5. Jnana, Karma and Bhakti Yoga
The Gita is perceived differently by different people
depending on their perspective.
There are three different paths given in the Gita which are karma yoga, sankhya
yoga and bhakti yoga. Karma yoga is ideal for someone who is mind-
oriented. Sankhya yoga is for intellect and bhakti yoga for heart
oriented.
In today’s world, the majority falls in the category of mind oriented. It is based on the belief that they are tied
up with chains and need to work hard to break them to free themselves. This
implies that it is action oriented. Any conversation with them would end up
with ‘What should I do now’. This path leads us to nishkaam-karma i.e.
unmotivated action.
Sankhya yoga, also known as jnana yoga, is about awareness or
knowing, but not knowledge. Its starting point is the belief that we are in a
dark room. To
dispel darkness, we simply need to light a lamp, as no amount of action or
struggle can remove it. This path takes us towards ‘choiceless awareness’.
Bhakti yoga is about surrender. Its followers equate themselves to a
wave which owes its existence to the ocean and the ocean being Paramatma,
the Supreme Being.
In the beginning, the language and understanding of these three paths would
be quite different. If a path of awareness is explained to a mind-oriented
person, he would keep looking for some action for awareness.
Certainly, these are not watertight paths. The combination of these three
shapes our experiences in our daily lives. For example, when karma and sankhya
paths meet we will get awareness that the final destiny of all karmas is
a mirage. Subsequently we get detached to karma as well as karma-phal
while performing any karma. Every karma becomes an act in a
drama.
Just like the entire universe is a combination of three particles namely electron,
proton and neutron, the spiritual world is a combination of these three paths.
Krishna says, all these paths have one common destination of realizing the self,
which is free of ahankaar.
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