Verse 24
BRAHMAARPANAM BRAHMAHAVIR
BRAHMAAGNAU BRAHMANAA HUTAM;
BRAHMAIVA TENA GANTAVYAM
BRAHMAKARMASAMAADHINAA.
(Brahman is the oblation; Brahman is the
melted butter (ghee); Brahman is the oblation poured into the fire of
Brahman; Brahman verily shall be reached by him who always sees Brahman in
action.)
For this special verse, let
us first get the translation word by word.
Brahma
|
Supreme Spirit. (Brahman)
|
Arpanam
|
Offering / oblation
|
Havih
|
Ghee
|
Agnau
|
In the fire of consummation
|
Brahmana
|
By the spirit soul
|
Ahutam
|
Offered
|
Brahma
|
Brahman (abode / state of Brahman)
|
Eva
|
Certainly
|
Tena
|
By Him
|
Gantavyam
|
To be reached
|
Brahma
|
Brahman
|
Karma
|
In all activities
|
Samadhina
|
By complete absorption
|
Brahma-arpanam, the ladle is
Brahman: The knower of Brahman
perceives the instrument with which he offers oblation in the fire as Brahman
Itself. He perceives it as not existing separately from the Self, as one sees
the non-existence of silver in nacre.
In this verse, Brahma word
is used six times. It is not the Brahma of the trinity Brahma Vishnu
Maheswara. Brahma here refers to the supreme principle, pure consciousness,
formless, attribute less, which was / is / will be there before creation ever
came into existence / during many creations / upon involution or ceasing of
creation or what we call as pralaya.
In Upanishad times or
when Bhagwad Gita was composed, there was no concept of personal God.
So, even in all the verses
in Gita where Krishna refers Himself as the supreme God, to whom we have to
surrender totally etc., Krishna is expressing all that not as a physical God
but as the supreme principle / pure consciousness which He refers himself as.
Now, let us go back to the verse.
Brahma-arpanam, the ladle is
Brahman: The knower of Brahman
perceives the instrument with which he offers oblation in the fire as Brahman
Itself. He perceives it as not existing separately from the Self, as one sees
the non-existence of silver in nacre.
Apparently, the analogy used
in this verse is about the Yagna /Homam performed in the ancient days when
Fire used to be lit up and sacred offering used to be performed to the Agni /
Fire.
Brahma arpanam - The one to
whom we offer, is Brahman.
Similarly, brahma-havih, the
oblation (ghee) is Brahman: What is seen as oblations to Him is nothing
but Brahman.
In the same way, brahma-agnau,
(this is a compound word), the fire into which oblation is hutam, poured
by the brahmana, (by Brahman) is Brahman Itself.
The meaning is that Brahman Itself is the agent (of the offering). The act of offering - that is also Brahman.
The meaning is that Brahman Itself is the agent (of the offering). The act of offering - that is also Brahman.
And the result that is gantavyam,
to be reached by him; that also is brahma eva, surely Brahman.
Brahma-karma-samadhina, by him who has focus/full concentration on Brahman as the only objective.
Brahman Itself is the objective (karma); he who has concentration (samadhi) on That is brahma-karma-samdhih. The goal to be reached by him is Brahman alone.
Brahma-karma-samadhina, by him who has focus/full concentration on Brahman as the only objective.
Brahman Itself is the objective (karma); he who has concentration (samadhi) on That is brahma-karma-samdhih. The goal to be reached by him is Brahman alone.
Dear All,
Till now, all that we (most of us if not all of us) knew about this verse is that we recite this verse
along with another verse “aham vaisvanaro...” before partaking food so that the
food gets purified.
Bhagawan has explained about
the significance of this verse in the context of partaking food, which is
available in net and therefore it is not being taken up here in detail.
However, when we read the
above explanation of this verse and contemplate, the implication, the result of
our absorption is far beyond food aspect.
Even if we start from the
food aspect, then it directly goes and aligns with the Pujari- Prasad analogy
which was covered in an earlier post and also given by way of talk to a
few.
When we offer prasad to God and in turn partake the same prasad after offering to God and receiving as prasad, do we ever analyze / think about the quality of such a prasad?
When we offer prasad to God and in turn partake the same prasad after offering to God and receiving as prasad, do we ever analyze / think about the quality of such a prasad?
This also has to draw our
mind to a very important aspect. What should be our frame of mind/our thoughts
when we offer the prasad or when we partake the prasad (let us take the
food that we partake daily as prasad for this purpose).
Only when the mind is pure,
devoid of violent / disturbing / immoral thoughts, only when our mind is at
rest / peace, the food that we partake serves the real purpose and it provides
us the required physical strength and it also gets digested properly.
Are we not aware of the
story where, intoxicated with / in God consciousness, when Mira was given
poison and she took it, did that poison itself not turn out to be pure food (amrtha)
for her instead of killing her??
That was about the “food”
aspect related to this verse.
Extending the essence of the
above commentary, it turns out that not only food, in fact each and
every act of ours have to be understood as under:
·
The one who is offering (all actions / thoughts),
·
The one to whom they are offered
·
The act of offering,
All are the same one supreme
principle – BRAHMAN.
Taking the implied subtler yet deeper
essence of the above, let us consider the following aspects:
· The one who is experiencing
· The one who is the object
of experience and,
· The process of
experiencing.
The difference in the above three things get
erased / transcended upon realization of Brahman / SELF and one exists verily as Brahman (Brahmaiva tena
gantavyam Brahma Karma Samadhina).
SO, THERE IS NOTHING APART FROM THE ESSENCE BRAHMAN, THE PURE CONSCIOUSNESS.
Actually,
when all the above three are transcended, the state of existence is
such that there is no one to even think or be aware that He/ She is Brahman.
This transcendental, ultimate state is " beyond awareness of awareness".
What a revelation through
a verse which we were just chanting before partaking prasad till
now!!!!
Thus, even the action
undertaken by one who desires to prevent mankind from going astray is in
reality inaction, for it has been illumined by the realization of Brahman.
This being so, in the case of the monk from whom action has dropped off, who
has renounced all activity, viewing his Knowledge as a (kind of) sacrifice,
too, becomes all the more justifiable from the point of view of praising full
realization.
Śrīmad Bhāgavatam states:
Sarva-bhūteṣhu yaḥ paśhyed
bhagavad-bhāvam ātmanaḥ
bhūtāni bhagavatyātmanyeṣha
bhāgavatottamaḥ
(11.2.45) [v20]
“One who sees God everywhere and in all
beings is the highest spiritualist.”
For such advanced spiritualists whose minds
are completely absorbed in God-consciousness, the person making the sacrifice ,
the object of the sacrifice, the instruments of the sacrifice, the sacrificial
fire, and the act of sacrifice, are all perceived as non-different from God
(Essence or Tatwa of God / Brahman).
Referring
/ taking " sacrifice" referred in the above para as dhyana or
meditation for a deeper understanding, it turns out that the meditator, the
object of meditation, the one who is meditated upon, the process of meditation-
all of these ultimately reach and merge in one essence which the sadhaka
now exists as!!!
Love.