īśvarera dainya kari' kariyÄche bhiká¹£Ä
ataeva daṇá¸a kari' karÄiba Å›iká¹£Ä
īśvarera - of the Supreme Personality of Godhead; dainya - poverty; kari' - establishing; kariyÄche - has done; bhiká¹£Ä - begging; ataeva - therefore; daṇá¸a - punishment; kari' - giving him; karÄiba - shall cause; Å›iká¹£Ä - instruction.
To describe a man as an incarnation of God, or NÄrÄyaṇa, and at the same time present him as poverty-stricken is contradictory, and it is the greatest offense. The MÄyÄvÄdÄ« philosophers, engaged in the missionary work of spoiling the Vedic culture by preaching that everyone is God, describe a poverty-stricken man as daridra-nÄrÄyaṇa, or “poor NÄrÄyaṇa.†Lord Caitanya MahÄprabhu never accepted such foolish and unauthorized ideas. He strictly warned, mÄyÄvÄdi-bhÄá¹£ya Å›unile haya sarva-nÄÅ›a: “Anyone who follows the principles of MÄyÄvÄda philosophy is certainly doomed.†Such a fool needs to be reformed by punishment.
Although it is contradictory to say that the Supreme Personality of Godhead or His incarnation is poverty-stricken, we find in the revealed scriptures that when the Lord incarnated as VÄmana, He begged some land from MahÄrÄja Bali. Everyone knows, however, that VÄmanadeva was not at all poverty-stricken. His begging from MahÄrÄja Bali was a device to favor him. When MahÄrÄja Bali actually gave the land, VÄmanadeva exhibited His all-powerful position by covering the three worlds with three steps. One should not accept the so-called daridra-nÄrÄyaṇas as incarnations, because they are completely unable to show the opulence of the genuine incarnations of God.