Devas in Dvārakā, Brahmā’s Petition, and Uddhava’s Appeal
Prabhāsa Departure Set-Up
यश्चिन्त्यते प्रयतपाणिभिरध्वराग्नौ त्रय्या निरुक्तविधिनेश हविर्गृहीत्वा । अध्यात्मयोग उत योगिभिरात्ममायां जिज्ञासुभि: परमभागवतै: परीष्ट: ॥ ११ ॥
yaś cintyate prayata-pāṇibhir adhvarāgnau trayyā nirukta-vidhineśa havir gṛhītvā adhyātma-yoga uta yogibhir ātma-māyāṁ jijñāsubhiḥ parama-bhāgavataiḥ parīṣṭaḥ
凡依《梨俱》《夜柔》《娑摩》三吠陀所述仪轨,手持供物将投于祭火者,皆观念祢的莲足。同样,修内在瑜伽的瑜伽行者也禅思祢的莲足,希求认识祢神圣的自性幻力(ātma-māyā)。而最崇高的纯粹奉献者则圆满礼拜祢的莲足,渴望越过祢的幻力彼岸。
The words ātma-māyāṁ jijñāsubhiḥ are significant in this verse. The mystic yogīs ( adhyātma-yoga uta yogibhiḥ ) are eager to acquire knowledge of the Lord’s mystic potencies, whereas the pure devotees ( parama-bhāgavataiḥ ) are eager to cross beyond the kingdom of illusion so that they can serve Lord Kṛṣṇa’s lotus feet in pure loving ecstasy. In any case, everyone is interested in the potency of the Supreme Personality of Godhead. The atheistic material scientists are also fascinated by the external material potency of the Lord, and the gross sense gratifiers are attracted by the physical body, which is also ātma-māyā, or an expansion of the Lord’s potency. Although all of the Lord’s potencies are qualitatively one with the Lord, and therefore with each other, the blissful spiritual potency is nevertheless supreme because it establishes relationships between the Lord and the pure living entities on the platform of eternal happiness. Every living entity is originally a loving servitor of the Lord, and the spiritual energy of the Lord engages the living entity in his pure constitutional position beyond illusion.
This verse says the Lord is contemplated in the sacrificial fire and accepts oblations offered according to Vedic hymns and proper procedure—showing yajña is meant for pleasing and realizing the Supreme Lord.
Krishna explains that different seekers approach Him through different disciplines—ritual sacrifice, inner yoga, and devotional inquiry—yet the ultimate aim is the same: knowing and reaching Him.
Offer your work and daily actions as an offering to God (the spirit of yajña), and combine it with inner practice (self-study, meditation, prayer) while keeping the goal as loving devotion and genuine inquiry into the Supreme.