Bhagavad-gītā As it Is << 10 - The Opulence of the Absolute >>
<< VERSE 21 >>
आदित्यानाम अहं विष्णुर जयॊतिषां रविर अंशुमान मरीचिर मरुताम अस्मि नक्षत्राणाम अहं शशी
ādityānām ahaṁ viṣṇur jyotiṣāṁ ravir aṁśumān marīcir marutām asmi nakṣatrāṇām ahaṁ śaśī
WORD BY WORD
ādityānām of the Ādityas; aham I am; viṣṇuḥ the Supreme Lord; jyotiṣām of all luminaries; raviḥ the sun; aṁśu-mān radiant; marīciḥ Marīci; marutām of the Maruts; asmi I am; nakṣatrāṇām of the stars; aham I am; śaśī the moon;
TRANSLATION
| Of the Ādityas I am Viṣṇu, of lights I am the radiant sun, of the Maruts I am Marīci, and among the stars I am the moon.
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PURPORT
| There are twelve Ādityas, of which Kṛṣṇa is the principal. Among all the luminaries shining in the sky, the sun is the chief, and in the Brahma-saṁhitā the sun is accepted as the glowing eye of the Supreme Lord. There are fifty varieties of wind blowing in space, and of these winds the controlling deity, Marīci, represents Kṛṣṇa.
| | Among the stars, the moon is the most prominent at night, and thus the moon represents Kṛṣṇa. It appears from this verse that the moon is one of the stars; therefore the stars that twinkle in the sky also reflect the light of the sun. The theory that there are many suns within the universe is not accepted by Vedic literature. The sun is one, and as by the reflection of the sun the moon illuminates, so also do the stars. Since Bhagavad-gītā indicates herein that the moon is one of the stars, the twinkling stars are not suns but are similar to the moon.
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