Kāla-vibhāga: The Divisions of Time from Atom to Brahmā, and the Lord Beyond Time
य: सृज्यशक्तिमुरुधोच्छ्वसयन् स्वशक्त्या पुंसोऽभ्रमाय दिवि धावति भूतभेद: । कालाख्यया गुणमयं क्रतुभिर्वितन्वं- स्तस्मै बलिं हरत वत्सरपञ्चकाय ॥ १५ ॥
yaḥ sṛjya-śaktim urudhocchvasayan sva-śaktyā puṁso ’bhramāya divi dhāvati bhūta-bhedaḥ kālākhyayā guṇamayaṁ kratubhir vitanvaṁs tasmai baliṁ harata vatsara-pañcakāya
O Vidura, the sun enlivens all beings by his boundless heat and light. To free them from the delusion of material attachment, he diminishes the span of their lives, and by sacrifices and sacred rites he broadens the path of ascent to the heavenly realms. Therefore, to that sun—who moves through the firmament with great speed as the form of kāla—one should offer reverence and arghya-bali with all articles of worship once every five years.
This verse describes Time as the Lord’s own potency that drives creation and manifests the guṇa-based material world, moving beings through cosmic order while bewildering the conditioned soul.
In Canto 3, Chapter 11, Śukadeva explains the structure of time to show how the universe runs under divine control; he links it with sacrifice because ritual action operates within the guṇas and time’s divisions.
Recognize time as God’s governing energy, become less illusioned by constant change, and align one’s actions with devotion rather than mere guṇa-driven achievement.