Key Passages from the Bhagavad Gita
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This section contains a selection of the Bhagavad Gita's most important passages to study and contemplate for spiritual self-understanding. |
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| Chapter
1 Verse 1 |
Dhritarashtra
said: O Samjaya! When my children and the Pandavas assembled to fight
on the sacred field of Kurukshetra, what did they do? |
| Chapter
1 Verse 14 |
Then
Shri Krishna and Arjuna, seated on their excellent decorated chariot
drawn by white horses, blew their divine conch shells. |
| Chapter
1 Verse 21 |
Now,
O Lord of the earth (Dhritarashtra), (Arjuna) spoke the following words
to Hrishikesha (Krishna). |
| Chapter
1 Verse 22 |
[Arjuna said:] O Achyuta (one who does not deviate from his divine glory),
place my chariot between the armies, so that I can see the parties assembled
here with whom I will have to fight in the battle. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 23 |
Weapons
cannot cut the soul; it can neither be burned by the fire, nor drenched
by the water, nor dried by the wind. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 24 |
The
individual soul is unbreakable and insoluble and cannot be burned or
dried. It is immovable, omnipresent, unchangeable, and everlasting. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 25 |
This
soul is unmanifest, unthinkable, and immutable. Therefore, knowing it
as such, you should not grieve. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 27 |
It
is certain that after birth, death is inevitable, and after death, birth
is bound to occur. You should not lament over the inevitable. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 29 |
Many
think the soul is something extraordinary; others think the soul is
something marvelous; some hear that the soul is astonishing, but having
only heard about the soul, no one truly knows it. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 40 |
In
the beginning of this selfless effort, no effort is wasted, nor is there
any adverse result. A little progress on this path can save you from
perilous danger. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 47 |
You
have every right to do selfless work, but you should not cherish any
desire for the fruits of your work. Do not let the fruit of your action
be your object, nor attachment to inaction. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 48 |
O
Dhanamjaya (Arjuna), remain in yoga, perform your duties, give up your
attachments, and don't let your mind dwell on success or failure; balance
of mind (equanimity, equilibrium, harmony) is yoga. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 50 |
Endowed
with equanimity, one frees oneself in this life from virtue and vice.
Devote yourself to this Yoga of equanimity. Skill in action is Yoga. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 54 |
Arjuna
asks: O Keshava (Krishna)! What are the characteristics of those established in wisdom who have attained samadhi (whose minds remain in God consciousness)? How do those constantly merged in God speak? How do they sit? How do they walk? |
| Chapter
2 Verse 55 |
The
blessed Lord said: O Partha (Arjuna), when a person thoroughly gives up all the cravings of his mind and is satisfied in the Self by the Self, he is said to be well established in wisdom. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 56 |
He
whose mind remains undisturbed in sorrow, who does not seek pleasure,
and who is free from passion, fear, and anger is called a sage, established
in wisdom. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 57 |
The
mind of a person who is free from affection, attachment, fondness, love,
and tenderness, who is not affected by pleasure and pain, and who is
above these qualities is established in wisdom. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 58 |
When
devotees fully withdraw their senses from sense objects, as the tortoise
withdraws its limbs from all directions, they are established in wisdom. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 59 |
The
objects recede from an abstinent man, with the exception of the taste.
Even taste falls away after the absolute is realized. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 60 |
O
son of Kunti (Arjuna)! Even for those who are true seekers of liberation,
their sense organs and work organs are so turbulent and powerful that
they forcibly try to take over and control the mind, intellect, and
ego. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 61 |
Having
controlled the senses, true seekers should sit for meditation, remaining
firm, and devoting the heart and the soul to Me. These seekers will
be established in wisdom, which means that their senses are under control. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 62 |
Thinking
of the sense objects repeatedly, a person will develop attachment for
them. From attachment springs desire, from unfulfilled desire comes
anger. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 63 |
From
anger arises delusion; from delusion, confusion of memory and loss of
reason. Without discrimination, the person goes to complete destruction. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 64 |
The
person (self-controlled yogi) who withdraws his senses completely and
overcomes his attraction and aversion gets peace of mind, even if he
still enjoys some objects with his five senses. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 65 |
When
you gain self-control by meditation, you will feel divine bliss and
all your sorrows will perish. The mind and intellect of contented people
are firmly established in the Self. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 66 |
The
person who has not controlled his mind and senses can not have a discriminating
intellect. Nor can such a person have sense of duty, and thus has no
peace. How can there be happiness for someone lacking peace? |
| Chapter
2 Verse 67 |
Just
as a storm overpowers a boat at sea, the mind engrossed in the biological
force and the sense organs leads a person away from discrimination. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 68 |
Therefore,
O Mighty-armed (Arjuna), people who can thoroughly control the power
of the virulent five senses are established in wisdom in every subject. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 69 |
During
the time that is night to all beings, the God-realized person remains
awake; and the time when all beings are awake is night to the munis
(sages). |
| Chapter
2 Verse 70 |
That
man attains peace into whose desires enter him like the waters flow
into a changeless sea that is being filled up from all sides. Such a
man does not desire objects. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 71 |
One
who gives up desire and roams the world, free from attachment, free
from the idea of me and mine (ego), and devoid of pride, finds peace. |
| Chapter
2 Verse 72 |
O
Partha (Arjuna), such is the state of the God-realized person. In this
state, he overcomes delusion. When established in this state at the
last moment of the life, he attains complete emancipation and bliss. |
| Chapter
3 Verse 4 |
A
human being cannot attain the state of non-action (the formless stage)
by avoiding action; not even by sannyasa (renunciation) does one attain
perfection. |
| Chapter
3 Verse 5 |
Human
beings cannot exist without work, even for a moment. Everyone is mechanically
forced to do work according to the qualities born of nature. |
| Chapter
3 Verse 6 |
The
person who outwardly controls the five organs of action, but mentally
recalls the objects of the senses, is a person of delusion, a hypocrite. |
| Chapter
3 Verse 7 |
The
person who controls his sense organs with his intellect while using
his organs of action, who remains detached, is a superior person. |
| Chapter
3 Verse 8 |
It
is wiser to work than not to work. Perform your allotted duty (inaction).
If you do not work, it is very difficult to maintain your livelihood,
or even to survive. |
| Chapter
3 Verse 10 |
In
the beginning of creation the Creator, having created everything [including
sacrifice], said, "By this you shall propagate. Let all your desires
be fulfilled by simply milking the divine wish-fulfilling cow within." |
| Chapter
3 Verse 14 |
All
beings have evolved from food, which grows by the power of rain. Rain
is formed from vapor, which results from the oblation that has been
offered. Oblation is the path of karma (action). Offering human inhalation
is oblation to the soul fire. Likewise, it nourishes the human life
force. |
| Chapter
3 Verse 15 |
Work
is originated by the indwelling Self in every being. The indwelling
soul is derived from the indestructible Brahman. Therefore, the all-pervading
infinite God is present in every action (which is yajña). |
| Chapter
3 Verse 35 |
One
should follow one's own religion (duty) even if it is devoid of merit,
rather than follow the religion (duty) of others. It is better to die
while following your own religion (duty) than to follow that of another,
which would be dreadful. |
| Chapter
3 Verse 37 |
The
blessed Lord said: Passionate desire and anger are the vital enemies of the God-realized person. Passion and anger originate from rajas (actions with attachment to wealth, sensual pleasure, pomp, and grandeur). Passion remains always unfulfilled, and anger is a vicious enemy; these are the vital, sinful enemies in this world. |
| Chapter
3 Verse 38 |
As
fire is obscured by smoke, as dust covers a mirror, or a child remains
hidden in the womb of the mother, so the strongest desire and passion
(illusion, delusion, and error) surround and obscure Self consciousness
and spiritual knowledge. |
| Chapter
3 Verse 42 |
The
five sense organs are more powerful than the gross body; the mind is
more powerful than the sense organs; the intellect is more powerful
than the mind; the soul (Self) is greater than the intellect. |
| Chapter
3 Verse 43 |
O
Mighty-armed (Arjuna)! Having discovered the Self, the supreme power
over the intellect, overcome your imperishable and insatiable desire
with firm determination. Desire is the principal enemy, hard to conquer
and an obstacle to soul culture. |
| Chapter
4 Verse 1 |
The
Blessed Lord spoke: I declared this indestructible science of yoga to Vivasvan. Vivasvan told it to Manu, and Manu taught it to Ikshwaku. |
| Chapter
4 Verse 2 |
All
those kings who were highly realized generation after generation were
aware of this yoga. O Paramtapa (slayer of enemies, Arjuna)! Over a
long period of time this secret yoga technique has declined in the world. |
| Chapter
4 Verse 3 |
O
Arjuna, you are my intimate friend, and you are my devotee, so today
I have told you the very old secret and best transcendental mystery
of brahma vidya, the science of the yoga of knowledge, which is truly
profound. |
| Chapter
4 Verse 7 |
The
Lord said: O Arjuna! Whenever there is a decline in right living and an increase in wrong living, I assume a physical body. |
| Chapter
4 Verse 8 |
The
Lord continued: For the protection of those who are committed to the Self and for the destruction (conversion) of those who follow adharma, I come into being in every age to establish dharma. |
| Chapter
4 Verse 19 |
The
person whose every action is free from attachment and desire, whose
every action is consumed by the fire of wisdom, is a realized person,
a true sage and wise. |
| Chapter
4 Verse 24 |
The
means of offering is Brahman. The oblation is Brahman, offered by Brahman
in the fire that is Brahman. Indeed, Brahman is to be reached by one
who sees everything as Brahman. |
| Chapter
4 Verse 29 |
Others
offer their exhalation (prana) as an oblation of the external air. Still
others offer apana (inhalation) as an oblation to prana, and in this
way they stop the flow of inhalation and exhalation. They practice pranayama
(breath regulation). |
| Chapter
4 Verse 30 |
Other
yogis, who regulate their prana, (who inhale with a faint breath) achieve
the breathless and pulseless stage. By knowing how to sacrifice the
breath, the sins of these yogis are destroyed. Their life force is merged
with the all-pervading soul. |
| Chapter
4 Verse 34 |
Understand
that by bowing down, by asking the proper questions, and through service,
you will be taught this knowledge by those who are wise, by those who
have the vision of truth. |
| Chapter
4 Verse 36 |
Even
if you are the most sinful person in the world of all sinners, by the
boat of transcendental knowledge, you can cross the ocean of misery
and sin. |
| Chapter
4 Verse 37 |
O
Arjuna, as the little fire burns much wood into ashes, so knowledge
is a spiritual fire that can burn all actions (calm all restlessness). |
| Chapter
4 Verse 39 |
Those
who have real love for the scriptures, the teacher, and God, who practice
single-minded meditation, who have thoroughly withdrawn their senses
from the lower centers to the pituitary, attain Self-realization. Having
gained this knowledge, they find permanent peace and liberation. |
| Chapter
4 Verse 40 |
There
are those who have no knowledge of God and no faith in God, who always
doubt Him; their desires are never fulfilled. A doubtful mind perishes.
Those who have doubts have neither this world, nor the world beyond,
nor any happiness. |
| Chapter
4 Verse 41 |
O
Dhanamjaya (Arjuna), actions do not bind those who have renounced action
through yoga; free from doubts through knowledge, they are self-realized. |
| Chapter
4 Verse 42 |
O
Arjuna! (Bharata) By the sword of knowledge cut out all the ignorance
that remains in your heart. Be free from doubt and practice the yoga
of action and yoga of knowledge. Don't be heartbroken. Stand up and
fight your ignorance. |
| Chapter
5 Verse 8 |
The
one who is established in yoga knows the truth and thinks, "I do
not do anything at all," even while seeing, hearing, touching,
smelling, eating, moving, sleeping, breathing… |
| Chapter
5 Verse 9 |
…speaking, releasing, holding, opening and closing the eyes. The yogi
remembers that the body organs function only in relation to the objects
of those organs. |
| Chapter
5 Verse 10 |
Those
who perform actions, giving up attachment and offering their actions
into Brahman, are not affected by sin, just as a lotus leaf is not wet
by water. |
| Chapter
5 Verse 13 |
A
self-controlled yogi always remains happily in the physical body, the
chity with nine gates, performing no actions, and not causing others
to act. |
| Chapter
5 Verse 17 |
There
are those whose minds and intellects are firmly absorbed in that (Brahman),
those who are constantly centered in the soul for whom the ultimate
end is that (Brahman); these people become free from sins by their constant
soul consciousness. They need not go back into the delusion (of family
bondage). They enjoy constant liberation. |
| Chapter
5 Verse 18 |
Indeed,
wise people see the Brahman in a brahmin, a low-caste person, a cow,
an elephant, or a dog. Nothing distinguishes them in the perception
of a Self-realized person. |
| Chapter
5 Verse 19 |
The
chycle of birth and death is defeated by those whose minds are in balance,
who have conquered everything and are free from defects. Perceiving
Brahman everywhere and achieving balance of mind amount to the same
thing. Self-realized persons, due to their balance of mind, are in the
stage of Brahman. |
| Chapter
5 Verse 27 |
A
person can be free and liberated while living in the body by shutting
out all external sense objects, keeping the vision in between the eyebrows,
and equalizing the outgoing and incoming breaths rhythmically through
the nostrils. |
| Chapter
5 Verse 28 |
Thus, the organs of action, senses, mind, and intellect become introverted,
and thereby, the person is ever free from desire, fear, and anger, and
attains the highest goal of life-liberation. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 5 |
With
the aid of your Self (soul consciousness), lift yourself up from delusion.
Don't degrade yourself, for you are your own friend and you are your
own enemy. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 6 |
The
person who has conquered his lower self becomes his own friend, but
the person who does not subdue the lower self is his own enemy. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 11 |
In
a clean spot that is not too high or too low, seated upon a piece of
soft cloth (silk cloth), which is on a skin on a grass mat, |
| Chapter
6 Verse 12 |
and
making the mind one-pointed, the one who has mastered the mind and senses
may practice meditation. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 13 |
With
body, head, and neck held firmly straight and still, and with the attention
between the two eyebrows, not looking about in every direction, |
| Chapter
6 Verse 14 |
the
mind is tranquil, free from fear and anxiety (a brahmachari). May this
yogi direct all thoughts to Me and seek Me deeply. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 17 |
The
path of meditation requires a moderate, regulated life, avoiding too
much or too little food, work, and sleep, or use of the senses. The
attention must abide in the soul at all times. For such a person, yoga
destroys all sorrows. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 22 |
and
having realized the Self, it does not think there is any other greater
gain. Such a mind is not affected even by great sorrow. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 24 |
Steadily,
using self-restraint and discrimination, gradually rise from the lower
centers to the upper center, withdraw knowledge into the soul, do not
allow the senses to go back down, |
| Chapter
6 Verse 25 |
Having
shunned all worldly desires and selfish moods born of thought, maintain
thorough control of all your sense organs; then meditate and do not
think of anything else. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 27 |
Indeed
the yogi (one who meditates) whose mind is tranquil, whose impurities
have all dissolved, whose life is free from defects, becomes Brahman
and reaches the supreme happiness. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 29 |
The
Yogi who is united in identity with the all-pervading infinite consciousness and sees unity everywhere, beholds the Self present in all beings and all beings as assumed in the Self. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 30 |
Devotees
who perceive Me everywhere and perceive everything in Me are never lost
to Me, nor am I ever lost to them. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 31 |
Devotees
with a balance of mind, who watch Me everywhere, who perceive Me in
everything, and who don't judge anything, are the real yogis. In the
world, in all circumstances, they always abide in Me. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 34 |
O
Lord, we all know the mind is constantly restless, deluded, turbulent,
and wild. Just as no one can stop or control the wind, it is very difficult
to subdue the mind. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 35 |
The
blessed Lord replied: O powerful warrior, mighty-armed Arjuna! Undoubtedly, a restless mind is very difficult to control. O son of Kunti, it can indeed be controlled by constant practice and detachment. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 42 |
Or
they might be born into the family of a learned yogi, but that birth
is undoubtedly very rare in this world. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 44 |
Bolstered
by his practices in previous lives, the yogi continues to practice yogic
techniques. With deep yoga meditation, the true seeker goes beyond ritual
worship. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 45 |
The
yogi who is a true seeker of the soul, who meditates deeply for long
periods, birth after birth, gains purity of heart and reaches the supreme
goal of liberation. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 46 |
O
Arjuna, I tell you to become a yogi, because yogis are superior to those
who lead a life of penance. They are greater than highly educated scholars
of the scriptures, and they are more advanced than people who mechanically
perform rites and rituals to ensure the fruit of their work. |
| Chapter
6 Verse 47 |
The
Blessed Lord said: Among all the yogis, those whose minds are ever fixed in Me, who are extremely devoted to Me with unflinching love and loyalty, who maintain implichit faith, and who practice meditation with single-minded devotion, are My favorites. |
| Chapter
7 Verse 2 |
I
shall reveal this knowledge to you completely, with intimate and inner
experience. Knowing this, nothing else remains to be known. |
| Chapter
7 Verse 3 |
Among
thousands of people, rarely does one charefully try to attain perfection
or realization; among those striving and succeeding, rarely does one
know Me in reality. |
| Chapter
7 Verse 4 |
Earth,
water, fire, air, ether (vachuum), mind, intellect, and ego are the
eightfold divisions of My nature. |
| Chapter
7 Verse 14 |
This
divine maya (delusion) of Mine consists of the three qualities of nature.
It is extremely difficult to overcome, except by those who constantly
keep their attention on Me (meditate). |
| Chapter
7 Verse 16 |
O
Arjuna! O Bharatarshabha (lord of the Bharatas)! There are four types
of devotees who are noble in deed and who meditate upon Me: the man
in distress, the seeker of knowledge, the person with desire for material
possession, and the man of knowledge and wisdom. |
| Chapter
7 Verse 17 |
Among
them, the man of wisdom is the best, because he perceives constant union
with the divine. He has single-minded devotion, which is meditation.
I am extremely dear to him and he is extremely dear to Me. |
| Chapter
7 Verse 18 |
No
doubt, these are all noble (great, soul, divine, sage, and compassionate),
but the man of wisdom is really My own Self because such a person is
always united with Me. To him, being established in Me is the highest
goal. |
| Chapter
7 Verse 19 |
At
the end of many lifetimes, the man of wisdom takes refuge in Me. He
realizes that Vasudeva, the all-pervading God, is in everything and
is everywhere. Such a great soul is extremely rare. |
| Chapter
8 Verse 6 |
O
Son of Kunti (Arjuna)! If one leaves the body at the end (death) while
thinking of a particular state of being, one attains that alone, being
ever absorbed in that thought. |
| Chapter
8 Verse 7 |
Therefore
O Arjuna! Remember Me at all times and fight. When your mind and understanding
are directed toward Me, you will come to Me, there is no doubt. |
| Chapter
8 Verse 12 |
All
the doors of the body are closed. The mind is firmly confined in the
cavity of the soul. One's life is fixed in the head (cranium or fontanel).
Then one is established in yoga. |
| Chapter
8 Verse 27 |
Therefore,
O Arjuna, at all times, be thou firm on Yoga, established in Yoga. |
| Chapter
9 Verse 2 |
This
is the supreme royal knowledge, the greatest secret (hidden) science,
the most holy and excellent, known through direct perception, attainable
through morality (dharma), extremely easy to practice and also imperishable. |
| Chapter
9 Verse 11 |
Being
deluded, they despise Me, as I am assumed to be in the human form. They
do not know My supreme nature as the great Lord of all existence. |
| Chapter
9 Verse 12 |
Those
with vain aspirations and fruitless knowledge, whose actions are futile,
and those who are devoid of discrimination, who abide in a fiendish
and demonic nature, are attracted by enchanting delusion. |
| Chapter
9 Verse 13 |
O
Partha (Arjuna!) Those who are great souls, who have embraced divine
nature, worship Me with an undistracted mind, knowing Me as the origin
of beings and also as the imperishable. |
| Chapter
9 Verse 21 |
Having
enjoyed the vast world of heaven, they enter the world of mortality
when their virtues are exhausted. Thus, sincerely following the dictum
of the three Vedas, they reach the state of going and coming, due to
their desire for enjoyment. |
| Chapter
9 Verse 22 |
To
those who concentrate on Me without any other thoughts, who sincerely
meditate (worship) and are constantly united with Me-I bring what they
lack and preserve what they possess. |
| Chapter
9 Verse 26 |
From
he who offers to me with devotion and a pure heart, a leaf, a flower,
a piece of fruit, or water, I will accept that offering of devotion. |
| Chapter
9 Verse 27 |
Whatever
you do, whatever you eat, whatever you offer to the sacred fire, whatever
you give (as charity), on whatever you meditate, O son of Kunti, do
it as an offering to Me. |
| Chapter
9 Verse 29 |
I
am the same in all beings, there are none who are disliked or dear to
Me. But those who worship Me with devotion are in Me, and I am in them. |
| Chapter
9 Verse 30 |
Even
if a man of the most vile conduct worships Me with undivided devotion,
he is to be thought of as righteous, for he has indeed rightly resolved. |
| Chapter
9 Verse 31 |
Quickly,
he becomes a virtuous person and goes into the state of eternal peace.
O Son of Kunti (Arjuna), be sure, no devotee of Mine is ever lost (out
of my sight). |
| Chapter
9 Verse 32 |
Those
who take refuge in Me, O Partha (Arjuna!), even if they are of low origin,
women, vaishyas, or shudras, they will also go to the highest goal. |
| Chapter
9 Verse 34 |
Fix
your mind on Me. Be devoted to Me. Worship Me and bow to Me. Having
disciplined yourself with Me as the supreme God, you yourself shall
come to Me. |
| Chapter
10 Verse 20 |
I
am the self, O Gudakesha (Arjuna)! Abiding in the core of all beings,
I am the beginning, middle, and end of all beings. |
| Chapter
10 Verse 38 |
I
am the power in the rulers. I am the wise polichy for those who want
victory. Of all the secrets, I am silence. I am the wisdom of all knowers
of wisdom. |
| Chapter
10 Verse 41 |
Whatever
is being manifested with glory, grace, and power, know that in every
case it is only a fraction of My glory. |
| Chapter
11 Verse 12 |
In
the sky, if a thousand suns should rise at once, such brilliance or
splendor would hardly approach that of the great self. |
| Chapter
11 Verse 38 |
You
are the first of the gods, the ancient Spirit. You are the ultimate
abode of this universe. You are both knower and knowable, and the supreme
goal. This entire universe is pervaded by You, O Vishvarupa! |
| Chapter
11 Verse 39 |
You
are vayu (breath), Yama (death), Agni (fire), Varuna (water), the moon,
the Lord of creatures, and the great, grandfather! Salutations to You,
a thousand times! |
| Chapter
11 Verse 40 |
Salutations
to You from the front and from the back. Salutations to You from all
sides. O Everything! You are of infinite glory and boundless strength.
You are all-pervading, therefore, You are everything. |
| Chapter
11 Verse 55 |
O
Pandava! He who does all his work for My sake, considers Me as the supreme,
is devoted to Me, has no attachment, and is free from malice towards
other beings, reaches Me. |
| Chapter
12 Verse 13 |
He
who is free from malice toward all beings, friendly and compassionate,
free from attachment to possessions and ego, indifferent to pain and
pleasure, and patient (forgiving), |
| Chapter
12 Verse 19 |
He
who is indifferent to blame and praise, silent, content with anything
whatsoever, homeless, firm in mind, and full of devotion is dear to
Me. |
| Chapter
13 Verse 8 |
Detachment
from the objects of sense, complete absence of egotism, and keeping
in constant view the evils of birth, death, old age, and disease. |
| Chapter
13 Verse 9 |
Non-attachment
and absence of clinging to son, wife, house, and the like, constant
balance of mind towards desired and undesired objects. |
| Chapter
13 Verse 10 |
Unflinching
devotion to Me with single-minded yoga, love of solitary living, and
dislike for the company of people. |
| Chapter
13 Verse 11 |
Constanchy
in the knowledge of the supreme Self, insight into the perception of
truth in all. This is declared as true knowledge and anything contrary
to it is but ignorance. |
| Chapter
13 Verse 12 |
That
which has to be known I shall narrate, knowing which one attains immortality.
It is the beginningless, supreme Brahman who is said to be neither existent
nor non-existent. |
| Chapter
13 Verse 13 |
With
hands and feet everywhere, eyes, head and faces everywhere, ears everywhere,
He dwells in the world, covering everything. |
| Chapter
13 Verse 14 |
He
seems to have the qualities of the senses, yet He is without the senses,
detached, maintaining all, free from the qualities of nature (the gunas),
yet experiencing these qualities. |
| Chapter
13 Verse 15 |
He
is outside as well as inside all beings. He is unmoving as well as moving.
He is too subtle to be known. He is very far, and at the same time very
near. |
| Chapter
13 Verse 16 |
He
is undivided yet He seems to be divided among all beings. He is to be
known as the maintainer of all beings, destroying them, and creating
them all. |
| Chapter
13 Verse 17 |
He is the light of lights, and is said to be beyond darkness. Knowledge worth knowing and attainable through wisdom, He is seated in the heart of all. |
| Chapter
13 Verse 31 |
O
Son of Kunti (Arjuna), this imperishable supreme soul is beginningless
and without qualities. Although He remains in the body (in its reality),
He is free from action and contamination. |
| Chapter
13 Verse 32 |
As
the all-pervading ether (space), because of its subtlety, is not tainted,
so the soul that is seated in the body is not tainted by the qualities
of the body. |
| Chapter
14 Verse 3 |
Great
Brahma (mother nature), is My womb, in it I place the seed of all life.
The creation of all beings follows from that, O Bharata (Arjuna)! |
| Chapter
14 Verse 4 |
Whatever
forms come from any womb, O Son of Kunti (Arjuna), the great Brahma
is their womb and I am the father who sows the seed. |
| Chapter
14 Verse 11 |
When
the light of knowledge shines through all the gates (doors) of the body,
then it should be known that sattva (goodness) is predominant. |
| Chapter
14 Verse 19 |
When
the seer perceives no doer other than the qualities and also knows that
which is higher than the qualities, he attains My being. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 1 |
The
Lord said: They speak of the eternal ashvatthama (peepul tree) as having its roots above and branches below. Its leaves are the Vedic hymns and he who knows this is the knower of the Vedas. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 2 |
Its
branches spread below and above, nourished by the qualities (of nature),
with the objects of the senses as the sprouts (shoots), and below its
roots stretch forth in all directions, binding the soul according to
the actions performed in the human body. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 3 |
Its
real form is not perceptible here in the world, not its end, nor its
beginning, nor its existence. Cut down this deeply rooted peepul tree
with the strong ax of detachment. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 4 |
Thereafter
the goal must be sought from which, having gone, no one returns. "Thou
art the primeval being. I take refuge in Thee from Whom the flow of
this beginningless creation has proceeded." |
| Chapter
15 Verse 5 |
Those
wise men who are free from arrogance and delusion, who have overcome
the evils of attachment, who are in eternal union with God with desires
and ambitions extinguished, who are released from the dualities such
as pleasure and pain, these undeluded people reach that supreme immortal
state. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 6 |
Neither
the sun, nor the moon, nor even fire can illumine that supreme Self-effulgent
state, attaining to which they never return to this world. That is my
supreme abode. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 7 |
The
eternal soul in this body, in the world of living, is a fragment of
Myself. It is that alone which draws to itself the five senses and the
sixth sense, the mind, that exist in material nature (prakriti). |
| Chapter
15 Verse 8 |
When
the Lord acquires a body and when He departs from it, He takes them
along (the senses and mind) like the blowing wind charries scents from
their sources. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 9 |
Presiding
over hearing, sight, touch, taste, and smell, as well as the mind, He
(the fragment of the Lord, the indwelling Self) enjoys the objects of
senses. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 10 |
When
the soul departs, remains, or enjoys (the sense objects) while accompanied
by the qualities (of nature), the deluded (ignorant, fools) do not perceive
Him. Those with the eye of knowledge are able to realize Him. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 11 |
The
yogis who strive (meditate) will realize that He is established in the
Self. But the ignorant, whose inner being is not disciplined, strives,
but cannot perceive Him. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 12 |
The
brilliance that resides in the sun and illumines the entire universe,
that which shines in the moon as well as in the fire, know that to be
Mine. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 13 |
And
permeating the earth, it is I who supports all creatures by My vital
power, and having become the nectarine (watering) moon, I nourish all
plants. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 14 |
Having
become the vaishvanara fire in the body of all living beings, I live.
Going outward (prana) and inward (apana), I digest the four kinds of
food. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 15 |
I
have entered into the hearts of all beings. From Me came memory, knowledge
as well as their loss. I alone am that which is to be known in all the
Vedas. I am the author of the Vedanta and the knower of the Vedas. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 16 |
There
are two purushas in this world, the perishable and the imperishable.
All beings are perishable, but kutastha (the unchanging) is called the
imperishable. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 17 |
But
the supreme person, who is still other than these, is also called the
supreme Self who, entering into the three worlds as the eternal Lord,
supports them. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 18 |
Since
I am beyond the perishable and even superior to the imperishable, therefore
I am known as Purushottama, the supreme person in the world as well
as in the Vedas. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 19 |
O
Bharata (Arjuna)! He who, thus undeluded, knows Me as the supreme person,
knows all and worships Me constantly with his whole being. |
| Chapter
15 Verse 20 |
O
blameless, sinless Arjuna! Thus, this most secret doctrine has been
taught by Me. By grasping it in essence, a man becomes wise and his
mission in life is accomplished. |
| Chapter
16 Verse 1 |
The
Lord said: Absolute fearlessness, perfect purity of mind, constant fixation in the yoga of meditation for the sake of self-realization, charity, self-restraint, sacrifice, study and teaching of the scriptures, austerity, rectitude (uprightness), |
| Chapter
16 Verse 2 |
Non-violence,
truth, absence of anger, renunciation, serenity, calmness, aversion
to fault-finding, compassion to all beings, freedom from desire, gentleness,
modesty, and absence of fickleness, |
| Chapter
16 Verse 3 |
Vigor,
forgiveness, fortitude, purity, freedom from malice, freedom from pride.
These are the marks of he who is born with divine qualities, godly gifts.
|
| Chapter
16 Verse 4 |
O
Partha (Arjuna)! Hypocrisy (fraud, deceit), arrogance, pride, anger,
harshness, and ignorance are the marks of those born with a demonic
nature. |
| Chapter
16 Verse 5 |
It
is said that the divine destiny leads to liberation, the demonic qualities
to bondage. O Pandava (Arjuna)! Do not grieve! You are born with divine
endowments. |
| Chapter
16 Verse 21 |
This
is the threefold gate of hell, which destroys the self: passion, anger,
and greed. Therefore one should avoid these three. |
| Chapter
17 Verse 8 |
Foods
that promote life and longevity, vitality, virtue, intelligence, strength
and vigor, health, happiness, and satisfaction are juichy, soft, firm,
pleasant to the stomach and naturally agreeable. These foods are dear
to the good and spiritual person. |
| Chapter
18 Verse 42 |
Serenity,
self-restraint, austerity, purity, forgiveness; uprightness of mind,
senses, and behavior; knowledge, super-consciousness and cosmic-consciousness;
and love for God are the natural duty (inborn qualities) of the brahmins. |
| Chapter
18 Verse 46 |
Man
attains the highest perfection by worshipping through his natural duty,
Him, from whom all beings have their origin, Him by whom this universe
is pervaded. |
| Chapter
18 Verse 48 |
Therefore,
O son of Kunti (Arjuna), one should not abandon the duty to which one
is born, even though it may be tainted with blemish, for even as fire
is enveloped with smoke, all beginnings of undertakings are clouded
with demerit. |
| Chapter
18 Verse 61 |
O
Arjuna! The Lord abides in the hearts of all beings, causing them to
revolve (according to their karma) by His illusive power, as if fixed
in a machine. |
| Chapter
18 Verse 65 |
Give
your mind to Me, be devoted to Me. Worship Me, bow down to Me. Doing
so, you will attain Me alone. I truly promise this, because you are
so extremely dear to Me. |
| Chapter
18 Verse 66 |
Resigning
all your duties (dharma), take refuge in Me alone. I shall liberate
you from all evils. Do not worry. |
| Chapter
18 Verse 75 |
By
the grace of Vyasa, I have heard this supreme and most secret yoga,
which Krishna has directly imparted to Arjuna before my eyes. |
| Chapter
18 Verse 76 |
O
king! Remembering again and again this dialogue between Keshava (Krishna)
and Arjuna, which is marvelous and holy, I rejoice again and again. |
| Chapter
18 Verse 77 |
Remembering
also, again and again, this most wonderful form of Hari (Krishna), even
greater is my wonder and I rejoice again and again. |
| Chapter
18 Verse 78 |
Wherever
there is Krishna, the Lord of yoga, and Partha (Arjuna, the archer-holding
the bow), there is glory, victory, prosperity, and morality. This is
my conviction. |
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