Prasthana Thraya – 3
One of the Dhyana slokas for Bhagavad Gita written by Madhusudhana Saraswathi praises Bhagavad Gita thus:
sarvopaniṣado
gavo dogdha gopala-nandanaḥ|
partho
vatsaḥ sudhirbhokta dugdhaṃ gitamṛtaṃ mahatII
All the Upaniṣhads are the
cows. Krishna is the milker. Arjuna is the calf. The pure-minded are the enjoyers
(of the milk). The supreme nectar of
Gita is the milk.
Bhagavad
Gita
which is thus praised as containing the essence of Upanishads constitutes one
of the trio of Prasthana Thraya along
with Upanishads and Brahma Sutras. Consisting of 700 slokas spread
over 18 chapters, Gita ,as we shall refer to it hereafter, comes in Bhisma Parva of Mahabharatha and is set in
the framework of a dialogue between, Arjuna, the armed warrior and disciple,
and Sri Krishna, his unarmed charioteer and Guru, in the battle field of
Kurukshetra. Arjuna who arrogantly asked Sri Krishna to take the chariot to the
front, turned sad and depressed seeing his Guru, elders and relatives assembled
on the other side and surrendered to Sri Krishna seeking his advice and
guidance on his eleventh hour dilemma “fight or pullback.” Sri Krishna’s elaborate advice encompassing
all the four yogas of Karma, Bhakthi, Raja and Jnana that dissolves Arjuna’s
delusion and drives him to action is the subject matter of Gita. So Gita
presents a synthesis of the four paths of Karma Yoga, Bhakthi Yoga, Raja Yoga,
and Jnana yoga.
Each chapter in Gita
is titled one Yoga or the other. Yoga
means a topic and also as that which unites the seeker with the destination. As per Swami
Paramartananda the destination here is “Security, Peace and Happiness” and
seekers are ourselves. We seek these outside ourselves from external objects
and relations, not knowing that we ourselves are the source for our ‘Peace,
Security and Happiness’; as our minds are covered with Malam(impurities); Vikshepa(extrovertedness)
and Ajjanam(ignorance). Malam
is the six fold impurities; the six fold obstacles to discover our inner joy. And those impurities are kamaḥ,
(desire), krodhaḥ, (anger); lobhaḥ (greed); mohaḥ (delusion); madaḥ
(arrogance or vanity); matsaryaḥ (jealousy or competitiveness). Vikṣēpaḥ,
mental extrovertedness, is the mental restlessness and wandering. Ajjanam is ignorance of the fact that I
am the one and only source for the “Happiness, Peace and Security” that I am
seeking from external objects and relations. Karma Yoga rids the mind of
impurities and makes it pure, giving Chitta
Suddhi. Bhakthi and Raja Yogas
discipline the wandering mind making it focussed and one-pointed, giving one Chitta Ekagratha. Jnana Yoga imparts to such a pure
focussed mind the true knowledge of the Self as Brahman of total peace and happiness
and security. Swami Sivananda
considers the eighteen chapters of Gita as having a progressive order, by
which Krishna leads "Arjuna up the ladder of Yoga from one rung to
another". It is not only Arjuna but
all of us as well through Arjuna.
Swami Vivekananda remarks
“This Kurukshetra War is only an allegory. When we sum up its esoteric
significance, it means the war which is constantly going on within man between
the tendencies of good and evil.” Man
can overcome the tendency for evil only through the disciplines of Karma Yoga
and Bhakthi/Upasana Yoga. As Gita speaks of them equally as Jnana Yoga, Swami
Chinmayananda writes, “Here in the Bhagavad Gita, we find a practical
handbook of instruction on how best we can re-organise our inner ways of
thinking, feeling, and acting in our everyday life and draw from ourselves a
larger gush of productivity to enrich the life around us, and to emblazon the
subjective life within us”. He viewed
the Gita as a universal scripture to turn a person from a state of
agitation and confusion to a state of complete vision, inner contentment, and
dynamic action. Mahatma Gandhi also emphasises Gita being a practical guide
with his own example with these words “When disappointment stares me in the
face and all alone I see not one ray of light, I go back to the Bhagavadgītā.
I find a verse here and a verse there and I immediately begin to smile in the
midst of overwhelming tragedies – and my life has been full of external
tragedies – and if they have left no visible, no indelible scar on me, I owe it
all to the teaching of Bhagavadgita”.
Not only Mahathma Gandhi but other leaders of freedom struggle like Bal
Gangadhar Tilak, Vinobha Bhave etc., have found Gita a source of inspiration in
their personal and public lives.
Let us see one instance of the
all-embracing practical approach i.e. in the case of obtaining Mukthi, given to us all through
Arjuna. In ch. 7 Sri Krishna classifies bhakthas in four groups Artha, Artharthi, Jijnasu and Jnani through verse 16, and we will be
mostly falling in one or the other of the first three groups:
chaturvidha
bhajante maṃ janaḥ sukṛtinorjuna
artho
jijnasurartharthi jnani ca bharatarṣabha
Four kinds of
virtuous men worship Me, O Arjuna! They are the Artha (distressed), Artharthi
(the seeker of security and pleasure), Jijnasu
( the seeker of knowledge of Me), and the Jnani
(one who knows Me)
Artha
bhaktha thinks of the Lord only periodically; as and when he is
faced with a crisis or a problem and then he prays to Him with all fervour but slowly
forgets Him after the crisis fades or blows over under the pretext he does not
want to disturb Him. He is a sakama bhaktha as his sporadic devotion is for
selfish needs and desires. For such a sakama
bhaktha also Sri Krishna offers a way for Mukthi in the closing verses of the
last chapter ie. Ch 18 in verse no. 56:
Sarvakarmaanyapi
sadaa kurvaano madvyapaashrayah;
Matprasaadaadavaapnoti
shaashwatam padamavyayam.
Doing all actions, always taking refuge in Me, by My Grace he obtains the eternal, indestructible state or
abode.
The prescription is to do all
nitya, naimithika karmas as well along
with other laukika karmas but without
forgetting the Lord all the time and also His words that fruits of all actions,
good, bad or mixed, come through His Grace only. In short perform all your
actions, material and spiritual, karma
yoga way completely surrendering to Lord and He will guide you to Mukthi
Artharthi
bhaktha remembers Him always no doubt but he has also one material
demand or other always. He is also a sakama
bhaktha but unlike Artha bhaktha he regularly thinks of the Lord. To him
Sri Krishna offers a way for Mukthi in
verse no. 65 of ch.18:
Manmanaa bhava
madbhakto madyaajee maam namaskuru;
Maamevaishyasi satyam
te pratijaane priyo’si me.
Fix your mind on Me,
be devoted to Me, sacrifice to Me, bow down to Me. You will come to Me; truly do I
promise unto you, (for) you are dear to Me.
The prescription here is to surrender
to one’s Ishta Devata, Bhakthi Yoga way
totally, converting his sakama bhakthi
into nishkama bhakthi. ‘Me’ stands for
Ishta Devatha only and not for Vasudeva putra.Krishna.
A Jijnasu bhaktha is a nishkama
bhaktha. His devotion is not out of material desires or wants but out of
deep thirst for knowing Him. So his devotion to Lord is for Lord’s sake. Only he also has not got the Jnanam and to Him Sri Krishna’s advice is contained in
sloka 66. This is also called Charama
sloka as this is the last sloka
of Upadesa.
Sarvadharmaan
parityajya maamekam sharanam vraja;
Aham twaa
sarvapaapebhyo mokshayishyaami maa shuchah.
Giving up all dharmas (dharmas and adharmas ie. all actions), take refuge in Me alone; I
will liberate you from all sins; grieve not.
Giving up actions
implies not giving up actions as such but giving up the Kartrutva buddhi ie, doership and also Bhokthrutva buddhi ie. enjoyership. With Karthruthva bukthi and Bhokthrutva
buddhi goes Ahamkaram, Mamakaram i,e. ‘me, my’ thought and
with that Dehabhimana also. So shedding ego and Dehabhimana, surrender to the Ishta
Devata meditating on It and being always aware of It as the One without a second
is the prescription. ‘Mamekam’ stands
for looking upon Ishta Devata as the one
Saguna Brahman whose manifestations
only are all other Devatas. As there is no sense of doership, no fruits
of action will attach to him. Though he may not be equipped
with Nirguna Brahma Jnanam he
surrenders the Jnana Yoga way to his Ishta Devata for Mukthi.
For the Jnani Bhaktha Sri Krishna does not offer
any advice as with attainment of Jnanam,
he has already attained Jivanmukthi
and for all purposes he is one with Him though he may continue in the body to
exhaust Prarabhdha karma.
This Sri Krishna has hinted
earlier in ch, 7 sloka 18:
Udaaraah sarva evaite
jnani twaatmaiva me matam;
Aasthitah sa hi
yuktaatmaa maamevaanuttamaam gatim.
Noble indeed are all
these (all the bhakthas); but I consider
Jnani bhaktha as My very Self; for,
steadfast in mind, he is established in Me alone as the supreme goal.
It is no wonder that with its practical approach, Gita has been highly praised not only by
eminent Indians like Mahathma Gandhi, Jawaharlal Nehru, Sarvapalli
Radhakrishnan, Abdul Kalam, etc. but also by eminent foreigners like Aldous
Huxley, Henry David Thoreau, J. Robert Oppenheimer, Ralph Waldo
Emerson, Carl Jung, and Herman Hesse.
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Great. I am reminded of Swami Chinmayananda and Dayanandaji's talks and writings. Thanks. Congratulations.
ReplyDeletegreat work.
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