yaḥ kaÅ›caneÅ›o balino 'ntakoragÄt
pracaṇá¸a-vegÄd abhidhÄvato bhṛśam
bhÄ«taá¹ prapannaá¹ paripÄti yad-bhayÄn
má¹›tyuḥ pradhÄvaty araṇaá¹ tam Ä«mahi
yaḥ - He who (the Supreme Personality of Godhead); kaÅ›cana - someone; īśaḥ - the supreme controller; balinaḥ - very powerful; antaka-uragÄt - from the great serpent of time, which brings death; pracaṇá¸a-vegÄt - whose force is fearful; abhidhÄvataḥ - who is chasing; bhṛśam - endlessly (every hour and every minute); bhÄ«tam - one who is afraid of death; prapannam - who is surrendered (to the Supreme Personality of Godhead); paripÄti - He protects; yat-bhayÄt - from fear of the Lord; má¹›tyuḥ - death itself; pradhÄvati - runs away; araṇam - the actual shelter of everyone; tam - unto Him; Ä«mahi - I surrender or take shelter.
One who is intelligent understands that there is a great and supreme authority above everything. That great authority appears in different incarnations to save the innocent from disturbances. As confirmed in Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ, paritrÄṇÄya sÄdhÅ«nÄá¹ vinÄÅ›Äya ca duá¹£ká¹›tÄm: the Lord appears in His various incarnations for two purposes — to annihilate the duá¹£ká¹›tÄ«, the sinful, and to protect His devotees. The King of the elephants decided to surrender unto Him. This is intelligent. One must know that great Supreme Personality of Godhead and surrender unto Him. The Lord comes personally to instruct us how to be happy, and only fools and rascals do not see by intelligence this supreme authority, the Supreme Person. In the Å›ruti-mantra it is said:
bhīṣÄsmÄd vÄtaḥ pavate
bhīṣodeti sūryaḥ
bhīṣÄsmÄd agniÅ› candraÅ› ca
má¹›tyur dhÄvati pañcamaḥ
(Taittirīya Upaniṣad 2.8)
It is out of fear of the Supreme Personality of Godhead that the wind is blowing, that the sun is distributing heat and light, and that death is chasing everyone. Thus there is a supreme controller, as confirmed in Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ (9.10): mayÄdhyaká¹£eṇa praká¹›tiḥ sÅ«yate sacarÄcaram. This material manifestation is working so well because of the supreme controller. Any intelligent person, therefore, can understand that there is a supreme controller. Furthermore, the supreme controller Himself appears as Lord Kṛṣṇa, as Lord Caitanya MahÄprabhu and as Lord RÄmacandra to give us instructions and to show us by example how to surrender unto the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Yet those who are duá¹£ká¹›tÄ«, the lowest of men, do not surrender (na mÄá¹ duá¹£ká¹›tino mÅ«á¸hÄḥ prapadyante narÄdhamÄḥ).
In Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ the Lord clearly says, má¹›tyuḥ sarva-haraÅ› cÄham: “I am all-devouring death.†Thus má¹›tyu, or death, is the representative who takes everything away from the living entity who has accepted a material body. No one can say, “I do not fear death.†This is a false proposition. Everyone fears death. However, one who seeks shelter of the Supreme Personality of Godhead can be saved from death. One may argue, “Does the devotee not die?†The answer is that a devotee certainly must give up his body, for the body is material. The difference is, however, that for one who surrenders to Kṛṣṇa fully and who is protected by Kṛṣṇa, the present body is his last; he will not again receive a material body to be subjected to death. This is assured in Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ (4.9). TyaktvÄ dehaá¹ punar janma naiti mÄm eti so ’rjuna: a devotee, after giving up his body, does not accept a material body, but returns home, back to Godhead. We are always in danger because at any moment death can take place. It is not that only Gajendra, the King of the elephants, was afraid of death. Everyone should fear death because everyone is caught by the crocodile of eternal time and may die at any moment. The best course, therefore, is to seek shelter of Kṛṣṇa, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, and be saved from the struggle for existence in this material world, in which one repeatedly takes birth and dies. To reach this understanding is the ultimate goal of life.
Thus end the Bhaktivedanta purports of the Eighth Canto, Second Chapter, of the ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam, entitled “The Elephant Gajendra’s Crisis.â€