INTERPRETING THE BHAGAVAD GITA
I want to ask you something from there, okay? The Bhagavad Gita is a
simple story of Arjuna, a man who’s getting ready to go to battle—
Low-flying disc.
Right. And his charioteer is Krishna, who turns out to be Source Energy,
God, all right, whatever.
[Playfully] No, not while on a low-flying disc.
Well, in the Gita, all right. So, he’s being given this advice and so much of
it is in alignment with what you say, Abraham. But there’s a point in there
that has so troubled me. I’ve read the entire Bhagavad Gita three times now
in the last couple of months and I don’t even know why. I just keep reading
it, and going through it, and taking notes on it, and writing.
Maybe it’s because the original authors would like to help you clear it up and
write it the way it was meant to be heard.
Maybe. I don’t know. But there is a point where he’s ready to go to battle
and he has said that this is his duty. And Krishna, Source Energy,
supposedly God, says to him, Go and do your duty. If it means killing
people, then that’s your duty because you don’t get to kill anybody. I take
all life; I’m responsible for all life. And he goes off into battle, you know, to
do his duty.
So my question to you, Abraham, is: Do we have duties that involve doing
things that are inconsistent with Divine love?
Never. But when you’re on the low-flying disc, it is from that vibrational
stance that you are doing your interpreting. Here’s how it works. So let’s say that
you get on the disc of revenge or worry or insecurity, and you stay there for a
while. You read about it, you talk with other people about it, and so you get a lot
of momentum going. The significant factor is you get a lot of momentum going.