This passage reads less like a checklist of divine qualities and more like a shift in how we’re meant to see. Guru Gobind Singh begins by loosening the familiar idea that God sits somewhere “over there,” a fixed point or a remote authority. Chattr chakr vartee points to a presence moving through every direction and every circle of existence—political, cosmic, psychological. And chattr chakr bhugatai takes it further: the One doesn’t just rule the circles of life from above; the One lives inside them, holds them, even “tastes” them. In this vision, power shows up as closeness.
The next lines widen that closeness into something almost metaphysical. Suyambhav names a reality that arises from itself—self-existent, self-illumined. Yet that kind of sovereignty doesn’t create distance. Sarabadaa sarab jugatai says this same self-existent One is present in all and threaded through all, the inner way things connect. God becomes the unseen coherence of life, the quiet intelligence that makes relationship possible.
Then the poem turns toward lived experience, especially the hard seasons. Dukaalam pranaasee isn’t only about famine or historical crisis. It also names the inner drought: fear, despair, the time when the mind collapses and meaning dries up. The line praises the One as the end of that season, the breaker of the spell. Immediately after, dayaalam saroopai brings tenderness into focus. Compassion isn’t an afterthought here. Mercy has presence. It takes shape. It enters the world in a recognizable form.
The final pair of lines lands the poem’s central tension in a way that feels deeply human. Sadaa ang sangai says the Divine stays close—limb with limb, breath with breath. That intimacy could sound fragile, as if closeness depends on conditions. Abhangang bibhute corrects that. This presence doesn’t crack under pressure. Even when everything burns down to ash, something remains—bibhuti, sacred residue, power that survives change.
Taken together, the passage offers a theology that refuses easy categories. God fills the world without getting diluted by it. God stays close without becoming breakable. God ends the drought and also arrives as compassion you can feel. Guru Gobind Singh gives us a vision where closeness carries authority, relationship carries eternity, and even ash holds a faint, stubborn light.