Sanatkumāra’s Bhāgavata Tantra: Tattvas, Māyā-Bonds, Embodiment, and the Necessity of Dīkṣā
प्रयोक्त्यादिमहीप्रांतमेतदंडार्थसाधनम् । प्रत्यात्मनियतं भोगभेदतो व्यवसीयते ॥ ८९ ॥
prayoktyādimahīprāṃtametadaṃḍārthasādhanam | pratyātmaniyataṃ bhogabhedato vyavasīyate || 89 ||
Cet entier « œuf cosmique » (brahmāṇḍa)—du Créateur jusqu’aux confins les plus lointains de la terre—sert d’instrument pour la maturation de sa fin; et, pour chaque soi, il est déterminé selon la diversité des expériences (bhoga).
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a Vedanga/technical context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It frames the universe (brahmāṇḍa) as a purposeful mechanism through which karmic results ripen, emphasizing that each jīva’s experiences are precisely allotted according to its own pattern of bhoga.
By showing that worldly experience is regulated and karmically conditioned, the verse indirectly supports bhakti as a way to transcend mere bhoga-driven cycles and orient life toward the higher purpose beyond karmic enjoyment.
A technical, dharma-śāstra/vedāṅga-style causality model: individual outcomes are ‘niyata’ (regulated) by prior causes, a foundational principle used when interpreting ritual results and ethical action-consequence teachings.