Ask Osho!

Why does Krishna appear egoistic in the Geeta despite being egoless?

Synthesized from Source definition

"Krishna's declaration of 'I am the Supreme' is not an assertion of ego, but a profound expression of oneness, where the personal 'I' dissolves into the entirety of existence."

According to Osho, Krishna sounds egoistic because he speaks from the path of expansion, not negation. His 'I' has grown to include the whole; with no 'thou' outside, the personal I-ness has vanished. Saying 'I am the Supreme' is merely linguistic shorthand for oneness—an egoless declaration arising from total identification with existence.
Krishna’s ‘I’ means everything and everyone together, not a separate person bragging; it’s just how language points to oneness.
Why this matters practically
- Prevents misreading enlightened words as arrogance.
- Guides practice: expand your sense of self to include others and life, rather than fighting the ego.
- Offers a check: if a ‘thou’ remains, the ‘I’ is still separate.
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