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Bhagavad Gita tutors, lessons & classes

हरे कृष्ण Hare Krishna, the devotional salutation most commonly heard around Gita study.

Personally vetted tutors who teach the Bhagavad Gita as both philosophical text and Sanskrit reading project. Lessons that move chapter by chapter through the 700 verses, with attention to language, context, and the major commentarial traditions.

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Bhagavad Gita tutor and student reading a chapter together — Strommen
20 yrs
EST. 2006
In-Person Online
250+Tutors
18+Years in LA
150+Film & TV Credits
50+Languages

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Bhagavad Gita tutors for private lessons & classes

The tutors below have the deepest background on our roster for the Bhagavad Gita specifically. Some have studied within a traditional Hindu or yogic lineage, some hold graduate credentials in Hindu philosophy or comparative religion, several have taught the Gita in classroom and workshop settings for years. Every one of them was met and vetted by Strommen directly before being listed.

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भगवद्गीता — text & tradition

5 things every Bhagavad Gita student meets early

These are the structural and historical anchors that organize Gita study. Knowing what each one is, and how it shapes the reading, makes the first months of study less mysterious and far more rewarding.

  1. 01

    अष्टादश अध्यायाः · the eighteen chapters

    The Gita's 700 verses are organized into eighteen chapters, each named in Hindu tradition by the form of yoga or the topic it most fully treats. Chapter one sets the scene; chapter two contains most of the foundational philosophical vocabulary; chapter eleven contains the cosmic vision; chapter eighteen integrates the threads. A serious tutor will help you choose which chapter to start with based on your goal.

    e.g. Beginners often start with chapter two or chapter twelve, not chapter one.

  2. 02

    कर्मयोगः · the path of action

    The discipline of acting without attachment to the fruits of action, developed most fully in chapters three through six. This is the single most-quoted concept from the Gita and has had enormous influence on Indian and global thought about ethics, work, and freedom. Gandhi's reading of the Gita centered this path.

    e.g. Karmaṇyevādhikāraste mā phaleṣu kadācana ("Your right is to action alone, never to its fruits," Bhagavad Gita 2.47).

  3. 03

    विश्वरूपदर्शनम् · the cosmic vision

    Chapter eleven, in which Krishna grants Arjuna a vision of his universal form, with all of creation visible within it. The passage Robert Oppenheimer famously quoted at the Trinity test ("Now I am become Death, the destroyer of worlds") comes from this chapter. It is the most theologically and poetically dense chapter and rewards slow reading.

    e.g. Many tutors save chapter eleven for later, after the philosophical groundwork of chapters two through six is solid.

  4. 04

    भाष्यम् · the commentarial tradition

    For roughly fifteen centuries, the major Hindu philosophical schools have read the Gita through extensive commentaries. Shankara (eighth century CE, Advaita Vedanta), Ramanuja (eleventh century, Vishishtadvaita), and Madhva (thirteenth century, Dvaita) are the three classical anchors. Modern commentaries by Gandhi, Aurobindo, Vivekananda, and others continue the tradition.

    e.g. Tutors will introduce a commentary when the reading raises a question one of them addresses well.

  5. 05

    अनुष्टुप् · anushtubh meter

    The 32-syllable meter in four eight-syllable lines that makes up almost all of the Gita's 700 verses, with a handful of longer Trishtubh verses inserted at moments of heightened intensity. The metric regularity makes the Gita one of the more approachable classical Sanskrit texts for students wanting to read in the original.

    e.g. The famous opening verse, dharma-kṣetre kuru-kṣetre, is anushtubh.

About Bhagavad Gita

Krishna and Arjuna on the eve of battle

What you'll cover

Lessons & classes tailored to Bhagavad Gita

Reading the text chapter by chapter

A working path through the eighteen chapters, tailored to your goal. Most students do not march straight from chapter one to chapter eighteen; tutors typically start with chapter two (which contains the foundational philosophical vocabulary) or chapter twelve (the most accessible devotional doorway) and circle outward. Each chapter is read with attention to its internal argument, its place in the larger structure, and the questions it has provoked across the commentarial tradition.

Karma, Jnana, and Bhakti yoga in context

The three paths the Gita weaves together: action without attachment, the cultivation of discriminating knowledge, and devotional surrender. Tutors resist the temptation to flatten the text into one of these as a single thesis, because the text itself does not. Lessons cover how the three paths support each other, where they differ in emphasis across chapters, and how the major commentarial traditions read the balance.

Context: the Mahabharata frame and the kshatriya world

The Gita is a small dialogue inside a vast epic, and reading it without its context flattens the text. Lessons cover the Mahabharata setup that puts Arjuna on the battlefield, the kshatriya warrior code that makes his crisis specifically a crisis of dharma, and the historical and cultural world in which the dialogue was composed. The point is not to make you a Mahabharata scholar, but to give the Gita the frame it needs.

Sanskrit alongside translation, if you want it

Many Gita students do not learn Sanskrit, and that is a legitimate path. Tutors who teach the Gita as text can work entirely from English (Easwaran, Sargeant, Prabhupada, Isherwood, or Gandhi, depending on your starting point) with attention to translation choices that matter. Students who want the Sanskrit can add it, either at the level of reading individual verses in the original (achievable within a year of beginner Sanskrit work) or as a full bilingual reading project. The anushtubh meter makes the Gita one of the more approachable classical texts in Sanskrit.

FAQ

About Bhagavad Gita lessons & classes

Which translation should I start with?

There is no single right answer, but a few strong starting points. Eknath Easwaran's translation is the most widely read introductory English version, warm and accessible. Swami Prabhupada's Bhagavad-gita As It Is is the Hare Krishna lineage's standard with extensive devotional commentary. The Winthrop Sargeant interlinear gives word-by-word Sanskrit and is essential for students reading the original. Gandhi's Anasaktiyoga reads the text through the lens of nonviolent action. Isherwood and Prabhavananda's Song of God is the most literary of the popular versions. Your tutor will help you choose based on whether you are reading as text, as practice, or as comparison.

Do I need to know Sanskrit to study the Bhagavad Gita?

Not at all. Many serious students of the Gita work entirely from English translation, and the text has been read that way fruitfully by everyone from Emerson and Thoreau to contemporary Hindu teachers. What Sanskrit adds is direct access to vocabulary that translators have to make choices about (dharma, atman, yoga, sannyasa, all of which travel imperfectly into English) and the ability to read individual verses in the original, which often resolves ambiguities in translation. If you want to add Sanskrit, see our beginner Sanskrit course; tutors can run both tracks in parallel.

Is this religious study or philosophical study?

It can be either, and tutors calibrate accordingly. The Gita is a central scripture of Hindu tradition and is taught devotionally within many lineages (Vaishnava, Smarta, and others). It is also one of the most-read philosophical texts in the world and can be approached as comparative philosophy alongside the Stoics, the Tao Te Ching, or the Christian mystics. Tell us at the trial which mode interests you and we will match you to a tutor whose approach fits.

How long does it take to work through the full Gita?

Depends on your pace, your depth, and whether you are reading translation only or Sanskrit alongside. A weekly chapter-by-chapter course with discussion covers the eighteen chapters in roughly four to six months at a comfortable pace, or in two to three months if you are moving briskly. A slower, more meditative reading with attention to the commentarial tradition and to selected Sanskrit passages typically runs a full year. Many students read the Gita more than once across their lives, getting different things from it each time.

Do I need to be Hindu to study the Bhagavad Gita?

No. The Gita has been studied across religious traditions for centuries. Gandhi (raised Vaishnava but reading widely across traditions), Thoreau and Emerson (American transcendentalists), Aldous Huxley, Hermann Hesse, T.S. Eliot, and many others approached the text as a work of world philosophy and literature. Plenty of our Gita students are Christian, Jewish, Buddhist, secular, or simply curious. The text is open to readers from any tradition; what changes is which layers of the reading land hardest.

Which commentaries are worth knowing?

The three classical Vedanta commentaries (Shankara, Ramanuja, Madhva) anchor the historical Hindu reception and represent three different metaphysical readings of the same verses. Among modern commentaries, Aurobindo's Essays on the Gita is a major twentieth-century philosophical reading, Gandhi's Anasaktiyoga reads through the lens of nonviolent action, Vivekananda's lectures bring the Gita to a Western audience in late-nineteenth-century terms, and Eknath Easwaran's chapter-by-chapter commentary is the most accessible contemporary introduction. Your tutor will introduce a commentary when the reading raises a question it addresses well.

Can I take Bhagavad Gita lessons online or only in person?

Both. Most of our Gita tutors teach online via Zoom or Jitsi and work with students worldwide. Several also teach in person around Los Angeles. Text-based reading lessons work very well online because most of the lesson is spent on a shared text. The booking widget on each tutor's profile shows their available formats.

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