tato virÄjam utsá¹›jy
vairÄjaḥ puruá¹£o ná¹›pa
avyaktaá¹ viÅ›ate sÅ«ká¹£maá¹
nirindhana ivÄnalaḥ

 tataḥ - then; virÄjam - the universe; utsá¹›jya - giving up (as his body); vairÄjaḥ puruá¹£aḥ - the personality of the universal form (Hiraṇyagarbha BrahmÄ); ná¹›pa - O King Nimi; avyaktam - unmanifest nature (the pradhÄna); viÅ›ate - he enters; sÅ«ká¹£mam - subtle; nirindhanaḥ - devoid of fuel; iva - like; analaḥ - a fire.


Text

Then VairÄja BrahmÄ, the soul of the universal form, gives up his universal body, O King, and enters into the subtle unmanifest nature, like a fire that has run out of fuel.

Purport

According to ÅšrÄ«la BhaktisiddhÄnta SarasvatÄ« ṬhÄkura the word vairÄjaḥ in this verse indicates the totality of the individual conditioned souls who originally take birth from BrahmÄ and are amalgamated back into him at the time of annihilation. By the manifestation of the virÄá¹­-puruá¹£a, the universal form of the Lord, there is a temporary display of forms, qualities and activities within the material creation. But the entire cosmic scene reverts to inert formlessness when the creation is withdrawn by the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Therefore the Lord’s universal form cannot be accepted as an eternal form of the Lord. It is merely the temporary imaginary resemblance of His personal form within the kingdom of mÄyÄ. In the First Canto of the ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam, as well as in the Second Canto, the universal form of the Lord is clearly explained to be an imaginary form offered to the neophyte for meditation on God. Those who are excessively materialistic are totally unable to understand that the Supreme Personality of Godhead is actually sac-cid-Änanda-vigraha, or the eternal form of bliss and knowledge, transcendental to the exhibition of material energy. Therefore to encourage such gross materialists to become faithful theists, the Vedic literature instructs them to meditate upon the physical universe as the gigantic body of the Supreme Lord. This pantheistic conception does not reflect the ultimate reality of the Supreme Lord but is a technique to bring the mind gradually toward God.

ÅšrÄ«la ÅšrÄ«dhara SvÄmÄ« has quoted the following verse as evidence that Lord BrahmÄ is supposed to go back to Godhead at the time of annihilation:

brahmaá¹‡Ä saha te sarve
 samprÄpte pratisañcare
parasyÄnte ká¹›tÄtmÄnaḥ
 praviÅ›anti paraá¹ padam

“At the time of final annihilation all self-realized souls enter with BrahmÄ into the supreme abode.†Since BrahmÄ is sometimes considered the best devotee of the Supreme Lord, he surely should obtain liberation rather than merely entering into the unmanifest state of material nature called avyakta. In this connection ÅšrÄ«la ÅšrÄ«dhara SvÄmÄ« points out that there is a class of nondevotees who attain the planet of BrahmÄ by performing aÅ›vamedha-yajñas and other sacrifices, and in certain cases BrahmÄ himself may not be a devotee of the Supreme Personality of Godhead. So the words avyaktaá¹ viÅ›ate sÅ«ká¹£mam can be understood to indicate that such a nondevotee BrahmÄ cannot enter the spiritual sky, despite having achieved the ultimate universal status of material expertise. But when BrahmÄ is a devotee of the Supreme Personality of Godhead the word avyaktam can be taken to indicate the spiritual sky; since the spiritual sky is not manifest to the conditioned souls, it may also be considered avyakta. If even Lord BrahmÄ cannot enter the kingdom of God without surrendering to the Supreme Personality of Godhead, then what to speak of other so-called pious or expert nondevotees.

In this regard ÅšrÄ«la ViÅ›vanÄtha CakravartÄ« ṬhÄkura has pointed out that there are three categories within the status of BrahmÄ, namely those of karmÄ«, jñÄnÄ« and devotee. A BrahmÄ who is the most exalted karmÄ« of the universe will have to come back to the material world; a living entity who has achieved the post of BrahmÄ by being the greatest speculative philosopher within the universe may attain impersonal liberation; and a living entity who has been awarded the post of BrahmÄ due to being a great devotee of the Supreme Personality of Godhead enters into the personal abode of the Lord. In the ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam (3.32.15) yet another case is described: a BrahmÄ who is a devotee of the Lord but who has the tendency to think himself independent of or equal to the Lord may achieve MahÄ-Viṣṇu’s abode at the time of annihilation, but when creation begins again he has to return and again take the post of BrahmÄ. The word used in this case is bheda-dṛṣṭyÄ, which refers to the tendency to think oneself independently powerful. The various destinations possible for such an exalted living entity as a Lord BrahmÄ definitely prove that any material position is worthless for guaranteeing an eternal life of bliss and knowledge. In Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ Lord Kṛṣṇa promises that if one gives up all other so-called obligations and surrenders to the devotional service of the Lord, the Lord will personally protect him and bring him back to the supreme abode in the spiritual sky. It is futile and foolish to try to achieve perfection by one’s own strenuous endeavor and not surrender to the lotus feet of Kṛṣṇa. Such a blind attempt is described in the Eighteenth Chapter of Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ as bahulÄyÄsam, indicating that it is work in the material mode of passion. BrahmÄ is the lord of passion, and his creation and management of the entire universe are certainly bahulÄyÄsam, or strenuous endeavor, in the most exalted sense. But all such passionate work, even that of Lord BrahmÄ, is ultimately useless without surrender to the lotus feet of Kṛṣṇa.