Vīrya, Māyā/Prakṛti, Śrī’s Inseparability, Paramāṇu, and Hari’s Infinitude
तदा हरिर्जगृहे लौकिकं च तमः पानं तेन रूपेण चक्रे / तद्रूपमाहुः प्राकृतं वै तदज्ञा ह्यन्धं तमः प्रविशन्त्येव सर्वे
tadā harirjagṛhe laukikaṃ ca tamaḥ pānaṃ tena rūpeṇa cakre / tadrūpamāhuḥ prākṛtaṃ vai tadajñā hyandhaṃ tamaḥ praviśantyeva sarve
ثم إن هَري تَقبَّلَ—على التعبير الدنيوي—«شُربَ» الظلمة، وبهذه الهيئة اتخذ صورةً توافق ذلك. ويسمّي الجاهلون تلك الصورة «برَاكْرِتَا» (مادّية)؛ حقًّا إن كلَّ غير العارفين يدخلون في ظلامٍ أعمى.
Lord Vishnu (Hari), as narrator/teacher addressing Garuda (Vinata-putra) in the Garuda Purana dialogue frame
Concept: Avidya/tamas causes misapprehension of the Lord’s manifestation as merely material; ignorance leads to deeper darkness.
Vedantic Theme: Avidya and tamas; adhyasa (superimposition) and the descent into moha; need for viveka (discernment).
Application: Avoid reducing the sacred to mere materialism; cultivate sattva through study, devotion, and ethical living to dispel tamas.
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: repeated cautions against tamas and ajnana in cosmological and ethical sections
The verse uses tamas as a symbol of spiritual ignorance: when one mistakes the divine for merely material (prākṛta), one “enters blind darkness,” i.e., deeper delusion rather than liberation.
It implies that wrong understanding (ajñāna) shapes one’s spiritual trajectory: instead of moving toward clarity and release, the soul that clings to material interpretations sinks into andha-tamas, obstructing progress toward mokṣa.
Cultivate right discernment—study, reflection, and devotion—so that spiritual reality is not reduced to mere materialism; this reduces tamasic habits and supports ethical, sattvic living.