Life’s uncertainties often make us feel insecure. Our
insecurities can be grouped into two broad categories: those related with
providing for what we need and those related with protecting what we have. All
material things are temporary, so they can’t provide lasting security.
Therefore, the Gita urges us to seek security at the eternal spiritual level of
reality. And while guiding us towards spiritual reality, it uses the dual
compound yoga-kshema (provision and protection) twice at two progressive
levels: the level of the soul and the level of Krishna. The Gita’s first usage
(02.45) of yoga-kshema is in the context of its call that we become possessors
of the soul (atmavan). As we ourselves are the souls, this usage of “possessor”
is figurative, meant to convey our possession of the awareness of our spiritual
identity. When we realize and remember that we at our core are non-material, we
understand that material things are peripheral to our essential being. That
understanding can substantially decrease our worries about gaining and
retaining material things. The Gita’s second usage of yoga-kshema occurs in a
more well-known verse (09.22), which assures that for those devoted to Krishna,
he personally takes care of their protection and provision. When we seek
security in the soul, we have to depend on our intellectual insight to stay
fixed in spiritual reality. But when we seek security in Krishna, we are
assisted by his omnipotent mercy. He mercifully grants us taste and faith:
taste in absorption in his remembrance, and faith in his benevolence to take
care of things by his supreme intelligence, which far exceeds our best
intelligence. When we thus raise our consciousness from detachment arising from
understanding our spiritual identity to devotion arising from understanding our
spiritual relationship with Krishna, we can relish the best spiritual security.
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