It is necessary that everyone, for his own interest, know the science
of Kṛṣṇa. Therefore, when Kṛṣṇa Himself speaks about Himself, it is
auspicious for all the worlds. To the demons, such explanations by Kṛṣṇa
Himself may appear to be strange because the demons always study Kṛṣṇa
from their own standpoint, but those who are devotees heartily welcome
the statements of Kṛṣṇa when they are spoken by Kṛṣṇa Himself. The
devotees will always worship such authoritative statements of Kṛṣṇa
because they are always eager to know more and more about Him. The
atheists, who consider Kṛṣṇa an ordinary man, may in this way come to
know that Kṛṣṇa is superhuman, that He is sac-cid-ānanda-vigraha (Bs.
5.1)—the eternal form of bliss and knowledge—that He is transcendental,
and that He is above the domination of the modes of material nature and
above the influence of time and space. A devotee of Kṛṣṇa, like Arjuna,
is undoubtedly above any misunderstanding of the transcendental position
of Kṛṣṇa. Arjuna's putting this question before the Lord is simply an
attempt by the devotee to defy the atheistic attitude of persons who
consider Kṛṣṇa to be an ordinary human being, subject to the modes of
material nature.
(BHAGAVAD-GITA------4:4------PURPORT).
One should not be misled by misconceptions of "I" and "mine." The
karmīs are fond of the conception of "mine," the jñānīs are fond of the
conception of "I," and both of them are unqualified to be free from the
bondage of the illusory energy. Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam and, primarily, the
Bhagavad-gītā are both meant for delivering a person from the
misconception of "I" and "mine," and Śrīla Vyāsadeva transcribed them
for the deliverance of the fallen souls. The living entity has to be
situated in the transcendental position where there is no more influence
of time nor of the material energy. In conditioned life the living
entity is subjected to the influence of time in the dream of past,
present and future. The mental speculator tries to conquer the influence
of time by future speculations of becoming Vāsudeva or the Supreme Lord
himself by means of culturing knowledge and conquering over ego. But
the process is not perfect. The perfect process is to accept Lord
Vāsudeva as the Supreme in everything, and the best perfection in
culturing knowledge is to surrender unto Him because He is the source of
everything. Only in that conception can one get rid of the
misconception of I and mine.
(SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM---------2:9:3------PURPORT).
Once one is fixed in the devotional service of the Lord, his position
of transcendental service cannot be destroyed, and the pleasure and
service simply increase unlimitedly. For the devotees engaged in Kṛṣṇa
consciousness, in the Vaikuṇṭha atmosphere, there is no influence of
time. In the material world the influence of time destroys everything,
but in the Vaikuṇṭha atmosphere there is no influence of time or of the
demigods because there are no demigods in the Vaikuṇṭha planets. Here
our activities are controlled by different demigods; even if we move our
hand and leg, the action is controlled by the demigods. But in the
Vaikuṇṭha atmosphere there is no influence of the demigods or of time;
therefore there is no question of destruction. When the time element is
present, there is the certainty of destruction, but when there is no
time element—past, present or future—then everything is eternal.
(SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM---------2:25:38------PURPORT).
The unmanifested forces of time are so powerful that they reduce all
matter to oblivion in due course. In Kali-yuga, the last millennium of a
round of four millenniums, the power of all material objects
deteriorates by the influence of time. In this age the duration of the
material body of the people in general is much reduced, and so is the
memory. The action of matter has also not so much incentive. The land
does not produce food grains in the same proportions as it did in other
ages. The cow does not give as much milk as it used to give formerly.
The production of vegetables and fruits is less than before. As such,
all living beings, both men and animals, do not have sumptuous,
nourishing food. Due to want of so many necessities of life, naturally
the duration of life is reduced, the memory is short, intelligence is
meager, mutual dealings are full of hypocrisy and so on.
(SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM---------1:4:17-18-------PURPORT).
The Supreme Lord is Śrī Kṛṣṇa, as confirmed in Bhagavad-gītā,
Brahma-saṁhitā and other authorized Vedic literatures. No one is equal
to or greater than Him, and that is the verdict of all scriptures. The
influence of time and space is exerted upon the dependent living
entities, who are all parts and parcels of the Supreme Lord. The living
entities are predominated Brahman, whereas the Supreme Lord is the
predominating Absolute. As soon as we forget this clear fact, we are at
once in illusion, and thus we are put into threefold miseries, as one is
put into dense darkness. The clear consciousness of the cognizant
living being is God consciousness, in which one bows down unto Him in
all circumstances.
(SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM---------1:11:16-------PURPORT).
During the political upsurge in India and its division into Pakistan
and Hindustan, so many rich and influential Indians had to surrender
life, property and honor due to the influence of time, and there are
hundreds and thousands of examples like that all over the world, all
over the universe, which are all effects of the influence of time.
Therefore, the conclusion is that there is no powerful living being
within the universe who can overcome the influence of time. Many poets
have written verses lamenting the influence of time. Many devastations
have taken place over the universes due to the influence of time, and no
one could check them by any means. Even in our daily life, so many
things come and go in which we have no hand, but we have to suffer or
tolerate them without remedial measure. That is the result of time.
(SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM---------1:13:20-------PURPORT).
Devastating time, which controls even the celestial demigods by its
manifestations of past, present and future, does not act on the
transcendental plane. The influence of time is exhibited by the symptoms
of birth, death, old age and disease, and these four principles of
material conditions are present everywhere in any part of the material
cosmos up to the planet Brahmaloka, where the duration of life of the
inhabitants appears to us to be fabulous. Insurmountable time even
brings about the death of Brahmā, so what to speak of other demigods
like Indra, Candra, Sūrya, Vāyu and Varuṇa? The astronomical influence
directed by the different demigods over mundane creatures is also
conspicuous by its absence.
(SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM---------2:2:17-------PURPORT).
According to Śrīla Jīva Gosvāmī, this Brahmaloka is the loka or abode
of Brahman, or the Supreme Lord. In the spiritual sky all the planets
are as good as the Lord Himself. The Lord is all spirit, and His name,
fame, glories, qualities, pastimes, etc., are all nondifferent from Him
because He is absolute. As such, the planets in the kingdom of God are
also nondifferent from Him. In those planets there is no difference
between the body and the soul, nor is there any influence of time as we
experience it in the material world. And in addition to there being no
influence of time, the planets in, Brahmaloka, due to being spiritual,
are never annihilated. All variegatedness in the spiritual planets is
also one with the Lord, and therefore the Vedic aphorism ekam
evādvitīyam is fully realized in that sanātana atmosphere of spiritual
variegatedness. This material world is only a shadow phantasmagoria of
the spiritual kingdom of the Lord, and because it is a shadow it is
never eternal; the variegatedness in the material world of duality
(spirit and matter) cannot be compared to that of the spiritual world.
(SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM---------2:5:39-------PURPORT).
In the material world there is always anxiety or fearfulness in the
hearts of all living entities, but the Lord, being Himself the supreme
fearless, also awards the same quality of fearlessness to His pure
devotees. Mundane existence is itself a kind of fear because in all
mundane bodies the effects of birth, death, old age and disease always
keep a living being compact in fear. In the mundane world, there is
always the influence of time, which changes things from one stage to
another, and the living entity, originally being avikāra, or
unchangeable, suffers a great deal on account of changes due to the
influence of time. The changing effects of eternal time are
conspicuously absent in the immortal kingdom of God, which should
therefore be understood to have no influence of time and therefore no
fear whatsoever. In the material world, so-called happiness is the
result of one's own work. One can become a rich man by dint of one's own
hard labor, and there are always fear and doubts as to the duration of
such acquired happiness. But in the kingdom of God, no one has to
endeavor to attain a standard of happiness. Happiness is the nature of
the spirit, as stated in the Vedānta-sūtras: ānandamayo 'bhyāsāt—the
spirit is by nature full of happiness. Happiness in spiritual nature
always increases in volume with a new phase of appreciation; there is no
question of decreasing the bliss.
(SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM---------2:6:18-------PURPORT).
In the transcendental realm there is no creation and no destruction,
and thus the duration of life is eternal unlimitedly. In other words,
everything in the transcendental world is everlasting, full of knowledge
and bliss without deterioration. Since there is no deterioration, there
is no past, present and future in the estimation of time. It is clearly
stated in this verse that the influence of time is conspicuous by its
absence. The whole material existence is manifested by actions and
reactions of elements which make the influence of time prominent in the
matter of past, present and future. There are no such actions and
reactions of cause and effects there, so the cycle of birth, growth,
existence, transformations, deterioration and annihilation—the six
material changes—are not existent there. It is the unalloyed
manifestation of the energy of the Lord, without illusion as experienced
here in the material world. The whole Vaikuṇṭha existence proclaims
that everyone there is a follower of the Lord.
(SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM---------2:9:10-------PURPORT).
The ingredients of matter are counted as twenty-three: the total
material energy, false ego, sound, touch, form, taste, smell, earth,
water, fire, air, sky, eye, ear, nose, tongue, skin, hand, leg,
evacuating organ, genitals, speech and mind. All are combined together
by the influence of time and are again dissolved in the course of time.
Time, therefore, is the energy of the Lord and acts in her own way by
the direction of the Lord. This energy is called Kālī and is represented
by the dark destructive goddess generally worshiped by persons
influenced by the mode of darkness or ignorance in material existence.
In the Vedic hymn this process is described as mūla-prakṛtir avikṛtir
mahadādyāḥ prakṛti-vikṛtayaḥ sapta ṣoḍaśakas tu vikāro na prakṛtir na
vikṛtiḥ puruṣaḥ. The energy which acts as material nature in a
combination of twenty-three ingredients is not the final source of
creation. The Lord enters into the elements and applies His energy,
called Kālī. In all other Vedic scriptures the same principle is
accepted.
(SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM---------3:6:2-------PURPORT).
The only way to understand the Lord as He is, is by devotional
service to the Lord, or by approaching the devotee of the Lord who
always has the Lord in his heart. By devotional perfection one can
understand that the impersonal brahmajyoti is only a partial
representation of the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Lord Kṛṣṇa, and
that the three puruṣa expansions in the material creation are His
plenary portions. In the spiritual sky of the brahmajyoti there is no
change of various kalpas or millenniums, and there are no creative
activities in the Vaikuṇṭha worlds. The influence of time is conspicuous
by its absence. The rays of the transcendental body of the Lord, the
unlimited brahmajyoti, are undeterred by the influence of material
energy. In the material world also, the initial creator is the Lord
Himself. He brings about the creation of Brahmā, who becomes the
subsequent creator, empowered by the Lord.
(SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM---------3:9:3-------PURPORT).
Everyone is conscious of the last stage of life, when he will meet
the cruel hands of death, but some consider their age and circumstances,
concern themselves with the influence of time and thus engage in pious
activities so that in the future they will not be put into a low family
or an animal species. Generally, people are attached to sense enjoyment
and so aspire for life on the heavenly planets. Therefore, they engage
themselves in charitable or other pious activities, but actually, as
stated in Bhagavad-gītā, one cannot get relief from the chain of birth
and death even if he goes to the highest planet, Brahmaloka, because the
influence of time is present everywhere within this material world. In
the spiritual world, however, the time factor has no influence.
(SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM---------3:29:4-------PURPORT).
Everyone is afraid of the activities of time, but a devotee who knows
that the time factor is another representation or manifestation of the
Supreme Personality of Godhead has nothing to fear from the influence of
time. The phrase rūpa-bhedāspadam is very significant. By the influence
of time, so many forms are changing. For example, when a child is born
his form is small, but in the course of time that form changes into a
larger form, the body of a boy, and then the body of a young man.
Similarly, everything is changed and transformed by the time factor, or
by the indirect control of the Supreme Personality of Godhead. Usually,
we do not see any difference between the body of a child and the body of
a boy or young man because we know that these changes are due to the
action of the time factor. There is cause for fear for a person who does
not know how time acts.
(SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM---------3:29:37-------PURPORT).
One cannot calculate the amount of loss there is in wasting valuable
time. Either materially or spiritually, one should be very alert in
utilizing the time which he has at his disposal. A conditioned soul
lives in a particular body for a fixed measurement of time, and it is
recommended in the scriptures that within that small measurement of time
one has to finish Kṛṣṇa consciousness and thus gain release from the
influence of the time factor. But, unfortunately, those who are not in
Kṛṣṇa consciousness are carried away by the strong power of time without
their knowledge, as clouds are carried by the wind.
(SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM---------3:30:1-------PURPORT).

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