Diti’s Puṁsavana Vow, Indra’s Intervention, and the Birth of the Maruts
तत्कर्मगुणवीर्याणि काश्यपस्य महात्मन: । पश्चाद्वक्ष्यामहेऽदित्यां यथैवावततार ह ॥ ९ ॥
tat-karma-guṇa-vīryāṇi kāśyapasya mahātmanaḥ paścād vakṣyāmahe ’dityāṁ yathaivāvatatāra ha
Más adelante (en el Canto Octavo del Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam) describiremos cómo Urukrama, el Señor Vāmanadeva, descendió como hijo del gran sabio Kaśyapa desde el vientre de Aditi, cómo cubrió los tres mundos con tres pasos, y cuáles fueron Sus actos extraordinarios, Sus cualidades y Su poder.
This verse signals the Bhagavatam’s method of presenting exalted figures—by their deeds (karma), qualities (guṇa), and spiritual/heroic potency (vīrya)—before detailing their role in the unfolding divine history.
He is transitioning the narrative: after the immediate events, he will explain Kaśyapa’s significance and how his connection with Aditi becomes important to the next developments involving the devas.
Evaluate leaders and teachers by consistent actions, character, and inner strength—not merely by claims—aligning one’s trust and learning with proven virtue and integrity.