bhagavÄn api rÄjará¹£eḥ
sopÄdhyÄyasya cÄcyutaḥ
harann iva mano 'muá¹£ya
sva-dhÄma pratyapadyata
bhagavÄn - the Supreme Personality of Godhead; api - also; rÄja-ṛṣeḥ - of the saintly King; sa-upÄdhyÄyasya - along with all the priests; ca - also; acyutaḥ - the infallible Lord; haran - captivating; iva - indeed; manaḥ - the mind; amuá¹£ya - of him; sva-dhÄma - to His abode; pratyapadyata - returned.
Because the Supreme Personality of Godhead is all-spiritual, He can descend from the spiritual sky without changing His body, and thus He is known as acyuta, or infallible. When a living entity falls down to the material world, however, he has to accept a material body, and therefore, in his material embodiment, he cannot be called acyuta. Because he falls down from his real engagement in the service of the Lord, the living entity gets a material body to suffer or try to enjoy in the miserable material conditions of life. Therefore the fallen living entity is cyuta, whereas the Lord is called acyuta. The Lord was attractive for everyone — not only the King but also the priestly order, who were very much addicted to the performance of Vedic rituals. Because the Lord is all-attractive, He is called Kṛṣṇa, or “one who attracts everyone.†The Lord appeared in the sacrificial arena of MahÄrÄja Pá¹›thu as KṣīrodakaÅ›ÄyÄ« Viṣṇu, who is a plenary expansion of Lord Kṛṣṇa. He is the second incarnation from KÄraṇodakaÅ›ÄyÄ« Viṣṇu, who is the origin of material creation and who expands as GarbhodakaÅ›ÄyÄ« Viṣṇu, who then enters into each and every universe. KṣīrodakaÅ›ÄyÄ« Viṣṇu is one of the puruá¹£as who control the material modes of nature.