The Greatness of Puruṣottama
Goloka-tattva and Rādhā–Kṛṣṇa Upāsanā
प्राणाधिकप्रियतमा सा राधाराधितो यया । सुवर्णवर्णा देवी सा चिद्रूपा प्रकृतेः परा ॥ ८ ॥
prāṇādhikapriyatamā sā rādhārādhito yayā | suvarṇavarṇā devī sā cidrūpā prakṛteḥ parā || 8 ||
Elle est plus chère que la vie même ; par elle Rādhā est adorée. Cette Déesse est d’éclat d’or, de nature de pure conscience (cid-rūpā), et au-delà de Prakṛti, la nature matérielle.
Narada (narrative voice within the Uttara-Bhaga; speaker attribution based on the dominant dialogue tradition of the Narada Purana)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bhakti
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It identifies the Goddess as supremely beloved, golden-hued, and essentially consciousness itself (cidrūpā), explicitly placing her beyond prakṛti—indicating a transcendental, liberating reality rather than a merely worldly deity.
By presenting the Goddess as “dearer than life” and linked with Rādha’s worship, the verse frames bhakti as intimate, total-hearted adoration aimed at a transcendental divine presence, not just ritual formality.
No direct Vedāṅga technique (like Vyākaraṇa, Jyotiṣa, or Kalpa ritual procedure) is taught here; the takeaway is doctrinal—using precise tattva language (cidrūpā, prakṛteḥ parā) to define the object of worship.