Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 10, Chapter 14, Text 40

SB 10.14.40

sri-krsna vrsni-kula-puskara-josa-dayin
 ksma-nirjara-dvija-pasudadhi-vrddhi-karin
uddharma-sarvara-hara ksiti-raksasa-dhrug
 a-kalpam arkam arhan bhagavan namas te
 
Translation: 
 
My dear Sri Krsna, You bestow happiness upon the lotuslike Vrsni dynasty and expand the great oceans consisting of the earth, the demigods, the brahmanas and the cows. You dispel the dense darkness of irreligion and oppose the demons who have appeared on this earth. O Supreme Personality of Godhead, as long as this universe exists and as long as the sun shines, I will offer my obeisances unto You.
 
Purport: 
 
According to Srila Sanatana Gosvami, Lord Brahma is here engaged in the ecstasy of nama-sankirtana, glorifying various holy names of Lord Krsna that indicate His variegated pastimes. Lord Krsna expertly suppressed the demoniac population of the earth, which became unbearable with the advent of demoniac politicians like Kamsa, Jarasandha and Sisupala. Similarly, in modern society there are many so-called God-fearing people who are actually attracted to demoniac existence. Such persons become enlivened with the setting of the sun and go out in the darkness to enjoy life in restaurants, nightclubs, discotheques, hotels and so on, which are all simply meant for illicit sex, intoxication, gambling and meat-eating. Then there are those who openly defy God and His laws, declaring themselves atheists and demons. Both the covert and the overt enemies of the Lord constitute an unholy burden for the earth, and Lord Krsna descends to expertly remove this burden.
 
Here Lord Brahma indirectly states that Lord Krsna should remove Brahma’s own subtle atheism, which had led him to try to exert illusory power over Lord Krsna. According to Srila Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakura, Lord Brahma, in his shame, felt himself to be like a brahma-raksasa from Satyaloka who had come to the earth to disturb Lord Krsna and His intimate friends and calves. Brahma is lamenting that although Lord Krsna is most exalted, the Lord of all lords, because He had appeared before Brahma in such a simple and innocent feature — decorated with a stick, a conchshell, ornaments, red clay, a peacock feather and so on, and sporting with His cowherd boyfriends — Brahma dared to challenge Him. Concerning Brahma’s prayers, of which this verse is the conclusion, Srila Visvanatha Cakravarti Thakura states, “May these prayers of Brahma, which take away all doubts and broadcast all the definitive conclusions of devotional service, become the expert craftsmanship of the foundation of my consciousness.”
Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 10, Chapter 14, Text 39
Srimad Bhagavatam Canto 10, Chapter 14, Text 41