⚠️ STAGING — test site · subscriptions charge a REAL ₹1/month · the live site is bhagavadgita.fyi

Bhagavad Gita 3.14

Spoken by Krishna · Verse 14 of 43

अन्नाद्भवन्ति भूतानि पर्जन्यादन्नसम्भवः । यज्ञाद्भवति पर्जन्यो यज्ञः कर्मसमुद्भवः ॥

annād bhavanti bhūtāni parjanyād anna-sambhavaḥ | yajñād bhavati parjanyo yajñaḥ karma-samudbhavaḥ ||

Action → yajna → rain → food → all beings. Human right-action sustains the entire chain of life.

Word by word (3)
annāt bhavanti bhūtāni
— beings come into being from food · Anna = food, grain. Bhūtāni = beings, creatures. The material chain begins at food — the basic sustaining substance. All living beings arise from food; this is the first link.
parjanyāt anna-sambhavaḥ
— food arises from rain · Parjanya = rain (the rain-god; also rain itself). Anna-sambhava = the coming into being of food. Rain enables crops; crops become food; food sustains beings. The ecological chain is precise and ancient.
yajñāt bhavati parjanyaḥ
— rain arises from yajna · The chain completes: action (karma) → yajna (sacrifice/giving) → rain → food → beings. Human action, when conducted as yajna, participates in and sustains the natural cycle. This is not mere metaphysics — it is the ecological truth that right human conduct maintains the conditions for life.

Beings come from food. Food comes from rain. Rain comes from yajna (sacrifice). Yajna arises from action. Therefore: human action, done as yajna, sustains the entire web of life.

A modern analogy

A community of farmers who return nutrients to the soil (yajna), maintain watersheds, and protect forests ensures rain (parjanya), which produces crops (anna), which sustains communities (bhūtāni). Cut any link — clear the forests, exhaust the soil, stop giving back — and the chain breaks. This is the Gita's ecological vision stated 5,000 years before modern environmental science.

Take with you

  • Your actions are not isolated — they participate in a chain that sustains or undermines life itself.
  • Yajna (giving, offering, reciprocal action) is the link between human activity and natural abundance.
  • Every selfless action you take contributes to the sustaining cycle; every purely self-serving action withdraws from it.
  • The Gita's cosmology is deeply ecological: right human action is part of the natural order, not separate from it.

🔱

Deep Seeker

The full commentary, the 2 deeper readings of this verse, and every classical lens — on all 700 verses.

Unlock · ₹199/month
Public-domain translations (5) compare all →

From food all creatures come into being; food is produced by rain; rain comes from sacrifice; sacrifice is born of action. [1]

From food are creatures born, and food is produced from rain; rain proceeds from sacrifice; sacrifice arises from action. [4]

From food springs all life; rain produces food; from sacrifice comes rain; and sacrifice is born of action. [6]

From food all creatures spring; Food comes from rain; and rain — it comes From sacrifice; and sacrifice is wrought By human deeds. [7]

From food are produced all creatures; food is produced from rain; rain proceeds from sacrifice; sacrifice is produced from action. [9]

This verse speaks to

Where this thread continues

Verse 14 of 43 · back to Chapter 3