Bg. 10.3

BG 10.3

Devanagari

यो मामजमनादिं च वेत्ति लोकमहेश्वरम् । असम्मूढ: स मर्त्येषु सर्वपापै: प्रमुच्यते ॥ ३ ॥

Verse text

yo mām ajam anādiṁ ca vetti loka-maheśvaram asammūḍhaḥ sa martyeṣu sarva-pāpaiḥ pramucyate

Synonyms

yaḥ anyone who ; mām Me ; ajam unborn ; anādim without beginning ; ca also ; vetti knows ; loka of the planets ; mahā-īśvaram the supreme master ; asammūḍhaḥ undeluded ; saḥ he ; martyeṣu among those subject to death ; sarva-pāpaiḥ from all sinful reactions ; pramucyate is delivered.

Translation

He who knows Me as the unborn, as the beginningless, as the Supreme Lord of all the worlds – he only, undeluded among men, is freed from all sins.

Translation (Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakura)

3. He who, without bewilderment, knows that I am unborn since I have no beginning, and also am born, and knows that I am the lord of all planets, is freed from all sins in this world and performs bhakti without impediments. 4-5. Intelligence, knowledge, freedom from illusion, tolerance, truthfulness, sense control, mind control, pleasure, pain, birth, death, fear, fearlessness, non-violence, equanimity, satisfaction, austerity, charity, fame, infamy—all these various states of the living beings arise only from Me.

Translation (Baladeva Vidyabhusana)

3. He who knows that I am unborn and also born, and still without beginning, lord of all planets, with no bewilderment, is freed from all sins in this world. 4-5. Intelligence, knowledge, freedom from illusion, tolerance, truthfulness, sense control, mind control, pleasure, pain, birth, death, fear, fearlessness, non-violence, equanimity, satisfaction, austerity, charity, fame, infamy—all these various states of the living beings arise from Me.

Translation (Bhurijana Dasa)

He who knows Me as the unborn, as the beginningless, as the Supreme Lord of all the worlds‑‑he only, undeluded among men, is freed from all sins. (com) Arjuna says: "You are Supreme Brahman and You are all pervading from space and time, and now You have taken this form. Why do we say sages don't know You?" He lifts His fourth finger annd points to His chest saying, "Yo mam," "one who knows Me as aja". But Brahma is also aja. "But also anadi ‑ I have neither beginning nor end. Brahma is not like that." "Some people know You as Paramatma and Supersoul." "But those who know Me as unborn, eternally and still taking birth, these people actually know Me." Mam: means as son of Vasudeva. "My birth and at same time remaining unborn are supreme truth and there is no *** by My internal potency. "You are not desiring fruit of Your activities and You appear although You have no birth. Even scholar becomes confused about how this occurs." Even in Brhad‑Bhagavatamrta, even those who are intelligent become bewildered and think it's not true and they don't understand how these things happen by internal potency of Lord. Krsna gives example to show how I take birth although unborn. Damodara‑lila. Breaking yoghurt pot ‑ "Mother Yasoda wanted to punish Me through tying ropes. Mother Yasoha wanted to bind Me but couldn't because rope was always too short by two fingers. But at the same time Krsna says, I was wearing black kinkne thread and bell. So that thread didn't break. I was covered by the belt, but at same time I couldn't be covered by ropes." Two fingers ‑ 1 endeavor ‑ 2 determination The Krsna will. Unlimited thus becomes limited by His potency. In same way, although unborn I take birth. This is beyond logic. "Now more that will surprise you. I am loka mahesvara ‑ and yet I am controlling your horses and you are controlling Me." "Those who understand My opulences like this are not confused. Others are confused because they engage in sinful activities against devotion." Some people explained that Krsna is unborn and unlimited and say that Krsna's birth is not real. Such people can't become free from sins, all their activities are opposed to devotion. Baladev: "This type of knowledge only rare souls achieve. Among humans, those who are endeavoring to know Me, only one who has got association of My devotee can understand Me as explained and he becomes free from sins. Bija means different from pradhana, material energy. Pradhana transforms and those in this world have taken birth in this body. Anadi ‑ separates Himself from liberated souls, they are aja but they have source ‑ Krsna. Even before they had body. So anadi and aja, He thus separates Himself from material world, pradhana, and liberated souls. And by saying loka‑mahesvara He separates Himself from nitya‑muktas, who are anadi and aja but not loka mahesvara. Also this separates Himself from loka and prakrti. (Demigods are aja ‑ loka‑mahesvara, but not anadi.) This is logican style. Every adjective has significance. Only by potency of Lord both get power to control. So one who knows Me that I have no relationship with inferior qualities, I am nitya‑ mukta, supreme controller, one who knows Me like this becomes free from obstacles of improper activities and attains My devotional service. "He becomes asamudha, free from delusion, not thinking I'm same as others who have taken birth. Although I've taken birth from Devaki."

Purport

As stated in the Seventh Chapter (7.3), manuṣyāṇāṁ sahasreṣu kaścid yatati siddhaye: those who are trying to elevate themselves to the platform of spiritual realization are not ordinary men; they are superior to millions and millions of ordinary men who have no knowledge of spiritual realization. But out of those actually trying to understand their spiritual situation, one who can come to the understanding that Kṛṣṇa is the Supreme Personality of Godhead, the proprietor of everything, the unborn, is the most successful spiritually realized person. In that stage only, when one has fully understood Kṛṣṇa’s supreme position, can one be free completely from all sinful reactions. Here the Lord is described by the word aja, meaning “unborn,” but He is distinct from the living entities who are described in the Second Chapter as aja. The Lord is different from the living entities who are taking birth and dying due to material attachment. The conditioned souls are changing their bodies, but His body is not changeable. Even when He comes to this material world, He comes as the same unborn; therefore in the Fourth Chapter it is said that the Lord, by His internal potency, is not under the inferior, material energy, but is always in the superior energy. In this verse the words vetti loka-maheśvaram indicate that one should know that Lord Kṛṣṇa is the supreme proprietor of the planetary systems of the universe. He was existing before the creation, and He is different from His creation. All the demigods were created within this material world, but as far as Kṛṣṇa is concerned, it is said that He is not created; therefore Kṛṣṇa is different even from the great demigods like Brahmā and Śiva. And because He is the creator of Brahmā, Śiva and all the other demigods, He is the Supreme Person of all planets. Śrī Kṛṣṇa is therefore different from everything that is created, and anyone who knows Him as such immediately becomes liberated from all sinful reactions. One must be liberated from all sinful activities to be in the knowledge of the Supreme Lord. Only by devotional service can He be known and not by any other means, as stated in Bhagavad-gītā. One should not try to understand Kṛṣṇa as a human being. As stated previously, only a foolish person thinks Him to be a human being. This is again expressed here in a different way. A man who is not foolish, who is intelligent enough to understand the constitutional position of the Godhead, is always free from all sinful reactions. If Kṛṣṇa is known as the son of Devakī, then how can He be unborn? That is also explained in Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam: When He appeared before Devakī and Vasudeva, He was not born as an ordinary child; He appeared in His original form, and then He transformed Himself into an ordinary child. Anything done under the direction of Kṛṣṇa is transcendental. It cannot be contaminated by material reactions, which may be auspicious or inauspicious. The conception that there are things auspicious and inauspicious in the material world is more or less a mental concoction because there is nothing auspicious in the material world. Everything is inauspicious because the very material nature is inauspicious. We simply imagine it to be auspicious. Real auspiciousness depends on activities in Kṛṣṇa consciousness in full devotion and service. Therefore if we at all want our activities to be auspicious, then we should work under the directions of the Supreme Lord. Such directions are given in authoritative scriptures such as Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam and Bhagavad-gītā, or from a bona fide spiritual master. Because the spiritual master is the representative of the Supreme Lord, his direction is directly the direction of the Supreme Lord. The spiritual master, saintly persons and scriptures direct in the same way. There is no contradiction in these three sources. All actions done under such direction are free from the reactions of pious or impious activities of this material world. The transcendental attitude of the devotee in the performance of activities is actually that of renunciation, and this is called sannyāsa. As stated in the first verse of the Sixth Chapter of Bhagavad-gītā, one who acts as a matter of duty because he has been ordered to do so by the Supreme Lord, and who does not seek shelter in the fruits of his activities ( anāśritaḥ karma-phalam ), is a true renouncer. Anyone acting under the direction of the Supreme Lord is actually a sannyāsī and a yogī, and not the man who has simply taken the dress of the sannyāsī, or a pseudo yogī.

Purport (Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakura)

“But certainly the devatās and ṛṣis know about birth of this body belonging to You, the supreme Brahman, who are unlimited by all time and space.” Placing His index finger on His chest the Lord speaks this verse. “He who knows that I am without birth and am beginningless is free from sin.” “Does not everyone know that Brahmā is not beginningless, but that you, Paramātmā, are called aja, without birth, because of having no beginning (ajam anādim)?” “He who knows that I am unborn, and also born to Vasudeva, and am still without beginning, is freed from all sins.” ca here signifies that He is also born. By using the word mām (me), Kṛṣṇa indicates His particular birth from Vasudeva. This refers back to the Lord’s previous statement in chapter four, “He who knows that My birth and activities are transcendental…..” “I take birth, but because I am Paramātmā, I am eternally without birth.” Both these conditions are absolute truth, a demonstration of the acintya śakti. The Lord has said, ajo’ pi san avyayātmā… sambhavāmi, “Though I am unborn, I appear.” Uddhava also says: karmāṇy anīhasya bhavo ’bhavasya te durgāśrayo ’thāri-bhayāt palāyanam kālātmano yat pramadā-yutāśramaḥ svātman-rateḥ khidyati dhīr vidām iha My Lord, even the learned sages become disturbed in their intelligence when they see that Your Greatness engages in fruitive work although You are free from all desires, that You take birth although You are unborn, that You flee out of fear of the enemy and take shelter in a fort although You are the controller of invincible time, and that You enjoy householder life surrounded by many women although You enjoy in Your Self. SB 3.4.16 The commentary in the Laghu Bhagavatāmṛta says: tat tan na vāstavaṁ cet syād vidāṁ buddhi-bhramas tadā na syād evety ato ’cintyā śaktir līlāsu kāraṇam If all this were not true, then all perceptions would be illusory. But that is not so. Thus the acintya-śakti is the cause of His pastimes. Laghu Bhāgavatamṛta 1.5.119 In My childhood, during the Dāmodara-līlā, it is inconceivable that I could be bound by strings of bells, but not by the cords of mother Yaśodā. In the same way, My birth and non-birth are also inconceivable. The Lord then speaks of His powers, which are hard to understand. He who knows that, though I am your chariot driver, I am also the great controller of all the planets (loka-maheśvaram)—he alone is not bewildered among men, and is free of all sins, which are an obstacle to bhakti. But he who, though accepting that the Lord is unborn, without beginning and is the controller of all beings, thinks that His being born is just a semblance of birth, is bewildered, and is not freed from all sins. Even those who are knowledgeable of scriptures cannot know about Me by their intelligence. Because intelligence and other elements are generated from the material guṇas like sattva, and though they all originate in Me, in themselves they are not suitable for understanding about Me who am beyond the guṇas. The list of items in these verses is given to show this. Intelligence (buddhi) is capable of discerning the fine meaning of things. Knowledge (jṣāna) refers to the ability to distinguish between ātmā and non-ātmā. [Note: Even knowledge of ātmā distinct from the body is only sattva guṇa.] Non-bewilderment (asaṁmoha) means to be devoid of perplexity. These three qualities, though they are regarded as causing knowledge of Me, are not really causes of that knowledge. The other states seen in people which arev mentioned here also do not arise on their own (they come from Me). Tolerance (kṣamā), to speak the truth (satyam), control of the external senses (dama), and control of the internal sense (śama) are sattvic. Happiness is sattvic and sorrow is tamasic. Birth and death, types of sorrow, and fear, are tamasic. Fearlessness arising from knowledge is sattvic, but if it arises from rajas or tamas, it is rajasic or tamasic. Non-violence and seeing others as ones self (samatā) are sattvic. Satisfaction, if unconditional is sattvic, and if conditional, is rajasic. Austerity and charity, if unconditional, are sattvic and if conditional, are rajasic. Fame and infamy are similarly either sattvic or rajasic. All these arise from My energy. Because of the non-difference of the energy and the source of energy, it is said they arise from Me (mattaḥ).

Purport (Baladeva Vidyabhusana)

Some person, however, does have this knowledge of Me. With this intention the Lord speaks. Among thousands of men who are endeavoring, he who gets the good fortune of association with devotees who know about Me will know Me, who am without beginning, unborn, the great lord of the universe. He, not being bewildered, will be free of all sins. The Lord is unborn (ajam). That means He is different from the material products, which are unconscious, and from any class of being in the universe, since all entities are born with material bodies (or forms in the case of material objects) which have a beginning, and by transformation, an end. He becomes more specific by saying that He is without beginning (anādim). He is different from all the liberated souls as well, for though liberated souls are without birth now, their liberated state had a beginning, since their previous condition was marked by birth in material bodies. The Lord is also different from the eternally liberated souls, as well as being different from prakṛti and time, by the mention of the word loka maheśvaram. Although these all have no birth and are without beginning, they do not have lordship over all the worlds. The Lord also uses the word “beginningless” to distinguish Himself from Brahmā and Śiva, since they are also lords of the worlds. That He is the lord of Brahmā and Śiva will be explained elsewhere. He who knows that I am distinguished from all others by lack of contact with bad qualities and by eternal lordship of all things becomes freed from all karmas (sarva pāpaiḥ pramucyate), which act as an obstacle to the appearance of devotion to Me. That person then attains devotion to Me. Bewilderment (sammūḍhaḥ) means thinking that something else is knowledge of Me. He is devoid of that bewilderment. Also he is not bewildered, thinking, “How can Kṛṣṇa be called unborn, since he is born from Devakī?” since he knows that Kṛṣṇa can be born from her without giving up His status as unborn. Bg 10.4, Bg 10.5, Bg 10.4-5 buiṬjaRNaMaSaMMaaeh" +aMaa SaTYa& dMa" XaMa" ) Sau%& du"%& >avae_>aavae >aYa& ca>aYaMaev c )) 4 )) Aih&Saa SaMaTaa TauiíSTaPaae daNa& YaXaae_YaXa" ) >aviNTa >aava >aUTaaNaa& Mata Wv Pa*QaiGvDaa" )) 5 )) buddhir jṣānam asammohaḥ kṣamā satyaṁ damaḥ śamaḥ sukhaṁ duḥkhaṁ bhavo 'bhāvo bhayaṁ cābhayam eva ca ahiṁsā samatā tuṣṭis tapo dānaṁ yaśo 'yaśaḥ bhavanti bhāvā bhūtānāṁ matta eva pṛthag-vidhāḥ buddhiḥ—intelligence; jṣānam—knowledge; asammohaḥ—freedom from doubt; kṣamā—forgiveness; satyam—truthfulness; damaḥ—control of the senses; śamaḥ—control of the mind; sukham—happiness; duḥkham—distress; bhavaḥ—birth; abhāvaḥ—death; bhayam—fear; ca—also; abhayam—fearlessness; eva—also; ca—and; ahiṁsā—nonviolence; samatā—equilibrium; tuṣṭiḥ—satisfaction; tapaḥ—penance; dānam—charity; yaśaḥ—fame; ayaśaḥ—infamy; bhavanti—come about; bhāvāḥ—natures; bhūtānām—of living entities; mattaḥ—from Me; eva—certainly; pṛthak-vidhāḥ—variously arranged. In two verses the Lord expounds His status as the origin of all and the lord of all (which were mentioned in the last verse). Buddhi means the ability to make subtle distinctions. Jṣāna means to distinguish spiritual from material (cit from acit). Asammoha is absence of confusion. Kṣama is tolerance. Satyam is to speak for others benefit things as they really are. Dama means restraining the senses such as the ear from useless sense objects. Śama is controlling the mind. Sukha means regarding something as favorable. Duḥka is regarding something as unfavorable. Bhāva means birth, and abhāva means death. Bhaya means fear, which arises from regarding something as a future cause of suffering. Abhaya is absence of that fear. Ahiṁsa is not giving pain to other entities. Samatā is being devoid of attraction and repulsion. Tuṣṭi is satisfaction on attaining whatever comes according to ones karma. Tapa is suffering of the body prescribed in the Vedas. Dāna is offering ones enjoyable items to a qualified person. Yaśa is being known for good qualities. The opposite is ayaśa. All such states of living entities (bhāvāḥ), with differing qualities (pṛthag vidhā), arise from Me, from My will. I alone am their cause.

Surrender Unto Me

This is the fulfillement of 'janma karma ca me divyam/ evam yo vetti tattvah', that "one who knows Me in truth about My birth and activities, He is liberated." (4:9) Understanding that the unborn, the beginningless, has taken His birth. Why? Because that is amazing. One who understands this things, he is freed from sins and the result of that is that he will go to Krsna. Someone may think: "This is not so hard to understand, because Krsna is the Brahman who has taken His birth." But Krsna to such persons says 'Yo mam ajam', "I am unborn!" But Lord Brahma is also known as 'ajam', because he has not taken a material birth, he has taken his birth from Garbhodakasayi Visnu. But although Lord Brahma is ajam, he is not 'anadim', he is not beginningless although he has not taken a material birth. And the demigods they are 'loka‑mahesvaram', but they also are not 'anadim'. And the sages they are unborn, ajam, because the soul is unborn and they know that they are anadim because they are spirit, but they are not 'loka‑mahesvaram'. Only Krsna is 'ajam, anadim and loka‑mahesvaram'. [2. All qualities and attitudes (freedom from illusion, self control, pleasure, birth, fear, austerity, charity, non‑violence, fame, and infamy) are created by Krsna. Even the progenitors of the universe are born from His mind. (4‑6) ] No one knows Krsna's source but Krsna now explains how He is the source of all qualities. And it should be understood from this, that all these qualities, the good, the bad, they are not sufficient to know Krsna because He is the source of these qualities.