4.106
radhikara bhava-murti prabhura antara
sei bhave sukha-duhkha uthe nirantara
SYNONYMS
radhikara—of Srimati Radharani; bhava-murti—the form of the emotions; prabhura—of Lord Caitanya Mahaprabhu; antara—the heart; sei—that; bhave—in the condition; sukha-duhkha—happiness and distress; uthe—arise; nirantara—constantly.
The heart of Lord Caitanya is the image of Sri Radhika’s emotions.
Thus feelings of pleasure and pain arise constantly therein.
PURPORT
Lord Caitanya’s heart was full of the feelings of Srimati Radharani, and His appearance resembled Hers.
Svarupa Damodara has explained His attitude as radha-bhava-murti, the attitude of Radharani.
One who engages in sense gratification on the material platform can hardly understand radha-bhava, but one who is freed from the demands of sense gratification can understand it.
Radha-bhava must be understood from the Gosvamis, those who are actually controllers of the senses.
From such authorized sources it is to be known that the attitude of Srimati Radharani is the highest perfection of conjugal love, which is the highest of the five transcendental mellows, and it is the complete perfection of love of Krsna.
These transcendental affairs can be understood on two platforms.
One is called elevated, and the other is called superelevated.
The loving affairs exhibited in Dvaraka are the elevated form.
The superelevated position is reached in the manifestations of the pastimes of Vrndavana.
The attitude of Lord Caitanya is certainly superelevated.
From the life of Sri Caitanya Mahaprabhu, an intelligent person engaged in pure devotional service can understand that He always felt separation from Krsna within Himself.
In that separation He sometimes felt that He had found Krsna and was enjoying the meeting.
The significance of this separation and meeting is very specific.
If someone tries to understand the exalted position of Lord Caitanya without knowing this, he is sure to misunderstand it.
One must first become fully self-realized.
Otherwise one may misidentify the Lord as nagara, or the enjoyer of the damsels of Vraja, thus committing the mistake of rasabhasa, or overlapping understanding.