PRECEPTORS OF ADVAITHAM PART 2 10 24

MADHUSUDANA SARASVATI *by  *V. Rajagopalan  M.A.

KR      Madusudana saraswati is an ardent upholder of advaitham who wrote
many treatise and also was strong contender agnst the Buddism.

-----------------------------------


*vaṃśīvibhūṣitakarānnavanīradābhāt pītāṃbarādaruṇabiṃbaphalādharoṣṭhāt
pūrṇendusundaramukhādaravindanetrāt kṛṣṇātparam kimapi tattvamaham na jāne*

How can an ardent follower of Śaṅkarāchārya who believed and proclaimed
that there is only one ultimate reality, that is, the nirguṇa Brahman,
which is devoid of any attribute, be also an ardent devotee of Śrī Kṛṣṇa?
To many, it is a wonder as to how the learned monk, Madhusūdana Sarasvatī,
who established the supremacy of the Advaita school of Śaṅkara by writing
one of the accepted masterpieces of the Vedānta philosophy, the
*Advaitasiddhi,* for refuting the objections raised against Advaita by
Vyāsatīrtha, a follower of the dualistic school of Madhva, can proclaim
Lord Kṛṣṇa as the ultimate reality, or in other words, that there is no
other ultimate reality except? Śrī Kṛṣṇa. A number of such doubts may arise
in the minds of the readers of Madhusūdana Sarasvatī’s works. The path of
knowledge or jñānamārga has been accepted to be the only direct path
leading to salvation by the sage Bādarāyaṇa and his large followers of the
Advaita school beginning with Āchārya Śaṅkara, who revealed the identity of
the individual soul with the supreme Self by properly explaining the
correct meaning of the scriptural texts which appear to be mutually
contradictory. All the Advaitins have accepted that the ultimate Reality is
nirguṇa or attributeless. But Madhusūdana considered Śrī Kṛṣṇa as the
Ultimate Reality and as the incarnation of the nirguṇa Brahman. Can any one
by any stretch of imagination consider Śrī Kṛṣṇa to be nirguṇa or
attributeless? Has Madhusūdana given up the path of knowledge and become
the advocate or the follower of the bhaktimārga or the path of devotion?
Or, should we take it that he was the follower of the bhaktimārga preached
in the *Bhāgavatapurāṇa* till he became the follower of Śaṅkara’s Advaita
school later in life when he could have probably been very enthusiastic to
establish the supremacy of the Advaita school by producing the most popular
works like *Siddhāntabindu* , *Vedāntakalpalatikā, Advaita-siddhi,* and
*Advaitaratnarakṣaṇa.* There is no evidence for such a change in the meagre
sketch of the life of Madhusūdana available to us in the introductions of
his various works published so far.

All that we come to know about him from these prefaces is that he took to
sannyāsa very early in his life, and that he was ordoined to sannyāsa by
Viśveśvarānanda Sarasvatī But in some of his works he has mentioned two
others, namely, Śrī Rāma and Mādhava as his gurus:


*srīrāmaviśveśvaramādhavānām praṇamya pādāṃbhujapuṇyapāṃśūn teṣām prabhāvād
ahamasmi yogyaḥ śilāpi* c *haitanyarn alabdha yebhyaḥ.*


*śrīmādhavasarasvatyo jayanti yaminām varāḥ vayam teṣām prasādena
śāstrārthe pariniṣṭhitāḥ*

It is also said that his name was Kamalajanayana in the pūrvāśrama and that
he was a native of Bengal. From his works we cannot say with any degree of
certainty where he was born or by which name he was called before becoming
a sannyāsin. His commentators like Brahmānanda also have not given us any
hint to ascertain the native place of Madhusūdana. In the
*Vedāntakalpalatikā,* Madhusūdana has mentioned the name of a deity,
nīlāchalanāyaka, the lord of the blue mountain.

“*aupaniṣadāstu bhagavatā nīlāchalanāyakena nārāyaṇenānugrihītaḥ*”[1]
<https://www.wisdomlib.org/hinduism/book/preceptors-of-advaita/d/doc62896.html#note-e-32826>

Arbitrarily many north Indian scholars have not only identified the
nīlāchalanātha, the lord of the blue mountain with Lord Jagannātha of Puri,
but also Madhusūdana as a resident of Puri. But a few scholars of Kerala
consider that nīlāchalanātha can be more appropriately identified with Lord
Kṛṣṇa at Guruvāyur (Guruvāyupuram) or with the Lord Kṛṣṇa at Uḍipi where
the deity in the temple is in the form of Bālakṛṣṇa. Madhusūdana was an
ardent devotee of Śrī Kṛṣṇa and he had a very great fascination for
Bālakṛṣṇa and this is evident from a number of devotional verses composed
by him in his works, *Gūḍārtha-dīpikā, Saṃkṣepaśārīrakaṭīkā,
Bhaktirasāyana,* etc. From a study of his works, it is very clear that
Madhusūdana was a very great devotee of Śrī Kṛṣṇa and that he was more
attracted by the *bālatva* aspect of Lord Kṛṣṇa which is vividly described
in the *Bhāgavatapurāṇa* to which he attached the same importance as to the
three prasthānas. His fervent devotion for Kṛṣṇa was so much as to make him
believe that Puṣpadanta’s *Śivamahimna-stotra* or *Mahimna-stotra* as it is
more popularly known is praising both Śiva and Kṛṣṇa and induced him to
write a commentary on the *Mahimnastotra* called *Mahimnastotraṭīkā* with
great skill.


*bhūtibhūṣitadehāya dvijarājena rājate ekātmane namo nityam haraye cha
harāya cha*.[2]
<https://www.wisdomlib.org/hinduism/book/preceptors-of-advaita/d/doc62896.html#note-e-32827>

While commenting on śloka 2, he states:




*‘navajaladharaśyāmadhāmani śrīvigrahe vaikuṇṭhavartini
veṇuvādanādivividhavihāra- parāyaṇe gopakiśore vā brindāvanavartini kasya
manaḥ nāpatati.’*

In this he has explicitly mentioned his great fascination for Kṛṣṇa as a
child. Only in Guruvāyūr and Uḍipi, Kṛṣṇa is worshipped as a child. There
is also every probability of Madhusūdana being either a native or a
resident of Guruvāyur in Kerala or Uḍipi in South Canara. He wanted to
attack the Dvaita school and establish the supremacy of the Advaita school.
Unless he studied the works of Madhvāchārya and his followers who attacked
the Advaita school, it could not be possible for him to refute their
arguments. And it is more likely that to get access to the works of the
Dvaita school, Madhusūdana must have taken pains to go to Uḍipi, where
Madhvāchārya and his disciples in the different mutts were flourishing. At
Uḍipi he might have been attracted by the beautiful idol of Bālakṛṣṇa,
installed by Śrī Madhvāchārya, or perhaps he could have taken a pilgrimage
to Kālaḍi the birth place of Ādi Śaṅkara and remained there visiting the
surrounding holy places. The Lord of Guruvāyūr could have fascinated him.
Even now there are a number of Brahmin families in Cochin area, near
Kāladi, called Gauda Sārasvata Brahmins. They have settled in Kerala for a
number of generations. There is a tradition amongst them that they have
migrated to Kerala from Gauḍa Deśa and that they belong to the Sārasvata
community or the Brahmin community, which was in charge of imbibing and
imparting knowledge in ancient India. Madhusūdana and his disciple Gauḍa
Brahmānanda too could have belonged to this community which migrated to
Kerala and lived there.

In ancient India only Sannyāsins were considered to be qualified to study
the Vedānta. But even in those days non-sannyāsins like Śrī-Harsha, the
author of *Khaṇḍana-khaṇḍa-khādya* and Vāchaspatimiśra, the author of
*Bhāmatī,* did not only study the Vedānta, but also contributed to the sum
total of knowledge by writing works on Advaita Vedānta. Renunciation, if at
all, was resorted to only during the last days. It will not be incorrect to
presume that Madhusūdana was an ardent devotee of Kṛṣṇa following the
bhaktimārga preached in the *Bhāgavata-purāṇa,* and mastered the Vedānta,
both the Advaita and its opponent schools afterwards. He was so much
saturated with Kṛṣṇabhakti that he identified the nirguṇa Brahman with the
incarnation of Kṛṣṇa. According to him there is nothing incompatible
between the attributeless monism of Śaṅkara and the ardent devotion of
Kṛṣṇa who is no other than the Supreme Being Itself. He has synthesised the
bhakti school and the path of knowledge and thus inculcated a new line of
thought or approach in the Advaita school. Saguṇabrahmopāsanā or meditation
on the Supreme Being with attributes has been prescribed by the Advaitins
as a preliminary step for self-realisation. Śaṅkarāchārya himself composed
a number of devotional hymns, though he considered and established the
Supreme Being as devoid of attributes. His successors adorning the five
mutts established by him in the different parts of India, are performing
daily pūjā to the Lord Chandramāulīśvara and the goddess Tripurasundarī.
All the sannyāsins, many of whom are released and yet alive (jīvan-muktas)
are uttering the name of Śrī Nārāyaṇa. So there is absolutely no
contradiction in being a devotee and at the same time a follower of the
oath of knowledge to realise the Supreme Being as identical with the self.

Madhusūdana’s ardent devotion for Śrī Kṛṣṇa was not at all affected by his
belief that Brahman which itself took incarnations did so through *māyā.* The
incarnations were those of the nirguṇa Brahman itself, but they were all
unreal. Madhusūdana criticised all those who held the view that Brahman is
eternal and yet assumes real incarnations, as unreasonable and groundless.
He fully concurred with Śaṅkara’s conception of jagat, jīvātmā and
Paramātmā and also the path of knowledge as directly leading to *mokṣa.* In
the synthesis of bhaktimārga and the path of knowledge he followed the
famous Sarvajñatmamuni, the author of *Saṃkṣepaśārīraka* who has offered
salutation to nirguṇa Brahman called Murāri in the very first verse of his
work which is a summary, in verses, of Śaṅkara’s *Brahmasūtra-bhāṣya*.[3]
<https://www.wisdomlib.org/hinduism/book/preceptors-of-advaita/d/doc62896.html#note-e-32828>
So
nirguṇa-bhaktimārga cannot be called a new innovation of Madhusūdana.

There seems to be some apparent contradiction in his works about the path
of devotion and the path of knowledge as means to *mokṣa.* In his
*Gūḍārthadīpikā,* a commentary on Śaṅkara’s bhāṣya on the *Bhagavadgītā,* he
believes the main teaching of the Gītā to be that nirguṇa Brahman could
also be attained through loving devotion to the Lord. It is also supported
by his *Bhaktirasāyana* which propounds that both bhakti and jñāna are the
means to *mokṣa,* but both differ as regards their nature, their means,
their goal, and the persons entitled to both *(adhikārins).*

Bhakti is of the nature of a conditional modification of the mind
experiencing beatification, while Brahmavidyā is of the nature of a
conditionless modification of the inflexible mind illumined by the
secondless Ātman. The means of bhakti is the hearing of the innumerable
merits of the worshipful, while that of Brahmajñāna is the mahavākyas like *tat
tvam asi* . Their fruits are respectively intense love for God and the
disappearance of ignorance which is the prime cause of all evils. All
beings are eligible for bhakti, but only sannyāsins having the four-fold
aid are fit for Brahmavidyā. But the bliss of bhakti is not the same or
similar to svarga which is to be enjoyed in a particular place at a
particular time and by a particular body. But like Brahmavidyā, it is
enjoyable in all places at all times and by all bodies. In his
*Bhaktirasāyana,* devotion is mentioned as superior, because it accelerates
the realisation of the truth more quickly than jñāna and that there is no
difference in the conception of *mokṣa* achieved through either. According
to him, the Knowledge of Brahman is as essential for a devote as it is for
pursuing the path of knowledge. But the devotion helps one in securing the
grace of the Lord by which the scriptures are revealed to him at the end of
the *yuga* while he stays in the *Brahmaloka* alter death and when the
knowledge is thus obtained, he becomes one with Brahman along with
Hiraṇyagarbha. Another benefit which one gets by the grace of God is that
he is freed from undergoing the punishment for his sins without performing
any propitiatory rites. To Madhusūdana, all beings including beast and
birds are entitled to bhakti, but only the sannyāsins having the four-fold
aid are fit for jñānamārga. He also considered bhakti as one of the aims of
life, bhakti for bhakti’s sake which is identical with Brahmānanda. In his
*Bhaktirasāyana* he quotes the śloka from the *Bhāgavatapurāṇa* that even
sages who enjoy Brahmānanda and who are far from the shackles of saṃsāra
dedicate themselves spontaneously to Viṣṇu without any aim or purpose. Or
in other words even jīvanmuktas are devoted to God. He thus establishes
bhakti as the highest goal of human life. So the path of devotion is
prescribed for all by Madhusūdana, while the path of knowledge is
restricted to sannyāsins. He is emphatically of the view that only by
getting the knowledge of Brahman, either by being taught by the teacher who
is a sannyāsin or by getting the revelation of knowledge along with the
creator, one can get *mokṣa.*

About the date of Madhusūdana there are different opinions. Professor
Burnouf and Professor Lassen assigned Madhusūdana to the middle of the 14th
century A.D. But Mr. Telang holds the view that he must have flourished
about the end of the 15th century or the beginning of the 16th century. For
Madhusūdana has quoted a number of passages from Vidyāraṇya’s *Pañchadaśī*
 and *Jīvan* - *muktiviveka.* Professor Winternitz also fixes his date as
the beginning of the 16th century. In the life of Vallabhāchārya it is
mentioned that once Śrī Vallabhāchārya went from Vāraṇasī to Prayāg where
he stayed for a number of days performing the pārāyaṇam of the
*Bhāgavatapurāṇa* and there he happened to meet a very learned sannyāsin
named Madhusūdana Sarasvatī, who was not only an advocate of *māyāvāda* but
also an ardent devotee of Śrī Kṛṣṇa and who showed him ins work called
*Bhaktirasāyana* and his commentary on Śaṅkara’s bhāṣya on the Gītā.
Impressed by the great qualities of Madhusūdana, he entrusted his son
Viṭṭhalnāth to the care of Madhusūdana for studying the various śāstras.
Viṭṭhalnāth was born in saṃvat 1572 or 1516 A.D. So the date of Madhusūdana
can be fixed as the beginning of the 16 th, century. But there is a
tradition that Madhusūdana wrote a commentary on the *Siddhāntaleśasaṅgraha* of
Appayya Dīkṣita.

It is conflicting with the fact that one of the students of Madhusūdana
named Śeṣagovinda was the guru of Bhaṭṭoji Dīkṣita who studied Vedānta from
Appayya Dīkṣita. Śeṣagovinda refers to Madhusūdana as follows:


*Yatprasādādhīnasiddhipuruṣārthachatuṣṭayam sarasvatyavatāram tam vande
śrīmadhusūdanam.*

Śeṣagovinda and Appayya Dīkṣita must have been contemporaries and
Madhusūdana was senior to Appayya Dīkṣita. Moreover, no such commentary of
*Siddhāntaleśasaṅgraha* attributed to Madhusūdana has come to light though
mentioned by one or two collectors of manuscripts.

There is also another tradition that Gadādhara, the famous Naiyāyika was a
contemporary of Madhusūdana:


*navadvīpe samāyate madhusūdana vākpatau chakaṃpe tarkavāgīśaḥ kātaro’bhūt
gadādharaḥ.*

Gauḍa Brahmānanda who wrote a commentary called *Chandrikā* on the
*Advaita-siddhi* of Madhusūdana was considered to be a costudent of
Gadādhara. So Madhusūdana must have been an elder contemporary of the
famous logician Gadādhara. All these evidences clearly establish that
Madhusūdana must have flourished in the beginning of the 16th century.

Madhusūdana wrote a number of works on bhaktimārga and also on the Advaita
Vedānta as propounded by Śaṅkara.

His works are

   - *Ānandamandākinī,*
   - *Bhaktirasāyana,*
   - *Īśvarapratipattiprakāśa,*
   - *Mahimnastotra-vyākhyā,*
   - *Harilīlā-vyākhyā,*
   - *Bhāgavatapraihamaślokatīkā,*
   - *Vedāntakalpalatikā,*
   - *Siddhāntahindu,*
   - *Saṃkṣepaśārīraka-vyākhyā,*
   - *Gūḍārthadīpikā,*
   - *Advaita-siddhi*
   - and *Advaita-ratna-rakṣaṇa.*

There were also some others having the name of Madhusūdana who were the
authors of works like *Anyāpadeśaśatakam* and a commentary on *Mahānāṭaka,* but
one can easily find out the difference between the works of Madhusūdana who
is a Vedāntin and others bearing the name of Madhusūdana.

*Ānandamandākinī* is an original poem of more than one hundred ślokas in
praise of Lord Kṛṣṇa. This work was his maiden attempt. One can easily
appreciate the fervent devotion of the author to Śrī Kṛṣṇa. His
*Vedāntakalpalatikā* is a small treatise on the Advaita Vedānta. He has
discussed the nature of the Absolute, refuted the conception of liberation
according to other schools, explained how the *avidyā* ceases to exist by
the direct apprehension of Brahman arising out of hearing the mahavākyas
and ultimately explained the concept of *mokṣa* according to Advaita. The
*Siddhāntabindu* is a commentary on Śaṅkara’s *Daśaślokī* and is written by
him for the benefit of his pupil Balabhadra. In this work, he has refuted
the views of other schools, established the views of the Advaita school and
has also presented the views of the various Advaitic āchāryas on important
concepts of Advaita without going into details. His commentary on the
*Saṃkṣepaśārīraka* is known as *Saṃkṣepaśārirakasārasaṃgraham.* Madhusūdana
has expressed his views on the Brahmasūtras by commenting upon
Sarvajñātmamuni’s *Saṃkṣepaśārīraka* which is a brief but lucid commentary
in verse on Śāṅkara bhāṣya on the *Vedānta-sūtras. Advaita-siddhi* is his
masterpiece. This work was written mainly to refute the charges raised
against Advaita by Vyāsatīrtha. *Gūḍārthadīpikā* is a commentary on
Śaṅkara’s bhāṣya on the *Bhagavadgītā* upholding Śaṅkara’s interpretation
but in some places deviating while advocating the path of devotion taught
in the second six chapters. Bhakti and jñāna are the two banks of the river
of Gitā according to him. His last work is *Advaita-ratna-rakṣaṇa* where he
has answered the unjust attacks of the Naiyāyikas and followers of Dvaita
school in a vehement manner at times in abusive words. *Bhaktirasāyana* is
a great treatise on bhakti. *Mahimnastotraṭīkā and Harilīlā-vyākhyā* are
commentaries on Puṣpadanta’s *Śivamahimnastotra* and Bopadeva’s
*Harilīlā* respectively
for proclaiming the wonderful qualities of Śrī Kṛṣṇa. He has exhibited his
great skill by interpreting the ślokas in praise of Śiva as praising Lord
Kṛṣṇa.

In the firmament of Advaita philosophy getting light only from Śaṅkara who
was resplendent like the sun, Madhusūdana shone like the moon excelling all
the other philosophic stars and enlightening the people with ambrosial
teachings worthy of his name,

Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

K Rajaram   IRS  2 10 24

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