dviá¹£antaḥ para-kÄyeá¹£u
svÄtmÄnaá¹ harim īśvaram
má¹›take sÄnubandhe 'smin
baddha-snehÄḥ patanty adhaḥ
dviá¹£antaḥ - envying; para-kÄyeá¹£u - (the souls) within the bodies of others; sva-ÄtmÄnam - their own true self; harim īśvaram - the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Hari; má¹›take - in the corpse; sa-anubandhe - together with its relations; asmin - this; baddha-snehÄḥ - their affection being fixed; patanti - they fall; adhaḥ - downward.
Materialistic persons express their envy of animals by cruelly killing them. Similarly, the conditioned souls become envious even of other human beings and of the Lord Himself, who dwells within everyone’s body. They express their envy of God by preaching atheistic science or pseudophilosophy in which they ridicule the fact that everyone is an eternal servant of God. Envious persons express their bitter feelings toward other human beings by creating wars, terrorism, cruel governments and cheating business enterprises. The sinful bodies of such envious persons are just like corpses. Still, envious persons are enamored by the corpse of their material body and become further fascinated by their children and other bodily extensions. Such feelings are based in false pride. ÅšrÄ«la MadhvÄcÄrya has quoted the following verse from Hari-vaá¹Å›a:
ÄptatvÄd Ätma-Å›abdoktaá¹
svasminn api pareá¹£u ca
jÄ«vÄd anyaá¹ na paÅ›yanti
śrutvaivaṠvidviṣanti ca
etÄá¹s tvam ÄsurÄn viddhi
laká¹£aṇaiḥ puruá¹£ÄdhamÄn
“The Supreme is called ÄtmÄ because He is found both in oneself and within others. Some persons become agitated by hearing descriptions of the Supreme Lord, and they openly state that there is no superior living being beyond themselves. Such persons are to be known as demons. By their practical symptoms they are to be understood as the lowest class of men.â€