In Bhagavad Gita Chapter 8, Verses 18–21, the Giver of the Gita (Kaal Brahm) explains the staggering scale of time and the hierarchy of the "Hidden" (Avyakt) Gods. Most translations confuse the "Day of Brahma" with the "Day of ParBrahm," but this explanation clarifies that the scale of destruction is much higher.
The Core Information: At the beginning of the Day of ParBrahm (Akshar Purush), all living beings emerge into a manifest state from the Unmanifest (Avyakt). When the Night of ParBrahm arrives, they merge back into that same Unmanifest.
The Core Information: Beyond the first Unmanifest (Kaal), there is another Eternal Unmanifest Being who does not perish even when the first Avyakt's realm is destroyed at the end of ParBrahm's day.
The Core Information: The Gita identifies a Third Avyakt who is superior to both the first and the second. This is the "Supreme State" (Param Gati).
| Level | Gita Context | Life/Cycle Scale | Destiny of Soul |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1st Avyakt | Kaal Brahm | Merges into Unmanifest during Night of ParBrahm. | Rebirth after the "Night" ends. |
| 2nd Avyakt | Akshar Purush | Survives the Night of ParBrahm; perishes at Mahapralaya. | Stays in 700 quadrillion universes (temporary). |
| 3rd Avyakt | Purna Brahm | Absolutely Eternal; No beginning or end. | Permanent Salvation (Satlok). |
The Giver of the Gita (the 1st Avyakt) warns that those who worship the "Manifest" (visible deities) or the "1st Unmanifest" (Kaal) remain trapped in the cycle of birth-death.
To achieve complete liberation, one must look beyond and find the Third Avyakt (KavirDev) through the guidance of a Tattvadarshi Saint. This is the core message of Chapter 8: moving from the perishable to the Truly Imperishable.