mano brahmaṇi yuñjÄno
yat tat sad-asataḥ param
guṇÄvabhÄse viguṇa
eka-bhaktyÄnubhÄvite
manaḥ - mind; brahmaṇi - on the Supreme; yuñjÄnaḥ - fixing; yat - which; tat - that; sat-asataḥ - cause and effect; param - beyond; guṇa-avabhÄse - who manifests the three modes of material nature; viguṇe - who is beyond the material modes; eka-bhaktyÄ - by exclusive devotion; anubhÄvite - who is perceived.
Whenever there is bhakti, there must be three things present — the devotee, the devotion and the Lord. Without these three — bhakta, bhakti and BhagavÄn — there is no meaning to the word bhakti. Kardama Muni fixed his mind on the Supreme Brahman and realized Him through bhakti, or devotional service. This indicates that he fixed his mind on the personal feature of the Lord because bhakti cannot be executed unless one has realization of the personal feature of the Absolute Truth. GuṇÄvabhÄse: He is beyond the three modes of material nature, but it is due to Him that the three modes of material nature are manifested. In other words, although the material energy is an emanation of the Supreme Lord, He is not affected, as we are, by the modes of material nature. We are conditioned souls, but He is not affected, although the material nature has emanated from Him. He is the supreme living entity and is never affected by mÄyÄ, but we are subordinate, minute living entities, prone to be affected by the limitations of mÄyÄ. If he is in constant contact with the Supreme Lord by devotional service, the conditioned living entity also becomes freed from the infection of mÄyÄ. This is confirmed in Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ: sa guṇÄn samatÄ«tyaitÄn. A person engaged in Kṛṣṇa consciousness is at once liberated from the influence of the three modes of material nature. In other words, once the conditioned soul engages himself in devotional service, he also becomes liberated like the Lord.