Nārāyaṇa’s Impartiality, Absorption in Kṛṣṇa, and the Jaya–Vijaya Descent
Prelude to Prahlāda’s History
यदा सिसृक्षु: पुर आत्मन: परो रज: सृजत्येष पृथक् स्वमायया । सत्त्वं विचित्रासु रिरंसुरीश्वर: शयिष्यमाणस्तम ईरयत्यसौ ॥ १० ॥
yadā sisṛkṣuḥ pura ātmanaḥ paro rajaḥ sṛjaty eṣa pṛthak sva-māyayā sattvaṁ vicitrāsu riraṁsur īśvaraḥ śayiṣyamāṇas tama īrayaty asau
ເມື່ອພຣະເຈົ້າສູງສຸດປາດຖະນາຈະສ້າງ ພຣະອົງໃຊ້ມາຍາຂອງພຣະອົງກະຕຸ້ນຣະໂຈຄຸນ ແລະສ້າງຮ່າງກາຍຫຼາກຫຼາຍ. ຈາກນັ້ນເປັນປະຣະມາດມາ ພຣະອົງເຂົ້າໄປໃນແຕ່ລະຮ່າງ ໃຊ້ສັດຕະວະເພື່ອຮັກສາ ຣະຈັສເພື່ອສ້າງ ແລະຕະມັສເພື່ອທຳລາຍ.
Although material nature is conducted by the three qualities — sattva-guṇa, rajo-guṇa and tamo-guṇa — nature is not independent. As the Lord says in Bhagavad-gītā (9.10) :
This verse explains that the Supreme Lord, by His own māyā, initiates creation by projecting rajas, sustains and diversifies experience through sattva, and brings dissolution by impelling tamas.
In Canto 7, Chapter 1, Śukadeva answers questions about the Lord’s impartiality and governance by showing how the Lord orchestrates cosmic functions through the guṇas without being bound by them.
Recognize how passion drives activity, goodness supports clarity and harmony, and ignorance leads to inertia; then cultivate sattva through disciplined living and devotion, remembering the Lord as the ultimate controller beyond all guṇas.