Visvarupa Darsana Yoga
Arjuna requests to see Krishna's cosmic form. Krishna grants divine vision and reveals the universal form — an awesome, terrifying vision of all creation, preservation, and destruction simultaneously. Arjuna is overwhelmed and begs Krishna to return to his gentle, personal form.
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Translation
By the supreme and secret teaching concerning the Self, which You have spoken out of grace toward me, this delusion of mine has been dispelled.
Arjuna said: Out of grace to me, the supreme secret known as Self-knowledge has been spoken by You — by that word, this delusion of mine has been dispelled.
Chapter 11 opens with Arjuna's acknowledgment that the previous teaching (Chapters 1-10) has dispelled his moha (delusion). But he wants to see, not merely hear. The request for darśana (vision) moves from śravana (hearing) to the direct experience of the teaching.
In Advaita, moha dispelled is the beginning of liberation. Arjuna has heard the supreme knowledge — now he wants the supreme vision. This shift from intellectual understanding to experiential confirmation is the movement from vichāra to anubhava.
Osho noted: hearing about the ocean is not enough for someone who has lived by it. Arjuna has heard about the cosmic reality from Krishna — now he wants to see it with his own eyes. This is the leap from faith to direct perception.
Madanugrāhāya — 'for my grace/benefit.' Arjuna recognizes that this knowledge was given not as an abstract teaching but as a personal gift of grace. The acknowledgment of grace is itself the beginning of proper receptivity.
The dispelling of moha by spoken teaching is the first phase. But moha can return when life's pressures mount. The vision Arjuna now seeks is the confirmation that transforms heard knowledge into unshakeable direct recognition.
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Translation
For I have heard from You in full detail the origin and dissolution of beings, O lotus-eyed one, and also Your imperishable majesty.
The origin and dissolution of beings have been heard by me in detail from You, O lotus-petal-eyed one, and also Your imperishable greatness.
Arjuna acknowledges the complete cosmological teaching received: bhava (origin/birth/creation) and apyaya (dissolution/return). He has grasped the theoretical framework — now he wants the direct perception behind it.
In Advaita, the teaching of bhava-apyaya (creation-dissolution) reveals the cyclical nature of manifestation. The Lord himself is beyond this cycle — avyaya (imperishable). Understanding this distinction is foundational to liberation.
Osho noted the term kamalapatrākṣa (lotus-petal-eyed): the one who addresses the Divine with such an intimate, tender name is no longer afraid. Arjuna's fear has dissolved; he speaks with the intimacy of one who has genuinely received the teaching.
Vistaraśaḥ — 'in detail.' Arjuna has been a thorough student. He has absorbed everything from Chapters 2-10. The request for the cosmic vision comes from one who has done the preparation. The vision is sought as the culmination of preparation, not a shortcut.
Bhavāpyayau — origin and dissolution. These two together frame all of existence: where it comes from, where it returns. Having understood both poles, Arjuna now wants to see the one in whom both poles meet — the imperishable source of both arising and return.
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Translation
Even as You have declared Yourself to be, O Supreme Lord, so it is. Yet I long to behold Your divine, sovereign form, O Supreme Person.
Thus, as You have described Yourself, O Supreme Lord — I wish to see Your divine form, O Supreme Person.
The request: having heard the description, Arjuna wants the vision. Draṣṭum icchāmi — 'I wish to see.' This is the movement from śruti (heard knowledge) to dṛṣṭi (vision). The Gita moves into the realm of the directly experiential.
In Advaita, the desire to see the Lord's divine form (aiśvara-rūpa) is a legitimate stage of spiritual development. For the bhakta, the intellectual recognition of Brahman wants to be confirmed by vision. This vision, in the Advaitic reading, is ultimately the vision of one's own Self as the cosmic reality.
Osho said: this is the moment of the real teaching. Arjuna has heard everything — and still says 'I want to see.' This is honest and profound. Understanding that the intellect cannot be satisfied by words alone, he asks for direct experience. That honesty is itself the doorway.
Parameśvara and Puruṣottama — two great names in one verse. Parameśvara (supreme ruler) acknowledges transcendence; Puruṣottama (Supreme Person) acknowledges immanence and personal relatedness. Arjuna addresses both aspects simultaneously.
The desire for darśana (vision/sight of the Divine) is not mere curiosity — it is the spiritual hunger that drives the entire devotional path. The teaching can prepare the mind; the vision confirms what the teaching pointed to. Both are necessary.
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Translation
If You think it possible for me to look upon it, O Lord — O Master of Yoga — then reveal to me Your imperishable Self.
If You consider it possible for me to see this, O Lord — O Lord of Yoga — then show me Your imperishable Self.
The humility of the request: 'if You consider it possible for me.' Arjuna doesn't demand — he asks with the recognition that the vision is the Lord's gift to grant or withhold based on the seeker's readiness.
In Advaita, Yogeśvara — 'Lord of Yoga' — is the supreme teacher who has mastered all the yoga-śaktis (creative powers). The request to see the ātmānam avyayam (imperishable Self) is ultimately a request to see one's own nature. But the vision comes through grace.
Osho noted: 'if you consider it possible' is the perfect prayer. Not demanding, not begging — asking with trust. The person who asks with this quality of openness is already more prepared to receive than one who demands with certainty.
Ātmānam avyayam — 'Your imperishable Self.' What Arjuna seeks to see is not a spectacular display but the truth of who Krishna is at the deepest level. The cosmic vision will be the gateway to this recognition — though the vision itself is only the beginning.
Yogeśvara — the Lord of Yoga. Only the master of all yoga can show the student the reality behind all yoga. The request is well-directed: not to an ordinary teacher but to the source of all yogic power. The vision given by such a source will be complete.
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Translation
The Blessed Lord said: Behold, O Partha, My forms by the hundreds and the thousands — manifold, divine, of many colors and many shapes.
The Blessed Lord said: Behold, O Partha, My forms — by the hundreds and thousands — of various kinds, divine, of many colors and forms.
Krishna responds to Arjuna's request with an imperative: paśya — 'behold!' Not 'I will explain' but 'look!' The cosmic vision begins with this command. Hundreds and thousands of forms: the infinite diversity of the Divine's self-expression.
In Advaita, the countless forms Krishna offers to show are all names and forms of the one Brahman. The vision of the cosmic form is designed to reveal the unity behind apparent multiplicity — the one in whom all the many inhere.
Osho observed: 'behold' is the most important word in this verse. Not think, not analyze, not believe — behold. The entire Vishvarupa teaching is about shifting from conceptual knowing to direct perception. The word 'paśya' (see) opens a new mode of knowing.
Nānāvidhāni — 'of various kinds.' The Divine's infinite creativity expresses in an endless variety of forms. No single form exhausts the Divine's expressiveness. The cosmic vision shows what no single ordinary perspective can see: the totality of divine self-expression.
Śataśaḥ sahasraśaḥ — 'hundreds and thousands.' The teaching through overwhelming abundance: when you see the divine in hundreds and thousands of forms simultaneously, the ordinary habit of naming and categorizing breaks down. What remains is pure seeing.
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Translation
Behold the Adityas, the Vasus, the Rudras, the two Ashvins, and the Maruts — behold, O Bharata, many marvels never seen before.
Behold the Adityas, the Vasus, the Rudras, the two Ashvins, and the Maruts — and many wonders never before seen, O Bharata.
Krishna itemizes the divine hosts visible in the cosmic form: the Adityas (solar deities), Vasus (elemental deities), Rudras (storm forces), Ashvins (divine physicians), and Maruts (wind gods). These are the deities of the Vedic cosmos, all simultaneously visible.
In Advaita, seeing all these divine hosts 'within' the cosmic form of Krishna reveals the unitary ground of all deity-worship: all gods are expressions of the one Brahman. The diversity of the pantheon resolves into the single divine consciousness.
Osho pointed out 'adṛṣṭapūrvāṇi' — 'never before seen.' This is the promise of genuine darśana: not the confirmation of what you already know but the revelation of what you have never been able to see. Every genuine spiritual encounter shows you what was invisible before.
The Vedic pantheon is listed because Arjuna would recognize these deities from his education. Krishna is saying: all of them — every deity you have ever worshipped or known of — are present simultaneously in this one form. Nothing is excluded.
Never before seen (adṛṣṭapūrvāṇi) points to the extra-ordinary nature of the vision. Ordinary perception operates within the bounds of familiar categories. The cosmic vision breaks those bounds and reveals what lies outside the ordinary frameworks of perception.
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Translation
Behold now, O Gudakesha, the whole universe, with all that moves and does not move, standing together as one here in My body — and whatever else you wish to see.
Here behold the entire world — the moving and the unmoving — standing as one in My body today, O Gudakesha, and whatever else you wish to see.
The cosmic vision offers total comprehension: the entire world, the moving (animate) and unmoving (inanimate), standing as one (ekastham) in the Divine's body. The multiplicity is contained in the one. Whatever Arjuna wishes to see is available within this one vision.
In Advaita, ekastham — 'standing as one' — is the key teaching of the vision: all the apparent diversity of the world is one in Brahman. The Vishvarupa darśana is the perceptual equivalent of the Upaniṣadic statement 'all this is indeed Brahman.'
Osho said: the promise 'whatever else you wish to see' is staggering. The Divine's body contains everything — every question answered, every mystery revealed. The seeker doesn't need to search anywhere else. The entire reality is here in this one vision.
Mama dehe — 'in My body.' Not outside, not at some other location, not in the future — right here, right now, in the body of the one Arjuna has been speaking with. The revelation is always already present; what changes is the capacity to see it.
Gudākeśa — 'conqueror of sleep.' At this moment of supreme vision, Arjuna is addressed as one who is fully awake. The cosmic vision is for the fully awake consciousness; the spiritually asleep cannot receive it even if offered.
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Translation
But you cannot see Me with these eyes of yours. I grant you a divine eye — now behold My sovereign power of yoga.
But you are not able to see Me with your own eyes alone. I give you divine vision — behold My divine sovereign power!
The crucial verse: ordinary sensory perception cannot see the cosmic reality. The Divine must give a new instrument of seeing — divyaṃ cakṣuḥ (divine eye/vision). The limitation is not of the reality but of the ordinary perception.
In Advaita, the divine eye (divya-cakṣu) is the eye of wisdom (jñāna-cakṣu) — the seeing that arises when the veil of māyā is temporarily lifted. This seeing is not a physical phenomenon but a shift in the quality of consciousness itself.
Osho observed: the grace of the divine eye is the greatest gift. You cannot see the Divine with the same eyes that see tables and chairs. A new instrument is required — and it cannot be manufactured by effort alone. It is given. That is grace.
Svacakṣuṣā — 'with your own eyes.' The ordinary eyes are instruments calibrated for practical navigation of the phenomenal world. They cannot receive what is beyond phenomena. This is not a limitation of the eyes — it is the nature of the extraordinary reality being revealed.
Divyaṃ cakṣuḥ dadāmi te — 'I give you divine vision.' The gift precedes the vision. Grace must come first; the vision follows. This is the structure of all genuine spiritual experience: you cannot prepare enough to earn the vision; you can only prepare enough to receive the gift.
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Translation
Sanjaya said: Having spoken thus, O King, Hari, the great Lord of Yoga, then revealed to Partha His supreme, sovereign form —
Sanjaya said: O King, thus having spoken, the great Lord of Yoga, Hari, then showed Partha His supreme divine form.
The narrative shifts to Sanjaya's third-person account. Mahāyogeśvara — 'the great Lord of Yoga' — identifies Krishna as the source of all yogic power before describing the vision. The showing is an act of supreme grace by the supreme yogin.
In Advaita, Sanjaya's role is significant: he sees the vision through the divine eye given by Vyasa. This means the cosmic vision can be transmitted — received in deep meditation or through the grace of a realized teacher — not only in the direct presence of the avatāra.
Osho noted: Sanjaya watches from a distance with divine sight. This teaches something important: the cosmic reality is visible from wherever you are if you have the right instrument of perception. Geography is irrelevant; inner preparation is everything.
Darśayāmāsa — 'showed.' An act of showing, not explaining. The Divine demonstrates rather than lectures at this crucial juncture. The cosmic form is the greatest show in the history of the universe — but it is shown only when the student is ready.
Paramam rūpam aiśvaram — 'supreme divine form.' Not one of the thousands of forms mentioned in v.5 but the supreme form that contains all other forms. This is the totalizing vision: not one perspective among many but the totality seen at once.
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Translation
with many mouths and eyes, with many wondrous aspects, with many divine ornaments, and with many divine weapons raised on high;
Many-mouthed, many-eyed, showing many wonderful visions, adorned with many divine ornaments, with many divine weapons raised.
Sanjaya begins describing the cosmic form through a cascade of 'aneka' (many): many mouths, many eyes, many wonders, many ornaments, many weapons. The repetition of 'many' breaks the mind's expectation of unity and singularity in the Divine.
In Advaita, the many mouths and eyes represent the Divine's simultaneous speaking and seeing through all beings. Every sentient being's eyes are the Divine's eyes; every voice is the Divine's voice. The cosmic form makes this abstract truth visually immediate.
Osho said: the 'many-ness' is deliberately overwhelming. The mind that tries to categorize and make sense of ordinary experience is broken by this vision. It cannot process 'many mouths, many eyes simultaneously' — and in that breaking, the separate-self's defenses dissolve.
Aneka — 'many' — repeated four times. The cosmic form has no human scale. It cannot be taken in through any single sensory act. The act of seeing it requires a complete overhaul of how one perceives. The divine eye (divya-cakṣu) operates on a different principle entirely.
Divyānekodyatāyudham — 'many divine weapons raised.' The weapons are not instruments of aggression but symbols of the Divine's complete power: the power to create, sustain, transform, and dissolve. All cosmic functions are simultaneously active in this form.
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Translation
wearing divine garlands and garments, anointed with divine fragrances, made of all marvels — the infinite God, facing every direction.
Wearing divine garlands and garments, anointed with divine fragrances — the all-wonderful, infinite Divine, facing in all directions.
Sanjaya's description shifts from the overwhelming multiplicity of v.10 to the magnificent beauty of the cosmic form: divine garlands, divine garments, divine fragrances. The infinite Divine is not just terrifying but also supremely beautiful.
In Advaita, viśvatomukham — 'universal-faced' — is the key term: the Divine faces in all directions simultaneously, which means it is present to every being equally at all times. There is no direction from which the Divine is turned away.
Osho noted: the cosmic form includes beauty and fragrance alongside terror and grandeur. The Divine is the totality of experience — not just the overwhelming but also the exquisitely beautiful. This is the completeness of the vision.
Sarvāścaryamayam — 'all-wonderful.' Not just wonderful in parts or for a moment but entirely wonder-full. The cosmic form is the supreme object of wonder — the thing that, once seen, makes all other objects of wonder seem small by comparison.
Anantam — 'infinite.' The defining characteristic: the cosmic form has no edges, no limits. It extends beyond what any horizon can contain. Infinity cannot be grasped; it can only be glimpsed. Even the cosmic vision is a glimpse of the limitless.
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Translation
Were the light of a thousand suns to blaze forth all at once in the sky, it might resemble the splendor of that exalted Being.
If a thousand suns were to rise simultaneously in the sky — that radiance would be similar to the radiance of that great-souled one.
The most famous simile in the Gita: a thousand simultaneous suns. Sanjaya reaches for the most extreme image of light available and says it would be comparable — not equivalent — to the cosmic form's radiance. The actual radiance exceeds even this analogy.
In Advaita, the sun-of-suns radiance is the metaphor for the light of Brahman-consciousness: the light that illumines all other lights, that makes the physical sun itself visible. This is cit-śakti — the radiance of pure awareness beyond all physical luminosity.
Osho said: when J. Robert Oppenheimer witnessed the first nuclear explosion, he quoted this verse. The physical bomb's light recalled the cosmic vision's light — and the bomb also, like the cosmic form, revealed the power of destruction alongside the awesome beauty.
Sūryasahasrasya yugapad utthitā — 'a thousand suns risen simultaneously.' This image breaks the mind's reference frame. We understand one sun. We can imagine two. At a thousand, simultaneously, the imagination fails — and that failure is the teaching.
Sadṛśī — 'similar to.' Not identical, not equal — similar. The analogy of the thousand suns is the closest human language and imagination can come. The reality exceeds even the most extreme analogy. This honest incompleteness is the most accurate description possible.
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Translation
There, within the body of the God of gods, the son of Pandu beheld the whole universe, divided into its countless parts yet resting together as one.
There, in the body of the God of gods, the Pandava then saw the entire world — divided into many yet standing as one.
The culmination of Sanjaya's description: Arjuna saw the entire world — in all its multiplicity (pravibhaktam anekadhā — 'divided in many ways') — yet standing as one (ekastham) in the body of the Divine. Unity in diversity, one in many.
In Advaita, this is the highest vision: the world appears diverse (pravibhaktam anekadhā) from the ordinary perspective but is recognized as one (ekastham) from the perspective of Brahman-consciousness. The cosmic vision makes this recognition perceptual rather than merely conceptual.
Osho said: this is the supreme statement of the Vishvarupa chapter. All of the world's apparent divisions — nations, species, elements, experiences — seen as one. Not dissolved into undifferentiated sameness but multiplicity-in-unity: the world as a single complex organism.
Devadevasya śarīre — 'in the body of the God of gods.' The universe as the body of the Divine: not a metaphor but a recognition. Every particle of existence is the Divine's body. You are reading this text in the body of the Divine.
Ekastham ... anekadhā — 'one ... in many ways.' This paradox is the heart of all non-dual teaching: the many are not contradicted by the one; the one is not negated by the many. Both are simultaneously true. The Vishvarupa vision makes this paradox directly perceivable.
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Translation
Then Arjuna, the winner of wealth, overcome with wonder and his hair standing on end, bowed his head before the God and spoke with palms joined in reverence.
Then Arjuna — filled with amazement, hair standing on end — bowing his head to the Divine with joined palms, spoke.
The physical response to the cosmic vision: vismayāviṣṭa (overwhelmed with wonder), hṛṣṭaromā (hair standing on end — the classic Indian sign of profound emotional arousal). Arjuna bows spontaneously — the body knows the appropriate response even before the mind can process.
In Advaita, hṛṣṭaromā — 'thrilled to the hair-roots' — is the physical expression of brahmanānda (the bliss of Brahman contact). The cosmic vision produces this spontaneous physical response: the body recognizing truth even before the mind articulates it.
Osho loved this description: Arjuna asked for the vision; now he receives it and his body responds before his mind can. Hair standing on end is the body's language for 'this is too much and yet exactly right.' It is the body's way of saying: I know this is real.
Praṇamya śirasā — bowing with the head. The appropriate response to the vision of the Divine is surrender — the head (seat of the ego's pride and calculation) bowing to the reality that exceeds all calculation. This bow is not humiliation but recognition.
The joining of palms (kṛtāñjaliḥ): in Indian culture, the añjali gesture represents the merging of the separate streams of individual consciousness into the one. Arjuna's palms joined before the cosmic vision is his gesture of non-separation.
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Translation
Arjuna said: O God, within Your body I behold all the gods and the hosts of every kind of being — Brahma the Lord seated upon his lotus throne, all the sages, and the divine serpents.
Arjuna said: O God, I see in Your body all the gods, all the hosts of special beings, Brahma seated on his lotus-throne, Ishvara, all the sages, and the divine serpents.
Arjuna's direct report of the vision: all the gods visible simultaneously in the Divine's body. Brahma (creator), Ishvara/Shiva (transformer), all sages, divine serpents — the entire hierarchy of cosmic existence visible at once within one form.
In Advaita, seeing all the deities within Krishna's cosmic body is the perceptual confirmation of the philosophical teaching: all gods are expressions of the one Brahman. The vision collapses the theological hierarchy into the single reality.
Osho was moved by Arjuna's excited reporting: 'I see!' Not 'I understand' but 'I see.' The difference between intellectual comprehension and direct vision. Now Arjuna is reporting from experience, not from inference. This is the transformation the vision achieves.
Brahmāṇam... kamalāsanastham — 'Brahma seated on his lotus-throne.' Even the creator-deity, the highest being in the Vedic cosmology, is a guest in Krishna's cosmic body. The vision establishes Krishna's priority over all created beings including the creator.
All the divine serpents (divine nagas) included: even the cosmic forces associated with the underground, the hidden, the chthonic — all are present. The cosmic form excludes nothing. The Divine's body is the home of every being, visible and invisible.
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Translation
I see You everywhere, infinite in form, with countless arms, bellies, mouths, and eyes. I can find in You no end, no middle, and no beginning, O Lord of the universe, O Universal Form.
I see You everywhere with infinite form — many arms, stomachs, faces, and eyes. I see no end, no middle, no beginning of You, O Lord of the Universe.
Arjuna reports the infinity of the cosmic form: no beginning, no middle, no end visible. The infinite cannot be bounded by any perception. Arjuna is experiencing the truth of Brahman's infinitude not as a concept but as a direct perceptual shock.
In Advaita, nāntaṃ na madhyaṃ na punaḥ ādim — 'no end, no middle, no beginning' — is the triple negation (neti-neti) applied to the Divine's form. What cannot be bounded by beginning-middle-end is the Infinite. Arjuna sees the infinite.
Osho said: this is the most frightening aspect of the cosmic vision — there is no edge. We are used to things that have boundaries. The encounter with the boundless is the encounter with what the ego cannot contain. The ego is bounded; the Divine is not.
Anekabāhūdara — 'many arms, many stomachs.' The cosmic form includes even digestion — the stomach. The Divine's body is not ethereal but includes the most basic, biological processes. Everything is within the Divine's body, nothing is excluded.
Viśveśvara — 'Lord of the universe.' Arjuna addresses the cosmic form with this name that acknowledges its scope: lord not of a country or a religion or a cosmos but of the universe itself. The address itself is an act of recognition.
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Translation
I see You crowned, bearing mace and discus — a mass of radiance blazing on every side, hard to look upon, dazzling all around like blazing fire and sun, immeasurable.
I see You crowned, bearing the mace and discus — a mass of radiance, blazing with light on all sides, difficult to look at, with the brilliance of blazing fire and the sun, immeasurable.
The regal aspect of the cosmic form: the Divine as supreme sovereign, wearing the crown, bearing the emblems of power (mace for sovereignty, discus for cosmic law). Yet this sovereign's light is so intense it is almost impossible to look at directly.
In Advaita, the cosmic form's unbearable brightness represents the overwhelming nature of Brahman-consciousness when directly encountered. The ordinary ego-mind literally cannot look at this reality — it is too intense, too vast, too radiant for ordinary perception.
Osho said: durnirīkṣyam — 'difficult to look at.' This is truth's quality. Truth is also difficult to look at. The cosmic vision and the truth are the same in this quality: most people look away, prefer the comfortable familiar, cannot sustain the gaze.
Dīptānalārkadyutim — 'with the brilliance of blazing fire and the sun.' Two of the most intense light-sources available to human experience, combined and then exceeded. The cosmic form's radiance makes the sun and fire seem dim by comparison.
Aprameyam — 'immeasurable.' The Divine cannot be measured — not by instruments, not by the mind, not by any category of thought. Immeasurability is not a limitation of our knowledge but a quality of what is being perceived. The infinite cannot be measured.
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Translation
You are the imperishable, the supreme to be known; You are the ultimate resting place of this universe. You are the changeless guardian of the eternal dharma — You, I am convinced, are the everlasting Person.
You are the imperishable, the supreme that should be known, the ultimate foundation of this universe — You are the imperishable, the guardian of eternal dharma. I consider You to be the Eternal Person.
Arjuna identifies the cosmic form with the Absolute: akṣaram paramam veditavyam (the imperishable supreme to be known from the Upaniṣads), the guardian of eternal dharma, the sanātana Puruṣa. The vision confirms the philosophical teaching.
In Advaita, the identification of the cosmic form with akṣaram paramam (the highest Brahman of the Upaniṣads) bridges the personal and impersonal aspects: the personal cosmic form and the impersonal Brahman are ultimately the same reality seen from different angles.
Osho noted: Arjuna's philosophical recognition deepens his experiential vision. He is not just awestruck — he is understanding what he sees. The seeing and the knowing are happening simultaneously. This is the integration that the Gita is trying to produce.
Śāśvatadharmagoptā — 'guardian of eternal dharma.' The cosmic form is not just power and light — it is also the guardian of the moral and cosmic order. The most terrifying aspect of the Divine is also its most reassuring: it is the upholder of dharma.
Sanātana — 'eternal.' Not ancient (which implies a beginning) but eternal (which has no beginning or end). The cosmic form is not something that appeared; it is what always is. The vision reveals the always-present face of the always-present reality.
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Translation
I see You without beginning, middle, or end, infinite in power, with countless arms, the moon and sun for Your eyes, Your mouth a blazing fire, scorching this whole universe with Your radiance.
I see You — without beginning, middle, or end, of infinite valor, with infinite arms, with the sun and moon as Your eyes, with a mouth blazing like fire, heating this entire universe by Your own radiance.
The full cosmic description: temporally boundless (anādimadhyāntam), energetically infinite (anantavīrya), spatially unlimited (anantabāhu). The sun and moon are the cosmic form's two eyes — the great celestial luminaries are just the Divine's eyes.
In Advaita, śaśisūryanetram — 'sun and moon as eyes' — reveals that the Divine sees through the greatest lights of the cosmos. The sun and moon, which provide light for all earthly life, are merely the Divine's instruments of perception.
Osho was struck by 'heating the entire universe by Your own radiance.' The warmth that makes all life possible on Earth — and by extension throughout the cosmos — is the Divine's own radiating energy. The universe is not cold; it is warmed by the Divine's presence.
Dīptahutāśavaktram — 'mouth blazing like fire.' The cosmic form's speech would be like fire — consuming what it meets, transforming everything it touches. Truth spoken at the cosmic level is not gentle; it burns away what is false.
Anantabāhum — 'with infinite arms.' The infinite arms of the Divine reach everywhere simultaneously. No point in the universe is beyond the reach of the Divine's hand. This is the meaning of omnipotence: not arbitrary power but universal reach.
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Translation
This space between heaven and earth, and all the directions, are pervaded by You alone. Seeing this wondrous and terrible form of Yours, the three worlds tremble, O exalted one.
This space between heaven and earth is pervaded by You alone, and all directions. Having seen Your wonderful and awesome form, the three worlds are trembling, O Great Soul.
Arjuna describes the pervasion: the entire space between heaven and earth — all that is 'above' and 'below' — filled by the Divine alone. And the response: the three worlds (earth, heaven, and the intermediate realm) are trembling at the sight.
In Advaita, tvayaikena — 'by You alone' — is the Advaitic teaching in perceptual form: the infinite space is not filled by many things but pervaded by one. The apparent multiplicity of objects exists in the one pervading consciousness.
Osho said: when the three worlds tremble, this is not metaphorical. Even the gods are shaken by this vision. What is shaking? The assumption that reality is ordinary. The cosmic form shatters every ordinary assumption about what reality is.
Lokatrayam pravyathitam — 'the three worlds are trembling.' The response to authentic divine presence is always this trembling — not from fear exactly but from the recognition that what appeared stable and familiar is revealed as temporary and secondary.
Dyāvāpṛthivyoḥ idam antaram — 'this space between heaven and earth.' The Vedic cosmos is enclosed above and below; between them, the entire realm of experience. This entire realm — everything you have ever experienced — is pervaded by You alone.
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Translation
Into You the hosts of gods are entering; some, afraid, praise You with joined palms. The throngs of great sages and perfected ones cry 'Hail!' and extol You with abundant hymns.
Indeed these hosts of gods are entering You — some, afraid, praising with joined palms, saying 'Hail!' — and the hosts of great sages and Siddhas are praising You with excellent hymns.
Arjuna now describes the response of the cosmic beings to the vision: the gods are entering the cosmic form (dissolution back into the source), some in fear, some in praise. The sages and Siddhas respond with the most refined response: hymns of praise.
In Advaita, the gods entering the cosmic form (viśanti) is the image of all separate expressions of divinity returning to their source — like rivers returning to the ocean. The cosmic form is the primal ocean into which all divine streams flow.
Osho observed: even the gods are afraid. This is the most reassuring and most terrifying aspect of the vision: if the gods tremble before this reality, what are ordinary humans before it? The cosmic reality humbles even the cosmic hierarchy.
Svastīty uktvā — 'saying svasti' (well-being/hail). Even in fear, the response of the wise and the divine is to affirm: svasti (it is well, this is auspicious). The cosmic vision, however terrifying, is ultimately auspicious — it is the truth.
Maharṣisiddhasaṃghāḥ — 'hosts of great sages and Siddhas' praising with abundant hymns. The highest response to the Divine is not fear but praise: the recognition that what one is seeing is supremely worthy of reverence, expressed in the most beautiful language available.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
The Rudras, Adityas, Vasus, and Sadhyas, the Vishvadevas, the two Ashvins, the Maruts, and the ancestral spirits, the hosts of Gandharvas, Yakshas, Asuras, and perfected ones — all gaze upon You in amazement.
The Rudras, Adityas, Vasus, Sadhyas, the Vishvadevas, Ashvins, Maruts, ancestral spirits — all the hosts of Gandharvas, Yakshas, Asuras, and Siddhas — are all looking at You in astonishment.
A comprehensive roll-call of every being in the Vedic cosmos: all twelve categories of celestial beings, all looking at the cosmic form in astonishment. No being in the entire cosmic hierarchy is indifferent to this vision.
In Advaita, the astonishment of all cosmic beings reflects the truth that even the highest created intelligences cannot fully comprehend Brahman. The astonishment is universal — it is not a sign of ignorance but of the appropriate response to infinity.
Osho said: every being in the cosmos, no matter how elevated — Gandharvas (divine musicians), Siddhas (perfected ones), Asuras (powerful beings) — all are stunned into silence by this vision. The cosmic form is the equalizer: before it, all distinctions of rank vanish.
Vismitāḥ — 'astonished.' The root vismaya — wonder, astonishment — is the appropriate response to genuine transcendence. When you encounter what is truly beyond your categories, wonder is the only honest response. The entire cosmos is in wonder.
The inclusion of Asuras (anti-gods) and Yakshas (spirits) along with the gods is significant: even those usually opposed to the divine order are struck with astonishment. The cosmic form transcends the duality of gods and anti-gods.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
Seeing Your great form of many mouths and eyes, O mighty-armed one, of many arms, thighs, and feet, of many bellies and many fearsome fangs, the worlds tremble, and so do I.
O mighty-armed, having seen Your great form — many-faced, many-eyed, many-armed, many-thighed, many-footed, many-bellied, many-fanged and terrible — the worlds are trembling. So am I.
Arjuna confesses his own trembling alongside the worlds. He is not a detached observer of the cosmic vision — he is caught in it, shaken by it. The repetition of 'bahu' (many) creates a kind of vertigo: too many of everything, overwhelming in all directions.
In Advaita, 'the worlds are trembling. So am I' — this confession of the student's equal trembling with the cosmos is the moment where the boundary between observer and observed begins to dissolve. Arjuna is not separate from the cosmic response.
Osho was moved by Arjuna's honesty: 'so am I.' He doesn't pretend to be unaffected. He acknowledges his own trembling. This is the beginning of authentic transformation: the ego that pretends to composure is more bound than the one that trembles honestly.
Bahudaṃṣṭrākarālam — 'terrible with many fangs.' The dental imagery is significant: the teeth that chew, that consume, that break down. The cosmic form is the great digestive process of the universe — it consumes everything that enters it.
Tathāham — 'so am I.' Two words that contain the most important spiritual admission: I am also shaken. The warrior who fought without fear is trembling before the cosmic form. The bravest response to truth is the honest admission of being overwhelmed.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
Seeing You touching the sky, blazing with many colors, Your mouths gaping wide, Your eyes vast and burning, my inmost self trembles; I find neither steadiness nor peace, O Vishnu.
Having seen You — blazing, touching the sky, many-colored, with gaping mouths and blazing wide eyes — my inner self is trembling. I find no steadiness, O Vishnu, and no peace.
Arjuna's psychological state in the vision: pravyathitāntarātmā — his innermost self (the ātmā within) is trembling. Not just his body or emotions but the deepest interior. And the loss: dhṛtiṃ na vindāmi śamaṃ ca — no steadiness, no peace.
In Advaita, the loss of steadiness and peace in the cosmic vision is a necessary phase: the ego's sense of stability is shattered before the Self's stability can be recognized. The trembling is the ego dissolving, not the Self suffering.
Osho said: when you truly encounter the infinite, you lose your footing. This is not a problem — it is the solution. The footing you lose was the footing of the limited self. What you stand on after the encounter is the ground of the Infinite itself.
Pravyathitāntarātmā — 'my inner self trembling.' The 'inner self' here is Arjuna's ordinary sense of self — his ego-identity. The cosmic vision shakes this to the root. The ordinary sense of 'I' cannot remain stable in the face of the cosmic 'I AM.'
Dhṛtiṃ na vindāmi śamaṃ ca — 'I find no steadiness and no peace.' Two of the qualities most valued in spiritual life — dhṛti (steadiness, resolve) and śama (inner peace) — are stripped away by the vision. The vision destroys before it rebuilds.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
Seeing Your mouths terrible with fangs, like the fires of universal destruction, I lose all sense of direction and find no refuge. Have mercy, O Lord of gods, O dwelling place of the worlds.
Just seeing Your mouths — terrible with fangs, resembling the fires of time/death — I don't know the directions and I find no comfort. Be gracious, O Lord of gods, O dwelling of the world!
Arjuna's disorientation deepens: he doesn't know the directions — spatial orientation has collapsed. The fanged mouths resembling the fires of time (kālānala — the cosmic fires of dissolution) produce total disorientation. The first prayer follows: prasīda — 'be gracious!'
In Advaita, the collapse of spatial orientation (diśo na jāne) represents the collapse of the ego's ordinary framework. The ego navigates by directions, boundaries, and categories. When all of these dissolve, what remains is the pure Self — which has no direction because it is everywhere.
Osho said: 'I don't know the directions' — this is the state of genuine enlightenment-shock. When your ordinary framework collapses, you don't know up from down, near from far, self from other. This loss of orientation is the beginning of a deeper orientation.
Kālānalasannibhāni — 'resembling the fires of time.' The fanged mouths are not just fearsome in the ordinary sense — they resemble the fires that consume at the end of cosmic cycles. Arjuna is seeing the ultimate face of impermanence: the force that devours all of time.
Prasīda — 'be gracious!' The first request is not for explanation or instruction but for grace. When overwhelmed beyond comprehension, the only available response is to ask for grace. This is the purest prayer: please be kind to me.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
All these sons of Dhritarashtra, together with the hosts of kings, and Bhishma, Drona, and Karna the charioteer's son, along with the chief warriors of our own side as well —
All these sons of Dhritarashtra — along with hosts of kings, Bhishma, Drona, Karna, and also our own chief warriors —
The cosmic vision suddenly focuses on the immediate: Arjuna sees the specific people from the Kurukshetra battlefield — Duryodhana and his brothers, Bhishma, Drona, Karna — entering the cosmic form's mouths. The abstract becomes terrifyingly personal.
In Advaita, this transition from cosmic abstraction to personal specificity is the teaching's most powerful moment: the cosmic dissolution includes the people Arjuna knows and loves. The same Brahman that is the infinite is also the specific face of Bhishma being devoured.
Osho said: the cosmic vision suddenly shows you what you love being consumed. This is the most difficult aspect: not just abstract souls entering the cosmic mouths but your teacher Drona, your grandfather Bhishma, your rival Karna. The cosmic is personal.
Sūtaputraḥ — 'the son of a charioteer' (Karna). Even in this cosmic moment, the class designation appears — this is how deeply social identity penetrates Indian consciousness. But the cosmic vision treats all of them equally: all enter the same mouths.
Asmākam api — 'our own also.' Arjuna sees his own warriors being drawn into the cosmic form. The vision does not spare his side. The Divine's cosmic form is indifferent to human allegiances — all enter equally, friend and foe alike.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
they rush headlong into Your mouths, fearsome and terrible with fangs. Some are seen caught between Your teeth, their heads ground to dust.
They are rushing into Your terrible, frightful, fang-filled mouths — some visible, stuck between the teeth, with heads crushed.
The horror intensifies: warriors rushing (tvaramāṇāḥ) into the cosmic mouths. Some are already lodged between the teeth, heads crushed. The vision has become a vision of total destruction — the cosmic form as the great consuming force.
In Advaita, the crushed heads (cūrṇitair uttamāṅgaiḥ) represent the crushing of ego (the head is the seat of individual identity and pride). The cosmic form crushes what is separate and returns it to the one. Destruction at the cosmic level is purification.
Osho observed: 'rushing in' — not dragged but rushing. This is significant. Beings rush toward their own dissolution. There is a pull toward the source, a longing to return. Even what appears as death is a rushing of all beings back toward the one from which they came.
Daśanāntareṣu saṃdṛśyante — 'visible between the teeth.' The specificity is disturbing and real: Arjuna can see individuals — specific people he knows — crushed between the cosmic teeth. The vision doesn't spare him the personal application of the cosmic truth.
Cūrṇitaiḥ uttamāṅgaiḥ — 'with crushed heads.' The head — seat of intellect, ego, pride — is what is crushed. This is the teaching: the cosmic dissolution destroys the ego (head) first. What survives the cosmic vision is what was never the ego.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
As the many rushing currents of rivers race toward the ocean, so these heroes of the world of men enter Your blazing mouths.
Just as the many water-currents of rivers flow facing toward the ocean — so these heroes of the world of men are entering Your blazing mouths.
The first simile for the cosmic dissolution: rivers flowing to the ocean. The currents of the rivers — all their individual identities, their sources, their paths — all converge in the one ocean. So the warriors of the world all converge in the cosmic form's mouths.
In Advaita, the river-ocean simile is the classic metaphor for the jīvā-Brahman relationship: individual souls (rivers) arising from and returning to Brahman (ocean). In the cosmic vision, this philosophical metaphor becomes a directly perceptible reality.
Osho loved this simile: rivers don't resist the ocean. They rush toward it. Their entire journey has been a rushing toward the one destination. The warriors rushing into the cosmic mouths are like rivers finally reaching their destination — dissolution in the One.
Abhimukhāḥ dravanti — 'flowing face-forward, rushing.' Not dragged, not resisting — rushing toward the ocean. This is the way of all rivers, all beings: an inherent orientation toward the one. What we call death is this rushing reaching its destination.
Naralokavīrāḥ — 'heroes of the world of men.' These are not ordinary beings — they are heroes, the greatest warriors of the age. Yet they too flow inevitably into the cosmic dissolution. Greatness and smallness, heroism and cowardice — all equally drawn to the one.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
As moths fly into a blazing flame to their destruction with ever-quickening speed, so these worlds rush into Your mouths to their destruction with ever-quickening speed.
Just as moths enter a blazing flame at full speed for their destruction — so indeed the worlds rush into Your mouths at full speed for their destruction.
The second great simile: moths flying into flame. The moth rushes with full speed (samṛddhavegāḥ) toward the very thing that will destroy it. So the beings of the world rush into the cosmic dissolution — not reluctantly but with 'full speed.'
In Advaita, the moth-flame simile has a deeper meaning than mere destruction: the moth's destruction in the flame is also the moth's ultimate union with light. The separate moth dissolves into the light it was always drawn to. Death-as-return is this dynamic.
Osho loved the moth-flame image: the moth doesn't know it will be destroyed. Or perhaps it does know, and can't help it — the beauty of the flame is too compelling. Beings rush into the Divine dissolution like moths: drawn by beauty, arriving at union through apparent destruction.
Nāśāya — 'for destruction.' The word is honest. This is not euphemism: the moths are destroyed, the worlds dissolve. But in the cosmic frame, destruction is transformation. What is destroyed is separateness; what remains is the one.
Samṛddhavegāḥ — 'with full speed.' Not reluctant dissolution but enthusiastic entry. The universe rushes into dissolution. This is why the Bhāgavata says that even the wise who know the truth do not escape dissolution — they embrace it, as the moth embraces the flame.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
Licking with Your flaming mouths, You devour all the worlds on every side. Filling the whole universe with radiance, Your terrible rays scorch it, O Vishnu.
You lick and devour all the worlds entirely from all sides with Your blazing mouths — and Your fierce radiance, O Vishnu, fills the entire world and scorches it.
The cosmic dissolution becomes viscerally immediate: lelihyase (licking — the divine tongue tasting/consuming), grasamānaḥ (devouring). The cosmic form is not passive — it is actively consuming the worlds. And the radiance fills the world and scorches.
In Advaita, licking and devouring represents the Divine's continuous consumption of the manifest world back into itself. Creation and dissolution are simultaneous — even now, the world is being created and dissolved moment to moment in the Divine's ongoing activity.
Osho observed: the cosmic form is not still and dignified — it licks, it devours, it scorches. This is the terrifying face of the Divine that most religions prefer not to show: the God who is also the great destroyer. But without this face, the picture is incomplete.
Pratapanti — 'are scorching.' The radiance of the cosmic form scorches the world. Truth at this intensity is not comfortable — it burns away what is not real. The cosmic vision is the ultimate test of what is real: what can survive being scorched by the Divine's own radiance?
Viṣṇo — 'O Vishnu.' Arjuna addresses the cosmic form as Vishnu — the all-pervading. The devouring and the pervading are the same act: what is devoured is not destroyed but returned to the pervasive Brahman-consciousness from which it arose.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
Tell me who You are, so terrible in form. I bow to You, O best of gods; have mercy. I long to know You, the primal One, for I cannot fathom Your working.
Tell me — who are You of terrible form? Salutation to You, O best of gods. Be gracious. I wish to know You, the primal One — for I do not understand Your action.
The central question of Chapter 11: ko bhavān ugrarūpaḥ — 'who are You of terrible form?' Arjuna asks what no ordinary devotee has dared ask: who is this destroying force? What is the intention behind this terrible action?
In Advaita, the question 'who are You?' is the deepest spiritual question — Ramana Maharshi's self-inquiry begins here. The cosmic vision transforms this question from an abstract philosophical inquiry to an urgent, visceral existential demand.
Osho said: this is the most important question of the chapter. Arjuna has seen the cosmic vision, has been shaken and awed and terrified — and now he asks 'who are you?' This is not intellectual curiosity. It is the cry of the soul encountering what it cannot contain.
Na hi prajānāmi tava pravṛttim — 'I do not understand Your action.' Arjuna is honest about not understanding. This honest admission of incomprehension opens the space for Krishna's answer. The one who pretends to understand closes the door to real understanding.
Namas tu te — 'salutation to You.' Even in the midst of terror and incomprehension, Arjuna bows. The instinct to revere transcends the capacity to understand. This is the essence of genuine devotion: reverence that doesn't require comprehension.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
The Blessed Lord said: I am Time, the mighty destroyer of worlds, grown great, set forth here to annihilate the worlds. Even without you, all these warriors arrayed in the opposing ranks shall cease to be.
The Blessed Lord said: I am Time, the mighty destroyer of worlds, come forth to destroy the worlds here. Even without you, all the warriors arrayed in the opposing armies will cease to be.
Krishna's answer to 'who are you?': kālo'smi — 'I am Time.' Not just a god, not just the cosmic form — Time itself: the force that destroys all worlds. And the staggering statement: even without Arjuna's action, these warriors are already destroyed.
In Advaita, kālo'smi — 'I am Time' — is the recognition that the Divine is the ultimate consuming force. Time destroys everything that is conditioned. Recognizing the Divine as Time is recognizing the impermanence of everything except Brahman itself.
Osho was electrified by this answer: 'I am Time.' When J. Robert Oppenheimer saw the first atomic bomb, he quoted these words. The destructive power of time — whether in natural death or human weapons — is the Divine's most awesome face.
Ṛte api tvām — 'even without you.' This is the most provocative statement: the warriors are already dead. The cosmic order (Time/Fate) has already consumed them. Arjuna's action or inaction cannot change what Time has already decided.
Pravṛddhaḥ — 'grown powerful/mature.' Time is not a young force that can be resisted. Time has grown powerful through the eons of cosmic existence. No individual action, no heroism, no cowardice can hold back what Time has already set in motion.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
Therefore arise and win glory. Conquer your enemies and enjoy a thriving kingdom. By Me alone these have already been slain; be merely My instrument, O Arjuna, ambidextrous archer.
Therefore arise, win glory, conquer the enemies, and enjoy the prosperous kingdom! By Me alone these have been slain already. Be merely the instrument, O Savyasachin.
The practical conclusion from the cosmic revelation: arise (uttiṣṭha), win glory (yaśo labhasva), enjoy the kingdom. The warriors are already slain by Time/the Divine. Arjuna is invited to be the nimittamātra — merely the instrument — not the agent.
In Advaita, nimittamātram bhava — 'be merely the instrument' — is the complete statement of karma yoga: don't be the doer, don't claim the fruits, be the instrument through which the Divine acts. The cosmic vision has revealed who the real agent is.
Osho said: this is the most liberating instruction. You don't have to be the hero who saves the day. You just have to be the instrument. The universe is not asking you to be Atlas, holding up the world. It's asking you to play your part in what is already unfolding.
Mayaiva ete nihatāḥ pūrvam eva — 'by Me alone these have already been slain.' This radical declaration removes the weight of personal agency from Arjuna. He is not killing them — they are already killed by Time. He is only the visible instrument of what is already accomplished.
Savyasācin — 'one who can shoot with both hands' (a title for Arjuna). Even in the cosmic context, Krishna addresses Arjuna by his warrior-skill. The cosmic instruction is given in terms of Arjuna's specific capacity. The instrument should function according to its nature.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
Drona and Bhishma, Jayadratha and Karna, and the other warrior-heroes too — already slain by Me — slay them. Do not falter. Fight! You shall conquer your rivals in battle.
Slay Drona, Bhishma, Jayadratha, Karna, and the other warrior-heroes — already slain by Me. Do not be distressed. Fight! You will conquer the adversaries in battle.
The specific names: Drona (teacher), Bhishma (grandfather), Jayadratha, Karna. These are the ones Arjuna most hesitates to kill. Krishna names them specifically — each already slain by the Divine. The cosmic vision removes the personal anguish from what Time has already decided.
In Advaita, hatān jahi — 'slay what is already slain' — is the paradox of action in non-dual awareness: the action is performed, but since the actor is an instrument and the result is already accomplished by the Divine, there is no real killing, no real agent.
Osho said: 'already slain by Me' — this is the most compassionate possible instruction. Krishna doesn't tell Arjuna to overcome his love for Bhishma and Drona by hardening himself. He shows Arjuna that they are already gone — the love is unchanged but the grief is needless.
Mā vyathiṣṭhāḥ — 'do not be distressed.' After the cosmic vision, after the revelation of Time as destroyer, the simple instruction: don't be distressed. The appropriate response to knowing the cosmic truth is not despair but action with equanimity.
Jetāsi — 'you will conquer.' Not 'try to conquer' but 'you will conquer.' The outcome of dharmic action aligned with the cosmic order is already decided. The warrior aligned with the cosmic purpose cannot ultimately fail — even if individual battles are lost.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
Sanjaya said: Hearing these words of Keshava, the diademed Arjuna, trembling and with palms joined, bowed down; and overcome with fear, bowing again, he spoke to Krishna in a faltering voice.
Sanjaya said: Hearing this word of Keshava, the diademed Arjuna — trembling, with joined palms, again bowing — spoke to Krishna with choked voice and extreme fear.
The narrative resumes with Sanjaya. Arjuna's physical state after Krishna's answer: trembling (vepamānaḥ), voice choked (sagadgadam), extremely frightened (bhītabhītaḥ). The cosmic revelation has not calmed him — it has deepened the awe.
In Advaita, sagadgadam — 'with choked voice' — is the sign of the highest bhakti: the voice that can no longer speak normally because the heart is so full. The choked voice is not a failure of speech but the overflow of what speech cannot contain.
Osho loved this description: bhītabhītaḥ — 'extremely frightened.' After the cosmic revelation, Arjuna is more frightened than before, not less. Real encounter with the Divine intensifies everything — it doesn't soothe. The soothing comes later, after the transformation.
Vepamānaḥ kṛtāñjaliḥ — 'trembling with joined palms.' The body and the gesture are perfectly aligned: the trembling is the body's truth, the joined palms are the soul's truth. Both are genuine. Both are appropriate to the moment.
The choked voice (sagadgadam) is important: Arjuna is about to offer the greatest prayer in the Gita. But the prayer begins in a choked voice — not in the clarity of prepared speech but in the rawness of genuinely shaken consciousness. Real prayer sounds like this.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
Arjuna said: Rightly, O Hrishikesha, does the world rejoice and delight in Your glory; the demons flee in terror in every direction, and all the hosts of the perfected ones bow before You.
Arjuna said: Rightly, O Hrishikesha, the world is delighted and drawn in love by the glorification of You; the Rakshasas, frightened, flee in all directions, and all the hosts of Siddhas bow.
Arjuna's prayer of recognition begins: sthāne — 'rightly.' The cosmic form's glorification is the right response for the world. Love and terror are simultaneously the appropriate responses to the Divine: the worlds love and flee at the same time.
In Advaita, prahṛṣyati anurajyate — 'is delighted and drawn in love' — describes the world's natural response to Brahman when recognized: joy and love. These are the natural fruits of recognizing what one fundamentally is.
Osho noted the different responses: the Siddhas bow in reverence, the Rakshasas flee in terror. The same Divine reality produces these opposite responses in different beings — not because the Divine changes but because the beings encounter it from such different places.
Hṛṣīkeśa — 'controller of the senses.' Arjuna addresses Krishna by this name that means: the one who governs all senses. Even the senses' responses — delight, love, fear — are ultimately governed by the one being addressed.
Sthāne — 'rightly/fitly.' This word of recognition is beautiful: Arjuna sees the fitness of everything he has witnessed. Not despite the terror and wonder but because of it — the cosmic form is exactly what the cosmic reality should look like. It is right.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
And why should they not bow to You, O exalted one, greater even than Brahma, the original creator? O Infinite, Lord of gods, dwelling of the worlds, You are the imperishable — being, non-being, and that which is beyond both.
And why should they not bow to You, O Great Soul — greater than even Brahma, the original creator, O Infinite, O Lord of gods, O abode of the world? You are the imperishable, being and non-being, and that which is beyond both.
Arjuna's theological recognition deepens: Krishna is greater than even Brahma (the creator). He is akṣaram (imperishable), sat (being), asat (non-being), and tatparam (that which transcends both being and non-being). The full metaphysical range.
In Advaita, sat-asat-tatparam is the Upaniṣadic description of Brahman: beyond being and non-being, transcending all categories. Arjuna has arrived at the language of the highest Vedanta through direct vision, not through textual study.
Osho said: greater than even Brahma — this places Krishna beyond the entire cosmic hierarchy. Brahma is the creator; Krishna is beyond creation and creator alike. This is Advaita: Brahman is not a creator-God but the ground that precedes even the distinction between creator and created.
Jagannivāsa — 'abode of the world.' The world dwells in the Divine. This is the inversion of ordinary spatial thinking: not the world containing the Divine (as in the pantheist idea of 'the Divine in the world') but the Divine containing the world.
Tatparam ca yat — 'and that which is beyond both.' The Gita's most philosophically precise statement: the Divine is beyond the sat-asat (being-non-being) duality. This places Brahman beyond ontology itself — beyond the question of existence and non-existence.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
You are the primal God, the ancient Person; You are the supreme resting place of this universe. You are the knower and the known, the supreme abode. By You, O Form without limit, is the universe pervaded.
You are the primal God, the ancient Person, the ultimate resting place of this universe. You are the knower and the supreme object of knowledge, the supreme abode. By You the universe is pervaded, O one of infinite form.
Arjuna's recognition in the prayer: ādidevah (primal God), puruṣaḥ purāṇaḥ (the eternal Person), the ultimate resting place (param nidhānam), knower, supreme object of knowledge, supreme abode. The entire theological vocabulary exhausted in one verse.
In Advaita, vettāsi vedyaṃ ca — 'You know and You are what is to be known' — is the non-dual statement: in Brahman, the knower and the known are one. The division between subject-of-knowledge and object-of-knowledge dissolves.
Osho said: every great name humans have ever given to the Divine is here: primal, eternal, resting place, knower, known, abode. Arjuna throws every theological concept he has at the cosmic form — and the cosmic form contains them all.
Param nidhānam — 'the ultimate resting place.' Not just the source (from which things come) but the resting place (to which things return and in which they rest). The Divine is both origin and home. This double role is the most comforting aspect of Brahman.
Tvayā tatam viśvam — 'the universe is pervaded by You.' The Gita returns again and again to this image of pervasion. Not God in the universe but the universe in God, pervaded by God. This is the correct relationship: Brahman pervades, the world is the pervaded.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
You are Vayu, Yama, Agni, Varuna, the Moon, Prajapati, and the great-grandsire of all. Salutation, salutation to You a thousandfold — and yet again and again, salutation, salutation to You.
You are Vayu, Yama, Agni, Varuna, the Moon, Prajapati, the great-grandfather. Salutation, salutation to You — a thousand times! And again and again, salutation, salutation to You!
The great salutation of Chapter 11: all the Vedic cosmic forces identified as the Divine, then the cascade of namaste — salutation. A thousand times, again and again. The repetition is the most honest prayer: what words can say to the infinite is said by repetition.
In Advaita, the identification of each cosmic force (wind, death, fire, law, moon, creative power) as the Divine is the vibhūti teaching applied cosmologically. There is no force in the universe that is not the Divine's expression.
Osho loved the cascade of namaste: sahasrakṛtvaḥ punaśca bhūyo'pi — 'a thousand times and again and again.' When language fails before the infinite, repetition becomes the only honest linguistic act. The word is repeated because one utterance is not enough.
Prapitāmahaḥ — 'great-grandfather.' Krishna is the ancestor of all ancestors — the origin of the originators. When you trace any lineage far enough back, you reach the one source. The Divine is the ancestor of every being that has ever existed.
Namas te'stu sahasrakṛtvaḥ — 'let there be salutation to You a thousand times.' The grammatical form is subjunctive: 'let there be.' Not just 'I salute' but 'may salutation happen, let it exist, may the world offer its salutation.' A prayer for universal recognition.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
Salutation to You from before and from behind; salutation to You from every side, O All. Infinite in power, boundless in might, You encompass everything — therefore You are all.
Salutation from the front, from behind, salutation to You from all sides! O All — of infinite valor and immeasurable prowess — You encompass all. Therefore You are the All.
The all-directional salutation: from front, from behind, from all sides. The Divine has no 'front' that one could stand before — it is everywhere simultaneously. The salutation in all directions is the acknowledgment of this omnidirectionality.
In Advaita, sarvam samāpnoṣi tato'si sarvaḥ — 'You encompass all, therefore You are the All' — is the Advaitic philosophical conclusion stated as a prayer: Brahman pervades all; therefore Brahman is the totality. This is the ultimate non-dual recognition.
Osho said: salutation from all sides — this is not a posture (you can't physically salute in all directions simultaneously) but a recognition: there is no direction from which the Divine is not present. The all-directional salutation is the body's way of acknowledging omnipresence.
O Sarvah — 'O All.' Not 'O creator of all' or 'O ruler of all' but 'O All' — the Divine is not different from the totality of what exists. The distinction between God and universe collapses in this direct address: You are the All.
Anantavīrya amitavikrama — 'infinite valor, immeasurable prowess.' Even the prayer uses warrior language to describe the Divine. The power that sustains and dissolves the universe requires language borrowed from the highest form of human excellence: the warrior's valor.
▶ Word by Word
Translation
Whatever I rashly said, thinking of You only as a friend — 'O Krishna, O Yadava, O comrade' — unaware of this greatness of Yours, through carelessness or through love;
Whatever has been said rashly — 'O Krishna, O Yadava, O friend' — treating You as friend, out of negligence or love, unknowing of Your greatness —
The great apology of Chapter 11: Arjuna realizes that all his previous informal address — 'hey Krishna, O friend' — was spoken in ignorance of the cosmic reality he has now seen. The same familiarity that was appropriate becomes an apology when the full truth is revealed.
In Advaita, this apology is the ego's recognition of its own inadequacy before the Absolute. All the ego's familiar, comfortable ways of relating to reality are seen as 'presumptuous' — prasabham — when the infinite reveals itself.
Osho was moved by this verse: the friend who becomes God, the God who was always friend. The relationship transforms without breaking. Arjuna is not renouncing his friendship with Krishna — he is recognizing the infinity within the familiar face he has always loved.
Sakheti matvā — 'considering as friend.' The friendship was genuine and appropriate to Arjuna's level of understanding at the time. The apology is not for the friendship but for the ignorance of the fullness of what he was befriending.
Pramādāt praṇayena vāpi — 'from negligence or from love.' The two possible explanations for the informal address. Arjuna doesn't know which it was — maybe both. Love makes people informal with what they love; negligence means forgetting what one knows. Both are honest.
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Translation
and in whatever way I slighted You in jest, at play, on the couch, at the table, alone or before others — for all that, O changeless one, immeasurable one, I beg Your forgiveness.
And whatever disrespect was shown in jest — during walks, sleep, sitting, eating — alone or before others, O Achyuta — I ask forgiveness of You, the immeasurable one.
The apology continues into the details of daily life: the casual disrespect during walks, while sleeping (sharing quarters), while sitting (in relaxed company), while eating (the most informal setting). All the moments of casual familiarity that ignored the cosmic reality.
In Advaita, the catalogue of informal moments — walking, sleeping, sitting, eating — reveals how the Divine is present in every ordinary moment. The cosmic vision doesn't replace daily life; it infuses daily life with the recognition of what is always present.
Osho found this verse deeply human: the moments Arjuna apologizes for — walking together, sleeping nearby, sitting, eating — are the moments of real friendship. These are not sins; they are the natural expressions of a genuine relationship with the friend who was also God.
Acuta — 'the infallible/imperishable one' (literally: one who has not fallen). This name chosen for the apology: even in the midst of apologizing for informal treatment, Arjuna uses a name that acknowledges Krishna's essential nature — one who cannot fall, cannot be diminished.
Kṣāmaye — 'I ask forgiveness.' The Sanskrit root kṣam means patience, forbearance, forgiveness. Arjuna asks for the patience of the infinite toward the limitations of the finite. This is the deepest form of humility: acknowledging that we cannot approach the infinite without grace.
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Translation
You are the father of the world, of all that moves and does not move; You are its object of worship, its most venerable teacher. There is none equal to You — how then could there be one greater, in all the three worlds, O matchless in power?
You are the father of this world — the moving and the unmoving — its venerable guru, the most revered. There is none equal to You, none greater. Where could there be another in the three worlds, O one of incomparable power?
Arjuna's theological recognition: the cosmic form is the father of the entire world, its guru, its most venerable elder. None equal, none greater — the comparative framework collapses when applied to the infinite. There is nothing to compare it with.
In Advaita, pitā lokasya — 'father of the world' — establishes the complete parenthood of Brahman. Not just creator but father: the intimate, ongoing, protective relationship. The Upaniṣads speak of Brahman as both father and mother of all.
Osho observed: 'no equal, no greater' — this is not arrogance on Krishna's part; it is Arjuna's recognition. When you truly see the infinite, you see that there is no other infinite to compare it with. Comparison requires two; the infinite is one.
Gurur garīyān — 'the guru, the most weighty.' The word garīyān shares its root with 'gravity' — the most weighty, the most consequential. The guru is the one whose words carry the most weight because they point toward the highest reality.
Apratimaprabāva — 'incomparable power.' Not just greater power but incomparable — there is no comparison available. The human scale of comparison (greater, lesser, equal) simply doesn't apply to the infinite. Language reaches its limit and bows.
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Translation
Therefore, bowing and laying my body prostrate, I implore Your grace, O adorable Lord. As a father bears with a son, a friend with a friend, a lover with the beloved, so, O God, be pleased to bear with me.
Therefore, bowing and laying my body prostrate, I beseech Your grace, O Lord, O praiseworthy one. As a father bears with a son, as a friend with a dear friend — please bear with me, O God.
The deepest prayer of submission: the entire body prostrate (praṇidhāya kāyam), begging grace. And then the beautiful relational analogies: the father who bears with a son's faults, the friend who bears with a dear friend's lapses. Arjuna asks for that relational grace.
In Advaita, the prostration of the entire body (praṇidhāya kāyam) is the physical expression of complete surrender — śaraṇāgati. Not just mental surrender but the body's recognition that it belongs entirely to the Divine.
Osho was deeply moved by this verse: after the terror, the awe, the philosophical recognition — the final word is the intimate human request: 'please bear with me as a father, as a friend.' The cosmic and the intimate are not opposites. The most cosmic is also the most intimate.
Piteva putrasya — 'as a father to a son.' The father's relationship with the son includes the bearing of the son's imperfections, the patience with the son's misunderstandings, the love that continues despite everything. This is the grace Arjuna requests.
Sakheva sakhyuḥ — 'as a friend to a friend.' The friendship relationship is mentioned again — not abandoned after the cosmic vision but deepened. The vision revealed the infinite behind the friend, not a different being. The friend-God and the God-friend are the same.
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Translation
I rejoice to have seen what was never seen before, yet my mind is shaken with fear. Show me again, O God, that other form of Yours; have mercy, O Lord of gods, O dwelling of the worlds.
I am thrilled, having seen what was never seen before — and my mind is disturbed with fear. Show me that very form again, O God. Be gracious, O Lord of gods, O abode of the world!
The paradox of the cosmic vision: hṛṣitaḥ asmi (I am thrilled) — AND — bhayena pravyathitam manaḥ me (my mind is disturbed with fear). Both simultaneously. And the request: show me again — but the familiar form, not the cosmic one.
In Advaita, hṛṣitaḥ AND bhayena disturbed — thrilled and afraid simultaneously — is the authentic response to direct encounter with Brahman. Too vast for the ego to contain, yet too beautiful for the soul to resist. The tension between these is the experience.
Osho said: 'I am thrilled' — but also 'show me the other form again.' This is the human dilemma. The glimpse of the infinite is the most wonderful experience — and also too much. The human heart can bear only so much infinity before it asks for the familiar.
Adṛṣṭapūrvam — 'never before seen.' The most significant qualification: this vision has never happened before in the history of the universe. Not for Arjuna — not for anyone. The Vishvarupa darśana is a unique event in cosmic history.
Tadeva rūpam darśaya — 'show me that very form.' The 'that' refers to the familiar human form of Krishna. After the cosmic vision, the ordinary human form becomes the most precious sight. The familiar becomes sacred through the recognition of what it contains.
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Translation
I long to see You as before, crowned, bearing the mace and the discus in Your hand. Take on again that four-armed form, O thousand-armed one, O Universal Form.
I wish to see You crowned, with mace, with discus in hand — in that very same way, with the four-armed form. Appear so, O thousand-armed one, O universal form!
Arjuna's specific request: the four-armed form of Vishnu — crowned, with mace, with discus — the familiar divine form of devotion. Not the terrifying thousand-armed cosmic form but the four-armed form that the devotee can love without being overwhelmed.
In Advaita, the preference for the four-armed form over the thousand-armed cosmic form reflects the devotee's need for a form that can be approached in love. The thousand-armed cosmic form reveals the truth; the four-armed form enables the devotional relationship.
Osho noted: Arjuna addresses the cosmic form as 'thousand-armed' while asking for the four-armed form. He knows what he's seen. He's not pretending the cosmic vision didn't happen. He's asking for a translation of that vision into a form he can love and approach.
Caturbhujam — 'four-armed.' The four arms of Vishnu hold the conch (sound of creation), the discus (cosmic law), the mace (power), and the lotus (beauty/liberation). The four-armed form contains all the essential functions of the Divine in a graspable symbol.
Viśvamūrte — 'O universal form.' Even while asking for the four-armed form, Arjuna addresses Krishna as the universal form. He hasn't forgotten what he's seen — he's asking for the accessible face of the same incomprehensible reality.
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Translation
The Blessed Lord said: Out of grace toward you, Arjuna, by My own power of yoga I have shown you this supreme form — radiant, universal, infinite, primal — which none but you has ever beheld.
The Blessed Lord said: Out of grace to you, Arjuna, this supreme form has been shown by Me through My own yoga — radiant, universal, infinite, primal — which has never before been seen by any other.
Krishna explains the cosmic vision: shown out of prasanna (grace, pleasure, favor) — not earned, not demanded, given freely. And the extraordinary claim: never before seen by any other. This is a unique grace given specifically to Arjuna.
In Advaita, mayā prasannena — 'by Me, out of grace' — is the complete teaching on the nature of enlightenment: it cannot be earned or produced by effort alone. It is given by grace. Effort prepares; grace delivers. The vision is always the Divine's gift.
Osho was moved by 'never before seen by any other.' Even in the Vedas, this vision has not been described. It has not appeared in the cosmological texts. This is a revelation happening in real time — the most unique event in the Gita's long teaching.
Ātmayogāt — 'by My own yoga/power.' The cosmic vision is not a conjuring trick or an illusion — it is the Divine revealing its own nature through its own creative power (yoga). What Arjuna saw was real: the actual face of the cosmic reality.
Tejomayam viśvam anantam ādyam — 'radiant, universal, infinite, primal.' These four qualities of the cosmic form summarize the entire vision: light (consciousness), universality (all-encompassing), infinity (boundless), primality (before all else). The complete description in four words.
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Translation
Not by the study of the Vedas and sacrifice, not by gifts, nor by rites, nor by severe austerities can I be seen in this form in the world of men by any other than you, O hero of the Kurus.
Not by Vedic study and sacrifice, not by charity, not by rituals, not by severe austerities — in this form I cannot be seen in the world of humans by any other than you, O hero of the Kurus.
The statement of grace's primacy: Vedic study, sacrifice, charity, ritual, severe austerity — none of these can produce the cosmic vision. The vision transcends all spiritual techniques. It is given by grace alone, to the prepared and fortunate soul.
In Advaita, this verse demolishes spiritual pride: no accumulation of religious merit, no discipline of asceticism, no systematic approach can earn the vision of Brahman. The methods of spiritual practice prepare and purify; the vision itself is given.
Osho said: this is the most revolutionary verse in the Gita. Not by Vedas (the highest knowledge), not by sacrifice (the highest action), not by austerity (the highest discipline) — none of these produce this vision. It is grace, not achievement.
Nṛloke — 'in the world of humans.' The cosmic vision is being offered to a human being, in human circumstances, in the middle of a battlefield before a great war. The vision is not reserved for monasteries or mountains — it happens wherever grace decides.
Tvad anyena — 'by any other than you.' This singular grace: among all the beings in existence, this vision is being given to this one human. Not because Arjuna is more deserving than all others but because grace works this way — singular, specific, unrepeatable.
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Translation
Be not troubled, be not bewildered at the sight of this terrible form of Mine. Free from fear, your heart gladdened, behold once more that other form of Mine.
Do not be distressed; do not be bewildered having seen My terrible form like this. With fear dispelled and mind delighted, now behold again that very form of Mine.
The compassionate response: mā vyathā, mā vimūḍhabhāvaḥ — 'no distress, no bewilderment.' Krishna dissolves the fear before resuming the familiar form. The permission to return to the familiar is itself a grace: you don't have to stay in the overwhelming vision.
In Advaita, vyapetabhīḥ prītamanāḥ — 'with fear dispelled and mind delighted' — describes the state after the cosmic vision is integrated: fear gone, delight present. This is the transformation that the Vishvarupa chapter achieves: from fear to delight.
Osho observed: Krishna doesn't tell Arjuna he should stay with the cosmic vision, should be strong enough, should maintain the overwhelming experience. He says: 'behold again the familiar form.' Grace is not about forcing you to remain in what you cannot bear.
Prapaśya — 'behold properly/again.' The prefix pra- intensifies: really look at this familiar form now. After the cosmic vision, the ordinary four-armed form of Krishna will be seen differently. The familiar is now luminous with the recognition of what it contains.
Mā te vyathā — 'may there not be anguish for you.' The Divine's first concern is the devotee's wellbeing. After the greatest vision in the history of the world, the Divine asks: are you okay? This intimacy alongside the infinite is the Gita's deepest teaching.
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Translation
Sanjaya said: Having thus spoken to Arjuna, Vasudeva once more revealed His own form; and the great-souled one, taking again His gentle shape, consoled the terrified Arjuna.
Sanjaya said: Having thus spoken to Arjuna, Vasudeva then showed His own form again — the great soul, having become again of gentle, gracious form, comforted the frightened Arjuna.
The return: from the cosmic to the gracious. Saumyavapuḥ — 'gentle, gracious form' — is the beautiful word for Krishna's ordinary human appearance after the terrifying cosmic form. The same greatness now clothed in approachability.
In Advaita, the return to saumyarūpa (gracious form) after the viśvarūpa is the teaching that the infinite is also the intimate, the cosmic is also the personal, the terrifying is also the comforting. The two forms are the same reality in different registers.
Osho was moved by āśvāsayāmāsa — 'comforted.' The Divine that just showed the most overwhelming vision in the history of the universe now comforts the frightened human. This is the infinite's tenderness: it knows how much the finite can bear.
Bhūtvā punaḥ saumyavapuḥ — 'having become again of gracious form.' The gracious form is Krishna's 'again' — it is the default, the comfortable, the approachable. The cosmic form was a revealed form; the gracious form is the familiar face.
Mahātmā — 'great soul' used for Krishna here by Sanjaya. The narrator of the entire battle uses this term of profound respect. Through all the teaching, the wisdom, the cosmic vision — the most appropriate word remains: mahātmā. The great soul.
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Translation
Arjuna said: Seeing this gentle, human form of Yours, O Janardana, I am now composed, restored to my own nature.
Arjuna said: Having seen this gentle human form of Yours, O Janardana, I am now composed and restored to my natural state of consciousness.
The relief of Arjuna: sacetāḥ — 'in my right mind/consciousness.' The cosmic vision had disoriented him completely. The return of the familiar gracious form restores his consciousness. Saṃvṛttaḥ — 'composed' — and back to his prakṛti (natural state).
In Advaita, saṃvṛttaḥ sacetāḥ — 'composed, in right consciousness' — describes the return to ordinary consciousness after the samādhi-like cosmic vision. The ordinary consciousness is restored but now it carries the memory of what it briefly touched.
Osho observed: this verse is the most human moment in the whole chapter. After the most extraordinary experience in the history of consciousness, Arjuna says: I am now in my right mind. The return to the ordinary is also necessary. The extraordinary cannot be permanent.
Prakṛtim gataḥ — 'returned to my natural state.' The cosmic vision is not the natural state for an embodied human consciousness. The natural state — ordinary awareness — returns. But it is not the same natural state. The memory of the vision changes everything.
Mānuṣam rūpam saumyam — 'gentle human form.' The human form of the Divine — the same form that was earlier called 'ordinary' by the fools of v.11.11 — is now seen as the most precious sight. The cosmic vision has transformed how Arjuna sees the ordinary.
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Translation
The Blessed Lord said: This form of Mine that you have seen is very hard to behold; even the gods forever long to look upon it.
The Blessed Lord said: This form of Mine — which you have seen — is very hard to see. Even the gods always long to see it.
Krishna confirms the rarity of what Arjuna received: sudurdarśam — 'very hard to see.' Even the gods always long for this vision. Arjuna received what the highest cosmic beings perpetually desire. This is the measure of the grace that was given.
In Advaita, devā api nityam darśanakāṃkṣiṇaḥ — 'even the gods always long to see it' — establishes that the cosmic vision transcends even the divine realm. The Brahman-vision is not the exclusive possession of the gods — it is beyond even the gods' usual experience.
Osho was moved: even the gods long to see this — always, not just occasionally. The cosmic vision is not something that has been seen many times. It is rare even by divine standards. Arjuna received the rarest gift in the cosmos.
Sudurdarśam — 'very hard to see.' Not just hard but sudur — 'very, exceedingly' hard. The prefix su- intensifies: this is not mildly difficult to attain but extraordinarily rare. The preparation of lifetimes, the grace of the moment, the openness of the student — all align rarely.
Nityam — 'always.' The gods are always longing for this vision, not just occasionally. This perpetual longing of the highest beings for this vision tells us how extraordinary it is. What the highest always seeks and rarely receives was given to one human being in one afternoon.
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Translation
Not through the Vedas, nor austerity, nor charity, nor sacrifice can I be seen in such a form as you have seen Me.
I cannot be seen in this form by Vedic study, nor by austerity, nor by charity, nor by sacrifice — as you have seen Me.
The most emphatic repetition of v.11.48's teaching: no spiritual technique can produce this vision. The four pillars of Vedic spiritual practice (Veda, austerity, charity, sacrifice) are explicitly named and set aside. The vision comes by a different means entirely.
In Advaita, this verse demolishes the idea that Brahman-realization is achievable through accumulated religious merit. Brahman cannot be reached by doing — only by being. The techniques prepare; grace reveals. The prepared heart is the vessel; the vision is the gift.
Osho said: after everything the tradition offers — the Vedas (highest knowledge), tapas (highest discipline), charity (highest action), sacrifice (highest ritual) — none of these produce this. Then what does? The answer comes in the next verse.
Dṛṣṭavān asi māṃ yathā — 'as you have seen Me.' The 'as you have seen' emphasizes the uniqueness of this particular seeing. There are many ways to approach the Divine; there is only one way this vision happened. And it wasn't through technique.
Na vedaiḥ na tapasā na dānena na ijyayā — the four-fold denial. Each represents the highest aspiration of one of the four components of Vedic religion: knowledge, asceticism, generosity, worship. All four are transcended by this grace.
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Translation
But by undivided devotion alone, O Arjuna, can I be known and truly seen in this form, and entered into, O scorcher of foes.
But by exclusive devotion I can be known, seen in truth, and entered into, O Arjuna, O scorcher of foes.
The answer: bhaktyā tu ananyayā — 'but by exclusive devotion.' Not Vedic study, not austerity, not charity, not sacrifice — but by undivided, exclusive devotion. This is the Gita's great declaration of bhakti as the supreme path to the Divine's direct knowledge.
In Advaita, ananya-bhakti (undivided devotion) is ultimately the recognition that there is no 'other' — only the Divine. The exclusive devotion is not an emotion but a non-dual orientation: the devotee has discovered that the Divine alone is real.
Osho said: 'exclusive devotion' is the key. Not devotion divided among many things, not devotion part-time, not devotion as one practice among many — but total, undivided, whole-being devotion. This is not a technique; it is a way of being.
Three verbs: jñātum (to know), draṣṭum (to see), praveṣṭum (to enter/merge into). The progression: first knowledge, then vision, finally union. Bhakti achieves all three. The devotee knows the Divine, sees the Divine, and finally merges into the Divine.
Praveṣṭum ca — 'and to enter into.' The final stage of bhakti is not just knowing or seeing the Divine but entering into it — the merger of the individual into the universal. This entry is the dissolution of the devotee-subject into the Beloved-object: non-dual union.
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Translation
One who works for Me, who holds Me as supreme, who is devoted to Me, free from attachment and without enmity toward any being — such a one comes to Me, O son of Pandu.
One who does My work, has Me as supreme, is My devotee, is free from attachment, and has no enmity toward any being — comes to Me, O son of Pandu.
Chapter 11's closing verse: the five qualities of the one who attains the Divine — performing Krishna's work, having the Divine as supreme, being devoted, being free of attachment, and being without enmity toward any being. This is the complete portrait of the liberated life.
In Advaita, nirvairasarvasarva-bhūteṣu — 'without enmity toward any being' — is the fruit of recognizing the cosmic form: when you have seen the Divine in all beings simultaneously, enmity toward any being becomes impossible. The cosmic vision produces universal love.
Osho loved this closing verse: after the greatest cosmic vision in history, the teaching returns to the simplest human qualities — do your work, be devoted, be unattached, be friendly to all. The cosmic and the practical are not two different domains.
Saṅgavarjitaḥ — 'free from attachment.' After the cosmic vision, what can you be attached to? The vision showed that everything arises from and returns to the one. Attachment to any particular thing becomes impossible when you've seen all things as expressions of the one.
Sa mām eti — 'comes to Me.' The promise of the entire Gita in three words: he comes to Me. Not 'may come,' not 'possibly comes' — comes. The path described here, lived fully, leads to the Divine. This is the Gita's unconditional guarantee.