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Śāstra‑mārga Darśanam — daily lila contemplation

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A śāstra‑mārga darśanam page: image + śāstra pramāṇa + practice.

Shakatasura-bhanjana-lila — baby Krishna breaks the cart demon

Shakatasura-bhanjana-lila — baby Krishna breaks the cart demon
Śāstra‑mārga Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam 10.7
Shakatasura-bhanjana-lila — baby Krishna breaks the cart demon
Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, Canto 10, Chapter 7

Pramāṇa (Śāstra reference)

Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, Canto 10, Chapter 7 — during the utthana ceremony, mother Yasoda places baby Krishna beneath a household cart. Awakening and wanting His mother’s milk, He throws up His little legs and overturns the cart, breaking it apart.

Saṅkṣepa (short meaning)

This lila reveals the inconceivable power of the Supreme Lord hidden within the softness of His baby form. Krishna appears as a helpless infant, yet with a simple movement of His tender feet He destroys the cart demon and overturns the heavy handcart. The residents of Vraja do not understand how it happened, and thus the sweetness of Vraja-bhava remains protected.

Śāstra-pramāṇa (key points from the text)

The utthana ceremony
When Krishna was about three months old, mother Yasoda celebrated the utthana ceremony with brahmanas, ladies, music, and auspicious rites.
(Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, Canto 10, Chapter 7)
Krishna rests beneath the cart
Busy receiving guests, she placed the sleepy child beneath a household cart, where there was a cradle underneath.
(Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, Canto 10, Chapter 7)
Baby Krishna breaks the cart
Desiring His mother’s milk, baby Krishna angrily raised His little legs and struck the cart. The cart overturned violently, the wheels separated, the axle and spokes broke, and the utensils scattered everywhere.
(Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, Canto 10, Chapter 7)
The children tell what happened
The nearby children said Krishna had kicked the cart apart, but the adults did not believe them.
(Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, Canto 10, Chapter 7)
Yasoda protects and feeds Krishna
Mother Yasoda picked Krishna up, fed Him, and brahmanas performed protective rituals, thinking some evil influence had attacked the child.
(Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, Canto 10, Chapter 7)

Tattva (essential teaching) — with śāstra

The Lord’s power is never limited
The Lord’s power is never limited by the appearance He accepts; even as an infant, Krishna remains fully supreme.
Vraja-bhakti protects intimate sweetness
Vraja-bhakti is so sweet that the residents do not think, “He is God”; they remain absorbed in parental affection and concern.
The devotees respond through loving care
The demon is destroyed, but the devotees respond not with theology first, but with care, love, and protective service to Krishna. This is the beauty of Vraja.

Sevā today (practice for this day)

1. Chant one attentive round
Chant one attentive round remembering that the Lord’s power is present even where He appears most simple and hidden.
2. Offer protective service
Offer one act of protective, practical service in a mood of motherly or fatherly care toward Krishna and His devotees.
3. Hear from shastra
Reflect on whether you try to measure the Lord by external appearance instead of hearing from shastra.
Even as an infant, Krishna remains fully supreme, while the sweetness of Vraja-bhakti remains undisturbed.
— Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam, Canto 10, Chapter 7

How to use this darśanam page

View the image, read the narration and śāstra-pramāṇa, contemplate the tattva, and complete the practice through seva. Follow the sequence: darśana → śravaṇa → manana → seva.