Gita: Essential Verses

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Essential Verses of the Bhagavad Gita

Swami Dayananda has chosen 10 verses that summarize the in depth teaching that Krishna imparts to his student Arjuna. These are as follows:

Chapter 2, verse 11

Ashocyaanavasocastvam prajnaavaadamsca bhaasase
Gataasuunagataasuumsca naanushocanti panditah

You are grieving for those who should not be grieved for. Yet you speak the words of wisdom. The wise do not grieve over the dead or the living.

Chapter 2, verse 21

vedaavinaashinam nityam ya enamajamavyayam
katham sa purusaha paartha kam ghaatyatihanti kam

Oh, son of Prtha, the one who knows this (self) to be indestructable, timeless and unborn, and not subject to decline, how and whom does that person kill? Whom does he cause to kill?

Chapter 2, verse 55

prajahaati yadaa kaamaansarvaanpaartha manogataan
Atmanyevaatmanaa tustaha sthitaprajnastadocyate

Oh Partha, when one gives up all desires arising in the mind,
satisfied in the Self by (the knowledge of) the Self, then one is called wise.

Chapter 9, verse 4

Mayaa tatamidam sarvam jagadavyaktamuurtinaa
Matsthaani sarvabhuutaani na caaham tesvavasthinah

The whole world is pervaded by Me, by My unmanifest form. All beings exist in me, but I do not dwell in them.

Chapter 3, verse 3

Loke smindvividha nisthaa puraa proktaa mayaanagha
jnaanayogena sankhyaanaam kaarmayogena yoginaam

In this world, O sinless one, at the beginning of creation, the two fold pursuit was enunciated by Me; the pursuit of knowledge for the contemplative ones and the pursuit of action for the active ones.

Chapter 2, verse 47

Karmanyevaadhikaaraste maa phaeshu kadaachana,
Maa karmaphalahetubhuurmaa te sangostvakarmani

You have freedom in (performing actions) and never in the results thereof. May you not become the author of the results of action, nor may you have attachment for inaction.

Chapter 18, verse 46

Yatah pravrttirbhuutaanaam yena saarvamidam tatam
Svakarmana tamabhyarcya siddhim vindati maanavah

The one from whom is the creation of all beings and by whom all this is prevaded: worshipping Him by one’s own duty, man attains perfection (purification of heart).

Chapter 5, verse 6

Sannyaasaastu mahaabaho dukhamaaptumayogatah,
Yogayukto munirbrahma na cirenaadhigacchati

Renunciation (characterized by wisdom), on the other hand, O mighty one, is difficult to attain without the preparation of karmayoga. The contemplative one endowed with a tranquil mind soon attains sunyaasa

Chapter 5, verse 13

Sarvakarmaani manasaa sannyaasyaaste sukham vasti,
Navadvaare puree dehii naiva kurvanna Kaarayan.

Having renounced all the actions by discriminative knowledge, the embodied one (the wise man) with senses under control, rests happily in the city of the nine gates, neither acting, nor causing another to act.

Chapter 18, verse 66

Sarvadharmaanparityajya maamekam saranam vraja
Aham tvaa sarvapaapebhyo moksayisyaami maa shucah

Giving up all actions, surrender to me alone. I will liberate you from all sins (bondage). Do not grieve.

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Related Links

Yoga in the Gita
Sthita Prajña (Stable Wisdom)
Summary of the 18 Chapters

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The Ten Oxherding Pictures

A Holiday Gift from the Buddhist World to all of us.

The ten Oxherding Pictures from Zen Buddhism represent the stages and path to awakening, integration and enlightenment, with the Ox representing our True Nature and the Oxherder each of us, the embodied being. It is important to note that the stages are not linear but spiralic and multi-dimensional, as we usually can get glimpses of more advanced levels before we have truly completed and integrated the any or all of the previous ones.

Also, we may often be working with several stages at the same time. More subtle awakenings in one level may trigger unconscious and unresolved traumas stored in the earlier levels that then need to be revisited, transformed and integrated. Then, the energy held in trauma is resolved and free to use for deeper growth.

There are many variations on the ten pictures representing the stages, and these are usually accompanied by poetic verses and/or commentary describing the journey. The paintings seen below are traditionally attributed to 天章周文 Tenshō Shūbun (1414-1463), of the Muromachi period in the late fifteenth century and are found at the Shōkokuji temple in Kyoto, Japan.

These stages can be seen as three sets of three transformations, with the final stage standing alone. The first three are the beginners journey, the second three those of the intermediate student, and the final three the most subtle and refined. The tenth transcends all and resolves as the awakened Buddha in the world helping others. Looking more deeply and ironically, we find that ultimately it is the Ox who is training and leading the Oxherder

1: Seeking the Ox
We know something is missing in our lives, but don’t know what it might be, or where to look. Our souls ache, our spirit feels fragile. The spiritual journey begins, but our minds are full of confusion and delusion. Our search is random and we cannot find the Ox anywhere. This is Dante at the beginning of The Divine Comedy.

2: Seeing Tracks of the Ox
Through study and guidance we begin to get glimpses. Maybe we discover yoga or meditation, or find spiritual teachers or writings that inspire us. But although we see the tracks, the Ox is still unseen, unknown. The tracks give us some confidence and we continue seeking, driven by the awakening cosmic impulse to discover/uncover the fullness and truth of our Being. The Ox is calling us.

3: First Glimpsing the Ox
There is the Ox. Wow! So magnificent! How did we ever not see! But the Ox remains elusive, disappearing into the forest. How could that be? Our minds are still confused, our seeking still undisciplined. The Ox teases us. She is everywhere and then nowhere to be found. Our mental habits and beliefs still dominate in spite of the revelation and we struggle to find ground. We are still beginners on the journey.

4: Catching the Ox
We finally catch the ox and grasp the rope to hold her, but she is wild and free, used to cavorting in the fields. We must hold the rope firmly and steadily. The rope of course is our evolving meditation practice and this is where it gets more serious. We are no longer beginners. We are in the realm of un-abiding awakening and must be ‘all in’ with our practice to stabilize the ground. Habits and conditioning have many tentacles extending into the unconscious, so our discipline must become stronger. The Ox keeps us on our toes.

5: Taming the Ox
As our practice becomes stronger, we can hold the rope more loosely as the Ox is relaxing somewhat. It is actually the mind that is relaxing as we begin to realize that the Ox is always steady and it is our minds that are wild and untamed. By relaxing our efforts, our practices can now include resting in the infinite and we become more comfortable in stillness and mystery. Habits still arise as the unconscious has many layers and levels of confusion and trauma, but we recognize the reality that our thoughts arise and fall from the depths of silence and that our delusion is self created.

6: Riding the Ox Back Home
The seeking and struggle come to an end and we can let go of the rope as Ox and herder are one, moving effortlessly together though the world. Buddha Nature is awake and free and we feel spontaneous joy and happiness. The Oxherder plays his flute for the birds and children of the village. This joy and delight can be a surprise as the practice has seemed quite serious at times. Unseen unconscious traumas may still exist so vigilance is still required.

7: Ox Forgotten, Self Alone
The Ox is now gone and the Oxherder sits at home alone. This is ‘Self as ‘I am’ without the need to ‘be something. This is Kaivalya of the Yoga Sutras, Purusha distinct from Prakriti. Up until now, there has remained a subtle sense of duality, of practice and life, of spiritual and not spiritual. This now dissolves. There is no longer ‘something to do’. Everything is meditation and nothing is special. Things are ‘just as they are’.

8: Ox and Self Both Forgotten
Total Emptiness. No concepts, ideas or beliefs, no sense of separateness. Even the “I am” is gone. All gone. Not even the scent of ‘holiness’ or special-ness remains. Gate, Gate, Paragate, Parasamgate.

9: Return to the Source
From the realization of Emptiness emerges the realization that the amazing flow of life always continues on in its own perfection. Seasons come and go. Cherry trees bloom in the spring. Birds sing and the rivers flow. Stars are born and others explode into cosmic dust. Emptiness is Fullness, Fullness is Emptiness. Bodhi svaha!

10: Returning to the Marketplace with Helping Hands
The enlightened being joyfully joins the world to aid all beings on their journey. Freedom, wisdom and compassion are the roots of action. Enlightenment is not passive but celebratory and engaged.

Here are some other perspectives:
From Tricycle Magazine
https://terebess.hu/english/Kuoan1.html
https://terebess.hu/english/oxherd0.html

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