HomeBhagavad GitaCh. 10Shloka 5
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Shloka 5

Vibhuti YogaVibhuti Yoga

Bhagavad Gita 5 illustration

अहिंसा समता तुष्टिस्तपो दानं यशोऽयशः । भवन्ति भावा भूतानां मत्त एव पृथग्विधाः ॥ १०.५ ॥

ahiṁsā samatā tuṣṭis tapo dānaṁ yaśo ’yaśaḥ | bhavanti bhāvā bhūtānāṁ matta eva pṛthag-vidhāḥ || 10.5 ||

अहिंसा समता तुष्टिस्तपो दानं यशोऽयशः । भवन्ति भावा भूतानां मत्त एव पृथग्विधाः ॥ १०.५ ॥

Non-violence, equanimity, contentment, austerity, charity, fame and infamy—these diverse states of beings arise from Me alone.

Non-harming, even-mindedness, satisfaction, discipline (austerity), giving, honor and dishonor—various states of living beings come from Me alone.

‘ahiṁsā’ is best rendered ‘non-harming’ in a broad ethical sense. ‘yaśo’/‘ayaśaḥ’ can be ‘fame/infamy’ or ‘honor/dishonor,’ emphasizing social valuation as part of conditioned experience. Together with 10.4, the list frames both admired virtues and socially contingent outcomes as arising within the same cosmic source.

अहिंसाnon-violence
अहिंसा:
Karta
Rootअहिंसा
समताequanimity
समता:
Karta
Rootसमता
तुष्टिःcontentment
तुष्टिः:
Karta
Rootतुष्टि
तपःausterity
तपः:
Karta
Rootतपस्
दानम्charity, giving
दानम्:
Karta
Rootदान
यशःfame, good repute
यशः:
Karta
Rootयशस्
अयशःill-fame, disgrace
अयशः:
Karta
Rootअयशस्
भवन्ति(they) become/are
भवन्ति:
Root√भू
भावाःstates, dispositions, qualities
भावाः:
Karta
Rootभाव
भूतानाम्of beings
भूतानाम्:
Rootभूत
मत्तःfrom me
मत्तः:
Apadana
Rootअस्मद्
एवindeed, only
एव:
Rootएव
पृथक्separately, distinctly
पृथक्:
Rootपृथक्
विधाःof various kinds, diverse
विधाः:
Karta
Rootविध
Krishna
AhiṁsāSamatā (equanimity)TapasDānaKarmic/social valuation
Ethical ideals within cosmic causalityEquanimity amid honor and dishonorUnity underlying diversity

FAQs

By pairing inner virtues with external evaluations (honor/dishonor), the verse encourages resilience: self-worth need not depend solely on reputation, and equanimity can be cultivated.

It presents a theistic-cosmological claim that all dispositions and experiential conditions occur within the divine ground, integrating moral life with an overarching metaphysics.

This completes the list begun in 10.4 and explicitly states the thesis: the manifold ‘bhāvas’ of beings originate from Krishna.

It supports ethical practice (non-harming, generosity) while maintaining composure when social recognition fluctuates.