Matsya Purana — Brahmā’s Four Faces
*मत्स्य उवाच तपश् चचार प्रथमम् अमराणां पितामहः आविभूतास् तथा वेदाः साङ्गोपाङ्गपदक्रमाः //
*matsya uvāca tapaś cacāra prathamam amarāṇāṃ pitāmahaḥ āvibhūtās tathā vedāḥ sāṅgopāṅgapadakramāḥ //
قال الربّ ماتسيا: في البدء قام جدُّ الخالدين براهما (Brahmā) أولًا بممارسة «تَبَس» (tapas، الزهد والرياضة الروحية)؛ ثم تجلّت الفيدات—مع أعضائها وعلومها المساندة، ومع ترتيب الألفاظ ونظام التلاوة على وجهه المقرّر.
It highlights a creation principle: after Brahmā’s tapas (creative austerity), the Vedas manifest in an ordered form—implying that cosmic order begins with disciplined, revelatory knowledge rather than randomness.
By grounding dharma in revealed Vedic knowledge “with limbs and subsidiary disciplines,” the verse implies that righteous governance and household life should be guided by properly transmitted Vedic tradition—study, correct recitation, and reliance on the auxiliary sciences that clarify practice.
Ritually, it stresses correct Vedic transmission—padakrama (word-order recitation) and the sāṅgopāṅga framework—foundational for accurate mantra use in yajña and later śāstras (including Vāstu and temple rites) that depend on Vedic authority.