Chapter 2. Contents of the Gita
Summarized
TEXT 20
na jayate mriyate va kadacin
nayam bhutva bhavita va na bhuyah
ajo nityah sasvato 'yam purano
na hanyate hanyamane sarire
SYNONYMS
na--never; jayate--takes birth; mriyate--never dies; va--either;kadacit--at any
time (past, present or future); na--never; ayam--this;bhutva--came into
being; bhavita--will come to be; va--or; na--not;bhuyah--or has
coming to be; ajah--unborn; nityah--eternal; sasvatah--permanent; ayam--this; puranah--the oldest; na--never; hanyate--is killed; hanyamane--being killed; sarire--by the body.
TRANSLATION
For the
soul there is never birth nor death. Nor, having once been, does he ever cease
to be. He is unborn, eternal, ever-existing, undying and primeval. He is not
slain when the body is slain.
PURPORT
Qualitatively,
the small atomic fragmental part of the Supreme Spirit is one with the Supreme.
He undergoes no changes like the body. Sometimes the soul is called the steady,
or kutastha. The body is subject to six
kinds of transformations. It takes its birth in the womb of the mother's body,
remains for some time, grows, produces some effects, gradually dwindles, and at
last vanishes into oblivion. The soul, however, does not go through such
changes. The soul is not born, but, because he takes on a material body, the
body takes its birth. The soul does not take birth there, and the soul does not
die. Anything which has birth also has death. And because the soul has no
birth, he therefore has no past, present or future. He is eternal, ever-existing,
and primeval--that is, there is no trace in history of his coming into being.
Under the impression of the body, we seek the history of birth, etc., of the
soul. The soul does not at any time become old, as the body does. The so-called
old man, therefore, feels himself to be in the same spirit as in his childhood
or youth. The changes of the body do not affect the soul. The soul does not
deteriorate like a tree, nor anything material. The soul has no by-product
either. The by-products of the body, namely children, are also different
individual souls; and, owing to the body, they appear as children of a
particular man. The body develops because of the soul's presence, but the soul
has neither offshoots nor change. Therefore, the soul is free from the six changes
of the body.
In the Katha Upanisad also we find a similar passage
which reads:
na jayate mriyate va vipascin
nayam kutascin na vibhuva kascit
ajo nityah sasvato 'yam purano
na hanyate hanyamane sarire
(Katha 1.2.18)
The
meaning and purport of this verse is the same as in the Bhagavad-gita, but here in this verse there is
one special word, vipascit, which means learned or with
knowledge.
The
soul is full of knowledge, or full always with consciousness. Therefore,
consciousness is the symptom of the soul. Even if one does not find the soul
within the heart, where he is situated, one can still understand the presence
of the soul simply by the presence of consciousness. Sometimes we do not find
the sun in the sky owing to clouds, or for some other reason, but the light of
the sun is always there, and we are convinced that it is therefore daytime. As
soon as there is a little light in the sky early in the morning, we can
understand that the sun is in the sky. Similarly, since there is some consciousness
in all bodies--whether man or animal--we can understand the presence of the
soul. This consciousness of the soul is, however, different from the
consciousness of the Supreme because the supreme consciousness is
all-knowledge--past, present and future. The consciousness of the individual
soul is prone to be forgetful. When he is forgetful of his real nature, he
obtains education and enlightenment from the superior lessons of Krsna. But
Krsna is not like the forgetful soul. If so, Krsna's teachings of Bhagavad-gita would be useless.
There
are two kinds of souls--namely the minute particle soul (anu-atma) and
the Supersoul (the vibhu-atma). This is also confirmed in
theKatha Upanisad in this
way:
anor aniyan mahato mahiyan
atmasya jantor nihito guhayam
tam akratuh pasyati vita-soko
dhatuh prasadan mahimanam atmanah
(Katha 1.2.20)
"Both
the Supersoul [Paramatma] and the atomic soul [jivatma] are situated on the same tree
of the body within the same heart of the living being, and only one who has
become free from all material desires as well as lamentations can, by the grace
of the Supreme, understand the glories of the soul." Krsna is the
fountainhead of the Supersoul also, as it will be disclosed in the following
chapters, and Arjuna is the atomic soul, forgetful of his real nature;
therefore he requires to be enlightened by Krsna, or by His bona fide
representative (the spiritual master).
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