Major Teachers & Commentators
9 major teachers who shaped how the Gita is understood. Each brings a different lens. All are worth knowing.
Adi Shankaracharya
Advaita VedantaIndian (Kerala)
Major work: Gita Bhashya (Commentary on the Bhagavad Gita)
The Gita teaches that the absolute reality (Brahman) is non-dual pure consciousness. The apparent world is Maya. The individual self (Atman) is identical to Brahman. Liberation is jnana — direct recognition of this truth.
- Atman-Brahman identity
- Jnana as primary path
- Chapter 2 as the essence
- Negation of the apparent world as ultimate
First systematic philosophical commentary on the Gita. Established Advaita Vedanta as the dominant school of Vedantic thought.
If you want the deepest philosophical analysis. Dense but transformative for serious students.
Ramanujacharya
VishishtadvaitaIndian (Tamil Nadu)
Major work: Gita Bhashya
Brahman is personal, with attributes, and is identified with Vishnu. Souls are real, distinct, yet are the body of Brahman. Bhakti (loving devotion) is the primary means to liberation, which is eternal closeness to God.
- Bhakti as highest path
- Personal God with qualities
- Souls eternally real
- Prapatti (total surrender)
The definitive bhakti philosophy. Showed that personal devotion and philosophical rigour are not opposites.
If you feel drawn to devotion and want both emotional depth and philosophical grounding.
Madhvacharya
Dvaita VedantaIndian (Karnataka)
Major work: Gita Tatparya Nirnaya
God (Vishnu) and souls are absolutely, eternally distinct. There is no identity between them. Bhakti to Vishnu is the sole path to liberation. Liberation means eternal proximity to God, not merger.
- Absolute difference between God and soul
- Pure devotional path
- Vishnu as supreme
- Clear hierarchy in creation
Sharpest critique of Advaita. Founded the Udupi Krishna tradition. Inspired later Vaishnava devotional movements.
If you want a clear, devotional relationship with God without philosophical merger.
Swami Vivekananda
Neo-Vedanta / ModernIndian (Bengal)
Major work: Lectures on the Bhagavad Gita; Karma Yoga
The Gita is a universal scripture. Karma yoga — selfless service to humanity as worship — is its most practical teaching. All four yogas (karma, bhakti, jnana, raja) are valid and complementary. The Gita's message is fearlessness and strength.
- Karma yoga as service
- Universal Vedanta
- Practical spirituality
- Strength and fearlessness
- Social transformation
Brought Vedanta and Gita to the modern world. Interpreted karma yoga as active service to the poor as worship of God.
If you want a modern, active, socially engaged reading of the Gita.
Sri Aurobindo
Neo-Vedanta / ModernIndian (Bengal)
Major work: Essays on the Gita (2 volumes)
The Gita is not a text about world-renunciation but about the transformation of all of life into yoga. The three paths (karma, bhakti, jnana) must be integrated into one complete yoga. Human evolution toward divine consciousness is the ultimate goal.
- Integration of all three paths
- Transformation not renunciation
- Evolution of consciousness
- Action as divine offering
- Synthesis and wholeness
Most comprehensive modern commentary — 2 volumes. Integral yoga philosophy. The Gita as a text for total life-transformation.
If you want deep, integral, modern commentary — the most complete single reading.
A.C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada
Achintya BhedabhedaIndian/Global
Major work: Bhagavad Gita As It Is
The Gita must be understood through the parampara (disciplic succession) from Krishna. Krishna is the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Bhagavan. Surrender to Krishna is the final and highest teaching. Every verse must be understood in the light of the devotional tradition.
- Surrender to Krishna
- Parampara (traditional lineage)
- Bhakti as supreme
- Literal interpretation of Krishna's divinity
- 18.66 as the essence
Most widely distributed English translation/commentary globally. Brought Gita to every continent through ISKCON.
If you want a traditional Vaishnava reading with extensive commentary. Rich bhakti context.
Swami Chinmayananda
Advaita VedantaIndian
Major work: The Holy Geeta (Commentary)
The Gita is a complete manual for mental evolution and liberation. Vedanta (non-dualism) is its philosophy but it is entirely practical. The student must live the teachings, not merely study them.
- Practical Vedanta
- Mental evolution
- The intellect must be purified
- Teaching through example
- Living the Gita
The most accessible contemporary Advaita commentary. Clear, modern English. Used in thousands of study groups globally.
Best starting commentary for serious English-speaking students wanting Advaita. Clear and systematic.
Paramahansa Yogananda
Neo-Vedanta / ModernIndian/American
Major work: God Talks With Arjuna (2 volumes)
The Gita is a symbolic text about the war within — between spiritual and material impulses. Krishna represents the higher Self; Arjuna represents the devotee-seeker. Every character is a psychological archetype. Kriya yoga is the primary technique.
- Inner psychological battle
- Meditation as primary practice
- Kriya yoga
- The Gita as guide to meditation
- Universal, non-sectarian interpretation
Psychological and yogic interpretation. Brought Gita to America. Connected ancient wisdom to practical meditation techniques.
If you are drawn to meditation practice and want a psychologically rich, universal interpretation.
J. Krishnamurti
IndependentIndian/Global
Major work: Commentaries on Living; various talks
Did not comment directly on the Gita but his teachings intersect deeply. All traditions can become obstacles. Direct observation of the mind without authority, interpretation, or belief is the only true path. The observer IS the observed.
- Choiceless awareness
- Questioning all authority
- Freedom from psychological time
- Direct observation
- No method or tradition
Radical questioning of all interpretive authority. His approach: look directly at your own mind without any tradition's lens.
If you want to approach the Gita's questions (not necessarily the Gita itself) with total intellectual independence.