Video Talks on the Bhagavad Gita

by Swami Nirmalananda Giri

*Learn to Lead a Successful Spiritual Life*

Gita Talk 84–Sannyasa & Tyaga

The eighty-fourth in a series of talks by Swami Nirmalananda Giri (Abbot George Burke) on the Bhagavad Gita, India’s most famous scripture: the unforgettable dialog between Sri Krishna and Arjuna about the essence of spiritual life.

In this talk, beginning with Chapter 18:12, Swamiji discusses what is meant by renunciation, and the difference between Sannyasa and Tyaga.

For those wishing to make a deeper study of the Gita, Swamiji’s commentary on the Gita, The Bhagavad Gita for Awakening: A Practical Commentary for Leading a Successful Spiritual Life can be found at Amazon.com.

Here are the Gita verses (18:12–18:22) covered in this talk:

The threefold fruit of all action–
Uncongenial, congenial, mixed–
Accrues to non-relinquishers,
But not to the relinquishers. (12)

Learn from Me these five causes for
The accomplishment of all works
As are declared in the Sankhya
Which is the end of all action: (13)

The body, agent, the senses,
The functions of manifold kind,
The presiding divinity,
And that which is also the fifth. (14)

Whate’er action a man performs
By his body, speech, and the mind–
Whether right or just the reverse–
These five alone are its causes. (15)

He who through a non-purified
Understanding looks on his Self,
The Absolute, as the agent–
He of distorted mind sees not. (16)

He who is free from egoism,
With intelligence untainted,
Although he kills all these people,
He kills not, neither is he bound. (17)

Knowledge, the known, and the knower
Form the threefold cause of action.
The instrument, purpose, agent
Are the threefold base of action. (18)

Knowledge, action, and agent are
Declared by Sankhya to be of
Three kinds, from the distinction of
Gunas: hear them also duly. (19)

That by which in all is seen the
One Indestructible Substance
Inseparate in the sep’rate–
Know that knowledge to be sattwic. (20)

But that by which in all are seen
Many beings of many kinds
As diff’rent from one another,
Know that knowledge as rajasic. (21)

Confined to a single effect
As the whole, and without reason
Or basis in truth, trivial–
Know that knowledge as tamasic. (22)

Here are the main points from this talk Sannyas & Tyaga:

Swamiji opens the 84th Gita Talk by clarifying two vital spiritual terms from the Gita’s final chapter: Sannyasa (renunciation) and Tyaga (relinquishment).

  • Sannyasa, often misunderstood as monasticism or physical withdrawal, actually means “casting aside” the egoic grip on the world—not from emotional rejection, but through inner detachment and witness-awareness.
  • Tyaga is the letting go of attachment to the fruits of action—doing one’s duty without clinging to outcome.

Swamiji emphasizes that true renunciation is not doing nothing or escaping life—it is performing one’s responsibilities without ego or expectation. The essence of spiritual freedom lies in seeing oneself as the witness, not the doer.

⚖️ Karma and the Afterlife

Actions bear fruit—desired, undesired, or mixed—even after death. The realms we experience reflect our inner state and karmic seeds. But the sannyasi, unattached and ego-free, rises beyond such cycles and enters pure consciousness.

🔎 Five Causes Behind Every Action

Krishna lists five elements at the root of any action:

  1. The body
  2. The sense of being the doer
  3. The senses and their functions
  4. The inner processes of perception
  5. The Divine Witness—the eternal observer and true Self

Recognizing this fifth element—the Divine—is key to transcending bondage. Life without this realization becomes a cycle of birth, effort, and eventual loss.

⚔️ Slaying Ignorance, Not People

On the battlefield, Krishna reminds Arjuna that killing done without ego or delusion does not bind one in karma. Spiritually, this symbolizes slaying the inner enemies of ignorance and ego—not people, but the forces of illusion.

🌈 Three Types of Knowledge (According to the Gunas)

Swamiji explains Krishna’s teaching on three types of knowledge:

  • Sattwic: Sees the One Spirit in all beings—liberating and luminous.
  • Rajasic: Sees separateness and division—drives attachment and conflict.
  • Tamasic: Clings to a fragment as if it were the whole—leads to delusion, stagnation, and narrow dogmatism.

Swamiji critiques the rigid, limited mindset that says “this one belief is all you need”—whether it’s karma, heaven, vegetarianism, or a doctrinal slogan. True wisdom is expansive, inclusive, and always evolving.

💡 Final Insight

Spiritual growth is not about latching onto a single idea, but about seeing the vast unity behind the many, acting without ego, and living from the level of the eternal witness Self.

Below is an audio version of this talk from our Gita Talks Podcast

Author: Swami Nirmalananda Giri

Swami Nirmalananda Giri (Abbot George Burke)

Swami Nirmalananda Giri, founder of Light of the Spirit Monastery, has spent over six decades immersed in the study and practice of Yoga and and the spiritual traditions of East and West. He is the author of more than 30 books on meditation, practical spiritual life and Sanatana Dharma. Learn more »