The Immortal
Nectar of the Bhagavad-gita
Through the centuries, India's greatest philosophers
and spiritualists have praised the Bhagavad-gita as the distilled essence of
the eternal Vedic wisdom. In his Meditations on the Bhagavad-gita, versified
here, the renowned sixth-century philosopher Sankara glorifies the Gita and its
divine author, Sri Krsna. Although universally celebrated as an impersonalist,
here Sankara reveals his devotion to the original personalform of God, Lord Sri
Krsna. And Srila Prabhupada elucidates.
--1--
O
Bhagavad-gita,
Through
Thy eighteen chapters
Thou
showerest upon man
The
immortal nectar
Of the
wisdom of the Absolute.
O blessed
Gita,
By Thee,
Lord Krsna Himself
Enlightened Arjuna.
Afterward, the ancient sage Vyasa
Included
Thee in the Mahabharata.
O loving
mother,
Destroyer
of man's rebirth
Into the
darkness of this mortal world,
Upon Thee
I meditate.
--2--
Salutations to thee, O Vyasa.
Thou art
of mighty intellect,
And thine
eyes
Are large
as the petals
Of the
full-blown lotus.
It was
thou
Who
brightened this lamp of wisdom,
Filling
it with the oil
Of the Mahabharata.
Purport
Sripada
Sankaracarya was an impersonalist from the materialistic point of view. But he
never denied the spiritual form known as sac-cid-ananda-vigraha, or the
eternal, all-blissful form of knowledge that existed before the material
creation. When he spoke of Supreme Brahman as impersonal, he meant that the
Lord's sac-cid-ananda form was not to be confused with a material conception of
personality. In the very beginning of his commentary on the Gita, he maintains
that Narayana, the Supreme Lord, is transcendental to the material creation.
The Lord existed before the creation as the transcendental personality, and He
has nothing to do with material personality. Lord Krsna is the same Supreme Personality,
and He has no connection with a material body. He descends in His spiritual,
eternal form, but foolish people mistake His body to be like ours. Sankara's
preaching of impersonalism is especially meant for teaching foolish persons who
consider Krsna to be an ordinary man composed of matter.
No one
would care to read the Gita if it had been spoken by a material man, and
certainly Vyasadeva would not have bothered to incorporate it into the history
of the Mahabharata. According to the above verses, Mahabharata is the history
of the ancient world, and Vyasadeva is the writer of this great epic. The
Bhagavad-gita is identical with Krsna; and because Krsna is the Absolute
Supreme Personality of Godhead, there is no difference between Krsna and His words.
Therefore the Bhagavad-gita is as worshipable as Lord Krsna Himself, both being
absolute. One who hears the Bhagavad-gita "as is" actually hears the
words directly from the lotus lips of the Lord. But unfortunate persons say
that the Gita is too antiquated for the modern man, who wants to find out God
by speculation or meditation.
--3--
I salute
Thee, O Krsna,
O Thou
who art the refuge
Of
ocean-born Laksmi
And all
who take refuge
At Thy
lotus feet.
Thou art
indeed
The
wish-fulfilling tree
For Thy
devotee.
Thy one
hand holds a staff
For
driving cows,
And Thy
other hand is raised--
The thumb
touching the tip
Of Thy
forefinger,
Indicating divine knowledge.
Salutations to Thee, O Supreme Lord,
For Thou
art the milker
Of the
ambrosia of the Gita.
Purport
Sripada
Sankaracarya explicitly says, "You fools, just worship Govinda and that
Bhagavad-gita spoken by Narayana Himself," yet foolish people still
conduct their research work to find out Narayana; consequently they are
wretched, and they waste their time for nothing. Narayana is never wretched nor
daridra; rather, He is worshiped by the goddess of fortune, Laksmi, as well as
by all living entities. Sankara declared himself to be "Brahman," but
he admits Narayana, or Krsna, to be the Supreme Personality who is beyond the
material creation. He offers his respects to Krsna as the Supreme Brahman, or
Parabrahman, because He (Krsna) is worshipable by everyone. Only the fools and
enemies of Krsna, who cannot understand what the Bhagavad-gita is (though they
make commentaries on it), say, "It is not the personal Krsna to whom we
have to surrender ourselves utterly, but the unborn, beginningless Eternal who
speaks through Krsna." Fools rush in where angels fear to tread. Whereas
Sankara, the greatest of the impersonalists, offers his due respects to Krsna
and His book the Bhagavad-gita, the foolish say that "we need not
surrender to the personal Krsna." Such unenlightened people do not know
that Krsna is absolute and that there is no difference between His inside and
outside. The difference of inside and outside is experienced in the dual,
material world. In the absolute world there is no such difference, because in
the absolute everything is spiritual (sac-cid-ananda), and Narayana, or Krsna,
belongs to the absolute world. In the absolute world there is only the factual
personality, and there is no distinction between body and soul.
--4--
The
Upanisads
Are as a
herd of cows,
Lord
Krsna, son of a cowherd,
Is their
milker,
Arjuna is
the calf,
The
supreme nectar of the Gita
Is the
milk,
And the
wise man
Of
purified intellect
Is the
drinker.
Purport
Unless
one understands spiritual variegatedness, one cannot understand the
transcendental pastimes of the Lord. In the Brahma-samhita it is said that
Krsna's name, form, quality, pastimes, entourage, and paraphernalia are all
ananda-cinmaya-rasa--in short, everything of His transcendental association is
of the same composition of spiritual bliss, knowledge, and eternity. There is
no end to His name, form, etc., unlike in the material world, where all things
have their end. As stated in the Bhagavad-gita, only fools deride Him; whereas
it is Sankara, the greatest impersonalist, who worships Him, His cows, and His
pastimes as the son of Vasudeva and pleasure of Devaki.
--5--
Thou son
of Vasudeva,
Destroyer
of the demons Kamsa and Canura,
Thou
supreme bliss of Mother Devaki,
O Thou,
guru of the universe,
Teacher
of the worlds,
Thee, O
Krsna, I salute.
Purport
Sankara
describes Him as the son of Vasudeva and Devaki. Does he mean thereby that he
is worshiping an ordinary, material man? He worships Krsna because he knows
that Krsna's birth and activities are all supernatural. As stated in the
Bhagavad-gita (4.9), Krsna's birth and activities are mysterious and
transcendental, and therefore only the devotees of Krsna can know them
perfectly. Sankara was not such a fool that he would accept Krsna as an
ordinary man and at the same time offer Him all devotional obeisances, knowing
Him as the son of Devaki and Vasudeva. According to the Bhagavad-gita, only by
knowing the transcendental birth and activities of Krsna can one attain liberation
by acquiring a spiritual form like Krsna's. There are five different kinds of
liberation. One who merges into the spiritual auras of Krsna, known as the
impersonal Brahman effulgence, does not fully develop his spiritual body. But
one who fully develops his spiritual existence becomes an associate of Narayana
or Krsna in different spiritual abodes. One who enters into the abode of
Narayana develops a spiritual form exactly like Narayana's (four-handed), and
one who enters into the highest spiritual abode of Krsna, known as Goloka
Vrndavana, develops a spiritual form of two hands like Krsna's. Sankara, as an
incarnation of Lord Siva, knows all these spiritual existences, but he did not
disclose them to his then Buddhist followers because it was impossible for them
to know about the spiritual world. Lord Buddha preached that void is the
ultimate goal, so how could his followers understand spiritual variegatedness?
Therefore Sankara said, brahma satyam jagan mithya, or, material variegatedness
is false but spiritual variegatedness is fact. In the Padma Purana Lord Siva
has admitted that he had to preach the philosophy of maya, or illusion, in the
Kali-yuga as another edition of the "void" philosophy of Buddha. He
had to do this by the order of the Lord for specific reasons. He disclosed his
real mind, however, by recommending that people worship Krsna, for no one can
be saved simply by mental speculations composed of word jugglery and
grammatical maneuvers. Sankara further instructs:
bhaja govindam bhaja govindam
bhaja govindam
mudha-mate
samprapte sannihite kale
na hi na hi raksati dukrn-karane
"You
intellectual fools, just worship Govinda, just worship Govinda, just worship
Govinda. Your grammatical knowledge and word jugglery will not save you at the
time of death."
--6--
Of that
terrifying river
Of the
battlefield of Kuruksetra
Over
which the Pandavas victoriously crossed,
Bhisma
and Drona were as the high banks,
Jayadratha as the river's water,
The King
of Gandhara the blue water-lily,
Salya the
shark, Krpa the current,
Karna the
mighty waves,
Asvatthama and Vikarna the dread alligators,
And
Duryodhana the very whirlpool--
But Thou,
O Krsna, wast the ferryman!
--7--
May the
spotless lotus of the Mahabharata
That
grows on the waters
Of the
words of Vyasa
And of
which the Bhagavad-gita
Is the
irresistibly sweet fragrance
And its
tales of heroes
The
full-blown petals
Fully
opened by the talk of Lord Hari,
Who
destroys the sins
Of
Kali-yuga,
And on
which daily light
The
nectar-seeking souls,
As so
many bees
Swarming
joyously--
May this
lotus of the Mahabharata
Bestow on
us the highest good.
--8--
Salutations to Lord Krsna
The
embodiment of supreme bliss,
By whose
grace and compassion
The dumb
become eloquent
And the
lame scale mountains--
Him I
salute!
Purport
Foolish
followers of foolish speculators cannot understand the meaning of offering
salutations to Lord Krsna, the embodiment of bliss. Sankara himself offered his
salutations to Lord Krsna so that some of his intelligent followers might
understand the real fact by the example set by their great master, Sankara, the
incarnation of Lord Siva. But there are many obstinate followers of Sankara who
refuse to offer their salutations to Lord Krsna and instead mislead innocent
persons by injecting materialism into the Bhagavad-gita and confusing innocent
readers by their commentaries, and consequently the readers never have the
opportunity to become blessed by offering salutations to Lord Krsna, the cause
of all causes. The greatest disservice to humanity is to keep mankind in
darkness about the science of Krsna, or Krsna consciousness, by distorting the
sense of the Gita.
--9--
Salutations to that supreme shining one
Whom the
creator Brahma, Varuna,
Indra,
Rudra, Marut, and all divine beings
Praise
with hymns,
Whose
glories are sung
By the
verses of the Vedas,
Of whom
the singers of Sama sing
And of
whose glories the Upanisads
Proclaim
in full choir,
Whom the
yogis see
With
their minds absorbed
In
perfect meditation,
And of
whom all the hosts
Of gods
and demons
Know not
the limitations.
To Him,
the Supreme God, Krsna, be all salutations--
Him we
salute! Him we salute! Him we salute!
Purport
By
recitation of the ninth verse of his meditation, quoted from the
Srimad-Bhagavatam, Sankara has indicated that Lord Krsna is worshipable by one
and all, including himself. He gives hints to materialists, impersonalists,
mental speculators, "void" philosophers, and all other candidates
subjected to the punishment of material miseries--just offer salutations to
Lord Krsna, who is worshiped by Brahma, Siva, Varuna, Indra, and all other
demigods. He has not mentioned, however, the name of Visnu, because Visnu is
identical with Krsna. The Vedas and the Upanisads are meant for understanding
the process by which one can surrender unto Krsna. The yogis try to see Him
(Krsna) within themselves by meditation. In other words, it is for all the
demigods and demons who do not know where the ultimate end is that Sankara
teaches, and he especially instructs the demons and the fools to offer
salutations to Krsna and His words, the Bhagavad-gita, by following in his
footsteps. Only by such acts will the demons be benefited, not by misleading
their innocent followers by so-called mental speculations or show-bottle
meditations. Sankara directly offers salutations to Krsna, as if to show the
fools, who are searching after light, that here ls light like the sun. But the
fallen demons are like owls that will not open their eyes on account of their
fear of the sunlight itself. These owls will never open their eyes to see the
sublime light of Krsna and His words the Bhagavad-gita. They will, however,
comment on the Gita with their closed owl-eyes to mislead their unfortunate
readers and followers. Sankara, however, discloses the light to his less
intelligent followers and shows that the Bhagavad-gita and Krsna are the only
source of light. This is all to teach the sincere seekers of truth to offer
salutation to Lord Krsna and thus surrender unto Him without misgivings. That
is the highest perfection of life, and that is the highest teaching of Sankara,
the great learned scholar whose teachings drove the voidist philosophy of
Buddha out of India, the land of knowledge. Om tat sat.
The Scriptural Basis of Krsna Consciousness