SB 1.5.19
Devanāgarī
न वै जनो जातु कथञ्चनाव्रजे- न्मुकुन्दसेव्यन्यवदङ्ग संसृतिम् । स्मरन्मुकुन्दाङ्घ्र्युरपगूहनं पुन- र्विहातुमिच्छेन्न रसग्रहो जन: ॥ १९ ॥
Text
na vai jano jātu kathañcanāvrajen mukunda-sevy anyavad aṅga saṁsṛtim smaran mukundāṅghry-upagūhanaṁ punar vihātum icchen na rasa-graho janaḥ
Synonyms
na—never;vai—certainly;janaḥ—a person;jātu—at any time;kathañcana—somehow or other;āvrajet—does not undergo;mukunda-sevī—the devotee of the Lord;anyavat—like others;aṅga—O my dear;saṁsṛtim—material existence;smaran—remembering;mukunda-aṅghri—the lotus feet of the Lord;upagūhanam—embracing;punaḥ—again;vihātum—willing to give up;icchet—desire;na—never;rasa-grahaḥ—one who has relished the mellow;janaḥ—person.
Translation
My dear Vyāsa, even though a devotee of Lord Kṛṣṇa sometimes falls down somehow or other, he certainly does not undergo material existence like others [fruitive workers, etc.] because a person who has once relished the taste of the lotus feet of the Lord can do nothing but remember that ecstasy again and again.
Purport
In the Bhagavad-gītā it is also said that such fallen devotees are given a chance to take birth in a family of highly qualified brāhmaṇas or in a rich mercantile family. A devotee in such a position is not as fortunate as one who is chastised by the Lord and put into a position seemingly of helplessness. The devotee who becomes helpless by the will of the Lord is more fortunate than those who are born in good families. The fallen devotees born in a good family may forget the lotus feet of the Lord because they are less fortunate, but the devotee who is put into a forlorn condition is more fortunate because he swiftly returns to the lotus feet of the Lord, thinking himself helpless all around.
Pure devotional service is so spiritually relishable that a devotee becomes automatically uninterested in material enjoyment. That is the sign of perfection in progressive devotional service. A pure devotee continuously remembers the lotus feet of Lord Śrī Kṛṣṇa and does not forget Him even for a moment, not even in exchange for all the opulence of the three worlds.
