Matsya Purana — Cosmic Creation: Emergence of the Great Elements and the Navel-Lotus
आभ्यां संघर्षणोद्भूतं पावकं वायुसंभवम् दृष्ट्वा प्रीतो महादेवो महाभूतविभावनः //
ābhyāṃ saṃgharṣaṇodbhūtaṃ pāvakaṃ vāyusaṃbhavam dṛṣṭvā prīto mahādevo mahābhūtavibhāvanaḥ //
Seeing the fire (Pāvaka) that had arisen from the friction of those two and was generated through the agency of Vāyu (wind), Mahādeva—who illumines and governs the great elements—became pleased.
It highlights creation-side cosmology: fire is presented as an element arising through friction and the causal support of wind, implying an ordered manifestation of the mahābhūtas rather than dissolution.
By grounding Agni in cosmic principles, the verse indirectly supports the householder’s central duty of maintaining sacred fire (homa/āhavanīya) and disciplined ritual life, which Puranas treat as sustaining social and cosmic order (dharma).
Ritually, it reinforces Agni’s legitimacy as a divinely approved principle (pleasing to Mahādeva), supporting fire-offerings and consecratory rites; architecturally, it underpins Vastu’s elemental logic where fire (Agni) and wind (Vāyu) are key forces considered in layout and ritual installation.