Chapter ten reveals Lord Krishna's exalted position as
the cause of all causes. Also specifying His special manifestations and
opulences. Arjuna prays to the Lord to describe more of the opulences
and the Lord describes those which are most prominent. Thus this chapter
is entitled: The Infinite Glories of the Ultimate Truth.
TEXT 1
sri-bhagavan uvaca
bhuya eva maha-baho
srnu me paramam vacah
yat te 'ham priyamanaya
vaksyami hita-kamyaya
SYNONYMS
sri-bhagavan uvaca--the Supreme Personality of Godhead said;
bhuyah--again;
eva--certainly;
maha-baho--O mighty-armed;
srnu--just hear;
me--My;
paramam--supreme;
vacah--information;
yat--that which;
te--to you;
aham--I;
priyamanaya--thinking you dear to Me;
vaksyami--say;
hita-kamyaya--for your benefit.
TRANSLATION
The
Supreme Lord said: My dear friend, mighty-armed Arjuna, listen again to
My supreme word, which I shall impart to you for your benefit and which
will give you great joy.
PURPORT

The word
paramam
is explained thus by Parasara Muni: one who is full in six opulences,
who has full strength, full fame, wealth, knowledge, beauty and
renunciation, is
paramam, or the Supreme Personality of Godhead.
While Krsna was present on this earth, He displayed all six opulences.
Therefore great sages like Parasara Muni have all accepted Krsna as the
Supreme Personality of Godhead. Now Krsna is instructing Arjuna in more
confidential knowledge of His opulences and His work. Previously,
beginning with the Seventh Chapter, the Lord already explained His
different energies and how they are acting. Now in this chapter He
explains His specific opulences to Arjuna. In the previous chapter He
has clearly explained His different energies to establish devotion in
firm conviction. Again in this chapter He tells Arjuna about His
manifestations and various opulences.

The
more one hears about the Supreme God, the more one becomes fixed in
devotional service. One should always hear about the Lord in the
association of devotees; that will enhance one's devotional service.
Discourses in the society of devotees can take place only among those
who are really anxious to be in Krsna consciousness. Others cannot take
part in such discourses. The Lord clearly tells Arjuna that because he
is very dear to Him, for his benefit such discourses are taking place.
TEXT 2
na me viduh sura-ganah
prabhavam na maharsayah
aham adir hi devanam
maharsinam ca sarvasah
SYNONYMS
na--never;
me--My;
viduh--knows;
sura-ganah--demigods;
prabhavam--opulences;
na--never;
maha-rsayah--great sages;
aham--I am;
adih--the origin;
hi--certainly;
devanam--of the demigods;
maha-rsinam--of the great sages;
ca--also;
sarvasah--in all respects.
TRANSLATION
Neither
the hosts of demigods nor the great sages know My origin, for, in every
respect, I am the source of the demigods and the sages.
PURPORT

As stated in the
Brahma-samhita,
Lord Krsna is the Supreme Lord. No one is greater than Him; He is the
cause of all causes. Here it is also stated by the Lord personally that
He is the cause of all the demigods and sages. Even the demigods and
great sages cannot understand Krsna; they can understand neither His
name nor His personality, so what is the position of the so-called
scholars of this tiny planet? No one can understand why this Supreme God
comes to earth as an ordinary human being and executes such commonplace
and yet wonderful activities. One should know, then, that scholarship
is not the qualification necessary to understand Krsna. Even the
demigods and the great sages have tried to understand Krsna by their
mental speculation, and they have failed to do so. In the
Srimad-Bhagavatam
also it is clearly said that even the great demigods are not able to
understand the Supreme Personality of Godhead. They can speculate to the
limits of their imperfect senses and can reach the opposite conclusion
of impersonalism, of something not manifested by the three qualities of
material nature, or they can imagine something by mental speculation,
but it is not possible to understand Krsna by such foolish speculation.

Here
the Lord indirectly says that if anyone wants to know the Absolute
Truth, "Here I am present as the Supreme Personality of Godhead. I am
the Supreme." One should know this. Although one cannot understand the
inconceivable Lord who is personally present, He nonetheless exists. We
can actually understand Krsna, who is eternal, full of bliss and
knowledge, simply by studying His words in
Bhagavad-gita and
Srimad-Bhagavatam.
The impersonal Brahman can be conceived by persons who are already in
the inferior energy of the Lord, but the Personality of Godhead cannot
be conceived unless one is in the transcendental position.

Because
most men cannot understand Krsna in His actual situation, out of His
causeless mercy He descends to show favor to such speculators. Yet
despite the Supreme Lord's uncommon activities, these speculators, due
to contamination in the material energy, still think that the impersonal
Brahman is the Supreme. Only the devotees who are fully surrendered
unto the Supreme Lord can understand, by the grace of the Supreme
Personality, that He is Krsna. The devotees of the Lord do not bother
about the impersonal Brahman conception of God; their faith and devotion
bring them to surrender immediately unto the Supreme Lord, and out of
the causeless mercy of Krsna, they can understand Krsna. No one else can
understand Him. So even great sages agree: What is
atma, what is the Supreme? It is He whom we have to worship.
TEXT 3
yo mam ajam anadim ca
vetti loka-mahesvaram
asammudhah sa martyesu
sarva-papaih pramucyate
SYNONYMS
yah--anyone who;
mam--unto Me;
ajam--unborn;
anadim--without beginning;
ca--also;
vetti--knows;
loka--the planets;
maha-isvaram--the supreme master;
asammudhah--without doubt;
sah--he;
martyesu--among those subject to death;
sarva-papaih--from all sinful reactions;
pramucyate--is delivered.
TRANSLATION
He
who knows Me as the unborn, as the beginningless, as the Supreme Lord
of all the worlds--he, undeluded among men, is freed from all sins.
PURPORT

As stated in the Seventh Chapter,
those who are trying to elevate themselves to the platform of spiritual
realization are not ordinary men. They are superior to millions and
millions of ordinary men who have no knowledge of spiritual realization,
but out of those actually trying to understand their spiritual
situation, one who can come to the understanding that Krsna is the
Supreme Personality of Godhead, the proprietor of everything, the
unborn, is the most successful spiritually realized person. In that
stage only, when one has fully understood Krsna's supreme position, can
one be free completely from all sinful reactions.

Here the word
ajam, meaning unborn, should not be confused with the living entities, who are described in the Second Chapter as
ajam.
The Lord is different from the living entities who are taking birth and
dying due to material attachment. The conditioned souls are changing
their bodies, but His body is not changeable. Even when He comes to this
material world, He comes as the same unborn; therefore in the Fourth
Chapter it is said that the Lord, by His internal potency, is not under
the inferior material energy, but is always in the superior energy.

He
was existing before the creation, and He is different from His
creation. All the demigods were created within this material world, but
as far as Krsna is concerned, it is said that He is not created;
therefore Krsna is different even from the great demigods like Brahma
and Siva. And because He is the creator of Brahma, Siva and all the
other demigods, He is the Supreme Person of all planets.

Sri
Krsna is therefore different from everything that is created, and
anyone who knows Him as such immediately becomes liberated from all
sinful reaction. One must be liberated from all sinful activities to be
in the knowledge of the Supreme Lord. Only by devotional service can He
be known and not by any other means, as stated in
Bhagavad-gita.

One
should not try to understand Krsna as a human being. As stated
previously, only a foolish person thinks Him to be a human being. This
is again expressed here in a different way. A man who is not foolish,
who is intelligent enough to understand the constitutional position of
the Godhead, is always free from all sinful reactions.

If Krsna is known as the son of Devaki, then how can He be unborn? That is also explained in
Srimad-Bhagavatam:
When He appeared before Devaki and Vasudeva, He was not born as an
ordinary child; He appeared in His original form, and then He
transformed Himself into an ordinary child.

Anything
done under the direction of Krsna is transcendental. It cannot be
contaminated by the material reactions, which may be auspicious or
inauspicious. The conception that there are things auspicious and
inauspicious in the material world is more or less a mental concoction
because there is nothing auspicious in the material world. Everything is
inauspicious because the very material mask is inauspicious. We simply
imagine it to be auspicious. Real auspiciousness depends on activities
in Krsna consciousness in full devotion and service. Therefore if we at
all want our activities to be auspicious, then we should work under the
directions of the Supreme Lord. Such directions are given in
authoritative scriptures such as
Srimad-Bhagavatam and
Bhagavad-gita,
or from a bona fide spiritual master. Because the spiritual master is
the representative of the Supreme Lord, his direction is directly the
direction of the Supreme Lord. The spiritual master, saintly persons and
scriptures direct in the same way. There is no contradiction in these
three sources. All actions done under such direction are free from the
reactions of pious or impious activities of this material world. The
transcendental attitude of the devotee in the performance of activities
is actually that of renunciation, and this is called
sannyasa. Anyone acting under the direction of the Supreme Lord is actually a
sannyasi and a
yogi, and not the man who has simply taken the dress of the
sannyasi, or a pseudo-
yogi.
TEXT 4-5
buddhir jnanam asammohah
ksama satyam damah samah
sukham duhkham bhavo 'bhavo
bhayam cabhayam eva ca
ahimsa samata tustis
tapo danam yaso 'yasah
bhavanti bhava bhutanam
matta eva prthag-vidhah
SYNONYMS
buddhih--intelligence;
jnanam--knowledge;
asammohah--freedom from doubt;
ksama--forgiveness;
satyam--truthfulness;
damah--control of the senses;
samah--control of the mind;
sukham--happiness;
duhkham--distress;
bhavah--birth;
abhavah--death;
bhayam--fear;
ca--and;
abhayam--without fear;
eva--also;
ca--and;
ahimsa--nonviolence;
samata--equilibrium;
tustih--satisfaction;
tapah--penance;
danam--charity;
yasah--fame;
ayasah--infamy;
bhavanti--become;
bhavah--natures;
bhutanam--of living entities;
mattah--from Me;
eva--certainly;
prthak-vidhah--differently arranged.
TRANSLATION
Intelligence,
knowledge, freedom from doubt and delusion, forgiveness, truthfulness,
self-control and calmness, pleasure and pain, birth, death, fear,
fearlessness, nonviolence, equanimity, satisfaction, austerity, charity,
fame and infamy are created by Me alone.
PURPORT

The different qualities of living entities, be they good or bad, are all created by Krsna, and they are described here.

Intelligence
refers to the power of analyzing things in proper perspective, and
knowledge refers to understanding what is spirit and what is matter.
Ordinary knowledge obtained by a university education pertains only to
matter, and it is not accepted here as knowledge. Knowledge means
knowing the distinction between spirit and matter. In modern education
there is no knowledge about the spirit; they are simply taking care of
the material elements and bodily needs. Therefore academic knowledge is
not complete.
Asammoha,
freedom from doubt and delusion, can be achieved when one is not
hesitant and when he understands the transcendental philosophy. Slowly
but surely he becomes free from bewilderment. Nothing should be accepted
blindly; everything should be accepted with care and with caution.
Ksama, forgiveness, should be practiced, and one should excuse the minor offenses of others.
Satyam,
truthfulness, means that facts should be presented as they are for the
benefit of others. Facts should not be misrepresented. According to
social conventions, it is said that one can speak the truth only when it
is palatable to others. But that is not truthfulness. The truth should
be spoken in a straight and forward way, so that others will understand
actually what the facts are. If a man is a thief and if people are
warned that he is a thief, that is truth. Although sometimes the truth
is unpalatable, one should not refrain from speaking it. Truthfulness
demands that the facts be presented as they are for the benefit of
others. That is the definition of truth.

Self-control
means that the senses should not be used for unnecessary personal
enjoyment. There is no prohibition against meeting the proper needs of
the senses, but unnecessary sense enjoyment is detrimental for spiritual
advancement. Therefore the senses should be restrained from unnecessary
use. Similarly, the mind should not indulge in unnecessary thoughts;
that is called
samah, or calmness. Nor should one spend one's
time pondering over earning money. That is a misuse of the thinking
power. The mind should be used to understand the prime necessity of
human beings, and that should be presented authoritatively. The power of
thought should be developed in association with persons who are
authorities in the scriptures, saintly persons and spiritual masters and
those whose thinking is highly developed.
Sukham, pleasure or
happiness, should always be in that which is favorable for the
cultivation of the spiritual knowledge of Krsna consciousness. And
similarly, that which is painful or which causes distress is that which
is unfavorable for the cultivation of Krsna consciousness. Anything
favorable for the development of Krsna consciousness should be accepted,
and anything unfavorable should be rejected.
Bhava,
birth, should be understood to refer to the body. As far as the soul is
concerned, there is neither birth nor death; that we have discussed in
the beginning of
Bhagavad-gita. Birth and death apply to one's
embodiment in the material world. Fear is due to worrying about the
future. A person in Krsna consciousness has no fear because by his
activities he is sure to go back to the spiritual sky, back home, back
to Godhead. Therefore his future is very bright. Others, however, do not
know what their future holds; they have no knowledge of what the next
life holds. So they are therefore in constant anxiety. If we want to get
free from anxiety, then the best course is to understand Krsna and be
situated always in Krsna consciousness. In that way we will be free from
all fear. In the
Srimad-Bhagavatam it is stated that fear is
caused by our absorption in the illusory energy, but those who are free
from the illusory energy, those who are confident that they are not the
material body, that they are spiritual parts of the Supreme Personality
of Godhead and are therefore engaged in the transcendental service of
the Supreme Godhead, have nothing to fear. Their future is very bright.
This fear is a condition of persons who are not in Krsna consciousness.
Bhayam, fearlessness, is only possible for one in Krsna consciousness.
Ahimsa,
nonviolence, means that one should not do anything which will put
others into misery or confusion. Material activities that are promised
by so many politicians, sociologists, philanthropists, etc., do not
produce very good results because the politicians and philanthropists
have no transcendental vision; they do not know what is actually
beneficial for human society.
Ahimsa means that people should be
trained in such a way that the full utilization of the human body can be
achieved. The human body is meant for spiritual realization, so any
movement or any commissions which do not further that end commit
violence on the human body. That which furthers the future spiritual
happiness of the people in general is called nonviolence.
Samata,
equanimity, refers to freedom from attachment and aversion. To be very
much attached or to be very much detached is not the best. This material
world should be accepted without attachment or aversion. Similarly,
that which is favorable for prosecuting Krsna consciousness should be
accepted; that which is unfavorable should be rejected. That is called
samata,
equanimity. A person in Krsna consciousness has nothing to reject and
nothing to accept unless it is useful in the prosecution of Krsna
consciousness.
Tusti,
satisfaction, means that one should not be eager to gather more and
more material goods by unnecessary activity. One should be satisfied
with whatever is obtained by the grace of the Supreme Lord; that is
called satisfaction.
Tapas means austerity or penance. There are many rules and definitions in the
Vedas
which apply here, like rising early in the morning and taking a bath.
Sometimes it is very troublesome to rise early in the morning, but
whatever voluntary trouble one may suffer in this way is called penance.
Similarly, there are prescriptions for fasting on certain days of the
month. One may not be inclined to practice such fasting, but because of
his determination to make advancement in the science of Krsna
consciousness, he should accept such bodily troubles which are
recommended. However, one should not fast unnecessarily or against Vedic
injunctions. One should not fast for some political purpose; that is
described in
Bhagavad-gita as fasting in ignorance, and anything
done in ignorance or passion does not lead to spiritual advancement.
Everything done in the mode of goodness does advance one, however, and
fasting done in terms of the Vedic injunctions enriches one in spiritual
knowledge.

As
far as charity is concerned, one should give fifty percent of his
earnings to some good cause. And what is a good cause? It is that which
is conducted in terms of Krsna consciousness. That is not only a good
cause, but it is the best cause. Because Krsna is good, His cause is
also good. Thus charity should be given to a person who is engaged in
Krsna consciousness. According to Vedic literature, it is enjoined that
charity should be given to the
brahmanas. This practice is still
followed, although not very nicely in terms of the Vedic injunction. But
still the injunction is that charity should be given to the
brahmanas. Why? Because they are engaged in higher cultivation of spiritual knowledge. A
brahmana is supposed to devote his whole life to understanding Brahman. A
brahma-jana is one who knows Brahman; he is called a
brahmana. Thus charity is offered to the
brahmanas
because since they are always engaged in higher spiritual service, they
have no time to earn their livelihood. In the Vedic literature, charity
is also to be awarded to the renouncer of life, the
sannyasi. The
sannyasis
beg from door to door, not for money but for missionary purposes. The
system is that they go from door to door to awaken the householders from
the slumber of ignorance. Because the householders are engaged in
family affairs and have forgotten their actual purpose in
life--awakening their Krsna consciousness--it is the business of the
sannyasis to go as beggars to the householders and encourage them to be Krsna conscious. As it is said in the
Vedas, one should awake and achieve what is due him in this human form of life. This knowledge and method is distributed by the
sannyasis; hence charity is to be given to the renouncer of life, to the
brahmanas, and similar good causes, not to any whimsical cause.
Yasah,
fame, should be according to Lord Caitanya, who said that a man is
famous when he is known as a great devotee. That is real fame. If one
has become a great man in Krsna consciousness and it is known, then he
is truly famous. One who does not have such fame is infamous.

All
these qualities are manifest throughout the universe in human society
and in the society of the demigods. There are many forms of humanity on
other planets, and these qualities are there. Now, for one who wants to
advance in Krsna consciousness, Krsna creates all these qualities, but
the person develops them himself from within. One who engages in the
devotional service of the Supreme Lord develops all the good qualities,
as arranged by the Supreme Lord.

Of
whatever we find, good or bad, the origin is Krsna. Nothing can
manifest in this material world which is not in Krsna. That is
knowledge; although we know that things are differently situated, we
should realize that everything flows from Krsna.
TEXT 6
maharsayah sapta purve
catvaro manavas tatha
mad-bhava manasa jata
yesam loka imah prajah
SYNONYMS
maha-rsayah--the great sages;
sapta--seven;
purve--before;
catvarah--four;
manavah--Manus;
tatha--also;
mat-bhavah--born of Me;
manasah--from the mind;
jatah--born;
yesam--of them;
loke--the planets;
imah--all this;
prajah--population.
TRANSLATION
The
seven great sages and before them the four other great sages and the
Manus [progenitors of mankind] are born out of My mind, and all
creatures in these planets descend from them.
PURPORT

The
Lord is giving a genealogical synopsis of the universal population.
Brahma is the original creature born out of the energy of the Supreme
Lord known as Hiranyagarbha. And from Brahma all the seven great sages,
and before them four other great sages, namely Sanaka, Sananda, Sanatana
and Sanat-kumara, and the Manus, are manifest. All these twenty-five
great sages are known as the patriarchs of the living entities all over
the universe. There are innumerable universes and innumerable planets
within each universe, and each planet is full of population of different
varieties. All of them are born of these twenty-five patriarchs. Brahma
underwent penance for one thousand years of the demigods before he
realized by the grace of Krsna how to create. Then from Brahma Sanaka,
Sananda, Sanatana and Sanat-kumara came out, then Rudra, and then the
seven sages, and in this way all the
brahmanas and
ksatriyas
are born out of the energy of the Supreme Personality of Godhead.
Brahma is known as Pitamaha, the grandfather, and Krsna is known as the
Prapitamaha, the father of the grandfather. That is stated in the
Eleventh Chapter of the
Bhagavad-gita (Bg. 11.39).
TEXT 7
etam vibhutim yogam ca
mama yo vetti tattvatah
so 'vikalpena yogena
yujyate natra samsayah
SYNONYMS
etam--all this;
vibhutim--opulence;
yogam ca--also mystic power;
mama--of Mine;
yah--anyone;
vetti--knows;
tattvatah--factual;
sah--he;
avikalpena--without division;
yogena--in devotional service;
yujyate--engaged;
na--never;
atra--here;
samsayah--doubt.
TRANSLATION
He who knows in truth this glory and power of Mine engages in unalloyed devotional service; of this there is no doubt.
PURPORT

The
highest summit of spiritual perfection is knowledge of the Supreme
Personality of Godhead. Unless one is firmly convinced of the different
opulences of the Supreme Lord, he cannot engage in devotional service.
Generally people know that God is great, but they do not know in detail
how God is great. Here are the details. If one knows factually how God
is great, then naturally he becomes a surrendered soul and engages
himself in the devotional service of the Lord. When one factually knows
the opulences of the Supreme, there is no alternative but to surrender
to Him. This factual knowledge can be known from the descriptions in
Srimad-Bhagavatam and
Bhagavad-gita and similar literatures.

In
the administration of this universe there are many demigods distributed
throughout the planetary system, and the chief of them are Brahma, Lord
Siva and the four great Kumaras and other patriarchs. There are many
forefathers of the population of the universe, and all of them are born
of the Supreme Lord Krsna. The Supreme Personality of Godhead, Krsna, is
the original forefather of all forefathers.

These
are some of the opulences of the Supreme Lord. When one is firmly
convinced of them, he accepts Krsna with great faith and without any
doubt, and he engages in devotional service. All this particular
knowledge is required in order to increase one's interest in the loving
devotional service of the Lord. One should not neglect to understand
fully how great Krsna is, for by knowing the greatness of Krsna one will
be able to be fixed in sincere devotional service.
TEXT 8
aham sarvasya prabhavo
mattah sarvam pravartate
iti matva bhajante mam
budha bhava-samanvitah
SYNONYMS
aham--I;
sarvasya--of all;
prabhavah--source of generation;
mattah--from Me;
sarvam--everything;
pravartate--emanates;
iti--thus;
matva--knowing;
bhajante--becomes devoted;
mam--unto Me;
budhah--learned;
bhava-samanvitah--with great attention.
TRANSLATION
I
am the source of all spiritual and material worlds. Everything emanates
from Me. The wise who know this perfectly engage in My devotional
service and worship Me with all their hearts.
PURPORT

A learned scholar who has studied the
Vedas
perfectly and has information from authorities like Lord Caitanya and
who knows how to apply these teachings can understand that Krsna is the
origin of everything in both the material and spiritual worlds, and
because he knows this perfectly he becomes firmly fixed in the
devotional service of the Supreme Lord. He can never be deviated by any
amount of nonsensical commentaries or by fools. All Vedic literature
agrees that Krsna is the source of Brahma, Siva and all other demigods.
In the
Atharva Veda it is said,
"yo brahmanam vidadhati: purvam yo vai vedams ca gapayati sma krsnah."
"It was Krsna who in the beginning instructed Brahma in Vedic knowledge
and who disseminated Vedic knowledge in the past." Then again it is
said,
"atha puruso ha vai narayano 'kamayata prajah srjeya ity upakramya." "Then the Supreme Personality Narayana desired to create living entities." Again it is said:
narayanad brahma jayate, narayanad prajapatih prajayate,
narayanad indro jayate, narayanad astau vasavo jayante, narayanad
ekadasa
rudra jayante, narayanad dvadasadityah.
"From Narayana, Brahma is born, and from Narayana, the
patriarchs are also born. From Narayana, Indra is born, from Narayana
the eight Vasus are born, from Narayana the eleven Rudras are born, from
Narayana the twelve Adityas are born."

It is said in the same
Vedas, brahmanyo devaki-putrah: "The son of Devaki, Krsna, is the Supreme Personality." Then it is said:
eko vai narayana asin na brahma na isano napo nagni samau neme
dyav-aprthivi na naksatrani na suryah sa ekaki na ramate tasya
dhyanantah sthasya yatra chandogaih kriyamanastakadi-samjnaka
stuti-stomah stomam ucyate.
"In the beginning of the creation there was only the Supreme
Personality Narayana. There was no Brahma, no Siva, no fire, no moon, no
stars in the sky, no sun. There was only Krsna, who creates all and
enjoys all"

In the many
Puranas it is said that Lord Siva was born from the highest, the Supreme Lord Krsna, and the
Vedas say that it is the Supreme Lord, the creator of Brahma and Siva, who is to be worshiped. In the
Moksa-dharma Krsna also says,
prajapatim ca rudram capy aham eva srjami vai tau hi mam na vijanito mama maya-vimohitau. "The
patriarchs, Siva and others are created by Me, though they do not know
that they are created by Me because they are deluded by My illusory
energy." In the Varaha Purana it is also said,
narayanah paro devas tasmaj jatas caturmukhah tasmad rudro 'bhavad devah sa ca sarva-jnatam gatah. "Narayana is the Supreme Personality of Godhead, and from Him Brahma was born, from whom Siva was born."

Lord
Krsna is the source of all generations, and He is called the most
efficient cause of everything. He says that because "everything is born
of Me, I am the original source of all. Everything is under Me; no one
is above Me." There is no supreme controller other than Krsna. One who
understands Krsna in such a way from a bona fide spiritual master and
from Vedic literature, who engages all his energy in Krsna
consciousness, becomes a truly learned man. In comparison to him, all
others, who do not know Krsna properly, are but fools. Only a fool would
consider Krsna to be an ordinary man. A Krsna conscious person should
not be bewildered by fools; he should avoid all unauthorized
commentaries and interpretations on
Bhagavad-gita and proceed in Krsna consciousness with determination and firmness.
TEXT 9
mac-citta mad-gata-prana
bodhayantah parasparam
kathayantas ca mam nityam
tusyanti ca ramanti ca
SYNONYMS
mat-cittah--minds fully engaged in Me;
mat-gata-pranah--lives devoted to the service of Krsna;
bodhayantah--preaching;
parasparam--among themselves;
kathayantah ca--talking also;
mam--about Me;
nityam--perpetually;
tusyanti--are pleased;
ca--also;
ramanti--enjoy transcendental bliss;
ca--also.
TRANSLATION
The
thoughts of My pure devotees dwell in Me, their lives are surrendered
to Me, and they derive great satisfaction and bliss enlightening one
another and conversing about Me.
PURPORT

Pure
devotees, whose characteristics are mentioned here, engage themselves
fully in the transcendental loving service of the Lord. Their minds
cannot be diverted from the lotus feet of Krsna. Their talks are solely
on the transcendental subjects. The symptoms of the pure devotees are
described in this verse specifically. Devotees of the Supreme Lord are
twenty-four hours daily engaged in glorifying the pastimes of the
Supreme Lord. Their hearts and souls are constantly submerged in Krsna,
and they take pleasure in discussing Him with other devotees.

In
the preliminary stage of devotional service they relish the
transcendental pleasure from the service itself, and in the mature stage
they are actually situated in love of God. Once situated in that
transcendental position, they can relish the highest perfection which is
exhibited by the Lord in His abode. Lord Caitanya likens transcendental
devotional service to the sowing of a seed in the heart of the living
entity. There are innumerable living entities traveling throughout the
different planets of the universe, and out of them there are a few who
are fortunate enough to meet a pure devotee and get the chance to
understand devotional service. This devotional service is just like a
seed, and if it is sown in the heart of a living entity, and if he goes
on hearing and chanting, Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna, Hare Hare/
Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare, that seed fructifies, just
as the seed of a tree fructifies with regular watering. The spiritual
plant of devotional service gradually grows and grows until it
penetrates the covering of the material universe and enters into the
brahmajyoti
effulgence in the spiritual sky. In the spiritual sky also that plant
grows more and more until it reaches the highest planet, which is called
Goloka Vrndavana, the supreme planet of Krsna. Ultimately, the plant
takes shelter under the lotus feet of Krsna and rests there. Gradually,
as the plant grows fruits and flowers, that plant of devotional service
also produces fruits, and the watering process in the form of chanting
and hearing goes on. This plant of devotional service is fully described
in the
Caitanya-caritamrta. It is explained there that
when the complete plant takes shelter under the lotus feet of the
Supreme Lord, one becomes fully absorbed in love of God; then he cannot
live even for a moment without being in contact with the Supreme Lord,
just as a fish cannot live without water. In such a state, the devotee
actually attains the transcendental qualities in contact with the
Supreme Lord.

The
Srimad-Bhagavatam is also full of such narrations about the relationship between the Supreme Lord and His devotees; therefore the
Srimad-Bhagavatam is very dear to the devotees. In this narration there is nothing about material activities, sense gratification or liberation.
Srimad-Bhagavatam
is the only narration in which the transcendental nature of the Supreme
Lord and His devotees is fully described. Thus the realized souls in
Krsna consciousness take continual pleasure in hearing such
transcendental literatures, just as a young boy and girl take pleasure
in association.
TEXT 10
tesam satata-yuktanam
bhajatam priti-purvakam
dadami buddhi-yogam tam
yena mam upayanti te
SYNONYMS
tesam--unto them;
satata-yuktanam--always engaged;
bhajatam--in devotional service;
priti-purvakam--in loving ecstasy;
dadami--I give;
buddhi-yogam--real intelligence;
tam--that;
yena--by which;
mam--unto Me;
upayanti--come;
te--they.
TRANSLATION
To those who are constantly devoted and worship Me with love, I give the understanding by which they can come to Me.
PURPORT

In this verse the word
buddhi-yogam
is very significant. We may remember that in the Second Chapter the
Lord, instructing Arjuna, said that He had spoken to him of many things
and that He would instruct him in the way of
buddhi-yoga. Now
buddhi-yoga is explained.
Buddhi-yoga itself is action in Krsna consciousness; that is the highest intelligence.
Buddhi means intelligence, and
yoga
means mystic activities or mystic elevation. When one tries to go back
home, back to Godhead, and takes fully to Krsna consciousness in
devotional service, his action is called
buddhi-yogam. In other words,
buddhi-yogam
is the process by which one gets out of the entanglement of this
material world. The ultimate goal of progress is Krsna. People do not
know this; therefore the association of devotees and a bona fide
spiritual master are important. One should know that the goal is Krsna,
and when the goal is assigned, then the path is slowly but progressively
traversed, and the ultimate goal is achieved.

When a person knows the goal of life but is addicted to the fruits of activities, he is acting in
karma-yoga. When he knows that the goal is Krsna, but he takes pleasure in mental speculations to understand Krsna, he is acting in
jnana-yoga. And when he knows the goal and seeks Krsna completely in Krsna consciousness and devotional service, he is acting in
bhakti-yoga, or
buddhi-yoga, which is the complete
yoga. This complete
yoga is the highest perfectional stage of life.

A
person may have a bona fide spiritual master and may be attached to a
spiritual organization, but still, if he is not intelligent enough to
make progress, then Krsna from within gives him instructions so that he
may ultimately come to Him without difficulty. The qualification is that
a person always engage himself in Krsna consciousness and with love and
devotion render all kinds of services. He should perform some sort of
work for Krsna, and that work should be with love. If a devotee is
intelligent enough, he will make progress on the path of
self-realization. If one is sincere and devoted to the activities of
devotional service, the Lord gives him a chance to make progress and
ultimately attain to Him.
TEXT 11
tesam evanukampartham
aham ajnana-jam tamah
nasayamy atma-bhavastho
jnana-dipena bhasvata
SYNONYMS
tesam--for them;
eva--certainly;
anukampa-artham--to show special mercy;
aham--I;
ajnana-jam--due to ignorance;
tamah--darkness;
nasayami--dispel;
atma--within;
bhavasthah--themselves;
jnana--of knowledge;
dipena--with the lamp;
bhasvata--glowing.
TRANSLATION
Out
of compassion for them, I, dwelling in their hearts, destroy with the
shining lamp of knowledge the darkness born of ignorance.
PURPORT

When
Lord Caitanya was in Benares promulgating the chanting of Hare Krsna,
Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna, Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama,
Hare Hare, thousands of people were following Him. Prakasananda, a very
influential and learned scholar in Benares at that time, derided Lord
Caitanya for being a sentimentalist. Sometimes philosophers criticize
the devotees because they think that most of the devotees are in the
darkness of ignorance and are philosophically naive sentimentalists.
Actually that is not the fact. There are very, very learned scholars who
have put forward the philosophy of devotion, but even if a devotee does
not take advantage of their literatures or of his spiritual master, if
he is sincere in his devotional service he is helped by Krsna Himself
within his heart. So the sincere devotee engaged in Krsna consciousness
cannot be without knowledge. The only qualification is that one carry
out devotional service in full Krsna consciousness.

The
modern philosophers think that without discriminating one cannot have
pure knowledge. For them this answer is given by the Supreme Lord: those
who are engaged in pure devotional service, even though they be without
sufficient education and even without sufficient knowledge of the Vedic
principles, are still helped by the Supreme God, as stated in this
verse.

The
Lord tells Arjuna that basically there is no possibility of
understanding the Supreme Truth, the Absolute Truth, the Supreme
Personality of Godhead, simply by speculating, for the Supreme Truth is
so great that it is not possible to understand Him or to achieve Him
simply by making a mental effort. Man can go on speculating for several
millions of years, and if he is not devoted, if he is not a lover of the
Supreme Truth, he will never understand Krsna or the Supreme Truth.
Only by devotional service is the Supreme Truth, Krsna, pleased, and by
His inconceivable energy He can reveal Himself to the heart of the pure
devotee. The pure devotee always has Krsna within his heart; therefore
he is just like the sun that dissipates the darkness of ignorance. This
is the special mercy rendered to the pure devotee by Krsna.

Due
to the contamination of material association, through many, many
millions of births, one's heart is always covered with the dust of
materialism, but when one engages in devotional service and constantly
chants Hare Krsna, the dust quickly clears and one is elevated to the
platform of pure knowledge. The ultimate goal of Visnu can be attained
only by this chant and by devotional service, and not by mental
speculation or argument. The pure devotee does not have to worry about
the necessities of life; he need not be anxious because when he removes
the darkness from his heart, everything is provided automatically by the
Supreme Lord, for He is pleased by the loving devotional service of the
devotee. This is the essence of the
Gita's teachings. By studying
Bhagavad-gita,
one can become a completely surrendered soul to the Supreme Lord and
engage himself in pure devotional service. As the Lord takes charge, one
becomes completely free from all kinds of materialistic endeavors.
TEXT 12-13
arjuna uvaca
param brahma param dhama
pavitram paramam bhavan
purusam sasvatam divyam
adi-devam ajam vibhum
ahus tvam rsayah sarve
devarsir naradas tatha
asito devalo vyasah
svayam caiva bravisi me
SYNONYMS
arjunah uvaca--Arjuna said;
param--supreme;
brahma--truth;
param--supreme;
dhama--sustenance;
pavitram--purest;
paramam--supreme;
bhavan--Yourself;
purusam--personality;
sasvatam--original;
divyam--transcendental;
adi-devam--original Lord;
ajam--unborn;
vibhum--greatest;
ahuh--say;
tvam--unto You;
rsayah--sages;
sarve--all;
deva-rsih--the sage among the demigods;
naradah--Narada;
tatha--also;
asitah--Asita;
devalah--Devala;
vyasah--Vyasa;
svayam--personally;
ca--also;
eva--certainly;
bravisi--explaining;
me--unto me.
TRANSLATION
Arjuna
said: You are the Supreme Brahman, the ultimate, the supreme abode and
purifier, the Absolute Truth and the eternal divine person. You are the
primal God, transcendental and original, and You are the unborn and
all-pervading beauty. All the great sages such as Narada, Asita, Devala,
and Vyasa proclaim this of You, and now You Yourself are declaring it
to me.
PURPORT

In
these two verses the Supreme Lord gives a chance to the modern
philosopher, for here it is clear that the Supreme is different from the
individual soul. Arjuna, after hearing the essential four verses of
Bhagavad-gita
in this chapter, became completely free from all doubts and accepted
Krsna as the Supreme Personality of Godhead. He at once boldly declares,
"You are Parambrahma, the Supreme Personality of Godhead." And
previously Krsna states that He is the originator of everything and
everyone. Every demigod and every human being is dependent on Him. Men
and demigods, out of ignorance, think that they are absolute and
independent of the Supreme Lord Krsna. That ignorance is removed
perfectly by the discharge of devotional service. This is already
explained in the previous verse by the Lord. Now by His grace, Arjuna is
accepting Him as the Supreme Truth, in concordance with the Vedic
injunction. It is not because Krsna is an intimate friend of Arjuna that
he is flattering Him by calling Him the Supreme Personality of Godhead,
the Absolute Truth. Whatever Arjuna says in these two verses is
confirmed by Vedic truth. Vedic injunctions affirm that only one who
takes to devotional service to the Supreme Lord can understand Him,
whereas others cannot. Each and every word of this verse spoken by
Arjuna is confirmed by Vedic injunction.

In the
Kena Upanisad
it is stated that the Supreme Brahman is the rest for everything, and
Krsna has already explained that everything is resting on Him. The
Mundaka Upanisad
confirms that the Supreme Lord, in whom everything is resting, can be
realized only by those who engage constantly in thinking of Him. This
constant thinking of Krsna is
smaranam, one of the methods of
devotional service. It is only by devotional service to Krsna that one
can understand his position and get rid of this material body.

In the
Vedas
the Supreme Lord is accepted as the purest of the pure. One who
understands that Krsna is the purest of the pure can become purified
from all sinful activities. One cannot be disinfected from sinful
activities unless he surrenders unto the Supreme Lord. Arjuna's
acceptance of Krsna as the supreme pure complies with the injunctions of
Vedic literature. This is also confirmed by great personalities, of
whom Narada is the chief.

Krsna
is the Supreme Personality of Godhead, and one should always meditate
upon Him and enjoy one's transcendental relationship with Him. He is the
supreme existence. He is free from bodily needs, birth and death. Not
only does Arjuna confirm this, but all the Vedic literatures, the
Puranas
and histories. In all Vedic literatures Krsna is thus described, and
the Supreme Lord Himself also says in the Fourth Chapter, "Although I am
unborn, I appear on this earth to establish religious principles." He
is the supreme origin; He has no cause, for He is the cause of all
causes, and everything is emanating from Him. This perfect knowledge can
be had by the grace of the Supreme Lord.

Here Arjuna expresses himself through the grace of Krsna. If we want to understand
Bhagavad-gita, we should accept the statements in these two verses. This is called the
parampara system, acceptance of the disciplic succession. Unless one is in the disciplic succession, he cannot understand
Bhagavad-gita.
It is not possible by so-called academic education. Unfortunately those
proud of their academic education, despite so much evidence in Vedic
literatures, stick to their obstinate conviction that Krsna is an
ordinary person.
TEXT 14
sarvam etad rtam manye
yan mam vadasi kesava
na hi te bhagavan vyaktim
vidur deva na danavah
SYNONYMS
sarvam--all;
etat--these;
rtam--truths;
manye--accept;
yat--which;
mam--unto me;
vadasi--You tell;
kesava--O Krsna;
na--never;
hi--certainly;
te--Your;
bhagavan--O Personality of Godhead;
vyaktim--revelation;
viduh--can know;
devah--the demigods;
na--nor;
danavah--the demons.
TRANSLATION
O Krsna, I totally accept as truth all that You have told me. Neither the gods nor demons, O Lord, know Thy personality.
PURPORT

Arjuna
herein confirms that persons of faithless and demonic nature cannot
understand Krsna. He is not even known by the demigods, so what to speak
of the so-called scholars of this modern world? By the grace of the
Supreme Lord, Arjuna has understood that the Supreme Truth is Krsna and
that He is the perfect one. One should therefore follow the path of
Arjuna. He received the authority of
Bhagavad-gita. As described in the Fourth Chapter, the
parampara system of disciplic succession for the understanding of
Bhagavad-gita
was lost, and therefore Krsna reestablished that disciplic succession
with Arjuna because He considered Arjuna His intimate friend and a great
devotee. Therefore, as stated in our Introduction to
Gitopanisad, Bhagavad-gita should be understood in the
parampara system. When the
parampara
system was lost, Arjuna was again selected to rejuvenate it. The
acceptance of Arjuna of all that Krsna says should be emulated; then we
can understand the essence of
Bhagavad-gita, and then only can we understand that Krsna is the Supreme Personality of Godhead.
TEXT 15
svayam evatmanatmanam
vettha tvam purusottama
bhuta-bhavana bhutesa
deva-deva jagat-pate
SYNONYMS
svayam--personality;
eva--certainly;
atmana--by Yourself;
atmanam--Yourself;
vettha--know;
tvam--You;
purusa-uttama--O greatest of all persons;
bhuta-bhavana--O origin of everything;
bhuta-isa--O Lord of everything;
deva-deva--O Lord of all demigods;
jagat-pate--O Lord of the entire universe.
TRANSLATION
Indeed,
You alone know Yourself by Your own potencies, O origin of all, Lord of
all beings, God of gods, O Supreme Person, Lord of the universe!
PURPORT

The
Supreme Lord Krsna can be known by persons who are in a relationship
with Him through the discharge of devotional service, like Arjuna and
his successors. Persons of demonic or atheistic mentality cannot know
Krsna. Mental speculation that leads one away from the Supreme Lord is a
serious sin, and one who does not know Krsna should not try to comment
on
Bhagavad-gita. Bhagavad-gita is the statement of Krsna,
and since it is the science of Krsna, it should be understood from
Krsna as Arjuna understood it. It should not be received from atheistic
persons.

The
Supreme Truth is realized in three aspects: as impersonal Brahman,
localized Paramatma and at last as the Supreme Personality of Godhead.
So at the last stage of understanding the Absolute Truth, one comes to
the Supreme Personality of Godhead. A liberated man and even a common
man may realize impersonal Brahman or localized Paramatma, yet they may
not understand God's personality from the verses of
Bhagavad-gita,
which are being spoken by this person, Krsna. Sometimes the
impersonalists accept Krsna as Bhagavan, or they accept His authority.
Yet many liberated persons cannot understand Krsna as Purusottama, the
Supreme Person, the father of all living entities. Therefore Arjuna
addresses Him as Purusottama. And if one comes to know Him as the father
of all the living entities, still one may not know Him as the supreme
controller; therefore He is addressed here as Bhutesa, the supreme
controller of everyone. And even if one knows Krsna as the supreme
controller of all living entities, still one may not know that He is the
origin of all the demigods; therefore He is addressed herein as
Devadeva, the worshipful God of all demigods. And even if one knows Him
as the worshipful God of all demigods, one may not know that He is the
supreme proprietor of everything; therefore He is addressed as
Jagatpati. Thus the truth about Krsna is established in this verse by
the realization of Arjuna, and we should follow in the footsteps of
Arjuna to understand Krsna as He is.

TEXT 16
vaktum arhasy asesena
divya hy atma-vibhutayah
yabhir vibhutibhir lokan
imams tvam vyapya tisthasi
SYNONYMS
vaktum--to say;
arhasi--deserve;
asesena--in detail;
divyah--divine;
hi--certainly;
atma--Yourself;
vibhutayah--opulences;
yabhih--by which;
vibhutibhih--opulences;
lokan--all the planets;
iman--these;
tvam--You;
vyapya--pervading;
tisthasi--remain.
TRANSLATION
Please tell me in detail of Your divine powers by which You pervade all these worlds and abide in them.
PURPORT

In
this verse it appears that Arjuna is already satisfied with his
understanding of the Supreme Lord Krsna. By Krsna's grace, Arjuna has
personal experience, intelligence and knowledge and whatever else a
person may have through all these agencies, and he has understood Krsna
as the Supreme Personality of Godhead. For him there is no doubt, yet he
is asking Krsna to explain His all-pervading nature so that in the
future people will understand, especially the impersonalists, how He
exists in His all-pervading aspect through His different energies. One
should know that this is being asked by Arjuna on behalf of the common
people.
TEXT 17
katham vidyam aham yogims
tvam sada paricintayan
kesu kesu ca bhavesu
cintyo 'si bhagavan maya
SYNONYMS
katham--how;
vidyam aham--shall I know;
yogin--O supreme mystic;
tvam--You;
sada--always;
paricintayan--thinking;
kesu--in which;
kesu--in which;
ca--also;
bhavesu--nature;
cintyah asi--You are remembered;
bhagavan--O Supreme;
maya--by me.
TRANSLATION
How should I meditate on You? In what various forms are You to be contemplated, O Blessed Lord?
PURPORT

As it is stated in the previous chapter, the Supreme Personality of Godhead is covered by His
yoga-maya.
Only surrendered souls and devotees can see Him. Now Arjuna is
convinced that His friend, Krsna, is the Supreme Godhead, but he wants
to know the general process by which the all-pervading Lord can be
understood by the common man. No common men, including the demons and
atheists, can know Krsna because He is guarded by His
yoga-maya
energy. Again, these questions are asked by Arjuna for their benefit.
The superior devotee is not only concerned for his own understanding,
but for the understanding of all mankind. Out of his mercy, because he
is a Vaisnava, a devotee, Arjuna is opening the understanding for the
common man as far as the all-pervasiveness of the Supreme is concerned.
He addresses Krsna specifically as
yogin because Sri Krsna is the master of the
yoga-maya
energy by which He is covered and uncovered to the common man. The
common man who has no love for Krsna cannot always think of Krsna;
therefore he has to think materially. Arjuna is considering the mode of
thinking of the materialistic persons of this world. Because
materialists cannot understand Krsna spiritually, they are advised to
concentrate the mind on physical things and try to see how Krsna is
manifested by physical representations.
TEXT 18
vistarenatmano yogam
vibhutim ca janardana
bhuyah kathaya trptir hi
srnvato nasti me 'mrtam
SYNONYMS
vistarena--in description;
atmanah--of Yourself;
yogam--mystic power;
vibhutim--opulences;
ca--also;
jana-ardana--O killer of the atheists;
bhuyah--again;
kathaya--describe;
trptih--satisfaction;
hi--certainly;
srnvatah--hearing;
na asti--there is not;
me--my;
amrtam--nectar.
TRANSLATION
Tell
me again in detail, O Janardana [Krsna], of Your mighty potencies and
glories, for I never tire of hearing Your ambrosial words.
PURPORT

A similar statement was made to Suta Gosvami by the
rsis of Naimisaranya, headed by Saunaka. That statement is:
vayam tu na vitrpyama uttama-sloka-vikrame
yac chrnvatam rasa-jnanam svadu svadu pade pade

"One
can never be satiated even though one continuously hears the
transcendental pastimes of Krsna, who is glorified by Vedic hymns. Those
who have entered into a transcendental relationship with Krsna relish
in every step descriptions of the pastimes of the Lord." Thus Arjuna is interested to hear about Krsna, specifically how He remains as the all-pervading Supreme Lord.

Now as far as
amrtam,
nectar, is concerned, any narration or statement concerning Krsna is
just like nectar. And this nectar can be perceived by practical
experience. Modern stories, fiction and histories are different from the
transcendental pastimes of the Lord in that one will tire of hearing
mundane stories, but one never tires of hearing about Krsna. It is for
this reason only that the history of the whole universe is replete with
references to the pastimes of the incarnations of Godhead. For instance,
the
Puranas are histories of bygone ages that relate the
pastimes of the various incarnations of the Lord. In this way the
reading matter remains forever fresh, despite repeated readings.
TEXT 19
sri-bhagavan uvaca
hanta te kathayisyami
divya hy atma-vibhutayah
pradhanyatah kuru-srestha
nasty anto vistarasya me
SYNONYMS
sri-bhagavan uvaca--the Supreme Personality of Godhead said;
hanta--yes;
te--unto you;
kathayisyami--I shall speak;
divyah--divine;
hi--certainly;
atma-vibhutayah--personal opulences;
pradhanyatah--principally;
kuru-srestha--O best of the Kurus;
na asti--there is no;
antah--limit;
vistarasya--to the extent;
me--My.
TRANSLATION
The
Blessed Lord said: Yes, I will tell you of My splendorous
manifestations, but only of those which are prominent, O Arjuna, for My
opulence is limitless.
PURPORT

It
is not possible to comprehend the greatness of Krsna and His opulences.
The senses of the individual soul are imperfect and do not permit him
to understand the totality of Krsna's affairs. Still the devotees try to
understand Krsna, but not on the principle that they will be able to
understand Krsna fully at any specific time or in any state of life.
Rather, the very topics of Krsna are so relishable that they appear to
them as nectar. Thus they enjoy them. In discussing Krsna's opulences
and His diverse energies, the pure devotees take transcendental
pleasure. Therefore they want to hear and discuss them. Krsna knows that
living entities do not understand the extent of His opulences; He
therefore agrees to state only the principal manifestations of His
different energies. The word
pradhanyatah (principal) is very
important because we can understand only a few of the principal details
of the Supreme Lord, for His features are unlimited. It is not possible
to understand them all. And
vibhuti, as used in this verse, refers to the opulences by which He controls the whole manifestation. In the
Amara-kosa dictionary it is stated that
vibhuti indicates an exceptional opulence.

The
impersonalist or the pantheist cannot understand the exceptional
opulences of the Supreme Lord nor the manifestations of His divine
energy. Both in the material world and in the spiritual world His
energies are distributed in every variety of manifestation. Now Krsna is
describing what can be directly perceived by the common man; thus part
of His variegated energy is described in this way.
TEXT 20
aham atma gudakesa
sarva-bhutasaya-sthitah
aham adis ca madhyam ca
bhutanam anta eva ca
SYNONYMS
aham--I;
atma--soul;
gudakesa--O Arjuna;
sarva-bhuta--all living entities;
asaya-sthitah--situated within;
aham--I am;
adih--origin;
ca--also;
madhyam--middle;
ca--also;
bhutanam--all living entities;
antah--end;
eva--certainly;
ca--and.
TRANSLATION
I am the Self, O Gudakesa, seated in the hearts of all creatures. I am the beginning, the middle and the end of all beings.
PURPORT

In
this verse Arjuna is addressed as Gudakesa, which means one who has
conquered the darkness of sleep. For those who are sleeping in the
darkness of ignorance, it is not possible to understand how the Supreme
Godhead manifests Himself in the material and spiritual worlds. Thus
this address by Krsna to Arjuna is significant. Because Arjuna is above
such darkness, the Personality of Godhead agrees to describe His various
opulences.

Krsna
first informs Arjuna that He is the Self or soul of the entire cosmic
manifestation by dint of His primary expansion. Before the material
creation, the Supreme Lord, by His plenary expansion, accepts the
purusa incarnations, and from Him everything begins. Therefore He is
atma, the soul of the
mahat-tattva,
the universal elements. The total material energy is not the cause of
the creation, but actually the Maha-Visnu enters into the
mahat-tattva,
the total material energy. He is the soul. When Maha-Visnu enters into
the manifested universes, He again manifests Himself as the Supersoul in
each and every entity. We have experience that the personal body of the
living entity exists due to the presence of the spiritual spark.
Without the existence of the spiritual spark, the body cannot develop.
Similarly, the material manifestation cannot develop unless the Supreme
Soul of Krsna enters.

The Supreme Personality of Godhead is existing as the Supersoul in all manifested universes. A description of the three
purusa-avataras is given in
Srimad-Bhagavatam. "The
Supreme Personality of Godhead manifests three features, as
Karanodakasayi Visnu, Garbhodakasayi Visnu and Ksirodakasayi Visnu, in
this material manifestation." The Supreme Lord Krsna, the cause of all
causes, lies down in the cosmic ocean as Maha-Visnu or Karanodakasayi
Visnu, and therefore Krsna is the beginning of this universe, the
maintainer of the universal manifestation, and the end of all the
energy.
TEXT 21
adityanam aham visnur
jyotisam ravir amsuman
maricir marutam asmi
naksatranam aham sasi
SYNONYMS
adityanam--of the Adityas;
aham--I am;
visnuh--the Supreme Lord;
jyotisam--of all luminaries;
ravih--the sun;
amsu-man--radiant;
maricih--Marici;
marutam--of the Maruts;
asmi--I am;
naksatranam--of stars;
aham--I am;
sasi--the moon.
TRANSLATION
Of the Adityas I am Visnu, of lights I am the radiant sun, I am Marici of the Maruts, and among the stars I am the moon.
PURPORT

There
are twelve Adityas, of which Krsna is the principal. And among all the
luminaries twinkling in the sky, the sun is the chief, and in the
Brahma-samhita
the sun is accepted as the glowing effulgence of the Supreme Lord and
is considered to be one of His eyes. Marici is the controlling deity of
of the heavenly spaces. Among the stars, the moon is the most prominent
at night, and thus the moon represents Krsna.
TEXT 22
vedanam sama-vedo 'smi
devanam asmi vasavah
indriyanam manas casmi
bhutanam asmi cetana
SYNONYMS
vedanam--of all the
Vedas; sama-vedah--the
Sama Veda; asmi--I am;
devanam--of all the demigods;
asmi--I am;
vasavah--heavenly king;
indriyanam--of all the senses;
manah--the mind;
ca--also;
asmi--I am;
bhutanam--of all living entities;
asmi--I am;
cetana--the living force.
TRANSLATION
Of
the Vedas I am the Sama-veda; of the demigods I am Indra; of the senses
I am the mind, and in living beings I am the living force [knowledge].
PURPORT

The
difference between matter and spirit is that matter has no
consciousness like the living entity; therefore this consciousness is
supreme and eternal. Consciousness cannot be produced by a combination
of matter.
TEXT 23
rudranam sankaras casmi
vitteso yaksa-raksasam
vasunam pavakas casmi
meruh sikharinam aham
SYNONYMS
rudranam--of all the Rudras;
sankarah--Lord Siva;
ca--also;
asmi--I am;
vitta-isah--the lord of the treasury of the demigods;
yaksa-raksasam--of the Yaksas and Raksasas;
vasunam--of the Vasus;
pavakah--fire;
ca--also;
asmi--I am;
meruh--Meru;
sikharinam--of all mountains;
aham--I am.
TRANSLATION
Of
all the Rudras I am Lord Siva; of the Yaksas and Raksasas I am the Lord
of wealth [Kuvera]; of the Vasus I am fire [Agni], and of mountains I
am Meru.
PURPORT

There
are eleven Rudras, of whom Sankara, Lord Siva, is predominant. He is
the incarnation of the Supreme Lord in charge of the modes of ignorance
in the universe. Among the demigods Kuvera is the chief treasurer, and
he is a representation of the Supreme Lord. Meru is a mountain famed for
its rich natural resources.
TEXT 24
purodhasam ca mukhyam mam
viddhi partha brhaspatim
senaninam aham skandah
sarasam asmi sagarah
SYNONYMS
purodhasam--of all priests;
ca--also;
mukhyam--chief;
mam--Me;
viddhi--understand;
partha--O son of Prtha;
brhaspatim--Brhaspati;
senaninam--of all commanders;
aham--I am;
skandah--Kartikeya;
sarasam--of all reservoirs of water;
asmi--I am;
sagarah--the ocean.
TRANSLATION
Of
priests, O Arjuna, know Me to be the chief, Brhaspati, the lord of
devotion. Of generals I am Skanda, the lord of war; and of bodies of
water I am the ocean.
PURPORT

Indra
is the chief demigod of the heavenly planets and is known as the king
of the heavens. The planet in which he reigns is called Indraloka.
Brhaspati is Indra's priest, and since Indra is the chief of all kings,
Brhaspati is the chief of all priests. And as Indra is the chief of all
kings, similarly Skanda, the son of Parvati and Lord Siva, is the chief
of all military commanders. And of all bodies of water, the ocean is the
greatest. These representations of Krsna only give hints of His
greatness.
TEXT 25
maharsinam bhrgur aham
giram asmy ekam aksaram
yajnanam japa-yajno 'smi
sthavaranam himalayah
SYNONYMS
maha-rsinam--among the great sages;
bhrguh--Bhrgu;
aham--I am;
giram--of vibrations;
asmi--I am;
ekam aksaram--
pranava; yajnanam--of sacrifices;
japa-yajnah--chanting;
asmi--I am;
sthavaranam--of immovable things;
himalayah--the Himalayan mountains.
TRANSLATION
Of
the great sages I am Bhrgu; of vibrations I am the transcendental om.
Of sacrifices I am the chanting of the holy names [japa], and of
immovable things I am the Himalayas.
PURPORT

Brahma,
the first living creature within the universe, created several sons for
the propagation of various kinds of species. The most powerful of his
sons is Bhrgu, who is also the greatest sage. Of all the transcendental
vibrations, the
"om" (
omkara) represents the Supreme. Of
all sacrifices, the chanting of Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, Krsna Krsna,
Hare Hare/ Hare Rama, Hare Rama, Rama Rama, Hare Hare is the purest
representation of Krsna. Sometimes animal sacrifices are recommended,
but in the sacrifice of Hare Krsna, Hare Krsna, there is no question of
violence. It is the simplest and the purest. Whatever is sublime in the
worlds is a representation of Krsna. Therefore the Himalayas, the
greatest mountains in the world, also represent Him. The mountain named
Meru was mentioned in a previous verse, but Meru is sometimes movable,
whereas the Himalayas are never movable. Thus the Himalayas are greater
than Meru.
TEXT 26
asvatthah sarva-vrksanam
devarsinam ca naradah
gandharvanam citrarathah
siddhanam kapilo munih
SYNONYMS
asvatthah--the banyan tree;
sarva-vrksanam--of all trees;
deva-rsinam--of all the sages amongst the demigods;
ca--and;
naradah--Narada;
gandharvanam--the citizens of the Gandharva planet;
citrarathah--Citraratha;
siddhanam--of all those who are perfected;
kapilah munih--Kapila Muni.
TRANSLATION
Of
all trees I am the holy fig tree, and among sages and demigods I am
Narada. Of the singers of the gods [Gandharvas] I am Citraratha, and
among perfected beings I am the sage Kapila.
PURPORT

The fig tree (
asvattha)
is one of the most beautiful and highest trees, and people in India
often worship it as one of their daily morning rituals. Amongst the
demigods they also worship Narada, who is considered the greatest
devotee in the universe. Thus he is the representation of Krsna as a
devotee. The Gandharva planet is filled with entities who sing
beautifully, and among them the best singer is Citraratha. Amongst the
perpetually living entities, Kapila is considered an incarnation of
Krsna, and His philosophy is mentioned in the
Srimad-Bhagavatam. Later on another Kapila became famous, but his philosophy was atheistic. Thus there is a gulf of difference between them.
TEXT 27
uccaihsravasam asvanam
viddhi mam amrtodbhavam
airavatam gajendranam
naranam ca naradhipam
SYNONYMS
uccaihsravasam--Uccaihsrava;
asvanam--among horses;
viddhi--know;
mam--Me;
amrta-udbhavam--produced from the churning of the ocean;
airavatam--Airavata;
gaja-indranam--of elephants;
naranam--among human beings;
ca--and;
nara-adhipam--the king.
TRANSLATION
Of
horses know Me to be Uccaihsrava, who rose out of the ocean, born of
the elixir of immortality; of lordly elephants I am Airavata, and among
men I am the monarch.
PURPORT

The devotee demigods and the demons (
asuras)
once took a sea journey. On this journey, nectar and poison were
produced, and Lord Siva drank the poison. From the nectar were produced
many entities, of which there was a horse named Uccaihsrava. Another
animal produced from the nectar was an elephant named Airavata. Because
these two animals were produced from nectar, they have special
significance, and they are representatives of Krsna.

Amongst
the human beings, the king is the representative of Krsna because Krsna
is the maintainer of the universe, and the kings, who are appointed on
account of their godly qualifications, are maintainers of their
kingdoms. Kings like Maharaja Yudhisthira, Maharaja Pariksit and Lord
Rama were all highly righteous kings who always thought of the citizens'
welfare. In Vedic literature, the king is considered to be the
representative of God. In this age, however, with the corruption of the
principles of religion, monarchy decayed and is now finally abolished.
It is to be understood that in the past, however, people were more happy
under righteous kings.
TEXT 28
ayudhanam aham vajram
dhenunam asmi kamadhuk
prajanas casmi kandarpah
sarpanam asmi vasukih
SYNONYMS
ayudhanam--of all weapons;
aham--I am;
vajram--the thunderbolt;
dhenunam--of cows;
asmi--I am;
kama-dhuk--the
surabhi cows;
prajanah--for begetting children;
ca--and;
asmi--I am;
kandarpah--Cupid;
sarpanam--of all snakes;
asmi--I am;
vasukih--Vasuki.
TRANSLATION
Of
weapons I am the thunderbolt; among cows I am the surabhi, givers of
abundant milk. Of procreators I am Kandarpa, the god of love, and of
serpents I am Vasuki, the chief.
PURPORT

The
thunderbolt, indeed a mighty weapon, represents Krsna's power. In
Krsnaloka in the spiritual sky there are cows which can be milked at any
time, and they give as much milk as one likes. Of course such cows do
not exist in this material world, but there is mention of them in
Krsnaloka. The Lord keeps many such cows, which are called
surabhi. It is stated that the Lord is engaged in herding the
surabhi
cows. Kandarpa is the sex desire for presenting good sons; therefore
Kandarpa is the representative of Krsna. Sometimes sex is engaged in
only for sense gratification; such sex does not represent Krsna. But sex
for the generation of good children is called Kandarpa and represents
Krsna.
TEXT 29
anantas casmi naganam
varuno yadasam aham
pitrnam aryama casmi
yamah samyamatam aham
SYNONYMS
anantah--Ananta;
ca--also;
asmi--I am;
naganam--of all serpents;
varunah--the demigod controlling the water;
yadasam--of all aquatics;
aham--I am;
pitrnam--of the ancestors;
aryama--Aryama;
ca--also;
asmi--I am;
yamah--the controller of death;
samyamatam--of all regulators;
aham--I am.
TRANSLATION
Of
the celestial Naga snakes I am Ananta; of the aquatic deities I am
Varuna. Of departed ancestors I am Aryama, and among the dispensers of
law I am Yama, lord of death.
PURPORT

Among
the many celestial Naga serpents, Ananta is the greatest, as is Varuna
among the aquatics. They both represent Krsna. There is also a planet of
trees presided over by Aryama, who represents Krsna. There are many
living entities who give punishment to the miscreants, and among them
Yama is the chief. Yama is situated in a planet near this earthly
planet, and after death those who are very sinful are taken there, and
Yama arranges different kinds of punishments for them.
TEXT 30
prahladas casmi daityanam
kalah kalayatam aham
mrganam ca mrgendro 'ham
vainateyas ca paksinam
SYNONYMS
prahladah--Prahlada;
ca--also;
asmi--I am;
daityanam--of the demons;
kalah--time;
kalayatam--of subduers;
aham--I am;
mrganam--of animals;
ca--and;
mrga-indrah--the lion;
aham--I am;
vainateyah--Garuda;
ca--also;
paksinam--of birds.
TRANSLATION
Among
the Daitya demons I am the devoted Prahlada; among subduers I am time;
among the beasts I am the lion, and among birds I am Garuda, the
feathered carrier of Visnu.
PURPORT

Diti
and Aditi are two sisters. The sons of Aditi are called Adityas, and
the sons of Diti are called Daityas. All the Adityas are devotees of the
Lord, and all the Daityas are atheistic. Although Prahlada was born in
the family of the Daityas, he was a great devotee from his childhood.
Because of his devotional service and godly nature, he is considered to
be a representative of Krsna.

There
are many subduing principles, but time wears down all things in the
material universe and so represents Krsna. Of the many animals, the lion
is the most powerful and ferocious, and of the million varieties of
birds, Garuda, the bearer of Lord Visnu, is the greatest.
TEXT 31
pavanah pavatam asmi
ramah sastra-bhrtam aham
jhasanam makaras casmi
srotasam asmi jahnavi
SYNONYMS
pavanah--the wind;
pavatam--of all that purifies;
asmi--I am;
ramah--Rama;
sastra-bhrtam--of the carriers of weapons;
aham--I am;
jhasanam--of all aquatics;
makarah--shark;
ca asmi--I am also;
srotasam--of flowing rivers;
asmi--I am;
jahnavi--the River Ganges.
TRANSLATION
Of
purifiers I am the wind; of the wielders of weapons I am Rama; of
fishes I am the shark, and of flowing rivers I am the Ganges.
PURPORT

Of
all the aquatics the shark is one of the biggest and is certainly the
most dangerous to man. Thus the shark represents Krsna. And of rivers,
the greatest in India is the Mother Ganges. Lord Ramacandra, of the
Ramayana, an incarnation of Krsna, is the mightest of warriors.
TEXT 32
sarganam adir antas ca
madhyam caivaham arjuna
adhyatma-vidya vidyanam
vadah pravadatam aham
SYNONYMS
sarganam--of all creations;
adih--beginning;
antah--end;
ca--and;
madhyam--middle;
ca--also;
eva--certainly;
aham--I am;
arjuna--O Arjuna;
adhyatma-vidya--spiritual knowledge;
vidyanam--of all education;
vadah--natural conclusion;
pravadatam--of arguments;
aham--I am.
TRANSLATION
Of
all creations I am the beginning and the end and also the middle, O
Arjuna. Of all sciences I am the spiritual science of the self, and
among logicians I am the conclusive truth.
PURPORT

Among
created manifestations, the total material elements are first created
by Maha-Visnu and are annihilated by Lord Siva. Brahma is the secondary
creator. All these created elements are different incarnations of the
material qualities of the Supreme Lord; therefore He is the beginning,
the middle and the end of all creation.

Regarding the spiritual science of the self, there are many literatures, such as the four
Vedas, the
Vedanta-sutra and the
Puranas, the
Srimad Bhagavatam and the
Gita. These
are all representatives of Krsna. Among logicians there are different
stages of argument. The presentation of evidence is called
japa. The attempt to defeat one another is called
vitanda, and the final conclusion is called
vada. The conclusive truth, the end of all reasoning processes, is Krsna.
TEXT 33
aksaranam akaro 'smi
dvandvah samasikasya ca
aham evaksayah kalo
dhataham visvato-mukhah
SYNONYMS
aksaranam--of letters;
akarah--the first;
asmi--I am;
dvandvah--dual;
samasikasya--compounds;
ca--and;
aham--I am;
eva--certainly;
aksayah--eternal;
kalah--time;
dhata--creator;
aham--I am;
visvatah-mukhah--Brahma.
TRANSLATION
Of
letters I am the letter A, and among compounds I am the dual word. I am
also inexhaustible time, and of creators I am Brahma, whose manifold
faces turn everywhere.
PURPORT
Akara, the first letter of the Sanskrit alphabet, is the beginning of the Vedic literature. Without
akara,
nothing can be sounded; therefore it is the beginning of sound. In
Sanskrit there are also many compound words, of which the dual word,
like
Rama-krsna, is called
dvandvah. For instance,
Rama and
Krsna have the same rhythm, and therefore are called dual.

Among
all kinds of killers, time is the ultimate because time kills
everything. Time is the representative of Krsna because in due course of
time there will be a great fire and everything will be annihilated.

Among
the creators and living entities, Brahma is the chief. The various
Brahma's exhibit four, eight, sixteen, etc., heads accordingly, and they
are the chief creators in their respective universes. The Brahmas are
representatives of Krsna.
TEXT 34
mrtyuh sarva-haras caham
udbhavas ca bhavisyatam
kirtih srir vak ca narinam
smrtir medha dhrtih ksama
SYNONYMS
mrtyuh--death;
sarva-harah--all-devouring;
ca--also;
aham--I am;
udbhavah--generation;
ca--also;
bhavisyatam--of the future;
kirtih--fame;
srih vak--beautiful speech;
ca--also;
narinam--of women;
smrtih--memory;
medha--intelligence;
dhrtih--faithfulness;
ksama--patience.
TRANSLATION
I
am all-devouring death, and I am the generator of all things yet to be.
Among women I am fame, fortune, speech, memory, intelligence,
faithfulness and patience.
PURPORT

As
soon as a man is born, he dies at every moment. Thus death is devouring
every living entity at every moment, but the last stroke is called
death itself. That death is Krsna. All species of life undergo six basic
changes. They are born, they grow, they remain for some time, they
reproduce, they dwindle and finally vanish. Of these changes, the first
is deliverance from the womb, and that is Krsna. The first generation is
the beginning of all future activities.

The
six opulences listed are considered to be feminine. If a woman
possesses all of them or some of them she becomes glorious. Sanskrit is a
perfect language and is therefore very glorious. After studying, if one
can remember the subject matter, he is gifted with good memory, or
smrti.
One need not read many books on different subject matters; the ability
to remember a few and quote them when necessary is also another
opulence.
TEXT 35
brhat-sama tatha samnam
gayatri chandasam aham
masanam marga-sirso 'ham
rtunam kusumakarah
SYNONYMS
brhat-sama--the
Brhat-sama; tatha--also;
samnam--of the
Sama Veda songs;
gayatri--the Gayatri hymns;
chandasam--of all poetry;
aham--I am;
masanam--of months;
marga-sirsah--the month of November-December;
aham--I am;
rtunam--of all seasons;
kusuma-akarah--spring.
TRANSLATION
Of
hymns I am the Brhat-sama sung to the Lord Indra, and of poetry I am
the Gayatri verse, sung daily by Brahmanas. Of months I am November and
December, and of seasons I am flower-bearing spring.
PURPORT

It has already been explained by the Lord that amongst all the
Vedas, the
Sama Veda is rich with beautiful songs played by the various demigods. One of these songs is the
Brhat-sama, which has an exquisite melody and is sung at midnight.

In
Sanskrit, there are definite rules that regulate poetry; rhyme and
meter are not written whimsically, as in much modern poetry. Amongst the
regulated poetry, the Gayatri
mantra, which is chanted by the duly qualified
brahmanas, is the most prominent. The Gayatri
mantra is mentioned in the
Srimad-Bhagavatam. Because the Gayatri
mantra is especially meant for God realization, it represents the Supreme Lord. This
mantra
is meant for spiritually advanced people, and when one attains success
in chanting it, he can enter into the transcendental position of the
Lord. One must first acquire the qualities of the perfectly situated
person, the qualities of goodness according to the laws of material
nature, in order to chant the Gayatri
mantra. The Gayatri
mantra
is very important in Vedic civilization and is considered to be the
sound incarnation of Brahman. Brahma is its initiator, and it is passed
down from him in disciplic succession.

The
months of November and December are considered the best of all months
because in India grains are collected from the fields at this time, and
the people become very happy. Of course spring is a season universally
liked because it is neither too hot nor too cold, and the flowers and
trees blossom and flourish. In spring there are also many ceremonies
commemorating Krsna's pastimes; therefore this is considered to be the
most joyful of all seasons, and it is the representative of the Supreme
Lord Krsna.
TEXT 36
dyutam chalayatam asmi
tejas tejasvinam aham
jayo 'smi vyavasayo 'smi
sattvam sattvavatam aham
SYNONYMS
dyutam--gambling;
chalayatam--of all cheats;
asmi--I am;
tejah--splendid;
tejasvinam--of everything splendid;
aham--I am;
jayah--victory;
asmi--I am;
vyavasayah--adventure;
asmi--I am;
sattvam--strength;
sattva-vatam--of all the strong;
aham--I am.
TRANSLATION
I
am also the gambling of cheats, and of the splendid I am the splendor. I
am victory, I am adventure, and I am the strength of the strong.
PURPORT

There
are many kinds of cheaters all over the universe. Of all cheating
processes, gambling stands supreme and therefore represents Krsna. As
the Supreme, Krsna can be more deceitful than any mere man. If Krsna
chooses to deceive a person, no one can surpass Him in His deceit. His
greatness is not simply one-sided--it is all-sided.

Among
the victorious, He is victory. He is the splendor of the splendid.
Among enterprising industrialists, He is the most enterprising. Among
adventurers, He is the most adventurous, and among the strong, He is the
strongest. When Krsna was present on earth, no one could surpass Him in
strength. Even in His childhood He lifted Govardhana Hill. No one can
surpass Him in cheating, no one can surpass Him in splendor, no one can
surpass Him in victory, no one can surpass Him in enterprise, and no one
can surpass Him in strength.
TEXT 37
vrsninam vasudevo 'smi
pandavanam dhananjayah
muninam apy aham vyasah
kavinam usana kavih
SYNONYMS
vrsninam--of the descendants of Vrsni;
vasudevah--Krsna in Dvaraka;
asmi--I am;
pandavanam--of the Pandavas;
dhananjayah--Arjuna;
muninam--of the sages;
api--also;
aham--I am;
vyasah--Vyasa, the compiler of all Vedic literature;
kavinam--of all great thinkers;
usana--Usana;
kavih--the thinker.
TRANSLATION
Of
the descendants of Vrsni I am Vasudeva, and of the Pandavas I am
Arjuna. Of the sages I am Vyasa, and among great thinkers I am Usana.
PURPORT

Krsna
is the original Supreme Personality of Godhead, and Vasudeva is the
immediate expansion of Krsna. Both Lord Krsna and Baladeva appear as the
sons of Vasudeva. Amongst the sons of Pandu, Arjuna is famous and
valiant. Indeed, He is the best of men and therefore represents Krsna.
Among the
munis, or learned men conversant in Vedic knowledge,
Vyasa is the greatest because he explained Vedic knowledge in many
different ways for the understanding of the common mass of people in
this age of Kali. And Vyasa is also known as an incarnation of Krsna;
therefore Vyasa also represents Krsna.
Kavis are those who are capable of thinking thoroughly on any subject matter. Among the
kavis,
Usana was the spiritual master of the demons; he was an extremely
intelligent, far-seeing, political and spiritual in every way. Thus
Usana is another representative of the opulence of Krsna.
TEXT 38
dando damayatam asmi
nitir asmi jigisatam
maunam caivasmi guhyanam
jnanam jnanavatam aham
SYNONYMS
dandah--punishment;
damayatam--of all separation;
asmi--I am;
nitih--morality;
asmi--I am;
jigisatam--of the victorious;
maunam--silence;
ca--and;
eva--also;
asmi--I am;
guhyanam--of secrets;
jnanam--knowledge;
jnana-vatam--of the wise;
aham--I am.
TRANSLATION
Among
punishments I am the rod of chastisement, and of those who seek
victory, I am morality. Of secret things I am silence, and of the wise I
am wisdom.
PURPORT

There
are many suppressing agents, of which the most important are those that
cut down the miscreants. When miscreants are punished, the rod of
chastisement represents Krsna. Among those who are trying to be
victorious in some field of activity, the most victorious element is
morality. Among the confidential activities of hearing, thinking and
meditating, silence is most important because by silence one can make
progress very quickly. The wise man is he who can discriminate between
matter and spirit, between God's superior and inferior natures. Such
knowledge is Krsna Himself.
TEXT 39
yac capi sarva-bhutanam
bijam tad aham arjuna
na tad asti vina yat syan
maya bhutam caracaram
SYNONYMS
yat--whatever;
ca--also;
api--may be;
sarva-bhutanam--of all creations;
bijam--the seed;
tat--that;
aham--I am;
arjuna--O Arjuna;
na--not;
tat--that;
asti--there is;
vina--without;
yat--that;
syat--exists;
maya--by Me;
bhutam--created;
cara-acaram--moving and unmoving.
TRANSLATION
Furthermore,
O Arjuna, I am the generating seed of all existences. There is no
being--moving or unmoving--that can exist without Me.
PURPORT

Everything
has a cause, and that cause or seed of manifestation is Krsna. Without
Krsna's energy, nothing can exist; therefore He is called omnipotent.
Without His potency, neither the movable nor the unmovable can exist.
Whatever existence is not founded on the energy of Krsna is called
maya, that which is not.
TEXT 40
nanto 'sti mama divyanam
vibhutinam parantapa
esa tuddesatah prokto
vibhuter vistaro maya
SYNONYMS
na--nor;
antah--a limit;
asti--is there;
mama--My;
divyanam--divine;
vibhutinam--opulences;
parantapa--O conqueror of the enemies;
esah--all this;
tu--that;
uddesatah--examples;
proktah--spoken;
vibhuteh--opulences;
vistarah--expanded;
maya--by Me.
TRANSLATION
O
mighty conqueror of enemies, there is no end to My divine
manifestations. What I have spoken to you is but a mere indication of My
infinite opulences.
PURPORT

As
stated in the Vedic literature, although the opulences and energies of
the Supreme are understood in various ways, there is no limit to such
opulences; therefore not all the opulences and energies can be
explained. Simply a few examples are being described to Arjuna to pacify
his inquisitiveness.
TEXT 41
yad yad vibhutimat sattvam
srimad urjitam eva va
tat tad evavagaccha tvam
mama tejo-'msa-sambhavam
SYNONYMS
yat yat--whatever;
vibhuti--opulences;
mat--having;
sattvam--existence;
sri-mat--beautiful;
urjitam--glorious;
eva--certainly;
va--or;
tat tat--all those;
eva--certainly;
avagaccha--you must know;
tvam--you;
mama--My;
tejah--splendor;
amsa--partly;
sambhavam--born of.
TRANSLATION
Know that all beautiful, glorious, and mighty creations spring from but a spark of My splendor.
PURPORT

Any
glorious or beautiful existence should be understood to be but a
fragmental manifestation of Krsna's opulence, whether it be in the
spiritual or material world. Anything extraordinarily opulent should be
considered to represent Krsna's opulence.
TEXT 42
atha va bahunaitena
kim jnatena tavarjuna
vistabhyaham idam krtsnam
ekamsena sthito jagat
SYNONYMS
atha va--or;
bahuna--many;
etena--by this kind;
kim--what;
jnatena--knowing;
tava--you;
arjuna--O Arjuna;
vistabhya--entire;
aham--I;
idam--this;
krtsnam--of all manifestations;
eka--one;
amsena--part;
sthitah--situated;
jagat--in the universe.
TRANSLATION
But
what need is there, Arjuna, for all this detailed knowledge? With a
single fragment of Myself I pervade and support this entire universe.
PURPORT

The
Supreme Lord is represented throughout the entire material universes by
His entering into all things as the Supersoul. The Lord here tells
Arjuna that there is no point in understanding how things exist in their
separate opulence and grandeur. He should know that all things are
existing due to Krsna's entering them as Supersoul. From Brahma, the
most gigantic entity, on down to the smallest ant, all are existing
because the Lord has entered each and all and is sustaining them.

Worship
of demigods is discouraged herein because even the greatest demigods
like Brahma and Siva only represent part of the opulence of the Supreme
Lord. He is the origin of everyone born, and no one is greater than Him.
He is
samata, which means that no one is superior to Him and that no one is equal to Him. In the
Visnu-mantra
it is said that one who considers the Supreme Lord Krsna in the same
category with demigods--be they even Brahma or Siva--becomes at once an
atheist. If, however, one thoroughly studies the different descriptions
of the opulences and expansions of Krsna's energy, then one can
understand without any doubt the position of Lord Sri Krsna and can fix
his mind in the worship of Krsna without deviation. The Lord is
all-pervading by the expansion of His partial representation, the
Supersoul, who enters into everything that is. Pure devotees, therefore,
concentrate their minds in Krsna consciousness in full devotional
service; therefore they are always situated in the transcendental
position. Devotional service and worship of Krsna are very clearly
indicated in this chapter in verses eight through eleven. That is the
way of pure devotional service. How one can attain the highest
devotional perfection of association with the Supreme Personality of
Godhead has been thoroughly explained in this chapter.
Thus end the Bhaktivedanta Purports to the Tenth Chapter of the Srimad Bhagavad-gita in the matter of the Opulence of the Absolute.
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