तथा प्रजापतिर्त्रह्मा अव्यक्त: प्रभुरव्यय: । येनेदं निखिल विश्व जनितं स्थावरं चरम्
tathā prajāpatis brahmā avyaktas prabhur avyayaḥ | yenedaṃ nikhilaṃ viśvaṃ janitaṃ sthāvaraṃ caram ||
उसी प्रकार प्रजापति ब्रह्मा—जो अव्यक्तस्वरूप, प्रभु और अविनाशी हैं—जिनसे यह समस्त स्थावर-जंगम जगत् उत्पन्न हुआ, वे भी ब्राह्मण ही माने जाते हैं।
अजुन उवाच
The verse elevates the idea of “brāhmaṇa” beyond mere birth by associating it with primordial, cosmic principles: even Brahmā—the unmanifest, imperishable lord who generates all beings—falls under the brāhmaṇa category, implying that brāhmaṇa-hood is tied to supreme creative/knowledge-bearing status and foundational dharmic authority.
Arjuna is speaking within Anuśāsana Parva’s discourse on dharma and social-religious categories. He cites Brahmā’s cosmic role—creating the entire moving and unmoving universe—to support a point about the exalted status and defining characteristics of the brāhmaṇa.