Bhagavad Gita Chapter 18 Verse 68 Meaning
He who, with supreme devotion to Me, teaches this supreme secret to My devotees, shall undoubtedly come to Me.
BG 18.68
य इमं परमं गुह्यं मद्भक्तेष्वभिधास्यति।भक्ितं मयि परां कृत्वा मामेवैष्यत्यसंशयः
ya idaṁ paramaṁ guhyaṁ mad-bhakteṣhv abhidhāsyati bhaktiṁ mayi parāṁ kṛitvā mām evaiṣhyaty asanśhayaḥ
Meaning
He who, with supreme devotion to Me, teaches this supreme secret to My devotees, shall undoubtedly come to Me.
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What Does Bhagavad Gita 18.68 Mean?
This verse carries the weight of lived truth. He who, with supreme devotion to Me, teaches this supreme secret to My devotees, shall undoubtedly come to Me. In the context of the synthesis of all teachings and the invitation to complete surrender to the Divine, these words illuminate the principle of duty and grace from a perspective that complements the surrounding verses. Shankaracharya emphasizes that this teaching is not merely contextual but universal.
The principle of duty and grace expressed here transcends its battlefield setting and speaks to the fundamental relationship between action, knowledge, and spiritual realization. For the modern practitioner, this verse suggests a concrete experiment: approach today's responsibilities with the awareness this teaching describes. The Gita's promise is that even imperfect practice in the right direction yields real results.
— Explained by the Nitya Team
What Is the Context of Bhagavad Gita 18.68?
The conclusion of the Gita, summarizing all paths and encouraging Arjuna to surrender to God.
Key themes in this chapter include Liberation, Surrender, Duty, Grace.
How Can I Apply Bhagavad Gita 18.68 in Daily Life?
- •When you need steadiness while dealing with liberation
- •When practicing surrender amid uncertainty
- •When applying duty to real-life choices
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Related Verses
BG 18.2
The Blessed Lord said, "The sages understand sannyasa to be the renunciation of action with desire; the wise declare the abandonment of the fruits of all actions to be tyaga."
BG 18.5
Acts of sacrifice, gift, and austerity should not be abandoned, but should be performed; for sacrifice, gift, and austerity are the purifiers of the wise.
BG 1.1
Dhritarashtra said, "What did my people and the sons of Pandu do when they had assembled together, eager for battle, on the holy plain of Kurukshetra, O Sanjaya?"
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