THE
BHAGAVAD-GITA
(The Sacred
Song)
Revised
2020 Edition
(visit: www.gita-society.com/explanationRead.html
for explanation)
 Â
(All 700 Verses
only)
Introduction of the
army commanders
Arjuna wants to
inspect the army
Arjuna describes the
evils of war     Â
Going gets tough,
even tough gets deluded
2. KNOWLEDGE OF GOD
Arjuna talks against
the war 27
Teachings of the
gita begins. 28
The spirit is
eternal, body is transitory. 29
Death and
transmigration of soul 30
Lord krishna reminds
arjuna of his duty 31
The vedas deal with
both aspects of life. 32
Theory and practice
of karma-yoga. 33
Marks of a
self-realized person. 35
Dangers of
unrestrained senses. 35
Happiness through
self-knowledge. 36
3. PATH OF DUTY (KARMA-YOGA)37
Why one shoiuld
serve others?. 38
The first
commandment of the creator 39
Leaders should set
an example. 40
All works are the
works of nature. 41
Stumbling blocks on
the path of perfection 42
4. PATH OF RENUNCIATION w/ KNOWLEDGE...43
Karma-yoga is an
ancient law.. 43
The purpose of
incarnation of God. 44
Attached, detached, forbidden action. 46
A karma-yogi is not
bound by kÄrmic laws 46
Different types of
spiritual practices. 47
Acquiring knowledge
is spiritual practice. 48
Knowledge is
revealed to a karma-yogi 49
Knowledge, karma-yoga
needed for nirvÄna 50
5. PATH OF RENUNCIATION……………………..50
Both paths lead to
the supreme. 50
A karma-yogi works
for God. 51
The path of
self-knowledge. 52
Additional marks of
a saintly
person. 53
The path of
devotional contemplation. 54
A karma-yogi is also
a renunciant 55
A definition of yoga
and yogi 55
Mind is both a
friend and an enemy. 55
Two methods to
subdue the mind. 59
Destination of
unsuccessful yogi 60
7. KNOWLEDGE AND ENLIGHTENMENT61
Matter,
consciousness, and spirit 62
The supreme spirit
is the basis of everything 62
God can be seen in
any image of worship 64
Supreme spirit,
spirit, individual soul, karma 66
Theory of
reincarnation and karma. 67
A simple method of God-realization. 67
Salvation by
meditating on God during death 68
Everything in the
creation is cyclic. 69
Two basic paths of
departure. 69
Transcendental
knowledge leads to salvation 70
9. SUPREME KNOWLEDGE and BIG
MYSTERY71
Knowledge of the
supreme, biggest mystery 71
The theory of
evolution and involution. 72
The ways of the wise and of the ignorant 72
Everything is
manifestation of the truth. 73
Attaining salvation
by devotional love. 74
Lord accepts and
eats the offering of love. 75
There is no
unforgivable sinner 75
The path of
devotional love is easier 76
10. MANIFESTATION OF THE GOD76
God is the origin of
everything. 76
God gives knowledge
to his devotees. 77
Nobody can know the
nature of reality. 78
Everything is a
manifestation of the absolute 79
Brief description of
divine manifestations. 79
Creation is a very
small fraction of the absolute 81
The vision of God is
the aim of a seeker 82
Lord krishna shows
his cosmic form.. 82
One may not be
prepared or qualified to see God 83
Arjuna is frightened
to see the cosmic form  85
We are only a divine
instrument 86
Arjuna’s prayers to
the cosmic form.. 86
One may see God in
any form.. 88
God can be seen by
devotional love. 89
Worship a personal
or an impersonal God? 90
Reasons for
worshipping a personal form of God 90
Karma-yoga is the
best way. 92
The attributes of a
devotee. 92
One should sincerely
try to develop divine qualities 93
13. CREATION AND THE CREATOR93
The fourfold noble
truth is a means of nirvÄna 94
God can be described
by parables only. 95
Supreme spirit,
spirit, and individual soul 96
The faith alone can
lead to nirvÄna. 97
14. THREE MODES (GUNAS) OF NATURE99
Beings are born from
union of spirit and matter 99
Three modes of nature bind the soul to the body 99
Characteristics of
three gunas of nature. 100
Three modes are
vehicles of transmigration 101
NirvÄna after
transcending three modes of nature 101
Process of rising above the three modes. 102
Bonds of gunas can
be cut by devotional love 103
Creation is like a
tree of the powers of mÄyÄÂ 103
Cut the tree of
attachment and attain salvation 104
The embodied soul is
the enjoyer 104
Spirit is the
essence of everything. 105
The supreme spirit,
spirit and the created beings? 106
16. DIVINE AND THE DEMONIC QUALITIES..107
A list of major
divine qualities for salvation 107
A list of demonic
qualities that must be given up 108
Two types of human
beings: wise and the ignorant 108
The destiny of the
ignorant 110
Lust, anger, and
greed are three gates to hell 110
One must follow the
scripture. 110
Three types of
sacrifices. 112
Austerity of
thought, word, and deed. 113
18. MOKSHA BY GIVING UP EGO115
Definition of
renunciation and sacrifice. 115
Three types of
resolve, four goals of life. 119
Division of labor is
based on one’s ability. 120
Moksha through duty,
discipline, and devotion 121
KÄrmic bondage and
the free will 123
Path of surrender,
the ultimate path
to God 124
Highest service to God,
and the best charity 125
Both Knowledge and
action are needed. 126
A 10-minute Gita for
Daily Reading
  Do
your duty to the best of your ability, O Arjuna, with your mind atÂtached to
the Lord. Give up worry for and selfish attachment to the results. Remain calm in
both success and failure, because one has no control over the results. The
calmness of mind is the fruit of NishkÄma-Karma-yoga. (2.48)
  All
works are done by the forces (or Gunas) of Nature. Due to ignorance, people
assume themselves to be the doer and suffer from karmic bondage. We all are
just a divine
instrument and should help each other. (3.27)
  As
a blazing fire reduces wood to ashes, similarly, the fire of Self-knowledge
removes all our past Karma and demonic qualities. Spiritual
knowledge is the best purifier. It opens up the gates of Nirvana for us. (4.37)
  SamnyÄsa
or giving up the feeling of doership and ownership (KartÄ and BhoktÄ), is difficult to attain without NishkÄm-Karma-Yoga (selfless service,
SevÄ). We are just a
trustee of God-given wealth. SevÄ gradually leads to Self-knowledge,
faith, deep devotion, and Mukti. (5.06)
After many births the wise ones
surrender to My will by realizing that everything is, indeed, another form of
Brahman. The One has become all these. Such a great soul is very rare. (7.19)
  Always
remember Me before starting any work and do your duty. Thus you shall certainly
remember Me at the time of death and come to Me if your mind and intellect are
ever focused on Me. (8.07)Â Â
  Whosoever
offers Me a leaf, a flower, a fruit, or water with faith
and devotion ¾
even mentally;
I accept and eat the offering of devotion by the faithful. (9.26)
  O
Creator and Lord of all, God of gods, the Supreme person, and Lord of the
universe, only You know Yourself. No one can know God, the Source of creation. (10.15)
  The
devotee who offers all his or her work as a worship to Me, who has detached-attachment or
no deep attachment to
anything, who is My devotee and depends on Me, and who is free from enmity toward any creature, reaches Me. (11.55)
 Lord Krishna said: I consider the
best yogis to be those devotees who worship with supreme faith by fixing their
mind on My personal form. (12.02)
   Dislike for sensual pleasures, absence of “I
and myâ€, thinking about pain and suffering in birth, old age, disease and death
leads to Self-knowledge and Nirvana. This world is called the house of
misery. (13.08)
One who is always
God-conscious and depends on My will and, remains calm in pain and pleasÂure, censure and praise, to
whom a clod, a stone, and gold are alike, and to whom the dear and the
unfriendly are alike and is full of devotion, attains Me. (14.24)
  Moksha
is attained by those who are free from pride, desires and delusion (Moha); who
have controlled the evil of attachment, who are always God conscious and remains
calm in gain and loss, victory and defeat. (15.05)
  Lust
(for wealth, power, and sensual pleasures), anger, and greed are the three gates
of hell leading to the downÂfall (or
reincarnation) of the individual soul. Uncontrolled sensual desire is the root
of all evils and misery. Therefore, one must learn to give up these three.
(16.21)
  The
faith of each is according to one’s own nature or SamskÄra. One is known by
one’s faith. One can become whatever one wants to be (if he constantly thinks about his goal with a burning desire and deep
faith in God). All we are is the result of our thoughts. (17.03)
  Sensual
pleasures, appear as nectar in the beginning but become poiÂson in the end, are
in the mode of passion. One should not get attached to sense pleasures. (18.38)
  One
who shall study and help propagate this supreme secret philosophy to My
devotees, shall be doing the highest devotional service (Bhakti) to Me, shall
be very dear to Me and shall certainly come to Me. The gift of
knowledge is the best gift. (18.68-69)
INTRODUCTION
The Gita is a doctrine
of universal truth. Its message is universal, sublime, and non-sectarian
although it is a part of the scriptural trinity of San|tana Dharma, commonly
known as Hinduism. The Gita is very easy to understand in any language for a
mature mind. A repeated reading with faith will reveal all the sublime ideas
contained in it. A few abstruse statements are interspersed here and there, but
they have no direct bearing on practical issues or the central theme of Gita.
The Gita deals with the most sacred metaphysical science. It imparts the
knowledge of the Self and answers two universal questions: Who am I, and how
can I lead a happy and peaceful life in this world of dualities? It is a book
of yoga, the moral and spiritual growth for mankind, based on the cardinal
principles of Hindu religion.
The
message of the Gita came to humanity because of Arjuna’s unwillingness to do
his duty as a warrior because fighting involved destruction and killing.
Nonviolence or Ahims| is one of the most fundamental tenets of Hinduism. All
lives, human or non-human, are sacred. This immortal discourse between the
Supreme Lord, Krishna, and His devotee-friend, Arjuna, occurs not in a temple,
a secluded forest, or on a mountain top but on a battlefield on the eve of a
war and is recorded in the great epic, Mah|bh|rata. In the Gita Lord Krishna
advises Arjuna to get up and fight. This may create a misunderstanding of the
principles of Ahims| if the background of the war of Mah|bh|rata is not kept in
mind. Therefore, a brief historical description is in order.
In
ancient times there was a king who had two sons, Dhritar|shtra and P|ndu. The
former was born blind; therefore, P|ndu inherited the kingdom. P|ndu had five
sons. They were called the P|ndavas. Dhritar|shtra had one hundred sons. They
were called the Kauravs. Duryodhana was the eldest of the Kauravas.
After
the death of king P|ndu the P|ndavas became the lawful king. Duryodhana was a
very jealous person. He also wanted the kingdom. The kingdom was divided into
two halves between the P|ndavas and the Kauravas. Duryodhana was not satisfied
with his share of the kingdom. He wanted the entire kingdom for himself. He
unsuccessfully planned several foul plays to kill the P|ndavas and take away
their kingdom. He unlawfully took possession of the entire kingdom of the
P|ndavas and refused to give back even an acre of land without a war. All
mediation by Lord Krishna and others failed. The big war of Mah|bh|rata was
thus inevitable. The P|ndavas were unwilling participants. They had only two
choices: fight for their right as a matter of duty or run away from war and
accept defeat in the name of peace and nonviolence. Arjuna, one of the five
P|ndava brothers, faced the dilemma in the battlefield whether to fight or run
away from war for the sake of peace.
Arjuna’s
dilemma is, in reality, the universal dilemma. Every human being faces
dilemmas, big and small, in their everyday life when performing their duties.
Arjuna’s dilemma was the biggest of all. He had to make a choice between
fighting the war and killing his most revered guru, very dear friends, close
relatives, and many innocent warriors, or running away from the battlefield for
the sake of preserving the peace and nonviolence. The entire seven hundred
verses of the Gita is a discourse between Lord Krishna and the confused Arjuna
on the battlefield of Kurukshetra near New Delhi, India, in about 3,100 years
BCE. This discourse was narrated to the blind king, Dhritar|shtra, by his
charioteer, Sanjaya, as an eye-witness war report.
The
central teaching of the Gita is the attainment of freedom or happiness from the
bondage of life by doing one’s duty. Always remember the glory and greatness of
the creator, and do your duty efficiently without being attached to or affected
by the results, even if that duty may at times demand unavoidable violence.
Some people neglect or give up their duty in life for the sake of a spiritual
life while others excuse themselves from spiritual practices because they
believe that they have no time. The Lord’s message is to sanctify the entire
living process itself. Whatever a person does or thinks ought to be done for
the glory and satisfaction of the Maker. No effort or cost is necessary for
this process. Do your duty as a service to the Lord and humanity and see God
alone in everything in a spiritual frame of mind. In order to gain such a
spiritual frame of mind, personal discipline, austerity, penance, good conduct,
selfless service, yogic practices, meditation, worship, prayer, rituals, and
study of scriptures, as well as the company of holy persons, pilgrimage,
chanting of the holy names of God, and Self-inquiry are needed to purify the
body, mind, and intellect. One must learn to give up lust, anger, greed, and
establish mastery over the six senses (hearing, touch, sight, taste, smell, and
mind) by the purified intellect. One should always remember that all works are
done by the energy of nature and that he or she is not the doer but only an
instrument. One must strive for excellence in all undertakings but remain calm
in success and failure, gain and loss, and pain and pleasure.
The
ignorance of metaphysical knowledge is humanity’s greatest predicament. A scripture,
being the voice of transcendence, cannot be translated. Language is incapable
and translations are defective to clearly impart the knowledge of the Absolute.
In this rendering, an attempt has been made to make it easy to read and
understand. We have tried to improve the clarity by adding words or phrases
within parentheses in the English translation of the verses. The translations
of one hundred and thirty-three (133) key verses are printed in underlined-bold
and/or hilighted
for the convenience of beginners. We suggest that all our readers ponder,
contemplate, and act upon these verses. The beginners and the busy persons should first read and
understand the meaning of these key verses before delving deep into the
bottomless ocean of transcendental knowledge of the Gita. It is said that there is no
human mind that cannot be purified by a repeated study of the Gita— just
one chapter a week.
This
book is dedicated to all my gurus whose blessings, grace, and teachings have
been invaluable. It is offered to the greatest Guru, Lord Krishna, with love
and devotion. May the Lord bless those who repeatedly read this with peace,
happiness, and the true knowledge of the Self.
OM TAT SAT
Ramananda Prasad, Ph.D.
Fremont, CA (USA)
Revised in June, 2020
 Â
(visit: www.gita-society.com/explanationRead.html
 for explanation)
King DhritarÄshtra said: O Sanjaya, assembled in the holy field of Kurukshetra and
eager to fight, what did my people and the PÄndavas do? (1.01) Sanjaya said:
Seeing the battle formation of the PÄndava’s army, King Duryodhana
approached his guru and spoke these words: (1.02) O master, behold this mighty
army of the sons of PÄndu, arranged in battle formation by your other talented
disciple. There are many great warriors, valiant men, heroes, and mighty
archers. I shall name a few of them for you. (1.03-06) Also know, O best among
the men, the distinguished ones on our side.
Introduction
of the army commanders
I shall name the
commanders of my army and many other heroes who have risked their lives for me.
They are armed with various weapons, and all are skilled in warfare. (1.07-09)
Our army is invincible, while their army is easy to conquer. Therefore, all of
you, occupying your respective positions on all fronts, protect our commander,
Bhishma. (1.10-11) The mighty Bhishma, the eldest man of the Kuru dynasty,
roared as a lion and blew his conch loudly, bringing joy to Duryodhana. (1.12)
After that,
conches, kettledrums,
cymbals, drums, and trumpets were sounded together. The commotion was
tremendous. (1.13) Then Lord Krishna and Arjuna, seated in a grand chariot
yoked with white horses, blew their celestial conches. (1.14) Krishna blew His
conch; then Arjuna and all other commanders of various divisions of the army
blew their respective conches. The tumultuous uproar, resounding through earth
and sky, tore the hearts of the Kauravas. (1.15-19)
Arjuna wants
to inspect the army
Seeing the Kauravas
standing, and the war about to begin with the hurling of weapons, Arjuna, whose
banner bore the emblem of Lord HanumÄna, took up his bow and spoke these words
to Lord Krishna: O Lord, please stop my chariot between the two armies until I
behold those who stand here eager for the battle and with whom I must engage in
this act of war. (1.20-22) I wish to see those who are willing to serve and
appease the evil-minded Kauravas by assembling here to fight the battle. (1.23)
Sanjaya said: O King, Lord Krishna, as requested by Arjuna, placed the
best of all the chariots in the midst of the two armies facing Bhishma, Drona,
and all other Kings, and said to Arjuna: Behold these assembled Kauravas!
(1.24-25) There, Arjuna
saw his uncles,
grandfathers, teachers, maternal uncles, brothers, sons, grandsons, and
comrades. (1.26)
Arjuna's
dilemma
Seeing fathers-in-law,
companions, and all his kinsmen standing in the ranks of the two armies, Arjuna
was overcome with great compassion and sorrowfully said: O Krishna, seeing my
kinsmen standing with a desire to fight, my limbs fail and my mouth becomes
dry. My body quivers and my hairs stand on end. (1.27-29) The bow slips from my
hand, and my skin intensely burns. My head turns, I am unable to stand steady,
and O Krishna, I see bad omens. I see no use of killing my kinsmen in battle.
(1.30-31) I desire neither victory, nor pleasure nor kingdom, O Krishna. What
is the use of the kingdom, or enjoyment, or even life, O Krishna? Because all
those—for whom we desire kingdom, enjoyments, and pleasures—are standing here
for the battle, giving up their lives and wealth. (1.32-33) I do not wish to
kill teachers, uncles, sons, grandfathers, maternal uncles, fathers-in-law,
grandsons, brothers-in-law, and other relatives who are about to kill us, even
for the sovereignty of the three worlds, let alone for this earthly kingdom, O
Krishna. (1.34-35)
O Lord Krishna, what pleasure shall we find in killing the
sons of DhritarÄshtra? Upon killing these felons, we shall incur only sin.
(1.36) Therefore, we should not kill our cousin brothers, the sons of
DhritarÄshtra. How can we be happy after killing our relatives, O Krishna?
(1.37) Though they, blinded by greed, do not see evil in the destruction of the
family, or sin in being treacherous to friends, why should not we, who clearly
see evil in the destruction of the family, think about turning away from this
sin, O Krishna? (1.38-39)
Arjuna
describes the evils of war
Eternal family
traditions and codes of conduct are destroyed with the destruction of the
family. Immorality prevails in the family due to the destruction of family
traditions. (1.40) And when immorality prevails, O Krishna, the women of the
family become corrupted; when women are corrupted, many social problems arise.
(1.41) This brings the family and the slayers of the family to hell because the
spirits of their ancestors are degraded when deprived of ceremonial offerings
of rice-ball and water. (1.42) The everlasting qualities of social order and
family traditions of those who destroy their family are ruined by the sinful
act of illegitimacy. (1.43) We have been told, O Krishna, that people whose
family traditions are destroyed necessarily dwell in hell for a long time.
(1.44)
When the
going gets tough, even tough ones can get deluded
Alas! We are ready to
commit a great sin by striving to slay our relatives because of greed for the
pleasures of the kingdom. (1.45) It would be far better for me if the sons of
DhritarÄshtra should kill me with their weapons in battle while I am unarmed
and unresisting. (1.46) Sanjaya said: Having said this in the
battlefield and casting aside his bow and arrow, Arjuna sat down on the seat of
the chariot with his mind overwhelmed with sorrow. (1.47)
2. KNOWLEDGE OF GOD
Sanjaya said: Lord Krishna spoke
these words to Arjuna whose eyes were tearful and downcast, and who was
overwhelmed with compassion and despair. (2.01) The Supreme Lord said:
How has the dejection come to you at this juncture? This is not fit for a
person of noble mind and deeds. It is disgraceful, and it does not lead one to
heaven, O Arjuna. (2.02) Do not become a coward, O Arjuna, because it does not
befit you. Shake off this trivial weakness of your heart and get up for the
battle, O Arjuna. (2.03)
Arjuna said: How shall I strike
Bhishma and Drona, who are worthy of my worship, with arrows in battle, O
Krishna? (2.04) It would be better, indeed, to live on alms in this world than
to slay these noble gurus because by killing them, I would enjoy wealth and
pleasures stained with their blood. (2.05) We do not know which alternative— to
fight or to quit— is better for us. Further, we do not know whether we shall
conquer them or they will conquer us. We should not even wish to live after
killing the sons of DhritarÄshtra who are standing in front of us. (2.06)
My
senses are overcome by the weakness of pity, and my mind is confused about duty
(Dharma). I request You to tell me, decisively, what is better for me. I am
Your disciple. Teach me who has taken refuge in You. (2.07) I do not perceive
that gaining an unrivaled and prosperous kingdom on this earth, or even
lordship over the celestial controllers (Devas), will remove the sorrow that is
drying up my senses. (2.08) Sanjaya said: O King, after speaking like
this to Lord Krishna, the mighty Arjuna said to Krishna: I shall not fight, and
became silent. (2.09) O King, Lord Krishna, as if smiling, spoke these words to
the distressed Arjuna in the midst of the two armies. (2.10)
The Supreme Lord said: You grieve for those who are not
worthy of grief; and yet speak words of wisdom. The wise grieve neither for the
living nor for the dead. (2.11) There was never a time when these monarchs,
you, or I did not exist, nor shall we ever cease to exist in the future. (2.12)
Just as the living
entity (AtmÄ, Jeeva, JeevÄtmÄ) acquires a
childhood body, a youth body, and an old age body during this life; similarly,
it acquires another body after death. The wise are not deluded by this. (See
also 15.08) (2.13) The contacts of the senses with the sense objects
give rise to the feelings of heat and cold, pain and pleasure. They are
transitory and impermanent. Therefore, learn to endure them, O Arjuna, (2.14)
because a calm person— who is not afflicted by these sense objects, and is
steady in pain and pleasure— becomes fit for immortality, O Arjuna. (2.15)
The spirit is eternal, body is transitory
The invisible Spirit
(Sat, AtmÄ) is eternal, and the
visible world (including the physical body) is transitory. The reality of these
two is indeed certainly seen by the seers of truth. (2.16) The Spirit (AtmÄ) by which all this universe is
pervaded is indestructible. No one can destroy the imperishable Spirit. (2.17)
Bodies of the eternal, immutable, and incomprehensible Spirit are perishable.
Therefore, fight, O Arjuna. (2.18) One who thinks that Spirit is a slayer, and one who
thinks Spirit is slain, are both ignorant. Because Spirit neither slays nor is
slain. (2.19) The Spirit is neither born nor does it die at any
time. It does not come into being, or cease to exist. It is unborn, eternal,
permanent, and primeval. The Spirit is not destroyed when the body is
destroyed. (2.20) O Arjuna, how can a person who knows that the Spirit is
indestructible, eternal, unborn, and immutable, kill anyone or cause anyone to
be killed? (2.21)
Death and transmigration of soul
Just as a person puts on new garments after discarding
the old ones; similarly, the living entity acquires new bodies after casting
away the old bodies. (2.22) Weapons do not cut this Spirit, fire does not
burn it, water does not make it wet, and the wind does not make it dry. Spirit cannot be cut, burned, wet, or
dried. It is eternal, all-pervading, unchanging, immovable, and primeval.
(2.23-24) The Spirit is said to be unexplainable, incomprehensible, and
unchanging.
Knowing
this Spirit as such, you should not grieve. (2.25) Even if you think that this
living entity or body takes birth and dies perpetually, even then, O Arjuna,
you should not grieve like this. Because, death is certain for one who is born,
and birth is certain for one who dies. Therefore, you should not lament over
the inevitable. (2.26-27) All
beings, O Arjuna, are unmanifest— invisible to our physical eyes— before birth
and after death. They manifest between the birth and the death only. What is
there to grieve about? (2.28) Some look upon this Spirit as a
wonder, another describes it as wonderful, and others hear of it as a wonder.
Even after hearing about it very few people know it. (2.29) O Arjuna, the
Spirit that dwells in the body of all beings is eternally indestructible.
Therefore, you should not mourn for anybody. (2.30)
Lord Krishna reminds Arjuna of his
Considering also your
duty as a warrior, you should not waver. Because there is nothing more
auspicious for a warrior than a righteous war. (2.31) Only the fortunate
warriors, O Arjuna, get such an opportunity for an unsought war that is like an
open door to heaven. (2.32) If you will not fight this righteous war, then you
will fail in your duty, lose your reputation, and incur sin. (2.33) People will
talk about your disgrace forever. To the honored, dishonor is worse than death.
(2.34) The great warriors will think that you have retreated from the battle
out of fear. Those who have greatly esteemed you will lose respect for you.
(2.35) Your enemies will speak many unmentionable words and scorn your ability.
What could be more painful to you than this? (2.36) You will go to heaven if
killed (in the line of duty), or you will enjoy the kingdom on the earth if
victorious. Therefore, get up with a determination to fight, O Arjuna. (2.37) Treating pleasure and pain, gain
and loss, and victory and defeat alike, engage yourself in your duty. By doing
your duty this way, you will not incur sin. (2.38)
The wisdom of
transcendental knowledge has been imparted to you, O Arjuna. Now listen to the
wisdom of Karma-yoga, the selfless service (SevÄ), endowed with which you will
free yourself from the bondage of action (Karma). (2.39) In Karma-yoga, no
effort is ever lost and there is no adverse effect. Even a little practice of
this discipline protects one from the great fear of birth and death. (2.40) A Karma-yogi
has a resolute determination for God-realization, O Arjuna, but the desires of
one who works to enjoy the fruits of work are endless and many-branched. (2.41)
The Vedas deal with both material and spiritual aspects
of life
The misguided ones who
delight in the melodious chanting of the Vedas— without understanding the real
purpose of the Vedas— think, O Arjuna, as if there is nothing else in the Vedas
except the rituals for the sole purpose of obtaining heavenly enjoyment. (2.42)
They are dominated by material desires and consider the attainment of heaven as
the highest goal of life. They engage in specific rites for the sake of
prosperity and enjoyment. Rebirth is the result of their action. (2.43) The
resolute determination of Self-realization is not formed in the minds of those
who are attached to pleasure and power and whose judgment is obscured by such
ritualistic activities. (2.44) A portion of the Vedas deals with three modes or
states (Gunas) of the material Nature. Become free from pairs of opposites; be
ever balanced and unconcerned with the thoughts of acquisition and
preservation. Rise above the three states, and be Self-conscious, O Arjuna.
(2.45) To a Self-realized person, the Vedas are as useful as a small reservoir
of water when the water of a huge lake becomes available. (2.46)
Theory and practice of Karma-yoga
You have control over your respective duty only, but no
control or claim over the results. The fruits of work should not be your
motive. You should never be inactive. (2.47) Do your duty to the best of your
ability, O Arjuna, with your mind attached to the Lord, abandoning worry and
attachment to the results, and remaining calm in both success and failure. The
calmness of the mind is called Karma-yoga. (2.48) Work done with selfish
motives is inferior by far to selfless service or Karma-yoga. Therefore, be a Karma-yogi,
O Arjuna. Those who work only to enjoy the fruits of their labor are, in truth,
unhappy. (because one has no control over the results). (2.49)
A Karma-yogi becomes free from both
vice and virtue in this life itself. Therefore, strive for Karma-yoga. Working
to the best of one’s abilities without becoming attached to the fruits of work
is called Karma-yoga. (2.50) Wise Karma-yogis are freed from the bondage of
rebirth by renouncing attachment to the fruits of all work and attain a
blissful divine state. (2.51) When your intellect completely pierces the veil
of confusion, then you will become indifferent to what has been heard and what
is to be heard from the scriptures. (2.52)
When
your intellect, that is confused by the conflicting opinions and the
ritualistic doctrine of the Vedas, shall stay steady and firm on concentrating
on the Supreme Being, then you shall attain union with the Supreme Being in
trance (SamÄdhi). (2.53) Arjuna said: O Krishna, what are the marks of
an enlightened person whose intellect is steady? How does a person of steady
intellect speak? How does such a person sit and walk? (2.54)
Marks of a Self-realized person
The Supreme Lord said: When one is completely
free from all desires of the mind and is satisfied with the Eternal Being
(Brahma) by the joy of Eternal Being, then one is called an enlightened person,
O Arjuna. (2.55) A
person whose mind is unperturbed by sorrow, who does not crave pleasures, and
who is completely free from attachment, fear, and anger, is called a sage of
steady intellect. (2.56) Those who are not attached to anything, who
are neither elated by getting desired results, nor troubled by undesired
results, their intellect is considered steady. (2.57) When one can completely
withdraw the senses from sense objects, as a tortoise withdraws its limbs into
the shell for protection, then the intellect of such a person is considered
steady. (2.58) The desire for sensual pleasures fades away if one abstains from
sense enjoyment, but the craving for sense enjoyment remains. The craving also
disappears from one who has known the Supreme Being. (2.59)
Dangers of unrestrained senses
Restless senses, O Arjuna, forcibly carry away the mind
of even a wise person striving for perfection. (2.60) One should fix one’s mind
on Me with loving contemplation after bringing the senses under control. One’s
intellect becomes steady when one’s senses are under complete control. (2.61)
One develops attachment to sense objects by thinking about sense objects.
Desire for sense objects comes from attachment to sense objects, and anger
comes from unfulfilled desires. (2.62) Delusion or wild ideas arise from anger. The mind
is bewildered by delusion. Reasoning is destroyed when the mind is bewildered.
One falls from the right path when reasoning is destroyed. (2.63)
Attainment of peace and happiness through sense control
and Self-knowledge
A disciplined person,
enjoying sense objects with senses that are under control and free from likes
and dislikes, attains tranquility. (2.64) All sorrows are destroyed upon
attainment of tranquility. The intellect of such a tranquil person soon becomes
completely steady and united with the Eternal Being. (2.65) There is neither
Self-knowledge nor Self-perception to those who are not united with the Eternal
Being. Without Self-perception there is no peace, and without peace there can
be no happiness. (2.66)
The mind, when controlled by the roving
senses, steals away the intellect as a storm takes away a boat on the sea from
its destination— the spiritual shore. (2.67) Therefore, O Arjuna, one’s intellect
becomes steady when the senses are completely withdrawn from sense objects.
(2.68) A yogi, the person of self-restraint, remains wakeful when it is night
for all others. It is night for the yogi who sees when all others are wakeful.
(2.69) (While most people sleep and make dream plans in the night of the
illusory world, a yogi keeps awake or detached from the world while living in
it.)
One attains peace when all desires
dissipate within the mind without creating any mental disturbance, just as
river waters enter the full ocean without creating any disturbance. One who
desires material objects is never peaceful. (2.70) One who abandons all
desires, and becomes free from longing and the feeling of “I†and “myâ€, attains
peace. (2.71) O Arjuna, this is the superconscious (BrÄhmi) state of mind.
Attaining this state, one is no longer deluded. Gaining this state, even at the
end of one’s life, a person attains Brahma-NirvÄna (or becomes one with the
Absolute). (2.72)
Arjuna said: If You consider
acquiring transcendental knowledge is better than working, then why do You want
me to engage in this horrible war, O Krishna? You seem to confuse my mind by
apparently conflicting words. Tell me, decisively, one thing by which I may
attain the Supreme. (3.01-02) The Supreme Lord said: In this world, O Arjuna, a twofold path of
spiritual discipline has been stated by Me in the past— the path of
Self-knowledge (JnÄnaYoga) for the contemplative, and the path of
unselfish work (SevÄ, Karma-yoga) for the active. (3.03) One does not attain
freedom from the bondage of Karma by merely abstaining from work. No one
attains perfection by merely giving up work. (3.04) Because no one can remain
actionless even for a moment, everyone is driven to action— helplessly indeed—
by the forces of nature. (3.05) The deluded ones, who restrain their organs of
action but mentally dwell upon the sense enjoyment, are called hypocrites.
(3.06)
One who controls the senses by a trained and purified
mind and intellect, and engages the organs of action to selfless service, is
superior, O Arjuna. (3.07) Perform your obligatory duty because working is indeed
better than sitting idle. Even the maintenance of your body would be impossible
without work. (3.08) Human
beings are bound by work that is not performed as a selfless service.
Therefore, O Arjuna, becoming free from attachment to the fruits of work, do
your duty efficiently as a service to Me. (3.09)
To help each other is the first commandment of the
creator
BrahmÄ, the creator, in
the beginning created human beings together with selfless service (SevÄ, Yajna,
sacrifice) and said: By Yajna you shall prosper, and Yajna shall fulfill all
your desires. (3.10) Nourish the celestial controllers (Devas) with selfless
service, and they will nourish you. Thus nourishing one another, you shall
attain the Supreme goal. (3.11) The celestial controllers, nourished by
selfless service, will give you the desired objects. One who enjoys the gift of
Devas without offering them anything in return is, indeed, a thief. (3.12) The
righteous who eat the remnants of selfless service are freed from all sins, but
the impious who cook food only for themselves (without first offering to Me, or
sharing with others), in truth, eat sin. (3.13) The living beings are born from
food grains; grains are produced by rain; rain comes (as a favor from Devas) if
duty is performed as a selfless service. (See also 4.32). Duty is prescribed in
the Vedas. The Vedas come from Brahma (Eternal Being). Thus the all-pervading
Brahma is ever present in SevÄ. (3.14-15) One who does not help to keep the wheel of creation in
motion by sacrificial duty (SevÄ), and who rejoices sense pleasures, that sinful
person lives in vain, O Arjuna. (3.16) For a Self-realized person,
who rejoices only with the Eternal Being, who is delighted with the Eternal
Being and who is content with the Eternal Being, there is no duty. (3.17) Such
a person has no interest, whatsoever, in what is done or what is not done. A
Self-realized person does not depend on anybody (except God) for anything.
(3.18)
Therefore, always perform your duty efficiently and
without any attachment to the results, because by doing work without attachment
one attains the Supreme Being. (3.19) King Janaka and others attained
perfection (or Self-realization) by selfless service (Karma-yoga) alone. You
should also perform your duty with a view to guide people, and for the universal
welfare of society. (3.20) Whatever noble persons do, others follow. Whatever standard
they set up, the world follows. (3.21) O Arjuna, there is nothing in the three
worlds (heaven, earth, and the lower regions) that should be done by Me, nor
there is anything un-obtained that I should obtain, yet I engage in action.
(3.22) If I do not engage in action relentlessly, O Arjuna, people would follow
the same path in every way. These worlds would perish if I do not work, and I
would be the cause of confusion and destruction of all these people. (3.23-24)
As the ignorant work, O Arjuna, with attachment to the fruits of work, so the
wise should work without attachment, for the welfare of the society. (3.25) The wise should not unsettle the
minds of the ignorant, who are attached to the fruits of work, but should
inspire others by performing all works efficiently without attachment. (See
also 3.29) (3.26)
All works are the works of Nature
All work is done by the energy and power of nature, but
due to delusion of ignorance, people assume themselves to be the doer. (See
also 5.09, 13.29, and 14.19) (3.27) One who knows the truth, O Arjuna, about the
role of the forces of nature and work, does not become attached to work,
knowing very well that it is the forces of nature that work with their
instruments— our organs. (3.28) Those who are deluded by the illusive power
(MÄyÄ) of Nature become attached to the work done by the forces of nature. The
wise should not disturb the mind of the ignorant whose knowledge is imperfect.
(See also 3.26) (3.29) Do
your duty— dedicating all work to Me— in a spiritual frame of mind, free from
desire, attachment, and mental grief. (3.30) Those who always
practice this teaching of Mine— with faith (or full attention and sincerity)
and free from cavil— are freed from the bondage of Karma. But those who carp at
My teaching and do not practice should be considered ignorant of all knowledge,
senseless, and lost. (3.31-32) All beings follow their nature. Even the wise
act according to their own nature. What, then, is the value of sense restraint?
(3.33) The answer comes:
Two major stumbling blocks on the path of perfection
Likes and dislikes for sense objects remain in the
senses. One should not come under the control of these two because they are,
indeed, two major stumbling blocks on one’s path of Self-realization. (3.34) One’s inferior natural
work is better than superior unnatural work. Death in carrying out one’s
natural work is useful. Unnatural work produces too much stress. (See also 18.47)
(3.35)
Arjuna said: O Krishna, what impels
one to commit sin as if unwillingly and forced against one’s will? (3.36) The Supreme Lord said: It is
lust (or intense desire for material and sensual pleasures), born out of passion,
that becomes anger when unfulfilled. Lust is insatiable and is a great devil.
Know this as the enemy. (3.37) As the fire is covered by smoke, as a mirror by
dust, and as an embryo by the amnion, similarly Self-knowledge becomes obscured
by lust. (3.38) O Arjuna, Self-knowledge becomes covered by this
insatiable fire of lust, the eternal enemy of the wise. (3.39) The senses, the mind, and the
intellect are said to be the seat of lust. Lust— by controlling the senses, the
mind, and the intellect— deludes a person by veiling Self-knowledge. (3.40) Therefore,
O Arjuna, by controlling the senses first, kill this devil of material desire
that destroys Self-knowledge and Self-realization. (3.41)
The senses are said to
be superior to the body; the mind is superior to the senses; the intellect is
superior to the mind; and Spirit is superior to the intellect. (See also
6.07-08) (3.42) Thus,
knowing the Spirit to be superior to the intellect, and controlling the mind by
the intellect (that is purified by spiritual practices), one must kill this
mighty enemy, lust, O Arjuna. (3.43)
The Supreme Lord said: I taught this Karma-yoga,
the eternal science of right action, to King VivasvÄn. VivasvÄn taught it to
Manu. Manu taught it to IkshvÄku. Thus handed down in succession the saintly
Kings knew this (Karma-yoga). After a long time the science of Karma-yoga was
lost from this earth. Today I have described the same ancient science to you
because you are my sincere devotee and friend. Karma-yoga is a supreme secret
indeed. (4.01-03) Arjuna said: You were born later, but VivasvÄn was
born in ancient time. How am I to understand that You taught this Karma-yoga in
the beginning of the creation? (4.04)
The purpose of incarnation of God
The Supreme Lord said: Both you and I have
taken many births. I remember them all, O Arjuna, but you do not remember.
(4.05) Though I am eternal, immutable, and the Lord of all beings, yet I
manifest myself by controlling My own material Nature, using My divine
potential energy (Yoga-MÄyÄ). (See also 10.14) (4.06) Whenever there is a decline of
Dharma (Righteousness) and a predominance of Adharma (Unrighteousness), O Arjuna,
then I manifest Myself. I appear from time to time for protecting the good, for
transforming the wicked, and for establishing world order (Dharma). (4.07-08) The
one who truly understands My transcendental appearance and activities (of
creation, maintenance, and dissolution), attains My supreme abode and is not
born again after leaving this body, O Arjuna. (4.09) Many have become free from
attachment, fear, anger, and attained salvation (Mukti) by taking refuge in Me,
becoming fully absorbed in My thoughts, and becoming purified by the fire of
Self-knowledge. (4.10)
With whatever motive
people worship Me, I fulfill their desires accordingly. People worship Me with
different motives. (4.11) Those who long for success in their work here on the
earth worship the celestial controllers. Success in work comes quickly in this
human world. (4.12) The
four divisions— based on aptitude and vocation— of human society were created
by Me. Though I am the author of this system of the division of labor, one
should know that I do nothing and I am eternal. (See also 18.41) (4.13) Work
or Karma does not bind Me, because I have no desire for the fruits of work. The
one who fully understands and practices this truth is also not bound by Karma. (4.14)
The ancient seekers of liberation also performed their duties with this
understanding. Therefore, you should do your duty as the ancients did. (4.15)
Even the wise ones are
confused about what is action and what is inaction. Therefore, I shall clearly
explain what is action, knowing that one shall be liberated from the evil of
birth and death. (4.16) The true nature of action is very difficult to understand.
Therefore, one should know the nature of attached (or selfish) action, the
nature of detached (or selfless) action, and also the nature of forbidden
action. (4.17)
A Karma-yogi is not subject to
the KÄrmic laws
The one who sees inaction in action, and action in
inaction, is a wise person. Such a person is a Yogi and has accomplished
everything. (See also 3.05, 3.27, 5.08 and 13.29) (4.18) (To see inaction in
action and vice versa is to understand that the Lord does all the work
indirectly through His power by using us. He is the inactive actor. We are
actively inactive because we cannot do anything without the flow of His power.
Therefore, we are not the doer, just an instrument in His hands.) A person, whose desires
have become selfless by being roasted in the fire of Self-knowledge, is called
a sage by the wise. (4.19) The one who has abandoned attachment to the fruits of work, and remains
ever content and dependent on no one but God, such a person— though engaged in
activity— does nothing at all and incurs no KÄrmic reaction, good or bad. (4.20) The
one who is free from desires, whose mind and senses are under control, and who
has renounced all proprietorship, does not incur sin— the KÄrmic reaction— by
doing bodily action. (4.21) Content with whatever gain comes naturally by His
will, unaffected by pairs of opposites, free from envy, calm in success and
failure, though engaged in work, such a Karma-yogi is not bound by Karma.
(4.22) The one who is free from attachment, whose mind is fixed in
Self-knowledge, who does work as a service (SevÄ) to the Lord, all KÄrmic bonds
of such a philanthropic person (Karma-yogi) dissolve away. (4.23) Brahma, the eternal Being, shall
be realized by the one who considers everything as a manifestation or an act of
Brahma. (Also see 9.16) (4.24)
Different types of spiritual practices
Some Yogis perform the
service of worship to celestial controllers (Devas, guardian angels), while
others study scriptures for Self-knowledge. Some restrain their senses and give
up their sensual pleasures. Others perform breathing and other yogic exercises.
Some give charity and offer their wealth as a sacrifice. (4.25-28) Those who
are engaged in yogic practices, reach the breathless state of trance (SamÄdhi)
by offering inhalation into exhalation and exhalation into inhalation as a
sacrifice by using yogic techniques. (4.29) Others restrict their diet and
offer their inhalations as sacrifice into their inhalations. All these people
are the knowers of sacrifice, and are purified by their sacrifice. (4.30) Those who perform selfless
service obtain the nectar of Self-knowledge as a result of their sacrifice and
attain the Eternal Being. O Arjuna, even this world is not a happy place for
the non-sacrificer, how can the other world be? (See also 4.38, and 5.06).
(4.31) Many types of spiritual disciplines are described in the
Vedas. Know them all to be born from Karma or the action of body, mind, and
senses. Knowing this, you shall attain salvation (Moksha, NirvÄna). (See also
3.14) (4.32)
Acquiring transcendental knowledge is a superior
spiritual practice
The acquisition and propagation of Self-knowledge are
superior to any material gain or gift, O Arjuna. Because all actions in their
entirety culminate in knowledge. (4.33) Acquire this transcendental knowledge from a
Self-realized person by humble reverence, by sincere inquiry, and by service.
The wise ones who have realized the Truth will teach you. (4.34) After knowing
the Truth, O Arjuna, you shall not again become deluded like this. By this
knowledge you shall behold the entire creation (first) within Me, the Supreme
Being, then within your own higher Self (and then see Me alone in everything).
(4.35) Even if one is the most sinful of all sinners, one shall yet cross over
the ocean of sin by the raft of Self-knowledge alone. (4.36) As the blazing
fire reduces wood to ashes; similarly, the fire of Self-knowledge reduces all
bonds of Karma to ashes, O Arjuna. (4.37)
Transcendental Knowledge is revealed to a Karma-yogi
In truth, there is no
purifier in this world like the true knowledge of the Supreme Being. One who
becomes purified by Karma-yoga discovers this knowledge within, naturally, in
course of time. (See also 4.31, and 5.06, 18.78) (4.38) The one who has faith
and is sincere in yogic practices and has control over the senses, gains this
transcendental knowledge. Having gained this knowledge, one at once attains
supreme peace. (4.39) The irrational, the faithless, and the disbeliever
(atheist) perish or take repeated birth and death. There is neither this world,
nor the world beyond, nor happiness for the disbeliever. (4.40)
Both transcendental knowledge and Karma-yoga are needed
for NirvÄna
Work (Karma) does not
bind a person who has renounced work by renouncing the fruits of work, and
whose doubts about the Self are completely destroyed by Self-knowledge, O
Arjuna. (4.41) Therefore, cut the ignorance-born doubt (about the Supreme
Being) abiding in your mind by the sword of Self-knowledge, resort to Karma-yoga,
and get up for the war, O Arjuna. (4.42)
Arjuna said: O Krishna, You praise
transcendental knowledge and also performance of selfless service. Tell me,
definitely, which one is the better of the two. (See also 5.05) (5.01) The
Supreme Lord said: The path of Self-knowledge and the path of selfless
service both lead to the supreme goal. But, of the two, selfless service is
superior to Self-knowledge. (5.02) A person should be considered a true
SamnyÄsi (renunciant) who neither likes nor dislikes. One is easily liberated
from KÄrmic bondage by becoming free from the pairs of opposites, O Arjuna.
(5.03)
Both paths lead to the Supreme
The ignorant— not the wise— consider the path of
Self-knowledge (or renunciation) and the path of selfless service (Karma-yoga)
as different from each other. The person who has truly mastered one, gets the
benefits of both. (5.04) Whatever goal a SamnyÄsi reaches,
a Karma-yogi also reaches the same goal. Therefore, the one who sees the path
of renunciation and the path of unselfish work as the same, really sees. (See
also 6.01 and 6.02) (5.05)
But, true renunciation, O Arjuna, is difficult to attain without Karma-yoga. A
sage equipped with Karma-yoga quickly attains Brahma. (See also 4.31, and 4.38)
(5.06)
A Karma-yogi whose mind is pure, whose mind and senses are under control, and
who sees one and the same Eternal Being in all beings, is not bound by Karma
though engaged in work. (5.07)
The wise (or SamnyÄsi)
who knows the truth thinks: "I do nothing at all". In seeing,
hearing, touching, smelling, eating, walking, sleeping, breathing; and
speaking, giving, taking, as well as opening and closing the eyes, a SamnyÄsi
believes that only the senses are operating upon their objects. (See also 3.27,
13.29, and 14.19) (5.08-09) One who does all work as an offering to the Lord— abandoning attachment
to the results— remains untouched by KÄrmic reaction or sin as a lotus leaf never gets wet
by water. (5.10) The Karma-yogis perform action— without attachment—
with their body, mind, intellect, and senses only for the sake of
self-purification. (5.11) A
Karma-yogi attains Supreme Bliss by abandoning attachment to the fruits of
work; while others, who are attached to the fruits of work, become bound by
work. (5.12)
A person who has
completely renounced the fruits of all works, lives happily, neither performing
nor directing any action. (5.13) The Lord neither creates the urge for action,
nor the feeling of doership, nor the attachment to the results of action in
people. All these are done by the powers of Nature. (5.14) The Lord does not take
the responsibility for the good or evil deeds of anybody. The Self-knowledge
becomes covered by the veil of ignorance; thereby people become deluded (and do
evil deeds). (5.15) Transcendental knowledge destroys the ignorance of the Self
and reveals the Supreme, just as the sun reveals the beauty of objects of the
world. (5.16) Persons
whose mind and intellect are totally merged in Brahma (Eternal Being), who are
firmly devoted to Brahma, who have Brahma as their supreme goal and sole
refuge, and whose impurities are destroyed by the knowledge of Brahma, do not
take birth again. (5.17)
enlightened person
An enlightened person (by perceiving the Lord in all)
looks at a learned and humble priest, an outcast, even a cow, an elephant, or a
dog with an equal eye. (See also 6.29) (5.18) Everything has been
accomplished in this very life by the one whose mind is set in equality. Such a
person has realized the Eternal Being because the Eternal Being is flawless and
impartial. (See also 18.55) (5.19) One who neither rejoices on obtaining what
is pleasant, nor grieves on obtaining the unpleasant, who has a steady mind,
who is undeluded, and who is a knower of Eternal Being, such a person eternally
abides with Eternal Being. (5.20) Such a person who is in union with the Eternal Being becomes unattached
to external sensual pleasures by discovering the joy of the Self through
contemplation, and enjoys transcendental bliss. (5.21) Sensual
pleasures are, in truth, the source of misery, and have a beginning and an end.
Therefore the wise, O Arjuna, do not rejoice in sensual pleasures. (See also
18.38) (5.22) One who is able to withstand the impulse of lust and anger before
death is a yogi, and a happy person. (5.23) One who finds happiness with the Eternal
Being, who rejoices Eternal Being (Brahma) within, and who is illuminated by
Self-knowledge; such a yogi attains Brahma-NirvÄna, and goes to the Supreme
Being. (5.24) Seers whose sins (or imperfections) are destroyed, whose doubts
have been dispelled by Self-knowledge, whose minds are disciplined, and who are
engaged in the welfare of all beings, attain the Supreme Being. (5.25) They who
are free from lust and anger, who have subdued the mind and senses, and who
have known the Self, easily attain Brahma-NirvÄna. (5.26)
The third path— the path of devotional meditation and
contemplation
A sage is, in truth,
liberated by renouncing all sense enjoyments, fixing the mind between the eye
brows, equalizing the breath moving through the nostrils, keeping the senses,
mind, and intellect under control, having salvation (Mukti) as the prime goal,
and becoming free from lust, anger, and fear. (5.27-28) My devotee attains
peace by knowing Me (or Krishna, the Supreme Being) as the enjoyer of
sacrifices and austerities, as the great Lord of all the universe, and the
friend of all beings. (5.29)
A Karma-yogi is also a renunciant
The Supreme Lord said: One who performs the
prescribed duty without seeking its fruit (for personal enjoyment) is a
renunciant (SamnyÄsi) and a Karma-yogi. One does not become SamnyÄsi merely by
not lighting the fire, and one does not become a yogi merely by abstaining from
work. (6.01) O Arjuna, what they call renunciation (SamnyÄsa) is also known as Karma-yoga.
No one becomes a Karma-yogi who has not renounced the selfish motive behind an
action. (See also 5.01, 5.05, 6.01, and 18.02) (6.02)
For the wise who seeks
to attain yoga (of meditation, or the calmness of mind), Karma-yoga is said to
be the means. For the one who has attained yoga, the calmness becomes the means
of Self-realization. A person is said to have attained yogic perfection when he
or she has no desire for sensual pleasures or attachment to the fruits of work,
and has renounced all personal selfish motives. (6.03-04)
Mind is both a friend and an enemy
One must elevate— and not degrade— oneself by one’s own
mind. The mind alone is one’s friend as well as one’s enemy. The mind is the
friend of those who have control over it, and the mind acts like an enemy for
those who do not control it. (6.05-06) One who has control over the lower self— the
mind and senses— is tranquil in heat and cold, in pleasure and pain, and in
honor and dishonor, and remains ever steadfast with the supreme Self. (6.07) A
person is called yogi who has both Self-knowledge and Self-realization, who is
calm, who has control over the mind and senses, and to whom a clod, a stone,
and gold are the same. (6.08) A person is considered superior who is impartial towards companions,
friends, enemies, neutrals, arbiters, haters, relatives, saints, and sinners.
(6.09)
A yogi, seated in
solitude and alone, should constantly try to contemplate the Supreme Being
after bringing the mind and senses under control, and becoming free from
desires and proprietorship. (6.10) One should sit on his or her own firm seat
that is neither too high nor too low, covered with sacred Kusha grass, a
deerskin, and a cloth, one over the other, in a clean spot. Sitting there in a
comfortable position and concentrating the mind on God, controlling the
thoughts and the activities of the senses, one should practice meditation for self-purification.
(6.11-12) One should sit by holding the waist, spine, chest, neck, and head
erect, motionless and steady; fix the eyes and the mind steadily in front of
the nostrils, without looking around; make your mind serene and fearless;
practice celibacy; have the mind under control; think of Me; and have Me as the
supreme goal. (See also 4.29, 5.27, 8.10, and 8.12) (6.13-14) Thus, by always
practicing to keep the mind fixed on Me, the yogi whose mind is subdued attains
peace of Brahma-NirvÄna and comes to Me. (6.15)
This
yoga is not possible, O Arjuna, for the one who eats too much or who does not
eat at all; who sleeps too much or who keeps awake. (6.16) But for the one who
is moderate in eating, recreation, working, sleeping, and waking, the yoga of
meditation destroys all sorrow. (6.17) A person is said to have achieved yoga,
the union with the Eternal Being, when the perfectly disciplined mind becomes
free from all desires and gets completely united with Brahma in SamÄdhi
(trance). (6.18) A lamp in a spot sheltered (by the Eternal Being) from the
wind (of desires) does not flicker; this simile is used for the subdued mind of
a yogi, practicing meditation on the Eternal Being. (6.19)
When
the mind, disciplined by the practice of meditation, becomes steady, one
becomes content with the Eternal Being by beholding Him with purified
intellect. (6.20) One feels infinite bliss that is perceivable only through the
intellect and is beyond the reach of the senses. After realizing the Eternal
Being, one is never separated from the Absolute Reality. (6.21) After
Self-realization (SR), one does not regard any other gain superior to SR.
Established in SR, one is not moved even by the greatest calamity. (6.22) The
state of severance of union with sorrow is called yoga. This yoga should be
practiced with firm determination and without any mental reservation. (6.23)
One gradually attains tranquility of mind by totally abandoning all desires,
completely restraining the senses from the sense objects by the intellect,
keeping the mind fully absorbed in the Eternal Being by means of a well-trained
and purified intellect, and thinking of Me. (6.24-25) Wheresoever this restless and
unsteady mind wanders away during meditation, one should just witness it under
the watchful eye (or supervision) of the self. (6.26)
Supreme bliss comes to
a Self-realized yogi, whose mind is tranquil, whose desires are under control,
and who is free from sin (or faults). (6.27) Such a sinless yogi, who
constantly engages his or her mind and intellect with the Eternal Being, easily
enjoys the infinite bliss of contact with Brahma. (6.28) Because of perceiving the
omnipresent Eternal Being abiding in all beings, and all beings abiding in the
Eternal Being; a yogi, who is in union with the Eternal Being, sees every being
with an equal eye. (See also 4.35, 5.18) (6.29) Those who perceive Me in
everything and behold everything in Me, are not separated from Me, and I am not
separated from them. (6.30) The non-dualists, who adore Me as abiding
in all beings, abide in Me irrespective of their mode of living. (6.31) One is considered the best yogi
who regards every being like oneself and who can feel the pain and pleasures of
others as one’s own, O Arjuna. (6.32)
Two methods to subdue the mind
Arjuna said: O Krishna, You have
said that the yoga of meditation is characterized by the calmness of mind, but
due to restlessness of mind, I do not perceive the steady state of mind.
Because the mind, indeed, is very unsteady, turbulent, powerful, and obstinate,
O Krishna. I think restraining the mind is as difficult as restraining the
wind. (6.33-34) The
Supreme Lord said: Undoubtedly, O Arjuna, the mind is restless and difficult to
restrain, but it is subdued by constant vigorous spiritual practice with
perseverance, and by detachment, O Arjuna. (6.35) In My opinion,
yoga is difficult for the one whose mind is not subdued. However, yoga is
attainable by the person of subdued mind by striving through proper means.
(6.36)
Destination of unsuccessful yogi
Arjuna said: The faithful who
deviates from the path of meditation and fails to attain yogic perfection due
to unsubdued mind— what is the destination of such a person, O Krishna? (6.37)
Does he not perish like a dispersing cloud, O Krishna, having lost both (Yoga
and Bhoga, the heavenly and worldly pleasures), supportless and bewildered on
the path of Self-realization? (6.38) O Krishna, only You are able to completely
dispel this doubt of mine because there is none, other than You, who can dispel
this doubt. (See also 15.15) (6.39) The Supreme Lord said: There is no
destruction, O Arjuna, for a yogi either here or hereafter. A transcendentalist
is never put to grief, My dear friend. (6.40)
The
unsuccessful yogi is reborn in the house of the pious and prosperous after
attaining heaven and living there for many years, or such a yogi is born in a
family of enlightened yogis. A birth like this is very difficult, indeed, to
obtain in this world. (6.41-42) There he or she regains the knowledge acquired
in the previous life and strives again to achieve perfection, O Arjuna. (6.43) The unsuccessful yogi is
instinctively carried towards the Eternal Being by virtue of the impressions
(SamskÄra) of yogic practices of previous lives. Even
the inquirer of yoga— the union with God— surpasses those who perform Vedic
rituals. (6.44) The yogi who diligently strives, becomes completely
free from all sins (or imperfections) after gradually perfecting through many
incarnations, and reaches the Supreme Abode. (6.45)
The yogi is superior to
the ascetics. The yogi is superior to the (Vedic) scholars. The yogi is
superior to the ritualists. Therefore, O Arjuna, be a yogi. (6.46) I consider the yogi-devotee— who
lovingly contemplates Me with supreme faith, and whose mind is ever absorbed in
Me— to be the best of all the yogis. (See also 12.02 and 18.66) (6.47)
 7.
KNOWLEDGE AND ENLIGHTENMENT
The Supreme Lord said: O Arjuna, listen how you
shall know Me fully without any doubt, with your mind absorbed in Me, taking
refuge in Me, and performing yogic practices. (7.01) I shall impart you
Self-knowledge, together with enlightenment, after comprehending that nothing
more remains to be known in this world. (7.02) Scarcely one out of thousands of
persons strives for perfection of Self-realization. Scarcely one among those
successful strivers truly understands Me. (7.03)
Definitions of matter, consciousness,
and spirit
The mind, intellect,
ego, ether, air, fire, water, and earth are the eightfold transformation (or
division) of My material energy (Prakriti). (See also 13.05) (7.04) The material energy is My lower
Nature. My other higher Nature is Spirit (Purusha) by which this entire
universe is sustained, O Arjuna. (7.05) Know that all creatures have evolved
from this twofold energy; and I— the Supreme Being (ParaBrahma, Krishna)— am
the source of origin, as well as dissolution of the entire universe. (See also
13.26) (7.06)
basis of everything
There is nothing higher than Me, O Arjuna. Everything in
the universe is strung on Me, the Supreme Being, like jewels are strung on the
thread (of a necklace). (7.07) O Arjuna, I am the sapidity in the water, I am
the radiance in the sun and the moon, the sacred syllable ‘OM’ in all the
Vedas, the sound in the ether, and potency in human beings. I am the sweet
fragrance in the earth. I am the heat in the fire, the life in all living
beings, and the austerity in the ascetics. (7.08-09) O Arjuna, know Me to be
the eternal seed of all creatures. I am the intelligence of the intelligent and
the brilliance of the brilliant. (See also 9.18 and 10.39). I am the strength
of the strong who is devoid of lust and attachment. I am lust (Cupid) in human
beings that is in accord with righteousness (Dharma) (for the sacred and sole
purpose of procreation after marriage), O Arjuna. (7.10-11) Know that three
modes (Gunas) of material Nature— goodness, passion, and ignorance— also
emanate from Me. I am not dependent on, or affected by, the Gunas, but the
Gunas are dependent on Me. (See also 9.04 and 9.05) (7.12) Human beings are
deluded by the various aspects of these three Gunas of material Nature;
therefore, they do not know Me, who is eternal and above these Gunas. (7.13)
This divine power (MÄyÄ) of Mine, consisting of three Gunas of material Nature, is very difficult to overcome. Only those
who surrender unto Me easily cross over this MÄyÄ. (See also 14.26,
15.19, and 18.66) (7.14) The evil doers, the ignorant, the lowest persons who are
attached to demonic nature and whose power of discrimination has been taken
away by divine illusive power (MÄyÄ) do not worship or seek Me. (7.15)
Four types of virtuous ones worship or
seek Me, O Arjuna. They are: The distressed, the seeker of Self-knowledge, the
seeker of wealth, and the enlightened one who has experienced the Supreme.
(7.16) Among
them the enlightened devotee, who is ever united with Me and whose devotion is
single-minded, is the best, because I am very dear to the enlightened, and the
enlightened is very dear to Me. (7.17) All these seekers are indeed noble, but
I regard the enlightened devotee as My very Self. One who is steadfast becomes
one with Me and abides in My supreme abode. (See also 9.29) (7.18) After many births the
enlightened one resorts to Me by realizing that everything is, indeed, My (or
Supreme Being’s) manifestation. Such a great soul is very rare. (7.19) Persons
whose discernment has been carried away by various desires, impelled by their
KÄrmic impression (SamskÄra), resort to celestial controllers and practice
various religious rites. (7.20)
God can be seen in an image of any desired form of
worship
Whosoever desires to worship whatever deity (using any
name, form, and method) with faith, I make their faith steady in that very
deity. Endowed with steady faith, they worship that deity and obtain their
wishes through that deity. Those wishes are, indeed, granted only by Me.
(7.21-22) Such
material gains of these less intelligent human beings are temporary. The
worshipers of celestial controllers go to celestial controllers, but My
devotees certainly come to Me. (7.23)
The ignorant ones— unable to understand
My immutable, incomparable, incomprehensible, and transcendental form (or
existence)— assume that I, the Supreme Being, am formless and take forms.
(7.24) Concealed by My divine power (MÄyÄ), I do not reveal Myself to the ignorant
ones, who do not know and understand My unborn, eternal, and transcendental
form and personality (and consider Me formless). (7.25)
I
know, O Arjuna, the beings of the past, of the present, and those of the
future, but no one really knows Me. (7.26) All beings in this world are in
utter ignorance due to delusion of pairs of opposites born of likes and
dislikes, O Arjuna. But persons of unselfish deeds, whose Karma or sin has come
to an end, become free from the delusion of pairs of opposites and worship Me
with firm resolve. (7.27-28) Those who strive for freedom from the cycles of
birth, old age, and death by taking refuge in Me fully comprehend Brahma (or
Eternal Being), the nature of Brahma, and Karma, the power of Brahma. (7.29)
The steadfast persons who know Me alone as the basis of all— mortal beings,
Divine Beings, and the Supreme Being— even at the time of death, attain Me.
(See also 8.04) (7.30)
Arjuna said: O Krishna, who is the
Eternal Being? What is the nature of the Eternal Being? What is Karma? Who are
the mortal beings? And who are Divine Beings? Who is the Supreme Being, and how
does He dwell in the body? How can You be remembered at the time of death by
those who have control over their minds, O Krishna? (8.01-02)
Definition of supreme spirit, spirit, individual soul,
and Karma
The Supreme Lord said: The immutable AtmÄ (Spirit) is called Brahma
(Eternal Being). The nature (including the inherent power of cognition and
desire) of Brahma is called AdhyÄtma. The creative power of Brahma that
causes manifestation of the living entity is called Karma. (8.03) Mortal beings are
changeable. Various expansions of the Supreme Being are called Divine Beings.
I, the Supreme Being reside inside the physical bodies as the supreme enjoyer
and divine controller (Ishvara), O Arjuna. (8.04)
Theory of reincarnation and Karma
The one who remembers
Me exclusively, even while leaving the body at the time of death, attains Me;
there is no doubt about it. (8.05) Remembering whatever object one leaves the body at the
end of life, one attains that object, O Arjuna, because of the constant thought
of that object (one remembers that object at the end of life and achieves it).
(8.06)
A simple method of God-realization
Therefore, always remember Me and do your duty. You shall
certainly attain Me if your mind and intellect are ever focused on Me. (8.07) By contemplating on Me
with an unwavering mind that is disciplined by the practice of meditation, one
attains the Supreme Being, O Arjuna. (8.08) One who meditates on the Supreme
Being— as the omniscient, the oldest, the controller, smaller than the smallest
(and bigger than the biggest), the sustainer of everything, the inconceivable,
the self-luminous like the sun, and as transcendental or beyond the material
reality— at the time of death with steadfast mind and devotion; making the flow
of bioimpulses (life forces, PrÄna) rise up to the middle of two eye brows (or
the sixth Chakra) by the power of yoga and holding there, attains Krishna, the
Supreme Divine Person. (See also 4.29, 5.27, 6.13) (8.09-10) I shall briefly
explain the process to attain the supreme abode that the knowers of the Veda
call immutable; into which the ascetics, freed from attachment, enter; and
desiring which, people lead a life of celibacy. (8.11)
Attain salvation by meditating on God at the time of
death
When one leaves the physical body by controlling all the
senses, focusing the mind on God and PrÄna (life forces) in the cerebrum, engaged in
yogic practice, meditating on Me and uttering OM—  the sacred monosyllable sound power of Eternal
Being— one attains the supreme abode. (8.12-13) I am easily attainable, O
Arjuna, by that ever steadfast yogi who always thinks of Me and whose mind does
not go elsewhere. (8.14) After attaining Me, the great souls do not incur rebirth in
this miserable transitory world because they have attained the highest
perfection. (8.15) The dwellers of all the worlds— up to and including the
world of BrahmÄ, the creator— are subject to the miseries of repeated birth and
death. But, after attaining Me, O Arjuna, one does not take birth again. (See
also 9.25) (8.16)
Everything in the creation is cyclic
Those who know that the
day of the creator (BrahmÄ) lasts one thousand Yugas (or 4.32 billion years)
and that his night also lasts one thousand Yugas, they are the knowers of day
and night. (8.17) All manifestations come out of the primary material Nature
(Adi-Prakriti) at the arrival of the day of BrahmÄ, the Creative Power, and
they again merge into the same at the coming of BrahmÄ’s night. (8.18) The same multitude of beings
comes into existence again and again at the arrival of the day of the creator
(BrahmÄ); and are annihilated, inevitably, at the
arrival of BrahmÄ’s night. (8.19)
There
is another eternal transcendental existence— higher than the changeable
material Nature (Prakriti)— that does not perish when all created beings
perish. This is called the Eternal Being (or Brahma). This is also said to be
the supreme abode. Those who attain My supreme abode do not take birth again.
(8.20-21) This supreme abode, O Arjuna, is attainable by unswerving devotion to
Me, within which all beings exist and by which all this universe is pervaded.
(See also 9.04 and 11.55) (8.22)
O Arjuna, now I shall describe different
paths departing by which, after death, the yogis do or do not come back. (8.23)
Passing gradually, after death, through celestial controllers of fire, light,
daytime, the bright lunar fortnight, and the six months of the northern
solstice of the sun, yogis who know the Self attain supreme abode (and do not
come back to earth). (8.24) Passing gradually, after death, through celestial
controllers of smoke, night, the dark lunar fortnight, and the six months of
southern solstice of the sun, the righteous person atÂtains heaven and comes
back to earth again. (8.25) The path of light (of spiritual practice and Self-knowledge) and the
path of darkness (of materialism and ignorance) are thought to be the world’s
two eternal paths. The former leads to salvation (Mukti, NirvÄna), and the latter leads to
rebirth. (8.26)
Transcendental knowledge leads
to salvation
Knowing these two
paths, O Arjuna, a yogi is not bewildered at all. Therefore, O Arjuna, be
steadfast in yoga with Me at all times. (8.27) The yogi who knows all this goes
beyond getting the benefits of the study of the Vedas, performance of
sacrifices, austerities, and charities, and attains My Supreme Eternal Abode.
(8.28)
The Supreme Lord said: I shall reveal to you,
who do not disbelieve, the most profound, secret, transcendental knowledge,
together with transcendental experience. Knowing this, you will be freed from
the miseries of worldly existence. (9.01)
Knowledge of the nature of the supreme is the biggest
mystery
This Self-knowledge is
the king of all knowledge, is the most secret, is very sacred, can be perceived
by instinct, conforms to righteousness (Dharma), is very easy to practice, and
is timeless. (9.02) O Arjuna, those who have no faith in this knowledge do not
attain Me and follow the cycles of birth and death. (9.03) This entire universe is an expansion
of Mine. All beings depend on Me. I do not depend on them (because I am the
highest of all). (See also 7.12) (9.04) Look at
the power of My divine mystery; in reality, I— the sustainer and creator of all
beings— do not depend on them, and they also do not depend on Me. (9.05) (Like
a gold chain depends on gold, and the milk products depend on milk. In fact,
the gold chain does not depend on gold; the chain is nothing but gold.
Similarly, matter and energy are different as well as non-different). Perceive that all beings remain
in Me (without any contact or without producing any effect) as the mighty wind,
moving everywhere, eternally remains in space. (9.06)
The theory of evolution and involution
All beings merge into
My Adi-Prakriti (primary material Nature) at the end of a cycle of just over
311 trillion solar years, O Arjuna, and I create them again at the beginning of
the next cycle. (See also 8.17) (9.07) I create the entire multitude of beings
again and again with the help of My material Nature. These beings are under
control of the modes of material Nature. (9.08) These acts of creation do not
bind Me, O Arjuna, because I remain indifferent and unattached to those acts.
(9.09) The divine kinetic energy (MÄyÄ)— with the help of material Nature—
creates all animate and inanimate objects under My supervision; thus, the
creation keeps on going, O Arjuna. (See also 14.03) (9.10)
Ignorant persons
despise Me when I appear in human form because they do not know My
transcendental nature as the great Lord of all beings (and take Me for an
ordinary human), and they have false hopes, false actions, false knowledge, and
delusive qualities (See 16.04-18) of fiends and demons (and are unable to
recognize Me). (9.11-12) But great souls, O Arjuna, who possess divine
qualities (See 16.01-03), know Me as immutable, as the material and efficient
cause of creation, and worship Me single-mindedly with loving devotion. (9.13)
Persons of firm resolve worship Me with ever steadfast devotion by always
singing My glories, striving to attain Me, and prostrating before Me with
devotion. (9.14) Some worship Me by acquiring and propagating Self-knowledge. Others
worship the infinite as the One in all (or non-dual), as the master of all (or
dual), and in various other ways. (9.15)
I am the ritual, I am
the sacrifice, I am the offering, I am the herb, I am the mantra, I am the
clarified butter, I am the fire, and I am the oblation. (See also 4.24). I am
the supporter of the universe, the father, the mother, and the grandfather. I
am the object of knowledge, the sacred syllable ‘OM’, and also the Rig, the
Yajur, and the SÄma Vedas. I am the goal, the supporter, the Lord, the witness,
the abode, the refuge, the friend, the origin, the dissolution, the foundation,
the substratum, and the immutable seed. (See also 7.10 and 10.39) (9.16-18) I
give heat. I send, as well as withhold, the rain. I am immortality, as well as
death. I am also both the absolute and the temporal, O Arjuna. (The Supreme Being has become everything. See
also 13.12) (9.19)
Attaining salvation by devotional love
The doers of the
rituals prescribed in the Vedas, the drinkers of the nectar of devotion, whose
sins are cleansed, worship Me by doing good deeds for gaining heaven. As a
result of their meritorious deeds, they go to heaven and enjoy celestial sense
pleasures. (9.20) They return to the mortal world— after enjoying the wide
world of heavenly pleasures— upon exhaustion of their good Karma. Thus
following the injunctions of the three Vedas, persons working for the fruit of
their actions take repeated birth and death. (See also 8.25) (9.21)
I personally take care of both the
spiritual and material welfare of those ever-steadfast devotees who always
remember and adore Me with single-minded contemplation. (9.22) O Arjuna, even those
devotees who worship the deities with faith, they also worship Me, but in an
improper way. (9.23) Because I— the Supreme Being— alone am the enjoyer of all
sacrificial services (Yajna) and Lord of the universe. But people do not know
My true, transcendental nature. Therefore, they fall (into the repeated cycles
of birth and death). (9.24) Worshippers of the deities go to the deities;
worshippers of ancestors go to the ancestors, and worshippers of the ghosts go
to the ghosts; but My devotees come to Me (and are not born again). (See also
8.16) (9.25)
The Lord accepts and eats the offering of love and
devotion
Whosoever offers Me a leaf, a flower, a fruit, or water
with devotion, I accept and eat the offering of devotion by the pure-hearted.
(9.26) O Arjuna, whatever you do, whatever you eat, whatever you offer as
oblation to the sacred fire, whatever charity you give, whatever austerity you
perform, do all that as an offering unto Me. (See also 12.10, 18.46) (9.27) You shall become free
from the bondage— good and bad— of Karma by this attitude of complete
renunciation (SamnyÄsa-yoga). Becoming liberated, you shall come to Me. (9.28)
There is no unforgivable sinner
The Self is present equally in all beings. There is no
one hateful or dear to Me. But those who worship Me with love and devotion are
very close to Me, and I am also very close to them. (See also 7.18) (9.29) If
even the most sinful person resolves to worship Me with single-minded, loving
devotion, such a person must be regarded as a saint because of making the right
resolution. (9.30) Such
a person soon becomes righteous and attains everlasting peace. Be aware, O
Arjuna, that My devotee shall never perish or fall down. (9.31)
The path of devotional love is easier
Anybody— including
women, merchants, laborers, and the evil-minded— can attain the supreme abode
by just surrendering unto My will with loving devotion, O Arjuna. (See also
18.66) (9.32) It should then be very easy for holy priests and devout royal
sages to attain the Supreme Being. Therefore, having obtained this joyless and
transitory human life, one should always worship Me with loving devotion.
(9.33) Fix your mind on
Me, be devoted to Me, worship Me, and bow down to Me. Thus uniting yourself
with Me by setting Me as the supreme goal and the sole refuge, you shall
certainly come to Me. (9.34)
The Supreme Lord said: O Arjuna, listen once
again to My supreme word that I shall speak to you, who are very dear to Me,
for your welfare. (10.01)
God is the origin of everything
Neither the celestial
controllers (Devas), nor the great sages know My origin because I am the origin
of all Devas and great sages also. (10.02) One who knows Me as the unborn, the
beginningless, and the Supreme Lord of the universe, is considered wise among
the mortals and becomes liberated from the bondage of Karma. (10.03)
Discrimination, Self-knowledge, non-delusion, forgiveness, truthfulness,
control over the mind and senses, tranquility, pleasure, pain, birth, death,
fear, fearlessness, nonviolence, calmness, contentment, austerity, charity,
fame, ill fame— these diverse qualities in human beings arise from Me alone.
(10.04-05) The seven great sages, four Sanakas, and fourteen Manus, from whom
all the creatures of the world were born, originated from My potential energy.
(10.06)
One
who truly understands My manifestations and yogic powers, is united with Me by
unswerving devotion. There is no doubt about it. (10.07) I am the origin of all.
Everything emanates from Me. Understanding this, the wise adore Me with love
and devotion. (10.08) My
devotees remain ever content and delighted. Their minds remain absorbed
in Me and their lives surrendered unto Me. They always enlighten each other by
talking about Me. (10.09)
God gives knowledge to His devotees
I give knowledge and
understanding of metaphysical science— to those who are ever united with Me and
lovingly adore Me— by which they come to Me. (10.10) I, who dwell within their
inner psyche as consciousness, destroy the darkness born of ignorance by the
shining lamp of transcendental knowledge as an act of compassion for them.
(10.11) Arjuna said: You are the Supreme Being, the Supreme Abode, the
Supreme Purifier, the Eternal Divine Being, the primal God, the unborn, and the
omnipresent. All sages have thus acclaimed You. The divine sage NÄrada, Asita,
Devala, VyÄsa, and You Yourself tell me that. (10.12-13)
Nobody can know the real nature
O Krishna, I believe
all that You have told me to be true. O Lord, neither the celestial controllers
nor the demons fully understand Your real nature. (See also 4.06) (10.14) O Creator and Lord of all
beings, God of all celestial rulers, Supreme person, and Lord of the universe,
You alone know Yourself by Yourself. (10.15) Therefore, You alone
are able to fully describe Your own divine glories— the manifestations— by
which You exist pervading all the universes. (10.16) How may I know You, O
Lord, by constant contemplation? In what form of manifestation am I to think of
You, O Lord? (10.17) O Lord, explain to me again, in detail, Your yogic power
and glory because I am not satiated by hearing Your nectar-like words. (10.18)
Everything is a manifestation of
the Absolute
The Supreme Lord said: O Arjuna, now I shall
explain to you My prominent divine manifestations because My manifestations are
endless. (10.19) O Arjuna, I am the Spirit abiding in the inner psyche of all
beings. I am also the beginning, the middle, and the end of all beings. (10.20)
I am the sustainer, I am the radiant sun among the luminaries, I am the
supernatural controllers of wind, I am the moon among the stars. (10.21) I am
the Vedas, I am the celestial rulers, I am the mind among the senses, I am the
consciousness in living beings. (10.22) I am Lord Shiva, I am the god of
wealth, I am the god of fire, and the mountains. (10.23) I am the priest and
the army general of the celestial controllers, O Arjuna. I am the ocean among
the bodies of water. (10.24) I am sage Bhrigu among the great sages; I am the
monosyllable cosmic sound, OM, among the words; I am the silent repetition of
mantra (Japa) among the spiritual disciplines; and I am the Himalaya among the
mountains. (10.25)
I am the holy fig tree
among the trees, NÄrada among the sages, and I am all other celestial rulers.
(10.26) Know Me as the celestial animal among the animals and the King among
men. I am the thunderbolt among weapons, and I am Cupid for procreation.
(10.27-28) I am the water god and the manes. I am the controller of death. I
was that great devotee of Mine, PrahlÄda. I am death among the healers, lion
among the beasts, and the king of birds among birds. (10.29-30) I am the wind
among the purifiers and Lord RÄma among the warriors. I am the crocodile among
the sea creatures and the holy GangÄ river among the rivers. (10.31)
I
am the beginning, the middle, and the end of all creation, O Arjuna. Among
knowledge I am knowledge of the supreme Self. I am logic of the logician.
(10.32) I am the letter ‘A’ among the alphabets. I am the dual compound among
the compound words. I am the endless time. I am the sustainer of all, and have
faces on all sides (or I am omniscient). (10.33) I am the all-devouring death
and also the origin of future beings. I am the seven goddesses or guardian
angels presiding over the seven qualities— fame, prosperity, speech, memory, intellect,
resolve, and forgiveness. (10.34) I am BrihatsÄma among the Vedic hymns. I am
GÄyatri mantra among the Vedic mantras. I am November-December among the
months, I am the spring among the seasons. (10.35)
I am gambling of the cheats, splendor of the splendid,
victory of the victorious, resolution of the resolute, and goodness of the
good. (10.36)
I
am Krishna among the Vrishni family, Arjuna among the PÄndavas, VyÄsa among the
sages, and UshanÄ among the poets. (10.37) I am the power of rulers, the
statesmanship of the seekers of victory, I am silence among the secrets, and
the Self-knowledge of the knowledgeable. (10.38) I am the origin of all beings,
O Arjuna. There is nothing, animate or inanimate, that can exist without Me.
(See also 7.10 and 9.18) (10.39)
The manifest creation is a very small fraction of the
Absolute
There is no end of My
divine manifestations, O Arjuna. This is only a brief description by Me of the
extent of My divine manifestations. (10.40) Whatever is endowed with glory, brilliance,
and power— know that to be a manifestation of a very small fraction of My
splendor. (10.41) What is the need for this detailed knowledge, O Arjuna? I
continually support the entire universe by a small fraction of My divine power
(Yoga-MÄyÄ). (10.42)
Arjuna said: My illusion is
dispelled by the profound words of wisdom You spoke out of compassion for me
about the supreme secret of Eternal Being. (11.01) O Krishna, I have heard from
You in detail about the origin and dissolution of beings and Your immutable
glory. (11.02)
The vision of God is the ultimate
O Lord, You are as You have said, yet I wish to see Your
divine cosmic form, O Supreme Being. (11.03) O Lord, if You think it is possible for
me to see Your universal form, then, O Lord of the yogis, show me Your
transcendental form. (11.04) The Supreme Lord said: O Arjuna, behold My
hundreds and thousands of multifarious divine forms of different colors and
shapes. Behold all the celestial beings and many wonders never seen before.
Also behold the entire creation— animate, inanimate, and whatever else you
would like to see— all at one place in My body. (11.05-07) But you are not able to see Me
with your physical eye; therefore, I give you the divine eye to see My majestic
power and glory. (11.08)
Lord Krishna shows His cosmic form
Sanjaya said: O King, having said
this, Lord Krishna, the great Lord of the mystic power of yoga, revealed His
supreme majestic form to Arjuna. (11.09) Arjuna saw the Universal Form of the
Lord with many mouths and eyes, and many marvelous visions with numerous divine
ornaments, holding many divine weapons, wearing divine garlands and apparel,
anointed with celestial perfumes and ointments, full of all wonders— the
limitless God with faces on all sides. (11.10-11) If the splendor of thousands
of suns were to blaze forth all at once in the sky, even that would not
resemble the splendor of that exalted being. (11.12) Arjuna saw the entire
universe, divided in many ways, but standing as (all in) One (and One in all)
in the transcendental body of Krishna, the Lord of celestial rulers. (See also
13.16, and 18.20) (11.13)
qualified to see God
(Upon seeing the cosmic
form of the Lord) Arjuna was filled with wonder; and his hairs standing on end,
bowed his head to the Lord and prayed with folded hands. (11.14) Arjuna
said: O Lord, I see in Your body all supernatural controllers and
multitudes of beings, all sages, celestial serpents, Lord Shiva, as well as
Lord BrahmÄ seated on the lotus. (11.15) O Lord of the universe, I see You everywhere with
infinite forms, with many arms, stomachs, faces, and eyes. O Universal Form, I
see neither your beginning nor the middle nor the end. (11.16) I see
You with Your crown, club, discus, and massive radiance, difficult to behold,
shining all around like the immeasurable brilliance and blazing fire of the
sun. (11.17)
I
believe You are the Supreme Being to be realized. You are the ultimate resort
of the universe. You are the Eternal Being and protector of the eternal order
(Dharma). (11.18) I see You with infinite power, without beginning, middle, or
end; with many arms; with the sun and the moon as Your eyes; with Your mouth as
a blazing fire, scorching the entire universe with Your radiance. (11.19) O
Lord, the entire space between heaven and earth in all directions is pervaded
by You. Seeing Your marvelous and terrible form, the three worlds are trembling
with fear. (11.20) Hosts of supernatural rulers enter into You. Some with
folded hands sing Your names and glories in fear. A multitude of perfected
beings hail and adore You with abundant praises. (11.21) All the celestial
beings amazingly gaze at You. Seeing your infinite form with many mouths, eyes,
arms, thighs, feet, stomachs, and many fearful tusks; the worlds are trembling
with fear, and so do I, O mighty Lord. (11.22-23)
the Cosmic form
Seeing Your effulgent
and colorful form touching the sky; Your mouth wide open and large shining
eyes; I am frightened and find neither peace nor courage, O Krishna. (11.24)
Seeing Your mouths with fearful tusks, glowing like fires of cosmic
dissolution, I lose my sense of direction and find no comfort. Have mercy on
me, O Lord of celestial rulers, refuge of the universe! (11.25) All my cousin
brothers, along with the hosts of other kings and warriors on the other side,
together with chief warriors on our side, are also quickly entering into Your
fearful mouths with terrible tusks. Some are seen caught in between the tusks
with their heads crushed. (11.26-27) These warriors of the mortal world are
entering Your blazing mouths as many torrents of the rivers enter into the
ocean. (11.28) All these people are rapidly rushing into Your mouths for
destruction as moths rush with great speed into the blazing flame for
destruction. (11.29) You are licking up all the worlds with Your flaming
mouths, swallowing them from all sides. Your powerful radiance is filling the
entire universe with effulgence and burning it, O Krishna. (11.30) Tell me who
You are in such a fierce form? My salutations to You, O best of all celestial
rulers, be merciful! I wish to understand You, O primal Being, because I do not
know Your mission. (11.31)
We are only a divine instrument
The Supreme Lord said: I am death, the mighty
destroyer of the world. I have come here to destroy all these people. Even
without your participation in the war, all the warriors standing arrayed in the
opposing armies shall cease to exist. (11.32) Therefore get up and attain
glory. Conquer your enemies, and enjoy a prosperous kingdom. All these warriors
have already been destroyed by Me. You are merely My instrument, O
Arjuna. (11.33) Kill all these great warriors who are already killed
by Me. Do not fear. You will certainly conquer the enemies in the battle;
therefore, fight! (11.34)
Arjuna’s prayers to the Cosmic form
Sanjaya said: Having heard these
words of Krishna, the crowned Arjuna, trembling with folded hands, prostrated
with fear and spoke to Krishna in a choked voice. (11.35) Arjuna said: Rightly,
O Krishna, the world delights and rejoices in glorifying You. Terrified demons
flee in all directions. The hosts of perfected ones bow to You in adoration.
(11.36) Why should they not— O great soul— bow to You, the original creator who
is even greater than BrahmÄ, the creator of material worlds? O infinite Lord, O
God of all celestial rulers, O abode of the universe, You are both Sat
(eternal) and Asat (temporal), and the Supreme Being that is beyond both Sat
and Asat. (See also 9.19, and 13.12) (11.37)
You
are the primal God, the most ancient Person. You are the ultimate resort of all
the universe. You are the knower, the object of knowledge, and the supreme
abode. The entire universe is pervaded by You, O Lord of the infinite form.
(11.38) You are the controller of death, the fire, the wind, the water god, the
moon god, and BrahmÄ, the creator, as well as the father of BrahmÄ. Salutations
to You a thousand times, and again and again salutations to You. (11.39) My
salutations to You from front and from behind. O Lord, my obeisances to You
from all sides. You are infinite valor and boundless might. You pervade
everything; therefore, You are everywhere and in everything. (11.40)
Considering
You merely as a friend, and not knowing Your greatness, I have inadvertently
addressed You as O Krishna, O YÄdava, O friend, etc., merely out of affection
or carelessness. (11.41) In whatever way I may have insulted You in jokes while
playing, reposing in bed, sitting, or at meals; when alone or in front of
others, O Krishna, the immeasurable One, I implore You for forgiveness. (11.42)
You are the father of this animate and inanimate world, and the greatest Guru
to be worshipped. No one is even equal to You in the three worlds; how can
there be one greater than You, O Being of incomparable glory? (11.43)
Therefore,
O adorable Lord, I seek Your mercy by bowing down and prostrating my body
before You. Bear with me as a father to his son, as a friend to a friend, and
as a husband to his wife, O Lord. (11.44) I am delighted by beholding that
which has never been seen before, and yet my mind is tormented with fear.
Therefore, O God of celestial rulers, the refuge of the universe, have mercy on
me and show me Your four-armed form. (11.45)
I wish to see You with
a crown, holding mace and discus in Your hand. Therefore, O Lord, with thousand
arms and universal form, please appear in the four-armed form. (11.46) The
Supreme Lord said: O Arjuna, being pleased with you I have shown you—
through My own yogic powers— this particular, supreme, shining, universal,
infinite, and primal form of Mine that has never been seen before by anyone
other than you. (11.47) O Arjuna, neither by study of the Vedas, nor by
sacrifice, nor by charity, nor by rituals, nor by severe austerities, can I be
seen in this cosmic form by anyone other than you in this human world. (11.48)
Do
not be perturbed and confused by seeing such a terrible form of Mine as this.
With fearless and cheerful mind, now behold My four-armed form. (11.49) Sanjaya
said: After speaking like this to Arjuna, Krishna revealed His four-armed
form. And then assuming His pleasant human form, Lord Krishna, the Great One,
consoled Arjuna who was terrified. (11.50) Arjuna said: O Krishna,
seeing this lovely human form of Yours, I have now become tranquil and I am
normal again. (11.51)
God can be seen by devotional love
The Supreme Lord said: This (four-armed) form
of Mine that you have seen is very difficult, indeed, to see. Even celestial
controllers are ever longing to see this form. (11.52) This four-armed form of Mine
that you have just seen cannot be seen even by study of the Vedas, or by
austerity, or by acts of charity, or by the performance of rituals. (11.53) However, through single-minded devotion
alone, I can be seen in this form, can be known in essence, and also can be
reached, O Arjuna. (11.54)
One who dedicates all works to Me, and to whom I am the supreme goal, who is my
devotee, who has no attachment, and is free from enmity towards any being—
attains Me, O Arjuna. (See also 8.22) (11.55)
Should one worship a personal or an impersonal God?
Arjuna said: Which of these has the best knowledge of
yoga— those ever-steadfast devotees who thus worship You (as Krishna, Your
personal aspect), or those who worship Your impersonal aspect, the Eternal
Being? (12.01) The Supreme Lord said: I consider the best yogis to be those
ever steadfast devotees who worship with supreme faith by fixing their mind on
Me as their personal god. (See also 6.47) (12.02) They also attain Me who
worship the unchangeable, the inexplicable, the invisible, the omnipresent, the
inconceivable, the unchanging, and the immovable Eternal Being; restraining all
the senses, even minded under all circumstances, and engaged in the welfare of
all creatures. (12.03-04)
personal form of God
Self-realization is more difficult for those who fix
their mind on the impersonal, unmanifest, Eternal Being because comprehension
of the unmanifest by embodied beings is attained with difficulty. (12.05) But for those who
worship Me with unswerving devotion as their personal god, offer all actions to
Me, intent on Me as the Supreme, and meditate on Me; I swiftly become their
savior— from the world that is the ocean of death and transmigration— whose
thoughts are set on My personal form, O Arjuna. (12.06-07)
Therefore, focus your mind on Me, and let your intellect
dwell upon Me alone (through meditation and contemplation). Thereafter, you
shall certainly attain Me. (12.08) If you are unable to focus your mind steadily
on Me, then long to attain Me, O Arjuna, by practice of (any other) spiritual
discipline that suits you. (12.09) If you are unable even to do any spiritual
discipline, then be intent on performing your duty for Me. You shall attain
perfection just by working for Me (as an instrument, just to serve and please
Me, without any selfish motive). (See also 9.27, 18.46) (12.10) If you are
unable to work for Me, then just surrender unto My will and renounce (the
attachment to, and the anxiety for) the fruits of all work with subdued mind
(by learning to accept all results, as God's grace with calmness. (12.11)
The knowledge of scriptures is better than mere
ritualistic practice; meditation is better than scriptural knowledge; TyÄga, or renunciation of attachment
to the fruits of work is better than meditation; peace immediately follows TyÄga.
(See more on renunciation in 18.02, 18.09) (12.12)
One who does not hate
any creature, who is friendly and compassionate, free from the notion of
"I" and "my", even-minded in pain and pleasure, forgiving;
and the yogi who is ever content, who has subdued the mind, whose resolve is
firm, whose mind and intellect are engaged in dwelling upon Me, who is devoted
to Me—  is dear to Me. (12.13-14) The one
by whom others are not agitated and who is not agitated by others, who is free
from joy, envy, fear, and anxiety, is also dear to Me. (12.15) One who is
desireless, pure, wise, impartial, and free from anxiety; who has renounced the
doership in all undertakings— such a devotee is dear to Me. (12.16) One who neither rejoices nor
grieves, neither likes nor dislikes, who has renounced both the good and the
evil, and is full of devotion— is dear to Me. (12.17) The one who
remains the same towards friend or foe, in honor or disgrace, in heat or cold,
in pleasure or pain; who is free from attachment; who is indifferent to censure
or praise, quiet, content with whatever one has, unattached to a place (a
country, or a house), calm, and full of devotion— that person is dear to Me.
(12.18-19)
One should sincerely try to develop
divine qualities
But those faithful devotees are very dear to Me who set
Me as their supreme goal and follow (or just sincerely try to develop) the
above mentioned nectar of moral values. (12.20)
The Supreme Lord said: O Arjuna, this
physical body, the miniature universe, may be called the field or creation. One
who knows the creation is called the creator by the seers of truth. (13.01) O Arjuna, know Me to be the creator of all the creation. The true
understanding of both the creator and the creation is considered by Me to be
the transcendental (or metaphysical) knowledge. (13.02) What the creation is, what it is like, what
its transformations are, where its source is, who that creator is, and what His
powers are— hear all these from Me in brief. (13.03)
The seers have separately described the creation and
the creator in different ways in the Vedic hymns, and also in the conclusive
and convincing verses of the Brahma-Sutra. (13.04) The primary material Nature,
cosmic intellect, "I" consciousness or ego, five basic elements, ten
organs, mind, five sense objects; and desire, hatred, pleasure, pain, the
physical body, consciousness, and resolve— thus the entire field has been
briefly described with its transformations. (See also 7.04) (13.05-06)
Humility, modesty, nonviolence, forgiveness, honesty,
service to guru, purity (of thought, word, and deed), steadfastness,
self-control; and aversion towards sense objects, absence of ego; constant
reflection on pain and suffering inherent in birth, old age, disease, and
death; (13.07-08) detached
attachment with family members, home, etc.; unfailing calmness upon attainment
of the desirable and the undesirable; and unswerving devotion to Me through
single-minded contemplation, taste for solitude, distaste for social gatherings
and gossips; steadfastness in acquiring the knowledge of Eternal Being, and
seeing the omnipresent Supreme Being everywhere— this is said to be (the means
of) Self-knowledge. That which is contrary to this is ignorance. (13.09-11)
God can be described by parables and not in any other way
I shall fully describe
the object of knowledge— knowing which one attains immortality. The
beginningless Supreme Being is said to be neither eternal (Sat) nor temporal
(Asat). (See also 9.19, 11.37, and 15.18) (13.12) The Eternal Being has His
hands, feet, eyes, head, mouth, and ears everywhere because He is all-pervading
and omnipresent. (13.13) He is the perceiver of all sense objects without the
physical sense organs; unattached, and yet the sustainer of all; devoid of
three modes of material Nature, and yet the enjoyer of the modes of material
Nature by becoming a living entity. (13.14) He is inside as well as outside all
beings, animate and inanimate. He is incomprehensible because of His subtlety.
And because of His omnipresence, He is very near— residing in one’s inner
psyche; as well as far away— in the Supreme Abode. (13.15) He is undivided, and
yet appears to exist as if divided in beings. He, the object of knowledge,
appears as: BrahmÄ, the creator; Vishnu, the sustainer; and Shiva, the
destroyer of all beings. (See also 11.13, and 18.20) (13.16)
The
Supreme Person is the source of all light. He is said to be beyond darkness (of
ignorance or MÄyÄ). He is the Self-knowledge, the object of Self-knowledge, and
seated in the inner psyche (or the causal heart as consciousness (See verse
18.61)) of all beings, He is to be realized by Self-knowledge. (See also 15.06
and 15.12) (13.17) Thus the creation as well as the knowledge and the object of
knowledge have been briefly described by Me. Understanding this, My devotee
attains My supreme abode. (13.18)
A description of the supreme spirit, spirit, and
individual soul
Know that both the
material Nature and the Spiritual Being are beginningless. All manifestations
and three states of mind and matter, called modes or Gunas, are born of
Prakriti. Prakriti is said to be the cause of production of the physical body
and the eleven organs of perception and action. Purusha (Consciousness, Spirit)
is said to be the cause of experiencing pleasure and pain. (13.19-20) Purusha enjoys three modes of
material Nature (Prakriti) by associating with Prakriti. Attachment to the
Gunas (due to ignorance caused by previous Karma) is the cause of birth of the
living entity in good and evil wombs. (13.21)
Eternal
Being (Brahma, AtmÄ, Spirit) in
the body is also called the witness, the guide, the supporter, the enjoyer, the
great Lord, and also the Supreme Self. (13.22) They who truly understand
Spiritual Being (Purusha) and the material Nature (Prakriti) with its three
modes (Gunas) are not born again, regardless of their way of life. (13.23) Some
perceive the supersoul in their inner psyche through mind and intellect that
have been purified either by meditation or by metaphysical knowledge or by Karma-yoga.
(13.24)
 The faith alone can
lead to NirvÄna
Others, however, do not
know the yogas of meditation, knowledge, and work; but they perform deity
worship with faith, as mentioned in the scriptures by the saints and sages.
They also transcend death by virtue of their firm faith in what they have
heard. (13.25) Whatever is born, animate or inanimate, know them to be born
from the union of the matter and Spirit, O Arjuna. (See also 7.06) (13.26) The one who sees the same
eternal Supreme Lord dwelling as Spirit equally within all mortal beings, truly
sees. (13.27)
Because
of beholding one and the same Lord existing equally in every being, one does
not injure anybody and thereupon attains the supreme abode. (13.28) One who
perceives that all works are done by the powers (Gunas) of material Nature
(Prakriti) alone, and thus does not consider oneself as the doer, that person
truly understands. (See also 3.27, 5.09, and 14.19) (13.29) The moment one
discovers the diverse variety of beings and their ideas abiding in One and
coming out from That alone, one attains the Supreme Being. (13.30)
Because of being
beginningless and unaffectable by the three modes of material Nature, the
eternal supersoul— even though dwelling in the body as a living entity— neither
does anything nor becomes tainted, O Arjuna. (13.31) Just as the all-pervading
space is not tainted because of its subtlety; similarly, Spirit, abiding in all
bodies, is not tainted. (13.32) Just as one sun illuminates the entire world;
similarly, Eternal Being illumines (or gives life to) the entire creation, O
Arjuna. (13.33)
They attain the Supreme, who perceive
the difference between creation (or the body) and the creator (or the AtmÄ) with the eye of
Self-knowledge, and know the technique (by
using any one of the five paths— Selfless service, Knowledge, Devotion,
Meditation, and Surrender) of liberation of the living entity (Jeeva) from the trap of divine
illusory energy (MÄyÄ). (13.34)
The
Vedas and Upanishads say: The Creator has become the creation.
14. THREE MODES (GUNAS) OF NATURE
The Supreme Lord said: I shall further explain
to you that supreme knowledge, the best of all knowledge, knowing which all the
sages have attained supreme perfection after this life. (14.01) They who have
taken refuge in this transcendental knowledge attain unity with Me and are
neither born at the time of creation, nor afflicted at the time of dissolution.
(14.02)
All beings are born from the union of spirit and matter
My material Nature is the womb of creation wherein I
place the seed of consciousness from which all beings are born, O Arjuna. (See
also 9.10) (14.03) Whatever
forms are produced in all different wombs, O Arjuna, the material Nature is
their body-giving mother; and I am the life-giving father. (14.04)
How three modes of material nature bind the soul to the
body
Goodness, passion (or activity) and ignorance (or
inertia)— these three modes (or ropes, Gunas) of material Nature (Prakriti)
fetter the eternal individual soul (Jeeva) to the body, O Arjuna. (14.05) Of these, the mode of
goodness is illuminating and good because it is pure. It fetters the living
entity by attachment to happiness and knowledge, O sinless Arjuna. (14.06) Know
that the mode of passion is characterized by intense craving and is the source
of desire and attachment. It binds the living entity by attachment to the
fruits of work. (14.07) Know, O Arjuna, that the mode of ignorance— the deluder
of living entity— is born of inertia. It binds the living entity by
carelessness, laziness, and excessive sleep. (14.08) O Arjuna, the mode of
goodness attaches one to happiness (of learning and knowing the Eternal Being);
the mode of passion attaches to action; and the mode of ignorance attaches to
negligence by covering Self-knowledge. (14.09)
Goodness prevails by
suppressing passion and ignorance; passion prevails by suppressing goodness and
ignorance; and ignorance prevails by suppressing goodness and passion, O
Arjuna. (14.10) When the light of Self-knowledge illuminates all the senses (or
gates) in the body, then it should be known that goodness is predominant.
(14.11) O Arjuna, when passion is predominant, greed, activity, undertaking of
selfish work, restlessness, excitement, etc. arise. (14.12) O Arjuna, when
inertia is predominant, ignorance, inactivity, carelessness, delusion, etc.
arise. (14.13)
Three modes are also the vehicles of transmigration for
the individual soul
One who dies when
goodness dominates goes to heaven— the pure world of knowers of the Supreme.
(14.14) One who dies when passion dominates is reborn attached to action (or
the utilitarian type). One who dies in ignorance is reborn as a lower creature.
(14.15) The fruit of good action is said to be beneficial and pure; the fruit
of passionate action is pain; and the fruit of ignorant action is laziness.
(14.16) Self-knowledge arises from the mode of goodness; greed arises from the
mode of passion; and negligence, delusion, and slowness of mind arise from the
mode of ignorance. (14.17) They who are established in goodness go to heaven;
passionate persons are reborn in the mortal world; and the ignorant, abiding in
the lowest mode of ignorance, go to lower planets or hell (or take birth as
lower creatures). (14.18)
Attain NirvÄna after transcending three modes of material
nature
When visionaries
perceive no doer other than the three modes of material Nature and know the
Supreme, which is above and beyond these modes, then they attain salvation
(Mukti). (See also 3.27, 5.09, and 13.29) (14.19) When one transcends (or rises above) the three
modes of material Nature that create (and/or originate in) the body, one
attains immortality or salvation (Mukti) and is freed from the pains of birth,
old age, and death. (14.20)
Arjuna said: What are the marks of
those who have transcended the three modes of material Nature, and what is
their conduct? How does one transcend these three modes of material Nature, O
Lord Krishna? (14.21) The Supreme Lord said: One is said to have
transcended the modes of material Nature who neither hates the presence of
enlightenment, activity, and delusion; nor desires for them when they are
absent; who remains like a witness without being affected by the modes of
material Nature; who stays firmly attached to the Lord without wavering—
thinking that only the modes of material Nature are operating. (14.22-23) And
one who depends on the Lord and is indifferent to pain and pleasure; to whom a
clod, a stone, and gold are alike; to whom the dear and the unfriendly are alike;
who is of firm mind; who is calm in censure and in praise, and indifferent to
honor and disgrace; who is impartial to friend and foe; and who has renounced
the sense of doership. (14.24-25)
cut by devotional love
One who offers service to Me with love and unswerving
devotion transcends the three modes of material Nature and becomes fit for
BrahmaNirvÄna. (See also 7.14 and 15.19) (14.26) Because I
am the basis of the immortal Eternal Being, of everlasting order (Dharma), and
of the absolute bliss. (14.27)
Creation is like a tree created by
the powers of MÄyÄ
The Supreme Lord said: Sages talk about an
eternal, ever changing macrocosmic tree whose root is the Supreme Being and the
trunk is Brahman. The Vedic knowledge are its leaves. One who truly knows this
tree is wise. (See also 10.08) (15.01) The branches of the macrocosmic tree are
spread all over the cosmos. The (other microcosmic) tree (of life) on earth is
nourished by the energy of material Nature; sense objects are its sprouts; and
below in the human world its roots of Karmic bondage are present. (15.02)
(Both the macrocosmic universe and the microcosmic tree of life on the
earth are compared to an eternal tree in verses 15.01 and 15.02, respectively.)
How to cut the tree of attachment
and attain salvation
The beginning, the end, the existence,
or the real form of this tree of life is not perceptible on earth. Having cut
the deep roots of this tree by the sharp ax of (Self-knowledge and) detachment,
the Supreme goal should be sought, reaching which one does not come back to the
mortal world again. One should be always thinking: I take refuge in that very
primal person from which this primal manifestation comes forth. (15.03-04) The wise reach that eternal
goal, who are free from pride and delusion, who have conquered the evil of
attachment, who constantly dwell in the Supreme Self with all desires
completely stilled, and who are free from dualities of pleasure and pain.
(15.05) The sun does not illumine My supreme abode, nor does the
moon, nor the fire. Having reached there people attain permanent liberation
(Mukti) and do not come back to this temporal world again. (See also 13.17 and
15.12) (15.06)
The embodied soul is the enjoyer
The eternal individual soul in the body of living beings
is, indeed, My integral part. It associates with the six sensory faculties of
perception— including the mind— and activates them. (15.07) Just as the air
takes aroma away from the flower; similarly, the individual soul takes out the
six subtle sensory faculties (or causal and subtle bodies) from the physical
body it casts off during death to the new physical body it acquires in
reincarnation (by the power of Karma). (See also 2.13) (15.08) The living entity
(Jeeva) enjoys sense pleasures using six sensory faculties of hearing, touch,
sight, taste, smell, and mind. The ignorant cannot perceive Jeeva departing
from the body, or staying in the body and enjoying sense pleasures by
associating with the modes of material Nature. But those who have the eye of
Self-knowledge can see it. (15.09-10) The yogis, striving for perfection,
behold the living entity (Jeeva) abiding in their inner psyche (as
consciousness), but the ignorant and those whose inner psyche is not pure, even
though striving, do not perceive Him. (15.11)
Spirit is the essence of everything
Know the light energy
to be Mine that comes from the sun and illumines the whole world and is in the
moon and in fire. (See also 13.17 and 15.06) (15.12) Entering the earth, I
support all beings with My energy. Becoming the sap-giving moon, I nourish all
the plants. (15.13) Becoming the digestive fire, I remain in the body of all
living beings. Uniting with vital life forces (PrÄna and ApÄna), I digest all
types of food. (15.14) And
I am seated in the inner psyche of all beings. Memory, Self-knowledge, and removal
of doubts and wrong notions (about the Eternal Being by reasoning or in trance
(SamÄdhi)) come from Me. I am, in truth, that which is to be known by the
study of all the Vedas. I am, indeed, the author of the VedÄnta and the knower of the
Vedas. (See also 6.39) (15.15)
What are the supreme spirit, spirit
and the created beings?
There are two entities
(or Purushas) in the cosmos: the changeable or temporal Divine Beings (Kshara
Purusha), and the unchangeable Eternal Being (Brahma, Akshara Purusha). All
created beings are subject to change, but the Eternal Being does not change.
(15.16) The Supreme Being is beyond both the Temporal Divine Beings and the
Eternal Being. He is also called the Absolute Reality or ParamÄtmÄ, who sustains both the Temporal and
the Eternal by pervading everything. (15.17) Because I am beyond both the Temporal and the Eternal,
therefore, I am known in this world and in the Veda as the Supreme Being
(ParaBrahma, ParamÄtmÄ, Purushottama, the Absolute, Truth,
Sat, Supersoul, etc.). (15.18) The wise, who truly understand Me as
the Supreme Being, know everything and worship Me wholeheartedly, O Arjuna.
(See also 7.14, 14.26, and 18.66) (15.19) Thus, I have explained this most
secret science of Self-knowledge, O sinless Arjuna. Having understood this, one
becomes enlightened; one’s all duties are accomplished; and the goal of human
life is achieved, O Arjuna. (15.20)
16. DIVINE AND THE DEMONIC QUALITIES
A list of major divine qualities that should be
cultivated for salvation
The Supreme Lord said: Fearlessness, purity of
the inner psyche, perseverance in the yoga of Self-knowledge, charity,
sense-restraint, sacrifice, study of the scriptures, austerity, honesty;
nonviolence, truthfulness, absence of anger, renunciation, calmness, abstinence
from malicious talk, compassion for all creatures, freedom from greed,
gentleness, modesty, absence of fickleness, splendor, forgiveness, fortitude,
cleanliness, absence of malice, and absence of pride— these are the
(twenty-six) qualities of those endowed with divine virtues, O Arjuna.
(16.01-03)
A list of demonic qualities that
should be given up
O Arjuna, the marks of
those who are born with demonic qualities are: Hypocrisy, arrogance, pride,
anger, harshness, and ignorance. (16.04) Divine qualities lead to salvation
(Moksha); the demonic qualities are said to be for bondage. Do not grieve, O
Arjuna; you are born with divine qualities. (16.05)
There are only two types of human beings: the wise and
the ignorant
Basically, there are
only two types or castes of human beings in this world: The divine, and the
demonic.
The divine has been described at length. Now hear from Me about the demonic, O
Arjuna. (16.06) Persons of demonic nature do not know what to do and what not
to do. They have neither purity nor good conduct nor truthfulness. (16.07) They
say that the world is unreal, without a substratum, without a God, and without
an order. The world is caused by sexual union of man and woman alone and
nothing else. (16.08) Adhering to this wrong, atheistic view, these degraded
souls— with small intellect and cruel deeds— are born as enemies for the
destruction of the world. (16.09) Filled with insatiable desires, hypocrisy,
pride, and arrogance; holding wrong views due to delusion; they act with impure
motives, (16.10) obsessed with endless anxiety lasting until death, considering
sense gratification their highest aim, and convinced that sense pleasure is
everything; (16.11)
Bound
by hundreds of ties of desire and enslaved by lust and anger, they strive to
obtain wealth by unlawful means to fulfill sensual pleasures. They think:
(16.12) This has been gained by me today; I shall fulfill this desire; I have
this much wealth and will have more wealth in the future; (16.13) that enemy
has been slain by me, and I shall slay others also. I am the lord. I am the
enjoyer. I am successful, powerful, and happy; (16.14)
I
am rich and born in a noble family. Who is equal to me? I shall perform
sacrifice, I shall give charity, and I shall rejoice. (16.15) Thus deluded by
ignorance, bewildered by many fancies, entangled in the net of delusion,
addicted to the enjoyment of sensual pleasures, they fall into a foul hell.
(16.16) Self-conceited, stubborn, filled with pride and intoxication of wealth,
they perform sacrifice (charity, Yajna etc.) only in name for show, and not
according to scriptural injunction. (16.17) These malicious people cling to
egoism, power, arrogance, lust, and anger; and they deny My presence in their
own body and in others’ bodies. (16.18)
I hurl these haters,
cruel, sinful, and mean people into the cycles of rebirth in the womb of demons
again and again. (16.19) O Arjuna, entering the wombs of demons, birth after
birth, the deluded ones sink to the lowest hell without ever attaining Me.
(16.20)
Lust, anger, and greed are the
three gates to hell
Lust, anger, and greed are the three gates of hell
leading to the downfall (or bondage) of the individual. Therefore, one must
(learn to) give up these three. (16.21) One who is liberated from these three gates of
hell, O Arjuna, does what is best and consequently attains the supreme abode.
(16.22)
One who acts under the
influence of his or her desires, disobeying scriptural injunctions, neither
attains perfection nor happiness nor the supreme abode. (16.23) Therefore, let the scripture be
your authority in determining what should be done and what should not be done.
You should perform your duty following the scriptural injunction. (16.24)
Arjuna said: What is the mode of
devotion of those who perform spiritual practices with faith, but without
following the scriptural injunctions, O Krishna? Is it in the mode of goodness,
passion, or ignorance? (17.01)
The Supreme Lord said: The natural faith of
embodied beings is of three kinds: Goodness, passion, and ignorance. Now hear
about these from Me. (17.02) O Arjuna, the faith of each is in accordance with one’s own natural
disposition (that is governed by latent KÄrmic impressions or SamskÄra). One is
known by one’s faith. One can become whatever one wants to be (if one
constantly contemplates or visualizes the object of desire with deep faith in
God and a burning desire). (17.03) Persons in the mode of goodness
worship celestial controllers; those in the mode of passion worship
supernatural rulers and demons; and those in the mode of ignorance worship
ghosts and spirits. (17.04) Ignorant persons of demonic nature are those who
practice severe austerities without following the prescription of the
scriptures, who are full of hypocrisy and egotism, who are impelled by the
force of desire and attachment, and who senselessly torture the elements in
their body and also Me who dwells within the body. (17.05-06)
The food preferred by
all of us is also of three types. So are the sacrifice, austerity, and charity.
Now hear the distinction between them. (17.07) The foods that promote
longevity, virtue, strength, health, happiness, and joy are juicy, smooth,
substantial, and nutritious. Such foods are liked by persons in the mode of
goodness. (17.08) People in the mode of passion like foods that are very
bitter, sour, salty, hot, pungent, dry, and burning; and cause pain, grief, and
disease. (17.09) People in the mode of ignorance like foods that are stale,
tasteless, putrid, rotten, refuse, and impure (such as meat and alcohol).
(17.10)
Selfless service,
enjoined by the scriptures and performed without the desire for the fruit, with
a firm belief and conviction that it is a duty, is in the mode of goodness.
(17.11) Selfless service that is performed only for show and aiming for fruit,
is in the mode of passion, O Arjuna. (17.12) Selfless service that is performed
without following the scripture, in which no food is distributed, which is
devoid of mantra, faith, and gift, is said to be in the mode of ignorance.
(17.13)
Austerity of thought, word, and deed
The worship of
celestial controllers, the priest, the guru, and the wise; purity, honesty,
celibacy, and nonviolence— these are said to be austerity of deed. (17.14) Speech that is non-offensive,
truthful, pleasant, beneficial, and is used for the regular study of scriptures
is called the austerity of word. (17.15) Serenity of mind,
gentleness, calmness, self-control, and purity of thought— these are called
austerity of thought. (17.16)
The above mentioned
threefold austerity (of thought, word, and deed), practiced by yogis with
supreme faith, without a desire for the fruit, is said to be in the mode of
goodness. (17.17) Austerity that is performed for gaining respect, honor,
reverence, and for the sake of show, yielding an uncertain and temporary
result, is said to be in the mode of passion. (17.18) Austerity performed with
foolish stubbornness or with self-torture or for harming others, is said to be
in the mode of ignorance. (17.19)
Charity that is given
at the right place and time as a matter of duty to a deserving candidate who
does nothing in return, is considered to be in the mode of goodness. (17.20) Charity that is given
unwillingly, or to get something in return, or to gain some fruit, is said to
be in the mode of passion. (17.21) Charity that is given at a wrong
place and time to unworthy persons, or without paying respect to the receiver
or with ridicule, is said to be in the mode of ignorance. (17.22)
‘OM TAT SAT’ is said to
be the threefold name of the Eternal Being. Persons with good qualities, the
Vedas, and selfless service were created by and from Brahma in the ancient
time. (17.23) Therefore, acts of sacrifice, charity, and austerity prescribed
in the scriptures are always commenced by uttering ‘OM’ by the knowers of the
Supreme Being. (17.24) Various types of sacrifice, charity, and austerity are
performed by the seekers of salvation (Moksha) by uttering ‘TAT’ (or He is all)
without seeking a reward. (17.25) The word ‘SAT’ is used in the sense of
Reality and goodness. The word ‘SAT’ is also used for an auspicious act, O
Arjuna. (17.26) Faith in sacrifice, charity, and austerity is also called
‘SAT’. Selfless service for the sake of the Supreme is, in truth, termed as
‘SAT’. (17.27) Whatever
is done without faith— whether it is sacrifice, charity, austerity, or any
other act— is called ‘ASAT’. It has no value here or hereafter, O Arjuna.
(17.28)
18. MOKSHA BY
GIVING UP EGO
Arjuna said: I wish to know the
nature of SamnyÄsa and TyÄga and the difference between the two, O Lord
Krishna. (18.01)
Definition of renunciation and sacrifice
The Supreme Lord said: The sages call SamnyÄsa (Renunciation) the
complete renunciation of work for any personal profit. The wise define TyÄga
(Sacrifice) as the sacrifice of, and the freedom from attachment to the fruits
of all work. (See also 5.01, 5.05, and 6.01) (18.02) Some philosophers say
that all work is full of faults and should be given up, while others say that
acts of sacrifice, charity, and austerity should not be abandoned. (18.03)
O
Arjuna, listen to My conclusion about sacrifice. Sacrifice is said to be of
three types. (18.04) Acts of service, charity, and austerity should not be
abandoned, but should be performed because service, charity, and austerity are
the purifiers of the wise. (18.05) Even these obligatory works should be
performed without attachment to the fruits. This is My definite supreme advice,
O Arjuna. (18.06)
Giving up one's duty is
not proper. The abandonment of obligatory work is due to delusion and is
declared to be in the mode of ignorance. (18.07) One who abandons duty merely
because it is difficult or because of fear of bodily affliction, does not get
the benefits of sacrifice by performing such a sacrifice in the mode of
passion. (18.08) Obligatory work performed as duty, renouncing attachment to
the fruit, is alone to be regarded as sacrifice in the mode of goodness, O
Arjuna. (18.09) One who neither hates a disagreeable work, nor is attached to
an agreeable work, is considered a sacrificer (TyÄgi), imbued with the mode of
goodness, intelligent, and free from all doubts about the Supreme Being.
(18.10) Human beings
cannot completely abstain from work. Therefore, one who completely renounces
attachment to the fruits of all work is considered a TyÄgi.
(18.11) The threefold fruit of works— desirable, undesirable,
and mixed— accrues after death to the one who is not a TyÄgi, but never to a
TyÄgi. (18.12)
Learn from Me, O
Arjuna, the five causes, as described in the SÄmkhya doctrine, for the
accomplishment of all actions. They are: the physical body, the seat of Karma;
the modes of material Nature, the doer; the eleven organs of perception and
action, the instruments; various PrÄnas (bioimpulses, life forces); and the
fifth is presiding deities (of the eleven organs). (18.13-14) These are the
five causes of whatever action, whether right or wrong, one performs by
thought, word and deed. (18.15) Therefore, the ignorant, who consider one’s
body or the soul as the sole agent, do not understand due to imperfect
knowledge. (18.16) One who is free from the notion of doership and whose
intellect is not polluted by the desire to reap the fruit— even after slaying
all these people— neither slays nor is bound by the act of killing. (18.17) The
subject, the object, and the knowledge of the object are the threefold driving
force (or impetus) to an action. The eleven organs of perception and action,
the act, and the modes of material Nature are the three components of action.
(18.18)
Self-knowledge, action,
and agent are said to be of three types, according to the Guna theory of
SÄmkhya doctrine. Hear duly about these also. (18.19) The knowledge by which one
sees a single immutable Reality in all beings as undivided in the divided, such
knowledge is in the mode of goodness. (See also 11.13, and 13.16) (18.20) The
knowledge by which one sees different realities of various types among all
beings as separate from one another; such knowledge is in the mode of passion.
(18.21) The irrational, baseless, and worthless knowledge by which one clings
to one single effect (such as the body) as if it is everything, such knowledge
is declared to be in the mode of darkness of ignorance (18.22)
Obligatory duty
performed without likes and dislikes, attachment, and desire to enjoy the
fruit, is said to be in the mode of goodness. (18.23) Action performed with
ego, with selfish motives, and with too much effort, is in the mode of passion.
(18.24) Action that is undertaken because of delusion, disregarding
consequences, loss, injury to others, as well as one’s own ability, is said to
be in the mode of ignorance. (18.25)
The agent who is free
from attachment, is non-egotistic, endowed with resolve and enthusiasm, and
unperturbed in success or failure, is called good. (18.26) The agent who is
impassioned, who desires the fruits of work, who is greedy, violent, impure,
and gets affected by joy and sorrow, is called passionate. (18.27) The agent
who is undisciplined, vulgar, stubborn, wicked, malicious, lazy, depressed, and
procrastinating, is called ignorant. (18.28)
Three types of intellect
Now hear Me explain
fully and separately, O Arjuna, the threefold division of intellect and
resolve, based on modes of material Nature. (18.29) O Arjuna, that intellect is
in the mode of goodness which understands the path of work and the path of
renunciation, right and wrong action, fear and fearlessness, bondage and
liberation. (18.30) That intellect is in the mode of passion which cannot
distinguish between righteousness and unrighteousness, and right and wrong
action, O Arjuna. (18.31) That intellect is in the mode of ignorance which,
when covered by ignorance, accepts unrighteousness as righteousness and thinks
everything to be that which it is not, O Arjuna. (18.32)
That resolve is in the
mode of goodness by which one manipulates the functions of the mind, PrÄna
(bioimpulses, life forces) and senses for God-realization only, O Arjuna.
(18.33) That resolve is in the mode of passion by which one, craving for the
fruits of work, clings to duty (Dharma), earning wealth (Artha), and pleasure
(KÄma) with great attachment. (18.34) That resolve is in the mode of ignorance
by which a dull person does not give up sleep, fear, grief, despair, and
carelessness, O Arjuna. (18.35)
And now hear from Me, O
Arjuna, about the threefold pleasure. The pleasure that one enjoys from
spiritual practice results in cessation of all sorrows. (18.36) The pleasure
that appears as poison in the beginning, but is like nectar in the end, comes
by the grace of Self-knowledge and is in the mode of goodness. (18.37) Sensual pleasures that appear as
nectars in the beginning, but become poison in the end, are in the mode of
passion. (See also 5.22) (18.38) Pleasure that confuses a person in
the beginning and in the end as a result of sleep, laziness, and carelessness,
is in the mode of ignorance. (18.39) There is no being, either on the earth or
among the celestial controllers in the heaven, who can remain free from these
three modes of material Nature. (18.40)
The division of labor
into the four categories (or Varna)— BrÄhmana, Kshatriya, Vaishya, and Shudra—
is also based on the qualities inherent in people’s nature (or the natural
propensities, and not necessarily as one’s birth right), O Arjuna. (See also
4.13) (18.41) Intellectuals who have serenity, self-control, austerity, purity,
patience, honesty, transcendental knowledge, transcendental experience, and
belief in God are labeled as BrÄhmans. (18.42) Those having the qualities of
heroism, vigor, firmness, dexterity, steadfastness in battle, charity, and
administrative skills are called Kshatriyas or protectors. (18.43) Those who
are good at cultivation, cattle rearing, business, trade, and industry are
known as Vaishyas. Those who are very good in service and labor type work are
classed as Shudras. (18.44)
Attainment of salvation through duty,
discipline, and devotion
One can attain the
highest perfection by devotion to one’s natural work. Listen to Me how one
attains perfection while engaged in one’s natural work. (18.45) One attains perfection by
worshipping the Supreme Being— from whom all beings originate, and by whom all
this universe is pervaded— through performance of one’s natural duty for Him.
(See also 9.27, 12.10) (18.46) One’s inferior natural work is better
than superior unnatural work even though well performed. One who does the work
ordained by one’s inherent nature incurs no sin (or KÄrmic reaction). (See also
3.35) (18.47) One’s natural work, even though defective, should not be
abandoned because all undertakings are enveloped by defects as fire is covered
by smoke, O Arjuna. (18.48) The person whose mind is always free from
attachment, who has subdued the mind and senses, and who is free from desires,
attains the supreme perfection of freedom from the bondage of Karma by
renouncing all attachment to the fruits of work. (18.49)
Learn
from Me briefly, O Arjuna, how one who has attained such perfection (or the
freedom from the bondage of Karma) attains the Supreme Person, the goal of
transcendental knowledge. (18.50) Endowed with purified intellect, subduing the mind with firm resolve,
turning away from sound and other objects of the senses, giving up likes and
dislikes; living in solitude; eating lightly; controlling the mind, speech, and
organs of action; ever absorbed in yoga of meditation; taking refuge in
detachment; and relinquishing egotism, violence, pride, lust, anger, and
proprietorship— one becomes peaceful, free from the notion of "I†and
“my", and fit for attaining oneness with the Supreme Being. (18.51-53) Absorbed
in the Supreme Being, the serene one neither grieves nor desires. Becoming
impartial to all beings, one obtains My ParÄ-Bhakti, the highest devotional
love. (18.54) By
devotion one truly understands what and who I am in essence. Having known Me in
essence, one immediately merges with Me. (See also 5.19) (18.55)
A
Karma-yogi devotee attains Moksha, the eternal immutable abode, by My grace—
even while doing all duties— just by taking refuge in Me (by surrendering all
action to Me with loving devotion). (18.56) Sincerely offer all actions to Me, set Me as your supreme
goal, and completely depend on Me. Always fix your mind on Me and resort to Karma-yoga.
(18.57) When your mind becomes fixed on Me, you shall overcome all
difficulties by My grace. But, if you do not listen to Me due to ego, you shall
perish. (18.58)
KÄrmic bondage and the free will
If due to ego you
think: I shall not fight, your resolve is vain. Because your own nature will
compel you to fight. (18.59) O Arjuna, you are controlled by your own
nature-born KÄrmic impressions (or SamskÄra). Therefore, you shall do— even
against your will— what you do not wish to do out of delusion. (18.60) The Supreme Lord, Krishna,
abiding as the controller in the inner psyche of all beings, O Arjuna, causes
them to act (or work out their Karma) like a puppet (of Karma) mounted on a
machine. (18.61) Seek refuge in the Supreme Lord alone with loving
devotion, O Arjuna. By His grace you shall attain supreme peace and the Eternal
Abode. (18.62) Thus, I have explained the knowledge that is more secret than
the secret. After fully reflecting on this, do as you wish. (18.63)
Path of surrender is the ultimate
Hear once again My most
secret, supreme word. You are very dear to Me; therefore, I shall tell this for
your benefit. (18.64) Fix your mind on Me, be devoted to Me, offer service to
Me, bow down to Me, and you shall certainly reach Me. I promise you because you
are My very dear friend. (18.65)
Setting aside (doership and attachment, or ego) in  all duties, just surrender (your ego)
completely to My Will or Law (with firm faith). I shall liberate you from all
sins, the bonds of Karma. Do not grieve. (18.66)
The meaning of
abandoning all duties and taking refuge in the Lord is that one should perform duty without ego and
attachment to results as a service to please the Lord, in the spirit of total
surrender to His Will and totally depend only on Him for help and guidance. The
Lord takes full responsibility for a person who totally depends on Him with a
spirit of genuine self-surrender. Learn to accept all results as His grace or divine Will.
The highest service to God, and
the best charity
This knowledge should
never be spoken by you to one who is devoid of austerity, who is without
devotion, who does not desire to listen, or who speaks ill of Me. (18.67) The one who shall propagate (or
help the propagation of) this supreme secret philosophy (of the Gita) amongst
My devotees, shall be performing the highest devotional service to Me and shall
certainly (attain the Supreme Abode and) come to Me. (18.68) No other person
shall do a more pleasing service to Me, and no one on the earth shall be more
dear to Me. (18.69)
Those who shall study
our sacred dialogue shall be performing a holy act of knowledge-sacrifice. This
is My promise. (18.70) Whoever hears or reads this sacred dialogue in the form
of the Gita with faith and without cavil becomes free from sin, and attains
heaven— the higher worlds of those whose actions are pure and virtuous. (18.71)
O Arjuna, did you listen to this with single-minded attention? Has your
delusion born of ignorance been completely destroyed? (18.72) Arjuna said: By
Your grace my delusion is destroyed; I have gained Self-knowledge; my confusion
(with regard to body and AtmÄ)
is dispelled; and I shall obey Your command. (18.73) Sanjaya said: Thus,
I heard this wonderful dialogue between Lord Krishna and MahÄtmÄ Arjuna, causing my hair to stand on
end. (18.74) By the grace of (guru) sage VyÄsa, I heard this most secret and
supreme yoga directly from Krishna, the Lord of yoga, Himself speaking (to
Arjuna) before my very eyes (of clairvoyance granted by sage VyÄsa). (18.75) O
King, by repeated remembrance of this marvelous and sacred dialogue between
Lord Krishna and Arjuna, I am thrilled at every moment, and (18.76)
recollecting again and again, O King, that marvelous form of Krishna I am
greatly amazed, and I rejoice over and over again. (18.77)
Both Knowledge and action are needed
Wherever
there will be both Krishna, the Lord of yoga (or Dharma in the form of the
scriptures) and Arjuna with the weapons of duty and protection, there will be
everlasting prosperity, victory, happiness, and morality. This is my
conviction. (18.78)
Thus
ends the Bhagavad-Gita
EPILOGUE
The Farewell Message of
Lord Krishna
Lord Krishna, on the
eve of His departure from the arena of this world, after finishing the
difficult task of establishing righteousness (Dharma), gave His last parting
discourse to His cousin brother Uddhava, who was also His dearest devotee and
follower. At the end of a long sermon comprising more than one thousand verses,
Uddhava said: O Lord, I think the pursuit of yoga as You narrated to Arjuna and
now to me, is very difficult, indeed, for most people because it entails
control of the unruly senses. Please tell me a short, simple, and easy way to
God-realization. Lord Krishna, upon Uddhava’s request, gave the essentials of
Self-realization for the modern age as follows:
(1)
Do your duty to the best of your abilities for Me, without any selfish motive,
and remember Me at all times— before starting a work, at the completion of a
task, and while inactive. (2) Practice looking upon all creatures as Myself in
thought, word, and deed; and mentally bow down to them. (3) Awaken your dormant
Kundalini power and perceive— through the activities of mind, senses,
breathing, and emotions— that the power of God is within you at all times and
is constantly doing all the work using you as a mere instrument. The essence of
God-realization is also summarized in the four verses of the BhÄgavata
MahÄ-PurÄna as follows:
The
Supreme Lord Krishna said: O BrahmÄ, the one who wants to know Me, the Supreme
Personality of Godhead, Lord Shri Krishna, should only understand that I
existed before creation; I exist in creation, as well as after dissolution. Any
other existence is nothing but My illusory energy (MÄyÄ). I exist within the
creation and at the same time outside the creation. I am the all-pervading
Supreme Lord, who exists everywhere, in everything, and at all times.
   The Ten Commandments of Hinduism according to sage Patanjali
(PYS 2.30-2.32), are: (1) Nonviolence, (2) Truthfulness, (3) Non-stealÂing, (4)
Celibacy or sense control, (5) Non-greed, (6) Purity of thought, word, and
deed, (7) Contentment, (8) Austerity or renunciaÂtion, (9) Study of scriptures,
and (10) Surrendering to God with faithÂful loving devotion.
   Compare these with the ten basic teachings
of the Bible: (1) Thou shall not
kill; (2) Do not lie; (3) Do not steal; (4) Do not commit adultery; (5) Do not
covet; (6) Do not divorce your wife; (7) Do for others what you want them to do
for you; (8) If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn the other cheek; (9)
Love your neighbor as yourself; and (10) Love the Lord with all thy heart.
   The Eightfold Noble Path of Buddhism is: Right view, right thought,
right speech, right deeds, right livelihood, right effort, right resolve, and
right meditation. Abstinence from all evil, performance of good acts, and
purification of the mind is the doctrine of Buddha.
           The five cardinal principles of Islam are: (1) Faith in God, His
message, and His messengers; (2) Meditation and prayer on the glory, greatness,
and the message of God for spiritual growth; (3) Helping others by giving
charity; (4) Austerity for self-purification by fasting in the month of
Ramadan; and (5) Pilgrimage to the holy places.
   All great masters have given us Truth
revealed by the Supreme. Krishna taught us to feel spiritual oneness by seeing
divinity in each and everyone. Buddha taught us to purify ourselves and have
compassion for all creatures. Christ asked us to love all beings as we love
ourselves. Muhammad taught us to submit to the will of God and act like His
instruments.
   In some
religions, however, only the members of one’s own sect are considered favorites
of God, and others are considÂered infidels. The Vedas teach not only mere
religious tolerance but the acceptance of all other religions and prophets as
analogous to one’s own. The Vedas say: Let noble thoughts come to us from
everywhere (RV 1.89.01). The dignity and welfare of humanity lie in the unity
of races and religion (Swami Harihar). True knowledge of religÂion breaks down
all barriers, including the barriers between faiths (Gandhi). Any religion that
creates walls of conflict and hatred among people in the name of God is not a
religion, but selfish politics in disguise. We have no right to criticize any
religion, sect, or cult in any way. Differences in human interpretation of
scriptures ¾ the transcendent voice ¾ are due to taking the literal meaning, prejudice,
ignorance, taking lines out of context, as well as distortion,
misinterpretation, and interpolation with personal selfish motives.