Shloka 19
🌟 Sanskrit:
यस्य सर्वे समारम्भाः कामसङ्कल्पवर्जिताः |
ज्ञानाग्निदग्धकर्माणं तमाहुः पण्डितं बुधाः || 4.19 ||
🌟 Transliteration:
yasya sarve samārambhāḥ kāma‑saṅkalpa‑varjitāḥ |
jñānāgni‑dagdha‑karmāṇaṁ tam āhuḥ paṇḍitaṁ budhāḥ ||
🌟 Meaning:
The wise call that person a sage whose all undertakings are free from selfish desire and egoistic intention, and whose karmas have been burnt up in the fire of spiritual knowledge.
🌟 Explanation:
Krishna describes the inner signature of a true karma‑yogi. All of this person’s initiatives (sarve samārambhāḥ) are untouched by craving and “I‑centered” planning (kāma‑saṅkalpa‑varjitāḥ). Actions still happen, but not as attempts to fill an inner emptiness. Through deep realization, past karmas lose their binding power, just as wood is reduced to ash in a blazing fire (jñānāgni‑dagdha‑karmāṇam). Such a life—outwardly active, inwardly pure—is what the truly wise call “pandit”: one whose wisdom is lived, not just spoken.
Today’s Takeaway
Let knowledge purify your actions. Before starting anything important, pause and ask: “Is this driven by insecurity and desire, or by clarity, love, and dharma?” When intention changes, the karmic weight of action changes too.
JAI SHRI KRISHNA👐👏💕💛💞💫🙇🙌🙏
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#BhagavadGita #DailyInspiration #MDayGitaQuote #JnanaKarmaSannyasaYoga #KarmaYoga #Jnanagni #DesirelessAction #InnerPurity #SpiritualWisdom

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