Bhagavad Gita 4.24
Spoken by Krishna ☆ Key verse · Verse 24 of 42
ब्रह्मार्पणं ब्रह्म हविर्ब्रह्माग्नौ ब्रह्मणा हुतम् । ब्रह्मैव तेन गन्तव्यं ब्रह्मकर्मसमाधिना ॥
brahmarpaṇaṃ brahma havir brahmāgnau brahmaṇā hutam | brahmaiva tena gantavyaṃ brahma-karma-samādhinā ||
Instrument, offering, fire, act, destination — all Brahman. One absorbed in Brahman-action reaches Brahman alone.
Word by word (3)
- brahma-arpaṇam brahma haviḥ
- — the instrument of offering is Brahman; the offering (oblation) is Brahman · Brahma-arpaṇam = the arpana (ladle/instrument of offering, or the act of offering itself) is Brahman. Arpaṇa from arp = to place toward, to offer. Haviḥ = the oblation, the thing offered (butter, grain, etc. in Vedic ritual). Both the instrument and the substance of offering are identified as Brahman — the conventional distinction between 'tool' and 'material' dissolves.
- brahma-agnau brahmaṇā hutam
- — offered into the fire of Brahman, by Brahman · Brahmāgni = the fire of Brahman (the sacred fire, which is itself Brahman). Brahmaṇā = by Brahman (instrumental: Brahman is the agent doing the offering). Hutam = offered, poured as oblation (from hu = to offer as libation). The fire that receives, and the agent who offers — both are Brahman. The subject-object structure of offering collapses entirely.
- brahmaiva tena gantavyam brahma-karma-samādhinā
- — Brahman alone is to be reached by the one absorbed in Brahman-action · Brahmaiva = Brahman alone (eva = emphasis). Tena = by that one (instrumental: by that person). Gantavyam = to be reached, to be attained (gerundive of gam). Brahma-karma-samādhinā = by one who is samādhi-absorbed in Brahman-as-karma (brahma-karma = action-as-Brahman; samādhi = complete absorption, from sam+ā+dhā = to place completely into). The outcome: Brahman is both the path and the destination for one who sees every action as Brahman.
The instrument of offering is Brahman. The oblation is Brahman. It is offered by Brahman into the fire of Brahman. Brahman alone is the destination for one absorbed in Brahman-action.
A modern analogy
Imagine a wave realizing it is the ocean — the water that moves, the movement itself, the shore it reaches — all ocean. No part of it is separate. Every element of the yajna act — the spoon, the butter, the fire, the priest, the act — all recognized as Brahman. The act of worship becomes an act of recognition.
Take with you
- Five appearances of 'Brahman' in two lines: instrument, substance, fire, agent, destination — all one Reality.
- Brahma-karma-samādhi: the state of being absorbed in 'action-as-Brahman' — this is the meditative dimension of karma-yoga.
- This verse transforms every action into worship — not by intention but by recognition: Brahman is doing everything.
- This verse is often used as a meal-prayer — recognizing the eater, the food, the act of eating, and the fire of digestion as Brahman.
Public-domain translations (5) compare all →
Brahman is the instrument of offering; Brahman is the oblation; by Brahman is the oblation poured into the fire of Brahman; Brahman alone is the goal of him who sees Brahman in all actions. [1]
Brahman is the ladle; Brahman the oblation; by Brahman is the oblation poured into the fire of Brahman; Brahman is to be reached by him who sees Brahman in his actions. [4]
The act of sacrifice is Brahman; the offering is Brahman; the fire is kindled by Brahman; the oblation is poured by Brahman; Brahman is to be reached by him who in all his acts sees Brahman only. [6]
The sacrifice itself is Brahm, the flame Is Brahm, the offering is Brahm, the fire Is Brahm; and Brahm it is that offereth: To Brahm shall he attain who in his deeds Medeth on Brahm. [7]
Brahman is the offering; Brahman the ghee; it is poured by Brahman in the fire of Brahman; by him whose mind is fixed on Brahman-action, Brahman alone is reached. [9]
This verse speaks to
Where this thread continues
For the liberated one — attachment gone, mind settled in knowledge, acting for yajna — all karma completely dissolves.
Whatever you do, eat, offer, give, or practise as austerity — do it all as mad-arpaṇam, an offering to Me.
The Lord dwells in the heart of all beings — whirling all, as if mounted on a machine, by His māyā.
Not hating, friendly, compassionate, without 'mine' or 'I', equal in pain and joy, forgiving — the dear devotee!
Renunciation without yoga is painful to achieve — the yoga-joined muni attains Brahman swiftly.
Regulate food, recreation, effort and sleep — and yoga becomes the destroyer of all pain.
Verse 24 of 42 · back to Chapter 4