Review Bhagavad Gita 3.25-3.35: Krishna teaches patient guidance, action beyond ego, offering work to him, working with one's nature, and staying with one's own dharma.
Correct0/6
Incorrect0/6
Question 1
How should the wise guide people who are still attached to action?
Krishna asks the wise to lead through example. People still attached to action should be guided patiently, not disturbed with teaching they are not ready to apply.
What do verses 3.27-3.28 teach about ego and action?
Krishna weakens false ownership without excusing negligence. The wise see body, mind, senses, and objects moving within nature, so they act with humility rather than egoic claim.
What complete formula for action does Krishna give Arjuna in verse 3.30?
This verse gathers Karma Yoga into a battlefield instruction: offer the action, give up possessiveness and feverish expectation, and still do the duty in front of you.
How do verses 3.31-3.32 contrast two ways of receiving Krishna's teaching?
Krishna is not condemning honest questions like Arjuna's. He contrasts sincere practice with cynical fault-finding that refuses to learn and therefore remains bound.
What practical warning do verses 3.33-3.34 give about nature, attraction, and aversion?
Krishna is realistic about nature. Forced denial does not work, but neither should one become a servant of attraction and repulsion; those impulses obstruct the path.
The section closes with svadharma. Krishna warns against imitation: another person's path may look efficient, but abandoning one's own rightful duty creates confusion and danger.