Bhagīratha Brings Gaṅgā; Saudāsa’s Curse; Khaṭvāṅga’s Instant Renunciation
यत् तद् ब्रह्म परं सूक्ष्ममशून्यं शून्यकल्पितम् । भगवान् वासुदेवेति यं गृणन्ति हि सात्वता: ॥ ४९ ॥
yat tad brahma paraṁ sūkṣmam aśūnyaṁ śūnya-kalpitam bhagavān vāsudeveti yaṁ gṛṇanti hi sātvatāḥ
至高にして極めて微妙、しかも空ではないブラフマンを、愚かな者は空や非人格と कल्प想する。まさにその御方がバガヴァーン・ヴァースデーヴァであり、清浄な भक्तたちが歌い讃える。
As stated in Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam (1.2.11) :
This verse says the supreme Brahman is not void (aśūnyam); the ‘void’ idea is a mental conception (śūnya-kalpitam). The Bhagavatam points to the personal Absolute—Vāsudeva—glorified by pure devotees.
He clarifies that the subtlest, supreme reality (Brahman) is ultimately realized personally as Bhagavān Vāsudeva, which is the devotee’s conclusion—beyond merely impersonal or void conceptions.
Instead of stopping at abstract spirituality, cultivate personal devotion—hear, chant, and remember Vāsudeva—so understanding of the Absolute becomes lived relationship and worship, not just concept.