|
Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam
<< Canto 2, The Cosmic Manifestation >> << 5 - The Cause of All Causes >>
<< VERSE 20 >>
स एष भगवांल्लिङ्गैस्त्रिभिरेतैरधोक्षजः स्वलक्षितगतिर्ब्रह्मन्सर्वेषां मम चेश्वरः
sa eṣa bhagavāḻ liṅgais tribhir etair adhokṣajaḥ svalakṣita-gatir brahman sarveṣāṁ mama ceśvaraḥ
WORD BY WORD
saḥ He; eṣaḥ this; bhagavān the Personality of Godhead; liṅgaiḥ by the symptoms; tribhiḥ by the three; etaiḥ by all these; adhokṣajaḥ the Superseer Transcendence; su-alakṣita veritably unseen; gatiḥ movement; brahman O Nārada; sarveṣām of everyone; mama mine; ca as also; īśvaraḥ the controller;
TRANSLATION
| O Brāhmaṇa Nārada, the Superseer, the transcendent Lord, is beyond the perception of the material senses of the living entities because of the above-mentioned three modes of nature. But He is the controller of everyone, including me.
|
PURPORT
| In the Bhagavad-gītā [7.24-25] the Lord has declared very clearly that the impersonalist, who gives more importance to the transcendental rays of the Lord as brahmajyoti and who concludes that the Absolute Truth is ultimately impersonal and only manifests a form at a time of necessity, is less intelligent than the personalist, however much the impersonalist may be engaged in studying the Vedānta. The fact is that such impersonalists are covered by the above-mentioned three modes of material nature; therefore, they are unable to approach the transcendental personality of the Lord. The Lord is not approachable by everyone because He is curtained by His yoga-māyā potency. But one should not wrongly conclude that the Lord was formerly unmanifested and has now manifested Himself in the human form. This misconception of the formlessness of the Supreme Personality of Godhead is due to the yoga-māyā curtain of the Lord and can be removed only by the Supreme Will, as soon as the conditioned soul surrenders unto Him. The devotees of the Lord who are transcendental to the above-mentioned three modes of material nature can see the all-blissful transcendental form of the Lord with their vision of love in the attitude of pure devotional service.
|
|
| |