Vibhūti-yoga in the Bhāgavata: The Lord’s Manifest Opulences and the Discipline of Control
ब्रह्मर्षीणां भृगुरहं राजर्षीणामहं मनु: । देवर्षीणां नारदोऽहं हविर्धान्यस्मि धेनुषु ॥ १४ ॥
brahmarṣīṇāṁ bhṛgur ahaṁ rājarṣīṇām ahaṁ manuḥ devarṣīṇāṁ nārado ’haṁ havirdhāny asmi dhenuṣu
ブラフマリシの中で我はブリグ、ラージャリシの中で我はマヌである。デーヴァリシの中で我はナーラダ、牛の中で我はカーマデーヌである。
It declares that the Lord is the supreme excellence within each category—Bhṛgu among brahmin sages, Manu among royal sages, Nārada among divine sages, and Havirdhānī among cows—showing His presence as the highest principle in all orders of beings.
In the Uddhava-gītā section, Kṛṣṇa teaches Uddhava how to perceive Him everywhere by recognizing His special manifestations (vibhūtis) in the most eminent personalities and representatives of different classes.
Practice seeing God’s hand in excellence and virtue—honor genuine wisdom, righteous leadership, and saintly devotion, and let that remembrance turn admiration into gratitude, humility, and steadier bhakti.