प्रह्लादस्य अव्यभिचारिणी भक्ति, मायाविनाशः, तथा विष्णोः विश्वरूप-स्तुतिः
सर्वभूतात्मके तात जगन्नाथे जगन्मये परमात्मनि गोविन्दे मित्रामित्रकथा कुतः
sarvabhūtātmake tāta jagannāthe jaganmaye paramātmani govinde mitrāmitrakathā kutaḥ
হে প্রিয়, গোবিন্দ—পরমাত্মা, জগন্নাথ, জগতের সর্বব্যাপী সার—যখন সকল জীবের আত্মা, তখন ‘মিত্র’ ও ‘শত্রু’র কথা কোথায় থাকে?
Sage Parāśara (teaching Maitreya)
Because Govinda is declared the Self of all beings, the verse frames social oppositions like friend/foe as products of limited perception rather than ultimate truth.
He points to Vishnu as Jagannātha and Paramātman—both transcendent and immanent—so recognizing Him in all beings naturally dissolves divisive categories.
Vishnu (Govinda) is presented as the Supreme Reality pervading the cosmos; this supports a Vaishnava metaphysics where devotion and wisdom lead to equanimity and universal regard.