| Summary
of Bhagavad Gita
The Bhagavad-gita
opens with blind King Dhritarashtra requesting
his secretary, Sanjaya, to narrate the battle
between his sons, the Kauravas, and their cousins,
the Pandavas. Lord Krishna, the Supreme Personality
of Godhead, out of affection for His devotee,
the Pandava prince Arjuna, has agreed to drive
his chariot. As Arjuna takes
up his bow and prepares to fight, he sees the
sons of Dhritarashtra drawn in military array
and requests infallible Krishna to draw his chariot
between the two fighting forces. There in the
midst of both armies, Arjuna's mind reels as he
foresees the imminent death of his teacher, relatives,
and friends. He throws down his bow and arrows
and decides not to fight.
In Chapter One and
in the beginning of Chapter Two, Arjuna presents
his arguments for refusing to fight. Basically,
he fears the sinful reactions of killing. But
after Arjuna surrenders to Lord Krishna and requests
the Lord to instruct him, the Lord begins countering
Arjuna's objections. First, Krishna analytically
explains that fighting in His service is transcendental
and will bring no sinful reaction. Krishna also
explains the Vedas' purpose as to gradually elevate
souls to Krishna consciousness. Krishna thus encourages
Arjuna to remain fixed in His service - fight
- and ignore his mind's desires.
As Krishna's explanations
why Arjuna should fight were only a summary, and
since Krishna glorifies both 'buddhi-yoga', intelligence
used in spiritual advancement of knowledge (2.45,
2.49-50), and 'karma', work (2.47-48, 2.50), Arjuna
becomes confused and wishes to use Krishna's instruction
to perform 'buddhi-yoga' as an excuse to retire
the battlefield for a life of contemplation. Arjuna
therefore opens Chapter Three asking Krishna why
He is encouraging fighting if intelligence is
better than fruitive work.
Krishna then explains
'karma-yoga', reaction-free devotional work, and
clears up Arjuna's mistaken idea that all work
is fruitive and leads to bondage. Krishna explains
that Arjuna should fight, for avoiding sinful
reactions though devotional work is better than
attempting to escape reactions though renouncing
work. Krishna also instructs Arjuna to fight to
set the proper example of duty. Krishna therefore
tells Arjuna to fight, but with knowledge and
detachment (3.29-30), without falling victim to
his own attractions and aversions.
Then, in answer
to Arjuna's question on the cause of a soul's
being impelled to improper action or neglect of
duty, Krishna names the enemy: lust. He then recommends
Arjuna to regulate his senses, become fixed in
his pure identity as a servant of Krishna, and
thereby avoid lust's control. Then, with spiritual
strength and deliberate intelligence, he should
conquer that forceful enemy - lust.
Since in Chapter
Three, Krishna has recommended that Arjuna fight
in full knowledge of Him (3.30), the Lord, in
Chapter Four, explain different aspects of transcendental
knowledge. First Krishna explains attaining knowledge
through the disciplic succession. Then after successively
explaining Hi appearance and then His mission,
the Lord explains His devotional service as the
goal of (Krishna had already referred to the importance
of performing 'yajna', sacrifice, in 3.9 Krishna
next explains the soul's relationship with Him
as eternal His part and parcel, which one must
approach a bonafide spiritual master to learn.
Chapter Four ends with Krishna glorifying transcendental
knowledge and requesting Arjuna to arm himself
with this knowledge - which burns all sinfull
reactions to ashes - and fight!
After Arjuna has
been impressed with the importance of both work
(which requires activity) and seeking knowledge
(which tends to be inactive), Arjuna is perplexed.
His determination is confused, and he sees fighting
and knowledge as contradic Therefore Arjuna opens
Chapter Five by asking Krishna to definitivelly
explain whether the renunciation of work (speculation,
'sankhya, jnana', inaction-in-knowledge) or work
in devotion is superior. Krishna answers that
one who is detached from his work's results is
the one who is truly renounced. Such a person
knows that while the body acts, he, the soul,
actually does nothing. Arjuna should therefore,
do his duty steadily act for the satisfaction
of Krishna. Impartially viewing the external world,
he should reside in his body aloof from bodily
activities. By fixing his consciousness on the
Supreme and knowing that Krishna is the true enjoyer,
the goal of sacrifice and austerity, and the Lord
of all planets, he, the pure soul, will find true
peace beyond this material world.
In the first five
chapters, Krishna has explained 'buddhi-yoga',
working with consciousness focused on Krishna
without fruitive desires. The Lord has also explained
'sankhya', 'karma-yoga',and 'jnana-yoga' to obtain
liberation and as steppingstones to Krishna consciousness.
Now, at the end of the Fifth Chapter (5. 27-28)
and continuing on to the Sixth Chapter (wherein
Krishna explains practical points for a practicioner),
Krishna explains 'dhyana- yoga' concluding that
'dhyana', or meditation upon Krishna, is meditation's
final goal.
Krishna begins the
Sixth Chapter by explaining that the neophyte
yogi engages in fruitive sitting postures while
the advanced yogi, the true 'sannyasi', works
without attachment. Such a yogi liberates, not
degrades, himself by his mind's activities. Carefully
controlling his mind and engaging it body, and
his self in Krishna's service, the yogi strictly
practices 'dhyana- yoga' in a secluded place.
Fixing his mind on the self and on Krishna, he
attains transcendental happiness in the kingdom
of God. Arjuna then points out the main difficulty
in practicing yoga is controlling the mind. Krishna
responds by saying that one can overcome the obstinate
mind through constant practice and determination.
In responding to Arjuna's about the fate of an
unsuccessful yogi, Krishna answers that one unsuccessful
in his practice will still take birth in a family
of wise transcendentalists and automatically become
attract yogic principles. Krishna finally states
in the last two verses of the chapter that the
yogi is greater than the ascetic, the jnani and
the karmi. And the greatest of all yogis is he
who always thinks of Krishna and with grest faith
worships Him in loving service.
Knowing Krishna's
instruction at the end of Chapter Six, one should
initiate his practice of yoga from the point of
concentrating of the mind upon Krishna. Chapter
Seven thus opens with Krishna explaining knowledge
of Himself and His opulent energies. Thus Arjuna
can fully worship Krishna, as described at the
end of Chapter Six, and think of Him with devotion
as he fights.
Krishna first explains
that as He is the Supreme Truth, everything in
existence is a combination of His material and
spiritual energies. He is the active principle
within all and is all- pervasive through His diverse
material and spiritual energies. Because the world's
activities are conducted by the three modes of
nature which emanate from Him, (Although Krishna
is independent and above them) only those who
surrender to Krishna can cross beyond these modes
to know Him. Four kinds of impious souls never
surrender to Krishna while four kinds of pious
souls do surrender. Krishna also covers Himself
from the impersonalists, who are less intelligent,
and from those who surrender to the demigods.
But those who are truly pious, the undeluded,
serve Krishna as the governor of the material
manifestation, the demigods, and sacrifice, can
know and understand Krishna - ev the time of death.
Chapter Eight begins
by Arjuna asking Krishna about Brahmam, karma,
the demigods, the material world, and knowing
Krishna at the time of death. Krishna first briefly
answers Arjuna's first five questions and then
begins explaining in detail how to know Krishna
at the time of death. Since one attains what one
remembers at the time of death, if one remembers
Krishna, one goes to Him. Krishna then explains
how He can be constantly thought of as the transcendental
person who knows everything, the oldest controller,
the smallest, the maintainer. Thus by pract yoga
and remembering Krishna, Krishna explains, one
will go to the eternal spiritual world and never
again to return to this temporary, miserable material
world. Then, after describing the different yogic
ways in which one may leave this world, Krishna
advises Arjuna not worry about other paths - either
Vedic study, yoga, austere sacrifices, charity,
jnana, or karma - for the results of these will
all be obtained through performing devotional
service. And in the end, such a yogi in devotion,
reaches the supreme eternal abode.
After Krishna answered
Arjuna's questions in Chapter Eight, He continues
speaking, in Chapter Nine, the knowledge about
Himself that He had begun explaining in Chapter
Seven. Krishna thus prefaces Chapter Nine by stating
that the knowledge He'll now reveal is most confidential,
for it is about His actual position, which only
the non-envious and faithful can understand. Krishna
continues explaining that although independent
and aloof, He pervades, creates and anihilates
the entire cosmos through His material energy.
Those mahatmas who know Krishna as the Supreme
Personality of Godhead take shelter of Him and
serve Him as the only enjoyer and the supreme
object of worship.
Krishna then explains
the fortunate position of such devotees: If one
worships Krishna, Krishna cares, compensates for
his deficiencies, and preserves his strengths.
And all Krishna asks for is an offering of a leaf,
a flower, or some water - if it is offered with
devotion. Thus His devotee comes to Him. Even
if a devotee unintentionally commits a horrendous
act, he will be rectified, for Krishna promises
that His devotee will never perish.
In Chapters Seven
and Nine, Krishna has explained knowledge of His
energies. In Chapter Ten, Krishna explains His
opulences more specifically and thereby reveals
Himself the Supreme Personality of Godhead, the
source of all. Krishna also tells how His pure
devotees know that He is the unborn Supreme Lord,
the source of all sages, the source of the material
and spiritual worlds, and the source of all qualities
and attitudes. Thus pure and wise devotees worship
Krishna, converse about Him, and with thoughts
dwelling in Him, undeluded and free from sin,
engage in His service. Out of compassion, Krishna
within their hearts destroys any remaining ignorance.
After hearing of
Krishna's opulences, Arjuna confirms Krishna as
the Supreme Lord by quoting authorities and explains
that only Krishna can truly know Himself. Krishna
then tells of His divine manifestations within
this world - as the Supersoul, the ocean, the
Himalayas - which merely indicate His limitless
opulences, for a single fragment of Krishna's
energy pervades and supports this entire universe!
Arjuna, although
acknowledging that Krishna in the two-armed form
that he now sees before him is Supreme, still
requests Krishna to reveal that all-pervading
Universal Form that supports the Universe. Thus,
in Chapter Eleven, Krishna proves Himself as the
Supreme Lord and He establishes the criteria that
anyone who claims to be God must also show a Universal
Form. Krishna then reveals to Arjuna His wondrous
effulgent, all-expansive form, and Arjuna sees
all soldiers on both sides dying within it. Krishna
explains His form as time, the destroyer of all
world, and requests that Arjuna, knowing in advance
the inevitable d of all the warriors, become His
instrument. In answer to Arjuna's fearful prayers,
Krishna first shows His four-armed form before
again returning to His original two-armed form.
Krishna then states that his two-armed form can
only be seen by pure devotees, and such pure devotees,
working for Krishna, free from desiring fruitive
activities, and who make Krishna the su goal of
their lives, certainly come to Him.
In Chapter Twelve,
Arjuna, after witnessing Krishna's awesome Universal
Form, wishes to clarify his own position as a
devotee, the highest worshiper of the Supreme.
He thus asks whether worshiping Krishna through
devotional service or worshiping the impersonal
is superior. Krishna immediatly responds saying
that one engaged in His personal service is the
topmost. One should therefore engage in Krishna's
service and fix his mind solely upon Krishna,
and, if that cannot be done, one should follow
the rules and regulations of 'bhakti-yoga', which
purify one so he is later able to do so. Krishna
then describes other processes that eventually
lead to His pure devotional service.
Then qualities that
endear a devotee to Krishna, which Krishna next
mentions, such as equality in both happiness and
distress, independence from the ordinary course
of activities, satisfaction, and the faithful
following of the path of devotional service, are
also part of the process of worshiping Krishna
in devotional service.
Arjuna opens Chapter
Thirteen by inquiring about the field of activities
and the knower of that field. Krishna answers
that the conditioned soul's body and that body's
interactions within the material world are His
limited field of activities. By understanding
the difference between the body, the soul, and
the Supersoul and by following the process of
knowledge, the soul can transcend the good and
the bad he meets, realize his eternal subordination
to Krishna, and attain the supreme destination.
The Thirteenth Chapter
clearly explained that by humbly developing knowledge
one can become free from material entanglement.
It is also explained that the living entity's
entanglement within the material world due to
his association with the modes of material nature
(13. 20-22). Now, in Chapter Fourteen, the Supreme
Personality of Godhead, in detail, explains the
three modes - goodness, passion and ignorance
- those forces that bind and control all conditioned
souls within this world. A soul can, however,
transcend these modes through devotional service
(All other processes are contaminated by the modes).
Thus the limitations imposed by his field of activities
can be overthrown and the soul can be elevated
to the Brahman platform, the constitutional position
of purity and happiness - a platform of which
Krishna is the basis.
As one must be detached
from the modes and their results in order to be
attached to the service of the Lord, Krishna describes
in Chapter Fifteen the process of freeing oneself
from matter's grip. He begins by comparing the
material world to a gigantic, upside-down banyan
tree, invoking Arjuna to detach himself from it
through surrender. Thus, the soul can end his
transmigrations and return to Him in the spiritual
world.
Although the foolish
cannot understand that the soul transmigrates,
quitting one body to obtain a new body based on
his mind's desires, transcendentalists see this
clearly. The foolish can learn to see properly
by understanding that it is Krishna who is the
splendor of the sun, moon, and fire, as the one
keeping the planets in orbit and making vegetables
succulent. They can see Krishna as the fire of
digestion; as the Paramatma in everyone's heart;
as the giver of remembrance, knowledge, and forgetfulness;
and as the goal of the Vedas and the compiler
of Vedanta. Krishna then reveals that knowing
Him as the Supreme Personality of Godhead and
engaging in His service is the ultimate purpose
of the Vedanta and the most confidential part
of the Vedas.
In Chapter Fifteen,
auspicious, elevating activities were described
as part of the banyan tree. In Chapter Sixteen,
after mentioning twenty-six godly qualities, Krishna
explains the demoniac nature which degrades the
soul through arrogant, ignorant, and conceited
pursuits of sense gratification and power.
Krishna explains
the demonic mentality as follows: The world is
unreal and is produced only of sex desire. Taking
shelter of lust, they think of sense gratification
as the goal of life and scheme to illegally increase
their wealth. While plotting to kill their 'competitor'
enemies, they think themselves powerful and happy,
and they, surrounded by their relatives, use sacrifices
and charity only to further increase their happiness.
Perplexed by illusory anxieties, bewildered by
self-complacency, impudency, and wealth; and envying
the Supersoul within their own bodies and within
the bodies of others, demons blaspheme real religion.
These mischievous, lowest amongst men are repeatedly
cast by Krishna into demonic species to gradually
sink to the most abominable forms of existence.
Krishna ends the
chapter by explaining that because lust, anger
and greed are the beginnings of demonic life,
all sane men should therefore give them up and
understand their duty through faithfully following
the scriptures.
Krishna has concluded
Chapter Sixteen by declaring that the ultimate
difference between the divine and the demoniac
is that the divine follow the scriptures while
the demons do not. In the beginning of Chapter
Seventeen, Arjuna inquires more about those who
don't follow scriptures, but who worship according
to their imaginations. Krishna answers by describing
how the combination of the modes of material nature
that control a particular person will dictate
a person's faith, worship, eating, sacrifices,
charity and austerity. The chapter ends with Krishna
explaining the syllables 'om tat sat' and how
these syllables indicate that any sacrifice, austerity,
or charity dictated by the modes and performed
without devotional service is useless in this
lif the next. One should therefore directly take
to Krishna's service in Krishna consciousnes.
The entire Bhagavad-gita
is concluded in seventeen chapters, and in the
Eighteen Chapter, Krishna reviews the knowledge
already presented. In this chapter Krishna concludes,
as He has done througout the Bhagavad-gita, that
one should practice devotional service - Krishna
conciousness.
Since Arjuna's basic
desire to renounce his duty of fighting was fear
of sinful reaction, Krishna explains true renunciation
and how to transcend sinful reactions through
(1) becoming renounced from the fruits of activities,(2)
abiding by the order of the Supersoul, and (3)
worshiping the Lord through one's fruits of work
by acting either as 'brahmana','ksatryia','vaisya',
or 'sudra' according to one's mode of nature.
(Each leads Arjuna to fight) Thus, one can achieve
the self-realized position of 'brahma-bhuta' and
that position, detached from all material things,
one can practice pure devotional service.
Krishna can only
be known through surrendering to Him in devotional
service, and by this direct process - free from
karma or jnana, Arjuna should need not fear any
sinful reactions. Under Krishna's protection,
such a pure devotee will reach "Krishna-loka".
Krishna instructs Arjuna that he should surrender
to the Supreme Lord within his heart and thus
attain peace in His supreme, eternal abode. The
most confidential knowledge is then explained
by Krishna: "Become My devotee, always think
of Me, act for Me, worship Me, and offer all homage
unto Me. Surrender unto Me alone. Do not fear
sinful reactions."
After hearing
the instructions of Sri Krishna, Arjuna is fixed
and ready to fight. Sanjaya, after narrating this
conversation to Dhritarashtra, ecstatically thinks
of the wondrous two-armed form of Krishna and
predicts victory for Arjuna, the supreme archer,
for he is surrendered to Krishna, the master of
all mystics. |