कर्म ब्रह्मोद्भवं विद्धि ब्रह्माक्षरसमुद्भवम् । तस्मात्सर्वगतं ब्रह्म नित्यं यज्ञे प्रतिष्ठितम् ॥

karma brahmodbhavaṃ viddhi brahmākṣara-samudbhavam | tasmāt sarva-gataṃ brahma nityaṃ yajñe pratiṣṭhitam ||

Action arises from Brahman, Brahman from the Imperishable. The all-pervading ultimate is present in every act of yajna.

Word by word (3)
karma brahmodbhavam
— know that action arises from Brahman · Brahmodbhava = arising from Brahman. The chain that began with action (V14) now reaches its ultimate source: action itself arises from Brahman — the ultimate reality. The chain is: Brahman → the eternal (Veda/Word) → karma → yajna → rain → food → beings. Brahman is both the source and the sustainer.
brahmākṣara-samudbhavam
— Brahman arises from the imperishable (akṣara) · Akṣara = imperishable, the syllable OM, the eternal. Brahman (here as Veda/cosmic law) arises from the akṣara — the primordial sound/imperishable reality. The entire chain is thus: akṣara (ultimate) → Brahman (cosmic order) → karma → yajna → all life.
sarva-gataṃ brahma nityaṃ yajñe
— the all-pervading Brahman is eternally established in yajna · Sarva-gata = all-pervading (going everywhere). Nityam = eternally, always. Pratiṣṭhitam = established, based. The profound statement: Brahman (ultimate reality) is eternally established in yajna. This means that when you act as yajna, you are not just following a rule — you are participating in the very nature of ultimate reality.

Know that action arises from Brahman (the cosmic order), and Brahman arises from the Imperishable (the Ultimate). Therefore, the all-pervading Brahman is eternally present in yajna.

A modern analogy

When you act with complete integrity and offering — in total alignment with your deepest nature — you touch something larger than yourself. Athletes call it 'the zone,' mystics call it 'grace,' scientists call it 'flow.' The Gita says: that experience is Brahman, which is eternally present when action becomes yajna.

Take with you

  • Your actions are not small — they arise from and participate in the ultimate ground of reality.
  • When action is yajna, it touches the infinite — which is why it produces liberation rather than bondage.
  • The entire chain of V9-15 culminates here: yajna is not just ethics, it is the very nature of Brahman in action.
  • This verse elevates every act of genuine giving to cosmic significance.

V15 closes the yajna cosmology section (V9-15) with the ultimate grounding. The chain is now complete: akṣara (imperishable ultimate) → Brahman (cosmic order/Veda) → karma (action) → yajna (offering) → parjanya (rain) → anna (food) → bhūtāni (all beings). And the closing statement: Brahman is eternally established in yajna. Shankaracharya reads this as the metaphysical justification for karma-yoga: since Brahman (ultimate reality) is present in yajna (right action), the karma-yogi who acts as yajna is not moving away from the spiritual path but toward its deepest expression. Action-as-yajna is action-in-Brahman. This is why karma-yoga and jñāna-yoga ultimately converge at the highest level.

Modern parallels

The physicist's recognition that the universe's laws (cosmic order/Brahman) are discoverable through the process of inquiry (karma) that participates in those very laws — the observer is part of the observed system. In ecological terms: human action (karma) is embedded in the laws of nature (Brahman); right action (yajna) aligns human participation with those laws, not against them.

Public-domain translations (5) compare all →

Know that action arises from Brahman, and Brahman arises from the Imperishable. Therefore the all-pervading Brahman is ever established in sacrifice. [1]

Know that action originates from Brahman, and Brahman proceeds from the Imperishable. Therefore the all-pervading Brahman is ever present in sacrifice. [4]

Know that action rises from the Eternal, and the Eternal springs from the Immutable. The all-pervading Brahman is therefore always present in sacrifice. [6]

All action comes of Brahm; Brahm springs from the Deathless; Therefore is the all-pervading Spirit lodged In sacrifice. [7]

Know that action proceeds from Brahman, and Brahman from the Imperishable. Therefore the all-pervading Brahman is always present in sacrifice. [9]

This verse speaks to

Where this thread continues