Akrūra’s Prayers (Akrūra-stuti): The Lord as Cause of Causes, Virāṭ, and the Goal of All Paths
अग्निर्मुखं तेऽवनिरङ्घ्रिरीक्षणं सूर्यो नभो नाभिरथो दिश: श्रुति: । द्यौ: कं सुरेन्द्रास्तव बाहवोऽर्णवा: कुक्षिर्मरुत् प्राणबलं प्रकल्पितम् ॥ १३ ॥ रोमाणि वृक्षौषधय: शिरोरुहा मेघा: परस्यास्थिनखानि तेऽद्रय: । निमेषणं रात्र्यहनी प्रजापति- र्मेढ्रस्तु वृष्टिस्तव वीर्यमिष्यते ॥ १४ ॥
agnir mukhaṁ te ’vanir aṅghrir īkṣaṇaṁ sūryo nabho nābhir atho diśaḥ śrutiḥ dyauḥ kaṁ surendrās tava bāhavo ’rṇavāḥ kukṣir marut prāṇa-balaṁ prakalpitam
Fire is Your face, the earth Your feet, the sun Your eye, and the sky Your navel. The directions are Your hearing, the chief demigods Your arms, and the oceans Your abdomen. Heaven is Your head, and the wind is Your vital breath and strength. Trees and herbs are the hairs on Your body, clouds the hair on Your head, and the mountains, O Supreme, Your bones and nails. The passing of day and night is the blinking of Your eyes; Prajāpati is Your generative organ, and rain is said to be Your seed-power.
This verse presents the Lord’s universal form by mapping cosmic functions to His body—fire as His mouth, sun as His eye, directions as His ears—showing that all creation rests within Him.
While traveling to bring Kṛṣṇa to Mathurā, Akrura’s devotion intensified; recognizing Kṛṣṇa as the Supreme, he worshiped Him by glorifying His all-pervading universal form.
It trains one to see the world as sacred and God-centered—cultivating reverence, humility, and steady devotion by remembering that every element of nature is connected to the Lord.