In this section of Chapter 3 (The Yoga of Right Action), verses 3.10–16 deliver a focused teaching within the Karma Kanda — the section of the Gita asking "What should I do?"
The block "The Cosmic Cycle of Sacrifice" represents block 2 of 5 in this chapter. Understanding this passage builds directly on the chapter's central theme.
Work through this block at your own pace. Read the verses first, then return here for the lesson structure.
Verse Range: 3.10–16
Where we are: Chapter 3 of the Bhagavad Gita — The Yoga of Right Action. This is block 2 of 5 in the chapter.
What These Verses Cover (3.10–20):
Krishna introduces the yajna cycle — the cosmic web of mutual support. "In the beginning, Brahma created beings along with yajna [sacrifice] and said: 'By this you shall prosper'" (3.10). The web works like this: yajna (offering) satisfies the gods; the gods send rain; rain produces food; food sustains life; life performs action; action, done as yajna, completes the cycle.
Working against this cycle is destructive. Living purely for oneself — taking without giving, consuming without offering — is described as "living in sin" (3.13). The person who eats what is first offered in yajna eats pure food; the person who cooks only for themselves eats impurity.
The political teaching (3.20–21): King Janaka and others achieved perfection through action alone. "Whatever a great person does, common people will follow. Whatever standard he sets, the world copies" (3.21). Leaders cannot hide behind "personal spirituality" — their behavior shapes society.
Krishna himself has nothing to gain by acting — yet he acts for the world's welfare (lokasangraha, 3.25). This is the model: action for the benefit of all, not for personal gain.
Difficulty 6/10 — Moderate. Take time with the concepts before moving on.
- This block (03.2) covers verses 3.10–16
- It is part of the Karma Kanda (Ch.1–6)
- Study this in sequence — blocks build on each other