The Bhagavata Podcast

1.19 What Would You Do If You Had Seven Days to Live? | Bhagavata Podcast with Sundar Gopal Das

51 min · 29 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio 1.19 What Would You Do If You Had Seven Days to Live? | Bhagavata Podcast with Sundar Gopal Das

Descripción

What would you do if you learned you had seven days to live? Most of us would panic, bargain, or spend those days in dread. King Parikshit sat down by the river and prepared to die with complete clarity.    This is the final chapter of the first book of the Srimad Bhagavatam, and it arrives like a carefully placed door: everything in Canto 1 has been building toward this moment.    In this episode, Bhrigupada Dasa (Dr. Mans Broo) and Sundar Gopal Das (Dr. Simon Haas) explore Canto 1, Chapter 19 of the Srimad Bhagavatam, in which King Parikshit, cursed to die by snakebite within seven days, renounces his kingdom and fasts by the Ganga. The great sages of the age converge not out of ceremony but out of omniscient foreknowledge: the Bhagavatam itself is about to be spoken. Sundar Gopal Das, joining from Costa Rica, draws on the commentary of Baladeva Vidyabhushan throughout, uncovering details that move quickly past in the text: the sages who could not reach agreement on what Parikshit should do, the tears and embraces when Shukadeva Goswami finally arrives, and the king's quiet, anxious gratitude that this wandering sage has agreed to stay longer than it takes to milk a cow.    The conversation ranges across the nature of the Bhagavatam as a literary structure (a text that ends every sequence on a cliffhanger), the contested identity of Shukadeva, the art of physiognomy by which the sages immediately recognise a great personality, and the Bhagavata Parampara: the lineage of instruction that does not pass through initiation but through teaching. The episode closes on a question the Srimad Bhagavatam poses in its first chapter and repeats here at the end of its first book: what is the duty of a human being, especially one who is about to die? The mortality rate, as Bhrigupada's teacher once reminded a Finnish audience, is 100 percent.    This episode covers Canto 1, Chapter 19 of the Srimad Bhagavatam.   The Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously. #Bhagavatam #BhaktiYoga #HinduPhilosophy #Parikshit #Shukadeva Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2457899/fan_mail/new] The Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

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23 episodios

episode 2.4 I've Never Been Completely Satisfied with Anything I've Done | Bhagavata Podcast with Anuradha Devi Dasi artwork

2.4 I've Never Been Completely Satisfied with Anything I've Done | Bhagavata Podcast with Anuradha Devi Dasi

Standing at Govardhan, Bhrigupada felt something deeply spiritual. A few minutes later it was gone. The Srimad Bhagavatam does not treat this as failure. It treats it as the starting point. Canto 2, Chapter 4 carries a misleading title: "The Process of Creation." The question about creation is asked in verse 9. The answer begins in the next chapter. What Shukadeva Goswami does instead, for more than half this chapter, is pray. Anuradha Dooney, who leads the Youth Education Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies, explains why the Bhagavatam's method is not to deliver answers but to demonstrate the orientation from which answers become possible. Shukadeva models what Parikshit is being taught before teaching it. The conversation covers the chapter's placement in the Srimad Bhagavatam, the verse in which Parikshit addresses Shukadeva as "as good as God" (2.4.14) and what that claim means for how knowledge moves through the text, and verse 18, which extends the promise of purification to peoples entirely outside the Vedic tradition. Prabhupada returned to this verse repeatedly as a rationale for bringing the Bhagavatam to the West. The episode also traces what Anuradha calls the Bhagavatam's "echo chamber" structure: not boxes within boxes but persons responding to persons, each bringing a different relationship to Krishna into the conversation. The episode closes on a practical question: what do you do if you have no devotee community near you? Anuradha's answer draws on decades of practice in settings that were, at various points, exactly that isolated. 🔔 Subscribe to join listeners around the world exploring the Bhagavatam together: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxspSZeIYq_ZZaW89hhnptA?sub_confirmation=1 [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxspSZeIYq_ZZaW89hhnptA?sub_confirmation=1] Starting from the beginning? Episode 1.1 is here: https://youtu.be/2LcGX8iK5tM [https://youtu.be/2LcGX8iK5tM] #Bhagavatam #BhaktiYoga #HinduPhilosophy #DevoteeCommunity #Govardhan Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2457899/fan_mail/new] The Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

3 de jun de 202655 min
episode 2.3 Chant Every Day and Still Feeling Nothing | Bhagavata Podcast with Manjari Devi Dasi artwork

2.3 Chant Every Day and Still Feeling Nothing | Bhagavata Podcast with Manjari Devi Dasi

What does it mean if years of sincere practice haven't changed you? Not for lack of effort, not for lack of concentration, but because something harder to name is holding you in place. The Srimad Bhagavatam calls this a steel-framed heart, and Canto 2, Chapter 3 is where it delivers that diagnosis. This episode explores one of the most densely cited chapters in the entire Bhagavatam. Of its 25 verses, Prabhupada quoted 19 in his writings and lectures, compared to just three from the 37-verse chapter before it. Manjari Devi Dasi, a scholar-practitioner from Bhaktivedanta College in Budapest, explains why this short chapter functions as an evaluative lock for everything that follows. After reading it, she argues, you cannot approach the Bhagavatam neutrally again. The conversation works through the chapter's structure carefully. First, Shukadeva Goswami maps the full range of human desires: wealth, power, longevity, liberation, and shows the corresponding Vedic methods for fulfilling each one. Rather than condemning these desires, the text draws them all through what Manjari calls a "theological funnel," narrowing toward a single conclusion: Bhakti is the highest path, regardless of where you begin. Then the chapter turns sharp. Verses 18 to 24 evaluate life not by productivity or ritual observance, but by engagement with Hari-katha, and what they say about lives lived without it is deliberately uncomfortable.  The penultimate verse goes further still, describing a heart that chants with full concentration and remains completely unmoved. Bhrigupada shares a personal account of a retina tear that prevented him from reading for a month, and what the forced stillness clarified about japa as the one practice that cannot be taken away. The Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously. 🔔 Subscribe to join listeners around the world exploring the Bhagavatam together: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxspSZeIYq_ZZaW89hhnptA?sub_confirmation=1 [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxspSZeIYq_ZZaW89hhnptA?sub_confirmation=1] Starting from the beginning? Episode 1.1 is here: https://youtu.be/2LcGX8iK5tM [https://youtu.be/2LcGX8iK5tM] #Bhagavatam #BhaktiYoga #HinduPhilosophy #SpiritualPractice #HolyName Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2457899/fan_mail/new] The Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

12 de may de 202657 min
episode 2.2 What the Manosphere Gets Wrong About Worth | Bhagavata Podcast with Shaunaka Rishi Das artwork

2.2 What the Manosphere Gets Wrong About Worth | Bhagavata Podcast with Shaunaka Rishi Das

A teenager thinks his father is a loser because he doesn't drive a Lamborghini. The Bhagavatam asks: when you can use your arm as a pillow, what is the necessity of a pillow at all? These two visions of the good life are further apart than they look — and closer together than you'd expect. Canto 2, Chapter 2 continues Shukadeva Goswami's answer to Pariksit's question: what should a person do who is about to die? Shaunaka Rishi Das, director of the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies, joins host Bhrigupada Dasa (Dr. Mans Broo) to read a chapter that turns out to be less about death and more about how to see the world clearly. Shukadeva describes the cosmic form, yogic meditation, and the soul's progression through higher planets — then sets all of it aside at the end of the chapter. The reason he goes through it at all is the same reason any good teacher meets a student where they are: you cannot hand someone a destination without first acknowledging the roads they already know. The conversation moves across a lot of ground. Shaunaka reads the Bhagavatam's renunciation verses alongside the Gospel of Matthew and finds them saying the same thing. He recalls a dinner at a Jesuit house where the priest asked, point-blank: do you believe all that? And 14 heads turned to look at him. He traces the commentarial tradition from Sridharaswami through Sanatana Goswami to Prabhupada, and what it means that every translator leaves their own impression on the text. And he describes the experience of waking up to God's presence everywhere as something that has to happen in stages — because waking a sleepwalker too fast gives them a shock. The Bhagavata Podcast is produced in association with the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously. 🔔 Subscribe to join listeners around the world exploring the Bhagavatam together: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxspSZeIYq_ZZaW89hhnptA?sub_confirmation=1 Starting from the beginning? Episode 1.1 is here: https://youtu.be/2LcGX8iK5tM #Bhagavatam #BhaktiYoga #HinduPhilosophy #Renunciation #Manosphere Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2457899/fan_mail/new] The Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

27 de abr de 202656 min
episode 2.1 What Should You Do When You're About to Die? | Bhagavata Podcast with Jayananda Dasa artwork

2.1 What Should You Do When You're About to Die? | Bhagavata Podcast with Jayananda Dasa

A well-known contemporary guru was asked, mid-event, how to prepare for death. He laughed — not dismissively, but his answer was: "You should be focusing on how to live." The Bhagavatam disagrees. And its answer turns out to be not about the future at all. Canto 2, Chapter 1 is where Shukadeva Goswami finally begins to speak. The first book of the Srimad Bhagavatam spent its entire length setting up one question: what should a person do who is about to die? Now, with Pariksit seated on the banks of the Ganges with seven days left to live, Shukadeva answers. He gives the full answer in the first ten verses. The remaining 15,000 verses are the elaboration. Jayananda Dasa (Dr. Janne Kontala of Åbo Akademi University in Finland) brings a researcher's precision to the chapter's opening moves. He and host Bhrigupada Dasa (Dr. Mans Broo) work through Shukadeva's strategy: why he begins by validating every other yoga system before identifying naama kirtana as the single recommendation for everyone, regardless of what they want. The episode also examines the chapter's panentheistic meditation on the universal form, what it would actually take to practice it seriously, and how it differs in aim from the Tantric framework of imagining the universe within oneself. Along the way: the ashrama system and whether spiritual practice can begin too early and the story of King Katvanga (who learned he had only moments to live and used them to achieve perfection). The Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously. 🔔 Subscribe to join listeners around the world exploring the Bhagavatam together: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxspSZeIYq_ZZaW89hhnptA?sub_confirmation=1 [https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxspSZeIYq_ZZaW89hhnptA?sub_confirmation=1] Starting from the beginning? Episode 1.1 is here: https://youtu.be/2LcGX8iK5tM [https://youtu.be/2LcGX8iK5tM] #Bhagavatam #BhaktiYoga #HinduPhilosophy #Shukadeva #NaamaKirtana Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2457899/fan_mail/new] The Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

13 de abr de 202656 min
episode 1.19 What Would You Do If You Had Seven Days to Live? | Bhagavata Podcast with Sundar Gopal Das artwork

1.19 What Would You Do If You Had Seven Days to Live? | Bhagavata Podcast with Sundar Gopal Das

What would you do if you learned you had seven days to live? Most of us would panic, bargain, or spend those days in dread. King Parikshit sat down by the river and prepared to die with complete clarity.    This is the final chapter of the first book of the Srimad Bhagavatam, and it arrives like a carefully placed door: everything in Canto 1 has been building toward this moment.    In this episode, Bhrigupada Dasa (Dr. Mans Broo) and Sundar Gopal Das (Dr. Simon Haas) explore Canto 1, Chapter 19 of the Srimad Bhagavatam, in which King Parikshit, cursed to die by snakebite within seven days, renounces his kingdom and fasts by the Ganga. The great sages of the age converge not out of ceremony but out of omniscient foreknowledge: the Bhagavatam itself is about to be spoken. Sundar Gopal Das, joining from Costa Rica, draws on the commentary of Baladeva Vidyabhushan throughout, uncovering details that move quickly past in the text: the sages who could not reach agreement on what Parikshit should do, the tears and embraces when Shukadeva Goswami finally arrives, and the king's quiet, anxious gratitude that this wandering sage has agreed to stay longer than it takes to milk a cow.    The conversation ranges across the nature of the Bhagavatam as a literary structure (a text that ends every sequence on a cliffhanger), the contested identity of Shukadeva, the art of physiognomy by which the sages immediately recognise a great personality, and the Bhagavata Parampara: the lineage of instruction that does not pass through initiation but through teaching. The episode closes on a question the Srimad Bhagavatam poses in its first chapter and repeats here at the end of its first book: what is the duty of a human being, especially one who is about to die? The mortality rate, as Bhrigupada's teacher once reminded a Finnish audience, is 100 percent.    This episode covers Canto 1, Chapter 19 of the Srimad Bhagavatam.   The Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously. #Bhagavatam #BhaktiYoga #HinduPhilosophy #Parikshit #Shukadeva Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2457899/fan_mail/new] The Bhagavata Podcast is produced by the Gaudiya Studies Research Programme at the Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies. Each episode brings together scholar-practitioners, trained in both Indology and lived Vaishnava devotion, to read this text closely and seriously.

29 de mar de 202651 min