देवतिर्यङ्मनुष्याणां सरीसृपसवीरुधाम् ।
सर्वजीवनिकायानां सूर्य आत्मा दृगीश्वरः ॥४६॥

deva-tiryaá¹…-manuá¹£yÄṇÄá¹
sarÄ«sá¹›pa-savÄ«rudhÄm
sarva-jÄ«va-nikÄyÄnÄá¹
sÅ«rya ÄtmÄ dá¹›g-Ä«Å›varaḥ

 deva - of the demigods; tiryak - the lower animals; manuá¹£yÄṇÄm - and the human beings; sarÄ«sá¹›pa - the insects and the serpents; sa-vÄ«rudhÄm - and the plants and trees; sarva-jÄ«va-nikÄyÄnÄm - of all groups of living entities; sÅ«ryaḥ - the sun-god; ÄtmÄ - the life and soul; dá¹›k - of the eyes; Ä«Å›varaḥ - the personality of Godhead.


Text

All living entities, including demigods, human beings, animals, birds, insects, reptiles, creepers and trees, depend upon the heat and light given by the sun-god from the sun planet. Furthermore, it is because of the sun’s presence that all living entities can see, and therefore he is called dṛg-īśvara, the Personality of Godhead presiding over sight.

Purport

In this regard, ÅšrÄ«la ViÅ›vanÄtha CakravartÄ« ṬhÄkura says, sÅ«rya ÄtmÄ ÄtmatvenopÄsyaḥ. The actual life and soul of all living entities within this universe is the sun. He is therefore upÄsya, worshipable. We worship the sun-god by chanting the GÄyatrÄ« mantra (om bhÅ«r bhuvaḥ svaḥ tat savitur vareṇyaá¹ bhargo devasya dhÄ«mahi). SÅ«rya is the life and soul of this universe, and there are innumerable universes for which a sun-god is the life and soul, just as the Supreme Personality of Godhead is the life and soul of the entire creation. We have information that VairÄja, Hiraṇyagarbha, entered the great, dull, material globe called the sun. This indicates that the theory held by so-called scientists that no one lives there is wrong. Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ also says that Kṛṣṇa first instructed Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ to the sun-god (imaá¹ vivasvate yogaá¹ proktavÄn aham avyayam). Therefore the sun is not vacant. It is inhabited by living entities, and the predominating deity is VairÄja, or VivasvÄn. The difference between the sun and earth is that the sun is a fiery planet, but everyone there has a suitable body and can live there without difficulty.

Thus end the Bhaktivedanta purports of the Fifth Canto, Twentieth Chapter, of the ÅšrÄ«mad-BhÄgavatam, entitled “Studying the Structure of the Universe.â€