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SABCL - Sri Aurobindo Birth Centenary Library

CWSA - Complete Works of Sri Aurobindo

CWM - Collected Works of The Mother

Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Anilbaran Roy/English/The Message of The Gita/Renunciation and Yoga of Works.htm
FIFTH CHAPTER RENUNCIATION AND YOGA OF WORKS Arjuna said: Thou declarest to me the renunciation of works, O Krishna, and again thou declarest to me Yoga; which one of these is the better way, that tell me with a clear decisiveness.1 The Blessed Lord said: Renunciation and Yoga of works both bring about the soul's salvation, but of the two the Yoga of works is distinguished above the renunciation of works. __________________________________________ 1: Arjuna is perplexed; here are desireless works, the principle of Yoga, and renunciation of works, the principle of Sankhya, put tog
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Anilbaran Roy/English/The Message of The Gita/The Possibility and Purpose of Avatarhood.htm
FOURTH CHAPTER I. THE POSSIBILITY AND PURPOSE OF AVATARHOOD 1. The Blessed Lord said: This imperishable Yoga 1I gave to Vivasvan (the Sun-God), Vivasvan gave it to Manu (the father of men), Manu gave it to Ikshvaku (head of the Solar line). 2. And so it came down from royal sage to royal sage till it was lost in the great lapse of Time, 0 Parantapa. This same ancient and original Yoga has been today declared to thee by Me, for thou art My devotee and My friend; this is the highest secret.2 _____________________________________________ 1 In speaking of this Yoga in
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Anilbaran Roy/English/The Message of The Gita/Glossary.htm
GLOSSARY (Proper names are given in capitals, words with English terminations in italics.) abhayam—fearlessness. abhyasa—Yogic practice. acharya—teacher. ahankara—the ego-sense, egoism. ahinsa—non-violence. akarta—a non-doer. Akshara—the immobile, the immutable. ananda—spiritual delight, the bliss of the Spirit. anisha—not lord, not master of but subject to the nature. anumanta—giver of sanction. apana—the incoming breath. artha—self-interest. Asura—a hostile being of the mental world. Asuric—relating to, of the nature of the Asuras. Atman—the Self or Spirit. avatara—descent or incarnat
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Anilbaran Roy/English/The Message of The Gita/Introduction.htm
INTRODUCTION It may be useful in approaching an ancient Scripture, such as the Veda, Upanishads or Gita to indicate precisely the spirit in which we approach it and what exactly we think we may derive from it that is of value to humanity and its future. First of all, there is undoubtedly a Truth one and eternal which we are seeking, from which all other truth derives, by the light of which all other truth finds its right place, explanation and relation to the scheme of knowledge. But precisely for that reason it cannot be shut up in a single trenchant formula, it is not likely to be found in its entirety or in all its bearings in any single philosophy or scripture or
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Anilbaran Roy/English/The Message of The Gita/The Gunas, Mind and Works.htm
EIGHTEENTH CHAPTER THE GUNAS, MIND AND WORKS 1.. Arjuna said: I desire, 0 mighty-armed, to know the principle of Sannyasa and the principle of Tyaga, 0 Hrishikesha, and their difference,1 0 Keshinisudana. 2. The Blessed Lord said: Sages have known as Sannyasa2 the physical depositing (or laying aside) of desirable actions; Tyaga is the name given by the wise to an entire abandonment of all attached clinging to the fruit of works. ____________________________________________ 1 The last question of Arjuna demands a clear distinction between the outer and inner renunc
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Anilbaran Roy/English/The Message of The Gita/The Three Purushas.htm
FIFTEENTH CHAPTER THE THREE PURUSHAS 1.. The Blessed Lord said: With its original source above (in the Eternal), its branches stretching below, the Ashwattha1 is said to be eternal and imperishable; the leaves of it are the hymns of the Veda; he who knows it is the Veda-knower.2 _____________________________________________ 1 Here is a description of cosmic existence in the Vedantic image of the Ashwattha tree. 2 The knowledge the Veda gives us is a knowledge of the gods, of the principles and powers of the cosmos, and its fruits are the fruits of a sacrifice which is offered with desire, fruits of enjoyment and lo
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Anilbaran Roy/English/The Message of The Gita/Works and Sacrifice.htm
THIRD CHAPTER 1. WORKS AND SACRIFICE Arjuna said: If thou holdest the intelligence to be greater1 than works, O Janardana, why then dost thou, O Keshava, appoint me to a terrible work ? Thou seemest to be bewilder my intelligence with a confused and mingled speech; tell me then decisively that one thing by which I may attain to my soul's weal. ________________________________________________ 1. The Yoga of the intelligent will and its culmination in the Brahmic status, which occupies all the close of the second chapter, contains the seed of much of the teaching
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Anilbaran Roy/English/The Message of The Gita/Kurukshetra.htm
FIRST CHAPTER KURUKSHETRA 1. Dhritarashtra1 said: _On the field of Kurukshetra, the field of the working out of the Dharma 2, gathered together, eager for battle, what did they, O Sanjaya.my people and the Pandavas? _________________________________________________ 1. THE peculiarity of the Gita among the great religious books of the world is that it does not stand apart as a work by itself, the fruit of the spiritual life of a creative personality like Christ, Mahomed or Buddha or of an epoch of pure spiritual searching like the Veda and Upanishads, but is given as an episode in an epic history of nations and their wars and men and the
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Anilbaran Roy/English/The Message of The Gita/The Story of the Gita.htm
APPENDIX I THE STORY OF THE GITA The Mahabhatata, of which the Gita is a part, took its present form from the fifth to the first centuries B. C. The Gita occurs in it as one portion of the Bhishma Parva. "Mahabharata" means literally "great India"; it is an epic narrative of the ancient Indians who saw the vision of a great India, one in culture and unified in political life, stretching from the Himalayas to Cape Commorin. Kuru is the name of a leading Kula or clan of that time, and Kurukshetra was a vast field near their capital Hastinapur (modern Delhi) where the Kurus used to perform their religious sacrifices. When Dhritarashtra the blind
Resource name: /E-Library/Disciples/Anilbaran Roy/English/The Message of The Gita/The Supreme Divine.htm
EIGHTH CHAPTER THE SUPREME DIVINE (In the last two slokas of the seventh chapter we have certain expressions which give us in their brief sum the chief essential truths of the manifestation of the supreme Divine in the cosmos. All the originative and effective aspects of it are there, all that concerns the soul in its return to integral self-knowledge. First, there is that Brahman, tad brahma; adhyatma, second, the principle of the self in nature; adhibhutao and adhidaiva next, the objective phenomenon and subjective phenomenon of being; adhiyajna last, the secret of the cosmic principle of works and sacrifice. I, the Purushottama (maw viduh}, says in