SB 9.11.6

SB 9.11.6

Devanagari

अप्रत्तं नस्त्वया किं नु भगवन् भुवनेश्वर । यन्नोऽन्तर्हृदयं विश्य तमो हंसि स्वरोचिषा ॥ ६ ॥

Verse text

aprattaṁ nas tvayā kiṁ nu bhagavan bhuvaneśvara yan no ’ntar-hṛdayaṁ viśya tamo haṁsi sva-rociṣā

Synonyms

aprattam not given ; naḥ unto us ; tvayā by Your Lordship ; kim what ; nu indeed ; bhagavan O Supreme Lord ; bhuvana īśvara — O master of the whole universe ; yat because ; naḥ our ; antaḥ hṛdayam — within the core of the heart ; viśya entering ; tamaḥ the darkness of ignorance ; haṁsi You annihilate ; sva rociṣā — by Your own effulgence .

Translation

O Lord, You are the master of the entire universe. What have You not given to us? You have entered the core of our hearts and dissipated the darkness of our ignorance by Your effulgence. This is the supreme gift. We do not need a material donation.

Translation (Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakura)

O Lord! Master of the entire universe! What have you not given to us? Since you have entered the core of our hearts and dissipated the darkness of our ignorance by your effulgence, what is the use of the earth to us? What did you not give? You gave everything. Since you have entered our hearts, what is the use of the earth to us?

Purport

When Dhruva Mahārāja was offered a benediction by the Supreme Personality of Godhead, he replied, “O my Lord, I am fully satisfied. I do not need any material benediction.” Similarly, when Prahlāda Mahārāja was offered a benediction by Lord Nṛsiṁhadeva, he also refused to accept it and instead declared that a devotee should not be like a vaṇik, a mercantile man who gives something in exchange for some profit. One who becomes a devotee for some material profit is not a pure devotee. Brāhmaṇas are always enlightened by the Supreme Personality of Godhead within the heart ( sarvasya cāhaṁ hṛdi sanniviṣṭo mattaḥ smṛtir jṣānam apohanaṁ ca ). And because the brāhmaṇas and Vaiṣṇavas are always directed by the Supreme Personality of Godhead, they are not greedy for material wealth. What is absolutely necessary they possess, but they do not want an expanded kingdom. An example of this was given by Vāmanadeva. Acting as a brahmacārī, Lord Vāmanadeva wanted only three paces of land. Aspiring to possess more and more for personal sense gratification is simply ignorance, and this ignorance is conspicuous by its absence from the heart of a brāhmaṇa or Vaiṣṇava.