Sanatkumāra’s Bhāgavata Tantra: Tattvas, Māyā-Bonds, Embodiment, and the Necessity of Dīkṣā
पक्षमासादिकालेन वर्धते वपुरत्र हि । दुःखाद्यः पीडितश्चैवाच्छन्नदेहो जरायुणा ॥ ९९ ॥
pakṣamāsādikālena vardhate vapuratra hi | duḥkhādyaḥ pīḍitaścaivācchannadeho jarāyuṇā || 99 ||
Wahrlich, in diesem Zustand wächst der Körper mit dem Ablauf der Zeit — nach Halbmonden, Monaten und so weiter; und das verkörperte Wesen wird von Schmerz und dergleichen gequält, während sein Leib von der fetalen Hülle (jarāyu) umschlossen ist.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a didactic dialogue)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It highlights the embodied soul’s helplessness and suffering even before birth, urging dispassion toward the body and a turn toward dharma and liberation-oriented practice.
By showing the body as a seat of unavoidable pain and limitation, it supports the bhakti impulse to seek refuge beyond the body—ultimately in the Lord—rather than relying on physical existence for lasting fulfillment.
It uses traditional time-units (pakṣa, māsa) and observational description of bodily development—an applied, technical framing consistent with Vedāṅga-style precision in measuring time and describing physiological stages.