Saturday, August 3, 2019

Bhagwad Gita - Post 66

Verse 17


Tadbuddhayas tadaatmaanas
Tannishthaas tatparaayanaah;
Gacchantyapunaraavrittim
Jnaana nirdhoota kalmashaah.


Their intellect absorbed in That, their self being That; established in That, with That as their supreme goal, they go whence there is no return, their sins dispelled by knowledge.



Lord Krishna is now stating the results of such worship. Those who are fixed and resolute in this spiritual knowledge, whose conviction is unwavering and steady, whose one aim is That, whose mind is centered in That, whose only refuge is That and That alone, whose sins have been dissolved by atma tattva and one achieves moksha or liberation and attains the Supreme Lord.

One can attain to this state of utter perfection free from the goodness or the badness of things, or the qualities of prakriti, by intense concentration on the transcendence which is God. 

God is untarnished because of there being no change, no mutation, no difference, no physicality and no externality in God. Meditation is to be conducted by the consciousness of the seeker on a universal transcendence of its own self, freed from the clutches of whatever the world may appear to be. 

Tadbuddhaya: They are tadbuddhaya who are centred in their intellect, and through their intellect are centred in That; their understanding is rooted in That. 

Tadātmāna: Whose self is perfectly lodged in That. Our existence itself is Its existence, and Its existence is our existence; this state of affairs is called tadātmāna

Tadātmāna is the uniting of the self with the Self. That is, the individual self unites itself with the Universal Self. That state is called tadātmāna

Those who are established in their understanding have also their self rooted in that Supreme Being. 

Tanniṣṭ: Whose main occupation is establishment in that Supreme Being. Our daily activity, our professions, our occupations, whatever we do, is a preparation for the establishment of ourselves in That.

The activities of people, the daily routine of anybody, should be so conducted and so refined and harmonized that it stands perfectly in order in respect of that Supreme Being, Who is perfect order. 

It does not mean that when we move to God, we move from wrong to right. It is a movement from the lesser right to the higher right.

It is also not moving from falsehood to truth. It is a movement from the lesser truth to the higher truth. 

Tanniṣṭ: That is establishment of oneself in that Supreme Being. Niṣṭ is establishment, rootedness. 

Tatparāyaā is always eager to attain That. Day in and day out we brood over the possibility of this supreme attainment: “When shall I get it, when shall I get it, when shall I get it?” You can go on chanting this mantra: “When shall I get it, when shall I get it, when shall I get it, when shall I get it?” 

This little sentence is also a recipe for bringing the mind back to the point of concentration on That. Eagerness to receive that Being into ourselves, eagerness to unite ourselves with that Being is tivra vairagya, intense detachment towards the world of objects. It is tivra samvega, or intense ardour to unite oneself with God. 

This is a word used in Patanjali’s sutra—tīvrasavegānām āsanna (Y.S. 1.21): God is near to you to the extent you are eager to attain Him. 

Tatparāyaā means one who is intensely eager to reach That, and his ardour is burning like a flame. 

Gacchantyapunarāvtti: Such persons, having attained immortality, will not return to this world of mortality. 

Jñānanirdhūtakalmaā: On account of their being purified through the highest knowledge, they do not get reborn into this world of bondage and limitations. Immortality is attained.

Love.