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Sri Krishna
Tells The Gita
Birth of the Gita
To everyone's surprise, in this war for
righteousness, in the beginning Arjuna, the great
and brave warrior, finds himself suddenly
overwhelmed with the feeling of mental depression,
grief, and fear when he realizes that he has to
fight with his close relatives - brothers, uncles,
and Teachers - present as his enemies. Arjuna is
greatly disturbed about the outcome of the war;
destruction and death that was sure to follow. He
thought it 'prudent' to retire to forest rather
than kill his own near and dear ones.
It is such a dramatic setting that we get the
start to Bhagavad-Gita. The brave warrior Arjuna,
with Lord Krishna as his charioteer, is standing
between the two arrayed armies ready to start the
battle, and then Arjuna lays down his arms to
retire at the back of his chariot! Trembling with
nervousness and anxiety, unable to lift his mighty
bow -Gandiva - he pleads to escape from the
consequences of the war. His emotions of love for
the near ones, his concepts of duty and Dharma,
all appear to be confusing to himself. He is
unable to determine the correct approach in this
piquant situation of grave urgency and emergency.
Therefore he turns to Sri Krishna, his friend, his
teacher, and his all: "How can I kill them?
Will it not be proper to give up this whole
kingdom, smacking of blood of my own relatives,
and retire to forest in peace? O Krishna, I am
unable to decide my further plan of action. I
surrender myself at your holy feet. O Lord, please
guide me through this difficult uncertainty as I
am your disciple and you are my Teacher."
Sri Krishna Tells The Gita

Thus, when Arjuna surrenders himself at the
feet of the Lord, Sri Krishna says, "O Brave
one, why this infatuation at this hour! Why have
you given yourself to this unmanliness and
cowardice? Do not think that by your high talk of
'renunciation and retiring to forest' people would
adore you and call you noble and intelligent. On
the contrary, for centuries to come, blame would
be put on you for running away from the battle
field. Generation after generation, people would
laugh at you and make fun of your unmanly
flight."
Srimad Bhagavad-Gita, Chapter II, verse 2 and 3:
"In such a crisis, whence comes upon thee, O
Arjuna, this dejection, un-Aryan-like,
disgraceful, and contrary to the attainment of
heaven?"
"Yield not to unmanliness, O son of Kunti!
Ill doth it become thee. Cast off this mean
faint-heartedness and arise, O scorcher of thine
enemies."
On listening to this rebuke, Arjuna steadies
himself, and further dialogue between Lord Krishna
and Arjuna follows in subsequent chapters. Thus
the Gita consists of eighteen - 18 - chapters and
a total of 700 verses contained in them. (In fact,
Gita consists of a dialogue between our lower self
and the Higher Self.)
Arjuna puts many question about the goal in life,
aim of human birth, about the nature of Duty and
Work, about the Self - Atman - and about the four
Yogas viz. Jnana-Yoga, Raja-Yoga, Karma-Yoga, and
Bhakti-Yoga.
Chapters II through IX deal with Karma-Yoga - Yoga
of selfless action - vis-a-vis Jnana-Yoga. Sri
Krishna exhorts Arjuna to fight the war without
thinking of the consequences. "Your duty is,
and you have right only, to fight; you do not have
control over the outcome", says the Lord. The
duty of a person as a Karma Yogi is to do the
allotted work as worship without expecting any
definite fruits thereof. Selfless work done with
full heart and perfection is the best way for the
worldly person to realize his inner Self. In fact
efficiency in work itself is a Yoga!
Those persons should embrace the life of
renunciation (monasticism) in whom impressions of
the past lives have created such attraction. But
other persons who have no such tendency, persons
in whom the past impressions of sense enjoyment
persist, such aspirants - sadhakas - are not yet
fit to take to life of sanyasins. Such persons
actually, after some progress on the path of total
renunciation -sanyasa, may get entangled in a
tamasic inactivity - lazy life of hypocrisy. Such
people do more harm than good to the cause of
spirituality, religion, and social progress.
For such people, which are in majority at a given
point of time, Sri Krishna advocates Nishkam Karma
Yoga - Yoga of selfless action - as the ideal path
to realize the Truth. Allotted work done without
motives, the work done without expecting or
thinking about its result, purifies the mind that
makes the person gradually fit to see the value of
reason and benefit of renouncing the work itself!.
Unless all mental desires and tendencies to enjoy
sense pleasures are controlled and rooted out, a
person does not become fit for final stage of
Liberation. Yoga makes the person fit through
action, devotion, contemplation, meditation , and
discrimination to sharpen his reason, develop
intuitive power of acquiring knowledge, and to
transcend the mind itself!
Theory of Incarnation
In chapter IV, verse 7 and 8, Sri Krishna says:
"Arjuna, whenever there is decline of
righteousness, and unrighteousness is in the
ascendant, then I body Myself forth,"
"For the protection of the virtuous, for the
destruction of evil-doers, and for establishing
Dharma (righteousness) on a firm footing, I am
born from age to age."
This concept of Divine Incarnation - Avatar - is
at the very root of religiosity prevalent all over
India. This hope that the Lord will come to the
help and rescue of His devotees, and corrupt and
greedy would be punished; that the Truth alone
would prevail in the end and not the untruth, has
had kept the flame of spirituality burning through
the dark ages of foreign aggression and servitude.
One should understand that Dharma here means
attempting to seek our own higher self. From
animal tendencies to Divine plane through human
growth, this is the journey. Materialism,
excessive involvement in sense enjoyment, and
identification of ourselves as body-mind complex
means 'unrighteousness is in the ascendant'. This
excess involvement in senses means evil, greed,
and corruption. Sri Krishna shows us the path: How
to rise above these senses and transcend them to
realize our higher state of consciousness - Atman.
Gradually the discussion centres around the real
nature of man and paths to seek the same. Says Sri
Krishna, "O Arjuna, you are not this body,
you are not this mind; you are ever pure,
unchanging eternal Self, Atman. This Atman is
covered with delusion/illusion of ignorance and
comes to identify itself as body-mind complex.
Therefore, when you say 'you will kill them, or
get killed by them, you are actually telling a
lie. The Atman is never killed, nor does it kill
anybody."
This body is like worn out clothes which the Atman
changes as we change our old garments!
ThenSri Krishna goes on elaborating the ways to
realize self as Self by undertaking various
spiritual disciplines. By proper control of
senses, by way of renunciation and discrimination,
and by constant practice it is possible to steady
and control the mind and realize the higher
Reality. The same end can be reached by Yoga of
action and Yoga of devotion.
In chapter XI there is a wonderful description of
Lord Krishna revealing Himself to Arjuna as "Virat"
- all pervading Reality. This Universal or Cosmic
Form of Sri Krishna relates to three aspects of 1)
shristi - creation, 2) sthiti - maintenance, and
3) vinash - destruction of all the worlds. The
terrifying aspect of this Self makes Arjuna
shudder with fear, and hence the Lord also reveals
His most beautiful form that is full of bliss,
beatitude, and serenity.
Chapter XII lays stress on the path of devotion -
Bhakti Yoga - and emphasizes qualifications and
virtues of a Bhakta.
Thus the Gita is a summary of all knowledge
contained in the Vedas and Upanishads. The Gita is
translated in many languages including the
English. Many learned scholars and spiritually
illumined souls have written commentaries on this
Universal Gospel of Perennial Philosophy.
Depending upon the priority and emphasis, some
advocate Jnana-Yoga as the essence of Gita, while
majority of the people thinks that the Gita
expounds doctrine of Karma Yoga at its best.
In recent times Swami Vivekananda has commented
that the Gita exhorts everyone of us to arise,
awake, and fight our unmanliness so that we emerge
as active and strong Karma Yogis. We become true
spiritual seekers to realize our true nature as
Atman and thereby do immense good to the world.
In the last chapter XVIII, Sri Krishna asks Arjuna,
"Are your doubts cleared? O Arjuna are you
freed from the delusory ideas regarding your true
nature?"
And the grateful Arjuna, full of bliss with recent
realization of the true knowledge declares:
"Yes, my lord. My ignorance has vanished.
Destroyed is my delusion, and I have gained my
memory through Thy Grace. O steadfast, I am firm;
my doubts are gone. Thy will be done."
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