Bhagavad Gītā Chapter 18, Verse 42: Krishna to ArjunaMokṣa-Sannyāsa-Yoga

Bhagavad Gītā 18.42Chapter 18 · Mokṣa-Sannyāsa-Yoga · KrishnaArjuna · anuṣṭubh
शमो दमस्तपः शौचं क्षान्तिरार्जवमेव च
ज्ञानं विज्ञानमास्तिक्यं ब्रह्मकर्म स्वभावजम्
śamo damadama(3 verses)nominative masculine singular nounself-control, restraint (from √dam)stapaḥtapas(25 verses)nominative neuter singular nounausterity, ascetic heat, spiritual discipline śaucaṃśauca(5 verses)nominative neuter singular nounpurity, cleanliness (from √śuc) kṣāntikṣānti(2 verses)nominative feminine singular nounpatience, forbearance (from √kṣam)rārjavamārjava(4 verses)nominative neuter singular nounuprightness, sincerity (from ṛju 'straight')evaeva(174 verses)indeed, truly, only (emphatic particle) caca(391 verses)and; (homonym: also the consonant ca)
jñānaṃjñāna(64 verses)nominative neuter singular nounknowledge, wisdom, cognitionattested in commentariesviśiṣṭādvaita। आस्तिक्यं वैदिकार्थस्य कृत्स्नस्य सत्यतानिश्चयः प्रकृष्टः, केनापि हेतुना चालयितुमशक्य इत्यर्थः।भगवान् पुरुषोत्तमो वासु vijñānamvijñāna(5 verses)nominative neuter singular noundiscriminative knowledge, realized knowing (vi- + √jñā)attested in commentariesadvaita, आस्तिक्यम् आस्तिकभावः श्रद्दधानता आगमार्थेषु, ब्रह्मकर्म ब्राह्मणजातेः कर्म स्वभावजम् --āstikyaṃāstikyanominative neuter singular nounbelief in the existence (of God/scripture); piety (from āstika) brahmabrahman(53 verses)compound (compound member)Brahman (the Absolute); also: the Veda; sacred utterancekarmakarman(144 verses)nominative neuter singular nounaction, deed, the law of actionattested in commentariesadvaitaस्वभावजम् --viśiṣṭādvaita, तैः तैः आराधितो धर्मार्थकाममोक्षाख्यं फलं प्रयच्छति, इति अस्य अर्थस्य सत्यतानिश्चयः आस्तिक्यम् svabhāvasvabhāva(11 verses)compound (compound member)own-nature, innate disposition (sva 'own' + bhāva 'being')jamja(16 verses)nominative neuter singular nounborn of, produced from (suffix)
spokensingle-voice recital; rendered via IndicF5 conditioned on a Sanskrit reference clip
meaning

Shama, dama, tapas, shaucha, kshanti, arjava, jnana, vijnana, and astikya are the natural-born duties of a brahmin.

Bhāṣyakāra purports

  • Śaṅkaraadvaita

    The nine qualities — shama (inner-sense withdrawal), dama (outer-sense restraint), tapas (austerity as described earlier), shaucha (purity), kshanti (forbearance), arjava (uprightness), jnana (scriptural knowledge), vijnana (direct understanding), and astikya (firm conviction in the meaning of the agamas) — constitute brahma-karma (the action proper to a brahmin), arising from svabhava (one's own inborn nature). Shankara presses that astikya is specifically shraddhana (trusting acceptance) of agama-artha (the content of revealed scripture), not a vague piety. These nine are enumerated tersely because each has been defined in prior discussions; they reappear here as the svabhava-prabhava (nature-born) qualities of the brahmana-jati (brahmin birth-order).

    divergence: Shankara: 'astikya — astikaabhavah shraddhaanataa aagamaartheshu; brahmakarma braahmanajaateh karma svabhaajam' — conviction is specifically in agamic content, not free-floating faith.

  • Rāmānujaviśiṣṭādvaita

    Ramanuja notably reverses the usual pairing: shama here is bahya-indriya-niyanana (restraint of outer senses) and dama is antahkarana-niyanana (restraint of the inner organ) — the opposite assignment from Shankara and Sridhara. Astikya receives the longest gloss in the panel: it is the unshakeable certainty (prasrishta nishchaya) that Bhagavan Purushottama Vasudeva — the subject of all Veda and Vedanta — is the sole cause of all worlds, their sustainer, and the dispenser of dharma-artha-kama-moksha to those who worship him. Ramanuja anchors this with six Gita cross-references (15.15, 10.8, 7.7, 5.29, 7.7, 18.46, 10.3), making astikya explicitly theocentric: it is not merely belief in paraloka (afterlife) but recognition that Vasudeva is that paraloka's very ground.

    divergence: Ramanuja: 'Bhagavan Purushottamo Vasudevah...sa eva nikhilajagadekakaaranam...tadaraadhanabhuutam cha kritsnam vaidikim karma...iti asya arthasya satyatanishchayah aastikyam.'

  • Madhvadvaita

    *Śama* (inner restraint), *dama* (sense-control), *tapas* (austerity), *śauca* (purity), *kṣānti* (forbearance), *ārjava* (straightforwardness), *jñāna* (scriptural knowledge), *vijñāna* (direct realization of the *svarūpa* of *Hari*), and *āstikyam* (unwavering conviction in the Lord's sovereignty) — these nine constitute *brahmakarma svabhāvajam*, the duties of the *brāhmaṇa* arising from innate nature. In *dvaita* *siddhānta*, each of these qualities is *paratantra* (eternally dependent) in its very excellence: *śama* and *dama* are not self-achieved virtues but gifts held in subordination to *Hari*'s *svatantra* (independently real, self-sufficient) will. *Jñāna* is not bare propositional learning but knowledge that presupposes *pañca-bheda* (the five-fold real distinction: Lord–*jīva*, Lord–matter, *jīva*–*jīva*, *jīva*–matter, matter–matter) as ontological bedrock. *Vijñāna* is the realized apprehension of the Lord's unrestricted independence from the *jīva* (the individual self) and from *jagat*, fixing the cognizing *jīva* in its place within the *taratamya* (graded ontological hierarchy). *Āstikyam* is the settled, unshakeable certainty that *bheda* (real distinction) between *Hari* and *jīva* is not provisional but eternal — the precise inversion of *adhyāsa*-based readings that dissolve that distinction. Together these nine qualities do not dissolve the *brāhmaṇa* into Brahman; they fit him, through *bhakti* (devotion as ontological subordination), for *kaiṅkarya* — eternal service to *Hari* — which is liberation without loss of the *jīva*'s distinct reality.

    divergence: Both Madhva and Jayatīrtha are silent on this verse. The reading is voiced directly from *dvaita* *siddhānta*: *pañca-bheda*, *taratamya*, *āstikyam* as conviction in eternal *bheda*, and *vijñāna* as realized knowledge of Hari's *svatantrya* — each a doctrinal counter to any non-dual reading of *brahmakarma*.

  • Vallabhaśuddhādvaita

    Vallabha's gloss is characteristically concise: these qualities are the svabhavika-vritti (natural disposition) of the brahmin. He makes only one doctrinal distinction — jnana is shruta (Vedically heard knowledge) while vijnana is paramatma-jnana (direct knowing of the Supreme Self as Krishna). For Vallabha's Pushti-marga, these nine qualities are not striving but prasada-expressions: they arise naturally in the soul that has received Krishna's grace, and they constitute the brahmin's sva-karma as a form of seva (devotional service) within the cosmic lila.

    divergence: Vallabha: 'jnanam shrautam. vijnanam paraatmajnaanam.' Brief but decisive in separating heard-knowledge from direct paramatma-recognition.

  • Śrīdharabhakti

    Sridhara gives the most pedagogically clean enumeration: shama is chitta-uparama (subsidence of the mind-stuff), dama is bahya-indriya-uparama (subsidence of outer senses), vijnana is anubhava (experiential realization as distinct from textual knowledge), and astikya is the firm nishchaya (certainty) captured in the phrase 'asti paralokah' — there is an afterlife, the fruits of dharma are real. His voice is balanced and devotionally inflected without collapsing into theocentric reduction: the nine qualities are the brahmin's svabhava-ja karma (nature-born action), the ground on which bhakti builds. The Sridhara payload is clean Sanskrit prose with no HTML artifacts.

    divergence: Sridhara: 'vijnaanamanubhavah; aastikya masthi paraloka iti nishchayah. Etacchhamaadi brahmanasya svabhaavajjatam karma.'

  • Madhusūdanaadvaita-bhakti

    Madhusudan offers the richest vijnana gloss in the panel: in karma-kanda it means yajna-adi-karma-kaushala (skilled mastery of sacrificial action); in brahma-kanda it means brahmatma-aikya-anubhava (experiential realization of brahman-atman identity) — a bifurcation unique to his synthesis. He reads astikya as sattviki-shraddha (faith of the sattva-guna quality, defined earlier in chapter 17). He then demonstrates through extensive citations from Vishnu-Purana, Mahabharata, Gautama-Dharmasutra, Yajnavalkya-smriti, and Brihaspati that these nine qualities are in fact samanya-dharma (common dharma of all four varnas) — they appear with maximum frequency in the brahmin because of sattva-dominance, but they belong to the moral structure of all human beings. This move universalizes the verse without erasing its varna-specific frame.

    divergence: Madhusudan: 'vijnanam karmakande yaajnaadikarmakaushalyam; brahmakaande brahmaatmaikyaanubhavah. Aastikyam saattvikii shraddhaa.' Plus: 'yady api chaturnam api varnanam sattvikaavasthayaam ete dharmaah sambhavanti tathaapy bahulyena braahmanena sambhavanti.'

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