Whatever forms are produced, O Arjuna, in any womb whatsoever, the great Brahma is their womb and I am the seed-giving father.
In simple words
Krishna continues: "In every species, in every womb, in every form of life — nature is the mother and I am the father who provides the seed."
Word-by-word meanings
सर्वयोनिषुin all the wombsकौन्तेयO son of Kunti (Arjuna)मूर्तयःformsसम्भवन्तिare producedयाःwhichतासाम्theirब्रह्मBrahmaमहत्greatयोनिःwombअहम्Iबीजप्रदःseedgivingपिताfather
14.4 सर्वयोनिषु in all the wombs? कौन्तेय O son of Kunti (Arjuna)? मूर्तयः forms? सम्भवन्ति are produced? याः which? तासाम् their? ब्रह्म Brahma? महत् great? योनिः womb? अहम् I? बीजप्रदः seedgiving? पिता father.Commentary I am the father The Primordial Nature is the mother. The whole manifested world is the child Nature has produced in its association with me. Therefore I am called the father of this world.Wombs Such as the gods? the manes? men? cattle? beasts? birds? etc.Forms Bodies consisting of parts? limbs? organs? etc.
Contemporary scholarly and practical interpretations for modern seekers.
This interpretation draws on a specific tradition and may not represent the view of any single school. For authoritative guidance within a specific tradition, seek a qualified teacher.
Modern
BG 14.4
A mere glance at creation reveals that beings are being born continuously. The places of the dead are constantly filled by countless newborn creatures. In all forms of life—human, animal, beast, and plant—this process continues eternally. All these beings are composed of the union of the inert and the conscious. The differences and distinctions among them arise from the inert conditions, while the conscious principle within all remains one and the same. This inert nature is what is indicated by the term Mahat Brahma.
Lord Sri Krishna, identifying himself with his nature of Sat-Chit-Ananda (Being-Consciousness-Bliss), declares: I am the Father who establishes the seed in this womb that is nature. His statement is metaphorical. As we have seen in the explanation of the previous verse, the expression of the Supreme Self's consciousness through nature is what constitutes the establishment of the seed. Through this, the inert nature becomes conscious and capable of action—just as an engine gains motion only when infused with steam; otherwise, it remains merely iron in a particular form. Similarly, without consciousness, the body, mind, and intellect remain mere instruments. An unmarried man, though possessing the capacity for procreation, cannot be called a father merely by virtue of that capacity. For this, after marriage, he must establish his seed in the womb. In the same way, nature alone cannot express the Supreme Self. The Lord here summarizes this principle: He is the eternal Father of the entire universe, who arranges the performance of life's drama upon the world stage.
Though followers of other faiths attempt to convince us that only Christianity first recognized and accepted God's fatherhood of the world, the facts contradict this belief. The Gita's teachings were imparted to Arjuna thousands of years before Christ. At most, we can only say that Christ may have adopted this concept from religions that existed before his time. The Hindus did not emphasize God's fatherhood of the world as much. Though this conception is poetic, it cannot be considered more rational from a philosophical standpoint. However, because this idea is easily comprehensible to the common people, the founders of later religions graciously accepted it from the earlier traditions.
Beginning the main subject of this chapter, Lord Sri Krishna explains what the qualities of nature are and how they bind the soul to the non-self.