Renouncing all actions in Me, with your mind fixed on the Self, without desire for gain, fight, free from lethargy.
Krishna encourages Arjuna to act without attachment, offering his actions to the divine. This act of surrender represents true karma yoga, where one’s deeds are performed as an offering, liberating the individual from anxiety.
Those who faithfully follow this teaching of Mine, without envy, are released from the bondage of actions.
Krishna explains that those who follow his teachings with devotion attain liberation. This emphasizes faith and alignment with divine wisdom as key factors in transcending karma and finding inner peace.
But those who, out of envy, do not follow My teaching, they are to be regarded as deluded and devoid of knowledge, ruined and mindless.
Those who reject Krishna’s teachings are bound by ignorance, unable to reach enlightenment. Krishna’s words stress the importance of humility and willingness to learn as prerequisites for spiritual growth and freedom.
Even a wise man acts according to his own nature, for all beings follow their nature. What can repression accomplish?
Even the wise are subject to their inherent nature, Krishna states, showing that one’s nature directs behavior. This insight highlights the limitations of forced restraint, suggesting that self-awareness and acceptance are key.
Attachment and aversion for sense objects are fixed in every sense; let none come under their sway, for they are his foes.
Attachment and aversion bind the senses, Krishna explains. He advises moderation, warning Arjuna not to succumb to emotional extremes, portraying them as obstacles to spiritual progress and inner balance.
Better is one’s own duty, though deficient, than the duty of another, well performed. Better is death in one’s own duty; the duty of another invites danger.
Krishna asserts that it’s better to follow one’s own path imperfectly than to excel in another’s. He promotes authenticity and encourages Arjuna to act according to his own dharma, warning of the dangers of imitation.
Arjuna said: O Varshneya, by what is one impelled to sinful acts, even unwillingly, as if engaged by force?
Arjuna inquires about the forces compelling people toward sin, even unwillingly. This question reflects the common human struggle with desire, setting the stage for Krishna’s explanation of the nature of destructive impulses.