The Hidden Hierarchy: Who Spoke the Gita and Who are the Parents of the Trinity?
Most seekers believe that the Bhagavad Gita was spoken by Shri Krishna and that Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva are the ultimate, unborn powers of the universe. However, the Introduction to the Gita reveals a much deeper, hidden hierarchy. By looking at the original Sanskrit and cross-referencing the Puranas, we find that there is a "Master of the 21 Universes" who sits above the Trinity, yet below the Supreme God.
I. The Evidence: Did Krishna Speak the Gita?
While Shri Krishna’s body was used as the medium, the individual speaking was Kaal Brahm. The proof is in the text itself:
- Memory Check (Gita 4.5): The speaker tells Arjuna, "You and I have passed through many births. I know them all, but you do not." Shri Krishna, as an avatar of Vishnu, is subject to birth and death within this realm.
- The Admission (Gita 11.32): When the terrifying Virat Roop appears, the speaker explicitly says, "I am Kaal." 3. The Request for Peace (Gita 18.62): The speaker tells Arjuna to go into the refuge of "Another" (Tam eva sharanam gachchh). If the speaker were the Supreme God, he would have said, "Stay in my refuge."
II. The Birth of the Trinity: Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva
One of the most common "Lokved" (folk myths) is that Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva are "Ajanma" (unborn). However, the Srimad Devi Bhagwat Puran and Shiva Purana tell a different story.
- The Parents: Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva are the sons of Kaal Brahm (Jyoti Niranjan) and Goddess Durga (Ashtangi).
- The Proof (Devi Bhagwat Puran, 3rd Skand, Page 123): Lord Vishnu explicitly tells his mother Durga, "O Mother! You are the one who gave birth to me, Brahma, and Shiva. We are not eternal; we are subject to birth and death."
- The Function: They are appointed "Departmental Heads" of one universe. Brahma handles Creation, Vishnu handles Preservation, and Shiva handles Destruction—all under the hidden direction of their father, Kaal.
III. The "Vraj" Translation Scandal (Gita 18.66)
The introduction to your site highlights a massive error in popular translations like those from the Bhaktivedanta Book Trust (ISKCON).
- The Sanskrit Word: Vraj.
- The Common Translation: "Come to Me."
- The Authentic Translation: "Go."
In Gita 18.66, the speaker tells Arjuna to leave all other religious duties and "Go" into the refuge of that Supreme Almighty. By translating "Go" as "Come," many gurus have accidentally (or intentionally) pointed seekers toward the "Warden" (Kaal) instead of the "King" (Kabir).
IV. Why This Matters for Your Salvation
Understanding the hierarchy is like knowing the difference between a Police Officer, a Jailer, and the President.
- Brahma, Vishnu, Shiva: The Police/Officers (Local administration).
- Kaal Brahm: The Jailer (Ruler of the 21 universes).
- KavirDev (God Kabir): The President (The only one who can grant a pardon and take you out of the prison).
If you worship the Jailer, you remain in the jail. To attain Moksha (complete liberation), you must worship the one who created the Jailer.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
1. Why did Kaal hide the truth about his parents?
Kaal Brahm wants souls to remain in his 21 universes so he can fulfill his curse of eating 1 lakh souls daily. If people knew he was a subordinate to a higher God, they would stop worshipping him and leave his territory.
2. Where is it written that Kaal is the father of the Trinity?
It is detailed in the Kabir Sagar and corroborated by the Shiva Purana, where it mentions that the "Unmanifest" (Brahm) and "Prakriti" (Durga) united to produce the three sons.
3. Is Shri Krishna "Bad"?
Absolutely not. Shri Krishna was a noble soul and a great king. The "trap" is not Krishna; the trap is the misunderstanding that the entity speaking through him was the highest power.