श्रेयान्द्रव्यमयाद्यज्ञाज्ज्ञानयज्ञः परन्तप । सर्वं कर्माखिलं पार्थ ज्ञाने परिसमाप्यते ॥
śreyān dravyamayād yajñāj jñāna-yajñaḥ parantapa | sarvaṃ karmākhilaṃ pārtha jñāne parisamāpyate ||
Knowledge-yajna surpasses all material sacrifice. Every action without exception culminates in knowledge.
Word by word (3)
- śreyān dravyamayāt yajñāt jñāna-yajñaḥ parantapa
- — better than the material yajna is the knowledge-yajna, O scorcher of foes · Śreyān = better, superior (comparative of śreya — the beneficial/better path vs. preya = the pleasant path). Dravyamayāt yajñāt = than material-substance yajna (dravya = material substance, wealth). Jñāna-yajñaḥ = the yajna of knowledge. Parantapa = O scorcher of enemies (para = others/enemies; tapa = scorcher/heater — the warrior's fire). A note of recognition: Arjuna is a scorcher of foes. But jñāna, not weapons, is the highest fire.
- sarvaṃ karma akhilam pārtha jñāne parisamāpyate
- — all action without remainder, O Partha, is completed/culminated in knowledge · Sarvaṃ = all. Karma = action. Akhilam = without remainder, entirely (a+khila = not a gap — complete wholeness). Pārtha = O son of Pritha (Arjuna). Jñāne = in knowledge (locative: in the field of knowledge). Parisamāpyate = is completely concluded, finds its culmination (pari+sam+āp+yate — the prefix pari adds thoroughness; āp = to reach, to conclude). The grand statement: all karma — every single action — finds its ultimate completion in jñāna.
- parisamāpyate
- — parisamāpyate = is fully completed/culminated/ends (pari = completely; sam = together; āpyate = is obtained/reaches its end; parisamāpyate = comes to its complete conclusion); sarvaṃ karma akhilam parisamāpyate = all action without remainder reaches its full conclusion in jñāna; the verb is significant: jñāna is not the rejection of karma but its parisamāpti (completion) — karma done correctly leads to jñāna as its natural endpoint; action is not abandoned but ripened into wisdom
The yajna of knowledge is superior to the yajna of material things, O Arjuna. All action without remainder, O Partha, finds its culmination in knowledge.
A modern analogy
You can give money to a cause — that is dravya-yajna. But the person who understands why justice matters, and from that understanding acts — their action springs from jñāna-yajna. The insight generates infinite material action. V33: material offering is bounded by your resources; knowledge-offering is not.
Take with you
- Śreyān dravyamayāt: material sacrifice is genuinely good — but knowledge-sacrifice is better. Not either/or, but a hierarchy.
- Sarvaṃ karmākhilam — ALL action, without remainder (akhila = not a gap). No exception.
- Parisamāpyate — 'finds its completion' in jñāna. Action is not negated by knowledge; it is fulfilled by it.
- V33 sets up V34 directly: since all action culminates in knowledge, the next question is — how to obtain that knowledge?
V33 states the hierarchy that was implicit throughout the yajna taxonomy: śreyān dravyamayād yajñāj jñāna-yajñaḥ — the knowledge-yajna is better than any material yajna. Why? Because sarvaṃ karmākhilaṃ jñāne parisamāpyate — all action finds its culmination in knowledge. Shankaracharya: the logic is that material yajna is the action-instrument; jñāna is the destination that all action-instruments are pointing toward. The instrument cannot be superior to the destination. This does not denigrate material yajna — V30 recognized all practitioners equally — but it establishes the direction of movement: from form to understanding, from action to its inner meaning, from karma to jñāna. V33 connects directly to V34's instruction: having established that jñāna is the culmination, Krishna now describes how to obtain it.
Public-domain translations (5) compare all →
Superior to sacrifice of material objects is the sacrifice of knowledge, O scorcher of foes. All action without exception, O son of Pritha, finds its culmination in knowledge. [1]
Superior to the sacrifice of any material thing is the sacrifice of knowledge, O Parantapa. All action in its entirety, O Partha, culminates in knowledge. [4]
The sacrifice of wisdom is greater than any material sacrifice, O Arjuna; because all action without exception culminates in wisdom. [6]
Better than gift of goods is gift of rite, Better than rite is meditation, better Than meditation is renouncement of fruit. All actions reach their consummation in knowledge. [7]
The sacrifice of knowledge is better than the sacrifice of material things, O scorcher of foes. All action, O son of Pritha, in its entirety culminates in knowledge. [9]
This verse speaks to
Where this thread continues
Approach the teacher with prostration, inquiry, and service. The knowers of truth will instruct you in jñāna.
Nothing in this world purifies like jñāna. The karma-yogi finds it within themselves in time.
For the liberated one — attachment gone, mind settled in knowledge, acting for yajna — all karma completely dissolves.
All sense-actions, all vital-breath actions — offered into the fire of self-mastery yoga, kindled by knowledge.
Three-fold impulse to action: knowledge, knowable, knower. Three-fold action-structure: organ, act, agent.
Kṣatriya dharma: bravery, vigor, fortitude, skill, not-fleeing-battle, generosity, lordly bearing — born of svabhāva.