BHAGAVATA PURANA
Of all Vedic works, the Bhagavata Purana ranks next to
the Bhagavad Gita in popularity. The legendary Maharshi Veda
Vyasa, author of the Mahbharata, is accredited with the composition
of it.
The Bhagavata is a complex synthesis of numerous
streams of Vedic thought in many literary forms, from the purest Bhakti
hymns to a variety of stories. There are retellings of ancient
myths, with much emotion, some eroticism, and a good mixture of
anthropomorphism. The doctrine of lila, divine sportive play,
explains the creation.
Composed in the ninth or tenth century A.D., the
Bhagavata is written in a lofty and difficult form of Sanskrit.
There are twelve sections divided into 320 chapters. The tenth
section of ninety chapters tells the story of Lord Krishna.
The view of Krishna here is considerably
different from that of the Bhagavad Gita. In the Bhagavata, we see
Krishna in a more human and semi-divine aspect rather than fully
divine. He is seen partaking in ordinary life, with special emphasis
on his childhood and youth.
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