Chapter 9 Confidential Knowledge of the Ultimate Truth
In chapter nine Lord Krishna reveals that the sovereign
science and the sovereign secret. He explains how the entire material
existence is created, prevaded, maintained and annihilated by His
external energy and all beings are coming and going under His
supervision. The subjects matters covered subsequently are primarily
concerned with devotional service and the Lord Himself declares that
these subject matters are most confidential. Thus this chapter is
entitled: Confidential Knowledge of the Ultimate Truth.
TEXT 1
sri-bhagavan uvaca
idam tu te guhyatamam
pravaksyamy anasuyave
jnanam vijnana-sahitam
yaj jnatva moksyase 'subhat
SYNONYMS
sri-bhagavan uvaca--the Supreme Personality of Godhead said;
idam--this;
tu--but;
te--unto you;
guhya-tamam--the most confidential;
pravaksyami--I am speaking;
anasuyave--to the nonenvious;
jnanam--knowledge;
vijnana--realized knowledge;
sahitam--with;
yat--which;
jnatva--knowing;
moksyase--be released;
asubhat--from this miserable material existence.
TRANSLATION
The
Supreme Lord said: My dear Arjuna, because you are never envious of Me,
I shall impart to you this most secret wisdom, knowing which you shall
be relieved of the miseries of material existence.
PURPORT

As a devotee hears more and more about the Supreme Lord, he becomes enlightened. This hearing process is recommended in the
Srimad-Bhagavatam:
"The messages of the Supreme Personality of Godhead are full of
potencies, and these potencies can be realized if topics regarding the
Supreme Godhead are discussed amongst devotees. This cannot be achieved
by the association of mental speculators or academic scholars, for it is
realized knowledge."

The
devotees are constantly engaged in the Supreme Lord's service. The Lord
understands the mentality and sincerity of a particular living entity
who is engaged in Krsna consciousness and gives him the intelligence to
understand the science of Krsna in the association of the devotees.
Discussion of Krsna is very potent, and if a fortunate person has such
association and tries to assimilate the knowledge, then he will surely
make advancement toward spiritual realization. Lord Krsna, in order to
encourage Arjuna to higher and higher elevation in His potent service,
describes in this Ninth Chapter matters more confidential than any He
has already disclosed.

The very beginning of
Bhagavad-gita,
the First Chapter, is more or less an introduction to the rest of the
book; and in the Second and Third chapters, the spiritual knowledge
described is called confidential. Topics discussed in the Seventh and
Eighth chapters are specifically related to devotional service, and
because they bring enlightenment in Krsna consciousness, they are called
more confidential. But the matters which are described in the Ninth
Chapter deal with unalloyed, pure devotion. Therefore this is called the
most confidential. One who is situated in the most confidential
knowledge of Krsna is naturally transcendental; he therefore has no
material pangs, although he is in the material world. In the
Bhakti-rasamrta-sindhu
it is said that although one who has a sincere desire to render loving
service to the Supreme Lord is situated in the conditional state of
material existence, he is to be considered liberated. Similarly, we
shall find in the
Bhagavad-gita, Tenth Chapter, that anyone who is engaged in that way is a liberated person.

Now this first verse has specific significance. Knowledge (
idam jnanam)
refers to pure devotional service, which consists of nine different
activities: hearing, chanting, remembering, serving, worshiping,
praying, obeying, maintaining friendship and surrendering everything. By
the practice of these nine elements of devotional service one is
elevated to spiritual consciousness, Krsna consciousness. At the time
when one's heart is cleared of the material contamination, one can
understand this science of Krsna. Simply to understand that a living
entity is not material is not sufficient. That may be the beginning of
spiritual realization but one should recognize the difference between
activities of the body and spiritual activities by which one understands
that he is not the body.

In
the Seventh Chapter we have already discussed the opulent potency of
the Supreme Personality of Godhead, His different energies, the inferior
and superior natures, and all this material manifestation. Now in
Chapters Nine and Ten the glories of the Lord will be delineated.

The Sanskrit word
anasuyave
in this verse is also very significant. Generally the commentators,
even if they are highly scholarly, are all envious of Krsna, the Supreme
Personality of Godhead. Even the most erudite scholars write on
Bhagavad-gita
very inaccurately. Because they are envious of Krsna, their
commentaries are useless. The commentaries given by devotees of the Lord
are bona fide. No one can explain
Bhagavad-gita, or give perfect
knowledge of Krsna if he is envious. One who criticizes the character
of Krsna without knowing Him is a fool. So such commentaries should be
very carefully avoided. For one who understands that Krsna is the
Supreme Personality of Godhead, the pure and transcendental Personality,
these chapters will be very beneficial.
TEXT 2
raja-vidya raja-guhyam
pavitram idam uttamam
pratyaksavagamam dharmyam
su-sukham kartum avyayam
SYNONYMS
raja-vidya--the king of education;
raja-guhyam--the king of confidential knowledge;
pavitram--the purest;
idam--this;
uttamam--transcendental;
pratyaksa--directly experienced;
avagamam--understood;
dharmyam--the principle of religion;
su-sukham--very happy;
kartum--to execute;
avyayam--everlasting.
TRANSLATION
This
knowledge is the king of education, the most secret of all secrets. It
is the purest knowledge, and because it gives direct perception of the
self by realization, it is the perfection of religion. It is
everlasting, and it is joyfully performed.
PURPORT

This chapter of
Bhagavad-gita
is called the king of education because it is the essence of all
doctrines and philosophies explained before. There are seven principal
philosophers in India: Gautama, Kanada, Kapila, Yajnavalkya, Sandilya,
Vaisvanara, and, finally, Vyasadeva, the author of the
Vedanta-sutra.
So there is no dearth of knowledge in the field of philosophy or
transcendental knowledge. Now the Lord says that this Ninth Chapter is
the king of all such knowledge, the essence of all knowledge that can be
derived from the study of the
Vedas and different kinds of
philosophy. It is the most confidential because confidential or
transcendental knowledge involves understanding the difference between
the soul and the body. And the king of all confidential knowledge
culminates in devotional service.

Generally,
people are not educated in this confidential knowledge; they are
educated in external knowledge. As far as ordinary education is
concerned, people are involved with so many departments: politics,
sociology, physics, chemistry, mathematics, astronomy, engineering, etc.
There are so many departments of knowledge all over the world and many
huge universities, but there is, unfortunately, no university or
educational institution where the science of the spirit soul is
instructed. Yet the soul is the most important part of this body;
without the presence of the soul, the body has no value. Still people
are placing great stress on the bodily necessities of life, not caring
for the vital soul.

The
Bhagavad-gita,
especially from the Second Chapter on, stresses the importance of the
soul. In the very beginning, the Lord says that this body is perishable
and that the soul is not perishable. That is a confidential part of
knowledge: simply knowing that the spirit soul is different from this
body and that its nature is immutable, indestructible and eternal. But
that gives no positive information about the soul. Sometimes people are
under the impression that the soul is different from the body and that
when the body is finished, or one is liberated from the body, the soul
remains in a void and becomes impersonal. But actually that is not the
fact. How can the soul, which is so active within this body, be inactive
after being liberated from the body? It is always active. If it is
eternal, then it is eternally active, and its activities in the
spiritual kingdom are the most confidential part of spiritual knowledge.
These activities of the spirit soul are therefore indicated here as
constituting the king of all knowledge, the most confidential part of
all knowledge.

This knowledge is the purest form of all activities, as is explained in Vedic literature. In the
Padma Purana,
man's sinful activities have been analyzed and are shown to be the
results of sin after sin. Those who are engaged in fruitive activities
are entangled in different stages and forms of sinful reactions. For
instance, when the seed of a particular tree is sown, the tree does not
appear immediately to grow; it takes some time. It is first a small,
sprouting plant, then it assumes the form of a tree, then it flowers,
bears fruit, and, when it is complete, the flowers and fruits are
enjoyed by persons who have sown the seed of the tree. Similarly, a man
performs a sinful act, and like a seed it takes time to fructify. There
are different stages. The sinful action may have already stopped within
the individual, but the results or the fruit of that sinful action are
still enjoyed. There are sins which are still in the form of a seed, and
there are others which are already fructified and are giving us fruit,
which we are enjoying as distress and pain, as explained in the
twentieth verse of the Seventh Chapter.

A
person who has completely ended the reactions of all sinful activities
and who is fully engaged in pious activities, being freed from the
duality of this material world, becomes engaged in devotional service to
the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Krsna. In other words, those who
are actually engaged in the devotional service of the Supreme Lord are
already freed from all reactions. For those who are engaged in the
devotional service of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, all sinful
reactions, whether fructified, in the stock, or in the form of a seed,
gradually vanish. Therefore the purifying potency of devotional service
is very strong, and it is called
pavitram uttamam, the purest.
Uttamam means transcendental.
Tamas means this material world or darkness, and
uttamam
means that which is transcendental to material activities. Devotional
activities are never to be considered material, although sometimes it
appears that devotees are engaged just like ordinary men. One who can
see and is familiar with devotional service, however, will know that
they are not material activities. They are all spiritual and devotional,
uncontaminated by the material modes of nature.

It
is said that the execution of devotional service is so perfect that one
can perceive the results directly. This direct result is actually
perceived, and we have practical experience that any person who is
chanting the holy names of Krsna (Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna,
Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare) in course of time
feels some transcendental pleasure and very quickly becomes purified of
all material contamination. This is actually seen. Furthermore, if one
engages not only in hearing but in trying to broadcast the message of
devotional activities as well, or if he engages himself in helping the
missionary activities of Krsna consciousness, he gradually feels
spiritual progress. This advancement in spiritual life does not depend
on any kind of previous education or qualification. The method itself is
so pure that by simply engaging in it one becomes pure.

In the
Vedanta-sutra this is also described in the following words:
prakasas ca karmany abhyasat.
"Devotional service is so potent that simply by engaging in the
activities of devotional service, one becomes enlightened without a
doubt." Narada, who happened to be the son of a maidservant, had no
education, nor was he born into a high family. But when his mother was
engaged in serving great devotees, Narada also became engaged, and
sometimes, in the absence of his mother, he would serve the great
devotees himself. Narada personally says, "Once only, by their
permission, I took the remnants of their food, and by so doing all my
sins were at once eradicated. Thus being engaged, I became purified in
heart, and at that time the very nature of the transcendentalist became
attractive to me."(
Bhag 1.5.25) Narada tells his disciple
Vyasadeva that in a previous life he was engaged as a boy servant of
purified devotees during four months of their stay and that he was
intimately associating with them. Sometimes those sages left remnants of
food on their dishes, and the boy, who would wash their dishes, wanted
to taste the remnants. So he asked the great devotees whether he could
eat them, and they gave their permission. Narada then ate those remnants
and consequently became freed from all sinful reactions. As he went on
eating, he gradually became as purehearted as the sages, and he
gradually developed the same taste. The great devotees relished the
taste of unceasing devotional service of the Lord, hearing, chanting,
etc., and by developing the same taste, Narada wanted also to hear and
chant the glories of the Lord. Thus by associating with the sages, he
developed a great desire for devotional service. Therefore he quotes
from the
Vedanta-sutra (
prakasas ca karmany abhyasat): if
one is engaged simply in the acts of devotional service, everything is
revealed to him automatically, and he can understand. This is called
prakasah, directly perceived.

Narada
was actually a son of a maidservant. He had no opportunity to go to
school. He was simply assisting his mother, and fortunately his mother
rendered some service to the devotees. The child Narada also got the
opportunity and simply by association achieved the highest goal of all
religions, devotional service. In the
Srimad-Bhagavatam it is
said that religious people generally do not know that the highest
perfection of religion is the attainment of the stage of devotional
service. Generally Vedic knowledge is required for understanding of the
path of self-realization. But here, although he was not educated in the
Vedic principle, Narada acquired the highest results of Vedic study.
This process is so potent that even without performing the religious
process regularly, one can be raised to the highest perfection. How is
this possible? This is also confirmed in Vedic literature:
acaryavan puruso veda. One who is in association with great
acaryas, even if he is not educated or has not studied the
Vedas, can become familiar with all the knowledge necessary for realization.

The process of devotional service is a very happy one. Why? Devotional service consists of
sravanam kirtanam visnoh,
so one can simply hear the chanting of the glories of the Lord or can
attend philosophical lectures on transcendental knowledge given by
authorized
acaryas. Simply by sitting, one can learn; then one
can eat the remnants of the food offered to God, nice palatable dishes.
In every state devotional service is joyful. One can execute devotional
service even in the most poverty-stricken condition. The Lord says,
patram puspam phalam:
He is ready to accept from the devotee any kind of offering, never mind
what. Even a leaf, a flower, a bit of fruit, or a little water, which
are all available in every part of the world, can be offered by
any
person, regardless of social position, and will be accepted if offered
with love. There are many instances in history. Simply by tasting the
tulasi
leaves offered to the lotus feet of the Lord, great sages like
Sanat-kumara became great devotees. Therefore the devotional process is
very nice, and it can be executed in a happy mood. God accepts only the
love with which things are offered to Him.

It
is said here that this devotional service is eternally existing. It is
not as the Mayavadi philosophers claim. They sometimes take to so-called
devotional service, and as long as they are not liberated they continue
their devotional service, but at the end, when they become liberated,
they "become one with God." Such temporary time-serving devotional
service is not accepted as pure devotional service. Actual devotional
service continues even after liberation. When the devotee goes to the
spiritual planet in the kingdom of God, he is also engaged there in
serving the Supreme Lord. He does not try to become one with the Supreme
Lord.

As it will be seen, actual devotional service begins after liberation. So in
Bhagavad-gita it is said,
brahma-bhuta.
After being liberated, or being situated in the Brahman position, one's
devotional service begins. By executing devotional service, one can
understand the Supreme Lord. No one can understand the Supreme
Personality of Godhead by executing
karma-yoga, jnana, or
astanga-yoga or any other
yoga
independently. Without coming to the stage of devotional service, one
cannot understand what is the Personality of Godhead. In the
Srimad-Bhagavatam it is also confirmed that when one becomes purified by executing the process of devotional service, especially by hearing
Srimad-Bhagavatam or
Bhagavad-gita from realized souls, then he can understand the science of Krsna, or the science of God.
Evam prasanna-manaso bhagavad-bhakti yogatah.
When one's heart is cleared of all nonsense, then one can understand
what God is. Thus the process of devotional service, of Krsna
consciousness, is the king of all education and the king of all
confidential knowledge. It is the purest form of religion, and it can be
executed joyfully without difficulty. Therefore one should adopt it.
TEXT 3
asraddadhanah purusa
dharmasyasya parantapa
aprapya mam nivartante
mrtyu-samsara-vartmani
SYNONYMS
asraddadhanah--those who are faithless;
purusah--such persons;
dharmasya--of this process of religion;
asya--of it;
parantapa--O killer of the enemies;
aprapya--without obtaining;
mam--Me;
nivartante--come back;
mrtyu--death;
samsara--material existence;
vartmani--on the path of.
TRANSLATION
Those
who are not faithful on the path of devotional service cannot attain
Me, O conqueror of foes, but return to birth and death in this material
world.
PURPORT

The
faithless cannot accomplish this process of devotional service; that is
the purport of this verse. Faith is created by association with
devotees. Unfortunate people, even after hearing all the evidence of
Vedic literature from great personalities, still have no faith in God.
They are hesitant and cannot stay fixed in the devotional service of the
Lord. Thus faith is a most important factor for progress in Krsna
consciousness. In the
Caitanya-caritamrta it is said that one
should have complete conviction that simply by serving the Supreme Lord
Sri Krsna he can achieve all perfection. That is called real faith. In
the
Srimad-Bhagavatam (3.4.12) it is stated that by giving
water to the root of a tree, its branches, twigs and leaves become
satisfied, and by supplying food to the stomach all the senses of the
body become satisfied, and, similarly, by engaging in the transcendental
service of the Supreme Lord, all the demigods and all the living
entities automatically become satisfied.

After reading
Bhagavad-gita one should promptly come to the conclusion of
Bhagavad-gita:
one should give up all other engagements and adopt the service of the
Supreme Lord, Krsna, the Personality of Godhead. If one is convinced of
this philosophy of life, that is faith. Now the development of that
faith is the process of Krsna consciousness.
TEXT 4
maya tatam idam sarvam
jagad avyakta-murtina
mat-sthani sarva-bhutani
na caham tesv avasthitah
SYNONYMS
maya--by Me;
tatam--spread;
idam--all these manifestations;
sarvam--all;
jagat--cosmic manifestation;
avyakta-murtina--unmanifested form;
mat-sthani--unto Me;
sarva-bhutani--all living entities;
na--not;
ca--also;
aham--I;
tesu--in them;
avasthitah--situated.
TRANSLATION
By Me, in My unmanifested form, this entire universe is pervaded. All beings are in Me, but I am not in them.
PURPORT

The
Supreme Personality of Godhead is not perceivable through the gross
material senses. It is said that Lord Sri Krsna's name, fame, pastimes,
etc., cannot be understood by material senses. Only to one who is
engaged in pure devotional service under proper guidance is He revealed.
In the
Brahma-samhita it is stated,
premanjanacchurita....
one can see the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Govinda, always within
himself and outside himself if he has developed the transcendental
loving attitude towards Him. Thus for people in general He is not
visible. Here it is said that although He is all-pervading, everywhere
present, He is yet not conceivable by the material senses. But actually,
although we cannot see Him, everything is resting in Him. As we have
discussed in the Seventh Chapter, the entire material cosmic
manifestation is only a combination of His two different energies, the
superior spiritual energy and the inferior material energy. Just as the
sunshine is spread all over the universe, the energy of the Lord is
spread all over the creation, and everything is resting in that energy.

Yet
one should not conclude that because He is spread all over He has lost
His personal existence. To refute such an argument the Lord says, "I am
everywhere, and everything is in Me, but still I am aloof." For example,
a king heads a government which is but the manifestation of the king's
energy; the different governmental departments are nothing but the
energies of the king, and each department is resting on the king's
power. But still one cannot expect the king to be present in every
department personally. That is a crude example. Similarly, all the
manifestations that we see, and everything that exists both in this
material world and in the spiritual world, are resting on the energy of
the Supreme Personality of Godhead. The creation takes place by the
diffusion of His different energies, and, as is stated in the
Bhagavad-gita, He is everywhere present by His personal representation, the diffusion of His different energies.
TEXT 5
na ca mat-sthani bhutani
pasya me yogam aisvaram
bhuta-bhrn na ca bhuta-stho
mamatma bhuta-bhavanah
SYNONYMS
na--never;
ca--also;
mat-sthani--situated in Me;
bhutani--all creation;
pasya--just see;
me--My;
yogam aisvaram--inconceivable mystic power;
bhuta-bhrt--maintainer of all living entities;
na--never;
ca--also;
bhuta-sthah--in the cosmic manifestation;
mama--My;
atma--Self;
bhuta-bhavanah--is the source of all manifestations.
TRANSLATION
And
yet everything that is created does not rest in Me. Behold My mystic
opulence! Although I am the maintainer of all living entities, and
although I am everywhere, still My Self is the very source of creation.
PURPORT

The
Lord says that everything is resting on Him. This should not be
misunderstood. The Lord is not directly concerned with the maintenance
and sustenance of this material manifestation. Sometimes we see a
picture of Atlas holding the globe on his shoulders; he seems to be very
tired, holding this great earthly planet. Such an image should not be
entertained in connection with Krsna's upholding this created universe.
He says that although everything is resting on Him, still He is aloof.
The planetary systems are floating in space, and this space is the
energy of the Supreme Lord. But He is different from space. He is
differently situated. Therefore the Lord says, "Although they are
situated on My inconceivable energy, still, as the Supreme Personality
of Godhead, I am aloof from them." This is the inconceivable opulence of
the Lord.

In
the Vedic dictionary it is said, "The Supreme Lord is performing
inconceivably wonderful pastimes, displaying His energy. His person is
full of different potent energies, and His determination is itself
actual fact. In this way the Personality of Godhead is to be
understood." We may think to doing something, but there are so many
impediments, and sometimes it is not possible to do as we like. But when
Krsna wants to do something, simply by His willing, everything is
performed so perfectly that one cannot imagine how it is being done. The
Lord explains this fact: although He is the maintainer and sustainer of
all material manifestation, He does not touch this material
manifestation. Simply by His supreme will everything is created,
everything is sustained, everything is maintained, and everything is
annihilated. There is no difference between His mind and Himself (as
there is a difference between ourselves and our present material mind)
because He is absolute spirit. Simultaneously the Lord is present in
everything; yet the common man cannot understand how He is also present
personally. He is different from this material manifestation, yet
everything is resting on Him. This is explained here as
yogam aisvaram, the mystic power of the Supreme Personality of Godhead.
TEXT 6
yathakasa-sthito nityam
vayuh sarvatra-go mahan
tatha sarvani bhutani
mat-sthanity upadharaya
SYNONYMS
yatha--as much as;
akasa-sthitah--situated in space;
nityam--always;
vayuh--wind;
sarvatra-gah--blowing everywhere;
mahan--great;
tatha--similarly;
sarvani--everything;
bhutani--created beings;
mat-sthani--situated in Me;
iti--thus;
upadharaya--try to understand.
TRANSLATION
As the mighty wind, blowing everywhere, always rests in ethereal space, know that in the same manner all beings rest in Me.
PURPORT

For
the ordinary person it is almost inconceivable how the huge material
creation is resting in Him. But the Lord is giving an example which may
help us to understand. Space is the biggest manifestation we can
conceive. The cosmic manifestation rests in space. Space permits the
movement of even the atoms and on up to the greatest planets, the Sun
and the Moon. Although the sky (or wind or air) is great, still it is
situated within space. Space is not beyond the sky.

Similarly,
all the wonderful cosmic manifestations are existing by the supreme
will of God, and all of them are subordinate to that supreme will. As we
generally say, not a blade of grass moves without the will of the
Supreme Personality of Godhead. Thus everything is moving under His
will: by His will everything is being created, everything is being
maintained, and everything is being annihilated. Still He is aloof from
everything, as space is always aloof from the activities of the
atmosphere. In the
Upanisads, it is stated, "It is out of the fear of the Supreme Lord that the wind is blowing." In the
Garga Upanisad
also it is stated, "By the supreme order, under the superintendence of
the Supreme Personality of Godhead, the moon, the sun and the great
planets are moving." In the
Brahma-samhita this is also
stated. There is also a description of the movement of the sun, and it
is said that the sun is considered to be one of the eyes of the Supreme
Lord and that it has immense potency to diffuse heat and light. Still it
is moving in its prescribed orbit by the order and the supreme will of
Govinda. So, from the Vedic literature we can find evidence that this
material manifestation, which appears to us to be very wonderful and
great, is under the complete control of the Supreme Personality of
Godhead. This will be further explained in the later verses of this
chapter.
TEXT 7
sarva-bhutani kaunteya
prakrtim yanti mamikam
kalpa-ksaye punas tani
kalpadau visrjamy aham
SYNONYMS
sarva-bhutani--all created entities;
kaunteya--O son of Kunti;
prakrtim--nature;
yanti--enter;
mamikam--unto Me;
kalpa-ksaye--at the end of the millennium;
punah--again;
tani--all those;
kalpa-adau--in the beginning of the millennium;
visrjami--I create;
aham--I.
TRANSLATION
O
son of Kunti, at the end of the millennium every material manifestation
enters into My nature, and at the beginning of another millennium, by
My potency I again create.
PURPORT

The
creation, maintenance and annihilation of this material cosmic
manifestation is completely dependent on the supreme will of the
Personality of Godhead. "At the end of the millennium" means at the
death of Brahma. Brahma lives for one hundred years, and his one day is
calculated at 4,300,000,000 of our earthly years. His night is of the
same duration. His month consists of thirty such days and nights, and
his year of twelve months. After one hundred such years, when Brahma
dies, the devastation or annihilation takes place; this means that the
energy manifested by the Supreme Lord is again wound up in Himself. Then
again, when there is need to manifest the cosmic world, it is done by
His will: "Although I am one, I shall become many." This is the Vedic
aphorism. He expands Himself in this material energy, and the whole
cosmic manifestation again takes place.
TEXT 8
prakrtim svam avastabhya
visrjami punah punah
bhuta-gramam imam krtsnam
avasam prakrter vasat
SYNONYMS
prakrtim--material nature;
svam--of My personal Self;
avastabhya--enter in;
visrjami--create;
punah punah--again, again;
bhuta-gramam--all these cosmic manifestations;
imam--this;
krtsnam--total;
avasam--automatically;
prakrteh--by the force of nature;
vasat--under obligation.
TRANSLATION
The whole cosmic order is under Me. By My will it is manifested again and again, and by My will it is annihilated at the end.
PURPORT

This
matter is the manifestation of the inferior energy of the Supreme
Personality of Godhead. This has already been explained several times.
At the creation, the material energy is let loose as the
mahat-tattva,
into which the Lord as His first Purusa incarnation, Maha-Visnu,
enters. He lies within the Causal Ocean and breathes out innumerable
universes, and into each universe the Lord again enters as
Garbhodakasayi Visnu. Each universe is in that way created. He still
further manifests Himself as Ksirodakasayi Visnu, and that Visnu enters
into everything--even into the minute atom. This fact is explained here.
He enters into everything.

Now,
as far as the living entities are concerned, they are impregnated into
this material nature, and as a result of their past deeds they take
different positions. Thus the activities of this material world begin.
The activities of the different species of living beings are begun from
the very moment of the creation. It is not that all is evolved. The
different species of life are created immediately along with the
universe. Men, animals, beasts, birds--everything is simultaneously
created, because whatever desires the living entities had at the last
annihilation are again manifested. It is clearly stated here that the
living entities have nothing to do with this process. The state of being
in their past life in the past creation is simply manifested again, and
all this is done simply by His will. This is the inconceivable potency
of the Supreme Personality of God. And after creating different species
of life, He has no connection with them. The creation takes place to
accommodate the inclinations of the various living entities, and so the
Lord does not become involved with it.

TEXT 9
na ca mam tani karmani
nibadhnanti dhananjaya
udasina-vad asinam
asaktam tesu karmasu
SYNONYMS
na--never;
ca--also;
mam--Me;
tani--all those;
karmani--activities;
nibadhnanti--bind;
dhananjaya--O conqueror of riches;
udasina-vat--as neutral;
asinam--situated;
asaktam--without attraction;
tesu--in them;
karmasu--in activities.
TRANSLATION
O Dhananjaya, all this work cannot bind Me. I am ever detached, seated as though neutral.
PURPORT

One
should not think, in this connection, that the Supreme Personality of
Godhead has no engagement. In His spiritual world He is always engaged.
In the
Brahma-samhita it is stated: "He is always involved
in His eternal, blissful, spiritual activities, but He has nothing to
do with these material activities." Material activities are being
carried on by His different potencies. The Lord is always neutral in the
material activities of the created world. This neutrality is explained
here. Although He has control over every minute detail of matter, He is
sitting as if neutral. The example can be given of a high court judge
sitting on his bench. By his order so many things are happening: someone
is being hanged, someone is being put into jail, someone is awarded a
huge amount of wealth--but still he is neutral. He has nothing to do
with all that gain and loss. Similarly, the Lord is always neutral,
although He has His hand in every sphere of activity. In the
Vedanta-sutra
it is stated that He is not situated in the dualities of this material
world. He is transcendental to these dualities. Nor is He attached to
the creation and annihilation of this material world. The living
entities take their different forms in the various species of life
according to their past deeds, and the Lord doesn't interfere with them.
TEXT 10
mayadhyaksena prakrtih
suyate sa-caracaram
hetunanena kaunteya
jagad viparivartate
SYNONYMS
maya--by Me;
adhyaksena--by superintendence;
prakrtih--material nature;
suyate--manifests;
sa--with;
cara-acaram--the moving and the nonmoving;
hetuna--for this reason;
anena--this;
kaunteya--O son of Kunti;
jagat--the cosmic manifestation;
viparivartate--is working.
TRANSLATION
This
material nature is working under My direction, O son of Kunti, and it
is producing all moving and unmoving beings. By its rule this
manifestation is created and annihilated again and again.
PURPORT

It
is clearly stated here that the Supreme Lord, although aloof from all
the activities of the material world, remains the supreme director. The
Supreme Lord is the supreme will and the background of this material
manifestation, but the management is being conducted by material nature.
Krsna also states in
Bhagavad-gita that of all the living
entities in different forms and species, "I am the father." The father
gives seeds to the womb of the mother for the child, and similarly the
Supreme Lord by His mere glance injects all the living entities into the
womb of material nature, and they come out in their different forms and
species, according to their last desires and activities. All these
living entities, although born under the glance of the Supreme Lord,
still take their different bodies according to their past deeds and
desires. So the Lord is not directly attached to this material creation.
He simply glances over material nature; material nature is thus
activated, and everything is created immediately. Because He glances
over material nature, there is undoubtedly activity on the part of the
Supreme Lord, but He has nothing to do with the manifestation of the
material world directly. This example is given in the
smrti: when
there is a fragrant flower before someone, the fragrance is touched by
the smelling power of the person, yet the smelling and the flower are
detached from one another. There is a similar connection between the
material world and the Supreme Personality of Godhead; actually He has
nothing to do with this material world, but He creates by His glance and
ordains. In summary, material nature, without the superintendence of
the Supreme Personality of Godhead, cannot do anything. Yet the Supreme
Personality is detached from all material activities.
TEXT 11
avajananti mam mudha
manusim tanum asritam
param bhavam ajananto
mama bhuta-mahesvaram
SYNONYMS
avajananti--deride;
mam--Me;
mudhah--foolish men;
manusim--in human form;
tanum--body;
asritam--assuming;
param--transcendental;
bhavam--nature;
ajanantah--not knowing;
mama--Mine;
bhuta--everything that be;
maha-isvaram--the supreme proprietor.
TRANSLATION
Fools
deride Me when I descend in the human form. They do not know My
transcendental nature and My supreme dominion over all that be.
PURPORT

From
the other explanations of the previous verses in this chapter, it is
clear that the Supreme Personality of Godhead, although appearing like a
human being, is not a common man. The Personality of Godhead, who
conducts the creation, maintenance and annihilation of the complete
cosmic manifestation, cannot be a human being. Yet there are many
foolish men who consider Krsna to be merely a powerful man and nothing
more. Actually, He is the original Supreme Personality, as is confirmed
in the
Brahma-samhita (
isvarah paramah krsnah); He is the Supreme Lord.

There are many
isvaras,
controllers, and one appears greater than another. In the ordinary
management of affairs in the material world, we find some official or
director, and above him there is a secretary, and above him a minister,
and above him a president. Each of them is a controller, but one is
controlled by another. In the
Brahma-samhita it is said that
Krsna is the supreme controller; there are many controllers undoubtedly,
both in the material and spiritual world, but Krsna is the supreme
controller (
isvarah paramah krsnah) and His body is
sac-cid-ananda, nonmaterial.

Material
bodies cannot perform the wonderful acts described in previous verses.
His body is eternal, blissful and full of knowledge. Although He is not a
common man, the foolish deride Him and consider Him to be a man. His
body is called here
manusim because He is acting just like a man,
a friend of Arjuna's, a politician involved in the Battle of
Kuruksetra. In so many ways He is acting just like an ordinary man, but
actually His body is
sac-cid-ananda-vigraha--eternal bliss and knowledge absolute. This is confirmed in the Vedic language also (
sac-cid-ananda-rupaya krsnaya):
"I offer my obeisances unto the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Krsna,
who is the eternal blissful form of knowledge." There are other
descriptions in the Vedic language also.
Tam ekam govindam: "You are Govinda, the pleasure of the senses and the cows."
Sac-cid-ananda-vigraham: "And Your form is transcendental, full of knowledge, bliss and eternality."

Despite
the transcendental qualities of Lord Krsna's body, its full bliss and
knowledge, there are many so-called scholars and commentators of
Bhagavad-gita
who deride Krsna as an ordinary man. The scholar may be born an
extraordinary man due to his previous good work, but this conception of
Sri Krsna is due to a poor fund of knowledge. Therefore he is called
mudha,
for only foolish persons consider Krsna to be an ordinary human being
because they do not know the confidential activities of the Supreme Lord
and His different energies. They do not know that Krsna's body is a
symbol of complete knowledge and bliss, that He is the proprietor of
everything that be and that He can award liberation to anyone. Because
they do not know that Krsna has so many transcendental qualifications,
they deride Him.

Nor
do they know that the appearance of the Supreme Personality of Godhead
in this material world is a manifestation of His internal energy. He is
the master of the material energy. As has been explained in several
places (
mama maya duratyaya), He claims that the material energy,
although very powerful, is under His control, and whoever surrenders
unto Him can get out of the control of this material energy. If a soul
surrendered to Krsna can get out of the influence of material energy,
then how can the Supreme Lord, who conducts the creation, maintenance
and annihilation of the whole cosmic nature, have a material body like
us? So this conception of Krsna is complete foolishness. Foolish
persons, however, cannot conceive that the Personality of Godhead,
Krsna, appearing just like an ordinary man, can be the controller of all
the atoms and of the gigantic manifestation of the universal form. The
biggest and the minutest are beyond their conception, so they cannot
imagine that a form like that of a human being can simultaneously
control the infinite and the minute. Actually although He is controlling
the infinite and the finite, He is apart from all this manifestation.
It is clearly stated concerning His
yogam aisvaram, His
inconceivable transcendental energy, that He can control the infinite
and the finite simultaneously and that He can remain aloof from them.
Although the foolish cannot imagine how Krsna, who appears just like a
human being, can control the infinite and the finite, those who are pure
devotees accept this, for they know that Krsna is the Supreme
Personality of Godhead. Therefore they completely surrender unto Him and
engage in Krsna consciousness, devotional service of the Lord.

There
are many controversies amongst the impersonalists and the personalists
about the Lord's appearance as a human being. But if we consult
Bhagavad-gita and
Srimad-Bhagavatam,
the authoritative texts for understanding the science of Krsna, then we
can understand that Krsna is the Supreme Personality of Godhead. He is
not an ordinary man, although He appeared on this earth as an ordinary
human. In the
Srimad-Bhagavatam, First Canto, First
Chapter, when the sages inquire about the activities of Krsna, it is
stated that His appearance as a man bewilders the foolish. No human
being could perform the wonderful acts that Krsna performed while He was
present on this earth. When Krsna appeared before His father and
mother, Vasudeva and Devaki, He appeared with four hands, but after the
prayers of the parents, He transformed Himself into an ordinary child.
His appearance as an ordinary human being is one of the features of His
transcendental body. In the Eleventh Chapter of the
Gita also it is stated,
tenaiva rupena etc.
Arjuna prayed to see again that form of four hands, and when Krsna was
thus petitioned by Arjuna, He again assumed His original form. All these
different features of the Supreme Lord are certainly not those of an
ordinary human being.

Some of those who deride Krsna, who are infected with the Mayavadi philosophy, quote the following verse from the
Srimad-Bhagavatam to prove that Krsna is just an ordinary man.
Aham sarvesu bhutesu bhutatmavasthitah sada: "The Supreme is present in every living entity." (
Bhag. 3.29.21) We should better take note of this particular verse from the Vaisnava
acaryas
like Jiva Gosvami instead of following the interpretation of
unauthorized persons who deride Krsna. Jiva Gosvami, commenting on this
verse, says that Krsna, in His plenary expansion as Paramatma, is
situated in the moving and the nonmoving entities as the Supersoul, so
any neophyte devotee who simply gives his attention to the
arca-murti,
the form of the Supreme Lord in the temple, and does not respect other
living entities is uselessly worshiping the form of the Lord in the
temple. There are three kinds of devotees of the Lord, and the neophyte
is in the lowest stage. The neophyte devotee gives more attention to the
Deity in the temple than to other devotees, so Jiva Gosvami warns that
this sort of mentality should be corrected. A devotee should see that
Krsna is present in everyone's heart as Paramatma; therefore every body
is the embodiment or the temple of the Supreme Lord, and as such, as one
offers respect to the temple of the Lord, he should similarly properly
respect each and every body in whom the Paramatma dwells. Everyone
should therefore be given proper respect and should not be neglected.

There
are also many impersonalists who deride temple worship. They say that
since God is everywhere, why should one restrict himself to temple
worship? But if God is everywhere, is He not in the temple or in the
Deity? Although the personalist and the impersonalist will fight with
one another perpetually, a perfect devotee in Krsna consciousness knows
that although Krsna is the Supreme Personality, He is all-pervading, as
is confirmed in the
Brahma-samhita. Although His personal abode
is Goloka Vrndavana and He is always staying there, still, by His
different manifestations of energy and by His plenary expansion, He is
present everywhere in all parts of the material and spiritual creations.
TEXT 12
moghasa mogha-karmano
mogha-jnana vicetasah
raksasim asurim caiva
prakrtim mohinim sritah
SYNONYMS
mogha-asah--baffled hope;
mogha-karmanah--baffled in fruitive activities;
mogha-jnanah--baffled in knowledge;
vicetasah--bewildered;
raksasim--demonic;
asurim--atheistic;
ca--and;
eva--certainly;
prakrtim--nature;
mohinim--bewildering;
sritah--taking shelter of.
TRANSLATION
Those
who are thus bewildered are attracted by demonic and atheistic views.
In that deluded condition, their hopes for liberation, their fruitive
activities, and their culture of knowledge are all defeated.
PURPORT

There
are many devotees who assume themselves to be in Krsna consciousness
and devotional service but at heart do not accept the Supreme
Personality of Godhead, Krsna, as the Absolute Truth. For them, the
fruit of devotional service--going back to Godhead--will never be
tasted. Similarly, those who are engaged in fruitive, pious activities
and who are ultimately hoping to be liberated from this material
entanglement will never be successful either because they deride the
Supreme Personality of Godhead, Krsna. In other words, persons who mock
Krsna are to be understood to be demonic or atheistic. As described in
the Seventh Chapter of
Bhagavad-gita, such demonic miscreants
never surrender to Krsna. Therefore their mental speculations to arrive
at the Absolute Truth bring them to the false conclusion that the
ordinary living entity and Krsna are one and the same. With such a false
conviction, they think that the body of any human being is now simply
covered by material nature and that as soon as one is liberated from
this material body there is no difference between God and himself. This
attempt to become one with Krsna will be baffled because of delusion.
Such atheistic and demoniac cultivation of spiritual knowledge is always
futile. That is the indication of this verse. For such persons,
cultivation of the knowledge in the Vedic literature, like the
Vedanta-sutra and the
Upanisads, is always baffled.

It
is a great offense, therefore, to consider Krsna, the Supreme
Personality of Godhead, to be an ordinary man. Those who do so are
certainly deluded because they cannot understand the eternal form of
Krsna. In the
Brhad-viasnava mantra it is clearly stated that one
who considers the body of Krsna to be material should be driven out
from all rituals and activities of the
sruti. And if one by
chance sees his face, he should at once take bath in the Ganges to rid
himself of infection. People jeer at Krsna because they are envious of
the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Their destiny is certainly to take
birth after birth in the species of atheistic and demoniac life.
Perpetually, their real knowledge will remain under delusion, and
gradually they will regress to the darkest region of creation.
TEXT 13
mahatmanas tu mam partha
daivim prakrtim asritah
bhajanty ananya-manaso
jnatva bhutadim avyayam
SYNONYMS
maha-atmanah--the great souls;
tu--but;
mam--unto Me;
partha--O son of Prtha;
daivim--divine;
prakrtim--nature;
asritah--taken shelter of;
bhajanti--render service;
ananya-manasah--without deviation of the mind;
jnatva--knowing;
bhuta--creation;
adim--original;
avyayam--inexhaustible.
TRANSLATION
O
son of Prtha, those who are not deluded, the great souls, are under the
protection of the divine nature. They are fully engaged in devotional
service because they know Me as the Supreme Personality of Godhead,
original and inexhaustible.
PURPORT

In this verse the description of
mahatma is clearly given. The first sign of the
mahatma
is that he is already situated in the divine nature. He is not under
the control of material nature. And how is this effected? That is
explained in the Seventh Chapter: one who surrenders unto the Supreme
Personality of Godhead, Sri Krsna, at once becomes freed from the
control of material nature. That is the qualification. One can become
free from the control of material nature as soon as he surrenders his
soul to the Supreme Personality of Godhead. That is the preliminary
formula. Being marginal potency, as soon as the living entity is freed
from the control of material nature, he is put under the guidance of the
spiritual nature. The guidance of the spiritual nature is called
daivi prakrti,
divine nature. So, when one is promoted in that way--by surrendering to
the Supreme Personality of Godhead--one attains to the stage of great
soul,
mahatma.

The
mahatma
does not divert his attention to anything outside Krsna because he
knows perfectly well that Krsna is the original Supreme Person, the
cause of all causes. There is no doubt about it. Such a
mahatma, or great soul, develops through association with other
mahatmas,
pure devotees. Pure devotees are not even attracted by Krsna's other
features, such as the four-armed Maha-Visnu. They are simply attracted
by the two-armed form of Krsna. Since they are not attracted to other
features of Krsna (what to speak of the demigods), they are not
concerned with any form of a demigod or of a human being. They only
meditate upon Krsna in Krsna consciousness. They are always engaging in
the unswerving service of the Lord in Krsna consciousness.
TEXT 14
satatam kirtayanto mam
yatantas ca drdha-vratah
namasyantas ca mam bhaktya
nitya-yukta upasate
SYNONYMS
satatam--always;
kirtayantah--chanting;
mam--Me;
yatantah ca--fully endeavoring also;
drdha-vratah--with determination;
namasyantah ca--offering obeisances;
mam--unto Me;
bhaktya--in devotion;
nitya-yuktah--perpetually engaged;
upasate--worship.
TRANSLATION
Always
chanting My glories, endeavoring with great determination, bowing down
before Me, these great souls perpetually worship Me with devotion.
PURPORT

The
mahatma cannot be manufactured by rubber-stamping an ordinary man. His symptoms are described here: a
mahatma
is always engaged in chanting the glories of the Supreme Lord Krsna,
the Personality of Godhead. He has no other business. He is always
engaged in the glorification of the Lord. In other words, he is not an
impersonalist. When the question of glorification is there, one has to
glorify the Supreme Lord, praising His holy name, His eternal form, His
transcendental qualities and His uncommon pastimes. One has to glorify
all these things; therefore a
mahatma is attached to the Supreme Personality of Godhead.

One who is attached to the impersonal feature of the Supreme Lord, the
brahmajyoti, is not described as
mahatma in the
Bhagavad-gita. He is described in a different way in the next verse. The
mahatma is always engaged in different activities of devotional service, as described in the
Srimad-Bhagavatam, hearing and chanting about Visnu, not a demigod or human being. That is devotion:
sravanam kirtanam visnoh, smaranam, and remembering Him. Such a
mahatma
has firm determination to achieve at the ultimate end the association
of the Supreme Lord in any one of the five transcendental
rasas.
To achieve that success, he engages all activities--mental, bodily and
vocal, everything--in the service of the Supreme Lord, Sri Krsna. That
is called full Krsna consciousness.

In
devotional service there are certain activities which are called
determined, such as fasting on certain days, like the eleventh day of
the moon, Ekadasi, and on the appearance day of the Lord, etc. All these
rules and regulations are offered by the great
acaryas for those
who are actually interested in getting admission into the association
of the Supreme Personality of Godhead in the transcendental world. The
mahatmas, great souls, strictly observe all these rules and regulations, and therefore they are sure to achieve the desired result.

As
described in the second verse of this chapter, this devotional service
is not only easy, but it can be performed in a happy mood. One does not
need to undergo any severe penance and austerity. He can live this life
in devotional service, guided by an expert spiritual master, and in any
position, either as a householder or a
sannyasi, or a
brahmacari;
in any position and anywhere in the world, he can perform this
devotional service to the Supreme Personality of Godhead and thus become
actually
mahatma, a great soul.
TEXT 15
jnana-yajnena capy anye
yajanto mam upasate
ekatvena prthaktvena
bahudha visvato-mukham
SYNONYMS
jnana-yajnena--by cultivation of knowledge;
ca--also;
api--certainly;
anye--others;
yajantah--worshiping;
mam--Me;
upasate--worship;
ekatvena--in oneness;
prthaktvena--in duality;
bahudha--diversity;
visvatah-mukham--in the universal form.
TRANSLATION
Others,
who are engaged in the cultivation of knowledge, worship the Supreme
Lord as the one without a second, diverse in many, and in the universal
form.
PURPORT

This
verse is the summary of the previous verses. The Lord tells Arjuna that
those who are purely in Krsna consciousness and do not know anything
other than Krsna are called
mahatma; yet there are other persons who are not exactly in the position of
mahatma
but who worship Krsna also, in different ways. Some of them are already
described as the distressed, the financially destitute, the
inquisitive, and those who are engaged in the cultivation of knowledge.
But there are others who are still lower, and these are divided into
three: 1) he who worships himself as one with the Supreme Lord, 2) he
who concocts some form of the Supreme Lord and worships that, and 3) he
who accepts the universal form, the
visvarupa of the Supreme
Personality of Godhead, and worships that. Out of the above three, the
lowest, those who worship themselves as the Supreme Lord, thinking
themselves to be monists, are most predominant. Such people think
themselves to be the Supreme Lord, and in this mentality they worship
themselves. This is also a type of God worship, for they can understand
that they are not the material body but are actually spiritual soul; at
least, such a sense is prominent. Generally the impersonalists worship
the Supreme Lord in this way. The second class includes the worshipers
of the demigods, those who by imagination consider any form to be the
form of the Supreme Lord. And the third class includes those who cannot
conceive of anything beyond the manifestation of this material universe.
They consider the universe to be the supreme organism or entity and
worship that. The universe is also a form of the Lord.
TEXT 16
aham kratur aham yajnah
svadhaham aham ausadham
mantro 'ham aham evajyam
aham agnir aham hutam
SYNONYMS
aham--I;
kratuh--ritual;
aham--I;
yajnah--sacrifice;
svadha--oblation;
aham--I;
aham--I;
ausadham--healing herb;
mantrah--transcendental chant;
aham--I;
aham--I;
eva--certainly;
ajyam--melted butter;
aham--I;
agnih--fire;
aham--I;
hutam--offering.
TRANSLATION
But
it is I who am the ritual, I the sacrifice, the offering to the
ancestors, the healing herb, the transcendental chant. I am the butter
and the fire and the offering.
PURPORT

The sacrifice known as
jyotistoma is also Krsna, and He is also the
maha-yajna.
The oblations offered to the Pitrloka or the sacrifice performed to
please the Pitrloka, considered as a kind of drug in the form of
clarified butter, is also Krsna. The
mantras chanted in this
connection are also Krsna. And many other commodities made with milk
products for offering in the sacrifices are also Krsna. The fire is also
Krsna because fire is one of the five material elements and is
therefore claimed as the separated energy of Krsna. In other words, the
Vedic sacrifices recommended in the
karma-kanda division of the
Vedas
are in total also Krsna. Or, in other words, those who are engaged in
rendering devotional service unto Krsna are to be understood to have
performed all the sacrifices recommended in the
Vedas.
TEXT 17
pitaham asya jagato
mata dhata pitamahah
vedyam pavitram omkara
rk sama yajur eva ca
SYNONYMS
pita--father;
aham--I;
asya--of this;
jagatah--of the universe;
mata--mother;
dhata--supporter;
pitamahah--grandfather;
vedyam--what is to be known;
pavitram--that which purifies;
om-kara--the syllable
om; rk--the
Rg Veda; sama--the
Sama Veda; yajuh--the
Yajur Veda; eva--certainly;
ca--and.
TRANSLATION
I
am the father of this universe, the mother, the support, and the
grandsire. I am the object of knowledge, the purifier and the syllable
om. I am also the Rg, the Sama, and the Yajur [Vedas].
PURPORT

The
entire cosmic manifestations, moving and nonmoving, are manifested by
different activities of Krsna's energy. In the material existence we
create different relationships with different living entities who are
nothing but Krsna's marginal energy, but under the creation of
prakrti
some of them appear as our father, mother, grandfather, creator, etc.,
but actually they are parts and parcels of Krsna. As such, these living
entities who appear to be our father, mother, etc., are nothing but
Krsna. In this verse the word
dhata means "creator." Not only are
our father and mother parts and parcels of Krsna, but their creator,
grandmother, and grandfather, etc., are also Krsna. Actually any living
entity, being part and parcel of Krsna, is Krsna. All the
Vedas, therefore, aim only toward Krsna. Whatever we want to know through the
Vedas
is but a progressive step to understand Krsna. That subject matter
which helps us purify our constitutional position is especially Krsna.
Similarly, the living entity who is inquisitive to understand all Vedic
principles is also part and parcel of Krsna and as such is also Krsna.
In all the Vedic
mantras the word
om, called
pranava, is a transcendental sound vibration and is also Krsna. And because in all the hymns of the four
Vedas, Sama, Yajur, Rg and
Atharva, the
pranava or
omkara, is very prominent, it is understood to be Krsna.
TEXT 18
gatir bharta prabhuh saksi
nivasah saranam suhrt
prabhavah pralayah sthanam
nidhanam bijam avyayam
SYNONYMS
gatih--goal;
bharta--sustainer;
prabhuh--Lord;
saksi--witness;
nivasah--abode;
saranam--refuge;
su-hrt--most intimate friend;
prabhavah--creation;
pralayah--dissolution;
sthanam--ground;
nidhanam--resting place;
bijam--seed;
avyayam--imperishable.
TRANSLATION
I
am the goal, the sustainer, the master, the witness, the abode, the
refuge and the most dear friend. I am the creation and the annihilation,
the basis of everything, the resting place and the eternal seed.
PURPORT
Gati
means the destination where we want to go. But the ultimate goal is
Krsna, although people do not know it. One who does not know Krsna is
misled, and his so-called progressive march is either partial or
hallucinatory. There are many who make as their destination different
demigods, and by rigid performance of the strict respective methods they
reach different planets known as Candraloka, Suryaloka, Indraloka,
Maharloka, etc. But all such
lokas or planets, being creations of
Krsna, are simultaneously Krsna and not Krsna. Actually such planets,
being the manifestations of Krsna's energy, are also Krsna, but actually
they only serve as a step forward for realization of Krsna. To approach
the different energies of Krsna is to approach Krsna indirectly. One
should directly approach Krsna, for that will save time and energy. For
example, if there is a possibility of going to the top of a building by
the help of an elevator, why should one go by the staircase, step by
step? Everything is resting on Krsna's energy; therefore without Krsna's
shelter nothing can exist. Krsna is the supreme ruler because
everything belongs to Him and everything exists on His energy. Krsna,
being situated in everyone's heart, is the supreme witness. The
residences, countries or planets on which we live are also Krsna. Krsna
is the ultimate goal of shelter, and as such one should take shelter of
Krsna either for protection or for annihilation of his distressed
condition. And whenever we have to take protection, we should know that
our protection must be a living force. Thus Krsna is the supreme living
entity. Since Krsna is the source of our generation, or the supreme
father, no one can be a better friend than Krsna, nor can anyone be a
better well-wisher. Krsna is the original source of creation and the
ultimate rest after annihilation. Krsna is therefore the eternal cause
of all causes.

TEXT 19
tapamy aham aham varsam
nigrhnamy utsrjami ca
amrtam caiva mrtyus ca
sad asac caham arjuna
SYNONYMS
tapami--give heat;
aham--I;
aham--I;
varsam--rain;
nigrhnami--withhold;
utsrjami--send forth;
ca--and;
amrtam--immortality;
ca--and;
eva--certainly;
mrtyuh--death;
ca--and;
sat--being;
asat--nonbeing;
ca--and;
aham--I;
arjuna--O Arjuna.
TRANSLATION
O
Arjuna, I control heat, the rain and the drought. I am immortality, and
I am also death personified. Both being and nonbeing are in Me.
PURPORT

Krsna,
by His different energies, diffuses heat and light through the agency
of electricity and the sun. During summer season it is Krsna who checks
rain from falling from the sky, and then, during the rainy season, He
gives unceasing torrents of rain. The energy which sustains us by
prolonging the duration of our life is Krsna, and Krsna meets us at the
end as death. By analyzing all these different energies of Krsna, one
can ascertain that for Krsna there is no distinction between matter and
spirit, or, in other words, He is both matter and spirit. In the
advanced stage of Krsna consciousness, one does not therefore make such
distinctions. He sees Krsna only in everything.

Since
Krsna is both matter and spirit, the gigantic universal form comprising
all material manifestations is also Krsna, and His pastimes in
Vrndavana as two-handed Syamasundara, playing on a flute, are those of
the Supreme Personality of Godhead.
TEXT 20
trai-vidya mam soma-pah puta-papa
yajnair istva svar-gatim prarthayante
te punyam asadya surendra-lokam
asnanti divyan divi deva-bhogan
SYNONYMS
trai-vidyah--the knowers of the three
Vedas; mam--unto Me;
soma-pah--drinkers of
soma juice;
puta--purified;
papah--sins;
yajnaih--with sacrifices;
istva--after worshiping;
svah-gatim--passage to heaven;
prarthayante--pray;
te--they;
punyam--virtue;
asadya--enjoying;
sura-indra--of Indra;
lokam--the world;
asnanti--enjoy;
divyan--celestial;
divi--in heaven;
deva-bhogan--pleasures of the gods.
TRANSLATION
Those
who study the Vedas and drink the soma juice, seeking the heavenly
planets, worship Me indirectly. They take birth on the planet of Indra,
where they enjoy godly delights.
PURPORT

The word
trai-vidyah refers to the three
Vedas, Sama, Yajur and
Rg. A
brahmana who has studied these three
Vedas is called a
tri-vedi. Anyone who is very much attached to knowledge derived from these three
Vedas is respected in society. Unfortunately, there are many great scholars of the
Vedas who do not know the ultimate purport of studying them. Therefore Krsna herein declares Himself to be the ultimate goal for the
tri-vedis. Actual
tri-vedis
take shelter under the lotus feet of Krsna and engage in pure
devotional service to satisfy the Lord. Devotional service begins with
the chanting of the Hare Krsna
mantra and side by side trying to understand Krsna in truth. Unfortunately those who are simply official students of the
Vedas
become more interested in offering sacrifices to the different demigods
like Indra, Candra, etc. By such endeavor, the worshipers of different
demigods are certainly purified of the contamination of the lower
qualities of nature and are thereby elevated to the higher planetary
systems or heavenly planets known as Maharloka, Janoloka, Tapoloka, etc.
Once situated on those higher planetary systems, one can satisfy his
senses hundreds of thousands of times better than on this planet.
TEXT 21
te tam bhuktva svarga-lokam visalam
ksine punye martya-lokam visanti
evam trayi-dharmam anuprapanna
gatagatam kama-kama labhante
SYNONYMS
te--they;
tam--that;
bhuktva--enjoying;
svarga-lokam--heaven;
visalam--vast;
ksine--being exhausted;
punye--merits;
martya-lokam--mortal earth;
visanti--fall down;
evam--thus;
trayi--three
Vedas; dharmam--doctrines;
anuprapannah--following;
gata-agatam--death and birth;
kama-kamah--desiring sense enjoyments;
labhante--attain.
TRANSLATION
When
they have thus enjoyed heavenly sense pleasure, they return to this
mortal planet again. Thus, through the Vedic principles, they achieve
only flickering happiness.
PURPORT

One
who is promoted to those higher planetary systems enjoys a longer
duration of life and better facilities for sense enjoyment, yet one is
not allowed to stay there forever. One is again sent back to this
earthly planet upon finishing the resultant fruits of pious activities.
He who has not attained perfection of knowledge, as indicated in the
Vedanta-sutra (
janmady asya yatah),
or, in other words, he who fails to understand Krsna, the cause of all
causes, becomes baffled in achieving the ultimate goal of life and is
thus subjected to the routine of being promoted to the higher planets
and then again coming down, as if situated on a ferris wheel which
sometimes goes up and sometimes comes down. The purport is that instead
of being elevated to the spiritual world where there is no longer any
possibility of coming down, one simply revolves in the cycle of birth
and death on higher and lower planetary systems. One should better take
to the spiritual world to enjoy eternal life full of bliss and knowledge
and never return to this miserable material existence.
TEXT 22
ananyas cintayanto mam
ye janah paryupasate
tesam nityabhiyuktanam
yoga-ksemam vahamy aham
SYNONYMS
ananyah--no other;
cintayantah--concentrating;
mam--unto Me;
ye--who;
janah--persons;
paryupasate--properly worship;
tesam--their;
nitya--always;
abhiyuktanam--fixed in devotion;
yoga-ksemam--requirements;
vahami--carry;
aham--I.
TRANSLATION
But
those who worship Me with devotion, meditating on My transcendental
form--to them I carry what they lack and preserve what they have.
PURPORT

One
who is unable to live for a moment without Krsna consciousness cannot
but think of Krsna twenty-four hours, being engaged in devotional
service by hearing, chanting, remembering, offering prayers, worshiping,
serving the lotus feet of the Lord, rendering other services,
cultivating friendship and surrendering fully to the Lord. Such
activities are all auspicious and full of spiritual potencies; indeed,
they make the devotee perfect in self-realization. Then his only desire
is to achieve the association of the Supreme Personality of Godhead.
This is called
yoga. By the mercy of the Lord, such a devotee never comes back to this material condition of life.
Ksema refers to the merciful protection of the Lord. The Lord helps the devotee to achieve Krsna consciousness by
yoga, and when he becomes fully Krsna conscious the Lord protects him from falling down to a miserable conditioned life.
TEXT 23
ye 'py anya-devata-bhakta
yajante sraddhayanvitah
te 'pi mam eva kaunteya
yajanty avidhi-purvakam
SYNONYMS
ye--those;
api--also;
anya--other;
devata--demigods;
bhaktah--devotees;
yajante--worship;
sraddhaya anvitah--with faith;
te--they;
api--also;
mam--Me;
eva--even;
kaunteya--O son of Kunti;
yajanti--sacrifice;
avidhi-purvakam--in a wrong way.
TRANSLATION
Whatever
a man may sacrifice to other gods, O son of Kunti, is really meant for
Me alone, but it is offered without true understanding.
PURPORT

"Persons
who are engaged in the worship of demigods are not very intelligent,
although such worship is done to Me indirectly," Krsna says. For
example, when a man pours water on the leaves and branches of a tree
without pouring water on the root, he does so without sufficient
knowledge or without observing regulative principles. Similarly, the
process of rendering service to the different parts of the body is to
supply food to the stomach. The demigods are, so to speak, different
officers and directors in the government of the Supreme Lord. One has to
follow the laws made by the government, not by the officers or
directors. Similarly, everyone is to offer his worship to the Supreme
Lord only. That will automatically satisfy the different officers and
directors of the Lord. The officers and directors are engaged as
representatives of the government, and to offer some bribe to the
officers and directors is illegal. This is stated here as
avidhi-purvakam. In other words, Krsna does not approve the unnecessary worship of the demigods.
TEXT 24
aham hi sarva-yajnanam
bhokta ca prabhur eva ca
na tu mam abhijananti
tattvenatas cyavanti te
SYNONYMS
aham--I;
hi--surely;
sarva--of all;
yajnanam--sacrifices;
bhokta--enjoyer;
ca--and;
prabhuh--Lord;
eva--also;
ca--and;
na--not;
tu--but;
mam--Me;
abhijananti--know;
tattvena--in reality;
atah--therefore;
cyavanti--fall down;
te--they.
TRANSLATION
I am the only enjoyer and the only object of sacrifice. Those who do not recognize My true transcendental nature fall down.
PURPORT

Here it is clearly stated that there are many types of
yajna performances recommended in the Vedic literatures, but actually all of them are meant for satisfying the Supreme Lord.
Yajna means Visnu. In the Second Chapter of
Bhagavad-gita
it is clearly stated that one should only work for satisfying Yajna or
Visnu. The perfectional form of human civilization, known as
varnasrama-dharma,
is specifically meant for satisfying Visnu. Therefore, Krsna says in
this verse, "I am the enjoyer of all sacrifices because I am the supreme
master." However, less intelligent persons, without knowing this fact,
worship demigods for temporary benefit. Therefore they fall down to
material existence and do not achieve the desired goal of life. If,
however, anyone has any material desire to be fulfilled, he had better
pray for it to the Supreme Lord (although that is not pure devotion),
and he will thus achieve the desired result.
TEXT 25
yanti deva-vrata devan
pitrn yanti pitr-vratah
bhutani yanti bhutejya
yanti mad-yajino 'pi mam
SYNONYMS
yanti--achieve;
deva-vratah--worshipers of demigods;
devan--to demigods;
pitrn--to ancestors;
yanti--go;
pitr-vratah--worshipers of the ancestors;
bhutani--to ghosts and spirits;
yanti--go;
bhuta-ijyah--worshipers of ghosts and spirits;
yanti--go;
mat--My;
yajinah--devotees;
api--also;
mam--unto Me.
TRANSLATION
Those
who worship the demigods will take birth among the demigods; those who
worship ghosts and spirits will take birth among such beings; those who
worship ancestors go to the ancestors; and those who worship Me will
live with Me.
PURPORT

If
anyone has any desire to go to the moon, the sun, or any other planet,
one can attain the desired destination by following specific Vedic
principles recommended for that purpose. These are vividly described in
the fruitive activities portion of the
Vedas, technically known as
darsa-paurnamasi,
which recommends a specific worship of demigods situated on different
heavenly planets. Similarly, one can attain the Pita planets by
performing a specific
yajna. Similarly, one can go to many
ghostly planets and become a Yaksa, Raksa or Pisaca. Pisaca worship is
called "black arts" or "black magic." There are many men who practice
this black art, and they think that it is spiritualism, but such
activities are completely materialistic. Similarly, a pure devotee, who
worships the Supreme Personality of Godhead only, achieves the planets
of Vaikuntha and Krsnaloka without a doubt. It is very easy to
understand through this important verse that if by simply worshiping the
demigods one can achieve the heavenly planets, or by worshiping the
pita achieve the
pita
planets, or by practicing the black arts achieve the ghostly planets,
why can the pure devotee not achieve the planet of Krsna or Visnu?
Unfortunately many people have no information of these sublime planets
where Krsna and Visnu live, and because they do not know of them they
fall down. Even the impersonalists fall down from the
brahmajyoti.
This Krsna consciousness movement is therefore distributing sublime
information to the entire human society to the effect that simply by
chanting the Hare Krsna
mantra one can become perfect in this life and go back home, back to Godhead.
TEXT 26
patram puspam phalam toyam
yo me bhaktya prayacchati
tad aham bhakty-upahrtam
asnami prayatatmanah
SYNONYMS
patram--a leaf;
puspam--a flower;
phalam--a fruit;
toyam--water;
yah--whoever;
me--unto Me;
bhaktya--with devotion;
prayacchati--offers;
tat--that;
aham--I;
bhakti-upahrtam--offered in devotion;
asnami--accept;
prayata-atmanah--of one in pure consciousness.
TRANSLATION
If one offers Me with love and devotion a leaf, a flower, fruit or water, I will accept it.
PURPORT

Here
Lord Krsna, having established that He is the only enjoyer, the
primeval Lord, and the real object of all sacrificial offerings, reveals
what types of sacrifices He desires to be offered. If one wishes to
engage in devotional service to the Supreme in order to be purified and
reach the goal of life--the transcendental loving service of God--then
he should find out what the Lord desires of him. One who loves Krsna
will give Him whatever He wants, and he avoids offering anything which
is undesirable or unasked for. Thus, meat, fish and eggs should not be
offered to Krsna. If He desired such things as offerings, He would have
said so. Instead He clearly requests that a leaf, fruit, flowers and
water be given to Him, and He says of this offering, "I will accept it."
Therefore, we should understand that He will not accept meat, fish and
eggs. Vegetables, grains, fruits, milk and water are the proper foods
for human beings and are prescribed by Lord Krsna Himself. Whatever else
we eat cannot be offered to Him, since He will not accept it. Thus we
cannot be acting on the level of loving devotion if we offer such foods.

In
the Third Chapter, verse thirteen, Sri Krsna explains that only the
remains of sacrifice are purified and fit for consumption by those who
are seeking advancement in life and release from the clutches of the
material entanglement. Those who do not make an offering of their food,
He says in the same verse, are said to be eating only sin. In other
words, their every mouthful is simply deepening their involvement in the
complexities of material nature. But preparing nice, simple vegetable
dishes, offering them before the picture or Deity of Lord Krsna and
bowing down and praying for Him to accept such a humble offering, enable
one to advance steadily in life, to purify the body, and to create fine
brain tissues which will lead to clear thinking. Above all, the
offering should be made with an attitude of love. Krsna has no need of
food, since He already possesses everything that be, yet He will accept
the offering of one who desires to please Him in that way. The important
element, in preparation, in serving and in offering, is to act with
love for Krsna.

The impersonalist philosophers, who wish to maintain that the Absolute Truth is without senses, cannot comprehend this verse of
Bhagavad-gita. To them, it is either a metaphor or proof of the mundane character of Krsna, the speaker of the
Gita.
But, in actuality, Krsna, the Supreme Godhead, has senses, and it is
stated that His senses are interchangeable; in other words, one sense
can perform the function of any other. This is what it means to say that
Krsna is absolute. Lacking senses, He could hardly be considered full
in all opulences. In the Seventh Chapter, Krsna has explained that He
impregnates the living entities into material nature. This is done by
His looking upon material nature. And so in this instance, Krsna's
hearing the devotee's words of love in offering foodstuffs is
wholly
identical with His eating and actually tasting. This point should be
emphasized: because of His absolute position, His hearing is wholly
identical with His eating and tasting. Only the devotee, who accepts
Krsna as He describes Himself, without interpretation, can understand
that the Supreme Absolute Truth can eat food and enjoy it.
TEXT 27
yat karosi yad asnasi
yaj juhosi dadasi yat
yat tapasyasi kaunteya
tat kurusva mad-arpanam
SYNONYMS
yat--whatever;
karosi--you do;
yat--whatever;
asnasi--you eat;
yat--whatever;
juhosi--you offer;
dadasi--you give away;
yat--whatever;
yat--whatever;
tapasyasi--austerities you perform;
kaunteya--O son of Kunti;
tat--that;
kurusva--make;
mat--unto Me;
arpanam--offering.
TRANSLATION
O
son of Kunti, all that you do, all that you eat, all that you offer and
give away, as well as all austerities that you may perform, should be
done as an offering unto Me.
PURPORT

Thus,
it is the duty of everyone to mold his life in such a way that he will
not forget Krsna in any circumstance. Everyone has to work for
maintenance of his body and soul together, and Krsna recommends herein
that one should work for Him. Everyone has to eat something to live;
therefore he should accept the remnants of foodstuffs offered to Krsna.
Any civilized man has to perform some religious ritualistic ceremonies;
therefore Krsna recommends, "Do it for Me," and this is called
arcana.
Everyone has a tendency to give something in charity; Krsna says, "Give
it to Me," and this means that all surplus money accumulated should be
utilized in furthering the Krsna consciousness movement. Nowadays people
are very much inclined to the meditational process, which is not
practical in this age, but if anyone practices meditating on Krsna
twenty-four hours by chanting the Hare Krsna
mantra round his beads, he is surely the greatest
yogi. as substantiated by the Sixth Chapter of
Bhagavad-gita.
TEXT 28
subhasubha-phalair evam
moksyase karma-bandhanaih
sannyasa-yoga-yuktatma
vimukto mam upaisyasi
SYNONYMS
subha--good;
asubha--evil;
phalaih--results;
evam--thus;
moksyase--free;
karma--action;
bandhanaih--bondage;
sannyasa--of renunciation;
yoga--the
yoga; yukta-atma--having the mind firmly set on;
vimuktah--liberated;
mam--to Me;
upaisyasi--you will attain.
TRANSLATION
In
this way you will be freed from all reactions to good and evil deeds,
and by this principle of renunciation you will be liberated and come to
Me.
PURPORT

One who acts in Krsna consciousness under superior direction is called
yukta. The technical term is
yukta-vairagya. This is further explained by Rupa Gosvami as follows.

Rupa
Gosvami says that as long as we are in this material world we have to
act; we cannot cease acting. Therefore if actions are performed and the
fruits are given to Krsna, then that is called
yukta-vairagya.
Actually situated in renunciation, such activities clear the mirror of
the mind, and as the actor gradually makes progress in spiritual
realization he becomes completely surrendered to the Supreme Personality
of Godhead. Therefore at the end he becomes liberated, and this
liberation is also specified. By this liberation he does not become one
with the
brahmajyoti, but rather enters into the planet of the Supreme Lord. It is clearly mentioned here:
mam upaisyasi,
"he comes to Me," back home, back to Godhead. There are five different
stages of liberation, and here it is specified that the devotee who has
always lived his lifetime here under the direction of the Supreme Lord,
as stated, has evolved to the point where he can after quitting this
body, go back to Godhead and engage directly in the association of the
Supreme Lord.

Anyone who has no other interest but to dedicate his life to the service of the Lord is actually a
sannyasi.
Such a person always thinks of himself as an eternal servant, dependent
on the supreme will of the Lord. As such, whatever he does, he does it
for the benefit of the Lord. Whatever action he performs, he performs it
as service to the Lord. He does not give serious attention to the
fruitive activities or prescribed duties mentioned in the
Vedas. For ordinary persons it is obligatory to execute the prescribed duties mentioned in the
Vedas,
but although a pure devotee who is completely engaged in the service of
the Lord may sometimes appear to go against the prescribed Vedic
duties, actually it is not so.

It
is said, therefore, by Vaisnava authorities that even the most
intelligent person cannot understand the plans and activities of a pure
devotee. The exact words are
vaisnavera kriya mudra vijne na bujhaya.
A person who is thus always engaged in the service of the Lord or is
always thinking and planning how to serve the Lord is to be considered
completely liberated at present and in the future. His going home, back
to Godhead, is guaranteed. He is above all materialistic criticism, just
as Krsna is above all criticism.
TEXT 29
samo 'ham sarva-bhutesu
na me dvesyo 'sti na priyah
ye bhajanti tu mam bhaktya
mayi te tesu capy aham
SYNONYMS
samah--equally disposed;
aham--I;
sarva-bhutesu--to all living entities;
na--no one;
me--Mine;
dvesyah--hateful;
asti--is;
na--nor;
priyah--dear;
ye--those;
bhajanti--render transcendental service;
tu--yet;
mam--unto Me;
bhaktya--in devotion;
mayi--unto Me;
te--such persons;
tesu--in them;
ca--also;
api--certainly;
aham--I.
TRANSLATION
I
envy no one, nor am I partial to anyone. I am equal to all. But whoever
renders service unto Me in devotion is a friend, is in Me, and I am
also a friend to him.
PURPORT

One
may question here that if Krsna is equal to everyone and no one is His
special friend, then why does He take a special interest in the devotees
who are always engaged in His transcendental service? But this is not
discrimination; it is natural. Any man in this material world may be
very charitably disposed, yet he has a special interest in his own
children. The Lord claims that every living entity--in whatever form--is
His son, and as such He provides everyone with a generous supply of the
necessities of life. He is just like a cloud which pours rain all over,
regardless of whether it falls on rock or land or water. But for His
devotees, He gives specific attention. Such devotees are mentioned here:
they are always in Krsna consciousness, and therefore they are always
transcendentally situated in Krsna. The very phrase "Krsna
consciousness" suggests that those who are in such consciousness are
living transcendentalists, situated in Him. The Lord says here
distinctly,
"mayi te," "in Me." Naturally, as a result, the Lord is also in them. This is reciprocal. This also explains the words:
asti na priyah/ ye bhajanti:
"Whoever surrenders unto Me, proportionately I take care of him." This
transcendental reciprocation exists because both the Lord and the
devotee are conscious. When a diamond is set in a golden ring, it looks
very nice. The gold is glorified, and at the same time the diamond is
glorified. The Lord and the living entity eternally glitter, and when a
living entity becomes inclined to the service of the Supreme Lord he
looks like gold. The Lord is a diamond, and so this combination is very
nice. Living entities in a pure state are called devotees. The Supreme
Lord becomes the devotee of His devotees. If a reciprocal relationship
is not present between the devotee and the Lord, then there is no
personalist philosophy. In the impersonal philosophy there is no
reciprocation between the Supreme and the living entity, but in the
personalist philosophy there is.

The
example is often given that the Lord is like a desire tree, and
whatever one wants from this desire tree, the Lord supplies. But here
the explanation is more complete. The Lord is here stated to be partial
to the devotees. This is the manifestation of the Lord's special mercy
to the devotees. The Lord's reciprocation should not be considered to be
under the law of
karma. It belongs to the transcendental
situation in which the Lord and His devotees function. Devotional
service of the Lord is not an activity of this material world; it is
part of the spiritual world where eternity, bliss and knowledge
predominate
TEXT 30
api cet su-duracaro
bhajate mam ananya-bhak
sadhur eva sa mantavyah
samyag vyavasito hi sah
SYNONYMS
api--in spite of;
cet--although;
su-duracarah--one committing the most abominable actions;
bhajate--engaged in devotional service;
mam--unto Me;
ananya-bhak--without deviation;
sadhuh--saint;
eva--certainly;
sah--he;
mantavyah--to be considered;
samyak--completely;
vyavasitah--situated;
hi--certainly;
sah--he.
TRANSLATION
Even
if one commits the most abominable actions, if he is engaged in
devotional service, he is to be considered saintly because he is
properly situated.
PURPORT

The word
suduracaro
used in this verse is very significant, and we should understand it
properly. When a living entity is conditioned, he has two kinds of
activities: one is conditional, and the other is constitutional. As for
protecting the body or abiding by the rules of society and state,
certainly there are different activities, even for the devotees, in
connection with the conditional life, and such activities are called
conditional. Besides these, the living entity who is fully conscious of
his spiritual nature and is engaged in Krsna consciousness, or the
devotional service of the Lord, has activities which are called
transcendental. Such activities are performed in his constitutional
position, and they are technically called devotional service. Now, in
the conditioned state, sometimes devotional service and the conditional
service in relation to the body will parallel one another. But then
again, sometimes these activities become opposed to one another. As far
as possible, a devotee is very cautious so that he does not do anything
that could disrupt his wholesome condition. He knows that perfection in
his activities depends on his progressive realization of Krsna
consciousness. Sometimes, however, it may be seen that a person in Krsna
consciousness commits some act which may be taken as most abominable
socially or politically. But such a temporary falldown does not
disqualify him. In the
Srimad-Bhagavatam it is stated that if a
person falls down but is wholeheartedly engaged in the transcendental
service of the Supreme Lord, the Lord, being situated within his heart,
beautifies him and excuses him from that abomination. The material
contamination is so strong that even a
yogi fully engaged in the
service of the Lord sometimes becomes ensnared; but Krsna consciousness
is so strong that such an occasional falldown is at once rectified.
Therefore the process of devotional service is always a success. No one
should deride a devotee for some accidental falldown from the ideal
path, for, as is explained in the next verse, such occasional falldowns
will be stopped in due course, as soon as a devotee is completely
situated in Krsna consciousness.

Therefore
a person who is situated in Krsna consciousness and is engaged with
determination in the process of chanting Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna
Krsna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare should be
considered to be in the transcendental position, even if by chance or
accident he is found to have fallen. The words
sadhur eva, "he is
saintly," are very emphatic. They are a warning to the nondevotees that
because of an accidental falldown a devotee should not be derided; he
should still be considered saintly even if he has fallen down
accidentally. And the word
mantavyah is still more emphatic. If
one does not follow this rule, and derides a devotee for his accidental
falldown, then he is disobeying the order of the Supreme Lord. The only
qualification of a devotee is to be unflinchingly and exclusively
engaged in devotional service.

The
mark of a spot which may be seen on the moon does not become an
impediment to the moonlight. Similarly, the accidental falldown of a
devotee from the path of a saintly character does not make him
abominable. On the other hand, one should not misunderstand that a
devotee in transcendental devotional service can act in all kinds of
abominable ways; this verse only refers to an accident due to the strong
power of material connections. Devotional service is more or less a
declaration of war against the illusory energy. As long as one is not
strong enough to fight the illusory energy, there may be accidental
falldowns. But when one is strong enough, he is no longer subjected to
such falldowns, as previously explained. No one should take advantage of
this verse and commit nonsense and think that he is still a devotee. If
he does not improve in his character by devotional service, then it is
to be understood that he is not a high devotee.
TEXT 31
ksipram bhavati dharmatma
sasvac-chantim nigacchati
kaunteya pratijanihi
na me bhaktah pranasyati
SYNONYMS
ksipram--very soon;
bhavati--becomes;
dharma-atma--righteous;
sasvat-santim--lasting peace;
nigacchati--attains;
kaunteya--O son of Kunti;
pratijanihi--justly declare;
na--never;
me--Mine;
bhaktah--devotees;
pranasyati--perishes.
TRANSLATION
He quickly becomes righteous and attains lasting peace. O son of Kunti, declare it boldly that My devotee never perishes.
PURPORT

This
should not be misunderstood. In the Seventh Chapter the Lord says that
one who is engaged in mischievous activities cannot become a devotee of
the Lord. One who is not a devotee of the Lord has no good
qualifications whatsoever. The question remains, then, How can a person
engaged in abominable activities--either by accident or intention--be a
pure devotee? This question may justly be raised. The miscreants, as
stated in the Seventh Chapter, who never come to the devotional service
of the Lord, have no good qualifications, as is stated in the
Srimad-Bhagavatam.
Generally, a devotee who is engaged in the nine kinds of devotional
activities is engaged in the process of cleansing all material
contamination from the heart. He puts the Supreme Personality of Godhead
within his heart, and all sinful contaminations are naturally washed
away. Continuous thinking of the Supreme Lord makes him pure by nature.
According to the
Vedas, there is a certain regulation that if one
falls down from his exalted position, he has to undergo certain
ritualistic processes to purify himself. But here there is no such
condition because the purifying process is already there in the heart of
the devotee, due to his remembering the Supreme Personality of Godhead
constantly. Therefore, the chanting of Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna
Krsna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare should be
continued without stoppage. This will protect a devotee from all
accidental falldowns. He will thus remain perpetually free from all
material contaminations.
TEXT 32
mam hi partha vyapasritya
ye 'pi syuh papa-yonayah
striyo vaisyas tatha sudras
te 'pi yanti param gatim
SYNONYMS
mam--unto Me;
hi--certainly;
partha--O son of Prtha;
vyapasritya--particularly taking shelter;
ye--anyone;
api--also;
syuh--becomes;
papa-yonayah--born of a lower family;
striyah--women;
vaisyah--mercantile people;
tatha--also;
sudrah--lower-class men;
te api--even they;
yanti--go;
param--supreme;
gatim--destination.
TRANSLATION
O
son of Prtha, those who take shelter in Me, though they be of lower
birth--women, vaisyas [merchants], as well as sudras [workers]--can
approach the supreme destination.
PURPORT

It
is clearly declared here by the Supreme Lord that in devotional service
there is no distinction between the lower or higher classes of people.
In the material conception of life, there are such divisions, but for a
person engaged in transcendental devotional service to the Lord, there
are not. Everyone is eligible for the supreme destination. In the
Srimad-Bhagavatam it is stated that even the lowest, who are called
candalas
(dog-eaters), can be elevated by association with a pure devotee.
Therefore devotional service and guidance of a pure devotee are so
strong that there is no discrimination between the lower and higher
classes of men; anyone can take to it. The most simple man taking center
of the pure devotee can be purified by proper guidance. According to
the different modes of material nature, men are classified in the mode
of goodness (
brahmanas), the mode of passion (
ksatriyas, or administrators), the mixed modes of passion and ignorance (
vaisyas, or merchants), and the mode of ignorance (
sudras, or workers). Those lower than them are called
candalas,
and they are born in sinful families. Generally, those who are born in
sinful families are not accepted by the higher classes. But the process
of devotional service and the pure devotee of the Supreme God are so
strong that all the lower classes can attain the highest perfection of
life. This is possible only when one takes center of Krsna. One has to
take center completely of Krsna. Then one can become much greater than
great
jnanis and
yogis.
TEXT 33
kim punar brahmanah punya
bhakta rajarsayas tatha
anityam asukham lokam
imam prapya bhajasva mam
SYNONYMS
kim--how much;
punah--again;
brahmanah--
brahmanas; punyah--righteous;
bhaktah--devotees;
raja-rsayah--saintly kings;
tatha--also;
anityam--temporary;
asukham--sorrowful;
lokam--planet;
imam--this;
prapya--gaining;
bhajasva--are engaged in loving service;
mam--unto Me.
TRANSLATION
How
much greater then are the brahmanas, the righteous, the devotees and
saintly kings who in this temporary miserable world engage in loving
service unto Me.
PURPORT

In
this material world there are classifications of people, but, after
all, this world is not a happy place for anyone. It is clearly stated
here,
anityam asukham lokam: this world is temporary and full of
miseries, not habitable for any sane gentleman. This world is declared
by the Supreme Personality of Godhead to be temporary and full of
miseries. Some of the philosophers, especially the minor philosophers,
say that this world is false, but we can understand from
Bhagavad-gita
that the world is not false; it is temporary. There is a difference
between temporary and false. This world is temporary, but there is
another world which is eternal. This world is miserable, but the other
world is eternal and blissful.

Arjuna
was born in a saintly royal family. To him also the Lord says, "Take to
My devotional service and come quickly back to Godhead, back home." No
one should remain in this temporary world, full as it is with miseries.
Everyone should attach himself to the bosom of the Supreme Personality
of Godhead so that he can be eternally happy. The devotional service of
the Supreme Lord is the only process by which all problems of all
classes of men can be solved. Everyone should therefore take to Krsna
consciousness and make his life perfect.
TEXT 34
man-mana bhava mad-bhakto
mad-yaji mam namaskuru
mam evaisyasi yuktvaivam
atmanam mat-parayanah
SYNONYMS
mat-manah--always thinking of Me;
bhava--become;
mat--My;
bhaktah--devotee;
mat--My;
yaji--worshiper;
mam--unto Me;
namaskuru--offer obeisances;
mam--unto Me;
eva--completely;
esyasi--come;
yuktva evam--being absorbed;
atmanam--your soul;
mat-parayanah--devoted to Me.
TRANSLATION
Engage
your mind always in thinking of Me, offer obeisances and worship Me.
Being completely absorbed in Me, surely you will come to Me.
PURPORT

In
this verse it is clearly indicated that Krsna consciousness is the only
means of being delivered from the clutches of this contaminated
material world. Sometimes unscrupulous commentators distort the meaning
of what is clearly stated here: that all devotional service should be
offered to the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Krsna. Unfortunately,
unscrupulous commentators divert the mind of the reader to that which is
not at all feasible. Such commentators do not know that there is no
difference between Krsna's mind and Krsna. Krsna is not an ordinary
human being; He is Absolute Truth. His body, mind and He Himself are one
and absolute. It is stated in the
Kurma Purana, as it is quoted by Bhaktisiddhanta Sarasvati Gosvami in his
Anubhasya comments on the
Caitanya-caritamrta (Fifth Chapter,
Adi-lila, verses 41-48),
"deha-dehi-vibhedo 'yam nesvare vidyate kvacit"
This means that there is no difference in Krsna, the Supreme Lord,
between Himself and His body. But, because they do not know this science
of Krsna, the commentators hide Krsna and divide His personality from
His mind or from His body. Although this is sheer ignorance of the
science of Krsna, some men make profit out of misleading the people.

There
are some who are demonic; they also think of Krsna, but enviously, just
like King Kamsa, Krsna's uncle. He was also thinking of Krsna always,
but he thought of Krsna as his enemy. He was always in anxiety,
wondering when Krsna would come to kill him. That kind of thinking will
not help us. One should be thinking of Krsna in devotional love. That is
bhakti. One should cultivate the knowledge of Krsna continually.
What is that favorable cultivation? It is to learn from a bona fide
teacher. Krsna is the Supreme Personality of Godhead, and we have
several times explained that His body is not material, but is eternal,
blissful knowledge. This kind of talk about Krsna will help one become a
devotee. Otherwise, understanding Krsna from the wrong source will
prove fruitless.

One
should therefore engage his mind in the eternal form, the primal form
of Krsna; with conviction in his heart that Krsna is the Supreme, he
should engage himself in worship. There are hundreds of thousands of
temples in India for the worship of Krsna, and devotional service is
practiced there. When such practice is made, one has to offer obeisances
to Krsna. One should lower his head before the Deity and engage his
mind, his body, his activities--everything. That will make one fully
absorbed in Krsna without deviation. This will help one transfer into
the Krsnaloka. One should not be deviated by unscrupulous commentators.
One must engage in the nine different processes of devotional service,
beginning with hearing and chanting about Krsna. Pure devotional service
is the highest achievement of human society.

In the Seventh and Eighth chapters of
Bhagavad-gita, pure devotional service to the Lord has been explained, apart from the
yoga of knowledge and mystic
yoga or
fruitive activities. Those who are not purely sanctified may be
attracted by different features of the Lord, like the impersonal
brahmajyoti and localized Paramatma, but a pure devotee directly takes to the service of the Supreme Lord.

There
is a beautiful poem about Krsna in which it is clearly stated that any
person who is engaged in the worship of demigods is most unintelligent
and cannot achieve at any time the supreme award of Krsna. The devotee,
in the beginning, may sometimes fall from the standard, but still he
should be considered superior to all other philosophers and
yogis.
One who always engages in Krsna consciousness should be understood to
be the perfect saintly person. His accidental nondevotional activities
will diminish, and he will soon be situated without any doubt in
complete perfection. The pure devotee has no actual chance to fall down
because the Supreme Godhead personally takes care of His pure devotees.
Therefore, the intelligent person should take directly to this process
of Krsna consciousness and happily live in this material world. He will
eventually receive the supreme award of Krsna.
Thus end the Bhaktivedanta Purports to the Ninth Chapter of the Srimad Bhagavad-gita in the matter of the Most Confidential Knowledge.
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