Is it that Krishn is referring thus to
the usual practice of fighting and at the same time uttering the
name of some deity? Remembrance, as he defines it, is incessant
contemplation of him without a thought of anything else. When
remembrance is so refined and intent, who can fight? What war is
possible with such intense absorption of the mind on a single object.
In fact, the real form of the war that is the theme of the Geeta
emerges only when a worshipper is imersed in such total and
unswerving contemplation. This is also the state in which the
obstructive properties of maya are clearly visible. Passion, anger,
attachment and aversion are our most terrible enemies. They
obstruct the worshippers memory and to overcome them is to fight
a war. The supreme goal is reached only after the destruction of
these enemies.
So Arjun is counselled to recite the sacred syllable of OM but
contemplate the form of Krishn, and adept in yog. Reciting the
deitys name while at the same time visualizing the known form of
a noble mentor, an accomplished or enlightened teacher, is the key
to successful worship.
In the chapter Krishn has also taken up the problem of rebirth
and said that the whole world, from Brahma himself to the lowest of
creatures, repeats itself. But even after all of them are destroyed,
his (Krishns) sublime, unmanifest being and the steady devotion
to him never come to an end.
A man who is initiated into yog is provided with two ways by
which he may proceed. On the first of these two paths, blessed
with the radiance of perfect knowledge, possessed of six fold
excellence (verse 24), in a state of upward motion, and absolutely
free from any blemish, the worshipper is assured of redemption.
But if there is even the least imperfection about him or any touch of
the gloom that prevails in the dark fortnight of a month, and he
departs from the body in such a state, he has to undergo yet another
birth. However, since he has been a worshipper, instead of being
for ever enmeshed in the vicious web of birth and death, after his
new birth he sets himself anew to the task of completing his
unaccomplished worship.
Thus, following the path of action in his next birth, the imperfect
worshipper too can reach the supreme goal. Krishn has also said
earlier that even a partial accomplishment of worship does no cease
until it has brought about liberation from the great fear of life and
death. Both the ways are eternal and indestructible. The man who
understands this is ever steady and in repose. So Arjun is advised
to be a yogi, for yogi transcend even the sacred rewards of study
of the Ved, penance, yagya and charity and so attain to ultimate
liberation.
At several points in the chapter there is a reference to the
supreme goal as the attainment of God, who is represented as
unmanifest, imperishable and eternal.
CHAPTER 9
STIRRING TO SPIRITUAL
ENLIGHTENMENT
Till Chapter 6, Krishn made a systematic investigation of yog.
Its precise meaning, as we have seen, is the conduct of yagya.
Yagya represents that special form of worship which provides
access to God, and in which the whole animate and inanimate
world is offered as a sacrifice. The immortal essence is known with
restraint of mind and ultimate dissolution of the restrained mind
itself. The one who partakes of what is generated by yagya at its
completion is a truly enlightened man, a realized sage and
accomplished teacher who is united with the eternal God. This union,
joining together of the individual and the Cosmic Soul, is named
yog. The conduct of yagya is called action. Krishn then went on to
say in Chapter 7 that the doers of this action know him along with
the all-pervasive God, perfect action, adhyatm and adhidaiv, as
well as adhibhoot and adhiyagya. He further added in Chapter 8
that this is salvation, which is the supreme goal.
In the present chapter he raises the question of the greatness
of the Soul who is endowed with yog. Pervading all, he is nonetheless
yet uninvolved. Although he acts, he is yet a non-doer. Besides
illumining the nature and influence of this accomplished Soul, the
chapter also contains a warning against such hindrances as other
gods in the way of the practice of yog; it also stresses the
importance of finding shelter under a realized sage, an accomplished
teacher, who is possessed of such a Soul.
I. The Lord said, I shall instruct you well with analogy in this
mysterious knowledge, O the sinless, after knowing which
you will be liberated from this sorrowful world.
By offering to impart this knowledge with vigyan, Krishn means
that he will illustrate it with the achievements of a great Soul of
attainment: how he functions simultaneously at all places, how he
enlightens, and how as a charioteer he always stands beside the
Self. Knowing this Arjun will be emancipated from this world of
misery where happiness is impermanent.
2. This (knowledge) is the monarch of all learning as well as
of all mysteries, most sacred, doubtlessly propitious, easy
to practise, and indestructible.
Substantiated by illustration, this knowledge is the sovereign
of all learning. But learning here does not mean mastering a
language or scholarship in its usual sense. True learning is that
which enables the man who has acquired it to go along Gods way
until he has won salvation. If he gets entangled in the vanity of his
achievements or in the material world while he is on the way, it is
evident that his learning has failed. His learning, then, is not
knowledge but a veil of ignorance. It is only regal learning (rajvidya),
spiritual enlightenment, which is profitable beyond any doubt. It is
the king of all secret teaching 1 because one can approach it only
after the practice of yog is brought to perfection by the unraveling
of the knots of both knowledge and ignorance. Holiest of the holy
and blessed with excellence, it is also manifestly fruitful. The
profit from it is so transparent. No sooner does a man have it than
he is rewarded. It is not the blind faith that we will be rewarded in
the next life if we are virtuous in this life. Buttressed by
lr^JdmZwdmM:
BX Vw V{ JwV_ d`m`Zgy`d{$&
kmZ odkmZgohV `kmdm _m{`g{@ew^mV$&&1$&&
amOodm amOJw [odo_X_wV__$&
`jmdJ_ Y` gwgwI H$Vw_``_$&&2$&&
Since accomplished sages are one with the unmanifest God, they
discard their bodies and act in the same divine state.
5.
And even all beings are not within me, and such is the
power of my yog-maya that my Spirit, the creator and
preserver of all beings, is not within them.
Even all beings are not within Krishn, because they are mortal
and dependent on nature. But such is the greatness of his yog that
although he creates and sustains all beings, his Spirit is not in
them. I am in the form of the Self not within those beings. This is
the achievement of yog. Krishn cites an instance to elucidate the
point:
6. Be it known to you that all beings dwell in me just as the
great wind that roams everywhere always dwells in the
sky.
The wind is always in the sky, but cannot taint and affect its
brightness. Similarly, all beings are within Krishn, but he is
unblemished like the sky. The problem of the power of yog is now
resolved. So Krishn next takes up the question of what the yogi
does.
7. All beings, O son of Kunti, attain to my nature and merge
into it at the end of a cycle (kalp) and I recreate them at
the beginning of another cycle.
He reshapes beings with special care at the beginning of a
phase. They had existed earlier, but they were misshapen. Now he
gives them a more refined, more perfect shape. They who were
lying in a state of insensibility, he now renders conscious. He also
prompts beings to kalp in the other sense of the word. Besides
cycle of time, kalp also means a change for the better. It is the
The ignorant who do not know his identity with the Supreme
Spirit, the God of all beings, regard Krishn as human and therefore
paltry. He dwells in the exalted state of that Supreme Spirit who is
the God of all beings, but ignorant men do not know it because he
is in mortal form. They address him as a man. And they are hardly
to blame. When they look at Krishn, they see only the body of the
great Soul. How then are they to know that he dwells in the being
of the great God? It is now explained why they are unable to realize
the truth.
12. The ignorant are , like evil spirits, afflicted with the property
of darkness and so their hopes and actions and knowledge
are all futile.
The unaware are possessed of futile hope (which can never be
fulfilled), futile action (which binds), and futile knowledge (which is
really ignorance). Lying in the chasm of unconsciousness and
characterized by the gullible nature of devils and demons, by
demoniacal nature, they believe Krishn to be but a man. Demons
and devils merely represent a property of the mind which has
nothing to do with any caste or class. Men with such an inclination
are unable to know the reality of Krishn, but sages know him and
adore him.
13. But, O Parth, they who have found shelter in divine nature
and know me as the eternal, imperishable source of all
beings, worship me with perfect devotion.
The sages who take refuge in pious impulses, the treasure of
divinity, and regard Krishn as the primal source of all beings,
unmanifest and eternal, always meditate upon him with devotion
only to him and without permitting the thought of anyone else into
their mind. The following verse dwells upon the mode of this worship.
on the way he has reached. Krishn then speaks about the performer
of yagya.
16. I am the action that is undertaken, the yagya, the fulfillment
of earlier resolutions, the healer, the sacred prayer, the
oblation as well as the sacred fire, and I am also the
sacrificial act of oblation.
Krishn is the doer-the agent. In truth, the power behind the
worshipper who always urges him on is that of the adored God. So
the worshippers accomplishment is only a gift from him. He is also
the yagya which is the appointed mode of worship. The man who
tastes the nectar that is generated at the successful completion
of yagya is united with the eternal God. Krishn is also the oblation,
for it is in him that the endless sanskar of the past is dissolved; their
ultimate resolution is provided by him. He is also the remedy that
cures the malady of worldly misery. Men are rid of this ailment
by attaining to him. He is also the sacred incantation that is offered
to the deity, for it is he who provides the strength by which the mind
is concentrated on breath. Being the one who adds to the ardour of
this deed, he is also the matter which is offered as oblation. He is
also the sacred fire, because all desires of the mind are burnt out in
his radiant flame. And he is also the sacrificial act of yagya.
Here Krishn repeatedly speaks in the first person: I am ...
I am The implication of this is only that it is he who stands
inseparably with the individual Self as an inspiration and leads the
observance of yagya to successful completion by constant
appraisal. This is named vigyan. The most revered Maharaj Ji would
repeatedly tell us that the act of devotional adoration does not
begin until the revered God appears as the charioteer to restrain
each single breath. We may close our eyes, engage in the act of
pious adoration, and mortify the senses by severe austerities, but
unless the desired God comes down to the level at which we are
and stands inseparably and watchful by the Self, the essence of
worship cannot be gained. This is why Maharaj Ji used to say,
If you but behold me, I shall give you everything. It is the same as
Krishns saying that he is the doer of all.
1 7. And I too am the bearer and preserver of the whole world
as also the giver of rewards for action; father, mother and
also the grandsire; the sacred, imperishable OM who is
worthy of being known; and all Ved-Rig, Sam and Yajur.
It is Krishn who supports the whole world. He is the father
who provides, the mother who conceives and gives birth, and
the grandsire who is the ancient source into whom all being also
merge at last. He is worthy of being known as also the sacred OM
which may also be interpreted as the Selfs resemblance to God
(aham+akarah = Omkarah).
That OM (God) is identical with him and so his Self is fit for
knowing. He is also the agent of the three parts of the observance
of yog: Rig-adequate prayer, Sam-evenness of mind; and Yajurthe ordained yagya for union with the Supreme Spirit.
18. I am the supreme goal, the sustainer and Lord of all, the
maker of good and evil, the abode and shelter of all, the
benefactor who wants nothing in return, the beginning
and the end, the fountainhead as well as that in whom all
beings are dissolved, and also the indestructible primal
energy.
Krishn is the salvation that is the ultimate goal that everyone
wishes to attain to. As the witness who stands as an onlooker and
knows everything, he is the master of all beings. He is the
imperishable primal cause and he is also the doom (destruction)
in whom all good and evil are dissolved. He possesses all these
glories. Moreover,
19. I am the sun that burns, I draw the clouds and also make
them rain, and, O Arjun, I am the drought of immortality
as well as death, and I am also both substance and
shadow.
He is the sun, the giver of light, and yet there are many who
regard him as unreal. Such men are victims of mortality and so
Krishn is also the punishment that is meted out to them.
20. Men who do pious deeds enjoined by the three Ved, who
have tasted nectar and freed themselves from sin, and
who wish for heavenly existence through worshipping
me by yagya, go to heaven (Indrlok) and enjoy godly
pleasures as a reward for their virtuous acts.
Although they practise all the three parts of worship-prayer
(Rig), equal conduct (Sam), and union (Yajur), partake of the dim
light of the moon (Rayi, the form-giving substance), rid themselves
of sin, and worship Krishn by the prescribed mode of yagya, such
men pray for the attainment of heaven because of which they are
rewarded with mortality and have to be reborn. They worship him
and also adopt the appointed mode, but they beseech for heavenly
joys in return. So rewarded for their piety they go to the abode of
Indr2 and enjoy the celestial pleasures of gods. Krishn is thus also
the provider of these pleasures.
V[m`h_h df oZJm`wgOmo_M$&
A_V Md _`w gXgMmh_OwZ$&&19$&&
odm _m gm{_[m: [yV[m[m `knaQ>dm dJqV mW`V{$&
V{ [w`_mgm gwa{cm{H$-_ZpV oX`mpXod X{d^m{JmZ$&&20$&&
2. King of Gods in Hindu mythology like Zeus in Greek mythology.
nominally yagya are cruel and sinful. Vaishya and Shudr stand
for, as we have seen, only different stages of the path that leads to
God. Women have been sometimes honoured and sometimes
denigrated, but they as well as Vaishya and Shudr have an equal
right to the performance of yog. So the teaching of Geeta is for
entire mankind, for all men, irrespective of their conduct and
circumstance of birth. It instructs all of us without any discrimination
in what is propitious. The Geeta thus embodies a universal
message.
33. It hardly needs saying that since pious Brahmin and royal
sages (rajarshi) attain to salvation, you should also
renounce this miserable, ephemeral, mortal body and
always engage in my worship.
Let alone those men and women in the Brahmin and Kshatriya
rajarshi stages, ultimate absolution is within the reach of devotees
in the stage of Vaishya, and Shudr as well. Brahmin is but a
particular stage of spiritual growth which is blessed with all the
virtues that lead the individual Soul to the Supreme Spirit. That
which incorporates the merits of peace, humble beseeching,
perception, contemplation, and readiness to follow the signs from
the worshipped God is the state of Brahmin. A Kshatriya who has
been elevated to a sage by his pious life and austere devotion is
endowed with the spirit of accomplishment, prowess, sense of
authority, and a natural reluctance to withdraw from the undertaken
enterprise. The yogi who have arrived at this stage of yog, it is
needless to say, surely succeed in completing their journey. So
Arjun, too, should renounce this joyless and transient human body
to devote himself to Krishns worship.
It is for the fourth time that Krishn has spoken here of the four
varn-Brahmin, Kshatriya, Vaishya, and Shudr. He has said in
Chapter 2 that there is no more profitable way than war for a
Kshatriya; and subsequently added in Chapter 3 that even dying
for ones inherent dharm is more desirable. In Chapter 4 he said
life and unmanifest existence. Such a sage goes beyond the sway
of nature after the moment of perception and yet, although constantly
dwelling in his Self, he works for the good of mankind. This is the
sages way of life and the conduct of this way of life is the nature of
a sage.
While Krishn is the creator who stirs beings to Selfimprovement, the other creator is the three-propertied nature which
in association with him brings forth the world of the animate and
the inanimate. This, too, is kalp that is characterized by a constant
change of bodies, of properties, and of time. Goswami Tulsidas
has represented the same as that fathomless, dark pit of worldly
life in which all beings lie in wickedness and terrible misery. Nature
is divided into knowledge and ignorance. Ignorance is evil and
sorrowful and, helplessly spurred by it, a being dwells like a prisoner.
Thwarted by ignorance, he is hemmed in by time, action, and the
natural properties. Opposed to it is the yog-maya, the maya of
knowledge, of which Krishn himself is the creator. It is this yogmaya that fashions the world and the properties of nature are
dependent upon this power. The quality of doing good belongs to
God alone. While there is no excellence in nature which is not
perishable, it is the awareness of God in knowledge that stirs beings
to strive towards his state of perfection.
Thus there are two kinds of kalp. One of them is the cycle of
change of object, body, and time-rendered by nature in conjunction
with Krishn. But the other higher kalp, which bestows refinement on
the Soul, is fashioned by accomplished sages; it is they who instill
consciousness into the inert nature of beings. Commencement of
worship is the beginning of this kalp, whereas the successful
completion of worship marks its close, with which the malady of
worldly misery is cured and replaced by a total absorption in God. At
this point the yogi attains to Krishns way of life as well as state. The
sages way of life after attainment is his nature.
Sacred texts tell us that a kalp is completed only with the
passing away of the four ages (yug), after which there is the
phenomenon of total dissolution known as doom. This is, however,
a misrepresentation of the truth. Yug also means two. Yug-dharm3
3. See the exposition of verse 8 in chapter 4.
their yagya- their sacrifices and so, although they worship, they fail
to realize him. They thus fail in their quest. They only succeed in
attaining to the fancied forms of gods, beings, and ancestors,
whereas men who are truly devoted to Krishn dwell directly in him
and assume his own being.
Krishn has represented the act of yagya as easy to practice.
Whatever his worshippers offer him, he accepts. So Arjun is advised
to surrender all his devotional acts to Krishn. When he is completely
detached, endowed with yog, and freed from the bonds of action,
he will know salvation which also is Krishn himself.
All beings are his, but there is no one whom he loves and no
one whom he abhors. Yet, however, he dwells in his earnest devotee
and that devotee in him. Even the most wicked and sinful man who
worships him with total dedication is worthy of being regarded as
a saint, because his steady resolve will soon unite him with the
Supreme Spirit and bless him with eternal peace. A true devotee
of Krishn is never destroyed. Whether a Shudr, a depraved man,
an aborigine, looked down on by the conventional culture, or one
with whatever name he is known by, or a man or a woman, or one
who had demoniacal nature and lowly birth-they all attain to the
supreme glory if they take refuge in Krishn and worship him with
firm intentness. So there is absolutely no doubt about the ultimate
salvation of those who have reached the stage of Brahmin and
royal sages (rajarshi) who are well-endowed with virtues that unite
the Soul with God. Their final absolution is assured beyond any
doubt, and so Arjun too should always remember and be reverent
to Krishn. If he seeks shelter under him, he will attain to him and
thus secure a state from which there is no going back.
Thus, in the present chapter, Krishn has dwelt upon the spiritual
knowledge which he himself brings to the state of consciousness.
This is the sovereign knowledge which is, after it has been once
awakened, doubtlessly propitious.
CHAPTER 10
AN ACCOUNT OF
GODS GLORY
In the last chapter Krishn revealed the mysterious and definitely
propitious knowledge that is the monarch of all knowledge. In Chapter
10, he again takes up the subject and asks Arjun to listen to him
carefully. But what is the need of repeating something that has
already been elucidated? The seeker is in fact imperfect right till
the moment of attainment. The fabric of nature wears thinner as he
is more and moire absorbed in his contemplation of God, and fresh
visions appear before him one after the other. This is made possible
through a sages -an accomplished teachers guidance. He does
not and cannot know them by himself. In the absence of such a
direction the worshipper will be deprived of the attainment of God.
So long as he is even slightly removed from his ultimate goal, it is
evident that a crust of nature still endures and there is an
apprehension of his slipping and stumbling. Arjun is a disciple who
has come under Krishns shelter. He has begged the Yogeshwar to
support him as he is his pupil who depends on him. So, for the
sake of this earnest and submissive disciple Krishn speaks again
on what he has already discoursed on in Chapter 9.
I. The Lord said, Listen again, O the mighty-armed, to the
mystic and compelling words I am about to speak because
of my concern for the good of a beloved pupil.
lr^JdmZwdmM:
The seven great sages,1 the four who had been earlier
than them, as well as Manu and others from whom all
mankind has sprung, have all been shaped by the operation
of my will.
The man who learns of the excellence of yog and the glories of
Krishn by direct perception is united with him and abides in him.
There is not even the least doubt about this. The steady, untrembling
flame of a lamp where there is no wind is an apt illustration of the
subdued mind of a yogi. Avikampen in the verse refers to such an
analogy.
8.
AOwZ CdmM:
2.
3.
all, he has in fact known nothing. It is evident then that his progress
is about to be obstructed. So it is the seekers duty that he holds on
to directions from the adored God and turns them into practice.
19. The Lord (then) said, I shall now tell you of the power of
my glories, for there is no end to my diverse
manifestations.
After this he sets out to enumerate some outstanding instances
of his numberless divine attributes.
20. I am, O Gudakesh, the Self that dwells within all beings, as
also their primeval beginning, middle, and end.
21 . I am Vishnu among the twelve sons of Aditi4, the sun
among lights, the god Mareechi among winds, and the
sovereign moon among planets.
Aditya and the other celestial beings referred to in the verse
were taken as symbols of certain inner attitudes in the time of
Krishn; they are all dwellers in the sphere of the heart.
22. I am also the Sam among the Ved, Indr among gods, the
mind among senses, and the consciousness in beings.
Among the Ved, Krishn is the Sam Ved, for it is he whose song
begets the state of equanimity. He is the Lord Indr among gods,
and the mind among senses for he is known only through restraint
of the mind. He is also the power that gives beings their sense of
awareness.
lr^JdmZwdmM:
31. I am the wind among powers that refine, Ram among armed
warriors, the crocodile among fishes, and the sacred
Bhagirathi Ganga27 among rivers.
Krishn is the invincible Ram among wielders of weapons. Ram
denotes one who rejoices. Yogi rejoice in knowledge. The signals
received from the God they worship are their sole pleasure. Ram
symbolizes that direct perception and Krishn is that awareness.
He is also the mighty crocodile among amphibian beings and the
most sacred Ganga among rivers.
32. I am, O Arjun , the beginning and end and also the middle
of created beings, the mystic knowledge of Self among
sciences, and the final arbiter among disputants.
Among branches of learning Krishn is knowledge of the Supreme
Spirit (as well as of the relation between the Supreme and the
individual Soul). He is the knowledge that leads to the sovereignty
of the Self. Dominated by maya, the vast majority are driven by
passion, malice, time, action, disposition, and the three properties
of nature. Krishn is the knowledge that takes one from this slavery
of the material world into the state in which the Self is in supreme
command. This is the knowledge that is called adhyatm. He is also
the final verdict that resolves all disputes on the Supreme Spirit.
What comes beyond this is, it is needles to say, beyond arbitration.
33. I am the vowel akar28 among the letters of the alphabet,
dwandwa29 among compounds, the eternal Mahakal amidst
mutable time, and also the God who holds and sustains
all.
Besides being the first sound of the sacred OM, Krishn is also
the imperishable, immutable time. Time is always changing, but he
is that state-that time-which takes one to the eternal God. He is
also the Omnipresent Spirit (Virat Swarup) who pervades and
sustains all.
34. I am the death that annihilates all, the root of the creations
to be, and Keerti30 among women-the embodiment of the
feminine qualities of accomplishing action (keerti)
vitality, speech, memory, awareness (medha), patience and
forgiveness.
As Yogeshwar Krishn will say in the sixteenth verse of Chapter
15, all beings (Purush) are of only two kinds, the perishable and the
imperishable. All these bodies which generate other beings and die
are mortal. Whether male or female, they are all Purush according
to Krishn. The other Purush is the imperishable Cosmic Spirit who
is perceived in the state when the mind has ceased to be. This is
the reason why men and women equally can attain the supreme
goal. The qualities of vitality, memory, awareness, and so on pointed
out in the thirty-fourth verse are all feminine in principle. Does it
mean that men have no need of these qualities? In truth, the
animating principle of the hearts sphere is a feminine principle.
The qualities enumerated in the verse need to be inculcated in all
hearts, of men as much as of women.
35. And I am the Sam Ved among scriptural hymn, the Gayatri31
among metrical compositions, the ascendant Agrahayan32
among months, and the spring among seasons.
Among the sacred Vedic texts (Shruti)33 that are fit to be sung,
Krishn is the Sam Ved (Brihatsam), the song that produces evenness
of mind. He is the spiritual awakening in these hymns. He, too, is
Gayatri34 among verses. The Gayatri, it is important to realize, is a
metrical composition of self-denying prayer rather than a spell or
charm, the recitation of which brings automatic salvation. After
straying thrice, throwing himself at the mercy of the desired God,
the sage Vishwamitr addressed him as the essence that permeates
the earth, all the worlds, and the Self, and entreated him to confer
wisdom on him and to inspire him so that he could know his reality.
So, as it may be seen, Gayatri is a prayer. The worshipper is not
able to resolve his doubts by his own intelligence; he does not
know when he is right or in error. So Krishn is the Gayatri by which
the hapless worshipper surrenders himself to God. This prayer is
doubtlessly propitious, for by this the devotee seeks refuge in Krishn.
Krishn is also Agrahayan among months-the ascendant season of
joy. He is the state of felicity that this month resembles.
36. I am the deceit of cheating gamblers, the glory of renowned
men, the victory of conquerors, the determination of the
resolved, and the virtue of the pious.
The idea of gambling in the verse refers to the fundamental
character of nature. Nature itself is a gambler and cheat. To forsake
outward show and engage in the way of private adoration to escape
from the contradictions of nature is an act of deception. But to
call it deception is hardly appropriate, for such secretiveness is
essential to the worshippers security. It is required that the
worshipper, although in possession of a heart that is lit up with
knowledge, appear outwardly ignorant like a benumbed Bharatlike one who is insane, blind, deaf and dumb. Although he sees, he
should show as if he knows nothing; although he hears, it should
yV N>c`Vm_p_ V{OV{OpdZm_h_$&
O`m{@p_ `dgm`m{@p_ gd gdVm_h_$&&36$&&
33. The part of the Ved which is known as Shruti: known by revelation.
34. The text of the prayer is given here for readers who may be interested in
learning it :
CHAPTER 11
REVELATION OF
THE OMNIPRESENT
In the last chapter Krishn gave only a brief account of his
outstanding glories, but Arjun thought complacently that he had
known enough. He, therefore, averred that after listening to Krishns
words he was rid of all his delusions. At the same time, however,
as he admits in the present chapter, he is curious to know what
Krishn has told him before in a more tangible form. Hearing is as
different from seeing as the east is from the west. When a seeker
endeavours towards his destination to see it with his own eyes,
what he knows then may be quite different from that which he had
visualized. So when Arjun has a direct vision of God, he begins to
tremble with fear and beg for mercy. Does an enlightened man
know fear? Is he left with any further curiosity? The fact of the
matter is that what is known at just the intellectual level is at best
vague and undefined. At the same time, however, it definitely
prompts to a desire for true knowledge. So Arjun entreats Krishn.
I.
AOwZ CdmM
_XZwJhm` [a_ Jw_`m_gokV_$&
`d`m{V dMV{Z _m{hm{@` odJVm{ __$&&1$&&
2.
3. You are, O Lord, what you have told me, but I wish, O
Supreme Being, to have a direct vision of your form in all
its divine magnificence.
Not satisfied with what he has learnt only by hearing, he wishes
to see it in a palpable form.
4. Show me, O Lord, your eternal form if you consider,
O Yogeshwar, that it is possible to see it.
Krishn does not object to this request because Arjun is his
devoted pupil and beloved friend. So he readily grants his prayer
and reveals his cosmic form.
5. The Lord said, Behold, O Parth, my hundreds and
thousands of various celestial manifestations of different
hues and forms.
lr^JdmZwdmM:
6.
7.
[`moX`mdgymZpdZm _VVWm$&
]h`Q>[ydmoU [`m`moU ^maV$&&6$&&
BhH$W OJH$gZ [`m gMamMa_$&
__ X{h{ JwS>mH{$e `Mm`X Qw>n_N>og$&&7$&&
Z Vw _m e`g{ Qw>_Z{Zd dMjwfm$&
oX` XXmo_ V{ Mjw: [` _{ `m{J_a_$&&8$&&
1. Represented in mythology as a mother of gods who are known as Aditya,
twelve in number, after her.
2. The name of a class of deities, eight in number.
3. The two physicians of gods and represented as twin sons of the Sun-god.
4. Marut is the god of wind but in the plural form the word may be understood as
meaning host of gods.
5. Cf. Chapter I, in which Sanjay, the epitome of self-control, is represented as
the medium through which the blind Dhritrashtr sees and hears. The mind
enveloped by the pall of ignorance perceives through one who has mastered
the mind and the senses.
gO` CdmM:
6. An epithet of the Supreme Spirit, of Vishnu and many other deities. The
interpretation here refers to the association of the sound of the word with
har which means taking away or depriving.
23. Looking at your colossus form with its many mouths and
eyes, hands, thighs and feet, stomachs and dreadful tusks,
O the mighty-armed, all beings are struck with terror and
so am I.
Both Krishn and Arjun are possessed of mighty arms. The one
whose sphere of action extends beyond nature is mighty-armed.
Whereas Krishn has achieved perfection in the field and arrived at
its furthest extent, Arjun has been just initiated and is yet on his
way. His destination is yet far away. Now when he looks at the
universal form of Krishn, like others he is also awed by the
incomprehensible greatness of God.
24. When I look at your enormous, dazzling form that reaches
right up to the sky, with its numerous manifestations,
wide open mouth, and huge glowing eyes, O Vishnu, my
inmost soul trembles in fear, I am bereft of courage and
peace of mind.
25. Since I have lost my sense of direction and joy by
beholding your faces with their frightening tusks and
flaming like the great conflagration that is believed to
consume the world in the event of doom, I entreat you, O
God of gods, to be merciful and pacified.
26. And I see Dhritrashtrs sons along with many other kings,
Bheeshm, Dronacharya, Karn, even the commanders of
our side and all...
27. Beings rushing wildly into your dreadful mouth with its
terrible tusks, and some of them lying between your teeth
with crushed heads.
28. Warriors of the human world are flinging themselves into
your flaming mouths just as numerous rivers plunge into
the ocean.
Currents of rivers are furious themselves and yet they rush
into the ocean. Even so multitudes of warriors are rushing into the
fiery mouths of God. They are men of courage and valour, but God
is like the ocean. Human strength is nothing against his might. The
following verse illustrates why and how they hurl themselves into
him.
29. They cast themselves into your mouths for their
destruction just as flying insects fling themselves into
the flame.
30. Devouring all the worlds with your flaming mouths and
licking your lips, your intense lustre is consuming the
whole world by filling it with its radiance.
This is clearly a portrayal of the dissolution of unrighteous
properties in God after which even the utility of the treasure of
divinity is dispensed with. Righteous properties, too, then merge
into the same Self. Arjun sees the Kaurav warriors and then the
warriors of his own army vanishing into Krishns mouth. So he
pleads with him.
The truth is that there is a dividing line between nature and the
Supreme Spirit. So long as the influence of the objects of nature is
dominant, universal ignorance (maya) is the motivating force. But,
after a worshipper has transcended nature, he succeeds in gaining
admission to the sphere of action of the adored God or, in other
words, of the enlightened Guru. Let us not forget that in the sense
of motivator, an accomplished teacher the individual Soul, the
Supreme Soul, the object of worship, and God are all synonymous.
The directions received by the worshipper all come from God. After
this stage, God or the accomplished Guru -arising from the Soul of
the worshipper himself-is present in his heart like a charioteer who
guides him on the right path.
The revered Maharaj Ji used to say, Mark that the act of worship
has not commenced adequately until the worshipper is aware of
his Self and God has come down to his level. Henceforth, whatever
he does is a gift from God. The worshipper then goes along the way
only according to Gods signals and directions. The worshippers
success is a grace of God. It is God who sees through the eyes of
the worshipper, shows him the path, and so enables him at last to
become one with himself. This is what Krishn means when he tells
Arjun to kill his enemies. Arjun will surely win, for God himself is
standing by him.
35. Sanjay (further) said (to Dhritrashtr), Trembling with fear
at hearing these words of Keshav11 and overwhelmed by
feeling, Arjun thus spoke to Krishn with folded hands and
reverent humbleness.
Sanjay has seen exactly what Arjun has seen. Dhritrashtr is
blind, but even he can see, hear, and understand clearly through
restraint.
gO` CdmM:
AOwZ CdmM:
lr^JdmZwdmM:
gO` CdmM:
AOwZ CdmM:
lr^JdmZwdmM:
Mareechi, Angiras, Pulastya, Pulah, Kratu, Atri and Vasishtha. The seven
sages, too, stand for the seven exercises or steps or attributes of yog, by
mastering which the seeker attains to the state of ultimate accomplishment.
CHAPTER 12
THE YOG
OF DEVOTION
Krishn repeatedly told Arjun at the end of Chapter 11 that his
cosmic form which he had manifested to him had never been seen
by anyone before and would not be seen by anyone in the future.
Rather than being known by penance or yagya or charity he can
be easily known and approached-as Arjun has seen him-by
unwavering devotion and contemplation which is constant and
uninterrupted like a stream of oil. So Arjun was exhorted to dedicate
himself to Krishn and remember him; he should perform the
ordained deed and better still by surrendering himself to him. Firm
and single-minded devotion is the means for achievement of the
supreme goal. This naturally whets Arjuns curiosity to know which
one of the two kinds of devotees, they who worship the manifest
God like Krishn and they who contemplate the unmanifest Spirit,
are superior.
In fact, Arjun has raised this question for the third time here.
He had asked Krishn in Chapter 3 why he was urging him to
undertake a dreadful task if he thought the Way of Knowledge
superior to the Way of Selfless Action. According to Krishn in both
ways action is a necessity.
Despite this, however, if a man restrains his senses with
unnatural violence and is yet unable to forget their objects, he is
an arrogant impostor rather than a man of knowledge. So Arjun
was counselled to do the ordained task, the deed of yagya. The
mode of yagya, which is a special form of worship and which
provides access to the supreme goal, was then elucidated. What
difference is there then between the Way of Knowledge and the
AOwZ CdmM
Ed gVV`wVm `{ ^Vmadm [`w[mgV{$&
`{ Mm`ja_`V V{fm H{$ `m{Jodm_m:$&&1$&&
2.
3-4. And they who restrain all their senses well, always adore
the Supreme Spirit who is beyond thought, all-pervading,
indefinable, filled with equanimity, immutable and
immovable, and formless and indestructible , with total
concentration, and who serve all beings viewing them with
an equal eye, attain to me.
These attributes of God are not different from those of Krishn,
but5.
lr^JdmZwdmM:
think that the Supreme Spirit is no different from him and that he is
him. Entertaining such thoughts and without waiting for fulfillment
he begins to feel that his body itself is the real he. So he wanders
about in the mortal world, the abode of sorrows, and at last comes
to a dead end. But this is not so with the worshipper who goes
ahead under Krishns gracious shelter.
6-7. And, O Parth, I soon deliver my affectionate devotees who
have set their mind on me and who, coming under my
shelter and dedicating all their action to me, ever
contemplate and worship me-the manifest God-with
unshaken intentness, from the abyss of the mortal world.
Krishn then prompts Arjun to such devotion and throws light
upon the way by which it may be accomplished.
8.
the way of the latter. He bears the responsibility for his profits and
losses himself, whereas the burden of the dedicated worshipper is
borne by God. So he soon achieves peace as an outcome of his
renunciation of the fruits of action. Krishn now enumerates the
attributes of the man who attains to such tranquillity.
13-14. The devotee who has malice towards none and loves
all, who is compassionate and free from attachment and
vanity, who views sorrow and joy equally and is forgiving,
endowed with steady yog, contented alike with both profit
and loss, restrained in mind, and dedicated to me with
firm conviction, is dear to me.
15. The devotee who does not upset anyone, nor is upset
by anyone, and who is free from the contradictions of joy,
envy, and fear, is dear to me.
Apart from these qualities, this worshipper is also one who
neither agitates any being nor is agitated by any being, and who is
free from joy, misery, fear, and all such distractions. Such a
worshipper is beloved of Krishn.
This verse is most salutary for worshippers, for they should so
conduct themselves that they do not hurt anyones feeling. They
have to be so, although others will not act in the same way. Being
worldly-minded they cannot but indulge in venomous fulminations.
However, whatever they say to denounce and hurt should not
disturb and interrupt the seekers meditation. Whatever they do,
his thoughts should be steadily and constantly set on the coveted
God. It is his duty to protect himself from the onslaughts of men
who are-as it were-intoxicated and out of their senses.
CHAPTER 13
lr^JdmZwdmM:
The one who knows the reality of the sphere of the body is a
kshetragya. This is vouched for by sages who have known the
essence of this sphere by direct experience. Now Krishn proclaims
that he too is a kshetragya. In other words, he too was a yogiindeed a Yogeshwar. Perception of the reality of kshetr and
kshetragya, of nature with its contradictions and the Soul, is
knowledge. Knowledge is not mere dispute.
3.
4.
7.
9.
A_moZd_Xp^d_qhgm jmpVamOd_$&
AmMm`m}[mgZ emM W`_m_odoZJh:$&& 7$&&
Bp`mW}fw dam`_ZhH$ma Ed M $&
O__`wOam`moY-Xw:IXm{fmZwXeZ_ $&& 8$&&
AgpVaZo^d: [wXmaJhmoXfw$&
oZ` M g_oMmdo_Q>moZQ>m{[[omfw $&& 9$&&
_o` MmZ``m{J{Z ^pVa`o^MmnaUr $&
ododVX{eg{odd_aoVOZggoX $&& 10 $&&
A`m_kmZoZ`d VdkmZmWXeZ_$&
EVkmZo_oV m{V_kmZ `XVm{@`Wm $&& 11 &&
k{` `md`mo_ `kmdm_V_ZwV{ $&
AZmoX_[a ] Z gmmgXw`V{ $&& 12$&&
of the causes that lead to the generation of beings, and along with
this dissolution-access to the identical God. These are all attributes
of that Supreme Being.
17. The light among lights and said to be beyond darkness,
that God, the embodiment of knowledge, worthy of being
known, and attainable only through knowledge, dwells in
the hearts of all.
The awareness that comes with intuitive perception is
knowledge. And by this knowledge alone can there be realization
of God. He dwells in the hearts of all; the heart is his dwelling and
we cannot find him if we search for him anywhere else. Therefore,
it is laid down by the canon that God can be attained only through
inner contemplation and conduct of yog.
18. Knowing the truth of what has been briefly said of kshetr,
knowledge, and of God, who ought to be known, my
devotee attains to my state.
Krishn now makes use of the terms nature (prakriti) and Soul
(purush) for what he earlier described as kshetr and kshetragya.
19. Be it known to you that both nature and Soul are without
beginning and end, and also that maladies such as
attachment, revulsion, and all the objects that are
possessed of the three properties are born from nature.
20. Whereas nature is said to be the begetter of deed and
doer, the Soul is said to be begetter of the experience of
pleasure and pain.
of him. At even a higher stage than this, after the Soul is endowed
with the attributes of the ultimate, he comes to be known as the
Supreme Spirit. Thus, although dwelling in the body, this Soul or
Purush is yet transcendental-quite beyond nature. The only
difference is that whereas he is a witness at the beginning, by
gradual ascent after touching the ultimate he is transformed into
the Supreme Spirit himself.
23. In whatever manner he conducts himself, the man who
knows the truth of the Soul and nature with its three
properties is never born again.
This is salvation. Yogeshwar Krishn has so far spoken to Arjun
on the freedom from rebirth which is the final outcome of the intuitive
knowledge of God and nature. But he now stresses yog whose
mode is worship, for attainment is impossible without the
accomplishment of this action.
24. While some perceive the Supreme Spirit in their heart
by contemplation with their refined mind, some others
know him by the yog of knowledge, and yet others by the
yog of action.
Some men perceive the Supreme Spirit in the realm of
their heart by inner remembrance and meditation. Some
others engage in the same task by Sankhya Yog or the Way
of Discrimination and Knowledge after a due appraisal of
their strength. And yet others see him by the Way of Selfless
Action. The chief means pointed out in the verse above is
meditation. The Way of Knowledge and the Way of Selfless Action
are the two modes of embarking on this deed of meditation and
worship.
25. But ignorant of these ways, there are yet others who
worship by just learning the truth from accomplished
sages and, relying upon what they hear, they also
doubtlessly steer across the gulf of the mortal world.
So, if we can do nothing else, we should at least seek the
company of accomplished sage.
26. Remember, O the best of Bharat, that whatever animate
or inanimate being exists is born from the coming
together of the insentient kshetr and the sentient
kshetragya,
On the state in which the final attainment is made, Krishn has
this to say:
27. He alone knows the truth who steadily sees the
imperishable God in all animate and inanimate beings
that are destructible.
That Soul alone apprehends reality who has a steady
perception of the immortal God in the animate and inanimate beings
that are annihilated in their own special ways. In other words, he is
of the state of the Supreme Spirit only after the characteristic
destruction of that nature, never before it. The same idea was
expressed in the third verse in Chapter 8 when Krishn pronounced
that the destruction of that condition of beings which generates
good or evil impressions (sanskar) is the culmination of action.
Action is then complete. He means the same when he now declares
that only he knows the truth who is steadily aware of the presence
of eternal God in perishable animate and inanimate beings.
g_ [`oh gd g_dpWV_rda_$&
Z ohZ`m_Zm_mZ VVm{ `moV [am JoV_$&& 28 &&
H$`d d H$_moU oH$`_mUmoZ gde:$&
`: [`oV VWm_mZ_H$Vma g [`oV$&& 29$&&
`Xm ^yV[W^md_{H$W_Zw[`oV $&
VV Ed M odVma ] g[V{ VXm $&& 30 $&&
AZmoXdoJwUdmV [a_m_m@`_``: $&
earaWm{@o[ H$mV{` Z H$am{oV Z oc`V{$&& 31$&&
CHAPTER 14
DIVISION OF
THE THREE PROPERTIES
Yogeshwar Krishn has elucidated the nature of knowledge in
several foregoing chapters. In the nineteenth verse of Chapter 4
he said that the ordained action, commenced well by a worshipper,
grows by gradual steps and becomes so subtle that all desires
and will are destroyed, and what he knows then by intuitive
perception is knowledge. In Chapter 13 knowledge was defined
as apprehension of the Supreme Spirit who is the end of the quest
for truth. Knowledge makes its advent only after the distinction
between kshetr and kshetragya, matter and spirit, is
comprehended. Knowledge is not logical arguments and neither
is it just the memorizing of holy texts. That state of practice is
knowledge in which there is awareness of truth. The experience
that is had with direct perception of God is knowledge, and
whatever is opposed to it is ignorance.
Even after having dwelt upon all this, however, Krishn tells
Arjun in the present chapter that he will again explain that sublime
knowledge to him. He is going to repeat what he has already said.
This is so because, as it has been rightly said, we should time and
again turn to even well-studied scriptures. Moreover, the further a
worshipper proceeds on the path of spiritual quest the nearer he
goes to the desired goal and has new experiences of God. This
awareness is made possible by an accomplished teacher that is, a
realized sage who has attained to the Supreme Spirit and who
stands inseparably with the worshippers Self. It is for this reason
that Krishn is resolved to enlighten Arjun again on the nature of
true knowledge.
The Lord said to Arjun, I shall tell you again that supreme
knowledge which is the noblest of all knowledge and,
having possessed which sages have escaped from worldly
bondage to achieve the ultimate perfection.
They who are close io this knowledge and have taken refuge in
it by attaining to Krishns state through treading the path of action
are neither born nor frightened by the prospect of death, because
lr^JdmZwdmM:
8.
Tamas binds the Self with laziness, the tendency to put off a
task to the next day, and with sleep. Sleep here does not mean
that a man possessed of tamas sleeps too much. It is not a question
of the body sleeping at all. As Krishn said in the sixty-ninth verse
of Chapter 2, the world itself with its ephemeral pleasures is like
night in which the man endowed with the property of tamas ever
toils in a state of unconsciousness of the effulgent God. This is the
slumber of tamas and one who is trapped in it sleeps. Krishn now
discourses on the collective form of the three properties.
9.
AOwZ CdmM:
lr^JdmZwdmM:
_mZm[_mZ`m{JVw`Vw`m{ o_mna[j`m{:$&
gdma^[na`mJr JwUmVrV: g C`V{$&&25$&&
_m M `m{@`o^Mm{aU ^pV`m{J{Z g{dV{$&
g JwUmg_Vr`Vm]^y`m` H$[V{$&&26$&&
]Um{ oh oVR>mh__V`m``` M$&
emdV` M Y_` gwI`H$mpVH$` M$&&27$&&
three properties are the real cause of some birth or the other. Since
it is these properties which chain the Soul to the body, one should
constantly endeavour to go beyond them.
At this Arjun asks three questions. What are the features of the
man who has risen above the properties of nature? How does he
conduct himself? And what is the way of transcending the three
properties? Replying to the queries, after elaborating the attributes
and mode of action of the man who has liberated himself from
these properties, Yogeshwar Krishn at last points out the way by
which one may free oneself from these properties. Thus revealing
himself as the shelter of all, Yogeshwar Krishn concludes Chapter
14 with a detailed account of the three properties of nature.
CHAPTER 15
THE YOG
OF THE SUPREME BEING
Accomplished sages have striven to explain the nature of the
world by various analogies. While some have described it as the
forest of worldly life, others have represented it as the ocean of
mortal existence. In a different context the same has been called
the river or abyss of worldly life. Sometimes it has also been
compared to the hoof of a cow. Apparently they all imply that the
extension of the world is only so much as that of the senses. And
the stage at last comes when even this fearsome ocean dries up.
In the words of Goswami Tulsidas, the mere naming of God dries
up this ocean. Yogeshwar Krishn, too, has used ocean and tree
as epithets for the world. He has said in the sixth and seventh
verses of Chapter 12 that he soon delivers his loving devotees,
who contemplate him-the manifest God-with firm concentration,
from the gulf of the mortal world. In the present chapter he declares
that the world is a tree which yogi who are seeking for the supreme
goal have to cut down.
1.
The Lord said, He who knows the Peepal (Fig) tree that
the world is, with its roots above and branches below
and which is said to be imperishable, and of which Vedic
verses are the foliage, is a knower of the Ved.
lr^JdmZwdmM:
3.
But how to effect the quest for this God? The Yogeshwar lays
down that self-surrender is an essential condition for it. There should
be the feeling that I am at the mercy of God-the Infinite Being
from whom the primordial world-tree has sprouted and grown. This
tree cannot be cut down without seeking shelter under him. Krishn
then speaks about the signs from which one may realize that the
tree has been cut down.
5.
8.
Like the wind carrying a scent from its source, the Soul
that is lord of the body also bears along with him the
senses and the mind from its previous body and assumes
a new one.
The Soul carries with him the propensities and mode of action
of the mind and five senses of the body from which he departs and
takes them into his new body. The next body is immediately assured
and that is why Krishn asked Arjun earlier how he had happened
to be a victim of the misconception that the departed Souls of
ancestors would fall from heaven in the absence of obsequial ricecakes and water-libation offerings. However, the immediate
question is what the Soul does after going into a new body and
what truly are the five senses along with the mind?
9.
10. The ignorant are unaware of the Soul, endowed with the
three properties and departing from the body or dwelling
in it and enjoying objects; only they who have eyes of
wisdom discern him.
So naturally the next verse is on how to secure this vision.
11. Yogi know the essence of the Soul dwelling in their
heart, but the unknowing who have not purified themselves
(of evils) fail to see him even after much endeavour.
By restraining their minds from all directions and through earnest
endeavour yogi perceive their Soul. But men with an unaccomplished
Soul, that is, with unclean mind and heart, fail to see him even
though they strive for it. This is because their mind and sense
organs are impure. Only by making a strenuous effort to subdue
their mind are sages enabled to apprehend their Self. So
contemplation is a necessity. Krishn now throws light upon the
glories of the Self of realized sages, which have also been dwelt
upon earlier.
12. Know that the radiance of the sun that lights up the world,
and of the moon and fire, is my own effulgence.
Next he points out the sages task:
of the works of God within the sphere of the heart is leela. Rather
than enactment of folk plays based on the legends of Ram and
Krishn, it is perception of the operations of God within the realm of
the heart that is the true leela. And the supreme abode is reached
when the touch of God begins to be felt after the perception of his
operations. Knowing him thus, the worshipper comes to dwell within
him. Dwelling in this abode and dwelling in the Supreme Spirit-after
feeling his touch in the perfect state of transcendental recitation
(paravani) are simultaneous events.
Thus, equipped with pran and apan, or shwas and prashwas,
and progressing gradually through baikhari and madhyama to the
culminating stage of para, the food that God is, is ready and available
and also assimilated, and, of course, by then the eater of the food
is ready, too, to partake of the sublime nourishment.
15. Seated in the heart of all beings, I am their memory and
knowledge and also the strength that overcomes all
impediments; I am that which is worthy of being
apprehended by the Ved; and I verily am the author of the
Vedant as well as their knower.
Krishn exists as the omniscient presence in the heart of all
beings and it is because of him that the Supreme Spirit is
remembered. Memory here signifies the recalling of the forgotten
essence of God. There is clearly here a representation of the
moment of realization. Knowledge that comes with memory and
the ability to overcome difficulties are also gifts from Krishn. He is
also a fit subject for knowing by all the Ved. He, too, is the author
as well as end of the Ved. Knowledge comes when he is separate,
but who will know whom when the worshipper has perceived him
and become one with him? Krishn is also knower of the Ved. He
said at the beginning of the chapter that the world is a tree, of
which the root is the God above and all of the branches below are
nature. The one who can distinguish the root from the branches
that are nature knows the essence of it, and he is versed in the
he too had become a Paramhans like him. After a while he told the
disciples who followed him aspiring-with mind, action and speechfor freedom from passion and worldly attachment, Dont ever be in
doubt now. I am the Ram who was born in Treta. I, too, am the
Krishn of Dwapar. I am their sacred Soul. I am of their form. If you
have to attain, behold me.
In precisely the same way my revered teacher used to say,
Mark you that I am but a messenger of God. Real sages are
messengers of the all pervading, preeminent, changeless Supreme
Spirit; and it is through them that his message is received. Jesus
Christ exhorted men to come to him, all who labour and are heavily
laden, and he would give them rest by revealing to them God his
Father (Matthew, 11:28). So everyone can be a son of God.3 Albeit
it is a different matter that going to sages is made possible only
through sincere striving for the accomplishment of worship and
meditation. In Surah II of the Koran, Allah reveals: Lo! We have
sent you (O Mohammad) with the truth, a bringer of glad tidings
and a messenger. The revered Maharaj Ji used to say the same
about himself to all. He neither supported nor contradicted any
view or doctrine; but he did tell those who earnestly craved for
liberation from passions and worldly attachment: Just look at my
form. If you aspire for the ultimate Spirit, contemplate me and have
no doubt. There were many who were skeptical, but, through
demonstrating by personal experience and conduct, and even by
berating them, he made them give up their irrelevant assumptions
among which are included the many rituals and ceremonies dwelt
upon by Krishn in verses 40-43 of Chapter 2, and thus induced
them to have faith in him. He exists timelessly as an accomplished
sage. Likewise, although Krishns glory was a mystery, he revealed
it to his earnest devotee, worthy and affectionate Arjun. This is
possible with every worshipper and sages have thus brought millions
on to the spiritual path.
3. The Koran, Surah II, 116 : And they say : Allah has taken unto himself a Son.
Be he glorified ! Nay, but whatsoever is in the heaven and the earth is his.
recall the God who was forgotten. He is also the knowledge that
comes with this memory. It is also by him that the hurdles
in the way are surmounted. He alone is fit to be known and he,
too, is the one who represents the end of this knowledge after it
is known. And since after this point the knower and the known
are one, knowledge is irrelevant, for now who is there to know
and who to be known. Krishn is knower of the Ved- of the divine
truth. He has said that he who knows the world-tree along with
its root is versed in the knowledge of Ved, but this knowledge
comes only to him who cuts down the tree. Now he says that he is
knower of the Ved. He counts himself as one of those who are
initiated into the wisdom of the Ved. So Krishn too is here a sageknower of the Ved, the knowledge of which the all of mankind is
entitled to.
At the end it is said that the world has three kinds of beings.
All the bodies of beings are transitory, but the same being is
imperishable in the state when the mind is steady, although it is
subject to contradictions. And even higher than this is the
transcendental God who is said to be unmanifest and eternal, and
who is indeed unique. This is the being beyond transience and
permanence; this is the ultimate being. As one with this being,
Krishn is thus also the same-beyond the destructible and
the indestructible-because of which he is known as the Supreme
Being. Enlightened seekers who know the Supreme Spirit thus
worship Krishn wholeheartedly. There is no anomaly in their
knowledge.
It is this most (secret) knowledge that Krishn imparts to Arjun.
Sages of attainment do not reveal it to all, but they also do not hide
it from the deserving. If it is hidden from them, how will they achieve
their object?
Thus concludes the Fifteenth Chapter, in the Upanishad of
the Shreemad Bhagwad Geeta, on the Knowledge of the
Supreme Spirit, the Discipline of Yog, and the Dialogue
between Krishn and Arjun, entitled:
Purushottam Yog or The Yog of the Supreme Being
CHAPTER 16
lr^JdmZwdmM:
of the mind and senses, conduct of yagya (as laid down by Krishn
in Chapter 4), offering sacrifice to the fire of self-restraint as
well as to the fire of the senses, offering pran and apan as
oblation to each other, and last of all the process of worship that
entails sacrificing oneself to the fire of knowledge which is achieved
by the inner workings of the mind and senses rather than by
the yagya that is performed with oilseeds, barley-grains and an
altar (Krishn accepts no such ceremonial act or sacrificial rite
as yagya ), meditation upon the Self which is the discipline that
prompts one towards the identical Supreme Spirit, penance that
moulds the mind along with the senses in accordance with the
cherished goal, and integrity of the mind and heart as well as of
the body and its senses, are some of the traits that characterize
pious men.
2.
5.
There are in the world two kinds of men, godlike and demonlike. When sacred impulses are active within the heart, man is
godlike; but he turns devilish if he is rife with demoniacal inclinations.
Whether born in Arabia or Australia or anywhere else, people all
over the world are divided into only these two classes. After having
spoken at length so far of godly disposition Krishn now proceeds
to enlighten Arjun on the traits of demoniacal temper.
7.
8.
Amem[meeV]m: H$m_H$m{Y[am`Um:$&
BhV{ H$m_^m{JmW_`m`{ZmWgM`mZ$&&12$&&
BX_ _`m cYo__ m`{ _Zm{ a W_ $ &
BX_VrX_o[ _{ ^od`oV [w Z Y Z _ $ &&13$&&
Agm _`m hV: ew h o Z`{ Mm[amZo[$&
Bam{@h_h ^m{Jr ogm{@h ]cdmgwIr$&&14$&&
AmT>`m{@o^OZdmZp_ H$m{@`m{@pV g`m{ _`m$&
``{ Xm`mo_ _m{oX` B`kmZod_m{ohVm:$&&15$&&
`: emodoY_w V ` dV V { H$m_H$maV:$&
Z g ogo_dmZm{oV Z gwI Z [am JoV_$&& 23$&$&
V_mN> m _mU V{ H$m`m H $m` `dpWVm $ &
kmdm emodYmZm{V H$_ H$Vwo_hmhog &$& 24$&&
CHAPTER 17
THE YOG
OF THREEFOLD FAITH
Yogeshwar Krishn explicitly said at the end of Chapter 16 that
the action which he has repeatedly spoken of commences only
after the renunciation of desire, anger, and greed. It is the action
without accomplishing which there is neither happiness nor
perfection, nor the final beatitude. Scripture is, therefore, the
authority to fall back upon whenever we are faced by the dilemma
of that which is worthy of being done and that which is unworthy-of
that which we should do and that which we should not. And that
scripture is the Geeta, the epitome of the most esoteric knowledge.
There are other scriptures, too, but it is of the utmost importance
that we always keep our eyes fixed on the Geeta. If we seek
elsewhere we may stray, for the systematic, straight approach of
the Geeta is not to be found anywhere else.
Thereafter Arjun asks the Lord to enlighten him on the state of
persons who worship in contravention of the scriptural ordinance
although with staunch faith. Are they sattwiki, rajasi or tamasi? Are
they righteous, impassioned, or diabolical? Arjun wishes to be
enlightened on this because he has learnt earlier that whatever be
the property, sattwa, rajas or tamas, it is determined by the nature
of ones birth. It is for this reason that at the very outset of the
chapter he raises the question.
I.
AOwZ CdmM:
lr^JdmZwdmM:
According to him yog is perfect restraint of the mind. And the use
of this arduous discipline is that in this state the onlooker, the
individual Soul enshrined in the human body, comes to rest firmly
in his own eternal, true counterpart. Is he tainted before this union ?
In Patanjalis view the Soul is earlier the same as the predilection
of the man who embodies it. And Krishn now affirms that man is
naturally endowed with the quality of faith, indeed totally immersed
in it. There is some dedication in him and he is moulded by the
character of his faith. A man is what his natural inclination is. At
this point, Krishn proceeds to catalogue the three kinds of faith.
4.
spirits. They not only worship, but indulge in the most agonizing
exercises of penance. According to Krishn, however, these acts of
self-mortification only sap the elements that make up their bodies
and the God within their Soul. Thus, instead of adoring the one
true God and partaking of his divinity, they only further distance
themselves from him. These persons ought to be regarded as evil.
This implies that even worshippers of gods are evil. There could
be no stronger way of putting across the idea. So let us resolve to
only adore and pray to and worship that Supreme - Being of whom
all these-the many gods, yaksh, demons, ghosts and spirits-are
no more than tiny fractions. This has been repeatedly emphasized
by Krishn.
7.
9.
Bitter, sour, salty, too hot, pungent, rough, and acidic food
that gives rise to sorrow, worries, and illness, is preferred
by the passionate.
And -
H$Q>dccdUm`wUVrU$jodXmohZ:$&
Amhmam amg`{Q>m Xw:Iem{H$m_`Xm:$&& 9$&&
`mV`m_ JVag [yoV [`wofV M `V$&
CpN>Q>_o[ Mm_{` ^m{OZ Vm_go`_$&&10$&&
A\$cmH$moL>jo^`km{ odoYQ>m{ ` B`V{$&
`Q>`_{d{oV _Z: g_mYm` g gmpdH$: $&& 11 $&&
21. And alms which are offered grudgingly and for a good
turn in exchange, or with some recompense in view, is said to
be impulsive and morally improper.
However, charity that is grievous because it is done under
coercion, or with expectation of some favour or reward, is of
the impassioned kind.
22. And the alms which are dispensed without deference or
contemptuously to unworthy recipients at an inappropriate
place and time are said to be diabolical.
The basest kind of gifts are, however, those that are offered
with disrespect and scorn to the undeserving at an inopportune
place and time.
The revered Maharaj Ji would always tell us, Bear it in mind
that the donor is wrecked if he gives alms to the undeserving.
Similar to this is Krishns observation that charity is worthwhile
only if it is directed, at a suitable place and time, at the meritorious
with true generosity and without any desire for a reciprocal favour.
Gifts that are offered reluctantly and with an eye on some profit in
return are morally flawed, while alms that are given irreverently and
with scorn to the undeserving are positively evil. Though generically
they are all gifts, alms-giving by persons who renounce their desires,
home, and all, and place their trust in God alone, is of a higher
order, for charity of this kind implies a total surrender by a mind
that has been purged of all cravings. Krishn approves of this form
of charity as an indispensable necessity.
Krishn at last enlightens Arjun on the significance of OM, tat,
and sat.1
23. Om, tat , and sat are three epithets used for the Supreme
Being from whom at the outset there came forth the
Brahmin, Ved, and yagya.
Krishn tells Arjun on how the three names Om, tat, and sat,
symbolizing God, direct us to the Supreme Being and call him to
mind. It is he who, at the beginning, created the Brahmin, the Ved,
and yagya. That is to say that Brahmin, the Ved, and yagya are all
born from OM, the symbol Of Brahm. Thus it could also be said
that they have all ensued from yog. They are generated only by
ceaseless contemplation of OM, and other than this there is no
way.
24. It is hence that the deeds of yagya, charity, and penance,
as ordained by scripture, are always initiated by the
devotees of Ved with a resonant utterance of the
syllable OM.
It is owing to this that performance of the ordained worship,
benevolence and penance by persons who concern themselves
with God ever commences with an articulation of the sacred OM,
for this utterance reminds one of that Supreme Being.
Krishn then elaborates the meaning and use of tat.
25. Stripped of desire for any reward and holding that God
is all pervading, persons who aspire to the ultimate bliss
embark on the tasks of yagya, penance, and charity as
ordained by scripture.
Tat denotes surrender to God. Stated differently, one has to
recite OM and take up the accomplishment of yagya, alms-giving,
and penance with absolute trust in tat, i.e., that God.
Krishn next elucidates the meaning and use of sat.
It is for the third time now that Krishn has broached the
subject of gods. He told Arjun, first in Chapter 7, that only misguided
men who have been robbed of their discernment by lust worship
gods. Reverting to the problem in Chapter 9, he asserted that
even worshippers of the many gods really worship him-the
one eternal, immutable God. However since the practice is
contrary to scriptural provision, this worship of theirs is but
futile. And now here, in Chapter 17, Krishn classifies these
worshippers as the most debased, for the only form of reverence
countenanced by him is the worship of the one God.
Subsequently Yogeshwar Krishn deals with four vital issues,
of food, yagya, atonement, and alms-giving. Food is said to be
of three categories. Men who are endowed with moral virtue
relish food that is nutritious, naturally pleasing, and soothing.
Men who are given to passion and moral confusion are fond of
dishes that are pungent, hot, tantalizing, and injurious to health.
And ignorant men with a wicked leaning hanker after stale and
unclean fare.
If taken up and accomplished in the way provided by scripture,
yagya-internal meditative exercises that subdues the mind and is
free from desire-is morally worthwhile. Yagya that is performed to
flaunt oneself and as just a venture for the gratification of some
desire is morally reprehensible. The lowest of all, however, is yagya
that is rightly called evil, for it is divested of scriptural sanction and
embarked on without incantation of sacred (Vedic) hymns, spirit of
sacrifice, and true dedication.
Reverent service to a teacher-preceptor, who has all the
virtues that can provide access to the Supreme God, and sincere
contrition that observes the principles of non-injury, continence,
and purity constitute penance of the body. Speaking that which
is true, agreeable, and benign is the penance of speech. Bringing
the mind to bear upon the required action and holding it in a state
of silent meditation on the cherished goal alone and nothing else
is penance of the mind. But the penance that is complete and
perfect in all respects is that which involves the mind, speech,
and body all.
CHAPTER 18
THE YOG
OF RENUNCIATION
This is the last chapter of the Geeta, the first half of which is
devoted to the resolution of several questions posed by Arjun,
whereas the latter half is the conclusion which dwells upon the
many blessings that flow from the sacred work. Chapter 17 classified
and elucidated food, penance, yagya, charity, and faith. In the same
context, however, the different forms of renunciation (sanyas) have
yet not been touched upon. What is the motive for whatever man
does? Who is the motivator-God or nature? The question was raised
earlier, but the present chapter again sheds light on it. Likewise,
the subject of the quadritype division of men was broached earlier,
but the present chapter again takes it up and closely analyzes its
character within the framework of nature. Then, at the end, numerous
advantages that ensue from the Geeta are illuminated.
After having listened to Krishns categorization of various
subjects in the previous chapter, Arjun now also desires to be
enlightened on the different forms of renunciation (sanyas) and
relinquishment (tyag).
1.
AOwZ CdmM
g`mg` _hm]mhm{ Vdo_N>mo_ d{oXVw_$&
`mJ` M frH{$e [W{$oeoZfyXZ$&&1$&&
and merits of action cease to be, and prior to which there is only
endless giving up of attachment for fulfillment of the spiritual quest.
There are two questions here: Arjun wants to know the essence of
renunciation as well as the essence of relinquishment. Thereupon
Yogeshwar Krishn says:
2.
3.
While many erudite men insist that since all actions are
vile they ought to be forsaken, other scholars proclaim
that deeds such as yagya, charity, and penance ought not
to be forsaken.
5.
lr^JdmZwdmM:
According to Krishn the ordained, essential action is only onethe performance of yagya. The Yogeshwar has reverted to and
stressed the ordained mode time and again, lest the seeker should
deviate from the right path. And now he declares that it is improper
to abandon this ordained action. Forsaking it out of some delusion
is thus said to be relinquishment of the diabolical kind (that is, of
the nature of tamas). The deed that ought to be done and the ordained
action are the same, and giving it up out of involvement in objects
of sensual pleasure is morally, improper, The man who abandons
such action is doomed to rebirth in low forms, for he has suppressed
the impulse for divine adoration.
Rather than granting licence to kill without any fear, the verse
signifies that the truly liberated person acts as a mere instrument
of the Supreme Spirit. Such a person may sometimes be compelled
to do even violent and awesome deeds (like Arjun), but he
undertakes them in a wholly detached and selfless spirit as well
as with the conviction that doing them is his bounden duty. So,
although such a liberated person slays from the worldly point of
view, he does not really slay. In truth, however, one who dwells in
constant awareness of God is of necessity disinclined to anything
that is evil. Such a person is simply not tempted to destroy, for the
world which tempts people to destroy no longer exists for him
because of his total renunciation of the aggregate of all his deeds.
18. Whereas the way of securing knowledge, the worthwhile
knowledge, and the knower constitute the threefold
inspiration to action, the doer, the agents, and the action
itself are the threefold constituents of action.
Arjun is told that the impetus to action is derived from allknowing seers, the mode of acquiring knowledge, and the object
that is worthy of being acquired. Krishn has said earlier that he is
the object worth knowing. The stimulus to action is derived only
when there is a realized sage with perfect knowledge who can initiate
the seeker into the way by which the desired knowledge can be
obtained, and when the seekers eyes are fixed on his goal. Similarly,
the store of action begins to grow by the coming together of the
doer-dedication of mind, agents such as wisdom, disinterest in the
material world, repose, and self-restraint by which the action is
accomplished, and awareness of the action. It has been pointed
out earlier that neither does the undertaking of action by the seeker
after accomplishment have any purpose, nor is there any loss even
in its abandonment. Yet he engages in action even then for the
generation of virtuous powers in the hearts of those who are left
behind. This is effected by the confluence of the doer, the agents,
and the action itself.
Knowledge, action, and the doer are also each of three kinds.
19. Listen to me well on how even knowledge and action
and the doer have been graded into three kinds each, in
the Sankhya philosophy of properties (gun).
The next verse throws light upon the character of virtuous
knowledge.
20. Know that knowledge as immaculate (sattwik) by which
one perceives the reality of the indestructible God as an
undivided entity in all divided beings.
Such knowledge is direct perception, with which the properties
of nature come to an end. It marks the culmination of awareness.
Let us now see knowledge of the second (rajas) kind.
21. Know that knowledge as tainted by passion by which
one perceives divided entities in all separate beings.
22. And know that knowledge as besmirched by ignorance
(tamas) which adheres to the body alone as if it were the
whole truth, and which is irrational, unfounded on truth,
and petty.
Devoid of wisdom and the required discipline to buttress it,
this kind of knowledge is worthless as it takes one away from
awareness of God who is the one and only reality.
The following verses then recount the three kinds of action.
odf`{p`g`m{JmmXJ{@_Vm{[__$&
[naUm_{ odfo_d VgwI amOg _V_ $&& 38$&&
`XJ{ MmZw]Y{ M gwI _m{hZ_m_Z:$&
oZmc`_mXm{W Vmm_g_wXmV_ $&& 39$&&
Z VXpV [oW`m dm oXod X{d{fw dm [wZ:$&
gd H$oVO_wV `X{o^: `mpo^JwU: $&& 40$&&
This is our one true asset and once it has been earned, it stays on
with us forever. Gradual amassing of this wealth in the course of
our struggle with the world of matter or nature is trade. The
acquisition of knowledge, which is the most precious of all riches,
is commerce. And what is farming? The body is like a piece of
earth. The seeds which are sown in it sprout in the form of sanskarthe merits of action: the force that is built up by all the actions in
previous lives. Arjun is told that the seed (the initial impulse) of
selfless action is never destroyed. Vaishya is the third step of the
ordained action- of contemplation of the Supreme Being; and
preservation of the seeds of divine meditation that are sown in this
patch of earth-the body, while at the same time opposing hostile
impulses, is agriculture. As Goswami Tulsidas has said, whereas
the wise husbandsman farms well and with care, they who are of
deficient wisdom are insensible and arrogant. To protect the senses
thus, to store spiritual wealth amidst the skirmishes of nature, and
to always strengthen contemplation of the ultimate essence are
the province of Vaishya.
According to Krishn, the omnipresent God is the final outcome
of yagya. The devout souls who partake of this fruit are emancipated
from all sins and it is the seeds of this action that are sown by the
meditative process. To protect this germ is true husbandry. In Vedic
writings food means the Supreme Spirit. God is the only real
sustenance-the food. The Soul is fully placated at the completion
of the exercise of contemplation and never again knows any craving.
Once the exercise has been brought to successful conclusion, the
Soul is freed from the cycle of birth and death. To go ahead sowing
the seeds of this food is true husbandry.
To serve those who have attained to a higher spiritual status,
revered men of accomplishment, is the duty of Shudr. Rather than
meaning base, Shudr means one with deficient knowledge. It is
the seeker at the lowest stage who is a Shudr. It is but proper that
this initiate worshipper should begin his quest with rendering
service. Service to men of accomplishment will in the course of
time generate nobler impulses in him and he will thus gradually
move up to the higher Vaishya, Kshatriya, and Brahmin stages.
And ultimately he will go beyond varn (properties of nature) and
become one with God. Character is a dynamic entity. There is change
release from all sins if, instead of worrying about his position on
the path of action, the pupil single-mindedly seeks refuge in his
mentor, and looks up to no one else but his accomplished teacherpreceptor. All sages have said the same. When a holy writing is
rendered, it may appear that it is for all, but it is truly secret teachingsecret undoubtedly because it is permitted only to those who are
spiritually equipped to study and profit by it. Arjun is such a deserving
pupil and so it is that Krishn instructs him so earnestly. Now Krishn
himself elaborates the merits of the worthy pupil.
67. This (the Geeta) which has been articulated for you must
never be made known to one who is bereft of penance,
devotion, and of willingness to listen, as also to one who
speaks ill of me.
Krishn was a realized sage and, along with adorers, he must
also have faced some slanderers. The Geeta is not for people who
speak maliciously of God. But, then, to whom should this sacred
knowledge be made known?
68. The one who, with firm devotion to me, imparts this most
secret teaching of my worshippers will doubtlessly attain
to me.
And then Krishn speaks about the one who disseminates the
sacred knowledge.
69. Neither is there among mankind any doer who is dearer
to me than this man, nor will there by any in the world
who is dearer to me than him.
The man who enlightens Krishns devotees, Souls who adhere
to the Lord, is the most beloved of him because he is the only
source of benediction-the only highway that leads one to God. He
is the one who teaches men to go along the right path.
A`{`V{ M ` B_ Y` gdmX_md`m{:$&
kmZ`k{Z V{Zmho_Q> `mo_oV _{ _oV: $&& 70 &&
lmdmZZgy`M lUw`mXo[ `m{ Za:$&
gm{@o[_wV: ew^mcm{H$mmZw`m[w` H$_Um_ $&& 71 &&
AOwZ CdmM:
You praise renunciation, the way of knowledge, and yet other times
you support the Way of Selfless Action. Please tell me one out of
these which is final, by which I can attain to the Absolute good. In
verse 35 of chapter 6, The Mind is very fickle. With slack efforts,
what would be his lot? In verses 1 and 2 of chapter 8, Govinda,
who is that Supreme Being, whom You have described? What is
the religious knowledge? What are Lords of gods and Lord of being?
Who is the Lord of sacrifice in this body? What is that action? How
do You come to be known at the end time? Thus he put forward
seven questions. In verse 17 of chapter 10, Arjun has evinced
curiosity, asking, While meditating incessantly, through what
feelings (emotions) do I call you to mind, to remember you ? In
verse 4 of chapter 11 he prayed and submitted, I long to see the
splendours that have been described by You. In verse 1 of chapter
12, Who is the superior possessor of Yoga among the devotees
who worship you well through unvacillating attentiveness and those
who worship the imperishable unmanifest Supreme Being? In verse
21 of chapter 14, A man who has surpassed the three natural
modes is liberated of character and how can a man surpass these
three modes? In verse 1 of chapter 17, What would be the fate of
a person who engages in yagya with dedication but does not follow
the procedure as laid down by the scriptures ? And in verse 1 of
chapter 18, O mighty armed! I yearn to learn separately and
individually everything about the nature of relinquishment and
renunciation.
Thus, throughout the Geeta, Arjun continued to put forward
queries (The esoteric secrets which could not be asked by him
were revealed by the Lord Himself.) As soon as his doubts were
dispelled he was freed from asking questions and said, Govinda!
Now I am ever ready to obey your instructions. In truth the questions
raised were for the benefit of all mankind and not just for Arjun
alone. Without having these questions answered, no seeker can
progress forward on the path of the highest good. Therefore, to
enable a man to obey an enlightened guru and to progress on the
path of the highest good, it is necessary, that one should learn the
complete teachings of the Geeta. Arjun was convinced and satisfied
that all his questions had been answered and his doubts allayed.
gO` CdmM:
77. Recalling the amazing visage of the Lord again and again,
O King, I am lost in wonder and ecstasy over and over.
Sanjays rapture can be ours, too, if we incessantly keep in our
minds the aspect of the cherished end.
That brings us to the last verse of the Geeta in which Sanjay
states his final conclusion.
78. Good fortune, conquest, splendour, and steadfast
wisdom abide wherever are Lord Krishn and the noble
archer Arjun : such is my conviction.
Intent contemplation and firm restraint of the senses are Arjuns
bow-the legendary Gandeev. So it is that Arjun is a sage who
meditates with equanimity. So wherever Yogeshwar Krishn and he
are, there too dwell the triumph after which there is no defeat, the
magnificence of God, and the firmness of resolve that enables
one to be constant in this inconstant world. Such is the welldeliberated judgement of Sanjay, of the seer who is gifted with
celestial vision.
The great archer Arjun is no longer amidst us. But were
steadfast wisdom and the glory that comes with spiritual conquest
for him alone? The Geeta is a dramatization of a historical event
that belonged to a certain time, namely the age that is known as
Dwapar. This does not mean, however, that Arjuns realization of
the truth of God came to an end with the ceasing of his time.
Yogeshwar Krishn has assured us repeatedly that he abides in the
realm of the heart. He exists within all of us. He is also within you.
Arjun is a symbol of affectionate devotion, which is but another
name of the minds inclination and dedication to the cherished goal.
If a worshipper is endowed with such devotion, perpetual triumph
against the demeaning properties of nature is assured. With such
devotion there must also always necessarily be steadfast wisdom.
Rather than being confined to a certain place, time or individual,
these attainments are universal-for ever and for all. So long as
beings exist, God must dwell in their hearts and the Soul must
impatiently hunger for the Supreme Being; and he who is
affectionately devoted to God will attain to Arjuns status. Everyone
of us can, therefore, aspire hopefully to the ultimate bliss of direct
perception of God.
believe that the perfect God is the doer. Such men are doubtlessly
of immature judgement and unaware of truth. But, whereas Krishn
affirms in the chapter that God does not act, he has also exhorted
Arjun earlier to but stand as a proxy since he (Lord Krishn) is the
one who acts and determines.
Krishns true message refers to the line of gravity that separates
nature from man. So long as a man lives within nature, he is
dominated by maya, Gods divine consort and the mother of all
material objects. But no sooner has he risen above nature and
given himself up to the final emancipation than he comes under
the reign of God who now rises in his heart like a charioteer. Arjun
belongs to the category of such men and so does Sanjay. For
others too there is the prescribed way by which they can break
free from the tenacious attraction of nature. The stage following
upon this is the one at which the guiding impulse comes from God
himself. The impetus for the ordained action arises from the
confluence of an all knowing sage, the right way of acquiring
knowledge, and the Supreme Being who is the one object that
ought to be known. So it is that it is an essential requirement for
the seeker to take some sage as his teacher-preceptor.
For the fourth time in the Geeta, in the chapter Krishn also
reverts to the four fold organization of men into classes (varn).
Deeds that enable the Soul to become one with God, such as
overcoming the senses, restraint of the mind, intentness, tuning
the body, speech, and mind to the coveted end through selfmortification, and generation of divine awareness as well as of the
readiness to adhere to Gods directions-constitute the province of
the Brahmin class. Prowess, unwillingness to retreat, mastery of
impulses, and possession of the required skill for undertaking
action-are all duties of the Kshatriya class. Care of the senses and
promotion of spiritual plenty are innate obligations of the Vaishya
class, while ministering to the needs of the spiritually adept is the
calling of the Shudr class. Rather than alluding to any particular
caste or tribe, Shudr only denotes the unenlightened man-the man
who sits in meditation for two hours without really availing himself
of even ten minutes of that time. It is true that his body is motionless,
but the mind which has to be stilled ranges wildly all the while.
Rendering service to men of a higher spiritual status-to some noble
mentor-is the means by which a seeker like this can liberate his
Self. Little by little, merits will then be engendered in him, too, and
his worship set in motion. This unenlightened mans accomplishment
must necessarily, therefore, commence with rendering service. The
action is only one, the ordained action-meditation, It is its
practitioners who are divided into the four-excellent, good, medium,
and inferior-categories of Brahmin , Kshatriya, Vaishya, and Shudr.
So it is not society but action that has been divided into four classes
on the basis of innate properties. Such is the character of varn
postulated by the Geeta.
Elucidating the nature of reality, Krishn promises that he will
instruct Arjun in the mode of that ultimate achievement which is
the crowning point of knowledge. The worshipper is competent to
perceive God when his wisdom, disinterest, self-control, fortitude,
uninterrupted contemplation, and inclination to the meditative
process-all attributes that enable the Soul to merge in the Supreme
Being-are fully fledged, while at the same time afflictions such as
desire, anger, delusion, fondness, and malice that hurl the Soul
down into the ravines of nature are rendered inert.
This ability moulds the intent devotion that turns its eyes away
from everything except the cherished goal. And it is only by such
devotion that the worshipper gains awareness of reality. God alone
is real and when the worshipper knows him and the celestial qualities
of which he is possessed-that he is ineffable, eternal, and
immutable-he at once comes to dwell in that God. So the essence
is this ultimate reality rather than five or twenty-five elements. With
the completion of worship the Soul is united with this essence and
endowed with its sublime attributes.
Krishn further instructs Arjun that God, the ultimate reality,
abides in the hearts of all beings. But men are unaware of this
because, seated on the vehicle of maya, they stray and wander.
So Arjun is exhorted to find shelter under the God who dwells in his
heart. He ought to take refuge with all his mind, acts, and speech
SUMMARY
nor cause harm to anyone. Thus Muslims too have been caught in
traps of their own making and it is more often than not forgotten
that the Grand Mosque is but a monument to cherish and perpetuate
the Prophet's sacred memory.
Among others, the true import of Islam was understood by
Tabrej, by Mansour, by Iqbal. But they were all victimized and
persecuted by religious fanatics and bigots. And so was Socrates
poisoned, allegedly for conspiring to convert people to atheism.
Since Jesus toiled even on the Sabbath and conferred vision on
the blind, the same charge was levelled against him and he was
crucified. In India even today, people, who earn their subsistence
from a place of worship, a religious order or sect, or from a seat of
pilgrimage, raise a great. hue and cry that faith is imperilled whenever
a sage speaks of reality. They can only oppose truth and ,do nothing
else, because they regard its propagation as a threat to their
livelihood. Like the persecutors of Socrates and Jesus, such so
called religious people have also either forgotten or deliberately
turned a blind eye to why a certain sacred memory had been
preserved in a monument in the remote past.
Sages are familiar with all kinds of conduct-extemal and internal,
practical and spiritual, and also of worldly conduct and the ideal
conduct enjoined by scriptures, for without such comprehensive
knowledge they cannot frame laws to regulate social life and
behaviour and a decorous order. Vashisth, Shukrachary, Yogeshwar
Krishn himself, Mahatma Buddh, Moses, Jesus, Muhammad, Sant
Ramdas, Dayanand, and hundreds of other sages like them have
done the same. But their social, worldly provisions are at best of a
temporal nature. Bestowing material benefits on society is not a
question of truth (Sanatan Dharm) because physical problems are
here today and gone tomorrow. Though undoubtedly useful in a
given time and situation, worldly dispensations by sages are also,
therefore, valid only for a limited period and as such they cannot be
accepted as a timeless order.
Sages do operate as LAW-GIVERS and they have rightly
exerted themselves for the eradication of social evils. The
undertaking of worship of the Supreme Spirit in a spirit of
argument on the question that at his time, too, there existed a sect,
the members of which boasted of being renunciates because they
did not kindle fire and had even given up meditation. As against
this, Krishn has asserted that there is no provision for abandonment
of the ordained action on either the Way of Knowledge or the Way of
Devotion. The enjoined task has to be set upon. This is an
inescapable necessity. By constant and resolute practice the act
of worship is progressively refined and finally rendered so subtle
that will and desire are completely subdued and stilled. True
renunciation is only this total cessation of will and desire, and there
is no sacrifice earlier than this accomplishment that could be called
renunciation. In chapter after chapter (2, 3, 5, 6), and specially in
the final chapter, it is underlined that no man becomes a yogi-a
selfdenier-by just not lighting fire or by relinquishment of action.
If we but understand the nature of yagya and action, we will
also easily comprehend the other issues raised in the Geeta, the
issues of WAR, of the four part organization of action, of varnsankar,
and of the Way of Knowledge as well as the Yog' of Action. That
means the entire message of the Geeta. Arjun did not wish to fight.
He cast away his bow and sat down despondently in the rear of his
chariot. By imparting the knowledge of action to him, then, Krishn
not only convinced him of its validity but also induced him to take
up his appointed task. Since Arjun is exhorted to take up arms and
fight in almost a score of verses, doubtlessly there was a war. But
there is not a single verse in the whole of the Geeta which approves
of physical slaughter and bloodshed. This is clearly seen from
Chapters 2, 3, 11, 15, and 18, because the action that is stipulated
in all of them without exception is the deed that is ordained and
performed through solitary meditation, and in which the mind is
reined in from all objects other than the cherished goal. If such is
the nature of action envisioned in the Geeta, the question of physical
warfare simply does not arise. If the propitious way revealed by the
Geeta is only for those who wish to fight wars, we had better keep
it aside. In fact, Arjun's predicament is' one that confronts all of us.
His grief and indecision were there in the historical past and they
are with us even today. When we try to restrain our minds and
concentrate with all our being, we are shaken by such infirmities as
desire, anger, infatuation, and disenchantment. To fight these
maladies and destroy them is war. Wars have been and are being
fought in the world, but the peace resulting from them is incidental
and transitory. True and lasting peace is won only when the Self
has attained the state of immortality.
This is the only peace after which there is no disquiet, and it
can be achieved only by accomplishing the ordained action. It is
this action, rather than mankind, that Yogeshwar Krishn has divided
into far VARN or classes. A worshipper with inadequate knowledge
is at the Shudr stage. So it is incumbent on him to begin his quest
with rendering of service as required by his native ability, for thus
alone can the proficiencies of the Vaishya, Kshatriya, and Brahmin
classes be gradually inculcated in him. Thus only will he be enabled
to ascend step by step. At the other end, the Brahmin too is flawed
because he is yet distant from God. And, after he has merged with
that Supreme Being, he ceases to be a Brahmin. "Varn" denotes
"form." A man's form is not his body but his inborn disposition.
Krishn tells Arjun in the third verse of Chapter 17 : "Since the faith
of all men, 0 Bharat, is according to their inherent propensity and
man is essentially reverent, he is what his faith is:' Every man's
character is moulded by his faith and the faith is according to his
dominant property. Yarn is thus a scale, a yardstick, to measure
one's capacity for action. But with the passing of time we either
grew oblivious of or discarded the appointed action, began to decide
social status by heredity-thus treating varn as caste, and laid down
rigid occupations and modes of living for different men. This is
social classification, whereas the classification made in the Geeta
is spiritual. Moreover, they who have thus twisted the meaning of
varn have also distorted the implications of action so as to protect
their hollow social standing and economic privileges. With the
passage of time, thus, varn came to be determined by birth alone.
But the Geeta makes no such provision. Krishn says that he was
the creator of the fourfold varn. Are we to assume from this that
there was creation within the boundaries of India alone, for castes
such as ours cannot be found anywhere else in the world? The
number of our castes and subcastes is beyond counting. Does this
mean that Krishn had divided men into classes? The definitive
answer to this is found in the thirteenth verse of Chapter 4, where,
the physical body is mere clothing and, rather than dying, the Soul
just changes from one apparel to another, who is it that we endeavour
to appease and sustain by making all these obsequial offerings?
That explains why Krishn declares the practice an example of
ignorance. Stressing the same again, he adds in the seventh verse
of Chapter 15 : "The immortal Soul in the body is a part of mine and
it is he who draws the five senses and the sixth-the mind-that dwell
in nature:' The Soul carries along the properties and mode of the
mind and five senses of the body from which he departs and takes
them into his new body. When the next body, equipped with all the
means of physical enjoyment, is immediately assured to the Soul,
to whom do we offer the obsequial flour-cakes and libations?
As the Soul discards his old body, he at once assumes another,
and there is no interruption between the two events. Imagining,
therefore, that the Souls of our deceased ancestors of a thousand
or more generations are lying somewhere waiting to be fed and
offered drinks by their living descendants, as well as shedding
tears of sorrow over the fancied fall of these Souls from their nonexistent heavenly abode, cannot but be an instance of ignorance.
Arjun's anxieties over varnsankar and the fall of the Souls of
the departed forbearers from their celestial home naturally draws
one's attention to the questions of SIN and PIETY. Numerous
misconceptions also prevail in regard to what is virtuous and what
is impious: the righteous and the unrighteous. According to
Yogeshwar Krishn, the man who is afflicted with the maladies of
lust and anger that arise from the property of spiritual ignorance,
and whose hunger for carnal enjoyment is insatiable, is the most
abject sinner. In other words, covetousness is the chief among all
sins. Lust and desire, dwelling in the senses, mind and intellect,
are the fountainhead of sin. No amount of washing the body can
make us clean if iniquity lurks within the mind.
Declaring that the mind and senses are purged by constant
remembrance and recitation of the name, by steady meditation,
and by resigning oneself as well as rendering ,earnest service to
some realized, accomplished sage who has grasped the essence,
Krishn urges Arjun, in the thirty-fourth verse of Chapter 4, to
undertake these deeds. Arjun is exhorted to obtain the knowledge,
into which all action is at last merged, from sages through reverence,
inquiry, and innocent solicitation. This knowledge-awareness of the
highest spiritual truth-annihilates all sin.
The same idea is stated differently in Chapter 13 when Arjun
is told that whereas wise men who partake of the food ensuing
from yagya are liberated from all sin, the impious who only covet
gratification of physical desires subsist on nothing but sin. Yagya
is, as we have seen, a certain process of meditation by which all
influences and impressions of the world-animate as well as
inanimate-stored in the mind are reduced to nothing. God is the
only remnant that is left behind. So, while sin is that which engenders
bodies, acts of piety enable a man to realize the indestructible,
eternal essence after which the Soul is freed from the compulsion
of assuming yet another body.
Rid of wicked and conflicting passions, the doers of virtuous
action which brings the cycle of birth and death to an end worship
and adore the Supreme Spirit with an avowed resolve. Krishn tells
Arjun in the twentyninth verse of Chapter 7 : "They who are aware
of God, the identity of the Supreme Spirit and the individual Soul,
and of all action, find shelter under me and strive for liberation from
the cycle of birth and death:' They who know Krishn as well as they
know the Supreme Being who animates all beings, all divinities,
and yagya, and whose minds are absorbed in him, come to know
the God in Krishn and are united with him forever. Piety is, therefore,
that which induces the Self to rise above birth and death and all
evils so as to know the eternal, immutable reality and forever dwell
in it. By the same logic, that deed is sinful which constrains the
Self to go round and round within the boundaries of mortality, and
of grief and spiritual sickness.
It is said again in Chapter 10 that the wise man, who knows
Krishn's essence as the birthless, eternal, and Supreme God
of the entire world, is freed from all sins. It is only the direct
perception of God, as we have been enlightened, that liberates
the Soul from sin.
In brief, therefore, whereas that which effects repeated birth
and death is sin, the deed that prompts one towards God and begets
the ultimate repose is piety. While merits such as truthfulness,
relying upon the produce of one's own labour, regarding women
with the loving reverence that is felt for one's own mother, and
integrity are also important concomitants of virtue, true piety is of
course the realization of God. The man who offends against faith in
God is a sinner.
In the popular imagination sin and HELL always go together.
Now, what is this hell? It has been described variously as bottomless
pit, as inferno, and as underworld. Giving an account of the property
of ignorance, Krishn has pointed out in Chapter 16 that, misguided
in numerous ways, enmeshed in the webs of attachment, and
inordinately fond of sensual pleasure, men fall into the most defiled
hell. Light is shed on the nature of this hell in the nineteenth verse
of the same chapter when Krishn says: "I for ever condemn these
abhorring, sinful, and cruel men, the most abject among mankind,
to inferior births." ignorant and wicked men who entertain a feeling
of hostility against God are perpetually condemned to repeated
birth in lower forms of life. As for what takes one to this hell, it is
declared in the same chapter that lust, anger, and greed, all
destructive of sanctity of the Self, are the three gateways to hell. It
is these maladies, more than any others, that constitute the devilish
hoard. So hell, as visualized in the Geeta, is degradation to recurrent
birth in base forms.
After having viewed all the different, scattered strands that go
into the making of the Geeta, it will be now opportune to dwell upon
the composite view of DHARM that emerges from the scripture. It
may be claimed without any impropriety that dharm, properties and
conduct that enable a man to realize his Self, is the overriding
concern of the Geeta. According to Krishn (2.16-29), the unreal
never exists and the real is never without existence at any time.
God alone is real, permanent, indestructible, changeless, and
eternal, but he is beyond thought, imperceptible, and quite above
the fluttering of mind. Action is the ,name of the mode by which a
man attains to God after subduing his mind. Putting this mode into
practice is dharm, which is a trust or obligation. As Krishn has told
the problem, Krishn tells Arjun that even the most degraded man is
rendered virtuous if he worships him (Krishn)- the one God-with
intentness, and his Soul is then merged with God who is the ultimate
reality and dharm. So, according to the Geeta, that man is pious
who performs the appointed task in keeping with his innate property
to realize God.
Arjun is counselled at last to forsake all his other obligations
and seek refuge in Krishn. So that man who is wholly devoted to
the one God is endowed with piety. To dedicate oneself thus to God
is dharm. The process by which the Self is enabled to attain to the
Supreme Being is dharm. The awareness, that comes to sages
after their hunger for union with God has been quenched because
of their achievement of the ultimate state, is the only reality in all of
creation. So we have to seek refuge in these men of enlightenment
and wisdom in order to learn how we can make our way along the
path that leads to final bliss. That path is only one and embarking
on it is dharm.
Dharm is an obligation-a sacred trust. It is propitious and the
mind that applies itself to this enjoined task is also one and unified.
(2.41) Offering the functions of the senses and the operations of
the life-winds to the fire of yog-self-restraint-kindled by the knowledge
of God is dharm. (4.27) When self-control is identical with the Soul,
and the operations of breath and the senses are thoroughly stilled,
the current which arouses passions and the current that bears one
towards God merge into one in the Self. Realization of God is the
sublime culmination of this spiritual process.
The FELICITY offered by the Geeta is its illumination of the
hidden truth of God-for the enlightenment of all mankind. There are
no schools that impart instruction in lust, anger, greed, and delusion
to their pupils. And yet there are youngsters who are better-versed
in these vices than even their elders. What can Krishn teach us in
regard to this? There was a time when pupils were initiated into the
Ved and trained in the martial skills of archery and wielding maces.
But no one cares to learn these things today because ours is an
age of automatic machines and self-propelled weapons. What can
Krishn say about these matters? What provisions for the external,
Sun is the originator. Sun is that ultimate power of the Lord that
designed the humans. It is not a personality and where the
enlightened power created the humans the same power was
transferred the knowledge based on Geeta that is it was transferred
to the Sun. Sun told the same to his son Manu thus it is called
Manusmriti. Sun is not a person, it is the source.
Lord Shri Krishna says I am going to say that same ancient
Yoga for you now. You are my beloved disciple, true friend. Arjun
was intelligent, true worthy. He reeled out a chain of questions like
you were born just; the Sun was born ages ago. How do I accept
that You told this to the Sun? He asked some twenty twenty-five
questions of this type. By the time Geeta came to conclusion all
his questions were answered, at that juncture the Lord Himself
raised the questions Arjun could not muster up and were in his
benefit and clarified the same. At the end of it all the Lord said,
Arjun! Did you listen to my advice in concentration? Was your
ignorance raised out of desire has vanished? Arjun said,
Nashto moha smritirlabdha twatprasadanmayachyut |
Sthitohsmi gatasandehah karishye vachanam tava || 18/73
Hey Lord, my desires have subsided. I have gotten memory. I
have not only listened but I am carrying it as part of system now. I
will abide by your orders, and will hold the war. He picked up his
bow, warred, won, and established an empire of the pure dharma
and in the form of a religious scripture that original Dharmashastra
Geeta again came in circulation.
Geeta is source religious scripture. This is the Manusmriti that
was embedded in memory by Arjuna. There is a reference to two
Geeta in front of Manu One gotten from the Father, the second,
the Vedas which appeared in front of Manu. There was no third
thing that appeared Manus time. Those days documentation was
not a way, paper & pen were not common thus there was the tradition
of listening to the knowledge and making it part of the memory.
Manu Maharaj, the source f human kind, the first human gave the
honor of shruti (listening) to Vedas and memory to Geeta.
Vedas appeared in front of Manu, listen to them, they are meant
for listening. Even if you may forget them later onwards there is no
harm but Geeta is smriti, you should always remember it. This is
that heavenly psalm fro the humankind that will forever give you
life, peace and everlasting prosperity.
The Lord said Arjun! If you will not listen to my advice because
of your ego you will cease to exist, that it the one who disrespects
the advices of Geeta will become extinct. In the last psalm of episode
fifteen the Lord said (15.20) Iti guhyatamam shastramidamuktam
mayanagha| I have uttered the most confidential of the confidential
science. By learning it you will acquire all the knowledge and ultimate
credit. In the last two psalms of episode sixteen it is said, - Yah
shastravidhimritsrijya vartane kaamakaaratah| The ones who
shun these sciences by getting excited with the vices and pray
other operations will not get happiness, prosperity and will neither
reach abode.
So Arjun, Tasmachchhaastram pramanam te
karyaakaryavyavasthitouh| this is the standard science behind
management of your tasks and untasks. Study it well and act
accordingly. You will be my part, reach that indestructible position
and will attain life forever and everlasting peace and prosperity.
Geeta is the Manusmriti and as per Lord Shri Krishna Geeta is
the religious science, there is no other science, no other memory.
He various memories practiced in society today is the fallback of
forgetting Geeta. The memories are the solution for machinations
of the royalties and a weapon to build walls in the society. They
neither paint a correct picture of Manus thoughts neither do they
describe Manus times. Original Manusmriti Geeta accepts One
Lord the Almighty the Truth, and proposes being one with it but
currently available about 164 memories do not even talk about the
God nor they discuss the ways to reach the Almighty. They limit
themselves only to get reservation in the heaven and encourage
those who are not there. They dont ever even refer to Moksha.
The Geeta is for the pious hermit, for the householder, and
FOR ALL MANKIND. Many a sage like Maharshi Patanjali has
elucidated the mode, in isolation from questions of social order and
organization, that begets the highest felicity. Yogeshwar Krishn also
finds the way more salutary. Also, his message is for only deserving
pupils. He reminds Arjun time and again that he has imparted the
knowledge to him because he is his loving devotee and because
he (Krishn) wishes to do him good.
This knowledge is the most secret knowledge-secret because
it is meant for only men of the required spiritual preparedness. So
Arjun is at the end bidden that before he passes on this knowledge
to another man he must wait, if the man is not a true devotee, until
he is brought over to the ordained way. Observance of such a
precaution in the imparting of this most mysterious knowledge is
essential, for this knowledge is the one and only means of final
salvation. And the Geeta is a systematic account, in Krishn's words,
of this transcendental knowledge.
SACRED BOOKS are useful in the same way as monuments
and places that remind us of the ideals and achievements of some
departed sage. They tell us of the dynamic spiritual process which
Yogeshwar Krishn calls the ordained action in order that we may
know and be inclined to undertake it. In case we are overtaken by
loss of remembrance sometimes, we go back to these works to
refresh our memory. But these sacred books are of absolutely no
avail if we just sprinkle grains of rice and sandal-paste on them and
then relegate them to a high shelf. A noble work like the Geeta is a
marker-a signthat directs us along the right path and provides support
right up to the time when the destination is reached. We look up to
holy books so that we may constantly advance towards the
cherished goal. But after the heart has once seized it, the goal
itself is transformed into a book. Veneration of noble memories is
desirable, but a blind worship of them is deplorable.
As for the present exposition, it is called Yatharth Geeta
because it is an attempt to elucidate the meaning of Krishn in its
true perspective. Embodying the whole means of ultimate liberation,
the Geeta is self-contained, There is not a single point in it that
may engender any doubt. But since it cannot be grasped on an
intellectual plane, there may arise what only appear to be doubts.
So if we fail to comprehend any part of the Geeta, we can resolve
our doubts as did Arjun by sitting devoutly by a sage who has
perceived and realized the essence.
OM SHANTI ! SHANTI !! SHANTI !!!
An Appeal
This Yatharth Geeta is intended to provide you with the noblest
sermon made by Yogeshwar Sri Krishn in the SHREEMAD
BHAGWAD GEETA: This contains the portrayal, by a sage, after
attainment, of that Supreme Soul that abides within our hearts.
Attempting to use the Geeta with cynical perspectives is to be
avoided, lest we may be cheated out of knowing our goals and the
paths. By the devoted study of the Geeta, the entire human race
stands to succeed in their efforts to gain well being. Even if they
comprehend only a small portion of it, they are certain to attain the
ultimate beatitude, because any progress made in this path, shall
never be lost.
- Swami Adgadanand
2.
3.
The Geeta was never intended for any specific individual, any
specific caste, religion, path, place, time or for any conventional
culture. It is a universal and eternal spiritual treatise. It is
enduringly and most relevant to every nation, every religion,
every living being. In fact, it is meant for everyone, everywhere.
The Geeta is a scripture that is meant for the entire human
race as a spiritual textbook.
Is it not a great honour and blessing for each of us then, that
this Geeta can be our own personal, spiritual textbook?
4.
5.
Among the folktales of India, there is a story that Aristotleone of the great Greek philosopher and men of wisdom like
Socrates had instructed Alexander the Great to bring back
with him from India, a country that was well-known for its spiritual
masters, a copy of the Shreemad Bhagwad GEETA as the
Every religion all over the world, can be seen as the distant
echo of the Shreemad Bhagwad Geeta. By listening to the
lessons conveyed by Swami Shree Adgadanandji in the
YATHARTH GEETA, Sri Jitenbhai, who was born in the Jain
religion, decided that those lessons must be made popular
through audio cassettes. Such a decision came out of a
realization that the essence of the GEETAS teachings has
found its place within the lessons throughout history taught by
accomplished teachers such as Mahavir, Gautam Buddh,
Nanak, Kabir and others. These cassettes of the Geeta are
being presented for Self-realisation for seekers everywhere.
Not only such a teaching from Lord Buddh, but whatever
essence has been professed as universal teachings in the
name of religion, or spirituality such as One Universal God,
Prayer, Repentance, Penance and so on, are all teachings
found to be contained within the Geeta itself, the original seed
scripture of mankind. Here, then, inYATHARTH GEETA, these
same lessons, coming straight from the spoken words of Swami
Shree Adgadanand, are being presented to the world at large
in the form of audio cassettes, so that the whole human race
can benefit from this universal wisdom.
7.
8.
9.
We make sure that our children are well educated so that they
shall be inculcated with noble culture. People tend to believe
that noble culture is that which shall ensure a decent livelihood
and solve the problems of daily living. Very few, hardly anyone,
*****