Bhagavad Gita Chapter 10 Verse 3 भगवद् गीता अध्याय 10 श्लोक 3 यो मामजमनादिं च वेत्ति लोकमहेश्वरम्। असम्मूढः स मर्त्येषु सर्वपापैः प्रमुच्यते।।10.3।। हिंदी अनुवाद - स्वामी तेजोमयानंद ।।10.3।। जो मुझे अजन्मा? अनादि और लोकों के महान् ईश्वर के रूप में जानता है? र्मत्य मनुष्यों में ऐसा संमोहरहित (ज्ञानी) पुरुष सब पापों से मुक्त हो जाता है।। Kumara Vaishnava Sampradaya - Commentary One who is never born is ajam or without birth. This attribute connotes the Supreme Lord Krishna as contra-distinguished from the transitory insentient matter and the sentient beings bound by samsara or the perpetual cycle of birth and death. The term anadim meaning without beginning differentiates the Supreme Lord from the muktas or liberated beings in the spiritual worlds who although having become birthless did have a beginning at the time of their liberation. The nature of liberation implies being freed from bondage at some time and is thus characterised by previously being associated with the material manifestation and duality. Hence the term anandi denotess that the Supreme Lord never had contact or association with duality and materialism due to the fact that He is transcendental to duality and everything material, The Svetasvatara Upanisad VI.XIX beginning niravadyam meaning the Supreme Lord is perfection, confirms this. it sometime had to be freed from a state of bondage. Thus the spiritually intelligent among mortals are those who realise that the Lord Krishna is the Supreme Lord over all other gods and lords being completely different from them in essence and in substance. The spiritually intelligent also realise that Lord Krishna is the antithesis and eternally contrary to anything associated with evil and unrighteousness. The word asammudhah means those who are not deluded, alluding to the spiritual intelligent which comprises being free from the illusion of perceiving anything as equal to the Supreme Lord, being free from the illusion of believing that anything is separate from the Supreme Lord and being free from the illusion of not identifying oneself as being an eternal, infinitesimal portion of the Supreme Lord. Thus one who is asammudhah is free from the defects and impediments of karma or reactions to sinful actions which is great obstacle in the development of bhakti or loving devotion to the Supreme Lord. Another angle of vision is that as in the world the emperor although the most powerful monarch amongst humans, he still is like all others subject to old age, disease and death. Yet he has been awarded emperor by the Supreme Lord due to some act of merit. This holds true also for Indra the king of all the demigods and even higher with Brahma the architect of the material existence, both were also awarded their posts by the Supreme Lord as a result of great acts of merit. Although they live for millions of years by Earth time calculations for them it is as 100 years and at the end of that time they die also and transmigrate into another form in another existence. Even exalted beings come under the three-fold bhavanas of material existence being karma bhavana like Janaka and others, brahman bhavana like Sanaka and Sanatana and ubhaya bhavana like Brahma himself and are subject to birth and death according to their acts. The Vedic scriptures confirms this. In Vishnu Purana VI.VII.IIL it states that: Therefore they are all accountable for their acts. The Svetasvatara Upanisad VI.VIII states: Yo brahmanan vidadhati meaning He who creates Brahma. This also applies to any mortal who has acquired the eight main siddhis or perfections such as anima or manima etc. But the Supreme Lord is loka-maheshvaram the Supreme Lord of all beings in all worlds. Loka is the total cosmos being the aggregate total of all sentient and non-sentient categories in conditions of inactive latency or active patency. The sentient includes both muktas or liberated beings as well as baddhas or not liberated beings. So all this is under the Supreme Lords control and rule. 1) Maha is greatness and consists of the Supreme Lord being the storehouse of unlimited attributes of glorious qualities and His always being the eternal antithesis of all that is unrighteous, demoniac and evil. 2) Isvarah means Lord as being the supreme, sovereign ruler eternally, independent of all. Thus the Supreme Lord is completely unlike all others, singular unto Himself alone, independent and superior to all. One who does not incur the error of including the Supreme Lord Krishna amongst all the various other lesser gods and who understands Him to be the sole cause, the sole source and the sole origin of all creation, verily realises Him and by His grace is relieved from all reactions to previous actions. Thus by illustrating how meditation on the factual absolute nature of the Supreme Lord removes the obstacles impeding the blossoming of bhakti or loving devotion unto the Supreme Lord causing such bhakti to become inaugurated; Lord Krishna will next explain how bhakti may be activated by deep and profound meditation on His sublime transcendental divine qualities and attributes.