अपश्यन्निति होवाच मयान्विष्टमिदं जगत् ।
भ्रातृहा मे गतो नूनं यतो नावर्तते पुमान् ॥१२॥

apaÅ›yann iti hovÄca
mayÄnviṣṭam idaá¹ jagat
bhrÄtá¹›-hÄ me gato nÅ«naá¹
yato nÄvartate pumÄn

 apaÅ›yan - not seeing Him; iti - in this way; ha uvÄca - uttered; mayÄ - by me; anviṣṭam - has been sought; idam - the whole; jagat - universe; bhrÄtá¹›-hÄ - Lord Viṣṇu, who killed the brother; me - my; gataḥ - must have gone; nÅ«nam - indeed; yataḥ - from where; na - not; Ävartate - comes back; pumÄn - a person.


Text

Unable to see Him, HiraṇyakaÅ›ipu said, “I have searched the entire universe, but I could not find Viṣṇu, who has killed my brother. Therefore, He must certainly have gone to that place from which no one returns. [In other words, He must now be dead.]â€

Purport

Atheists generally follow the Bauddha philosophical conclusion that at death everything is finished. HiraṇyakaÅ›ipu, being an atheist, thought this way. Because Lord Viṣṇu was not visible to him, he thought that the Lord was dead. Even today, many people follow the philosophy that God is dead. But God is never dead. Even the living entity, who is part of God, never dies. Na jÄyate mriyate vÄ kadÄcit: “For the soul there is never birth or death.†This is the statement of Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ (2.20). Even the ordinary living entity never takes birth or dies. What then is to be said of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, who is the chief of all living entities? He certainly never takes birth or dies. Ajo ’pi sann avyayÄtmÄ (Bg. 4.6). Both the Lord and the living entity exist as unborn and inexhaustible personalities. Thus HiraṇyakaÅ›ipu’s conclusion that Viṣṇu was dead was wrong.

As indicated by the words yato nÄvartate pumÄn, there is certainly a spiritual kingdom, and if the living entity goes there, he never returns to this material world. This is also confirmed in Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ (4.9): tyaktvÄ dehaá¹ punar janma naiti mÄm eti so ’rjuna. Materially speaking, every living entity dies; death is inevitable. But those who are karmÄ«s, jñÄnÄ«s and yogÄ«s return to this material world after death, whereas bhaktas do not. Of course, if a bhakta is not completely perfect he takes birth in the material world again, but in a very exalted position, either in a rich family or a family of the purest brÄhmaṇas (Å›ucÄ«nÄm Å›rÄ«matÄá¹ gehe), just to finish his development in spiritual consciousness. Those who have completed the course of Kṛṣṇa consciousness and are free from material desire return to the abode of the Supreme Personality of Godhead (yad gatvÄ na nivartante tad dhÄma paramaá¹ mama). Here the same fact is stated: yato nÄvartate pumÄn. Any person who goes back home, back to Godhead, does not return to this material world.