Mahāprabhu’s associates, svakīya-vāda and
aiśvarya mixtures
Vaisnava - "At the end of the Caitanya Candrodaya Nāṭaka Mahāprabhu tells Advaita ācārya:
dāsye kecana kecana praṇayinaḥ sakhye ta evobhaye
rādhā-mādhava niṣṭhayā katipaye śrī dvārakādhīśituh
sakhyādāv ubhayatra kecana pare ye vāvatārāntare
mayyābaddha hṛdo'khilān vitanavai vṛndāvanāsaṅginaḥ
“Some devotees are in a mood of servitude, some are fixed in a fraternal mood, some are fixed in the love of Rādhā and Mādhava, others in the Lord of Dvārakā and again others in My different avatāras like Rāma and Nṛsiṁha. I will lock you all in the chains of My love and give You attachment to Vṛndāvana!"
On the surface it seems from this verse that Mahāprabhu's associates are just conditioned souls who are being redeemed by Him, though they are supposed to be nitya siddhas. Plus there seems to be the possibility of being promoted from dāsya rasa, Dwārakā rati whatever, to Rādhā-Mādhava."
Advaitadās – You have to see the context. This verse comes at the end of a drama, which has a happy ending, just like the end of Rūpa Gosvāmī’s Lalita-mādhava drama where Rādhā-Kṛṣṇa get married. As for nitya-siddhas – they all have their sthāyi-bhāvas. Mahāprabhu failed to persuade Jīva Gosvāmī's father Vallabha to switch from Rāma-bhakti to Kṛṣṇa-bhakti.
Vaiṣṇava - Why Jīva Gosvāmī preached svakīya vāda (Rādhā-Kṛṣṇa marrying)?
Advaitadās – Rādhā-Kṛṣṇa Gosvāmī writes in his Sādhana Dīpika:
gopāla-dāsa-nāmā ko’pi vaiśyaḥ śrī-jīva-gosvāmi-pādānāṁ priya-śiṣyaḥ. tat-prārthanā-paravaśena tena svakīyātvaṁ siddhāntitam
"There was a vaiśya named Gopāla, who was Śrī Jīva Gosvāmī's dear disciple. He established the svakīya siddhānta because he was subdued by his prayer to do so."
Vaiṣṇava - In the Veṇu Gīta in the Śrīmad-bhāgavat the gopīs pray to the clouds, trees, birds etc. Is that just poetry or all they also all sentient beings who can respond?"
Advaitadās – According to Vedic vision even material elements are persons – Indra is rain, Vāyu is wind etc. - what to speak of elements in the all-sentient spiritual sky?
Vaiṣṇava – In his commentary on Vilāpa-kusumāñjali, Śrī Ānanda Gopāl Gosvāmī describes how Rādhākuṇḍa and Rādhārāṇī's sash-of-bells (kāñchi) talk back to Raghunātha Dās Gosvāmī. Is that not aiśvarya? This is not a sign of nara-līlā (human pastimes).
Advaitadas – I still think this is very sweet, but yes it is aiśvarya. Aiśvarya cannot be avoided altogether in Vraja-līlā though. Rādhā-Mādhava cross a distance of 50 kilometers in the evening, walking from Nandagrām and Yāvat to Vṛndāvana to dance the Rāsa at night. It takes them just a few moments to walk 50 km. Kṛṣṇa expands himself during the noon pastimes in Rādhākuṇḍa to enjoy in all eight sakhīs’ kuñjas at the same time. Without some aiśvarya-hocus pocus even sweet Vraja-līlās cannot be accomplished. This aiśvarya drowns in an ocean of mādhurya, though, depending on the mādhurya-capacity and inclination of the sādhaka. The same thing goes for all the marvelous buildings described in the eternal Vraja-līlās.
Hare Kṛṣṇa!
ReplyDeleteThank you for the nice post, I love the expression "this aiśvarya drowns in an ocean of mādhurya."
Indeed, I've always been of the understanding that the higher rāsas include the lower ones, superseding them, not that they oppose/contrast them, as if mādhurya cannot contain aiśvarya.
Do you have śāstric references in this regard?
Or even better, could you write a post with them?
Thank you.
Sri Ramananda Ray explains to Sriman Mahaprabhu in Caitanya Caritamrita - Madhya 8. 85-87
ReplyDeletepūrva-pūrva-rasera guṇa----pare pare haya
dui-tina gaṇane pañca paryanta bāḍaya
Guṇādhikye svādādhikya bāḍe prati-rase
śānta-dāsya-sakhya-vātsalyera guṇa madhurete vaise
ākāśādira guṇa yena para-para bhūte
dui-tina krame bāḍe pañca pṛthivīte
A quality is added to each of the five rasas, one after the other. Each rasa increases in quality and taste. All qualities of shanta, dasya, sakhya and vatsalya reside in madhura. Just as each element, from ether upwards, has one quality more than the other, until we come to earth , which has five qualities.
Hare Kṛṣṇa!
ReplyDeleteThank you for the reference. That's the verse I had in mind, but I was wondering if the Gosvāmīs and the Gauḍīya Ācāryas elaborate more in other texts as well.
I cannot remember. Perhaps in Laghu- or Brihad Bhagavatamrita.
ReplyDeleteThank you. I will check asap.
ReplyDeleteDo you know if there is any specific description of aiśvarya in mādhurya anywhere?
All across the Bhagavat. sthane sthane bhagavate.
ReplyDelete