Home


Body & Soul(Kshetra Kshetragnya Vibhag Yoga):- SHLOK 31
31. Having no beginning, having no qualities, this Supreme Self imperishable, though dwelling in the Body, O son of Kunti: neither acts nor is tainted.The Self has no beginning, no cause. That which has a cause perishes by itself, whereas This (Self) does not perish, because, as having no cause, He is without parts. Further, He does not perish because He is without qualities ; for that which has qualities perishes by loss of qualities; whereas the Self does not perish, because He is devoid of qualities. Thus the Supreme Self imperishable He suffers no destruction. Therefore, though dwelling in the body,the Self is said to dwell in the body because the Self is manifested in the body, yet He does not act. Because He does not act, He is not affected by the results of acts. The meaning is this:He that is an agent is affected by the fruit of the act ; but this (the Self) is a nonagent and is therefore not tainted by the fruit of action.(Objection):Who, then, in the bodies acts and is tainted If, on the one hand, an embodied self, distinct from the supreme Self, acts and is tainted, then the identity of Kshetrajna with the Isvara spoken of in such places as xiii. 2 would be inexplicable. If, on the other hand, there is no embodied self distinct from the Isvara, then tell me who acts and is tainted: or say that the Isvara is not Supreme. On the ground that the doctrine or the Upanishads taught by the Lord is thus in every way difficult to understand and difficult to explain, it has been abandoned by the Vaiseshikas, as well as by the Sankhyas, the Arhatas, and the Buddhists.(.answer):As regards this objection, the following answer has been afforded by the Lord Himself.
Sri Shankaracharaya
31. As this Paramatman is beginningless and devoid of qualities, He is without or devoid of destruction. Even if He exists in the body, neither does He perform any Karmas nor does the fruit of any Karma affect or taint Him.
Sri. Gangolli D.B
Copyright © 2002 - 2011 HungamaMasti™. All Rights Reserved.
Best viewed with Internet Explorer 5.0 and above and on 800 x 600 screen resolution.