Bhagavad Gītā Chapter 17, Verse 3: Krishna to Arjuna — Śraddhātraya-Vibhāga-Yoga
A person's faith takes the shape of their own inner nature; each person is made of their faith, and whatever they put their faith in, that is what they are.
Bhāṣyakāra purports
- Śaṅkaraadvaita
Each being's faith conforms to the antahkarana (inner instrument) shaped by prior samskara (conditioning-impressions); the samsarin (transmigrating self) is constituted by faith, for Shankara says 'shraddhamayah ayam shraddha-prayah purushah samsari jivah.' The gunas of the antahkarana determine faith's quality, not any autonomous choice of the jiva. One's venerations — of devas, ancestors, or bhutas — merely index the guna-composition of the inner instrument, inferring sattva or its absence from the observable act of worship.
- Rāmānujaviśiṣṭādvaita
Ramanuja reads 'sattvam' as the antahkarana itself: the inner organ, conditioned by the gunas instilled through prior karma and Bhagavan's own orchestration, determines the character of one's faith. 'Shraddhamayah' means that a person is literally shaped into the form of his faith — 'shraddha-parinamah' — so that a person faithful toward punya-karma (meritorious action) becomes fruit-connected to that merit. The verse teaches that sraddha is not merely instrumental but constitutive: the quality of one's service-orientation (kainkarya) to Bhagavan is disclosed by the very texture of one's inner organ.
- Madhvadvaita
Madhva's commentary is terse and precise: faith is proportioned to the citta (mind-stuff), 'sattvanurupah cittanurupah.' The person of sattvika-shraddha is sattvika; the rajas-dominated person has rajasika faith — no exceptions, no mixing. For Madhva the jiva is eternally distinct and dependent; the quality of faith reflects Hari's sovereign allotment of guna-composition to each jiva, not the jiva's self-construction. Worship of devas or bhutas in the following verses will confirm the guna-gradient already encoded here.
- Vallabhaśuddhādvaita
Vallabha, reading through the lens of Pusti-marga, emphasizes that the antahkarana inherits its orientation from purva-samskara (prior-life impressions), and where shastric knowledge is absent the antahkarana has no corrective; 'yesham shastra-jnana-rahitam antahkaranam tesham shraddha-pi tatha.' The guna-composition of the antahkarana is thus a form of Krsna's own lila-prasada (grace-play) shaping each vessel differently. The verse's conclusion — 'yo yac-chraddha sa eva sah' — affirms that the soul's very identity is its faith: in Pusti-marga this means the soul is what Krsna has made it through the grace of that particular faith.
- Śrīdharabhakti
Sridhara Svami meets an implied objection head-on: if faith is a sattvika vrtti (sattvic function) as stated elsewhere, why does the Gita speak of three kinds? He answers that faith participates in the trigunic modulation of the antahkarana — rajas and tamas color sattva, yielding threefold faith. For the viveki (discerning person) fortified by shastric knowledge, sattva prevails and faith remains ekaka-sattviki (purely sattvic); for the aviveki (undiscerning), faith mirrors the guna-dominance of the moment. The verse thus doubles as a diagnosis and a prescription: identify your shraddha, diagnose your antahkarana, and apply shastric viveka (discernment) to re-orient it.
- Madhusūdanaadvaita-bhakti
Madhusudana Sarasvati offers the most layered account: shraddha-vicitrya (variety of faith) arises from two distinct causes — the vasana-rupa (impression-form) nimittakarana (efficient cause) from prior births, AND the antahkarana itself as upadana-karana (material cause), itself differentiated by guna-panchikarna (quintuplication of elements) into devas (sattva-dominant), yaksas (rajas-tinged), and pretas (tamas-dominated). Humans are typically vyamisra (mixed), but shastric viveka-vijnana can cause sattva to rise and suppress rajas-tamas. 'Shraddhamayah' uses the mayat suffix as in 'annamayah' — the person IS faith as its predominant modification. For Madhusudana this is not a deterministic trap: the verse opens the path back to shuddha-sattva through shastric discipline, and the address 'Bharata' (noble-lineaged one) quietly signals that purity is already within Arjuna's reach.