Shloka 16
🌟 Sanskrit:
किं कर्म किमकर्मेति कवयोऽप्यत्र मोहिताः |
तत्ते कर्म प्रवक्ष्यामि यज्ज्ञात्वा मोक्ष्यसेऽशुभात् || 4.16 ||
🌟 Transliteration:
kiṁ karma kim akarmeti kavayo ’py atra mohitāḥ |
tat te karma pravakṣyāmi yaj jñātvā mokṣyase ’śubhāt ||
🌟 Meaning:
What is action, what is inaction? Even wise people are confused about this. Therefore, I shall explain to you what action is, knowing which you shall be freed from all inauspiciousness.
🌟 Explanation:
Krishna acknowledges that even thoughtful and learned people (kavayaḥ) get bewildered about the difference between action, inaction, and the deeper “non‑action” within action. This confusion leads to inner conflict and karmic entanglement. He therefore promises Arjuna a clear understanding of karma, which will free him from aśubha—all inauspicious, binding reactions.
Today’s Takeaway
Right understanding of action = freedom.
The problem is not that we act, but that we don’t clearly understand what real action, inaction, and non‑action are. Krishna is leading Arjuna (and us) to see:
Some “busy” action is spiritually dead.
Some outer stillness is actually inner avoidance.
And some sincere action, done in wisdom and surrender, does not bind at all.
Seeking clarity about how to live and act is itself a high form of spiritual inquiry—and Krishna promises that this clarity leads to freedom from all inauspicious karma.
JAI SHRI KRISHNA👤👏👐💖💝💞💫🙌🙇🙏
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#BhagavadGita #DailyInspiration #MDayGitaQuote #JnanaKarmaSannyasaYoga #KarmaAndJnana #WhatIsAction #InnerFreedom

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