Sutra 37. Lokeapi Bhagavat guna Sravana keertanaat.
[(Bhakti develops) from listening to and
singing of the attributes and glories of the Lord, even while engaged in the
ordinary activities of life in the world.]
Loke: in society, while
engaged in the ordinary activities of life in the world
api : also, even
Bhagavad- guna-Sravana-kirtanaat: from listening to and singing of the attributes and glories of the Lord.
As Vishnu, the Lord said,
Naham vasami vaikunthe / Yoginam hridaye nacha
Madh bhakta yatra gayanthi / Tatra tishtami Narada
["I may not always be found in heaven (Vaikuntha), or even in the hearts of great yogis. Wherever My devotees are singing My Name, Narada, there you will find Me without fail."]
As Sathya Sai, the Lord reiterated the same when He said,
"Wherever my glory is sung, I install myself there"
Sravanam (Listening) & Kirtanam (Singing) are the first 2 stages in the Navavida Bhakti given in Srimad bhagavatam and the same are given in this sutra by the same Vyaasa.
SRAVANAM
There cannot be a story more appropriate than the story of Raja Parikshit, when it comes to Sravanam
The king again and again requested for water
but the rishi deep in meditation did not
hear him. This enraged the king and
he completely lost his intelligence.
In his anger, the king picked up a dead snake and placed it on the shoulder of the sage.
The rishi’s son Shringi came to know about this incident and angrily cursed the king. He
cursed that on the seventh day from that
day, a snake-bird would bite Parikshit
Maharaj.
When Shamika Rishi came to know about the curse, he chastised his son.
When king Parikshit received the news of his death, he accepted
this curse as good
news.
Maharaj Parikshit was a great devotee of the Supreme Lord Krishna. He had full faith
in the protection of the Lord.
He did not try to make any arrangements to protect himself. Instead he immediately gave up his royal duties and went to the banks of the Ganges.
He did not try to make any arrangements to protect himself. Instead he immediately gave up his royal duties and went to the banks of the Ganges.
He knew that one who engages in hearing the transcendental pastimes of the Supreme
Lord gets liberated from the cycle of birth and death. He desired to associate with
great saintly devotees who could speak to him about Krishna.
By the arrangement of the Lord, many great saintly devotees also came to the banks of
the river Ganges. The great sage Sukhdev Goswami, the son of Vyasa appeared on
the scene. Maharaj Parikshit accepted him as his spiritual master and requested him to
narrate the transcendental, glorious pastimes of the Lord.
Maharaj Parikshit was completely absorbed
in hearing about the transcendental
pastimes of the Lord. Anyone who regularly
hears Hari Katha becomes eligible to get
liberated from the cycle of birth and death.
After hearing the katha for seven days and
nights without sleeping, eating or drinking,
Parikshit Maharaj fixed
his mind on the Lord
and meditated on Him. The snake-bird
Takshaka bit the king. The body of the kind
immediately burst into flames and burned to
ashes due to the fire of the snake-bird’s
poison.
(O Sai Bhaktas, Parikshit could transcend all limitations of his body in 7 days of listening to Lord's glory , he transcended the fear of death and could merge with the Lord even before the snake actually went to bite him and here, in this Kali Yuga, Swami has spoken to us for 70 years, from October 1940 when He taught us Manasa Bhajore Guru Charanam, up to 2010/11,
Should we not transcend all limitations of this world and reach Him and merge with Him, even while our body continues to carry on its required duties?)