Viṣṇu as Seed-Cause: Pañcarātra Emanations, Tattva-Unfolding, and the Avatāra Chronology
ततो हरिः प्रादुरभून्महात्मा धन्वन्तरिर्नाम हरिन्मणिद्युतिः / अपथ्यदोषान्परिहर्तुमेव हस्ते गृहीत्वा पूर्णकुभं सुधाभिः
tato hariḥ prādurabhūnmahātmā dhanvantarirnāma harinmaṇidyutiḥ / apathyadoṣānparihartumeva haste gṛhītvā pūrṇakubhaṃ sudhābhiḥ
Luego Hari, el magnánimo, se manifestó como Dhanvantari, resplandeciente como una gema verde; en Su mano llevaba una vasija colmada de Sudhā (amṛta), apareciendo precisamente para apartar las faltas nacidas de lo insano y de lo impropio.
Lord Vishnu (narrated within the Purana’s discourse to Garuda)
Concept: Removal of apathya-doṣa (faults from unwholesome conduct) through right regimen and divine grace; life is to be protected as a dharmic instrument.
Vedantic Theme: Īśvara-anugraha expressed as upakāra (beneficence) sustaining embodied beings; harmony of body-mind as support for sādhana.
Application: Adopt apathya-avoidance: disciplined diet, conduct, and moderation; invoke Dhanvantari for clarity in healing choices.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: cosmic ocean emergence scene
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.15 (avatāra enumeration including Dhanvantari)
This verse presents Dhanvantari as Hari’s manifestation who brings the nectar-pot, symbolizing divine healing and the removal of harm caused by unwholesome diet and conduct (apathya-doṣa).
By stating that Hari appears to remove apathya-doṣa, the verse links dharmic living—right food, right conduct, and restraint—with purification and well-being, showing health as part of righteous order.
Adopt apathya-avoidance: reduce harmful habits, choose sattvic and wholesome routines, and treat health-care as a dharmic responsibility—seeing healing as both physical and ethical correction.