तरुणं रमणीयाङ्गमरुणोष्ठेक्षणाधरम् । प्रणताश्रयणं नृम्णं शरण्यं करुणार्णवम् ॥ ४६ ॥
taruṇaṁ ramaṇīyāṅgam aruṇoṣṭhekṣaṇādharam praṇatāśrayaṇaṁ nṛmṇaṁ śaraṇyaṁ karuṇārṇavam
Nārada Muni continued: The Lord’s form is ever youthful; every limb is perfectly fashioned, free from fault. His eyes and lips are rosy like the rising sun. He is always ready to shelter the surrendered soul, and whoever beholds Him feels complete satisfaction. He is worthy to be the Master of the surrendered, for He is an ocean of mercy.
Everyone has to surrender to someone superior. That is always the nature of our living condition. At the present moment we are trying to surrender to someone — either to society or to our nation, family, state or government. The surrendering process already exists, but it is never perfect because the person or institution unto whom we surrender is imperfect, and our surrender, having so many ulterior motives, is also imperfect. As such, in the material world no one is worthy to accept anyone’s surrender, nor does anyone fully surrender to anyone else unless obliged to do so. But here the surrendering process is voluntary, and the Lord is worthy to accept the surrender. This surrender by the living entity occurs automatically as soon as he sees the beautiful youthful nature of the Lord.
This verse describes the Lord as praṇatāśrayaṇa—He becomes the refuge of those who bow to Him—and śaraṇya, the supreme protector worthy of surrender.
In Dhruva’s intense search and eventual vision of the Lord, the Bhagavatam emphasizes that the Lord responds mercifully to sincere devotion, revealing Himself as compassion personified.
Practice humility and surrender in prayer, remembering that the Lord is a reliable refuge for the sincere; approach challenges by seeking divine shelter rather than relying only on ego or anger.