Guest guest Posted October 7, 2005 Report Share Posted October 7, 2005 Namaste: Before we start the Satsangh next week, let us all contemplate on the summary of chapters 1 to 9 presented below. This will help us to understand why Lord Krishna wants to describe His Glories at this juncture. Harih Om! Ram Chandran -------------------- The Bhagavad Gita (the Song of the Lord), is a Sanskrit poem incorporated into the Mahabharata, one of the greatest religious classics of Santana Dharma, the Eternal Faith. The Bhagavad Gita consists of a dialogue between Lord Krishna and Prince Arjuna on the eve of the great battle of Kurukshetra. Arjuna overcomes with anguish when he sees in the opposing army many of his kinsmen, teachers, and friends. Krishna persuades him to fight by instructing him in spiritual wisdom and the means of attaining union with God (see yoga). The Bhagavad Gita explains the essence three doctrines – Karma Yoga, Jnana Yoga and Bhakti Yoga. Karma-yoga is the yoga of selfless action performed with inner detachment from the results of that action. Jnana-yoga is the yoga of knowledge and discrimination between the lower nature of man and the Supreme Self. Bhakti Yoga is the yoga of devotion to the Supreme Self. The Bhagavad Gita essentially summarizes the essence of the Upanishads in a nutshell. Chapter one (Arjuna Vishad Yoga) introduces the scene, the setting, the circumstances and the characters responsible for the revelation of the Truth of Bhagavad Gita. The scene is the sacred plain of Kuruksetra and the setting is the battlefield. The circumstance is the great war between relatives (Pandavas and Kauravas). The main characters are the Supreme Lord Krishna and Prince Arjuna, witnessed by thousands of soldiers led by their respective military commanders. After naming the principal warriors on both sides, Arjuna's growing delusion is described due to the fear of losing friends and relatives in the course of the impending war and the subsequent sins attached to such actions. The dialog opens with a question from King Dhritarashtra to Sanjaya, about the disposition of the forces on the war-field of Kurukshetra. The scene, the setting, the circumstances and the characters symbolize our struggle to fulfill the desires of our life. Dhritarshtra represents the physical body and Sanjaya represents the subconscious mind. Arjuna represents our intellect (buddhi) and Lord Krishna the Consciousness or the Supreme Self. Our intellect gets confused with the conflicting nature of our desires and worried about taking actions with potentials to bring pain and sufferings. The intellect (Arjuna) seeks the guidance from the inner voice (Lord Krishna) for guidance. Arjuna represents the which desires to learn and do that which is right. Lord Krishna, the Higher Self and discriminating Mind. It is one with the Universal Mind. We, as the embodied mind, hold a discussion, however brief, every time we make a choice. In chapter two (Sankhya Yoga ) Arjuna accepts the position as a disciple of Lord Krishna and taking complete of Him requests the Lord to instruct him in how to dispel his lamentation and grief. This chapter is often deemed as a summary to the entire Bhagavad-Gita. Here many subjects are explained such as: karma yoga, jnana yoga, Sankya yoga, buddhi yoga and the Atma which is the soul. Predominance has been given to the immortal nature of the soul existing within all living entities and it has been described in great detail. Krishna advocates the control of heart emotion by a man's will. Through this exercise, tranquility in contemplation is obtained. This eliminates anxiety. Universal wisdom is available to the calm man. Reflection is then possible. Objects of sense are to be given an appropriate importance. Desire, greed, selfishness and pride are to be shunned. This is true dependence on the Supreme Spirit. Chapter three (Karma Yoga) establishes the fact by various points of view that the performance of prescribed duties is obligatory for everyone. Here Lord Krishna categorically and comprehensively explains how it is the duty of each and every member of society to carry out their functions and responsibilities in their respective stage of life according to the rules and regulations of the society in which one lives. Further the Lord explains why such duties must be performed, what benefit is gained by performing them, what harm is caused by not performing them. Plus what actions lead to bondage and what actions lead to salvation. All these points relating to duty have been described in great detail. Krishna, esplains that lust- greed-desire creates the attachment. The insatiable desire for possession is man's constant enemy. It rages like a fire, and is unappeasable: It is lust which instigates him. It is passion, sprung from the quality of rajas; insatiable and full of sin. Know this to be the enemy of man on earth. As the flame is surrounded by smoke, and a mirror by rust, and as the womb envelopes the fetus, so is the universe surrounded by this passion. The senses and organs are esteemed great, but the thinking self is greater than they. The discriminating principle—Buddhi, is greater than the thinking self, and that which is greater than the discriminating principle is He—the Supreme Spirit, the true Ego. In chapter four (Jnana-Karma-Sanyasa Yoga) Lord Krishna reveals how spiritual knowledge is received by disciple succession and the reason and nature of His descent into the material worlds. Here He also explains the paths of action and knowledge as well as the wisdom regarding the supreme knowledge which results at the culmination of the two paths. Thus this chapter is entitled: Approaching the Ultimate Truth. Spiritual wisdom, when adopted, clears up all errors of ignorance in the mind. It is the universal purifier. Krishna, the Supreme Spirit is perceived in all beings and in every situation by the Wise. Wisdom springs up spontaneously in the wise man as he progresses. The one-pointed resolve to know and to act as the Supreme purifies all who adopt this discipline. Those who doubt, who are skeptical, who will not enquire into the Spirit, or study, can have no steadiness, certainty or happiness. In chapter five (Karma-Sanyasa Yoga) Lord Krishna delineates the concepts of action with detachment and renunciation in actions explaining that both are a means to the same goal. Here He explains how salvation is attained by the pursuance of these paths. The true devotee cannot be selfish or detach himself from other "creatures." But, in himself, he must be free of desire and anger, temperate, with thoughts restrained and have a secure knowledge of the true Self. His heart and understanding are to be brought under his control, and he is to be determined to attain liberation from the world of sense- attachments. By adopting this attitude, he becomes emancipated, even in his present life, and shares consciously, in the wider life of the Supreme Spirit. In chapter six (Dhyana Yoga) Lord Krishna reveals astanga yoga, and the exact process of practicing such yoga. He explains in detail the difficulties of the mind and the procedures by which one may gain mastery of their mind through yoga which reveals the spiritual nature of a living entity. Krishna states that in the process of meditation, when every desire that arises in the imagination has been abandoned, and the lower mind, held steady, subdues the impulses that arise from the senses and organs, and he then finds rest. Krishna further suggests that Supreme bliss surely comes to the sage with a peaceful mind free of passions and desires. The Yogi who is thus devoted and free from sin obtains the highest bliss and unites with the Supreme Spirit. In chapter seven (Jnana-Vijnana Yoga) Lord Krishna gives concrete knowledge of the absolute reality as well as the opulence of divinity. He describes His illusory energy in the material existence called Maya and declares how extremely difficult it is to surmount it. He also describes the four types of people attracted to divinity and the four types of people who are opposed to divinity. In conclusion He reveals that one in spiritual intelligence takes exclusive refuge of the Lord without reservation in devotional service. The best are those who possess spiritual knowledge obtained by exclusive devotion to Him. They permit the Higher Self to act. They are rare, consistently follow the path of peace, and are devoted to the Supreme. These, after many births, discover His ubiquitous nature and see Him residing in their own hearts, "superior to all things, and exempt from decay. Being deathless, the Higher Self, knows all creatures in their innermost nature. He is unrecognized by the deluded because he remains undiscovered, "enveloped in his magic illusion." At the time of rebirth, all creatures fall into the delusion of the opposites which springs from liking and disliking. It is they who created their present condition through their choices made in past lives. But those men of righteous lives whose sins have ceased, being free from this delusion of the 'pairs of opposites,' firmly settled in faith, worship the Supreme. They who depend only on the Supreme and labor for deliverance from birth and death know the Brahman. Those who permanently rest in the Supreme, knowing Him to be the Adhibhuta, the Adhidaivata, and the Adhiyajna are the ones who remember Him also at the time of death! In chapter eight (Akshara Brhama Yoga) Lord Krishna emphasizes the science of yoga. Revealing that one attains whatever one remembers at the end of one's life the Lord emphasizes the utmost importance of the very last thought at the moment of death. Also he gives information on the creation of the material worlds as well as establishing a distinction between them and the spiritual world. Here he explains the light and dark paths in regards to leaving this material existence, the destination to which they each lead to and the reward received by each. Krishna suggest that Meditation by the spiritual Ego and Buddhi on Him is to be continued throughout life, not merely at the time of death. The power of such meditation enables the Spiritual Ego to rise to the plane of the Supreme Divine Spirit when the body dies. Krishna describes this special practice as: Closing the "gateways" to sense-perceptions, imprisoning the mind in the heart, and focusing the vital powers in the head. At the time of death, such as one whose soul-Ego is in his firm control, using the word "OM," merging it into his individuality, passes into the state and presence of the Supreme Spirit. Yogis who have attained supreme perfection are no longer bound by the troubles of rebirth and change. In chapter nine (Rajavidhya RajaGuhya Yoga) Lord Krishna reveals that the sovereign science and the sovereign secret. He explains how the entire material existence is created, pervaded, maintained and annihilated by His external energy and all beings are coming and going under His supervision. The subjects matters covered subsequently are primarily concerned with devotional service and the Lord Himself declares that these subject matters are most confidential. Krishna summarizes the essence of the Supreme Spiritual Knowledge to Arjuna in this chapter. All this universe is pervaded by the Supreme in His invisible form; all things exist in Him, but He does not exist in them. Nor are all things in Him and this is the Divine Mystery. He causes the things to exist, supports their existence but at the same time doesn't dwell in them. Taking control of His Divine nature He emanates again and again creates the universe and dissolves everything. These divine acts do not bind Him because He is totally detached from those actions. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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