Unlimited Names of God
nāmnām akāri bahudhā nija-sarva-śaktis
tatrārpitā niyamitaḥ smaraṇe na kālaḥ
etādṛśī tava kṛpā bhagavan mamāpi
durdaivam īdṛśam ihājani nānurāgaḥ
“O my Lord, Your Holy Name bestows auspiciousness upon all. And You have unlimited names such as Kṛṣṇa and Govinda by which You reveal Yourself.
In Your many Holy Names You have kindly invested all Your transcendental potency. And in chanting these names, there are no strict rules concerning time or place. Out of Your causeless mercy, You have descended in the form of divine sound, but my great misfortune is that I have no love for Your Holy Name.”
Here it is said, “O my Lord, You have revealed the chanting of Your Holy Names, and all Your power has been invested within those names.” Both the Holy Name of Kṛṣṇa and its potency are eternal. All potencies or energies are found within the Holy Name of Kṛṣṇa. And there is no particular time or place which has been fixed for chanting the name. It is not that one can only chant in the morning, or only after taking bath, or only after going to a holy place—there are no such conditions. One may go on chanting the Holy Name of Kṛṣṇa anytime, anywhere, in any circumstance.
In this verse, Śrī Chaitanya Mahāprabhu says, “O Kṛṣṇa, You have given a most sublime opportunity to all. You are so infinitely gracious that You have given us the service of Your Holy Name (nāma bhajana). Still, my misfortune is the worst. I don’t find any earnest desire within me to take the name. I have no faith, no love, no tendency to take the name. I do not find any innate hankering to chant the name. What can I do?”
This is the second of Śrīman Mahāprabhu’s eight precepts. He says, “O Lord, You have given everything from Your side to lift me up from this mundane world of relativity. Your attempt to deliver me is so magnanimous that all You require from me is a little cooperation in accepting Your grace, but I turn a deaf ear to Your magnanimous call. O Lord, I am hopeless.”
Śrī Chaitanya Mahāprabhu has given us great hope in the first verse of his Śikṣāṣṭakam or eight precepts. He explains that the chanting of the Holy Name of Kṛṣṇa, when properly undertaken, may progress step by step, revealing seven consequences. The first effect is the cleansing of consciousness; the second is liberation from all mundane relativity. As the third effect, positive goodness awakens within our heart and takes us to Vṛndāvana. Then, under the guidance of svarūpa-śakti, the Lord’s internal energy yogamāyā, we come to the vadhū conception: we are potency, we are to serve Kṛṣṇa unconditionally. Vadhū means that rasa which gives full connection with the Lord (madhura-rasa).
After attaining that stage, what are the other consequences that come? One becomes a particle in the ocean of joy, and that joy is not stale or static, but ever-new and dynamic; it is purifying to the utmost. Although we are allowed to keep our individual conception, still we feel that all parts of our existence become purified to the utmost when we take the name. And this will not only affect me, but all who are connected with this nām-saṅkīrtan. They will experience mass conversion, mass purification, the utmost purification. These are the sevenfold results of chanting the Holy Name.
After mentioning this thesis in His first verse, Mahāprabhu now gives the antithesis in the second verse. When such great hope is there in the Holy Name, why are we having so much trouble? Where is the difficulty? Why do we not realize the advantage of the magnanimous sanction of divinity found in the Holy Name? Inestimable grace is coming from Kṛṣṇa’s side. He has given us so many opportunities, with the least requirement from our side. We must have some taste, some earnestness to accept the Holy Name; but there’s the difficulty—we have none. So what hope can we have? How can we attain it? We may be approaching the Holy Name formally, but not from the core of our hearts, so by what process can we really benefit and make progress? The third verse answers this question.
Although one may feel that he does not have the minimum required deposit to receive the grant, still it is not a hopeless case. The very nature of this realization takes him to the conception of humility. When one begins to practice devotion towards the infinite Lord, he cannot but feel that in relation to the infinite, there is nothing of value in himself. He thinks, “I have nothing to give in return; even the minimum requirement for the Lord’s grace is absent in me.” That takes him to the conception that, “I have no qualification. I am completely empty.”
A devotee feels within his heart that he is not only unfit but too despicable for the Lord’s service. Kṛṣṇadāsa Kavirāja Goswāmī says: “I am lower than a worm in stool and more sinful than Jagai and Madhai (jagāi mādhāi haite muñi se pāpiṣṭha purīṣera kīṭa haite muñi se laghiṣṭha).” We should not be discouraged when we think we have not even the least bit of merit which is required for the service of the Holy Name of Kṛṣṇa, for this kind of consciousness is natural for a devotee.
At the same time, we must guard ourselves from an insincere conception of our own devotion; this is our enemy. To think, “I do not have the least liking or taste for the Lord,” is all right. But to think, “I have some taste, some earnestness, some devotion for the Lord,” is dangerous.
If we are going to have a connection with the infinite, we must be fully empty; our self-abnegation must be complete. Worldly attainment is a negative thing, and we must withdraw from it completely. We should think, “I am nothing; I have no qualifications for being accepted or used in the service of the Lord. I am completely unfit.” We must completely withdraw from the egoistic world and allow ourselves to be captured by yogamāyā, the Lord’s internal energy. A slave has no position; the whole position is with the master. Everything is His. Realizing this is our real qualification. As soon as we assert that we have some qualifications, our difficulties begin. So Śrī Chaitanya Mahāprabhu Himself says, “I don’t find a trace of love of Kṛṣṇa within My heart (na prema-gandho ’sti darāpi me harau).” This is the standard of humility. And that feeling must be sincere; it must not be an imitation. We must be careful. We must not venture to imitate the highest devotees. To genuinely feel, to conceive that we possess nothing and that everything is His—that is the only qualification for chanting the Holy Name of Kṛṣṇa.