sva-mÄyayÄ sṛṣá¹am idaá¹
sad-asal-lakṣaṇaṠvibhuḥ
praviá¹£á¹a Ä«yate tat-tat-
svarūpo 'gnir ivaidhasi
sva-mÄyayÄ - by His own material energy; sṛṣá¹am - created; idam - this (body of the individual jÄ«va); sat-asat - as demigod, animal, and so on; laká¹£aṇam - characterized; vibhuḥ - the Almighty; praviá¹£á¹aḥ - having entered; Ä«yate - appears; tat-tat - of each different form; svarÅ«paḥ - assuming the identity; agniḥ - fire; iva - as; edhasi - in firewood.
Although the Supreme Lord is within everything, everything is not the Lord. By the mode of goodness the Lord creates the exalted material bodies of demigods and brÄhmaṇas, and by expanding the mode of ignorance He similarly creates the bodies of animals, śūdras and other lower forms of life. The Lord enters all of these superior and inferior creations, but He remains vibhu, the all-powerful Personality of Godhead. ÅšrÄ«la ViÅ›vanÄtha CakravartÄ« ṬhÄkura explains that although fire is present within smoldering wood, it blazes forth when we stir the wood around. Similarly, although the Personality of Godhead is indirectly present everywhere, when we chant and hear His glories with love and devotion the Lord is stirred into manifestation and directly appears before His devotees.
The foolish conditioned souls ignore the spectacular presence of the Lord within everything and instead absorb their mediocre consciousness in their own temporary material coverings, thinking, “I am a strong man,†“I am a beautiful woman,†“I am the richest man in this city,†“I am a Ph.D.,†and so on. One should cut off such useless entanglement and accept the fact that one is pure spirit soul, the eternal, blissful servant of Lord Kṛṣṇa.