ye vai bhagavatÄ proktÄ
upÄyÄ hy Ätma-labdhaye
añjaḥ puá¹sÄm aviduá¹£Äá¹
viddhi bhÄgavatÄn hi tÄn
ye - which; vai - indeed; bhagavatÄ - by the Supreme Personality of Godhead; proktaḥ - spoken; upÄyÄḥ - means; hi - indeed; Ätma-labdhaye - for realizing the Supreme Soul; añjaḥ - easily; puá¹sÄm - by persons; aviduá¹£Äm - less intelligent; viddhi - know; bhÄgavatÄn - to be bhÄgavata-dharma; hi - certainly; tÄn - these.
There are many Vedic scriptures, such as Manu-saá¹hitÄ, that present standard injunctions for the peaceful management of human society. Such Vedic knowledge is based on the varṇÄÅ›rama system, which scientifically divides human society into four occupational divisions as well as four spiritual divisions. According to ÅšrÄ«la ÅšrÄ«dhara SvÄmÄ«, however, knowledge that can bring one directly in contact with the Supreme Personality of Godhead is called ati-rahasyam, or the most confidential knowledge (ati-rahasyatvÄt sva-mukhenaiva bhagavatÄviduá¹£Äm api puá¹sÄm añjaḥ sukhenaivÄtma-labdhaye).
BhÄgavata-dharma is so confidential that it is spoken by the Lord Himself. The essence of bhÄgavata-dharma is given in Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ, wherein Kṛṣṇa personally instructs Arjuna. Yet in the Eleventh Canto of ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam the Lord will give instructions to Uddhava that surpass even the teachings given to Arjuna in Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ. As ÅšrÄ«la PrabhupÄda has stated, “Undoubtedly Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ was spoken by the Lord on the Battlefield of Kuruká¹£etra just to encourage Arjuna to fight, and yet to complete the transcendental knowledge of Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ the Lord instructed Uddhava. The Lord wanted Uddhava to fulfill His mission and disseminate knowledge which He had not spoken even in Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ.†(BhÄg. 3.4.32 purport) Similarly, it is understood that the knowledge that will be presented here by the nine Yogendras is not their personal concoction but is authorized knowledge originally spoken by the Lord Himself.
According to ÅšrÄ«la BhaktisiddhÄnta SarasvatÄ«, the living entities, in the course of their wanderings throughout the cycle of birth and death, lose all trace of the Personality of Godhead. But when they hear the eternally auspicious topics spoken by the Supreme Lord for their benefit and understand their eternal identities as spirit souls, the realized experience of being an eternal servant of Kṛṣṇa becomes the basis of bhÄgavata-dharma. In the soul’s experience as a pure Vaiṣṇava, or servant of God, there is no consideration of being different from God or the same as God, nor is one interested in the kingdom of material sense gratification. The pure devotee simply perceives his particular devotional service to the Supreme Lord and sees himself as an individual part and parcel of the ultimate shelter. A pure devotee experiences that his very being is tied, by ropes of loving devotion, to the ultimate shelter Himself in one of His direct personal expansions. And in such a perfect state of consciousness, the devotee can perceive the all-pervading variegated forms of the Absolute Truth.