When Arjuna saw the Virat Roop, he felt he was seeing everything that exists. However, the speaker was only showing the extent of his own personal "Field" (Kshetra). This field consists of 21 universes, a massive but finite prison designed to keep souls away from their true home, Satlok.
The Virat Roop is essentially the "Physical Body" of Kaal Brahm (also known as Jyoti Niranjan). Just as your soul pervades your body, Kaal’s energy pervades these 21 universes.
In Tattvagyan, the number 21 represents the jurisdiction of the "Negative Power" (Kaal).
Arjuna described the Virat Roop as having the radiance of "a thousand suns." While this sounds beautiful, it actually serves a restrictive purpose:
| Feature | The Virat Realm (Kaal) | The Eternal Realm (Satlok) |
|---|---|---|
| Size | 21 Universes. | Infinite (Incalculable). |
| Duration | Perishable (Dissolves in Pralaya). | Everlasting (Amrit). |
| Light | Blinding, Scorching (11.19). | Cool, Soothing Divine Light. |
| Governance | Law of Karma (Justice/Fear). | Law of Grace (Mercy/Love). |
| Form | Gargantuan/Terrifying. | Human-like/Beautiful (Satpurush). |
To a fish in a massive tank, the tank is "limitless." Arjuna had never seen anything beyond the 3 worlds. Seeing the full 21-universe expansion of the Manager of this system was enough to make him believe he was seeing the Absolute.
Yes. That is the entire purpose of the Tattvadarshi Saint mentioned in Gita 4.34. The Saint provides the "Mantra" (the secret code) that allows the soul to pass through the boundaries of the 21st universe and enter the realm of the Supreme God.
Kaal Brahm received these universes as a "fiefdom" or territory from the Supreme God Kabir, but because of his ego, he manages them as a prison rather than a playground.