According to Osho, a Gita without an Arjuna (or Janak) is only potential, not power; scripture becomes alive only in a receptive seeker. Krishna’s words turned Arjuna’s seed into a tree; Ashtavakra’s Mahageeta ripened Janak. The teaching’s glory is the flowering it provokes. Without a trembling, hesitant disciple ready to break the shell, the Gita is unheard music—presence without transformation.
A holy teaching matters only when a ready person hears it and blossoms; without such a seeker, it’s just words.