Mahabharata (English)

by Kisari Mohan Ganguli | 2,566,952 words | ISBN-10: 8121505933

The English translation of the Mahabharata is a large text describing ancient India. It is authored by Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa and contains the records of ancient humans. Also, it documents the fate of the Kauravas and the Pandavas family. Another part of the large contents, deal with many philosophical dialogues such as the goals of life. Book...

Go directly to: Footnotes, Concepts.

Section XXXI (Bhagavad Gita Chapter VII)

[Sanjaya continued,—]

"The Holy One said,

'Listen, O son of Pritha, how, without doubt, you mayst know me fully, fixing your mind on me, practising devotion, and taking refuge in me. I will now, without leaving anything speak to you about knowledge and experience, knowing which there would be left nothing in this world (for you) to know. One among thousands of men strives for perfection. Of those even that are assiduous and have attained to perfection, only some one knows me truly.[1]

Earth, water, fire, air, space, mind, also understanding, and consciousness,—thus has my nature been divided eight-fold. This is a lower (form of my) nature. Different from this, know there is a higher (form of my) nature which is animate, O you of mighty arms, and by which this universe is held.[2]

Know that all creatures have these for their source. I am the source of evolution and also of the dissolution of the entire universe. There is nothing else, O Dhananjaya, that is higher than myself. Upon me is all this like a row of pearls on a string. Taste I am in the waters, O soil of Kunti, (and) I am the splendour of both the moon and the sun, I am the Om in all the Vedas, the sound in space, and the manliness in men. I am the fragrant odour in earth, the splendour in fire, the life in all (living) creatures, and penance in ascetics. Know me, O son of Pritha, to be the eternal seed of all beings. I am the intelligence of all creatures endued with intelligence, the glory of all glorious objects. I am also the strength of all that are endued with strength, (myself) freed from desire and thirst, and, O bull of Bharata’s race, am the desire, consistent with duty, in all creatures.[3]

And all existences which are of the quality of goodness, and which are of the quality of passion and quality of darkness, know that they are, indeed, from me. I am, however, not in them, but they are in me. This entire universe, deluded by these three entities consisting of (these) three qualities knows not me that am beyond them and undecaying; since this illusion of mine, depending on the (three) qualities, is exceedingly marvellous and highly difficult of being transcended. They that resort to me alone cross this illusion.[4]

Doers of evil, ignorant men, the worst of their species, robbed of their knowledge by (my) illusion and wedded to the state of demons, do not resort to me. Four classes of doers of good deeds worship me, O Arjuna, viz., he that is distressed, that is possessed of knowledge, being always devoted and having his faith in only One, is superior to the rest, for unto the man of knowledge I am dear above everything, and he also is dear to me. All these are noble. But the man of knowledge is regarded (by me) to be my very self, since he, with soul fixed on abstraction, takes refuge in me as the highest goal. At the end of many births, the man possessed of knowledge attains to me, (thinking) that Vasudeva is all this. Such a high-souled person, however, is exceedingly rare. They who have been robbed of knowledge by desire, resort to their godheads, observant of diverse regulations and controlled by their own nature.[5]

Whatever form, (of godhead or myself) any worshipper desires to worship with faith, that faith of his unto that (form) I render steady. Endued with that faith, he pays his adorations to that (form), and obtaines from that all his desire, since all those are ordained by me.[6] The fruits, however, of those persons endued with little intelligence are perishable.

They that worship the divinities, go to the divinities, (while) they that worship me come even to me.[7] They that have no discernment, regard me who am (really) unmanifest to have become manifest, because they do not know the transcendent and undecaying state of mine than which there is nothing higher.[8]

Shrouded by the illusion of my inconceivable power, I am not manifest to all. This deluded world knows not me that I am unborn and undecaying. I know, O Arjuna, all things that have been past, and all things that are present, and all things that are to be. But there is nobody that knows me. All creatures, O chastiser of foes, are deluded at the time of their birth by the delusion, O Bharata, of pairs of opposites arising from desire and aversion. But those persons of meritorious deeds whose sins have attained their end, being freed from the delusion of pairs of opposites, worship me, firm in their vow (of that worship). Those who, taking refuge in me, strive for release from decay and death, know Brahman, the entire Adhyatma, and action.[9]

And they who know me with the Adhibhuta, the Adhidaiva, and the Adhiyajna, having minds fixed on abstraction, know me at the time of their departure (from this world).[10]

Footnotes and references:

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[1]:

Only some one, i.e., very few. Few perfection, i.e., for knowledge of self. Thus all the commentators.

[2]:

The last word of the first line of this sloka is param (higher) and not aparam with the initial a silent owing to the rules of Sandhi. Many of the Bengal texts have aparam, not excepting the latest one printed at Calcutta.

[3]:

Kama which I have rendered desire is explained by Sreedhara as the wish for an unattained object; and raga as the longing or thirst for more. The second Kama is explained as desires of the class of love or lust.

[4]:

Daivi is explained by Sankara as divine; by Sreedhara as marvellous.

[5]:

The divine desires are about sons, fame, victory over enemies, etc., regulations, such as fasts etc.; their own nature, i.e., disposition as dependent on the acts of their past lives. Thus all the commentators.

[6]:

The worshipper obtains his desires, thinking he gets them from the godhead he worships. It is however, that gives him those.

[7]:

The divinities being perishable, myself imperishable. What these obtain is perishable. What my worshippers obtain is imperishable.

[8]:

The ignorant, without knowledge of my transcendent essence take me to be no higher than that what is indicated in my human and other incarnate manifestations. Thus Sreedhara.

[9]:

Adhyatman is explained as all that by which Brahman is to be attained. All actions mean the whole course of duties and practices leading to the knowledge of Brahman.

[10]:

The three words occurring in this sloka and explained in the next section, forming as they do the subject of a question by Arjuna.

Other Purana Concepts:

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Discover the significance of concepts within the article: ‘Section XXXI (Bhagavad Gita Chapter VII)’. Further sources in the context of Purana might help you critically compare this page with similair documents:

Brahman, Adhyatma, Adhibhuta, Adhidaiva, Adhiyajna, Man of knowledge, Meritorious deed, Entire universe, Taking refuge, Holy One, Quality of Passion, High-souled person, Three qualities, Son of Pritha, Quality of goodness, Worship me, Dissolution of the universe, Greatest good, Quality of darkness, Transcendent state, Practising devotion, Divinities, Adhibhuta, Adhidaiva, Adhiyajna, Practice devotion, Higher nature, Lower nature, Eternal seed, Man possessed of knowledge, Pairs of opposite, Perishable fruit.

Conclusion:

This concludes Section XXXI (Bhagavad Gita Chapter VII) of Book 6 (Bhishma Parva) of the Mahabharata, of which an English translation is presented on this page. This book is famous as one of the Itihasa, similair in content to the eighteen Puranas. Book 6 is one of the eighteen books comprising roughly 100,000 Sanskrit metrical verses.

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