Bhagavad-Gita Explained
Chapter Two:
Atma-jñāna
by Michael Dolan/B.V. Mahayogi
I'd like to dedicate this post to the memory of my old friend Yudhamanyu Prabhu, who passed away on Shiva-ratri. I know he's there waiting for us all in the big kirtan.
On this blog I've tried to do a bit of a study guide to the Bhagavad-Gita, which I posted here:
https://mexpostfact.blogspot.com/2015/07/bhagavad-gita-study-guide-index.html
When I re-read what I had written, I realized that the summary of the second chapter was too short.
The thing is, I have read through the second chapter so often that it seems familiar to me. I feel like everyone already knows this, so I spent more time on other chapters. But some friends asked me to continue writing about the second chapter of the Bhagavad-Gita, so I decided to have another go. I left the Sanskrit in footnotes to make it easier to read.
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Second
Chapter of Bhagavad-Gita cont.
In the beginning of the section we find the great warrior Arjuna lamenting the horrors of war and giving profound antiwar arguments. He’s
basing his ideas on duty, what is right. But as Krishna will point out, these are all relative truths. War, like peace, is a relative and temporary aspect of the struggle for existence. Shridhar Maharaja, when asked about whether we should be in a panic about nuclear war replied that this world is temporary. What goes on here is a relative concern, even war. In the context of eternal life, war is a point on a line, a line in a plane, a moment in infinite time and space.
Portrait of Shridhar Maharaja by Mahayogi |
But Arjuna is focusing on the events at hand. He wants what is best for his family, but his family is toxic. He wants peace with his cousins, but there is no saving
a tryant like Duryodhana. Even the gurus, Bhishma and Drona are corrupt. They
have lined upon on the side of corruption. Some of his foes have very good
reasons for their taking the wrong side in a family war. In the end the result will be
the same. There is no avoiding a blood bath. Still Arjuna is remorseful.
The
war conflict is, in an important sense, a metaphor for the struggle we all face
in daily life. In this sense, the Bhagavad-Gita offers us perspectives on how
to engage in the battle of daily life.
Krishna
explains that there is no avoiding the battle. Arjuna cannot run away.
Cowardice is no solution. Especially not for a warrior of his stature, but even
for ordinary men. We cannot escape the struggle of life. We must confront our
conflicts, not run from them.
Krishna
points out to Arjuna that the act of engaging in the struggle may result in
death. But in the end, all bodies are all mortal. Bodily mortality is
inevitable. For one who has been born, death is certain. If the battle is a
life and death struggle, we must see through the superficial lines of conflict
to the central problem: death and life itself.
If
death is inevitable for the human body, the soul is immortal.
Krishna
gives a deep explanation of the nature of the soul, spirituality, and the atma.
The
soul can neither be cut nor burned nor dried. It outlives the mortal body. And
if we are immortal, then death cannot touch us. Arjuna has raised the problem
of sin and karma. Won’t
the sin of killing consume us after death?
But
before dealing with the question of how karma marks the soul, Krishna wants to
establish the permanence of spirit itself. Karma, after all, is a relative
question which will be discussed at length. But spirit itself is above and
beyond karma.
Are
we mortal or immortal? Krishna says we are immortal, and this is really his
first teaching to Arjuna in the second chapter of the Bhagavad-Gita.
Consciousness
is real. The soul exists. It is unseen by the human eye, infinitesimal. Even
the wise cannot discern how consciousness works, how it is connected to the
body and mind. And yet Krishna tells us that soul or atma is transcendental to
both mind and body. Mind itself is a construct of eternal consciousness. This
soul takes on bodies and then leaves them just as we put on clothes in the
morning and take them off at night.
He
tells Arjuna to put away his ordinary morality for a moment and consider the
eternal nature of the soul. In the end, the soul is unstained even by bad
karma, for in the course of a thousand lives mistakes are made. And the atma
will outlive a thousand lives a thousand times over. So one must see to the
soul. Our permanent self-interest is more important that our interest in
society and family.
Our next life may be as hellish as this one or may offer a
higher birth and heavenly rewards. But the entire material world is a vicious
circle, a wheel of birth and death. A higher consideration is liberation from
the cycle of reincarnation.
Krishna
will deal in greater detail with these questions in the rest of the
conversation. But for the moment he wants Arjuna to turn his attention from the
immediate conflict to the higher question of immortal life.
We
must all fight our battles every day. We must not shrink from the fight. But
the real conflict is the struggle for eternal life. Enmeshed in our daily
fight, we lose sight of our spiritual self-interest. Before we can even begin
to journey on the spiritual path, we must recognize the existence of the
eternal soul.
Krishna
explains the nature of the atma or soul as follows:[1]
be.
He is unborn, eternal, ever-existing, undying, primeval. He is not slain when
the
body is slain.
(Bhagavad-gītā 2.20)
The
soul can never be cut into pieces, nor can he be burned by fire, nor
moistened
by water, nor withered by the wind.[2]
(Bhagavad-gītā 2.23)
This
individual soul is unbreakable and insoluble, and can be never be burned
nor
dried. He is everlasting, all-pervading, unchangeable, immovable, and
eternally
the same. [3]
The
Bhagavad-Gita is sometimes called “Gitopanishad” since the concepts
expressed there are given in seed form as axiomatic truths. The idea that the
Atma or individual soul is conscious atomic spiritual energy echoes the version
of the ancient Upanishadic texts:
If
we divide the tip of a hair into one hundred parts and then take one part and
divide
this into another one hundred parts, that ten-thousandth part is the
dimension
of the living entity. And this living entity is capable to attain the
unlimited
Lord. [4]
(Śvetāśvatara Upaniṣad 5.9)
न जायते म्रियते वा कदाचिन्
नायं भूत्वा भविता वा न भूयः
अजो नित्यः शाश्वतो ऽयं पुराणो
न हन्यते हन्यमाने शरीरे
na
jāyate mriyate vā kadācin
nāyaṁ
bhūtvā bhavitā vā na bhūyaḥ
ajo
nityaḥ śāśvato
'yaṁ purāṇo
na
hanyate hanyamāne
śarīre
[2] नैनं छिन्दन्ति
शस्त्राणि नैनं दहति पावकः
न चैनं क्लेदयन्त्य् आपो न शोषयति मारुतः
nainaṁ
chindanti śastrāṇi
nainaṁ dahati pāvakaḥ
na
cainaṁ kledayanty āpo na śoṣayati
mārutaḥ
[3] अच्छेद्यो ऽयम्
अदाह्यो ऽयम् अक्लेद्यो ऽशोष्य एव च
नित्यः सर्व-गतः स्थाणुर् अचलो ऽयं सनातनः
acchedyo
'yam adāhyo
'yam akledyo 'śoṣya
eva ca
nityaḥ
sarva-gataḥ sthāṇur
acalo 'yaṁ sanātanaḥ
[4] बालाग्र-शत भागस्य
शतधा कल्पितस्य च
भागो
जिवः स विज्ञेयः स चानन्त्याय काप्ते
bālāgra-śata
bhāgasya śatadhā kalpitasya ca
bhāgo jivaḥ
sa vijñeyaḥ sa cānantyāya kāpte
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