Bhagavad Gitabhashya of Bhaskara - P - Gitasamiksa014825mbp
Bhagavad Gitabhashya of Bhaskara - P - Gitasamiksa014825mbp
Bhagavad Gitabhashya of Bhaskara - P - Gitasamiksa014825mbp
GITA SAMIKSA
$>
EDITED BY
1971
in March 1970.
Papers presented to the Seminar on the GIta held
,)=.
s
46802
Price: Rs. 7-50
(OEEWEO
The Registrar,
S.V. University,
EDITOR.
INAUGURAL ADDRESS
*y
Dr. D. JAGANATHA REDDY, MD.,
Vice-chancellor,
Sri Venkateswara University^ Tirupati.
I am happy to associate
myself with this Seminar on the
Lord's song (Bhagavad Gita) to-day and
express my thanks to-
Professor Sarma for affording me this opportunity. I am confi-
dent that this dialogue or discourse on the Gita
by eminent
scholars gathered here will be unrestrictive and fearless in ex-
pressing opinions. May the youth seated in the last benches
gather courage to participate and contribute to the richness of
the seminar. It is up to the
participants to leave an impress
on the audience of the greatness and significance and the enno-
bling influence of the Gita on mankind as a whole and in parti-
cular to the Hindu thought and action.
the Scholars and Pandits who are assembled here I would like to
say that they should impart the message of the Glta to the stu-
dents who come to them for learning Sanskrit.
in the interest of our children that they are made to recite a few
^verses from the Glta daily. Stability, domestic or at State
level, could be achieved by the application of the Glta to the
problems of the day.
keep in mind
the following Publish or Perish, extend or confine,
:
'IW^R^^^I^^
11. The Gitn and the Quran SYED MOHIDEEN SHAH 131
3. BG. 7. 13.
4. BG. 10. 8.
5. BG. 9. 17.
6. BS. 1.1.2,
7. ibid. 3.1.
2 GlTASAMIKSA .
the other hand, Saiikara points out that the nirguna Brahman,
the transcendental Absolute of the Upanisads, is not only im-
plicit in BG M but also explicitly set forth in several con-
texts. Verses 11-30 in Chapter II, verses 3 and 4 in Chapter XII,
and verses 13-17 in Chapter XIII, among others, may be cited
in this connection.
A point Sankara's
central to
interpretation of BG,,
with a tremendous probative force of its own, deserves more
than passing notice. What is the exact status of the jlva> the
practitioner of religious life? 'mamalvam'so jlvaloke jivabhutah
sanatanati** is the answer vouchsafed by the Gita. Reality,
which is non-dual Spirit., 10 and lifted altogether above the
11
threefold difference, cannot conceivably have arasoy or parts of
any kind. Alone among the commentators Sankara explicitly
raises this decisive issue: nanu 1 * niravayavasya paramatmanah
kuto'vayava ekadeso'msaJ??' Admittedly, spirit transcends time
and space, the sine qua non of plurality, 13 and, therefore, it
cannot conceivably admit, of distinctions like parts and whole.
Such is the insight behind-Sankara's contention that the relation
in question has to be conceived, not as one obtaining between
two eternally separate relata but as one that is purely empirical,
more apparent than real, and that resembles the"relation between
a pot-space and the infinite space outside. Dr. Radhakrishnan
seems to grant the substance of Sankara's contention, but, later,
qualifies it thus 'When he (jiva) rises above his limitations
:
'
9. BG. 15.7.
10. BS. 3.2.16 - aha ca tanmatram;
1 1 .
sajatiyavljatlyasvagatabhedarahitam.
12. cf. BSB. 2.3.43: na hi niravayavasya mukhyo'msah sambhavati,
13. cf. Russel, It is time and space that are the source of plurality; HWP.,
p. 783.
14. Radhakrishnan, The Bhagavad Gita, pp. 328, 329.
SRI SANKARA ON THE BHAGAYAD-GITA 3
into the Absolute does not rise in 'Sankara's Advaita, if only be-
cause there nothing real beside the Absolute which may dis-
is
of the supreme* 15 is seriously meant, one may ask for further light
on the significance of the alleged "movement* in the non-
16
spatial and non-temporal Absolute.
2l
te*\ sarvapapebhyo moksayisyami may be adverted to in this
,
saving knowledge. In
this context a hierarchy of such means,
direct and indirect, may be thought of. Sankara's interpreta-
tion of the Gita does not unfairly inflate jnana at the expense
of karma and bhakti or vice versa. He takes an objective
view of the relevance of the threefold means to the practical
achievement of emancipation. One has to go on digging the
well, fervently, till the water is found, but when the country
29. ibid.
38. 3.17.
SRI S ANKARA ON THE BHAGAVAD-GlTA 7
widely over the Gita, harmonize most naturally with the Ad-
vaitic metaphysics of Sankara; with other systems they are in
clear contradiction. If the self of man is an agent, as a matter
of course, to hold 'naiva kfficit karomi"*, is to nurse a falsehood.
ker as his deepest Self. The term 'we does not, of course, mean
1
39. 5.13.
40. B.G. 5.8.
c
10 GITASAMIKSA
asti".
a case of the drop becoming the sea and not getting lost in it,
60
for Brahman the sea of immortality .
is Inspired by such a
1
vision Sankara affirms the brahmabk&va* of the mukta.
ffaraii^^
m *pfi w^ ' (
VIL
The problem once arises whether the Glta does not re-
at
unreal. Rami-
gard the external world of matter as ultimately
For him
nuja rejects emphatically such an interpretation.
Mayci means 'flf%^<^Rt' an existent entity with wondrous
vity.
n CVIL 4.)
16 ,
interpreted by Ramanuja as
fi
^^3M
They constitute y
.
(x.4.) is
Ill
The
essential nature of the self is indicated by the term
Ksetrajna even as the Brahma-sutra indicates it by the word
jna. The fundamental truth about the self is that It is the
11 (v. ie.)
This verse proves for Ramanuja that jnana is the essential
character of the self. From this single fact of the self being the
knower in its fundamental nature, all its other basic characteris-
tics are deduced by Ramanuja. The second chapter sets forth
the immortality of the Jlva. The crucial verse is:
n (ii. is.)
(II. 12.)
3 TOR
(V. 16.)
the self, the self is also a free agent in relation to action. ^^T
is a real feature of the self.
nuja says :
- 3. 37.)
! (Sri-bhasya, (II
In the final analysis jnana is the same as ananda and as such the
knowing self has to be a bhoktr.
1
(V. 19.)
He says
|
(XV. 7.)
__
This doctrine of the Jlvatman as an ^^T or part of the
Paramatrnan does justice to all the varied pronouncements of
the text on the relation of the two. Transcendence and iden-
tity are to be taken as aspects of the comprehensive fact of
God's possesssion of the Jlva as a part of His totality of being.
,
22 GITASAMlKSA
Ramanuja says
IV
culous. The Brahma-sutra may discuss the proofs for the reality
of Brahman. But the Gltn for Ramanuja is a revelation by
God Himself to Arjuna and while the highest Deity presents it-
and speaks forth the saving knowledge the de-
self to vision
I (IX. 2.)
That an experience of God such as the one vouchsafed to Arjuna
is veridical is to be established by two considerations :
dge. should
It not be just an intensified recollection of what has
been learnt in the course of antecedent experience by way of scri-
ptural study or reasoning. Often such a wishful recollection may
take on delusive vividness and the image may pose as a perceptual
object, (b) The reality supposed to be apprehended should not
be
something wholly out of relation to the established facts of non-
mystical experience. It must not be an alternative realm stand-
ing in contradiction to the world of mundane actuality.
In that
case instead of resolving contradictions, it would be generating
a new contradiction. To be a genuine perception of reality an
in itself and must introduce integra-
experience must be integrated
tion into the otherwise incoherent empirical world. Its authen-
is to be measured by its coherent reconstruction of the
un-
city
coordinated multiplicities of every day experience.
I (XL 6.)
1
(XL 7.)
II (XL 13.)
|
(XV. 17.)
<T STFf T Wf
(X. 12-14.)
Commenting OB
26 GITASAMlKSA
\
(ix. is.)
As a whole this love-aspect of the deity pervades the entire text.
God's relation to the cosmos of unthinking matter and the
finite souls alive with the eternal light of consciousness is con-
: n
: n (ix. 4, 5.)
: l
paF?raffti3r
Glta. To refer to only one passage out of many that are equally
good: q<g&\ ^ f^f&% 3^FT WT *W \ Eternal life is life in God.
That this end has to be worked for with all the resources
of a fundamental truth.
life is
Bhakti may be
provisionally defined as intensely loving contemp-
lation of But such love of God does not arise except at a
God.
high level of spiritual purity. Ramanuja understands Sri Krsna
to be saying in the 12th chapter :
TO vrfrR:
tal tojnana and karma but the very fruition of jnana and
karma.
VI
(in. so.)
30 G.ITASAMIKSA
from
As a matter of karma-yoga of the right type is action
fact
but in inward essence it is jnana
an outward point of view its
mm m
W4 SWWQ^fHRT
cfa I! (IV. 24,)
declaration that
This fusion is what is intended by the puzzling
and akarma in karma.
a wise man sees karma in akarma
(IV. 33.)
of
The Gita meets the question of the relative superiority
3rd and 5th The ans-
karma and. yoga twice, in the chapters.
is clear and decisive.
wer of SriKrsna according to Ramanuja
Some are not&tforjntna-yoga. For them karma-yoga
is easy,
natural and carries no risk. Even those who are fit for jnana-
some karma of the nature of sacrifice for
yoga, have to practise
Those who are ad-
meeting the necessities of life. spiritually
observing their conduct lesser
vanced and are such that by
own lives on that pattern are to practise karma
men model their
Sri Krsna cites His own life as
as a matter of hka-sangraha.
abandon
an illustration of this principle. If the distinguished
it and if those who need
karma-yoga as they no longer need
still
(III. 2L)
n (ix. 27.)
VII
ness of the self, which naturally marks the cessation of all other
(II. 61.)
He says :
<rat ^W *FT
It is for this reason that the jijnasu of the 7th chapter is given
to practice of bhakti. The idea is reinforced again in the 13th
chapter by including qfa ^?R%?fa ^f%^f^Roft (XIII. 10.)
of bhakti, the next one, for it too includes bhakti and the self-
knowledge it seeks is destined to lead up to ultimate bhakti.
VIII
The conclusion of the 5th chapter and the whole of the 6th
chapter of the Glta are devoted, according to Ramanuja, to the
exposition of yoga. Yoga, in this context, means what it means
conventionally in Indian philosophical culture. For Ramanuja
THE GITA ACCORDING TO RAMANUJA 33
prehending the pure self, he apprehends the divine self also. The
IX
Even as Arjuna raises the question twice as to which of
the two yogas, karma and jnana, is superior to the other, he
raises the question with regard to the relative status of the yoga
of jnana and that of bhakti in the 12th chapter. Ramanuja
restricts the scope of the question as pertaining to only the ease
of performance and speed of fructification. He points out that
the highest place has already been accorded to bhakti from the
standpoint of intrinsic and objective worth in the conclusion of
the sixth chapter. There it is said :
(IX. 29.)
The interpretation of the verse runs as follows :
36 "GlTASAMlKSA
3
STsqf^f Jf spfasR^ fsraf Sfe
w *
II (XL 54.)
XL 55 ; ( )
(ix. 13.)
.
9.)
X
There is another factor integral to bhakti which, for
TPPff II
II (XVIII. 66.)
II
qR%
1. Arjuna is ^
^Wf^f^ (not a fl^rfiN5rf^ as con-
tended by Sankara.)
either ffxf or
ing those who are opposed to dharma and God, and practises
devotion to God he will not have discharged his dharma. Simi-
2.
ipjf^ ^raraf flgoT; q^siqf TORI; ) (HI. 35.)
3 .
sfq; ^[f*f 4 spq ssjrnr efii^fi%
%j^ 5f i
Ill
2.
^r^ITR^RT ^flT^F^ ^* ^^l ^- ?W :
. The first
( VIL 7 -)
2. sxfJT;3^^z: Tpn^tl^r: xv l7 I (
-
-)
x
-)
(
-
2.)
1.
stt 1(fa ?W3; JTrf: 33 3 I (X. 8.)
2 .
^ 5Jjf^I: (IX. 5.) etc., bring out
5Jcf3j?T
aspect of God.
:
(11.47.). The expression ^pte^g: is explain-
(XVIII. 2.).
GITA ACCORDING TO SRl MADHVACARYA 45
while the last two $ajRT and ??FT relate to the perspec-
i.e.,
tive to be adopted in performing karma. With this perspective
the karmayoga is no longer pravrttimarga. Only the actions with
motives constitute prvrttimarga. When the motive is eliminated
it is nivrttimarga.
1 (in. i.)
c
The answer given you being a ksatriya yatyasrama is
is,
not svadharma for you'. Sanaka and a selected few are eligible
for jnanayoga while even Janaka followed the path of karma-
yoga. Ev en jnanayoga is not completely divorced of karma, nor
karmayoga completely divorced of jnana. The two expressions are
explained as fRFR^T %H ^R%T; and
46 GfTASAMlKSA
(III. 5.)
IV
1.
GlTA ACCORDING TO SRl MADHVACARYA 47
3.
: \
qspRn'q^R^^
clear that the discussion of all other topics such as bhakti jnana^ ,
HPT: \
Sri Madhva finds support for all the tenets of his system
in the very exposition of this Gitadharma. In the verse
i (xvi.s.)
(11.12.)
2.
3. Jff-WJpRr'OTTO^ (XIL6.)
GfTA ACCORDING TO SRl MADHVACSRYA 49
1-
^fffew^sfcf (11.72.)
(V.24.)
4. swqsn^ 353^
<* (XIV.26.)
Thus, not only he finds support for all his tenets in the
Glta but declares that the doctrines of mmaikya and jagdn-
mithyatva are repudiated in the Glta.
VI
On a number of crucial verses Sri Madhva's interpreta-
tions are far better and could be adopted without clash of doc-
trines. We may notice one or two here.
The line
^T^^J^T ^g^f% Tfefl: (11.11.) is
ordinarily rendered as Vise men do not grieve for the dead and
the living'. However, Sri Madhva takes ^ here in the sense of
II (HIM.)
cf^T
1. On BG., XVIII 66 :
Bhaskara reads as :
*Pf|t
The same reading is also found in the Ramakantha's Gita-
bhasya and this was probably the reading current at the time of
Bhaskara. Ramakantha is in fact the follower of Bhaskara's
theory of jnanakarma samuccaya^ and therefore it may perhaps
be that he followed Bhaskara's readings. A survey of the read-
ings adopted by Bhaskara will reveal that Bhaskara accepted
those readings as genuine and correct and justified their authen-
ticity by his explanatory notes. He levels charges against some of
the commentators who had adopted certain readings to suit the
philosophical doctrines of their own. He makes rather sarcas-
9
tic remarks about them In certain cases Bhaskar^ adopts
.
kara as :
ing his time. Bhaskara shows his keen interest in fixing the
readings of the Glffi in the second and third chapters of the BG.
so as to suit his doctrinal variations in certain contexts.
I cT5{
OTcT^
11. B.C. XL 17:
'N
"
i%f%ciT
3fqf
BHASKARA ON THE GITA 55
BHASKARA'S PHILOSOPHY
Bhaskara's Brahma-sutra bhasya furnishes much more in
formation regarding his philosophy. The vital theory
of jnanakarma-samuccaya is explained under the sutra
Sarvapeksa ca yajnadis*uteh asvavat. Bhaskara naturally finds
his patent theory well nourished and nurtured in BG., where the
role of karma &ndjnana are comprehensively treated with special
emphasis on the co-ordination of both of them. His metaphysi-
cal doctrine of bhedabheda finds only a subordinate place in the
BG. According to Bhaskra, Reality is one and many (abhinna
and bhinna). The one is conditioned and the uncaused cause,
but the manifold is the absolute conditioned by the upadhis or
delimiting adjuncts. The finite self is Brahman limited by the
metaphysical and moral imperfections of avidya, karma, and
kUma. Mukti consists in removing the barriers of this region of
sanisfira, and becoming one with Brahman or attaining eki-
bhava. Bhaskara accepts upadhis as satya and not mithya. He
is known therefore as Satyopadhivadin.
13. On BG., I. 20 :
56 GlTASAMlKA
14. sT
18. ibid.:
BHASKARA ON THE GITA 57
''
BHASKARA AS A CRITIC
.....
1 (BG., IL is.).
Bhaskara justifies that the context refers only to the jiva of the
form of paraniatman in the original form and that the interpre-
tation with reference to meditation which will be discussed only
in the sixth chapter and not earlier is out of context here."
23.
24.
58 GlTASAMIKSA
Bhaskara justifies his reading as correct and holds the view that
the dispelling of Arjuna's ignorance is imminent and that a
sudden jump to meditation without contextual sanction is un-
warranted and illogical. 26 To thrust meditation on to the con-
text by changing the readingis named by Bhaskara as
ahopuru-
sika which mesns
the bragging of a person arbitrarily promoted
by extreme vanity, self conceit and high-handedness. The views
of such persons are liable to cause confusion in the minds of
those who are real seekers after truth 2r
28.
29.
30.
60 GITASAMIKSA
I (in. 3.)
32.
33,
=
35. *T
36. This reading of Bhaskara sounds peculiar. The common reading is:
etc.
BHASKARA ON THE GIT A 61
37
parallel Vedic authority where the word nyasa is substituted in
the place of tyaga or renunciation. Therefore it is specifically
understood that nyfisa or tyfiga doss not convey the import of
sarvakarma-parityaga* He interprets the term nyasa to mean
Brahman.
37.
38.
39.
62 GlTASAMIKSA
42.
: t on
BG.. VIII. 7.
43.
f =3 ?r[rf*ra%c[w
50. f
V. VARADACHARI
A study, p. 48.
6. Pandey: - p. 40.
Ramakantha's Sarvatobhadra. p. 6.
The word maya may be taken to show that these commentators of
Kashmir were familiar with the Advaita teachings of amkara: For
details see Abhmavagupta : A Study, pp. 88-90, Pratyabbijnavimarinl
II p. 146.
9. Vide:
^F^l *l cl rict^ K-H <rt W
Sarvatobhadra p. 4; Paadey: pp.40, pp.210-220.
10. op. cit. : pp. 221, 225-226.
11. op. cit p 221.
kasa and vimarsa which enable it to know itself and which are
'
known as svatantrya-sakti
1 1
visits
19
which Krsna paid to Kailasa and the instructions 20 which
he received from Upamanyu on the mode of worshipping Siva,
made the exponents of Kashmir Saivism treat Krsna as a fol-
lower of Trika. The Bhagavadglta therefore came to be consi-
31
dered as one of the basic texts for Saivism. Vasugupta,
15. Pandeyi op. cit., pp. 186-191.
16. Vide :- ^rqfgfeSWT: fTOf f^Nfafa?: \
SWfel^ I
Tantraloka I p. 162.
Jayaratha on this.
25
navagupta and RajSnaka Lasakaka commented on the Gita.
The commentaries of Ramakantha and Abhinavagupta have
alone appeared in print. All these commentators must have
either belonged to Kashmir or influenced by the Kashmir tradi-
26
tions. They all count the number of slokas in the Gira as
more than 700. Abhinavagupta" has 22 more than 700 and in a
particular context treats three slokas as spurious".
22. This writeris th same as the author of the Dhvanyaloka. For infor-
mation on his commentary on the Gita, see Introduction to Rama-
kanta's Sarvatobhadm pp. XIX.
23. Rlmakantha was the younger brother of Muktakana, who fiourished in
the court of Avantivarman of Kashmir (857-884 A. D.). He was the
pupil of Utpala who was the son and pupil of Somananda. Ramaka-
ntha's commentary is called Bhagavadgltavivaranam&n&SarvatQbhadra.
This was published in the Madras University Sanskrit Series. Foe
details, see Introduction to Sarvatobhadra P. XXXIX.
28. Vide : ^^
%i%^T^5I: ^to; ^TcH: I
peared in print - ibid., PP. 45-46. For details regarding the other
works, see ibid., pp. 22- 65.
31. Somananda (850 A.D.) was the founder of the Pratyabhijna school,
the principles of which were laid down by him in his Sivadrsti.
Pandey; op. cit., p. 83.
32. Utpala is the author of the Pratyabhijnasutra with Vrtti and Vivrti -
ibid., p.99.
33. Bhattenduraja was the pupil of Mukula who was the son and pupil of
Kallata, pupil of Somananda. ibid., p. 74.
- IV. 7, where he reads atma $am
34. Abhinavagupta on BG. .- in the place
of atmanam.
35. ibid., IV 9.
36. Vide :
^R ^jfof ^%f ^ H^fcf I ^fl
Laghuprakrlya of Abhinavagupta*
GITA ACCORDING TO ABHINAVAGUPTA 7!
43. All commentators take the word avidhi, as the negation of the
the
proper course. Abhinavagupta alone interprets the word as 'anyo
vidhih*. The negative particle cannoi convey the sense of another.
This interpretation is hardly justifiable. The case of the word adharma
is different.
72 GITASAM1KA
9
be Bhattaenduraja and Laksmana Gupta/
47. Vide:- VI. 29; IX. 16; 17,25; XF. 18; XII. 7, 11; XV. 16.
lect and who had made the creator first and sent him the sacred
scriptures. Thus the surrender is scriptural.
f?Piff:
(iv. 34.)
We
see three distinet phases in the growth and develop-
ment of Indian philosophy. They are the Vedic, the Upanisadic
and the post-Vedic. They may also be described as the cos-
mological, the metaphysical, and the systematic stages, res-
pectively. The metaphysical or the Upanisadic philosophy
appears to have divergent and contradictory views such as unity
and plurality s
assertion of attributes and their negation with
76 GlTASAMlKSA
' '
w
Sri Sankara was the foremost among such exponents. He
propounded the theory of absolute monism and explained the
plurality by the theory of illusion or Maya. Plurality, accord-
ing to Saijkara, is false or unreal. The awareness of identity of
the soul with Brahman is liberation. Thus, the philosophy of
Sankara can be summed up in the oft-quoted words :
.
U.)
II (Laghumanjusn, p. 2 )
discussess the nature of God, spirit, and matter. The first two
slokas define Jlva and its characterestic features.
T: i (xv. 7.)
.
*fa: I (BG. XIII. 33.)
As the one sun illumines all this world, so does the embodied
one.
(I
n (ix.32.)
The tenth sloka forms the fourth and the final kosthika.
In this sloka Nimbarka states that an aspirant should know the
character of an aspirant, the aspired thing, fruit of His grace,
the distinctive features of devotion and the nature of obstacles.,
GlTASAMIKSA
(Tattvaprakasika. p. 217.)
|| (XVIIL66.)
i 3T SPRPJ; II
(II. 7.)
The first principle of surrender is seen in the Lord's state-
ment :
% it H5|^B5Wrf^Rr :
II (VI. 31.)
II (XVI. 4.)
ii (ix.22.)
|| (XL 43,)
11 (xi. 45.)
(i (XI 44.)
(XI. 25.)
1 (XL 31.)
II (iv. 5.)
I
(VII, 6.)
(X, 8.)
1
(ii. 22.)
^ =? 1
(11.23,24.)
Ii (VII. 14.)
the seeker of knowledge, the seeker of wealth and the wise man.
Of these the jnanin is also extolled :
f f Rt
II (VII. 17.)
V. ANJANEYA SARMA
tha-dipa-nihhanda} II :
^fcf ^[^%^^^J%^^lfiw^^
The pramanas other than sruti have only an empirical purpose and
must be interpreted in harmony with the sruti:
T \
; \\
VALLABHA ON THE GITA 89
and tamas prevail over sattva, jnana is destroyed and hence its
efficacy is not absolute. So the means of moksa must be some-
thing different which is objective and everlasting.
^T U
11. BG p. 16 :
'90 GITASAMlKSA
=3" TC s
u
^
So the philosophy of the Cita with Vallabha's system, is the philo-
sophy of taking refuge in the Lord. The ceremonial initiation into the
Vallabha Order consists of ^TW^f^f'?^ sfllW: 3Rf *ffl is the man-
11-84: 5l
1-68:
the cause and the effect; while he assumes the forms of both. 19
mcrfcTT i
BGIX-19: XI-37.
The jivas are to Brahman what the sparks are to the fire.
The image is suggested in the eleventh chapter of the Glia*
The nature of relation between the two is termed karya-karana-
bh'dva and atnsamsi-bhava. The jiva is atomic in size and forms
part of Brahman. The cit aspect of Brahman who is sat-cid-
20
ananda-svarupa predominates in him. Suddhadvaita is also
interpreted to mean the union between the two suddhas, i.e., the
21
jiva and the Brahman, the former entering into the being of
the latter (pravesatmaka-sayujya). The individual selves fall into
three classes according to the way of life they lead r 2 (1) the-
pravafta-jivas or those who represent the sad-anisa of the Lord and
who are given to the worldly lifo (pravaha). Pravaha signifies
that they are drifted like a straw in a flood hither and thither at
random as God These are those whom the Gita calls
pleases.
the asuras in contrast with the daivas (2) the maryada-jivas- ;
or those who represent the cid-amsa and who are guided by the
Vedic teachings (maryada); and (3) the pusti-jivas or those who
have given themselves upto Lord's Grace (pusti). This concept
of pusti is the keynote of Vallabha's philosophy. It is the
highest state of devotion to the Lord in which the sadhaka re-
signs himself to the dicates of God's will and Grace consciously
Tattva-diplka XIII-17
HIP Vol. IV p. 332n.
That the Jiva is atomic is one of the reasons why the commentary on?
the Brahma-siitra is called Anu-bhasya.
See Sri Vallabhacharya* p. 174.
Also see Brabma-siitra, in~iii-19f and 43f for the concept of amsamsi-
hhava.
22. Sanskrit Introducton to the Brahmavada-samgraha (of Hariraya, Kasi
Sanskrit Series, 61 Banaras 1928) pp.
1 to 5.
of the Glta that one should try to rise above the realm of the
three gunas and approximate oneself to the highest Being, Puru-
sottama is the mainspring of Vallabha's doctrine.
xvni-66 -.
3ff ^
24. HIP, Vol. II p. 507 "In such circumstances", comtnees Dasgupta^
"the more logical course would be that of ^ankara who would hold a
man who is free from desires and attachments to be above morality,,
above duties and above responsibilities."
94 GITASAMIKSA
27. II-x-4:
ir-x-6 :
28. AB llI-iu-29 :
Tattva-dipika,
3 5ft:
29. Mandaka-Up.
VALLABHA ON THE GlTA 95
Brahman becomes the bodies and senses and so the world is not
mithya. 1-79: %^f =cfRcf ^ SRqrpTOc^ (tftf. 3T.
2-6) 5
say that the effect is a mere name and the cause alone is real;
1-70
^^TO^T ^t JJ^j
1
Nibandha 1-23 : ^f
In the first place, the Gita deals with as many paths as its
chapters. Even visa-da, melancholy is a path. For that is the
first step in any faith. Every tear becomes a tutor. Secondly,
during the course of the text are given other paths like the Yoga,
the Brahma-yoga, the Buddhi-yoga, the Abhyasa-yoga, the Ananya-
yoga, etc. Thirdly, some other paths are described and defined
without being named, such as the Yajna-yoga*' With a truly
motherly attitude the Glta never condemns one method in prefe-
rence to another. But we find every commentary on the Gita to
whatever school it may belong, old or new, trying to adapt it to
its own preconceptions. It is perhaps that because the Gita is
too broad-minded for any school of crystallization, Vallabha
did not think of commenting on it. But the VaUabha philosophy
35. BG IV-11 : 4 W j
AB p. 1164:
<?. MARULASIDDAIAH
THE BHAGAVADGITA AND VIRASAIVISM
The greatness of the Glia as distinguished from the theistic
Bhagavata need not be over-emphasised. Because of its synthetic
stress on all aspects of Dharma (ethics, religions, philosophies,
etc.) it is ecliptic and affords ample opportunity for any inter-
pretation from any quarter. An earnest endeavour to revise and
e
revitalise the already lost Vedic values emphasising more on
pravrtti than nivrtti* and to recommend a universal religion
1
*
Saivism is one of the living religions. It has a very large
following even today and its history goes back to the time of the
Indus Valley Culture and Civilizations.'
1. M. Hiriyanna: Outlines of Indian Philosophy. George Allen and
Unwin, London, p. 130.
2. KL. Krishnamoorthy : 'Git a and Basave&vara* . Basavesvara CV;;;we-
moration Volume* p. 101.
3. See K.C/Pandey : Bhaskarl, Vol. Ill, pp. 2, 3,163. Lucknow, 1954.
4. S.C. Nandimath : A Handbook ofVeerasaivism. Dharwar, 1942, p. 3.
100 GITASAMIKSA
Lifiga-cult has its origin along with the. salagrama or any other
sacred symbol common to other cults.
The term coined on the Hues of other systems like Dvaita, Advaita
Is
8. (1) Bhakta, (2) Mahesa, (3) Prasadl, (4) Pranalingi, (5) Parana
and (6) A iky a.
to Linga (if you are really men worth the designation). Hence Vira-
saivas cared very little for verbal speculation of values, but the
proof of pudding is in eating. Eschewing artificial social inequities,
broad outlook to common good, pious conduct and such are enforced
more than monism or dualism or quantified monism of unknown
Being by the unsound being.
THE BHAGAVADGlTA AND VlRASAIVISM 103
openly and decided. Ail rallied round the faith with perfect
equality, fraternity and liberty. Here would one recollect the
Git a :
VII. 21.
tasya tasyacalam sraddhain tameva vidadhamyaham*
Te* pyanyadevaffibhaktahyajante sraddhayanvitah
IX. 23.
te'pi mameva kaunteya yajantyavidhipurvakam*
A on the
high sense of toleration and religious equality
basis of conduct Is the common feature underlying both. Even
the nature and scope of both (God and devotee) agree, as adak-
sari puts it :
'
differ not only in ritualism, etc., as already referred to, but also
in their philosophical or more appropriately in their measures
If I am not mistaKen to be sentimental,
:
of myst cism. I
9 '
but fair tofeel that the philosophical finale between the Gita
and Sarana-Gitn is entirely a departure from the well established
yogic tradition and each Vlrasaiva-sarana has his own way of
transmigration unknown or undetected by others. This may be
common But the fact goes established that the verbosity
to all.
of the multitude in books and looks are not final and truth is
individualistic like love and it holds good even in the field of
philosophy or adhyatma.
(Kan) Vedanadatita-lurlya-paramQnanda-mravayava
Sattrimsat prabbapa{alada prabheya helagidu no dire
Belagitwlagana rnahabelagina hehgu
KM cfala Sangamadeva ,
* '
108 GlTASAMlKA
THE BHAGAVADGITA
ACCORDING TO THE RADHASOAMIS
India is avataras and saints. The
the blessed land of rs?s,
"Our idea is that the rise and fall of nations takes place
as a result of the presence or absence of extra-ordinarily gifted
souls and such souls take b rth only in communities and countries
where they can get adequate facilities for carrying out their
work. This is why we in Dayalbagh are making an attempt to
maintain a pure spiritual atmosphere typical of India and simul-
taneously to provide freedom and facilities for work as are
3
available in the west."
10. Yathartha Prakash, Eng. Translation Pr. Ill, Vol. ii, Pages 164-178.
11. His diary reproduced in Dayalbag'i Herald, A Satsang weekly.
3-2-1970 P. 4.
112 GITASAMIKSA
It is therefore wished that all those that are fond of the Gita are
%srr: 11
(XL 32.)
12. Ibid.
sive and the basis of all the three worlds. He is called the
Purusoftama and according to the author of the Gittt, Lord Krsna
is the incarnation of this Purusottama and the highest spiritual
benefit consists in attaining Him.
HT
11 (xv. 15-200
ss i fsr
GITA ACCORDING TO THE RADHASOAMIS 115
it
ft ^
: I (HI. 5.)
{^30%
A man should get his heart cleansed of love and hatred, and
consider all states good or evil, desirable or undesirable as
equal and bear pleasure and pain that befall him with equani-
mity and engage himself in the performance of his duties. This
fitness cannot be attained by man without any effort. There-
fore, it is advised that a seeker of param'drtha should do the
necessary yogic practices to concentrate his mind and maintain
equanimity.
f; II
'Close all the doors of the body i.e., the senses, restrain
the mind within you, restrain your prana within your forehead
and concentrate your attention with the hejp of yoga. Whoso-
ever leaves the human body, while repeating the word fi
Ow' and
meditating on me, attains highest status, i.e., the highest state
of spirutuality.'
n (iv. 33.)
118 G IT AS AM IK A
fR irPTSR^pT: ii (iv. 34 )
14. It may be noticed here that this emphasis on guru is not alien to
the spirit of the Upanisads and the orthodox philosophical systems.
eg.
Kathopanisad, I. 3.14.
n (xv. 7.)
His own amsa comes as the immortal jiva in this world and
attracts towards himself the senses, which exist in the universe.
These senses include the mind called the sixth sense. This may
be compared with the interpretation of the Brahmaputra.
II-3-43, by Sri Ramanuja.
1. BG. x.3. The passages from the Glta in this chapter are taken
from the translation by D.S. Sarma (S. Ganesan & Co., Madras).
2. ibid ix. 7-10.
3. ibid, x.4,5.
4. Ibid, xviii. 61.
every side, blazing like the burning fire of the sun, and passing
all bounds. Thou art the Imperishable, the Supreme to be
realized; thou art the Abode of the universe, Thou art the
undying Guardian of the eternal law; Thou art the Primal
Being, believe.
I I behold thee as one with no beginning,
middle, nor end; with infinite arms and infinite strength; with
the sun and the inoon as thine eyes; with my face shining as a
51
flaming fire, and with thy radiance consuming all this universe.
'*
the light in the sun and the moon. I arn the syllable in all OM
the Vedas; I am the sound in ether and manliness in men. I am
the pure fragrance in the earth and the brightness in the fire.
I am the life in all creatures and the austerity in ascetics. Know
me to be the seed, O
Arjuna, of all things that are. I am the
wisdom of the wise, and I am the glory of the glorious. I am the
strength of the strong, free from desire and passion. And I am
the desire in all creatures, O Arjuna, which is not in conflict
5 1J
ivith the law.
There
another question of even greater practical impor-
is
it is also true that through the ages it has had unrivalled hold
upon the thought and devotion of the people, how does it happen
that Theism has never become the dominating religious philo-
sophy of India ? Today we find the Gita widely read. In pre-
vious ages it was probably not so widely read because education
other beings.
SYED MOHWEEN SHAH
The Glta and the Quran are the sacred books the of Hindus
and Muslims respectively. They deal with the problem of life
and claim to guide man on right lines. In the words of Iqbal
'There are certain common problems to religion, philosophy and
higher poetry. The character and general structure of the
universe in which we live, the permanent element in the con-
stitution of this universe, our relation to it, the place we
occuppy in it and the kind of conduct that befits the place we
occupy are important. Poetic inspiration is essentially indivi-
dual in its character; it is figurative, vague and indefinite.
Religion in its more advanced forms rises higher than poetry.
It moves from individual to society. In its attitude towards
132 GlTASAMlKA
speak of the ultimate Reality. The verses from the Quran and the
Giiti referring to God are quoted below: 'Allah is the light of the
c
Allah: There is no God save Him., the Alive, the
Eternal. Neither slumber nor sleep overtaketh Him. Unto Him
belongeth whatsoever is in the heavens and whatsoever is in the
earth. Who is he that -intercedeth with Him, save by His leave ?
He knoweth that which is in front of them and that which is
behind them, while they encompass nothing of His knowledge
save what He will. His throne includeth the heavens and the
earth and He is never weary of preserving them. He is the
5
*
This space between heaven and earth and all the quar-
ters are filled
by thee alone. Having seen this, thy marvellous
and awfui form, the three worlds are trembling. O, High-Souled-
Being,' (Gift) XI.19.
c
Man the vice-regent of God ', so says the Quran.
is Of c
136
torture inflected by a
revengeful God; it is corrective
experience which may make a hardened, ego once more sensitive
to the living breeze of Divine Grace. Nor is Heaven -a holiday.
Life is one and continuous* Man marches always onward to
receive ever fresh illuminations from an Infinite Reality which
'every moment appears in a new glory'. And the recipient of
divine illumination is not merely a passive recipient. Every
act of a free ego creates a new situation, and thus offers oppor-
tunities of creative unfolding.
in the fact that in Its description of both the end and the means
It gives a synopsis of the religiousthought and experience of India
through the ages. Being a predominantly theistic work it often
describes the ultimate reality as a personal God, identified with
the avatar Krsna. The supreme is referred to as immanent
spirits as the transcendent absolute and finally as the state of
one's own, awakened soul. It speaks of the threefold path of
The Gita speaks of the four varnas, i.e., orders due to birth.
Rebirth (samsara) due to karma of previous janma is referred
to. Papa (sin), puny a (merit), moksa (salvation), dharma
(morality) are also spoken of. Birth in a particular caste becomes
an index of soul's progress towards God. It speaks of dharma
the total body of moral and religious rules. The
Quran., the word
of God, is the most important religious book of the Muslims.
Itspeaks of belief in (!) God, (2) Angels, (3) inspired books
(4; prophets (5) the day of Judgement and (6) God's predesti-
nation of good and evil. Unity of God is There
emphasised.
is no idolatry in Islam. Of the religious reci-
practices, (1)
tal of the creed. (2) performance of divine-worship daily: (3)
Ramzan.
fasting in (4) payment of legal alms and pilgri-
(5)
mage of Mecca are important.
with a free mind, still more those who have tried to live it, can-
not doubt for a moment, the justice of Mr Tilak's point of view.
But is not the tendency of the Gltn towards a superethical
rather than an ethical activity ? Ethics is usually the standards
ising of the highest current social ideals of conduct: the Song
Celestial while
recognizing their importance, seeks to fix the
principle of action deeper in the centre of a man's soul and
points ultimately to the government of our outward life by the
divine will within.' (The Arya Vol, I pp, 60, 61)
yoga* and an integral yoga that does justice to the karma., jn$na-
and bhakti from a supra - ethical point of view Aurobindo
wrote his brilliant Essays on the Gita.
consists of 24 chapters.
truth and experience and the view it gives us embraces all the
province of that supreme region/ (ibid.)
144 .
It is this that forms the inner spirit and genius of the life
The Glta Is a teaching for all seekers after the Infinite and
transcendent life that promises the aspirations of freedom from
.rebirth and freedom from fear of papa and punya and even 9
of the Yoga schools and Samkhya does not yet do justice to the
logic of the infinite, though pointing to something far beyond
which Vedanta supplies. The transcendent divine theology
does not go far beyond the finite for it suffers from the illusion
AUROBINDO ON THE BHAGAVADGITA 147
ii
difficulty or distress.
whether
Attempts are generally made to debate the point
an Advaitin in the one
mainly the Mahatma was believing only
he
and only formless, undefinable Atman or Brahman or whether
the existence of a Paramat-
was a Visistadvaitin acknowledging
man or ultimate reality to whom one and all will have to yield
their all in complete surrender. However much the student of
philosophy backed by erudition might try to make out from his
many statements and writings that on final analysis he must be
seems
belonging to one school of philosophy or other, there
actually doubts arose in his mind and made him seek solution
for them.
his writings on the Glta that if any two teachings could be held
as central in the entire Git8 they were ahtmsa and Truth. He
was certain that although the Gita had not in so many words
2. Harijan (18-4-1936).
152 ;
,
G1TASAMIKSA
......
Gandhiji's main point was that if Atman or Self can remain un-
touched or unaffected by any of these pairs of opposites men-
tioned above, the mind inevitably becomes wedded to ahimsa*
Certainly it stands to reason, if only we recollect how the Lord
even at the opening verses of the second chapter tried to show
the difference between atman and anatman, the soul and the
body.
other distinct suggestions in his words once the poem has left
his hands. Let us listen to Gandhiji himself on this: 'A poet's-
meaning is limitless. Like man, the meaning of great writings
suffer evolution. On examining the history of languages, we
notice that the meaning of important words has changed or
55
expanded* In illustration of his standpoint he showed how
in the very Gifa certain words have been allowing of different
connotations according to the context. For instance Sf
of his own gave Gandhiji the clue to find out ahimsa in the
verses of the Gifa. He said 'It is perhaps clear from the fore-
going that without ahimsa it is not possible to seek and find
Truth. Ahimsa and Truth are so intertwined that it is practi-
cally impossible to disentangle and separate them. They are
like the two sides of a coin or rather of a smooth unstamped
metallic disc. "Who can say, which is the obverse and which is
the reverse. Nevertheless ahimsa is the means; Truth is the
end. Means to be means must always be within our reach^
and so ahimsa is our supreme duty, s The explanation does
5
8. ibid.
9. ibit. p. 130.
156 GITASAMKISA
I (xii. 10.)
II (IX. 27.)
Gandhiji that he came upon the Gita while his mind was
submitting itself to introspection and self-analysis of an
unusual nature at the very threshold of his entry into public
work in South Africa. In a profound manner he admitted that
'Today the Gita is my mother. I lost my earthly mother who
!
(II, 13,)
3FT9TT3*
]
R
1
13. ibid.
63-133).
-^ ^:IW%%^R^
^-~ (620)
THE PROBLEMS OF THE TEXT 163
(67) ^ *fa^ I
f^FJ: WWR (1)
(4) Belvalkar's
attempt to unriddle the 'Bhagavadgita
Riddle* with the help of the GitaSara text. He points out that
is
mate the extent to the Gitamana total of 745; but even then he
is not able to bring the total extent and the distribution to the
various speakers conform to those given (ABORL XIX. 335-48).
Git a not found in all versions. The Bengal version and the
is
(3-37.)
: ||
THE PROBLEMS OF THE TEXT 167
3 ,jg
GITASAMIK.SA
: II
E.R. SREEKRJSHNA SARMA
tion of the state of sthitaprajna and the last one pronounces the
grand result (phalasruti) of its attainment.
^*,
"'f-oontentment, on the one
mtcllcct reSUltin * from the
on the other. The next
control of
verses reason out how sense
control leads to the
steadiness of intellect.
for all other beings is the day for the man of self-control and
vice versa. Vinoba successfully shows that this verse contains
the description of the central point where samkkhya~buddhi (self
knowledga),j>ogtf-Z><W/zz (action without attachment to the results)
and the state of sthitaprajna fully meet.
ideal For the terms
pasyan, muni and samyaml indicate the atmajnanin, karmayogin
and sthitaprajna, respectively.
be the desire of life (jijivisa), even that is ruled out by the latter.
Stillhe lives and acts (carati). This is to be understood as
explained in X. 9. by tusyanti ca ramanti ca with reference to
bhaktas. The grand phalasruti as stated in II. 72, is not a formal
one; it is real and significant. The expression brahml sthiti is note-
worthy. This is the natural state of sthitaprajna. There- is no
moving out of any time, even at the last moment of one's
it at
life. The meaning indicated by the word sthiti is further explained
F )