In chapter fourteen Lord Krishna reveals matters
pertaining goodness, passsion and nescience which everything in the
material existence is influenced by. He gives pertinent details on the
essential characteristics of each individually, their cause, the level
of their potency, how they influence a living entity affected by them as
well as the signs of one who has risen above them. Here he clearly
advises to relinquish oneself from ignorance and passion and adopt the
path of pure goodness until aquiring the ability to transcend them. Thus
this chapter is entitled; The Three Qualities of Material Nature.
TEXT 1
sri-bhagavan uvaca
param bhuyah pravaksyami
jnananam jnanam uttamam
yaj jnatva munayah sarve
param siddhim ito gatah
SYNONYMS
sri-bhagavan uvaca--the Supreme Personality of Godhead said;
param--transcendental;
bhuyah--again;
pravaksyami--I shall speak;
jnananam--of all knowledge;
jnanam--knowledge;
uttamam--the supreme;
yat--which;
jnatva--knowing;
munayah--the sages;
sarve--all;
param--transcendental;
siddhim--perfection;
itah--from this world;
gatah--attained.
TRANSLATION
The
Blessed Lord said: Again I shall declare to you this supreme wisdom,
the best of all knowledge, knowing which all the sages have attained the
supreme perfection.
PURPORT

From
the Seventh Chapter to the end of the Twelfth Chapter, Sri Krsna in
detail reveals the Absolute Truth, the Supreme Personality of Godhead.
Now, the Lord Himself is further enlightening Arjuna. If one understands
this chapter through the process of philosophical speculation, he will
come to an understanding of devotional service. In the Thirteenth
Chapter, it was clearly explained that by humbly developing knowledge
one may possibly be freed from material entanglement. It has also been
explained that it is due to association with the modes of nature that
the living entity is entangled in this material world. Now, in this
chapter, the Supreme Personality explains what those modes of nature
are, how they act, how they bind and how they give liberation. The
knowledge explained in this chapter is proclaimed by the Supreme Lord to
be superior to the knowledge given so far in other chapters. By
understanding this knowledge, various great sages attained perfection
and transferred to the spiritual world. The Lord now explains the same
knowledge in a better way. This knowledge is far, far superior to all
other processes of knowledge thus far explained, and knowing this many
attained perfection. Thus it is expected that one who understands this
Fourteenth Chapter will attain perfection.

TEXT 2
idam jnanam upasritya
mama sadharmyam agatah
sarge 'pi nopajayante
pralaye na vyathanti ca
SYNONYMS
idam--this;
jnanam--knowledge;
upasritya--taking shelter of;
mama--My;
sadharmyam--nature;
agatah--attained;
sarge api--even in the creation;
na--never;
upajayante--comes in;
pralaye--in the annihilation;
na--nor;
vyathanti--disturbed;
ca--also.
TRANSLATION
By
becoming fixed in this knowledge, one can attain to the transcendental
nature, which is like My own nature. Thus established, one is not born
at the time of creation nor disturbed at the time of dissolution.
PURPORT

After
acquiring perfect transcendental knowledge, one acquires qualitative
equality with the Supreme Personality of Godhead, becoming free from the
repetition of birth and death. One does not, however, lose his identity
as an individual soul. It is understood from Vedic literature that the
liberated souls who have reached the transcendental planets of the
spiritual sky always look to the lotus feet of the Supreme Lord, being
engaged in His transcendental loving service. So, even after liberation,
the devotees do not lose their individual identities.

Generally,
in the material world, whatever knowledge we get is contaminated by the
three modes of material nature. But knowledge which is not contaminated
by the three modes of nature is called transcendental knowledge. As
soon as one is situated in that transcendental knowledge, he is on the
same platform as that of the Supreme Person. Those who have no knowledge
of the spiritual sky hold that after being freed from the material
activities of the material form, this spiritual identity becomes
formless, without any variegatedness. However, just as there is material
variegatedness in this world, so, in the spiritual world, there is also
variegatedness. Those in ignorance of this think that spiritual
existence is opposed to material variety. But actually, in the spiritual
sky, one attains spiritual form. There are spiritual activities, and
the spiritual situation is called devotional life. That atmosphere is
said to be uncontaminated and there one is equal in quality with the
Supreme Lord. To obtain such knowledge, one must develop all the
spiritual qualities. One who thus develops the spiritual qualities is
not affected either by the creation or the destruction of the material
world.

TEXT 3
mama yonir mahad brahma
tasmin garbham dadhamy aham
sambhavah sarva-bhutanam
tato bhavati bharata
SYNONYMS
mama--My;
yonih--source of birth;
mahat--the total material existence;
brahma--supreme;
tasmin--in that;
garbham--pregnancy;
dadhami--create;
aham--I;
sambhavah--possibility;
sarva-bhutanam--of all living entities;
tatah--thereafter;
bhavati--becomes;
bharata--O son of Bharata.
TRANSLATION
The
total material substance, called Brahman, is the source of birth, and
it is that Brahman that I impregnate, making possible the births of all
living beings, O son of Bharata.
PURPORT

This is an explanation of the world: everything that takes place is due to the combination of
ksetra and
ksetra-jna,
the body and the spirit soul. This combination of material nature and
the living entity is made possible by the Supreme God Himself. The
mahat-tattva
is the total cause of the total cosmic manifestation, and because in
the total substance of the material cause there are three modes of
nature, it is sometimes called Brahman. The Supreme Personality
impregnates that total substance, and thus innumerable universes become
possible. This total material substance, the
mahat-tattva, is described as Brahman in the Vedic literature:
tasmad etad brahma nama-rupam annam ca jayate.
Into that Brahman the seeds of the living entities are impregnated by
the Supreme Person. The twenty-four elements, beginning from earth,
water, fire and air, are all material energy, called
mahad brahma,
or the great Brahman, the material nature. As is explained in the
Seventh Chapter, beyond this there is another, superior nature--the
living entity. In material nature the superior nature is mixed by the
will of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, and thereafter all living
entities are born of this material nature.

The
scorpion lays its eggs in piles of rice, and sometimes it is said that
the scorpion is born out of rice. But the rice is not the cause of the
scorpion. Actually, the eggs were laid by the mother. Similarly,
material nature is not the cause of the birth of the living entities.
The seed is given by the Supreme Personality of Godhead, and they only
seem to come out as products of material nature. Thus every living
entity, according to his past activities, has a different body, created
by this material nature, and the entity can enjoy or suffer according to
his past deeds. The Lord is the cause of all the manifestations of
living entities in this material world.
TEXT 4
sarva-yonisu kaunteya
murtayah sambhavanti yah
tasam brahma mahad yonir
aham bija-pradah pita
SYNONYMS
sarva-yonisu--in all species of life;
kaunteya--O son of Kunti;
murtayah--forms;
sambhavanti--as they appear;
yah--which;
tasam--all of them;
brahma--supreme;
mahat yonih--the source of birth in the material substance;
aham--Myself;
bija-pradah--seed-giving;
pita--father.
TRANSLATION
It
should be understood that all species of life, O son of Kunti, are made
possible by birth in this material nature, and that I am the
seed-giving father.
PURPORT

In
this verse it is clearly explained that the Supreme Personality of
Godhead, Krsna, is the original father of all living entities. The
living entities are combinations of the material nature and the
spiritual nature. Such living entities are seen not only on this planet,
but in every planet, even in the highest, where Brahma is situated.
Everywhere there are living entities; within the earth there are living
entities, even within water and within fire. All these appearances are
due to the mother, material nature, and Krsna's seed-giving process. The
purport is that the living entities, being impregnated in the material
world, come out and form at the time of creation according to their past
deeds.
TEXT 5
sattvam rajas tama iti
gunah prakrti-sambhavah
nibadhnanti maha-baho
dehe dehinam avyayam
SYNONYMS
sattvam--mode of goodness;
rajah--mode of passion;
tamah--mode of ignorance;
iti--thus;
gunah--qualities;
prakrti--material nature;
sambhavah--produced of;
nibadhnanti--does condition;
maha-baho--O mighty-armed one;
dehe--in this body;
dehinam--the living entity;
avyayam--eternal.
TRANSLATION
Material
nature consists of the three modes--goodness, passion and ignorance.
When the living entity comes in contact with nature, he becomes
conditioned by these modes.
PURPORT

The
living entity, because he is transcendental, has nothing to do with
this material nature. Still, because he has become conditioned by the
material world, he is acting under the spell of the three modes of
material nature. Because living entities have different kinds of bodies,
in terms of the different aspects of nature, they are induced to act
according to that nature. This is the cause of the varieties of
happiness and distress.
TEXT 6
tatra sattvam nirmalatvat
prakasakam anamayam
sukha-sangena badhnati
jnana-sangena canagha
SYNONYMS
tatra--thereafter;
sattvam--mode of goodness;
nirmalatvat--being purest in the material world;
prakasakam--illuminating;
anamayam--without any sinful reaction;
sukha--happiness;
sangena--association;
badhnati--conditions;
jnana--knowledge;
sangena--association;
ca--also;
anagha--O sinless one.
TRANSLATION
O
sinless one, the mode of goodness being purer than the others, is
illuminating, and it frees one from all sinful reactions. Those situated
in that mode develop knowledge, but they become conditioned by the
concept of happiness.
PURPORT

The
living entities conditioned by material nature are of various types.
One is happy, another is very active, and another is helpless. All these
types of psychological manifestations are causes of the entities'
conditioned status in nature. How they are differently conditioned is
explained in this section of
Bhagavad-gita. The mode of goodness
is first considered. The effect of developing the mode of goodness in
the material world is that one becomes wiser than those otherwise
conditioned. A man in the mode of goodness is not so much affected by
material miseries, and he has a sense of advancement in material
knowledge. The representative type is the
brahmana, who is
supposed to be situated in the mode of goodness. This sense of happiness
is due to understanding that, in the mode of goodness, one is more or
less free from sinful reactions. Actually, in the Vedic literature it is
said that the mode of goodness means greater knowledge and a greater
sense of happiness.

The
difficulty here is that when a living entity is situated in the mode of
goodness, he becomes conditioned to feel that he is advanced in
knowledge and is better than others. In this way he becomes conditioned.
The best examples are the scientist and philosopher: each is very proud
of his knowledge, and because they generally improve their living
conditions, they feel a sort of material happiness. This sense of
advanced happiness in conditioned life makes them bound by the mode of
goodness of material nature. As such, they are attracted toward working
in the mode of goodness, and, as long as they have an attraction for
working in that way, they have to take some type of body in the modes of
nature. Thus there is no likelihood of liberation, or of being
transferred to the spiritual world. Repeatedly one may become a
philosopher, a scientist or a poet, and, repeatedly, become entangled in
the same disadvantages of birth and death. But, due to the illusion of
the material energy, one thinks that that sort of life is pleasant.

TEXT 7
rajo ragatmakam viddhi
trsna-sanga-samudbhavam
tan nibadhnati kaunteya
karma-sangena dehinam
SYNONYMS
rajah--the mode of passion;
raga-atmakam--born of desire or lust;
viddhi--know;
trsna--with hankering;
sanga--association;
samudbhavam--produced of;
tat--that;
nibadhnati--binds;
kaunteya--O son of Kunti;
karma-sangena--by association with fruitive activity;
dehinam--the embodied.
TRANSLATION
The
mode of passion is born of unlimited desires and longings, O son of
Kunti, and because of this one is bound to material fruitive activities.
PURPORT

The
mode of passion is characterized by the attraction between man and
woman. Woman has attraction for man, and man has attraction for woman.
This is called the mode of passion. And, when the mode of passion is
increased, one develops the hankering for material enjoyment. He wants
to enjoy sense gratification. For sense gratification, a man in the mode
of passion wants some honor in society, or in the nation, and he wants
to have a happy family, with nice children, wife, and house. These are
the products of the mode of passion. As long as one is hankering after
these things, he has to work very hard. Therefore it is clearly stated
here that he becomes associated with the fruits of his activities and
thus becomes bound by such activities. In order to please his wife,
children and society and to keep up his prestige, one has to work.
Therefore, the whole material world is more or less in the mode of
passion. Modern civilization is considered to be advanced in the
standards of the mode of passion. Formerly, the advanced condition was
considered to be in the mode of goodness. If there is no liberation for
those in the mode of goodness, what of those who are entangled in the
mode of passion?

TEXT 8
tamas tv ajnana-jam viddhi
mohanam sarva-dehinam
pramadalasya-nidrabhis
tan nibadhnati bharata
SYNONYMS
tamah--mode of ignorance;
tu--but;
ajnana-jam--products of ignorance;
viddhi--knowing;
mohanam--delusion;
sarva-dehinam--of all embodied beings;
pramada--madness;
alasya--indolence;
nidrabhih--sleep;
tat--that;
nibadhnati--binds;
bharata--O son of Bharata.
TRANSLATION
O
son of Bharata, the mode of ignorance causes the delusion of all living
entities. The result of this mode is madness, indolence and sleep,
which bind the conditioned soul.
PURPORT

In this verse the specific application of the word
tu
is very significant. This means that the mode of ignorance is a very
peculiar qualification of the embodied soul. This mode of ignorance is
just the opposite of the mode of goodness. In the mode of goodness, by
development of knowledge, one can understand what is what, but the mode
of ignorance is just the opposite. Everyone under the spell of the mode
of ignorance becomes mad, and a madman cannot understand what is what.
Instead of making advancement, one becomes degraded. The definition of
the mode of ignorance is stated in the Vedic literature: under the spell
of ignorance, one cannot understand the thing as it is. For example,
everyone can see that his grandfather has died, and therefore he will
also die; man is mortal. The children that he conceives will also die.
So death is sure. Still, people are madly accumulating money and working
very hard all day and night, not caring for the eternal spirit. This is
madness. In their madness, they are very reluctant to make advancement
in spiritual understanding. Such people are very lazy. When they are
invited to associate for spiritual understanding, they are not much
interested. They are not even active like the man who is controlled by
the mode of passion. Thus another symptom of one embedded in the mode of
ignorance is that he sleeps more than is required. Six hours of sleep
is sufficient, but a man in the mode of ignorance sleeps at least ten or
twelve hours a day. Such a man appears to be always dejected and is
addicted to intoxicants and sleeping. These are the symptoms of a person
conditioned by the mode of ignorance.

TEXT 9
sattvam sukhe sanjayati
rajah karmani bharata
jnanam avrtya tu tamah
pramade sanjayaty uta
SYNONYMS
sattvam--mode of goodness;
sukhe--in happiness;
sanjayati--develops;
rajah--mode of passion;
karmani--fruits of activities;
bharata--O son of Bharata;
jnanam--knowledge;
avrtya--covering;
tu--but;
tamah--the mode of ignorance;
pramade--in madness;
sanjayati--develops;
uta--it is said.
TRANSLATION
The mode of goodness conditions one to happiness, passion conditions him to the fruits of action, and ignorance to madness.
PURPORT

A
person in the mode of goodness is satisfied by his work or intellectual
pursuit, just as a philosopher, scientist, or educator may be engaged
in a particular field of knowledge and may be satisfied in that way. A
man in the modes of passion and goodness may be engaged in fruitive
activity; he owns as much as he can and spends for good causes.
Sometimes he tries to open hospitals, give to charity institutions, etc.
These are the signs of one in the mode of passion. And the mode of
ignorance covers knowledge. In the mode of ignorance, whatever one does
is neither good for him nor for anyone.
TEXT 10
rajas tamas cabhibhuya
sattvam bhavati bharata
rajah sattvam tamas caiva
tamah sattvam rajas tatha
SYNONYMS
rajah--mode of passion;
tamah--mode of ignorance;
ca--also;
abhibhuya--also surpassing;
sattvam--mode of goodness;
bhavati--becomes prominent;
bharata--O son of Bharata;
rajah--mode of passion;
sattvam--mode of goodness;
tamah--mode of ignorance;
ca--also;
eva--like that;
tamah--mode of ignorance;
sattvam--mode of goodness;
rajah--mode of passion;
tatha--as in this.
TRANSLATION
Sometimes
the mode of passion becomes prominent, defeating the mode of goodness, O
son of Bharata. And sometimes the mode of goodness defeats passion, and
at other times the mode of ignorance defeats goodness and passion. In
this way there is always competition for supremacy.
PURPORT

When
the mode of passion is prominent, the modes of goodness and ignorance
are defeated. When the mode of goodness is prominent, passion and
ignorance are defeated. And, when the mode of ignorance is prominent,
passion and goodness are defeated. This competition is always going on.
Therefore, one who is actually intent on advancing in Krsna
consciousness has to transcend these three modes. The prominence of some
certain mode of nature is manifested in one's dealings, in his
activities, in eating, etc. All this will be explained in later
chapters. But if one wants, he can develop, by practice, the mode of
goodness and thus defeat the modes of ignorance and passion. One can
similarly develop the mode of passion and defeat goodness and ignorance.
Or, one can develop the mode of ignorance and defeat goodness and
passion. Although there are these three modes of material nature, if one
is determined, he can be blessed by the mode of goodness, and, by
transcending the mode of goodness, he can be situated in pure goodness,
which is called the
vasudeva state, a state in which one can
understand the science of God. By the manifestation of particular
activities, it can be understood in what mode of nature one is situated.
TEXT 11
sarva-dvaresu dehe 'smin
prakasa upajayate
jnanam yada tada vidyad
vivrddham sattvam ity uta
SYNONYMS
sarva-dvaresu--all the gates;
dehe asmin--in this body;
prakasah--quality of illumination;
upajayate--develops;
jnanam--knowledge;
yada--when;
tada--at that time;
vidyat--must know;
vivrddham--increased;
sattvam--the mode of goodness;
iti--thus;
uta--said.
TRANSLATION
The manifestations of the mode of goodness can be experienced when all the gates of the body are illuminated by knowledge.
PURPORT

There
are nine gates in the body: two eyes, two ears, two nostrils, the
mouth, the genital and the anus. In every gate, when the symptom of
goodness is illuminated, it should be understood that one has developed
the mode of goodness. In the mode of goodness, one can see things in the
right position, one can hear things in the right position, and one can
taste things in the right position. One becomes cleansed inside and
outside. In every gate there is development of the symptoms of
happiness, and that is the position of goodness.
TEXT 12
lobhah pravrttir arambhah
karmanam asamah sprha
rajasy etani jayante
vivrddhe bharatarsabha
SYNONYMS
lobhah--greed; pravrttih--hankering; arambhah--endeavor; karmanam--of activities; asamah--uncontrollable; sprha--desire; rajasi--in the mode of passion; etani--all this; jayante--develop; vivrddhe--when there is excess; bharata-rsabha--O chief of the descendants of Bharata.
TRANSLATION
O
chief of the Bharatas, when there is an increase in the mode of
passion, the symptoms of great attachment, uncontrollable desire,
hankering, and intense endeavor develop.
PURPORT
One
in the mode of passion is never satisfied with the position he has
already acquired; he hankers to increase his position. If he wants to
construct a residential house, he tries his best to have a palatial
house, as if he would be able to reside in that house eternally. And he
develops a great hankering for sense gratification. There is no end to
sense gratification. He always wants to remain with his family and in
his house and to continue the process of sense gratification. There is
no cessation of this. All these symptoms should be understood as
characteristic of the mode of passion.

TEXT 13
aprakaso 'pravrttis ca
pramado moha eva ca
tamasy etani jayante
vivrddhe kuru-nandana
SYNONYMS
aprakasah--darkness;
apravrttih--inactivity;
ca--and;
pramadah--madness;
mohah--illusion;
eva--certainly;
ca--also;
tamasi--of the mode of ignorance;
etani--these;
jayante--are manifested;
vivrddhe--is developed;
kuru-nandana--O son of Kuru.
TRANSLATION
O son of Kuru, when there is an increase in the mode of ignorance, madness, illusion, inertia and darkness are manifested.
PURPORT

When
there is no illumination, knowledge is absent. One in the mode of
ignorance does not work by a regulative principle; he wants to act
whimsically for no purpose. Even though he has the capacity to work, he
makes no endeavor. This is called illusion. Although consciousness is
going on, life is inactive. These are the symptoms of one in the mode of
ignorance.
TEXT 14
yada sattve pravrddhe tu
pralayam yati deha-bhrt
tadottama-vidam lokan
amalan pratipadyate
SYNONYMS
yada--when;
sattve--mode of goodness;
pravrddhe--in development;
tu--but;
pralayam--dissolution;
yati--goes;
deha-bhrt--embodied;
tada--at that time;
uttama-vidam--of the great sages;
lokan--the planets;
amalan--pure;
pratipadyate--attains.
TRANSLATION
When one dies in the mode of goodness, he attains to the pure higher planets.
PURPORT

One in goodness attains higher planetary systems, like Brahmaloka or Janoloka, and there enjoys godly happiness. The word
amalan
is significant; it means free from the modes of passion and ignorance.
There are impurities in the material world, but the mode of goodness is
the purest form of existence in the material world. There are different
kinds of planets for different kinds of living entities. Those who die
in the mode of goodness are elevated to the planets where great sages
and great devotees live.
TEXT 15
rajasi pralayam gatva
karma-sangisu jayate
tatha pralinas tamasi
mudha-yonisu jayate
SYNONYMS
rajasi--in passion;
pralayam--dissolution;
gatva--attaining;
karma-sangisu--in the association of fruitive activities;
jayate--takes birth;
tatha--thereafter;
pralinah--being dissolved;
tamasi--in ignorance;
mudha--animal;
yonisu--species;
jayate--take birth.
TRANSLATION
When
one dies in the mode of passion, he takes birth among those engaged in
fruitive activities; and when he dies in the mode of ignorance, he takes
birth in the animal kingdom.
PURPORT

Some
people have the impression that when the soul reaches the platform of
human life, it never goes down again. This is incorrect. According to
this verse, if one develops the mode of ignorance, after his death he is
degraded to the animal form of life. From there one has to again
elevate himself, by an evolutionary process, to come again to the human
form of life. Therefore, those who are actually serious about human life
should take to the mode of goodness and in good association transcend
the modes and become situated in Krsna consciousness. This is the aim of
human life. Otherwise, there is no guarantee that the human being will
again attain to the human status.
TEXT 16
karmanah sukrtasyahuh
sattvikam nirmalam phalam
rajasas tu phalam duhkham
ajnanam tamasah phalam
SYNONYMS
karmanah--of work;
su-krtasya--in the mode of goodness;
ahuh--said;
sattvikam--mode of goodness;
nirmalam--purified;
phalam--result;
rajasah--of the mode of passion;
tu--but;
phalam--result;
duhkham--misery;
ajnanam--nonsense;
tamasah--of the mode of ignorance;
phalam--result.
TRANSLATION
By
acting in the mode of goodness, one becomes purified. Works done in the
mode of passion result in distress, and actions performed in the mode
of ignorance result in foolishness.
PURPORT

By
pious activities in the mode of goodness one is purified; therefore the
sages, who are free from all illusion, are situated in happiness.
Similarly, activities in the mode of passion are simply miserable. Any
activity for material happiness is bound to be defeated. If, for
example, one wants to have a skyscraper, so much human misery has to be
undergone before a big skyscraper can be built. The financier has to
take much trouble to earn a mass of wealth, and those who are slaving to
construct the building have to render physical toil. The miseries are
there. Thus
Bhagavad-gita says that in any activity performed
under the spell of the mode of passion, there is definitely great
misery. There may be a little so-called mental happiness--"I have this
house or this money"--but this is not actual happiness.

As
far as the mode of ignorance is concerned, the performer is without
knowledge, and therefore all his activities result in present misery,
and afterwards he will go on toward animal life. Animal life is always
miserable, although, under the spell of the illusory energy,
maya,
the animals do not understand this. Slaughtering poor animals is also
due to the mode of ignorance. The animal killers do not know that in the
future the animal will have a body suitable to kill them. That is the
law of nature. In human society, if one kills a man he has to be hanged.
That is the law of the state. Because of ignorance, people do not
perceive that there is a complete state controlled by the Supreme Lord.
Every living creature is a son of the Supreme Lord, and He does not
tolerate even an ant's being killed. One has to pay for it. So,
indulgence in animal killing for the taste of the tongue is the grossest
kind of ignorance. A human being has no need to kill animals because
God has supplied so many nice things. If one indulges in meat-eating
anyway, it is to be understood that he is acting in ignorance and is
making his future very dark. Of all kinds of animal killing, the killing
of cows is most vicious because the cow gives us all kinds of pleasure
by supplying milk. Cow slaughter is an act of the grossest type of
ignorance. In the Vedic literature the words
gobhih prinita-matsaram
indicate that one who, being fully satisfied by milk, is desirous of
killing the cow, is in the grossest ignorance. There is also a prayer in
the Vedic literature that states:
namo brahmanya-devaya go-brahmana-hitaya ca
jagad-dhitaya krsnaya govindaya namo namah

"My Lord, You are the well-wisher of the cows and the
brahmanas,
and You are the well-wisher of the entire human society and world."
The purport is that special mention is given in that prayer for the
protection of the cows and the
brahmanas. Brahmanas are the symbol of spiritual education, and cows are the symbol of the most valuable food; these two living creatures, the
brahmanas
and the cows, must be given all protection--that is real advancement of
civilization. In modern human society, spiritual knowledge is
neglected, and cow killing is encouraged. It is to be understood, then,
that human society is advancing in the wrong direction and is clearing
the path to its own condemnation. A civilization which guides the
citizens to become animals in their next lives is certainly not a human
civilization. The present human civilization is, of course, grossly
misled by the modes of passion and ignorance. It is a very dangerous
age, and all nations should take care to provide the easiest process,
Krsna consciousness, to save humanity from the greatest danger.
TEXT 17
sattvat sanjayate jnanam
rajaso lobha eva ca
pramada-mohau tamaso
bhavato 'jnanam eva ca
SYNONYMS
sattvat--from the mode of goodness;
sanjayate--develops;
jnanam--knowledge;
rajasah--from the mode of passion;
lobhah--greed;
eva--certainly;
ca--also;
pramada--madness;
mohau--illusion;
tamasah--from the mode of ignorance;
bhavatah--develops;
ajnanam--nonsense;
eva--certainly;
ca--also.
TRANSLATION
From
the mode of goodness, real knowledge develops; from the mode of
passion, greed develops; and from the mode of ignorance, foolishness,
madness and illusion develop.
PURPORT

Since
the present civilization is not very congenial to the living entities,
Krsna consciousness is recommended. Through Krsna consciousness, society
will develop the mode of goodness. When the mode of goodness is
developed, people will see things as they are. In the mode of ignorance,
people are just like animals and cannot see things clearly. In the mode
of ignorance, for example, they do not see that by killing one animal
they are taking a chance of being killed by the same animal in the next
life. Because people have no education in actual knowledge, they become
irresponsible. To stop this irresponsibility, education for developing
the mode of goodness of the people in general must be there. When they
are actually educated in the mode of goodness, they will become sober,
in full knowledge of things as they are. Then people will be happy and
prosperous. Even if the majority of the people aren't happy and
prosperous, if a certain percentage of the population develops Krsna
consciousness and becomes situated in the mode of goodness, then there
is the possibility for peace and prosperity all over the world.
Otherwise, if the world is devoted to the modes of passion and
ignorance, there can be no peace or prosperity. In the mode of passion,
people become greedy, and their hankering for sense enjoyment has no
limit. One can see that even if one has enough money and adequate
arrangement for sense gratification, there is neither happiness nor
peace of mind. That is not possible because one is situated in the mode
of passion. If one wants happiness at all, his money will not help him;
he has to elevate himself to the mode of goodness by practicing Krsna
consciousness. One engaged in the mode of passion is not only mentally
unhappy, but his profession and occupation are also very troublesome. He
has to devise so many plans and schemes to acquire enough money to
maintain his status quo. This is all miserable. In the mode of
ignorance, people become mad. Being distressed by their circumstances,
they take shelter of intoxication, and thus they sink further into
ignorance. Their future in life is very dark.
.
TEXT 18
urdhvam gacchanti sattva-stha
madhye tisthanti rajasah
jaghanya-guna-vrtti-stha
adho gacchanti tamasah
SYNONYMS
urdhvam--upwards;
gacchanti--go;
sattva-sthah--one who is situated in the mode of goodness;
madhye--in the middle;
tisthanti--dwell;
rajasah--those who are situated in the mode of passion;
jaghanya--abominable;
guna--quality;
vrtti-sthah--occupation;
adhah--down;
gacchanti--go;
tamasah--people in the mode of ignorance.
TRANSLATION
Those
situated in the mode of goodness gradually go upward to the higher
planets; those in the mode of passion live on the earthly planets; and
those in the mode of ignorance go down to the hellish worlds.
PURPORT

In
this verse the results of actions in the three modes of nature are more
explicitly set forth. There is an upper planetary system, consisting of
the heavenly planets, where everyone is highly elevated. According to
the degree of development of the mode of goodness, the living entity can
be transferred to various planets in this system. The highest planet is
Satyaloka, or Brahmaloka, where the prime person of this universe, Lord
Brahma, resides. We have seen already that we can hardly calculate the
wondrous condition of life in Brahmaloka, but the highest condition of
life, the mode of goodness, can bring us to this.

The
mode of passion is mixed. It is in the middle, between the modes of
goodness and ignorance. A person is not always pure, but even if he
should be purely in the mode of passion, he will simply remain on this
earth as a king or a rich man. But because there are mixtures, one can
also go down. People on this earth, in the modes of passion or
ignorance, cannot forcibly approach the higher planets by machine. In
the mode of passion, there is also the chance of becoming mad in the
next life.

The
lowest quality, the mode of ignorance, is described here as abominable.
The result of developing ignorance is very, very risky. It is the
lowest quality in material nature. Beneath the human level there are
eight million species of life: birds, beasts, reptiles, trees, etc.,
and, according to the development of the mode of ignorance, people are
brought down to these abominable conditions. The word
tamasah is very significant here.
Tamasah indicates those who stay continually in the mode of ignorance without rising to a higher mode. Their future is very dark.

There
is opportunity for men in the modes of ignorance and passion to be
elevated to the mode of goodness, and that system is called Krsna
consciousness. But one who does not take advantage of this opportunity
certainly will continue in the lower modes.
TEXT 19
nanyam gunebhyah kartaram
yada drastanupasyati
gunebhyas ca param vetti
mad-bhavam so 'dhigacchati
SYNONYMS
na--never;
anyam--other than;
gunebhyah--from the qualities;
kartaram--the performer;
yada--when;
drasta anupasyati--he who sees properly;
gunebhyah ca--from the modes of nature;
param--transcendental;
vetti--know;
mat-bhavam--My spiritual nature;
sah--he;
adhigacchati--is promoted.
TRANSLATION
When
you see that there is nothing beyond these modes of nature in all
activities and that the Supreme Lord is transcendental to all these
modes, then you can know My spiritual nature.
PURPORT

One
can transcend all the activities of the modes of material nature simply
by understanding them properly by learning from the proper souls. The
real spiritual master is Krsna, and He is imparting this spiritual
knowledge to Arjuna. Similarly, it is from those who are fully in Krsna
consciousness that one has to learn this science of activities in terms
of the modes of nature. Otherwise, one's life will be misdirected. By
the instruction of a bona fide spiritual master, a living entity can
know of his spiritual position, his material body, his senses, how he is
entrapped, and how he is under the spell of the material modes of
nature. He is helpless, being in the grip of these modes, but when he
can see his real position, then he can attain to the transcendental
platform, having the scope for spiritual life. Actually, the living
entity is not the performer of different activities. He is forced to act
because he is situated in a particular type of body, conducted by some
particular mode of material nature. Unless one has the help of spiritual
authority, he cannot understand in what position he is actually
situated. With the association of a bona fide spiritual master, he can
see his real position, and, by such an understanding, he can become
fixed in full Krsna consciousness. A man in Krsna consciousness is not
controlled by the spell of the material modes of nature. It has already
been stated in the Seventh Chapter that one who has surrendered to Krsna
is relieved from the activities of material nature. Therefore for one
who is able to see things as they are, the influence of material nature
gradually ceases.

TEXT 20
gunan etan atitya trin
dehi deha-samudbhavan
janma-mrtyu-jara-duhkhair
vimukto 'mrtam asnute
SYNONYMS
gunan--qualities;
etan--all these;
atitya--transcending;
trin--three;
dehi--embodied;
deha--body;
samudbhavan--produced of;
janma--birth;
mrtyu--death;
jara--old age;
duhkhaih--distresses;
vimuktah--being freed from;
amrtam--nectar;
asnute--enjoys.
TRANSLATION
When
the embodied being is able to transcend these three modes, he can
become free from birth, death, old age and their distresses and can
enjoy nectar even in this life.
PURPORT

How
one can stay in the transcendental position, even in this body, in full
Krsna consciousness, is explained in this verse. The Sanskrit word
dehi
means "embodied." Although one is within this material body, by his
advancement in spiritual knowledge he can be free from the influence of
the modes of nature. He can enjoy the happiness of spiritual life even
in this body because, after leaving this body, he is certainly going to
the spiritual sky. But even in this body he can enjoy spiritual
happiness. In other words, devotional service in Krsna consciousness is
the sign of liberation from this material entanglement, and this will be
explained in the Eighteenth Chapter. When one is freed from the
influence of the modes of material nature, he enters into devotional
service.
TEXT 21
arjuna uvaca
kair lingais trin gunan etan
atito bhavati prabho
kim acarah katham caitams
trin gunan ativartate
SYNONYMS
arjunah uvaca--Arjuna said;
kaih--by which;
lingaih--symptoms;
trin--three;
gunan--qualities;
etan--all this;
atitah--having transcended;
bhavati--become;
prabho--my Lord;
kim--what;
acarah--behavior;
katham--what;
ca--also;
etan--these;
trin--three;
gunan--qualities;
ativartate--transcend.
TRANSLATION
Arjuna
inquired: O my Lord, by what symptoms is one known who is
transcendental to those modes? What is his behavior? And how does he
transcend the modes of nature?
PURPORT

In
this verse, Arjuna's questions are very appropriate. He wants to know
the symptoms of a person who has already transcended the material modes.
He first inquires of the symptoms of such a transcendental person. How
can one understand that he has already transcended the influence of the
modes of material nature? The second question asks how he lives and what
his activities are. Are they regulated or nonregulated? Then Arjuna
inquires of the means by which he can attain the transcendental nature.
That is very important. Unless one knows the direct means by which one
can be situated always transcendentally, there is no possibility of
showing the symptoms. So all these questions put by Arjuna are very
important, and the Lord answers them.
TEXT 22-25
sri-bhagavan uvaca
prakasam ca pravrttim ca
moham eva ca pandava
na dvesti sampravrttani
na nivrttani kanksati
udasina-vad asino
gunair yo na vicalyate
guna vartanta ity evam
yo 'vatisthati nengate
sama-duhkha-sukhah sva-sthah
sama-lostasma-kancanah
tulya-priyapriyo dhiras
tulya-nindatma-samstutih
manapamanayos tulyas
tulyo mitrari-paksayoh
sarvarambha-parityagi
gunatitah sa ucyate
SYNONYMS
sri-bhagavan uvaca--the Supreme Personality of Godhead said;
prakasam ca--and illumination;
pravrttim ca--and attachment;
moham--illusion;
eva ca--also;
pandava--O son of Pandu;
na dvesti--does not hate;
sampravrttani--although developed;
na nivrttani--nor stop development;
kanksati--desires;
udasina-vat--as if neutral;
asinah--situated;
gunaih--by the qualities;
yah--one who;
na--never;
vicalyate--is agitated;
gunah--the qualities;
vartante--is situated;
iti evam--knowing thus;
yah--one who;
avatisthati--remains;
na--never;
ingate--flickering;
sama--equal;
duhkha--in distress;
sukhah--in happiness;
sva-sthah--being situated himself;
sama--equally;
losta--a lump of earth;
asma--stone;
kancanah--gold;
tulya--equally disposed;
priya--dear;
apriyah--undesirable;
dhirah--steady;
tulya--equally;
ninda--in defamation;
atma-samstutih--in praise of himself;
mana--in honor;
apamanayoh--dishonor;
tulyah--equally;
tulyah--equally;
mitra--friend;
ari--enemy;
paksayoh--in parties;
sarva--all;
arambha--endeavor;
parityagi--renouncer;
guna-atitah--transcendental to the material modes of nature;
sah--he;
ucyate--is said to be.
TRANSLATION
The
Blessed Lord said: He who does not hate illumination, attachment and
delusion when they are present, nor longs for them when they disappear;
who is seated like one unconcerned, being situated beyond these material
reactions of the modes of nature, who remains firm, knowing that the
modes alone are active; who regards alike pleasure and pain, and looks
on a clod, a stone and a piece of gold with an equal eye; who is wise
and holds praise and blame to be the same; who is unchanged in honor and
dishonor, who treats friend and foe alike, who has abandoned all
fruitive undertakings--such a man is said to have transcended the modes
of nature.
PURPORT

Arjuna
submitted the three different questions, and the Lord answers them one
after another. In these verses, Krsna first indicates that a person
transcendentally situated neither envies anyone nor hankers for
anything. When a living entity stays in this material world embodied by
the material body, it is to be understood that he is under the control
of one of the three modes of material nature. When he is actually out of
the body, then he is out of the clutches of the material modes of
nature. But as long as he is not out of the material body, he should be
neutral. He should engage himself in the devotional service of the Lord
so that his identity with the material body will automatically be
forgotten. When one is conscious of the material body, he acts only for
sense gratification, but when one transfers the consciousness to Krsna,
sense gratification automatically stops. One does not need this material
body, and he does not need to accept the dictations of the material
body. The qualities of the material modes in the body will act, but as
spirit soul the self is aloof from such activities. How does he become
aloof? He does not desire to enjoy the body, nor does he desire to get
out of it. Thus transcendentally situated, the devotee becomes
automatically free. He need not try to become free from the influence of
the modes of material nature.

The
next question concerns the dealings of a transcendentally situated
person. The materially situated person is affected by so-called honor
and dishonor offered to the body, but the transcendentally situated
person is not affected by such false honor and dishonor. He performs his
duty in Krsna consciousness and does not mind whether a man honors or
dishonors him. He accepts things that are favorable for his duty in
Krsna consciousness, otherwise he has no necessity of anything material,
either a stone or gold. He takes everyone as his dear friend who helps
him in his execution of Krsna consciousness, and he does not hate his
so-called enemy. He is equally disposed and sees everything on an equal
level because he knows perfectly well that he has nothing to do with
material existence. Social and political issues do not affect him
because he knows the situation of temporary upheavals and disturbances.
He does not attempt anything for his own sake. He can attempt anything
for Krsna, but for his personal self he does not attempt anything. By
such behavior one becomes actually transcendentally situated.

TEXT 26
mam ca yo 'vyabhicarena
bhakti-yogena sevate
sa gunan samatityaitan
brahma-bhuyaya kalpate
SYNONYMS
mam--unto Me;
ca--also;
yah--person;
avyabhicarena--without fail;
bhakti-yogena--by devotional service;
sevate--renders service;
sah--he;
gunan--all the modes of material nature;
samatitya--transcending;
etan--all this;
brahma-bhuyaya--to be elevated to the Brahman platform;
kalpate--is considered.
TRANSLATION
One
who engages in full devotional service, who does not fall down in any
circumstance, at once transcends the modes of material nature and thus
comes to the level of Brahman.
PURPORT

This
verse is a reply to Arjuna's third question: What is the means of
attaining to the transcendental position? As explained before, the
material world is acting under the spell of the modes of material
nature. One should not be disturbed by the activities of the modes of
nature; instead of putting his consciousness into such activities, he
may transfer his consciousness to Krsna activities. Krsna activities are
known as
bhakti-yoga--always acting for Krsna. This includes not
only Krsna, but His different plenary expansions such as Rama and
Narayana. He has innumerable expansions. One who is engaged in the
service of any of the forms of Krsna, or of His plenary expansions, is
considered to be transcendentally situated. One should also note that
all the forms of Krsna are fully transcendental, blissful, full of
knowledge and eternal. Such personalities of Godhead are omnipotent and
omniscient, and they possess all transcendental qualities. So, if one
engages himself in the service of Krsna or His plenary expansions with
unfailing determination, although these modes of material nature are
very difficult to overcome, he can overcome them easily. This is already
explained in the Seventh Chapter. One who surrenders unto Krsna at once
surmounts the influence of the modes of material nature. To be in Krsna
consciousness or in devotional service means to acquire the equality of
Krsna. The Lord says that His nature is eternal, blissful and full of
knowledge, and the living entities are part and parcel of the Supreme,
as gold particles are part of a gold mine. Thus the living entity's
spiritual position is as good as gold, as good as Krsna in quality. The
difference of individuality continues, otherwise there is no question of
bhakti-yoga. Bhakti-yoga means that the Lord is there,
the devotee is there and the activity of exchange of love between the
Lord and the devotee is there. Therefore the individuality of two
persons is present in the Supreme Personality of Godhead and the
individual person, otherwise there is no meaning to
bhakti-yoga.
If one is not situated in the same transcendental position with the
Lord, one cannot serve the Supreme Lord. To be a personal assistant to a
king, one must acquire the qualifications. Thus the qualification is to
become Brahman, or freed from all material contamination. It is said in
the Vedic literature,
brahmaiva san brahmapy eti. One can attain
the Supreme Brahman by becoming Brahman. This means that one must
qualitatively become one with Brahman. By attainment of Brahman, one
does not lose his eternal Brahman identity as individual soul.
TEXT 27
brahmano hi pratisthaham
amrtasyavyayasya ca
sasvatasya ca dharmasya
sukhasyaikantikasya ca
SYNONYMS
brahmanah--of the impersonal
brahmajyoti; hi--certainly;
pratistha--the rest;
aham--I am;
amrtasya--of the immortal;
avyayasya--of the imperishable;
ca--also;
sasvatasya--of the eternal;
ca--and;
dharmasya--of the constitutional position;
sukhasya--happiness;
aikantikasya--ultimate;
ca--also.
TRANSLATION
And
I am the basis of the impersonal Brahman, which is the constitutional
position of ultimate happiness, and which is immortal, imperishable and
eternal.
PURPORT

The
constitution of Brahman is immortality, imperishability, eternity, and
happiness. Brahman is the beginning of transcendental realization.
Paramatma, the Supersoul, is the middle, the second stage in
transcendental realization, and the Supreme Personality of Godhead is
the ultimate realization of the Absolute Truth. Therefore, both
Paramatma and the impersonal Brahman are within the Supreme Person. It
is explained in the Seventh Chapter that material nature is the
manifestation of the inferior energy of the Supreme Lord. The Lord
impregnates the inferior material nature with the fragments of the
superior nature, and that is the spiritual touch in the material nature.
When a living entity conditioned by this material nature begins the
cultivation of spiritual knowledge, he elevates himself from the
position of material existence and gradually rises up to the Brahman
conception of the Supreme. This attainment of the Brahman conception of
life is the first stage in self-realization. At this stage the Brahman
realized person is transcendental to the material position, but he is
not actually perfect in Brahman realization. If he wants, he can
continue to stay in the Brahman position and then gradually rise up to
Paramatma realization and then to the realization of the Supreme
Personality of Godhead. There are many examples of this in Vedic
literature. The four Kumaras were situated first in the impersonal
Brahman conception of truth, but then they gradually rose to the
platform of devotional service. One who cannot elevate himself beyond
the impersonal conception of Brahman runs the risk of falling down. In
Srimad-Bhagavatam
it is stated that although a person may rise to the stage of impersonal
Brahman, without going further, with no information of the Supreme
Person, his intelligence is not perfectly clear. Therefore, in spite of
being raised to the Brahman platform, there is the chance of falling
down if one is not engaged in the devotional service of the Lord. In the
Vedic language it is also said:
raso vai sah; rasam hy evayam labdhvanandi bhavati:
"When one understands the Personality of God, the reservoir of
pleasure, Krsna, he actually becomes transcendentally blissful." The
Supreme Lord is full in six opulences, and when a devotee approaches
Him, there is an exchange of these six opulences. The servant of the
king enjoys on an almost equal level with the king. And so, eternal
happiness, imperishable happiness, eternal life accompany devotional
service. Therefore, realization of Brahman, or eternity, or
imperishability is included in devotional service. This is already
possessed by a person who is engaged in devotional service.

The
living entity, although Brahman by nature, has the desire to lord it
over the material world, and due to this he falls down. In his
constitutional position, a living entity is above the three modes of
material nature, but association with material nature entangles him in
the different modes of material nature, goodness, passion and ignorance.
Due to the association of these three modes, his desire to dominate the
material world is there. By engagement in devotional service in full
Krsna consciousness, he is immediately situated in the transcendental
position, and his unlawful desire to control material nature is removed.
Therefore the process of devotional service beginning with hearing,
chanting, remembering--the prescribed nine methods for realizing
devotional service--should be practiced in the association of devotees.
Gradually, by such association, by the influence of the spiritual
master, one's material desire to dominate is removed, and one becomes
firmly situated in the Lord's transcendental loving service. This method
is prescribed from the twenty-second to the last verse of this chapter.
Devotional service to the Lord is very simple: one should always engage
in the service of the Lord, should eat the remnants of foodstuffs
offered to the Deity, smell the flowers offered to the lotus feet of the
Lord, see the places where the Lord had His transcendental pastimes,
read of the different activities of the Lord, His reciprocation of love
with His devotees, chant always the transcendental vibration Hare Krsna,
Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama,
Hare Hare, and observe the fasting days commemorating the appearances
and disappearances of the Lord and His devotees. By following such a
process one becomes completely detached from all material activities.
One who can thus situate himself in the
brahma-jyoti is equal to the Supreme Personality of Godhead in quality.
Thus end the Bhaktivedanta Purports to the Fourteenth Chapter of the Srimad Bhagavad-gita in the matter of the Three Modes of Material Nature.
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