Varāha-avatāra: The Boar Incarnation Lifts the Earth and Slays Hiraṇyākṣa
दीक्षानुजन्मोपसद: शिरोधरं त्वं प्रायणीयोदयनीयदंष्ट्र: । जिह्वा प्रवर्ग्यस्तव शीर्षकं क्रतो: सत्यावसथ्यं चितयोऽसवो हि ते ॥ ३७ ॥
dīkṣānujanmopasadaḥ śirodharaṁ tvaṁ prāyaṇīyodayanīya-daṁṣṭraḥ jihvā pravargyas tava śīrṣakaṁ kratoḥ satyāvasathyaṁ citayo ’savo hi te
Además, oh Señor, Tu repetida manifestación es el origen de la dīkṣā y de los upasad; Tu cuello es el sostén de la cabeza. Tus colmillos son el prāyaṇīya y el udayanīya—el fruto de la iniciación y su culminación. Tu lengua es el pravargya; Tu cabeza es la cima del kratu; el satyāvasathya son Tus altares; y Tus fuerzas vitales son las piras sagradas, el conjunto de todos los fuegos del sacrificio.
This verse portrays Lord Varaha as yajna personified—His limbs correspond to major sacrificial rites—teaching that sacrifice ultimately rests in the Supreme Lord.
In the Varaha narrative, the sages glorify Him as the source and goal of Vedic sacrifice, showing that ritual gains its sanctity and power because it is connected to the Lord.
Offer one’s work, speech, and daily duties as devotion to the Lord—keeping the purpose (pleasing Bhagavan) central rather than mere external form.