spášĹantaáš pÄdayoḼ premášÄ
vrÄŤá¸itaáš svena karmaášÄ
Ĺata-kratuáš pariᚣvajya
vidveᚣaᚠvisasarja ha
spášĹantam - touching; pÄdayoḼ - the feet; premášÄ - in ecstasy; vrÄŤá¸itam - ashamed; svena - his own; karmaášÄ - by activities; Ĺata-kratum - King Indra; pariᚣvajya - embracing; vidveᚣam - envy; visasarja - gave up; ha - of course.
There are many cases in which a person becomes an offender to the lotus feet of a Vaiᚣášava and later becomes repentant. Here also we find that although the King of heaven, Indra, was so powerful that he accompanied Lord Viᚣášu, he felt himself a great offender for stealing Pášthu MahÄrÄjaâs horse that was meant for sacrifice. An offender at the lotus feet of a Vaiᚣášava is never excused by the Supreme Personality of Godhead. There are many instances illustrating this fact. Ambarčᚣa MahÄrÄja was offended by DurvÄsÄ Muni, a great sage and mystic yogÄŤ, and DurvÄsÄ also had to fall down at the lotus feet of Ambarčᚣa MahÄrÄja.
Indra decided to fall down at the lotus feet of King Pášthu, but the King was so magnanimous a Vaiᚣášava that he did not want MahÄrÄja Indra to fall down at his feet. Instead, King Pášthu immediately picked him up and embraced him, and both of them forgot all the past incidents. Both King Indra and MahÄrÄja Pášthu were envious and angry with each other, but since both of them were Vaiᚣášavas, or servants of Lord Viᚣášu, it was their duty to adjust the cause of their envy. This is also a first-class example of cooperative behavior between Vaiᚣášavas. In the present days, however, because people are not Vaiᚣášavas, they fight perpetually among one another and are vanquished without finishing the mission of human life. There is a great need to propagate the KášášŁáša consciousness movement in the world so that even though people sometimes become angry and malicious toward one another, because of their being KášášŁáša conscious such rivalry, competition and envy can be adjusted without difficulty.