Devanagari
यन्नामधेयश्रवणानुकीर्तनाद्
यत्प्रह्वणाद्यत्स्मरणादपि क्वचित् ।
श्वादोऽपि सद्य: सवनाय कल्पते
कुत: पुनस्ते भगवन्नु दर्शनात् ॥ ६ ॥
Verse text
yan-nāmadheya-śravaṇānukīrtanād
yat-prahvaṇād yat-smaraṇād api kvacit
śvādo ’pi sadyaḥ savanāya kalpate
kutaḥ punas te bhagavan nu darśanāt
Synonyms
yat
—
of whom (the Supreme Personality of Godhead)
;
nāmadheya
—
the name
;
śravaṇa
—
hearing
;
anukīrtanāt
—
by chanting
;
yat
—
to whom
;
prahvaṇāt
—
by offering obeisances
;
yat
—
whom
;
smaraṇāt
—
by remembering
;
api
—
even
;
kvacit
—
at any time
;
śva
—
adaḥ — a dog-eater
;
api
—
even
;
sadyaḥ
—
immediately
;
savanāya
—
for performing Vedic sacrifices
;
kalpate
—
becomes eligible
;
kutaḥ
—
what to speak of
;
punaḥ
—
again
;
te
—
You
;
bhagavan
—
O Supreme Personality of Godhead
;
nu
—
then
;
darśanāt
—
by seeing face to face .
Translation
To say nothing of the spiritual advancement of persons who see the Supreme Person face to face, even a person born in a family of dog-eaters immediately becomes eligible to perform Vedic sacrifices if he once utters the holy name of the Supreme Personality of Godhead or chants about Him, hears about His pastimes, offers Him obeisances or even remembers Him.
Translation (Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakura)
By hearing or chanting your name, by offering respects to you, by occasional remembrance of you, even the dog-eater immediately becomes qualified for performing the soma sacrifice. O Lord! What then to speak of the person who sees you?
By seeing you, the world becomes most fortunate. This is expressed through the method of kaimutya-nyāya (what to speak of). Prahvaṇat means obeisances. Smaraṇāt kvacid means “occasional remembrance.” Even the outcaste (śvādaḥ) becomes immediately qualified to perform the soma sacrifice (savanāya). This means he becomes worshipable like a brāhmaṇa, performer of the soma sacrifice. This implies that this takes place because of destruction of prārabdha sinful reactions experienced in this life as low birth. Śrī Rūpa Gosvāmī says:
durjātireva savanāyayogyatve kāraṇaṁ matam
durjātyārambhakaṁ pāpaṁ yat syāt prārabdhameva tat
It was understood that the low qualities of the dog-eater is the cause of his disqualification for performing sacrifices. The sin by which he attains such low qualities in this life is called the prārabdha sin. BRS 1.1.22
Purport
Herein the spiritual potency of chanting, hearing or remembering the holy name of the Supreme Lord is greatly stressed. Rūpa Gosvāmī has discussed the sequence of sinful activities of the conditioned soul, and he has established, in
Bhakti-rasāmṛta-sindhu,
that those who engage in devotional service become freed from the reactions of all sinful activities. This is also confirmed in
Bhagavad-gītā.
The Lord says that He takes charge of one who surrenders unto Him, and He makes him immune to all reactions to sinful activities. If by chanting the holy name of the Supreme Personality of Godhead one becomes so swiftly cleared of all reactions to sinful activities, then what is to be said of those persons who see Him face to face?
Another consideration here is that persons who are purified by the process of chanting and hearing become immediately eligible to perform Vedic sacrifices. Generally, only a person who is born in a family of
brāhmaṇas,
who has been reformed by the ten kinds of purificatory processes and who is learned in Vedic literature is allowed to perform the Vedic sacrifices. But here the word
sadyaḥ,
“immediately,” is used, and Śrīdhara Svāmī also remarks that one can
immediately
become eligible to perform Vedic sacrifices. A person born in a family of the low caste which is accustomed to eat dogs is so positioned due to his past sinful activities, but by chanting or hearing once in pureness, or in an offenseless manner, he is immediately relieved of the sinful reaction. Not only is he relieved of the sinful reaction, but he immediately achieves the result of all purificatory processes. Taking birth in the family of a
brāhmaṇa
is certainly due to pious activities in one’s past life. But still a child who is born in a family of a
brāhmaṇa
depends for his further reformation upon initiation into acceptance of a sacred thread and many other reformatory processes. But a person who chants the holy name of the Lord, even if born in a family of
caṇḍālas,
dog-eaters, does not need reformation. Simply by chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa, he immediately becomes purified and becomes as good as the most learned
brāhmaṇa.
Śrīdhara Svāmī especially remarks in this connection,
anena pūjyatvaṁ lakṣyate.
Some caste
brāhmaṇas
remark that by chanting Hare Kṛṣṇa, purification
begins.
Of course, that depends on the individual process of chanting, but this remark of Śrīdhara Svāmī’s is completely applicable if one chants the holy name of the Lord without offense, for he immediately becomes more than a
brāhmaṇa.
As Śrīdhara Svāmī says,
pūjyatvam:
he immediately becomes as respectable as a most learned
brāhmaṇa
and can be allowed to perform Vedic sacrifices. If simply by chanting the holy name of the Lord one becomes sanctified instantly, then what can be said of those persons who see the Supreme Lord face to face and who understand the descent of the Lord, as Devahūti understands Kapiladeva.
Usually, initiation depends on the bona fide spiritual master, who directs the disciple. If he sees that a disciple has become competent and purified by the process of chanting, he offers the sacred thread to the disciple just so that he will be recognized as one-hundred-percent equal with a
brāhmaṇa.
This is also confirmed in the
Hari-bhakti-vilāsa
by Śrī Sanātana Gosvāmī: “As a base metal like bell metal can be changed into gold by a chemical process, any person can similarly be changed into a
brāhmaṇa
by
dīkṣā-vidhāna,
the initiation process.”
It is sometimes remarked that by the chanting process one begins to purify himself and can take birth in his next life in a
brāhmaṇa
family and then be reformed. But at this present moment, even those who are born in the best
brāhmaṇa
families are not reformed, nor is there any certainty that they are actually born of
brāhmaṇa
fathers. Formerly the
garbhādhāna
reformatory system was prevalent, but at the present moment there is no such
garbhādhāna,
or seed-giving ceremony. Under these circumstances, no one knows if a man is factually born of a
brāhmaṇa
father. Whether one has acquired the qualification of a
brāhmaṇa
depends on the judgment of the bona fide spiritual master. He bestows upon the disciple the position of a
brāhmaṇa
by his own judgment. When one is accepted as a
brāhmaṇa
in the sacred thread ceremony under the
pāṣcarātrika
system, then he is
dvija,
twice-born. That is confirmed by Sanātana Gosvāmī:
dvijatvaṁ jāyate.
By the process of initiation by the spiritual master, a person is accepted as a
brāhmaṇa
in his purified state of chanting the holy name of the Lord. He then makes further progress to become a qualified Vaiṣṇava, which means that the brahminical qualification is already acquired.