American Institute of Vedic Studies

SPECIAL DISCOUNT!

Days
Hours
Minutes
Seconds

Why Sri Krishna is the Avatar of Yoga

Sri Krishna is the only human guru and incarnation of Vishnu called Yogavatara or the Avatar of Yoga, and Yogeshvara or the Lord of Yoga. The Bhagavad Gita remains the most important and foundational Yoga Shastra or definitive Yoga text. To understand Yoga one must understand Sri Krishna, his life, teachings and the Bhagavad Gita. Otherwise one has only touched the surface of the profound yogic science of consciousness.

The Gita is the essence of the Upanishads, which in turn are the essence of the Vedas. As such, the Gita is the key teaching of the Vedic Sanatana Dharma. It remains the most accessible Vedic text both in language and context. Sri Krishna is the ultimate Yoga guru as the master of all the Yoga branches and the great teacher of Vedic knowledge on all levels.

 


The Yoga Sutras a greater systematization than the Gita but less detail and comprehensiveness overall. This is only natural as a short sutra work it has fewer words than the verse-based Gita. Yet Rishi Patanjali as a Naga is identified with Shesh Nag, the cosmic serpent energy on which Lord Vishnu reclines during the period of cosmic dissolution.

 

In Kashmir, Sri Krishna is sometimes identified with Lord Shiva who is the great Lord of Yoga and Adi Guru of Yoga among the many Shaivite traditions of Pashupata, Nath, Siddha and Hatha Yogas, showing the universality of Krishna as the supreme Yoga guru.

 

Other Yoga Shastras and Yoga Upanishads may provide more information on specific practices, but all rest upon the Gita for their inspiration. While Adi Shankara criticized Yoga and Samkhya for their idea of Purushas as many, he never criticizes the Yoga of the Gita in his commentary on the text. Great Yogis of modern Indian from Vivekananda to Aurobindo, Ramana Maharshi, Yogananda and Chinmayananda emphasized the Gita as the basis of Yoga.


 

Sri Krishna’s All-Encompassing Yoga

 

In the process of teaching Arjuna, Sri Krishna explains the whole of Yoga at an integral level. He teaches Jnana Yoga and Vedanta, the Yoga of knowledge, as the realization of the Atman or Supreme Self beyond all name and form. He explains the Bhakti Yoga or the Yoga of action as surrender to him as the Divine ruler, Ishvara within the heart. He emphasizes Karma Yoga as the path of action following one’s dharma in life, with all we do as an offering to the Divine within. Krishna in the Gita addresses all aspects of Yoga including pranayama, pratyahara, dharana, meditation and samadhi, with an emphasis on Jnana and Bhakti, not on specific techniques. He mentions asana but only as a seated posture for meditation.

 

Sri Krishna was a Kshatriya and states that he taught Yoga originally to Vivasvan, the solar deity, to  Manu and then to Ikshvaku who founded the solar dynasty of kings, Surya Vamsha, which passed on a line of Yoga to its great kings and emperors including Sri Ram. Krishna’s Yoga reflects this Kshatriya basis in his teachings to Arjuna whose Karma Yoga was to fight in the Kurukshetra battle. The connection of Krishna’s Yoga with a Kshatriya discipline also suggests the martial arts that we find in both Hindu and Buddhist monastic traditions, including in Hatha Yoga. That is also why the Gita became the main book for India’s Independence Movement against British colonial rule. Yet Krishna’s many-sided Yoga addresses all aspects of human life, extending to the cosmic existence, which he reveals in his universal form (Vishvarupa).

 

Besides formal Yoga teachings, Krishna explains the three gunas of sattva, rajas and tamas in great detail, and provides many keys for controlling the mind, mastering emotions, working with and transcending karma. As such, the Gita teaches us how to manage our lives on all levels, including how to act in the most challenging circumstances.

 

The Gita is also the ultimate book of dharma, as it starts out with Dharma Kshetra Kurukshetra. Yoga is the ultimate Moksha Dharma among the Purusharthas or human dharmas. The Gita teaches us how to discover and follow our dharma, which is not a dogma or dictate, but a way of consciously addressing the challenges of life as is best possible. Dharma is not a set of laws or principles but a way of awareness and responsible action, a many sided Karma Yoga.

 

If we examine the life of Krishna we see that he was able to manifest the highest awareness during all phases of life and all levels of action, including his role on the world stage as a king and diplomat. Sri Aurobindo noted that owing to his inner awareness a yogi can do anything better than a non-yogi. He also taught that life is Yoga. Sri Krishna is the manifestation of all life as Yoga and shows us how to conduct ourselves with the consummate awareness making everything we do a Divine Lila, taking us to the highest bliss.

Jai Sri Krishna!

Vamadeva Shastri

 

 

 

 

 

Latest Articles
Articles on Vedic Counseling

Embodied Mind and Transcendent Consciousness

American Institute of Vedic Studies
American Institute of Vedic Studies
Embodied Mind and Transcendent Consciousness
/

We human beings are embodied creatures defined by our birth in a particular physical body as indicating our real identity and the focus of our lives. Our minds are not only located in the body but ruled by an entire set of bodily needs, imperatives, appearances and actions and their

Read More »
Articles by Yogini Shambhavi

Kali as the Yuga Shakti: the Power to Create a New World Age

By Yogini Shambhavi   As the great power of time, Kali’s Shakti creates the different Yugas or world ages that humanity passes through during the long cycles of cosmic evolution. Kali is the Goddess of eternity watching over all our temporal changes and facilitating those which promote our inner growth.

Read More »
Articles on Vedic Counseling

Comparison and the Incomparable Self

Your inner Self (Atman) and true nature cannot be compared to anything. It has no name, form or action, no shape, size or color. It is beyond all elements and qualities of nature. It is beyond body and mind, time and appearance altogether. It dwells within everything yet is not

Read More »
Articles on Ayurveda

Shiva Ayurveda – The Yogic Power of Healing and Transformation

Most Ayurvedic practitioners look upon Lord Dhanvantari, an incarnation of Lord Vishnu, as the deity of Ayurveda and ideal doctor. Certainly that is an important tradition worthy of following based on profound Puranic stories and symbolism. Yet in the Rigveda, the oldest Vedic text, and Shruti or book of mantric

Read More »
Articles on Vedic Astrology

Winter Solstice, Galactic Center and New Time of Troubles

I have been writing for some years about 2020 as indicating the beginning of a “New Time of Troubles” for humanity, dangerous from 2020-2028, but continuing long beyond that. This relates astronomically to the Winter Solstice point transiting the Galactic Center in the constellation of Sagittarius. It is difficult to

Read More »
Articles on Yoga

The Ancient Yoga of the Sun

For the Winter Solstice December 21, which marks the rebirth of the Sun and Agni What if the most powerful force for energizing all Yoga practices were as obvious and visible as the Sun? The fact is that it is. The Sun, properly understood not merely as an outer but

Read More »
Articles on Yoga

Yoga as Samadhi

Yoga is defined as Samadhi in the Yoga Sutras. Yet few Yoga practitioners know what Samadhi is or how to approach it. But without understanding Samadhi one cannot understand Yoga in the true sense of the term. Samadhi is complete coherence and composure of mind, the mind fully united with

Read More »
Articles on Yoga

Yoga Nidra according to Adi Shankara

Yoga Nidra is a popular topic today but seldom taken to the depth that it is presented with in the Vedantic teachings. Here we will examine it according to the views of the great teacher, Shankara.   Adi Shankara or Shankaracharya is the most lauded exponent of Advaita or non-dualistic

Read More »
Articles on Yoga

Why Sri Krishna is the Avatar of Yoga

Sri Krishna is the only human guru and incarnation of Vishnu called Yogavatara or the Avatar of Yoga, and Yogeshvara or the Lord of Yoga. The Bhagavad Gita remains the most important and foundational Yoga Shastra or definitive Yoga text. To understand Yoga one must understand Sri Krishna, his life,

Read More »
Layer 1