Bhagavad Gita 18.46 — Yatah Pravrittir Bhutanam — Benefits & How to Chant
श्रीमद्भगवद्गीता १८.४६ — यतः प्रवृत्तिर्भूतानाम्
Complete guide to chanting correctly for maximum benefit
Benefits of Chanting Bhagavad Gita 18.46 — Yatah Pravrittir Bhutanam
Reveals that any honest work, done as worship, leads to spiritual perfection
Sanctifies every profession and duty as a path to God
Removes the divide between worldly work and worship
Brings dignity, meaning and devotion to daily labour
Teaches that the all-pervading Lord can be served through one's own dharma
Combines karma-yoga, devotion and self-fulfilment in a single practice
How to Chant Bhagavad Gita 18.46 — Yatah Pravrittir Bhutanam
Instructions
Recite this verse before you begin your work each day, consciously offering your duty as worship to the Lord who pervades all. Let it transform routine tasks into acts of devotion, performed for His sake rather than mere personal gain. It is especially encouraging for anyone who feels their work is ordinary — reminding them that sincere duty itself, offered to God, becomes a means of attaining perfection.
Spiritual Significance
Saints from every walk of life — weavers, cobblers, farmers and merchants among them — are remembered for attaining God-realization simply by doing their humble work as worship, exactly as this verse promises, proving that no honest duty is too small a path to the Divine.
Origin & History
Source: Bhagavad Gita Chapter 18, Verse 46
Author: Sage Veda Vyasa (Mahabharata, Bhishma Parva)
In the eighteenth and final chapter, Moksha Sannyasa Yoga, Krishna summarizes the whole teaching of the Gita. Having described duties according to one's nature, he reveals this profound truth: the Lord who is the source of all beings and pervades the universe is worshipped through one's own work, and by such worship a person attains perfection.