Mahāviṣṇu-Mantras: Aṣṭākṣarī, Sudarśana-Astra, Nyāsa Systems, Āvaraṇa-Pūjā, and Prayogas
नारसिंहमिवात्मानं देवं ध्यात्वातिभैरवम् । शश्त्रं संमंत्र्य मंत्रेण शब्रून्हत्वा निवर्तते ॥ ५६ ॥
nārasiṃhamivātmānaṃ devaṃ dhyātvātibhairavam | śaśtraṃ saṃmaṃtrya maṃtreṇa śabrūnhatvā nivartate || 56 ||
Indem man die überaus furchterregende Gottheit als Narasiṃha manifestiert meditiert und die Waffe mit einem Mantra weiht, schlägt man die feindseligen Gegner nieder und zieht sich dann zurück.
Narada (in dialogue context with the Sanatkumara tradition; technical instruction mode)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: raudra
It teaches that victory over fear and opposition is rooted in dhyāna (focused contemplation) on the Lord’s protective, fierce form (Narasiṃha) and in disciplined mantra-application, not mere physical force.
By placing Narasiṃha-dhyāna first, the verse frames action as arising from devotion and surrender to Viṣṇu’s safeguarding power; the devotee acts as an instrument after invoking the Deity’s presence.
It reflects applied mantra-prayoga—ritual technique of mantra-siddhi and saṃskāra (consecration/empowerment) of implements—aligned with auxiliary disciplines used to execute rites with precision.