स्वेच्छावतारचरितैरचिन्त्यनिजमायया ।
करिष्यत्युत्तमश्लोकस्तद्ध्यायेद्धृदयङ्गमम् ॥५७॥

svecchÄvatÄra-caritair
acintya-nija-mÄyayÄ
kariṣyaty uttamaślokas
tad dhyÄyed dhá¹›dayaá¹…-gamam

 sva-icchÄ - by His own supreme will; avatÄra - incarnation; caritaiḥ - activities; acintya - inconceivable; nija-mÄyayÄ - by His own potency; kariá¹£yati - performs; uttama-Å›lokaḥ - the Supreme Personality of Godhead; tat - that; dhyÄyet - one should meditate; há¹›dayam-gamam - very attractive.


Text

My dear Dhruva, besides worshiping the Deity and chanting the mantra three times a day, you should meditate upon the transcendental activities of the Supreme Personality of Godhead in His different incarnations, as exhibited by His supreme will and personal potencies.

Purport

Devotional service comprises nine prescribed practices — hearing, chanting, remembering, worshiping, serving, offering everything to the Deity, etc. Here Dhruva MahÄrÄja is advised not only to meditate on the form of the Lord, but to think of His transcendental pastimes in His different incarnations. MÄyÄvÄdÄ« philosophers take the incarnation of the Lord to be in the same category as the ordinary living entity. This is a great mistake. The incarnation of the Supreme Personality of Godhead is not forced to act by the material laws of nature. The word svecchÄ is used here to indicate that He appears out of His supreme will. The conditioned soul is forced to accept a particular type of body according to his karma given by the laws of material nature under the direction of the Supreme Lord. But when the Lord appears, He is not forced by the dictation of material nature; He appears as He likes by His own internal potency. That is the difference. The conditioned soul accepts a particular type of body, such as the body of a hog, by his work and by the superior authority of material nature. But when Lord Kṛṣṇa appears in the incarnation of a boar, He is not the same kind of hog as an ordinary animal. Kṛṣṇa appears as VarÄha-avatÄra in an expansive feature which cannot be compared to an ordinary hog’s. His appearance and disappearance are inconceivable to us. In the Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ it is clearly said that He appears by His own internal potency for the protection of the devotees and the annihilation of the nondevotees. A devotee should always consider that Kṛṣṇa does not appear as an ordinary human being or ordinary beast; His appearance as VarÄha-mÅ«rti or a horse or tortoise is an exhibition of His internal potency. In the Brahma-saá¹hitÄ it is said, Änanda-cinmaya-rasa-pratibhÄvitÄbhiḥ: one should not mistake the appearance of the Lord as a human being or a beast to be the same as the birth of an ordinary conditioned soul, who is forced to appear by the laws of nature, whether as an animal, as a human being or as a demigod. This kind of thinking is offensive. Lord Caitanya MahÄprabhu has condemned the MÄyÄvÄdÄ«s as offensive to the Supreme Personality of Godhead because of their thinking that the Lord and the conditioned living entities are one and the same.

NÄrada advises Dhruva to meditate on the pastimes of the Lord, which is as good as the meditation of concentrating one’s mind on the form of the Lord. As meditation on any form of the Lord is valuable, so is chanting of different names of the Lord, such as Hari, Govinda and NÄrÄyaṇa. But in this age we are especially advised to chant the Hare Kṛṣṇa mantra as enunciated in the Å›Ästra: Hare Kṛṣṇa, Hare Kṛṣṇa, Kṛṣṇa Kṛṣṇa, Hare Hare/ Hare RÄma, Hare RÄma, RÄma RÄma, Hare Hare.