Chapter 7: Dvīpa–Varṣa–Meru-varṇana
Description of the Dvīpa, Varṣas, and Mount Meru
ब्रह्मलोकच्युता: सर्वे सर्वे सर्वेषु साधव: । तपस्तप्यन्ति ते तीव्र भवन्ति हार्ध्वरेतस: । रक्षणार्थ तु भूतानां प्रविशन्ते दिवाकरम्
sañjaya uvāca |
brhmalokacyutāḥ sarve sarve sarveṣu sādhavaḥ |
tapastapyanti te tīvraṃ bhavanti ūrdhvaretasaḥ |
rakṣaṇārthaṃ tu bhūtānāṃ praviśanti divākaram |
Sañjaya dijo: «Todos ellos son seres descendidos del mundo de Brahmā (Brahmaloka): virtuosos por naturaleza y benévolos en su trato con todos. Practican austeridades severas y viven como célibes firmes (ūrdhvaretaḥ), conservando su energía vital. Luego, para la protección de todas las criaturas, entran en el Sol y se vuelven parte de su poder sustentador».
संजय उवाच
The verse links personal discipline (tapas and brahmacarya/ūrdhvaretas) with universal welfare: the power generated by ethical self-restraint is portrayed as sustaining and protecting all beings, even to the point of merging with the Sun’s life-giving function.
Sañjaya describes a class of highly virtuous ascetics said to have descended from Brahmaloka. Through intense austerity and celibate discipline, they become spiritually potent and then ‘enter the Sun’—a cosmological image for contributing their merit/energy to the Sun’s protective, sustaining role for living creatures.