Chapter 2 Summary – Sankhya Yoga
SRIMAD
BHAGAVADGITA SVADHYAYA
Chapter 2 - SANKHYA
YOGA
Summary of Second
Discourse
By Swami Sivananda
Sanjaya
explains the condition of Arjuna, who was agitated due to attachment and fear.
Lord Krishna rebukes him for his dejection, which was due to Moha or
attachment, and exhorts him to fight. After failing to convince Sri Krishna
through his seemingly wise thoughts, Arjuna realises his helplessness and
surrenders himself completely to the Lord, seeking His guidance to get over the
conflict of his mind.
The
Lord takes pity on him and proceeds to enlighten him by various means. He
explains to Arjuna the imperishable nature of the Atman, for which there is no
past, present and future. The Atman never dies, therefore Arjuna should not
grieve. As It transcends the five elements, namely, earth, water, fire, air and
ether, It cannot be cut, burnt or dried. It is unchanging and eternal.
Everyone
experiences conditions like pleasure and pain, heat and cold, due to contact of
objects with the senses. The senses carry the sensations through the nerves to
the mind. One should be able to withdraw the senses from objects, like the
tortoise which withdraws all its limbs within.
Krishna
asserts that only one who has the capacity to be balanced in pleasure and pain
alike is fit for immortality.
Krishna
goes on to tell Arjuna that if he refuses to fight and flees from the battle,
people will be justified in condemning such action as unworthy of a warrior.
Having
taught Arjuna the immortal nature of the Atman, Lord Krishna turns to the
performance of action without expectation of fruit. A man should not concern
himself about the fruit of the action, like gain and loss, victory and defeat.
These are in the hands of the Lord. He should perform all action with a
balanced mind, calmly enduring the pairs of opposites like heat and cold,
pleasure and pain, that inevitably manifest during action. Krishna advises
Arjuna to fight, free from desire for acquisition of kingdom or preservation of
it.
Arjuna
is eager to know the characteristics of a man who has a stable mind. Such a
person, Krishna tells him, will have no desires at all. Since he is content
within, having realised the Self, he is entirely free from desires. The
consciousness of the Atman and abandonment of desires are simultaneous
experiences. The various qualities of a Sthitaprajna (a stable-minded person)
are described by the Lord. He will not be affected by adversity and will have
no fear or anger. He will take things as they come, and will not have any likes
and dislikes. He will neither hug the world nor hate it.
The
man of stable mind will have perfect control of the senses. The senses are
powerful and draw the mind outwards. One should therefore turn one’s gaze
within and realise God who resides in the heart. The Yogi, having achieved a
stable mind, remains steadfast even though all sense-objects come to him. He is
unmoved and lives a life of eternal peace.
Krishna
concludes that the eternal Brahmic state frees one from delusion forever. Even
at the end of life, when one departs from this body, one does not lose
consciousness of one’s identity with Brahman.
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