Review Bhagavad Gita 4.24-4.32: Krishna explains Yagya as divine vision, self-offering, sense discipline, charity, study, breath-control, regulated living, and action purified by dedication.
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Question 1
What vision of Yagya does Krishna present in verse 4.24?
Verse 4.24 expands Yagya beyond ritual mechanics. For one whose mind is fixed on God, every part of the act is seen as Brahman, so action becomes worship rather than egoic claim.
How does verse 4.25 distinguish different levels of sacrifice?
Krishna recognizes different spiritual capacities. The section does not mock external worship, but it points toward the deeper sacrifice of ego and personal will into Brahman.
What does verse 4.28 show by listing charity, discipline, meditation, study, and knowledge?
Krishna broadens the field of offering: resources, tapas, yoga, scripture study, and knowledge can all purify when they are practiced as disciplined dedication.
Why do breath-control and regulated diet count as Yagya in verses 4.29-4.30?
Krishna includes embodied discipline in Yagya. Breath, diet, and habit can steady the mind when they are practiced with awareness rather than obsession or pride.
How does verse 4.32 connect these many Yagyas back to Karma Yoga?
The section closes with a Karma Yoga point: sacrifice is action transformed by offering. Different practices suit different people, but the shared principle is disciplined, dedicated action.