His most important work is his commentary on the
Brahmasutra named
Govinda-bhasya. He has also written commentaries on the Upanishads and the Gita, among several other works. It was composed by Vidyabhusana under the order of
Maharaja Sawai Jai Singh II (1688-1743 AD), as mentioned at the beginning and the end of the manuscript. The work is undated, but from the available historical documentation, it can be inferred that it was written between 1730 and 1740 AD. This was the
Vedanta commentary that Vidyabhusana wrote very quickly in order to appease the King and the opponents who belittled the Gaudiyas for not having a Brahma-sutra-bhasya. The much more famous Govinda-bhasya was a much later and more elaborate work, and its oldest known manuscript is dated Saṁvat 1815 (1758 AD). Some claim that Baladeva received the title "Vidyabhusana" from the King or from the Ramanandis. However, the Karika-bhasya manuscript and his other earlier manuscripts are signed "Vidyabhusana." He may have received this title before joining the Gaudiyas, probably when he was a
Tattvavadi debater. Another of his earlier works was the Tattva-dipika, also written under the order of
Sawai Jai Singh II. Some misinformed individuals also claim that the Govinda-bhasya was written at Galta, to which there is not the slightest evidence and which makes no sense at all, as according to documentary evidence, even during Sawai Jai Singh II Vidyabhusana was the Mahant of the New Govinda-deva Temple in Vrindavan as well as of his own temple in
Jaipur, and the idea that he left his duties in both places to sit down in a temple of another sampradaya to write a commentary is nothing but absurd. The earliest documents that mention Baladeva Vidyabhusana belong to the 1740s; therefore, it is most unlikely that he had any participation in the Amer/Jaipur debates before the 1730s. Other works include Siddhanta-ratnam (Govinda-bhasya-pithakam), Prameya-ratnavali, Siddhanta-darpana, Kavya-kaustubha, Vyakarana-kaumudi, Pada-kaustubha, Isadi-upanisad bhasya, Gitabhusana-bhasya, Sri Visnunama-sahasra-nama-bhasya, Sanksepa-bhagavatamrta- tippani, Tattva-sandarbha-tika, Stava-mala-vibhusana-bhasya, Nataka-candrika-tika, Candraloka-tika, Sahitya-kaumudi, Srimad-Bhagavata-tika (Vaisnavanandini). A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada, founder Acarya of ISKCON, dedicated his Bhagavad Gita As It Is to Baladeva Vidyabhusana, "who presented so nicely the Govinda Bhasya commentary on Vedanta philosophy." ==Commentary on Vedanta==