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Download Gita buttonBhagavad Gita—Chapter Four

The Yoga of Wisdom

The Holy Lord said:
This imperishable yoga
I taught to Vivaswat, then he
In turn taught it to Manu, who
Then taught it unto Ikshwaku. (1)

Thus, handed down in succession,
The royal sages knew of it.
This yoga, by long lapse of time,
Was lost here on earth, Arjuna. (2)

This ancient yoga is today
Declared by Me to you because
You are my devotee and friend,
This secret is supreme indeed. (3)

Arjuna said: O Krishna, later was Your birth,
And Vivaswat’s was earlier.
How then should I understand that
You taught this in the beginning? (4)

The Holy Lord said:
Many the births that I have passed–
Many passed by you, Arjuna.
I have full knowledge of them all,
While you do not, Scorcher of Foes. (5)

Though birthless, imperishable,
Although the Lord of all beings,
Controlling my own Prakriti,
I manifest by my own pow’r. (6)

Whenever dharma decreases,
O Bharata, and then there is
The arising of adharma,
Then do I manifest Myself. (7)

For protection of the righteous
And destruction of the wicked,
For establishing of dharma,
I manifest from age to age. (8)

He who thus knows in its true light,
My divine birth and My action,
Leaving the body, is not born
Again–but he attains to Me. (9)

Freed from attachment, fear, anger–
Absorbed, taking refuge in Me,
Purified by fire of knowledge,
Many have attained My Being. (10)

In whatever way they resort
To Me do I thus reward them.
It is My path which ev’rywhere
All men follow, O Arjuna. (11)

Longing for success in action,
In this world men worship the gods,
Because success from such action
Is quickly attained in this world. (12)

The fourfold caste was made by Me,
Based on guna and on karma.
Though I am the Maker thereof,
Know Me as non-doer, changeless. (13)

Never do actions taint Me, nor
Do I thirst for action’s result.
And whosoever knows Me thus
Is not fettered by his actions. (14)

Knowing thus, the ancient seekers
After freedom performed action.
Do you, therefore, perform action,
As did the ancients in past times. (15)

Even sages are bewildered
As what is action, inaction.
I shall tell you what action is:
This knowledge frees you from evil. (16)

For you should know the nature of
Actions enjoined, prohibited,
As well as that of inaction–
All this is hard to understand. (17)

Seeing inaction in action,
Seeing action in inaction–
Such a man is wise among men:
A yogi–doing all action. (18)

Whose undertakings are devoid
Of plan and desire for results,
Whose actions are burnt in the fire
Of knowledge–him the wise call wise. (19)

Having abandoned attachment
For action’s fruit, always content,
Not dependent e’en when acting,
He truly does nothing at all. (20)

Acting with the body alone,
Without wish, thought and self restrained,
Abandoning all thoughts of gain,
Though acting he incurs no fault. (21)

Content with what comes unbidden,
Beyond duality, envy,
The same in success or failure,
E’en though acting, he is not bound. (22)

Having gone beyond attachment,
His mind established in knowledge,
Who acts only as sacrifice:
His whole karma dissolves away. (23)

Brahman is the off’ring and the
Oblation made by Brahman in
The fire that is Brahman. Who sees
Thus, by him Brahman is attained.1 (24)

Some yogis offer sacrifice
To gods alone, while some others
Offer the self as sacrifice
Unto the self in Brahman’s fire. (25)

Some offer senses like hearing
Into the fires2 of restraint;
Some, sound and other sense objects
Into the fire of the senses. (26)

Some offer the senses’ actions
And the functions of life force in
The yoga-fire of self-control,
That is enkindled by knowledge. (27)

Some offer wealth, austerity,
And yoga as their sacrifice,
Some, of restraint and stringent vows,
Offer knowledge as sacrifice. (28)

Some offer the outgoing breath
Into the incoming breath, and
Then stop the course of both the breaths–
Their breath-control their sacrifice.3 (29)

While those of regulated food
Offer it to digestive fires.
All these, knowers of sacrifice,
Destroy their sins by sacrifice. (30)

Eating sacrificial remains,
They go to the Primal Brahman.
Neither this world nor the others
Are for the non-sacrificing. (31)

Sacrifices of many kinds
Are spread out before Brahman’s face.
All of them are born from action;
Thus knowing you shall be released. (32)

Better than mere material
Sacrifice is that of knowledge.
All action without exception
Is comprehended4 in knowledge. (33)

Know that by prostrating yourself,
By questioning and by serving,
The wise who realized the truth
Will instruct you in that knowledge. (34)

Know this, and you shall not again
Become deluded, Arjuna.
By this you shall come to see all
Creation in your self and Me. (35)

Even if you should be the most
Sinful among all the sinful,
Yet you would cross over all sin
By the raft of knowledge alone. (36)

As fire reduces wood to ash,
In the same way, O Arjuna,
The fire of knowledge does reduce
To ashes all karma–know this. (37)

Within this world there is nothing
So purifying as knowledge.
In time, the perfect in yoga
Finds that knowledge within his heart. (38)

The man of faith, and devoted,
And the master of his senses,
Attains this knowledge, and having
Attained quickly finds Supreme Peace. (39)

The ignorant man, without faith,
The doubting, goes to destruction.
The doubter has neither this world,
Nor yet the next, nor happiness. (40)

With work renounced by yoga and
Doubts rent asunder by knowledge,
Actions do not, Dhananjaya,5
Bind him who is poised in the self. (41)

Cutting with the sword of knowledge
This doubt about the self which is
Born of ignorance in your heart,
Take refuge in yoga: arise! (42)

Om Tat Sat
Thus in the Upanishads of the glorious Bhagavad Gita, the science of the Eternal, the scripture of Yoga, the dialogue between Sri Krishna and Arjuna, ends the fourth discourse entitled: The Yoga of Wisdom.

More chapters of the Bhagavad Gita:

Introduction
Chapter One—The Yoga of the Despondency of Arjuna
Chapter Two—Sankhya Yoga
Chapter Three—The Yoga of Action
Chapter Four—The Yoga of Wisdom
Chapter Five—The Yoga of Renunciation of Action
Chapter Six—The Yoga of Meditation
Chapter Seven—The Yoga of Wisdom and Realization
Chapter Eight—The Yoga of Imperishable Brahman
Chapter Nine—The Yoga of the Kingly Science and Kingly Secret
Chapter Ten—The Yoga of Divine glories
Chapter Eleven—The Yoga of the Vision of the Cosmic Form
Chapter Twelve—The Yoga of Devotion
Chapter Thirteen—The Yoga of the Distinction Between the Field and the Knower of the Field
Chapter Fourteen—The Yoga of the Division of the Three Gunas
Chapter Fifteen—The Yoga of the Supreme Spirit
Chapter Sixteen— Yoga of the Division between the Divine and the Demoniacal
Chapter Seventeen—The Yoga of the Division of Threefold Faith
Chapter Eighteen—The Yoga of Liberation by Renunciation

Sri Maharshi Gita—An arrangement of verses of the Bhagavad Gita made by Sri Ramana Maharshi that gives an overview of the essential message of the Gita.
The Maharshi Gita sung in english. – This is an arrangement of verses of the Bhagavad Gita made by Sri Ramana Maharshi that gives an overview of the essential message of the Gita. Arranged according to the meter of the original Sanskrit text and sung to a classical Gita melody used to chant the Gita every morning in our ashram and in most of the ashrams of India. Sung by the monks of Atma Jyoti Ashram.

To hear online audio files of the above translation of the Gita, click here.

Bhagavad Gita Commentary by Swami Nirmalananda:

1. The Battlefield of the Mind
2. The Smile of Krishna
3. Right But Wrong
4. Birth and Death–The Great Illusions
5. Experiencing The Unreal
6. The Unreal and the Real
7. The Body and the Spirit
8. Know the Atman!
9. Practical Self-Knowledge
10. Perspective on Birth and Death
11. The Wonder of the Atman
12. The Indestructible Self
13. “Happy The Warrior”
14. The Virtues of Karma Yoga
15. Religiosity Versus Religion
16. Perspective on Scriptures
17. How Not To Act
18. How To Act
19. How To Be Miserable; How To Be Free
20. Wisdom About the Wise
21. Wisdom about both the Foolish and the Wise
22. The Way of Peace
23. Calming the Storm
24. First Steps in Karma Yoga
25. From the Beginning to the End
26. The Real “Doers”
27. Our Spiritual Marching Orders
28. Freedom From Karma
29. “Nature”
30. Swadharma
31. In the Grip of the Monster
32. “Devotee and Friend”
33. The Eternal Being
34. Worshippers and the Worshipped
35. Caste and Karma

36. Action–Divine and Human
37. The Mystery of Action and Inaction
38. The Wise in Action
39. Sacrificial Offerings
40. The Worship of Brahman
41. The Core Problem
42. Action–Renounced and Performed
43. Freedom (Moksha)
44. The Brahman-Knower
45. The Goal of Karma Yoga
46. The Will of the Wise
47. The Yogi’s Retreat
48. The Yogi’s Inner Life
49. Union With Brahman
50. The Yogi’s Future
51. Success in Yoga
52. The Net and Its Weaver
53. Those Who Seek God
54. Those Who Worship God and the Gods
55. The Veil in the Mind
56. The Big Picture
57. The Sure Way To Realize God
58. Day, Night, and the Two Paths
59. The Supreme Knowledge
60. Universal Being

and more as it is posted.


1) “Brahman is the offering, Brahman is the oblation poured out by Brahman into the fire of Brahman. Brahman is to be attained by him who always sees Brahman in action.” [Go back]

2) Pronounced as two syllables: “fi-yers.” [Go back]

3) “Others offer inhalation into exhalation, and exhalation into inhalation, restraining the path of inhalation and exhalation, intent on control of the vital breath (prana).” [Go back]

4) That is, contained (encompassed) or completed in knowledge (jnana). [Go back]

5) Conqueror of Wealth–Arjuna [Go back]

 
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