तस्मा इदं भागवतं पुराणं दशलक्षणम् ।
प्रोक्तं भगवता प्राह प्रीतः पुत्राय भूतकृत् ॥४४॥

tasmÄ idaá¹ bhÄgavataá¹
purÄṇaá¹ daÅ›a-laká¹£aṇam
proktaá¹ bhagavatÄ prÄha
prÄ«taḥ putrÄya bhÅ«ta-ká¹›t

 tasmai - thereupon; idam - this; bhÄgavatam - the glories of the Lord or the science of the Lord; purÄṇam - Vedic supplement; daÅ›a-laká¹£aṇam - ten characteristics; proktam - described; bhagavatÄ - by the Personality of Godhead; prÄha - said; prÄ«taḥ - in satisfaction; putrÄya - unto the son; bhÅ«ta-ká¹›t - the creator of the universe.


Text

Thereupon the supplementary Vedic literature, ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam, which was described by the Personality of Godhead and which contains ten characteristics, was told with satisfaction by the father [BrahmÄ] to his son NÄrada.

Purport

Although the ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam was spoken in four verses, it had ten characteristics, which will be explained in the next chapter. In the four verses it is first said that the Lord existed before the creation, and thus the beginning of the ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam includes the VedÄnta aphorism janmÄdy asya. JanmÄdy asya is the beginning, yet the four verses in which it is said that the Lord is the root of everything that be, beginning from the creation up to the supreme abode of the Lord, naturally explain the ten characteristics. One should not misunderstand by wrong interpretations that the Lord spoke only four verses and that therefore all the rest of the 17,994 verses are useless. The ten characteristics, as will be explained in the next chapter, require so many verses just to explain them properly. BrahmÄjÄ« had also advised NÄrada previously that he should expand the idea he had heard from BrahmÄjÄ«. ÅšrÄ« Caitanya MahÄprabhu instructed this to ÅšrÄ«la RÅ«pa GosvÄmÄ« in a nutshell, but the disciple RÅ«pa GosvÄmÄ« expanded this very elaborately, and the same subject was further expanded by JÄ«va GosvÄmÄ« and even further by ÅšrÄ« ViÅ›vanÄtha CakravartÄ« ṬhÄkura. We are just trying to follow in the footsteps of all these authorities. So ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam is not like ordinary fiction or mundane literature. It is unlimited in strength, and however one may expand it according to one’s own ability, BhÄgavatam still cannot be finished by such expansion. ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam, being the sound representation of the Lord, is simultaneously explained in four verses and in four billion verses all the same, inasmuch as the Lord is smaller than the atom and bigger than the unlimited sky. Such is the potency of ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam.