Uddhava Meets the Gopīs: Bhramara-gītā and Kṛṣṇa’s Message of Separation
एता: परं तनुभृतो भुवि गोपवध्वो गोविन्द एव निखिलात्मनि रूढभावा: । वाञ्छन्ति यद् भवभियो मुनयो वयं च किं ब्रह्मजन्मभिरनन्तकथारसस्य ॥ ५८ ॥
etāḥ paraṁ tanu-bhṛto bhuvi gopa-vadhvo govinda eva nikhilātmani rūḍha-bhāvāḥ vāñchanti yad bhava-bhiyo munayo vayaṁ ca kiṁ brahma-janmabhir ananta-kathā-rasasya
[Уддхава воспел:] Среди всех воплощённых на земле лишь эти пастушьи жёны достигли высшего совершенства, ибо их чистая, безраздельная любовь укоренилась в Говинде, Душе всего сущего. Той любви, которой жаждут мудрецы, боящиеся сансары, и которой жаждем мы, — для вкусившего нектар повествований о Бесконечном Господе какая польза в рождении знатным брахманом или даже в рождении самим Брахмой?
Śrīla Viśvanātha Cakravartī explains that here the term brahma-janmabhiḥ, “brahminical births,” refers to the threefold birth by (1) seminal parenthood, (2) sacred-thread initiation and (3) sacrificial initiation. These cannot compare to pure Kṛṣṇa consciousness.
It declares the gopīs the greatest among embodied beings because their love is firmly rooted in Govinda, the indwelling Self of all.
After witnessing their unmatched separation-love and single-minded absorption in Kṛṣṇa, Uddhava acknowledges that even sages seek the devotion the gopīs naturally possess.
It teaches that real spiritual success is measured by sincere attachment to God and taste for divine hearing (Kṛṣṇa-kathā), not by status, background, or external credentials.