Monday, December 04, 2017

Bhagavad-Gita (between 5th and 2nd centuries BCE?)

(130 pages)

Wasn't familiar with this until Dharma sent us a link to a TED talk - in which a pretty engaging speaker sought to pull some lessons for current application - the talk was good enough to encourage me to read the entire work.

Which consists of 700 verses in the midst of a very long Hindu epic named Mahabharata.

Prince Arjuna is speaking to his charioteer Lord Krishna - though not recognizing him until later in the discussion.  The conversation takes place just before what is certain to be a major battle - Arjuna recognizes family and friends on the other side - despairs whether fighting is the right thing to do.  Lord Krishna explains why Arjuna should fight; speaks with compassion, insight, patience (and much much more); lets Arjuna make his own decision.

Useful thoughts throughout; many overlap, almost down to the word, with Bible passages.  I liked Krishna's way of advising to focus on what one can control without being overly concerned with the outcome; with doing one's duties well, choosing responsibilities wisely, in part to reciprocate for what's been given.

"See a bit of yourself in everything around you, and a bit of everything in you" - nice.

Some discussion of castes; need to figure out better how this fits in.

No comments:

Post a Comment