तत्सर्वं न: समाचक्ष्व पृष्टो यदिह किञ्चन । मन्ये त्वां विषये वाचां स्नातमन्यत्र छान्दसात् ॥ १३॥

tat sarvaá¹ naḥ samÄcaká¹£va
pṛṣṭo yad iha kiñcana
manye tvÄá¹ viá¹£aye vÄcÄá¹
snÄtam anyatra chÄndasÄt

 tat - that; sarvam - all; naḥ - unto us; samÄcaká¹£va - clearly explain; pṛṣṭaḥ - questioned; yat iha - herein; kiñcana - all that; manye - we think; tvÄm - you; viá¹£aye - in all subjects; vÄcÄm - meanings of words; snÄtam - fully acquainted; anyatra - except; chÄndasÄt - portion of the Vedas.


Text

We know that you are expert in the meaning of all subjects, except some portions of the Vedas, and thus you can clearly explain the answers to all the questions we have just put to you.

Purport

The difference between the Vedas and the PurÄṇas is like that between the brÄhmaṇas and the parivrÄjakas. The brÄhmaṇas are meant to administer some fruitive sacrifices mentioned in the Vedas, but the parivrÄjakÄcÄryas, or learned preachers, are meant to disseminate transcendental knowledge to one and all. As such, the parivrÄjakÄcÄryas are not always expert in pronouncing the Vedic mantras, which are practiced systematically by accent and meter by the brÄhmaṇas who are meant for administering Vedic rites. Yet it should not be considered that the brÄhmaṇas are more important than the itinerant preachers. They are one and different simultaneously because they are meant for the same end, in different ways.

There is no difference also between the Vedic mantras and what is explained in the PurÄṇas and ItihÄsas. According to ÅšrÄ«la JÄ«va GosvÄmÄ«, it is mentioned in the MÄdhyandina-Å›ruti that all the Vedas, namely the SÄma, Atharva, Ṛg, Yajur, PurÄṇas, ItihÄsas, Upaniá¹£ads, etc., are emanations from the breathing of the Supreme Being. The only difference is that the Vedic mantras are mostly begun with praṇava oá¹kÄra, and it requires some training to practice the metric pronunciation of the Vedic mantras. But that does not mean that ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam is of less importance than the Vedic mantras. On the contrary, it is the ripened fruit of all the Vedas, as stated before. Besides that, the most perfectly liberated soul, ÅšrÄ«la Åšukadeva GosvÄmÄ«, is absorbed in the studies of the BhÄgavatam, although he is already self-realized. ÅšrÄ«la SÅ«ta GosvÄmÄ« is following his footsteps, and therefore his position is not the least less important because he was not expert in chanting Vedic mantras with metric pronunciation, which depends more on practice than actual realization. Realization is more important than parrotlike chanting.