ajo 'pi sann avyayätmä
bhütänäm éçvaro 'pi san
prakåtià sväm adhiñöhäya
sambhavämy ätma-mäyayä
SYNONYMS
ajaù-unborn; api-although; san-being so; avyaya-without
deterioration; ätmä-body; bhütänäm-of all those who are born; éçvaraù-the
Supreme Lord; api-although; san-being so; prakåtim-in the
transcendental form; sväm-of Myself; adhiñöhäya-being so situated; sambhavämi-I
do incarnate; ätma-mäyayä-by My internal energy.
TRANSLATION
Although I am unborn and My transcendental body never deteriorates, and although I am
the Lord of all living entities, I still appear in every millennium in My original
transcendental form.
PURPORT
The Lord has spoken about the peculiarity of His birth: although He may appear like an
ordinary person, He remembers everything of His many, many past "births,"
whereas a common man cannot remember what he has done even a few hours before. If someone
is asked what he did exactly at the same time one day earlier, it would be very difficult
for a common man to answer immediately. He would surely have to dredge his memory to
recall what he was doing exactly at the same time one day before. And yet, men often dare
claim to be God, or Kåñëa. One should not be misled by such meaningless claims. Then
again, the Lord explains His prakåti, or His form. Prakåti means
"nature," as well as svarüpa, or "one's own form." The Lord
says that He appears in His own body. He does not change His body, as the common living
entity changes from one body to another. The conditioned soul may have one kind of body in
the present birth, but he has a different body in the next birth. In the material world,
the living entity has no fixed body but transmigrates from one body to another. The Lord,
however, does not do so. Whenever He appears, He does so in the same original body, by His
internal potency. In other words, Kåñëa appears in this material world in His original
eternal form, with two hands, holding a flute. He appears exactly in His eternal body,
uncontaminated by this material world. Although He appears in the same transcendental body
and is Lord of the universe, it still appears that He takes His birth like an ordinary
living entity. And although His body does not deteriorate like a material body, it still
appears that Lord Kåñëa grows from childhood to boyhood and from boyhood to youth. But
astonishingly enough He never ages beyond youth. At the time of the Battle of Kurukñetra,
He had many grandchildren at home; or, in other words, He had sufficiently aged by
material calculations. Still He looked just like a young man twenty or twenty-five years
old. We never see a picture of Kåñëa in old age because He never grows old like us,
although He is the oldest person in the whole creation-past, present, and future. Neither
His body nor His intelligence ever deteriorates or changes. Therefore, it is clear that in
spite of His being in the material world, He is the same unborn, eternal form of bliss and
knowledge, changeless in His transcendental body and intelligence. Factually, His
appearance and disappearance is like the sun's rising, moving before us, and then
disappearing from our eyesight. When the sun is out of sight, we think that the sun is
set, and when the sun is before our eyes, we think that the sun is on the horizon.
Actually, the sun is always in its fixed position, but owing to our defective,
insufficient senses, we calculate the appearance and disappearance of the sun in the sky.
And because Lord Kåñëa's appearance and disappearance are completely different from
that of any ordinary, common living entity, it is evident that He is eternal, blissful
knowledge by His internal potency-and He is never contaminated by material nature. The Vedas
also confirm that the Supreme Personality of Godhead is unborn yet He still appears to
take His birth in multimanifestations. The Vedic supplementary literatures also confirm
that even though the Lord appears to be taking His birth, He is still without change of
body. In the Bhägavatam, He appears before His mother as Näräyaëa, with four
hands and the decorations of the six kinds of full opulences. His appearance in His
original eternal form is His causeless mercy, bestowed upon the living entities so that
they can concentrate on the Supreme Lord as He is, and not on mental concoctions or
imaginations, which the impersonalist wrongly thinks the Lord's forms to be. The word mäyä,
or ätma-mäyä, refers to the Lord's causeless mercy, according to the Viçva-koça
dictionary. The Lord is conscious of all of His previous appearances and disappearances,
but a common living entity forgets everything about his past body as soon as he gets
another body. He is the Lord of all living entities because He performs wonderful and
superhuman activities while He is on this earth. Therefore, the Lord is always the same
Absolute Truth and is without differentiation between His form and self, or between His
quality and body. A question may now be raised as to why the Lord appears and disappears
in this world. This is explained in the next verse.