etÄvÄn eva yogena
samagreṇeha yoginaḥ
yujyate 'bhimato hy artho
yad asaṅgas tu kṛtsnaśaḥ
etÄvÄn - of such a measure; eva - just; yogena - by yoga practice; samagreṇa - all; iha - in this world; yoginaḥ - of the yogÄ«; yujyate - is achieved; abhimataḥ - desired; hi - certainly; arthaḥ - purpose; yat - which; asaá¹…gaḥ - detachment; tu - indeed; ká¹›tsnaÅ›aḥ - completely.
There are three kinds of yoga, namely bhakti-yoga, jñÄna-yoga and aá¹£á¹Äá¹…ga-yoga. Devotees, jñÄnÄ«s and yogÄ«s all try to get out of the material entanglement. The jñÄnÄ«s try to detach their sensual activities from material engagement. The jñÄna-yogÄ« thinks that matter is false and that Brahman is truth; therefore by cultivation of knowledge he tries to detach the senses from material enjoyment. The aá¹£á¹Äá¹…ga-yogÄ«s also try to control the senses. The devotees, however, try to engage the senses in the service of the Lord. Therefore it appears that the activities of the bhaktas, devotees, are better than those of the jñÄnÄ«s and yogÄ«s. The mystic yogÄ«s simply try to control the senses by practicing the eight divisions of yoga — yama, niyama, Äsana, prÄṇÄyÄma, pratyÄhÄra, etc. — and the jñÄnÄ«s try by mental reasoning to understand that sense enjoyment is false. But the easiest and most direct process is to engage the senses in the service of the Lord.
The purpose of all yoga is to detach one’s sense activities from this material world. The final aims, however, are different. JñÄnÄ«s want to become one with the Brahman effulgence, yogÄ«s want to realize ParamÄtmÄ, and devotees want to develop Kṛṣṇa consciousness and transcendental loving service to the Lord. That loving service is the perfect stage of sense control. The senses are actually active symptoms of life, and they cannot be stopped. They can be detached only if there is superior engagement. As it is confirmed in Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ, paraá¹ dṛṣá¹vÄ nivartate: the activities of the senses can be stopped if they are given superior engagements. The supreme engagement is engagement of the senses in the service of the Lord. That is the purpose of all yoga.