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Sraddhatraya

Bhagavad Gītā Chapter XVII — The Threefold Faith (Śraddhā-Traya-Vibhāga)

N=1 distillation. Source: Arnold, The Song Celestial (1885), Gutenberg #2388. Quotes pending Phase 7. Tags: ../00-methodology.md. Citation Gītā 17.

Chapter role

Arjuna asks about those who worship "with faith at heart" but outside the prescribed forms. Krishna answers with the doctrine of threefold faith (śraddhā): faith conforms to one's nature — "Such as the shrine, so is the votary" — and is sattvic, rajasic, or tamasic according to the dominant guṇa. He then sorts the whole religious life by the three qualities: food, sacrifice, austerity, and gift each come in three kinds. Notably he reframes austerity (tapas) inwardly — the austerity of body (reverence, purity, harmlessness), of speech ("Words causing no man woe, words ever true, / Gentle and pleasing words"), and of mind (serenity, benignity, self-mastery) — and praises the gift "lovingly given" without expectation of return.

Atomic statements

G17-C1: A person is constituted by their faith (śraddhā), which conforms to their nature: "The faith of each believer… / Conforms itself to what he truly is… / Such as the shrine, so is the votary." (FOUNDATIONAL / DEVOTION+KNOWLEDGE)

  • Gītā 17: "Threefold the faith is of mankind and springs / From those three qualities… / The faith of each believer, Indian Prince! / Conforms itself to what he truly is… / [Such as the shrine, so is the votary.]"
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: śraddhā

G17-C2: Food, sacrifice, austerity, and gift each come in three kinds by the guṇas — the sattvic form being wholesome, rightly-offered, and disinterested; the rajasic self-seeking; the tamasic foul or destructive. (OPERATIONAL / DESIRE+DEVOTION)

  • Gītā 17: "there is a food which brings / Force, substance, strength… The 'Soothfast' meat… / A sacrifice not for rewardment made… / Is 'Soothfast' rite. But sacrifice for gain… is Rajas-rite."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: supporting · Untranslatable: guṇa

G17-C3: True austerity is threefold and inward — of body (reverence, purity, harmlessness), of speech (true, gentle, non-wounding words), of mind (serenity, benignity, self-mastery) — and is highest when "Kept, with no hope of gain, by hearts devote." (OPERATIONAL / NON-HARM+TRUTH+EQUANIMITY)

  • Gītā 17: "not to injure any helpless thing,— / These make a true religiousness of Act. / Words causing no man woe, words ever true, / Gentle and pleasing words… / These make the true religiousness of Speech. / Serenity of soul, benignity, / Sway of the silent Spirit… / Such threefold faith, in highest piety / Kept, with no hope of gain."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: tapas (austerity), ahiṃsā

G17-C4: The sattvic gift is given freely, in due place and time, to a worthy recipient who can render nothing back; the rajasic gift seeks return; the tamasic gift is flung in disdain. (OPERATIONAL / DHARMA)

  • Gītā 17: "The gift lovingly given, when one shall say / 'Now must I gladly give!' when he who takes / Can render nothing back… / Is gift of Sattwan… / The gift selfishly given, where to receive / Is hoped again… This is of Rajas… / The gift churlishly flung… / Is gift of Tamas."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: supporting

Step 4 — Clusters

Cluster Atomic statements Intent
Faith conforms to nature C1 One becomes what one trusts; faith takes the guṇa's colour
The threefold sorting of religious life C2, C4 Food, sacrifice, gift graded by the guṇas
Inward austerity disinterestedly offered C3 True tapas of body/speech/mind without hope of gain

Step 5 — Internal tensions

None genuine. The threefold scheme is a classification, not a contradiction.

Step 6 — Synthesized chapter principles

G17-P1: A person is made by their faith (śraddhā)

Faith takes the colour of one's dominant nature and shapes the self — "such as the shrine, so is the votary"; one becomes what one trusts.

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: DEVOTION+KNOWLEDGE · Covers: C1 · Evidence: Gītā 17 · Untranslatable: śraddhā

G17-P2: The whole religious life is graded by the three qualities

Food, sacrifice, austerity, and gift each come in sattvic, rajasic, and tamasic kinds — the worthiest being wholesome and disinterested.

  • Tier: OPERATIONAL · Domain: DESIRE+DEVOTION · Covers: C2, C4 · Evidence: Gītā 17 · Untranslatable: guṇa

G17-P3: True austerity is inward and disinterested — harmless act, gentle truth, serene mind

Austerity of body (reverence, harmlessness), of speech (true, non-wounding words), and of mind (serenity, self-mastery), offered "with no hope of gain," is the highest piety.

  • Tier: OPERATIONAL · Domain: NON-HARM+TRUTH+EQUANIMITY · Covers: C3 · Evidence: Gītā 17 · Untranslatable: tapas, ahiṃsā

Step 7 — Traceability

Principle Atomic statements Citation
G17-P1 C1 Gītā 17
G17-P2 C2, C4 Gītā 17
G17-P3 C3 Gītā 17

Step 8 — Quality

  • Coverage: high. Orphaned: <10%. Principles: 3. Traceability: 100%.

Step 9 — Validation

  • Claim-vs-warrant: G17-P1 ("a person is what they trust"; faith conforms to and shapes the self) is a portable psychological-spiritual claim converging with "as a man thinketh, so is he" and with the formative power of devotion across traditions. G17-P3 (true austerity = harmless deeds, truthful gentle speech, inner serenity, offered without hope of reward) is a strong convergence node — it reframes asceticism as ethical interiority, paralleling prophetic "I desire mercy, not sacrifice" and the disinterested almsgiving counselled in many traditions. The guṇa grading (G17-P2) carries the frame-specific Sāṃkhya warrant. Notably, the chapter's reframing of tapas as gentleness and truth, not self-torture, weakens the divergence at the claim level.