Shloka 25
🌟 Sanskrit :
दैवमेवापरे यज्ञं योगिनः पर्युपासते |
ब्रह्माग्नावपरे यज्ञं यज्ञेनैवोपजुह्वति || 4.25 ||
🌟 Transliteration:
daivam evāpare yajñaṁ yoginaḥ paryupāsate |
brahmāgnāv apare yajñaṁ yajñenaivopajuhvati ||
🌟 Meaning:
Some yogis perfectly worship the celestial deities through sacrifice, while others offer sacrifice itself into the fire of the Supreme Brahman.
Explanation:
After describing the Brahma‑Yajña (4.24), Krishna now shows that people approach the Divine through varied sacrificial paths, according to temperament and understanding:
“Daivam yajñaṁ paryupāsate” – Some perform ritual offerings to higher cosmic powers, understanding them as expressions of Divinity in nature.
“Brahmāgnau yajñaṁ yajñena upajuhvati” – Others, more inward, dissolve even the idea of separate gods into the one eternal Fire of Consciousness, realizing that all worship culminates in Brahman.
Each approach—outer ritual or inner realization—can purify the heart, if done without selfish motive. Krishna’s aim is not to reject ritual but to reveal its deeper unity: every form of worship, when sincere, becomes a bridge to the Supreme.
Today’s Takeaway
All true worship leads upward.
Whatever your way—devotional service, charitable action, meditation, or self‑inquiry—if offered with sincerity and surrender, it becomes a yajña. Focus less on the method, more on the motive; what matters most is that each act widens the heart and lessens the ego.
JAI SHRI KRISHNA👐👏💚💛💫🙌🙇🙏
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