Bhagavad-Gita Explained
Chapter Two:
Atma-jñāna
by Michael Dolan/B.V. Mahayogi
Bhagavad-Gita Chapter 2 continued... March 11, 2019
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Ancient Dialogues
It is useful to keep in mind that for all its philosophical
rigor, the Bhagavad-Gita is not a doctoral thesis or an academic paper. It is
ancient conversation recorded long before the talks of Socrates were edited
into dialogues by Plato. Krishna advises his friend while Arjuna anxiously eyes
the warriors lined up against him. They talk while armed men race about in
chariots blowing war-trumpets. We may not expect an entirely disciplined
discourse, footnoted for scholars. And yet, Krishna’s
arguments follow a logical framework. Here in the second chapter Krishna lays
the ground for the points that follow.
First Principles
His first teaching is important. He tells Arjuna to try to
see things from a wider perspective: from the point of view of eternity.
The soul is immortal. All wisdom will flow from this.
Krishna will uncover different levels of surrender to divinity culminating in
complete dedication. But he wants Arjuna to explore the spiritual dimension
first. This echoes the Vedanta-sutra’s athāto-brahma-jijñāsa: The
human form of life is meant for inquiring into the nature of self; it is a gift
for discovering spiritual reality. Soon we will discover a higher
principle--that of divinity or God.
Bhagavad Gita and Theism
The Bhagavad-Gita is a profoundly monotheistic work. The
word “Bhagavan” means God. In the course of the
work we discover that Krishna claims divinity for Himself. It will be revealed
that God may be understood as the Supreme Person. The inner meaning of the Mahābharata
is seen in the Bhagavad-Gita which reveals Krishna as the Supreme Absoute
Truth. Some may be uncomfortable with the insistence upon Krishna as God, but
if we suspend our critical judgment long enough to enter into the teachings
given here, we may learn something useful that helps our own faith. Anyone
reading the Bible must accept that the Old Testament describes God as Yahweh.
In order to truly enter the spirit of the Bhagavad-Gita we must likewise accept
Krishna as Bhagavan at least for the duration of our reading.
Why God Appears
According to the text, when the earth was over-populated
with tyrants and burdened by the weight of military might, God Himself appeared
in the Krishna-avatar to diminish the burden by eliminating those puissant
kings. The battle of Kurukshetra was to be their extinction. Krishna has
empowered Arjuna with the task of removing such demonic kings.
And so Krishna asks Arjuna not only to do his duty as a
soldier but to fight as an act of dedication to God Himself, the Supreme
Person.
The idea of dedication to God is called Bhakti or divine
love and bhakti is the true inner meaning of the Gita. Krishna will discuss in
turn different religious practices, different concepts of duty, and distinct
forms of yoga. Arjuna is rightly concerned with death. If he dies in battle,
having murdered cousins, uncles, gurus, and grandfathers, perhaps he might go
to hell. Before riding in to battle, he has questions: “What is
the standard of proper behavior? How does karma affect us? What is the right
path?”
Spiritual Wisdom: Buddhi-yoga
Krishna will answer his questions in due course, but he
begins with the idea of spiritual wisdom. On the basis of spiritual wisdom we
will come to the right conclusions about action. Krishna explains that such
wisdom will ultimately lead one to see the value of dedication, bhakti.
The Buddha taught that right thinking and knowledge are key
to proper vision, action, meditation and enlightenment. Krishna tells us that
wisdom and a proper understanding of the soul are key to determining our true
self-interest as spiritual entities: eternal dedication to divinity in love or bhakti.
He will go on to describe different kinds of processes that
lead to self-realization and freedom from birth and death. He will talk of
different “yogas” but at the heart of all these
yogic processes is what he dubs here in the second chapter: buddhi-yoga.
Bhaktivinod Thakura has commented that “Krishna’s
teaching will show that real wisdom--buddhi-yoga--is the central guiding
principle behind all the other yogas described in the Gita. When the
path of wisdom is limited by good deeds or intellectual “knowledge”
it is karma-yoga, saṅkhya or jñāna-yoga. But true wisdom discovers the bhakti
principle of dedication. This is the purport of buddhi-yoga and supercedes all other forms of yoga: The highest wisdom is found in surrender and
divine love--bhakti.
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