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send a friendBhagavad Gita Commentary–Seventy-four–by Swami Nirmalananda Giri

Krishna teaches ArjunaFreedom

The great bondage

“When men have thrown off their ignorance, they are free from pride and delusion. They have conquered the evil of worldly attachment. They live in constant union with the Atman. All craving has left them. They are no longer at the mercy of opposing sense-reactions. Thus they reach that state which is beyond all change.” (Bhagavad Gita 15:5) This is the state of moksha–of freedom.

It is possible to waste a lot of time and struggle on things that prove impossible to accomplish because we are going about it in the wrong way. This first sentence gives us invaluable information about dealing with ego and delusion. “How can I get rid of ego?” is a constant refrain of those who have no idea of the Way. According to the Gita pride (ego) and delusion are side-effects of ignorance. So we need to work on ridding ourselves of that. Furthermore, once ignorance is gone, so is attachment to the dream-illusions of this world. For our eyes see clearly both the truth and the untruth of things.

The most important characteristic of the liberated yogi is living in conscious, unbroken union with Spirit–individual and infinite. This is the goal of all those within the field of relativity. Illuminated consciousness is total fulfillment, therefore within it all desire has melted away. In the same way the experiences of the senses no longer control or produce delusive reactions. There is an important implication here: the liberated person still experiences the external world–it does not vanish–but without identifying with it or being influenced by it. This is true mastery. Such a state is beyond all change. It cannot be lessened or obscured, for it is Reality itself. “This is my Infinite Being; shall the sun lend it any light–or the moon, or fire? For it shines Self-luminous always: and he who attains me will never be reborn.” (Bhagavad Gita 15:6)

Eternal spirit

How is it that what the Gita says about us and our infinite destiny can be true–it seems so beyond anything we know of ourselves? That is because we have no idea of our own nature as part of that Infinite Life we call “God.” This is why the Gita should be our daily study–to keep us reminded. Now Krishna will explain how we are in a sense incarnations of Divinity.

“Part of myself is the God within every creature, keeps that nature eternal, yet seems to be separate, putting on mind and senses five, the garment made of Prakriti.” (Bhagavad Gita 15:7) Every sentient being is rooted in Infinite Being and is in an incomprehensible way a part of that Being. Our presence is the Presence of God, however much we keep that divine aspect of ourselves covered up. At no time are we other than eternal beings free within God, but the dream of duality and delusion has overcome us. We think we are cut off from God because we have put on the costume of the material body with the five outer senses and the inner sense of the mind.

There are really two persons inhabiting each body: the individual spirit and the Supreme Spirit. Krishna keeps speaking of the Lord (Ishwara) so we will not lose sight of that fact, and also so we will realize that the Infinite Will is always in control however the dream may seem otherwise.

“When the Lord puts on a body, or casts it from him, he enters or departs, taking the mind and senses away with him, as the wind steals perfume out of the flowers.” (Bhagavad Gita 15:8) Nothing is really lost to us by death. We take all that matters with us, and we bring it back with us in the next birth to continue our evolutionary path. Each life affects us, and we take those influences along with us. Because they are so subtle they are symbolized as the perfume of flowers. But they are none the less real for that.

“Watching over the ear and the eye, and presiding there behind touch, and taste, and smell, he is also within the mind: he enjoys and suffers the things of the senses.” (Bhagavad Gita 15:9) Both we and God are witnesses through the senses and mind of all our experiences as we incarnate in the “many mansions” of creation. We seem to undergo those experiences–which we do, but as in a dream. God experiences all that we do–this is a manifestation of our oneness with God. God knows it is a dream, but we do not and so we suffer.

Two kinds of human beings

“Dwelling in flesh, or departing, or one with the gunas, knowing their moods and motions, he is invisible always to the ignorant, but his sages see him with the eye of wisdom.” (Bhagavad Gita 15:10) There are two basic divisions in this world: those that do not see God and those that do. And those that see God and their own Self never lose sight of those divine realities whether incarnate, “dying,” or experiencing the modes (gunas) of Prakriti. The others never see anything–but in time they will, for that is the destiny of all sentient beings.

Who sees God?

Who are those that see God? Not the merely religious or virtuous, for Krishna continues: “Yogis who have gained tranquility through the practice of spiritual disciplines, behold him in their own consciousness. But those who lack tranquility and discernment will not find him, even though they may try hard to do so.” (Bhagavad Gita 15:11)

Only the adept yogis who have entered into their own spirit-consciousness beyond the tossing waves of samsara–including their own gross and subtle bodies–see God. And they do not see him outside themselves, but at the very core of their being, pervading their own consciousness.

Who does not see?

When the scriptures of authentic dharma speak of the ignorant and describe their dilemmas, it is never to condemn or despise them, but to inform us who seek to be wise. In this verse two words are used to describe those that cannot possibly see God, and they tell us much.

The first word is akritatmano, which means one who is unprepared and unperfected. Now this is important, for Krishna is not talking of “bad” or “unworthy” people, but of those who have not evolved to perfection and therefore are unprepared for the Divine Vision–incapable of it. This is not a fault, but a stage on the way in which all but a fraction of sentient beings find themselves. But we are hereby told what we need: to prepare ourselves and strive to be more complete in mastery of our energy levels and more centered in the consciousness that we really are. We need to become steady practicers of yoga.

The other word is acetasah–the unthinking. This includes both those that are simply unaware and those that refuse to be aware. There are people that live heedlessly throughout life after life, never considering the deeper implications of their existence. Even though they have an intellectual belief in God, they do not live life in the perspective of that truth. Only those who ponder deeply on the eternal mystery of God, man, and life are open to understand and move onward from mere thinking about it to actually walking the Way.


More 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
61. Maya–Its Dupes and Its Knowers
62. “Shall Not” Versus “Can Not”
63. Going To God
64. Wisdom and Knowing
65. Going To The Source
66. From Hearing To Seeing
67. The Wisdom of Devotion
68. Right Conduct
69. The Field and Its Knower
70. Interaction of Purusha and Prakriti
71. Seeing The One Within the All
72. The Three Gunas–Part One
73. The Cosmic Tree
74. Freedom
75. The All-pervading Reality
76. The Divine and the Demonic
77. Faith and the Three Gunas
78. Food and the Three Gunas
79. Worship and Discipline and the Gunas

Read the Bhagavad Gita online: The English text of the Gita posted on this Web Site is arranged according to the meter of the original Sanskrit text so it can be sung–as it is done every morning in our ashram and in most of the ashrams of India.

 
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