उपर्य् आक्रान्तवाञ् छैलं बृहद्रूपेण केशवः तथापरेण मैत्रेय यन् न दृष्टं सुरासुरैः
upary ākrāntavāñ chailaṃ bṛhadrūpeṇa keśavaḥ tathāpareṇa maitreya yan na dṛṣṭaṃ surāsuraiḥ
Entonces Keśava, expandiéndose en una forma vasta e inconmensurable, pisó la montaña y la sometió. Y, oh Maitreya, reveló además otro prodigio, jamás visto por dioses ni demonios por igual.
Sage Parāśara (addressing Maitreya)
Speaker: Parasara
Topic: Further marvels of Keśava during the churning, beyond ordinary divine/asuric experience
Teaching: Cosmological
Quality: revealing
Avatara: Kurma
Purpose: He enlarges into a vast form to subdue and stabilize Mandara, displaying unprecedented divine might to ensure the churning continues.
Leela: Loka-rakshana
Dharma Restored: Stability of the cosmic enterprise that yields amṛta and restores devas’ order
Concept: The Lord’s greatness exceeds the perception of both gods and demons; His ‘measure’ is not bounded by created categories.
Vedantic Theme: Brahman
Application: Practice humility before the divine—do not reduce God to one’s concepts; cultivate wonder through śravaṇa and meditation.
Vishishtadvaita: Keśava’s infinite greatness coexists with personal agency in history, supporting the Viśiṣṭādvaita view of Brahman as the supreme Person with auspicious attributes.
Vishnu Form: Hari
It signals Vishnu’s supremacy as the transcendent Lord who can assume immeasurable form to uphold cosmic order, surpassing the limits of divine and demonic perception.
By framing the event as beyond both camps, Parāśara emphasizes that Vishnu’s power is not merely greater than rivals, but categorically beyond ordinary cosmic hierarchies.
Vishnu is presented as the Supreme Reality whose manifestations govern and subdue the cosmos, reinforcing a Vaishnava vision where all beings—even devas—are secondary to Him.