Bhagavad Gita 17.17: This threefold austerity, practiced with supreme faith by steadfast people who desire no fruit, is called sattvic.

BG 17.17 , This threefold austerity, practiced with supreme faith by steadfast people who desire no fruit, is called sattvic.. Sanskrit, translation, and deep reflection. Study Shraddhatraya Vibhaga Yoga with GitaPath.

BHAGAVAD GITA 17.17

shraddhaya paraya taptam tapas tat tri-vidham naraih aphalakankshibhir yuktaih sattvikam paricakshate

This threefold austerity, practiced with supreme faith by steadfast people who desire no fruit, is called sattvic.

All three levels of austerity, body, speech, and mind, when practiced together with supreme faith and without desire for reward, constitute sattvic tapas. The integration of all three is what makes the practice whole.

Understanding Bhagavad Gita 17.17

Bhagavad Gita 17.17 belongs to Chapter 17, Shraddhatraya Vibhaga Yoga: the yoga of the threefold division of faith. The verse teaches: All three levels of austerity, body, speech, and mind, when practiced together with supreme faith and without desire for reward, constitute sattvic tapas. The integration of all three is what makes the practice whole. Chapter 17 takes the three-guna framework established in Chapter 14 and applies it to the most intimate domains of human life: what we eat, how we worship, how we practice discipline, how we give, and above all, what we believe at the deepest level.

Study the Bhagavad Gita verse by verse with audio, reflection, and guided inquiry.

Faith as the Root of Action

The organizing insight of Chapter 17 is that faith, shraddha, is not just one element of the spiritual life. It is its root. Whatever quality of faith predominates in a person will shape everything that flows from them: their food choices, their worship, their discipline, their generosity. Verse 17.17 shows one specific way this shaping occurs.

From Reading to Living

Chapter 17 closes with a decisive reminder: without faith, even the most elaborate sacrifice, austerity, or charity is Asat, unreal. The invitation is to ask honestly: what is the quality of faith behind my actions right now? Is it sattvic, oriented toward truth? Rajasic, oriented toward reward? Or tamasic, operating from inertia or delusion? Verse 17.17 gives you one more angle from which to examine that question.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the meaning of Bhagavad Gita 17.17?

BG 17.17 teaches: All three levels of austerity, body, speech, and mind, when practiced together with supreme faith and without desire for reward, constitute sattvic tapas. The integration of all three is what makes the practice whole. It is part of Chapter 17, Shraddhatraya Vibhaga Yoga, the yoga of the threefold division of faith.

What is the central teaching of Chapter 17?

Chapter 17 teaches that faith is the root of all human action. Faith takes three forms corresponding to the three gunas: sattvic faith leads toward liberation, rajasic faith leads toward restlessness, and tamasic faith leads toward delusion and bondage.

How does the three-guna framework apply to faith?

Just as food, sacrifice, austerity, and charity each take a sattvic, rajasic, or tamasic form, so does faith itself. Verse 17.17 applies this framework to show how the quality of faith shapes its corresponding domain.

What is the context of BG 17.17 in Chapter 17?

Chapter 17 applies the three-guna lens to faith, food, worship, austerity, charity, and the sacred syllables Om Tat Sat. Verse 17.17 is one application of this framework, adding precision to our understanding of how inner quality shapes outer practice.

How does GitaPath support study of Chapter 17?

GitaPath offers audio, daily reflections, and structured inquiry prompts for all 28 verses of Chapter 17, guiding you from the concept of shraddha to the living practice of sattvic faith in everyday action.

Deepen your shraddha verse by verse. GitaPath makes daily Gita practice accessible and transformative.

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