Vows of Hari and the Hundred Names of Suputra (Viṣṇu/Kṛṣṇa): Ritual Metadata and Fruits of Japa
मुरारिं लोकपालं तं पद्महस्तं गदाधरम् । गुहावासं सर्ववासं पुण्यवासं महाभुजम्
murāriṃ lokapālaṃ taṃ padmahastaṃ gadādharam | guhāvāsaṃ sarvavāsaṃ puṇyavāsaṃ mahābhujam
মই সেই মুৰাৰীক বন্দনা কৰোঁ—লোকপালক—যাৰ হাতত পদ্ম আৰু যি গদা ধাৰণ কৰে; যি হৃদয়-গুহাত বাস কৰে, সকলোৰে আশ্ৰয়, পুণ্যময় নিবাস আৰু মহাবাহু প্ৰভু।
Unspecified in the provided excerpt (likely part of a devotional praise/description within the chapter).
Concept: Murāri is both cosmic guardian and intimate indweller—lotus-handed, mace-bearing—simultaneously transcendent protector and immanent abode of all.
Application: Worship with a twofold vision: see the Lord in the temple icon and also remember him within the heart; cultivate protective dharma (gādā) and purity (padma) in conduct.
Primary Rasa: bhakti (shanta)
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: forest
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"Murāri stands at the threshold of a luminous heart-cave: one hand holding a fresh lotus, the other resting on the mighty mace, as if guarding the worlds from within the devotee’s own chest. The cave walls shimmer with subtle mantra-etchings, and a tiny universe—sun, moon, and directions—appears reflected in his aura.","primary_figures":["Vishnu (Murari)"],"setting":"A mystical heart-cave sanctum blending temple-garbha-gṛha and inner meditation space.","lighting_mood":"temple lamp-lit","color_palette":["deep indigo","lamp-flame amber","lotus pink","bronze gold","pearl white"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Murari in classic South Indian iconography, padma in one hand and gadā in the other, standing within a stylized cave-garbha-gṛha; heavy gold-leaf halo, embossed arch (prabhāvali), rich maroon and green drapery, gem-like highlights on ornaments, miniature lokapāla symbols in the border.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: Vishnu as a gentle guardian at a cave entrance, lotus and mace rendered with delicate brushwork; soft chiaroscuro inside the cave, faint script-like patterns on rock, cool blues and warm ochres, refined serene face, minimal gold accents.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold outlined Murari with large eyes, lotus and mace prominent, set inside a cave-temple hybrid with ornamental creepers; strong reds, yellows, greens, and blue body tone; symmetrical composition with decorative borders and lamp motifs.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central Murari framed by an ornate arch of lotuses; repeating lotus motifs echoing ‘padmahasta’, golden mace motif as a vertical axis; deep blue background with gold floral borders, peacocks at corners, temple-lamp patterns around the heart-cave."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"devotional","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"reverent-soft","sound_elements":["temple bells","conch shell","soft mridangam pulse","low humming drone"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: समासपदानि; ‘मुरारिम्’ = मुरा+अरि (षष्ठी-तत्पुरुष)।
Murāri is a well-known epithet of Viṣṇu, meaning the slayer of the demon Mura, and is used here to praise Him as the cosmic protector.
It can be read literally as ‘cave-dwelling’ in sacred imagery, and also figuratively as the Lord dwelling in the ‘cave of the heart’ (the inner secret place of awareness).
It emphasizes a Vaiṣṇava devotional vision of Viṣṇu as both transcendent (protector of worlds) and immanent (abode of all; dwelling within), approached through reverent praise.