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Bhagavad Gita 4.10 — Vita-Raga-Bhaya-Krodha

Bhagavad Gita 4.10 — Vita-Raga-Bhaya-Krodha in English · English

🕉️ hindu·📿 11× repetitions·🕐 Morning meditation or during devotional surrender to the Lord·📜 Bhagavad Gita Chapter 4, Verse 10
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Meaning

In this verse of the Jnana-Karma-Sannyasa Yoga chapter, Krishna describes how innumerable seekers across the ages have attained him. The path he names is twofold: inner purification — freedom from attachment, fear and anger — and loving absorption in him through complete refuge. Cleansed by the fire of true knowledge, many such devotees have already reached his divine nature, showing that the goal of God-realization is real and attainable.

Origin & Story

Bhagavad Gita Chapter 4, Verse 10 · Sage Veda Vyasa (Mahabharata, Bhishma Parva) · Ancient (text compiled c. 5th–2nd century BCE)

In the fourth chapter, Jnana-Karma-Sannyasa Yoga, after revealing the divine nature of his birth and deeds, Krishna explains how devotees come to him. He recounts that across the ages many, freed from attachment, fear and anger and taking refuge in him, have been purified by knowledge and have attained his very being — assuring Arjuna that the path to him is open to all.

As told in scripture

The lives of countless saints stand as living proof of this verse, for many who took refuge in the Lord and conquered attachment, fear and anger were transformed by the fire of knowledge and, by tradition, merged into his divine nature — a promise the Gita declares has already been fulfilled for innumerable devotees.

The Mantra

Tap any line — or the ▶ button — to hear it recited

vīta-rāga-bhaya-krodhā man-mayā mām upāśhritāḥ bahavo jñāna-tapasā pūtā mad-bhāvam āgatāḥ

Meaning:Freed from attachment, fear and anger, absorbed in Me and taking refuge in Me, purified by the austerity of knowledge, many have attained My state of being.

Word-by-Word Meaning

Click any word to hear its pronunciation

vīta🔊freed from, devoid of
rāga🔊attachment
bhaya🔊fear
krodhāḥ🔊and anger
mat-mayāḥ🔊fully absorbed in Me
mām🔊in Me
upāśhritāḥ🔊taking refuge
bahavaḥ🔊many
jñāna🔊of knowledge
tapasā🔊by the austerity (fire) of knowledge
pūtāḥ🔊purified
mat-bhāvam🔊My state of being, My divine nature
āgatāḥ🔊attained, have come to

Benefits of Chanting Bhagavad Gita 4.10 — Vita-Raga-Bhaya-Krodha

Shows the path to God-realization through refuge and inner purity

Helps free the heart from attachment, fear and anger

Deepens loving absorption (tanmayata) in the Divine

Purifies the mind through the fire of true knowledge (jnana-tapas)

Gives assurance that liberation has been attained by many before us

Inspires complete surrender and refuge in the Lord

How to Chant Bhagavad Gita 4.10 — Vita-Raga-Bhaya-Krodha

Repetitions11times
Best TimeMorning meditation or during devotional surrender to the Lord

Recite this verse while resolving to release attachment, fear and anger, and to take wholehearted refuge in the Divine. Let it inspire both inner purification and loving absorption in God. Chanted regularly, it strengthens surrender, calms the disturbing emotions, and orients the heart toward the Lord's pure being.

Frequently Asked Questions

This page shows the complete Bhagavad Gita 4.10 — Vita-Raga-Bhaya-Krodha written in the English script — the same Sanskrit/Hindi verses, transliterated character-by-character so you can read and chant comfortably. Tap any line (or the ▶ button) to hear it recited aloud.
Yes — only the script changes; the words and their meaning are the original. The verse-by-verse meaning, benefits and how-to-chant guidance on this page apply exactly the same.
Krishna teaches that many seekers have attained his divine nature by becoming free from attachment, fear and anger, by absorbing their minds in him, taking full refuge in him, and being purified by the fire of knowledge. It describes both the inner qualities and the devotion that lead to liberation.
Attachment (raga), fear (bhaya) and anger (krodha). These three agitations of the mind bind the soul to material life. Freedom from them, combined with refuge in the Lord and purification by knowledge, is the gateway to attaining God's divine being.
Just as fire burns away impurities, true spiritual knowledge (jnana-tapas) burns away ignorance, ego and the contaminations of the mind. This inner purification readies the soul to merge into the divine nature of the Lord.
To give hope and encouragement. The path is not theoretical — countless devotees across the ages have already reached his divine state by following it. This assurance inspires the seeker to take refuge and purify the heart with confidence in the goal.

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