Bhagavad Gita 15.12
Spoken by Krishna · Verse 12 of 20
यद् आदित्यगतं तेजो जगद् भासयते ऽखिलम् । यच् चन्द्रमसि यच् चाग्नौ तत् तेजो विद्धि मामकम् ॥
yad āditya-gataṃ tejo jagad bhāsayate 'khilam | yac candramasi yac cāgnau tat tejo viddhi māmakam ||
The radiance in the sun illumining the whole world, and in moon and fire — know all that tejas as Mine.
Word by word (3)
- yad āditya-gataṃ tejaḥ jagad bhāsayate 'khilam
- — that radiance (tejaḥ) residing in the sun (āditya-gatam) which illumines the entire world (jagad akhilam) — the sun's light as cosmic agency
- yac candramasi yac cāgnau
- — and that which is in the moon (candramasi), and that which is in fire (agnau) — the triad of cosmic luminaries from V6 now claimed as Krishna's tejas
- tat tejo viddhi māmakam
- — know that tejas (radiance/power) to be Mine (māmakam) — viddhi = imperative 'know this,' the teaching's direct command
The radiance that dwelling in the sun illumines the entire world, that which is in the moon and that which is in fire — know that radiance to be Mine.
A modern analogy
A multiplug socket has many outlets — each device draws current from the same source. The sun, moon, and fire are like different outlets: different in size, temperature, rhythm — but the same current of tejas (luminous power) flows through all of them from one source: Paramātmā.
Public-domain translations (4) compare all →
That light which residing in the sun illumines the whole world, that which is in the moon and in the fire — that light do thou know to be Mine. [1]
The light which residing in the sun illumines the whole world, that which is in the moon and in the fire — know that light to be Mine. [4]
Know that glory to be mine which, dwelling in the sun, lights up the whole world, or in the moon or fire. [9]
That splendor dwelling in the sun which illumines the vast universe, that which is in the moon, and that which is in the fire, know that splendor to be mine. [13]
This verse speaks to
Where this thread continues
Whoever does not turn the cosmic wheel of giving — living only for sense-pleasure — lives in vain.
I taught this imperishable yoga to the sun-god at the dawn of time — it has been passed down through kings ever since.
Whenever dharma declines and adharma rises — I project Myself forth. The divine responds to every crisis.
For the protection of the good, destruction of wickedness, establishment of dharma — I come, age after age.
All beings arise from these two natures as their womb — and I am the origin and dissolution of the entire universe.
Brahman is the Imperishable; Adhyātma is its presence in each body; Karma is the cosmic offering sustaining all beings.
Verse 12 of 20 · back to Chapter 15