Quotes on Gita : āIf one reads Bhagavad-Gita very sincerely and with all seriousness, then by the grace of the Lord the reactions of his past misdeeds will not act upon himā Lord Shiva to Parvatidevi, Gita-Mahatmya.
No other philosophical or religious work reveals ,in such a lucid and profound way, the nature of consciousness, the self, the universe and the Supreme. I will shall read (Youtube Link Attached) and write Gita verses from the book āBhagvan-Gita As It Isā by Swami Prabhupada everyday.
Chapter 2 ā Contents of the Gita Summarised
Text 61 – One who restrains his senses, keeping them under full control, and ļ¬xes his consciousness upon Me, is known as a man of steady intelligence.
Purport – That the highest conception of yoga perfection is Kį¹į¹£į¹a consciousness is clearly explained in this verse. And unless one is Kį¹į¹£į¹a conscious it is not at all possible to control the senses. As cited above, the great sage DurvÄsÄ Muni picked a quarrel with MahÄrÄja Ambarīṣa, and DurvÄsÄ Muni unnecessarily became angry out of pride and therefore could not check his senses. On the other hand, the king, although not as powerful a yogÄ« as the sage, but a devotee of the Lord, silently tolerated all the sageās injustices and thereby emerged victorious. The king was able to control his senses because of the following qualiļ¬cations, as mentioned in the ÅrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam (9.4.18ā20): āKing Ambarīṣa ļ¬xed his mind on the lotus feet of Lord Kį¹į¹£į¹a, engaged his words in describing the abode of the Lord, his hands in cleansing the temple of the Lord, his ears in hearing the pastimes of the Lord, his eyes in seeing the form of the Lord, his body in touching the body of the devotee, his nostrils in smelling the ļ¬avor of the ļ¬owers offered to the lotus feet of the Lord, his tongue in tasting the tulasÄ« leaves offered to Him, his legs in traveling to the holy place where His temple is situated, his head in offering obeisances unto the Lord, and his desires in fulļ¬lling the desires of the Lord .ā.ā. and all these qualiļ¬cations made him ļ¬t to become a mat-para devotee of the Lord.ā
The word mat-para is most signiļ¬cant in this connection. How one can become mat-para is described in the life of MahÄrÄja Ambarīṣa. ÅrÄ«la Baladeva VidyÄbhūṣaį¹a, a great scholar and ÄcÄrya in the line of the mat-para, remarks, mad-bhakti- prabhÄvena sarvendriya-vijaya-pÅ«rvikÄ svÄtma-dį¹į¹£į¹iįø„ su-labheti bhÄvaįø„. āThe senses can be completely controlled only by the strength of devotional service to Kį¹į¹£į¹a.ā Also, the example of ļ¬re is sometimes given: āAs a blazing ļ¬re burns everything within a room, Lord Viį¹£į¹u, situated in the heart of the yogÄ«, burns up all kinds of impurities.ā The Yoga-sÅ«tra also prescribes meditation on Viį¹£į¹u, and not meditation on the void. The so-called yogÄ«s who meditate on something other than the Viį¹£į¹u form simply waste their time in a vain search after some phantasmagoria. We have to be Kį¹į¹£į¹a conscious ā devoted to the Personality of Godhead. This is the aim of the real yoga.
Excerpt From: His Divine Grace A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada. āBhagavad-gita As It Isā. Apple Books.


Leave a reply to vequinox Cancel reply