Transmission of Bhāgavata Wisdom and Brahmā’s Vision of the Supreme Lord on Ananta
निवीतमाम्नायमधुव्रतश्रिया स्वकीर्तिमय्या वनमालया हरिम् । सूर्येन्दुवाय्वग्न्यगमं त्रिधामभि: परिक्रमत्प्राधनिकैर्दुरासदम् ॥ ३१ ॥
nivītam āmnāya-madhu-vrata-śriyā sva-kīrti-mayyā vana-mālayā harim sūryendu-vāyv-agny-agamaṁ tri-dhāmabhiḥ parikramat-prādhanikair durāsadam
Seeing the Lord in a mountainlike form, Brahmā concluded that He was Hari, the Supreme Personality of Godhead. The garland upon His chest, radiant with beauty, sang His glory in sweet strains of Vedic wisdom. Guarded by the Sudarśana disc, even the sun, moon, wind, fire, and the rest could not approach Him.
This verse depicts cosmic rulers like the sun, moon, wind, and fire circumambulating Hari, showing that even the highest administrators honor and worship the Supreme Lord as their source and master.
Because those influenced by pradhāna—material nature and its modes—cannot easily perceive or reach Him through material power or intellect; He is approached through devotion and grace.
It encourages prioritizing bhakti and humility: even great powers revolve around the Divine, so a seeker should cultivate devotion, remembrance, and reverence rather than relying only on material achievement.