—json {
"name":"Cc. Madhya 6.58", "h1":"Cc. Madhya 6.58", "label":"Text 58", "title":"Śrī Caitanya-caritāmṛta, Madhya-līlā 6.58", "description":"\"Because you are a teacher of Vedānta philosophy, you are the master of all the people in the world and their well-wisher as well. You are also the benefactor of all kinds of sannyāsīs."
} —
“tumi jagad-guru—sarvaloka-hita-kartā
vedānta paḍāo, sannyāsīra upakartā
tumi jagat-guru—you are the master of all people; sarva-loka—of all people; hita-kartā—the well-wisher; vedānta paḍāo—you teach Vedānta philosophy; sannyāsīra—of the mendicants in the renounced order of life; upakartā—the benefactor.
“Because you are a teacher of Vedānta philosophy, you are the master of all the people in the world and their well-wisher as well. You are also the benefactor of all kinds of sannyāsīs.
Because the Māyāvādī sannyāsīs teach Vedānta philosophy to their students or disciples, they are customarily called jagad-guru. This indicates that they are the benefactors of all people. Although Sārvabhauma Bhaṭṭācārya was not a sannyāsī but a householder, he used to invite all the sannyāsīs to his home and offer them prasāda. Thus he was accepted as the best well-wisher and friend of all the sannyāsīs.