Bhagavad Gītā Chapter 14, Verse 7: Krishna to Arjuna — Guṇatraya-Vibhāga-Yoga
Know rajas as passion-natured, born of craving for what you lack and clinging to what you have; through that hunger for results, it binds the embodied soul to action.
Bhāṣyakāra purports
- Śaṅkaraadvaita
Rajas is raga-atmakam (passion-natured) — know it as born of trishna (craving for the unattained) and sanga (mental adhesion to what is attained). Shankara is precise: ragas is the redness (ranjana) that stains the mind like ochre dye, not a neutral force. Through karma-sanga — intense orientation toward seen and unseen results of action — rajas binds the dehin (embodied one), who is in reality the unbound Atman mistaking itself for an agent.
- Rāmānujaviśiṣṭādvaita
Rajas originates as the cause (hetu) of mutual longing between enjoyer and enjoyed — Ramanuja specifies raga as the mutual attraction (anyonya-spriha) between a person and sense-objects. Trishna is desire toward all sound-and-form objects; sanga is the yearning for continued union with kin and companions. Rajas binds the dehin by generating spriha (appetite) toward actions, and those actions being of punya-papa (merit-demerit) character, they produce births in corresponding wombs, sustaining samsara-bandha.
- Madhvadvaita
Rajas is raga-atmakam — Madhva's terse note confirms that trishna and sanga are its twin causes (karana), not merely its products. For Dvaita the point is ontological: the jiva, eternally distinct from Hari, when governed by rajas acts from its own appetite rather than as dependent servant (paratantra). This self-sourced appetitive action is precisely the binding (nibandha): the jiva accumulates karma that obscures its natural condition of Hari-servitude.
- Vallabhaśuddhādvaita
Rajas is anuraga-atmakam — Vallabha cites the root ranj (to colour, to attract) directly. The binding is karmasu ranjana: rajas draws the jiva into action by colouring it with delight, making karma adhesive. In Pushti-marga this is the state prior to prasada-labhа: the soul attracted to worldly rasa rather than Krishna-rasa. Vallabha's reading implies that the same ranjana-shakti, when redirected by grace, becomes the very capacity for divine anuraga (loving attachment to the Lord).
- Śrīdharabhakti
Sridhara defines rajas clearly as anuranjana-rupa (the form of colouring-attraction). Trishna is abhilasha toward the unattained; sanga is priti-visheshena-asakti — a specifically intensified fondness for what is already possessed. Together they generate karma-asakti (attachment-in-action), and through that double adhesion rajas binds the dehin firmly (nitaram badhnati) to both seen (drishta) and unseen (adrishta) fruit-seeking. The bhakta must recognize this double grip before devotion can dissolve it.
- Madhusūdanaadvaita-bhakti
Madhusudhana gives the fullest phenomenology: raga is the very svarupa (essential nature) of rajas — the person is dyed by sense-objects (rajyate vishayeshu). Trishna is craving for the unattained; asakti is the wish to protect what one possesses even as it perishes. Rajas then binds through karma-sanga understood as the specific conviction 'I am the doer, I will enjoy this result' (aham idam karomi etat phalam bhokshye) — an abhinivedha-vishesha that superimposes kartritva (agency) on the one who is in reality akarta (non-agent).