शीतोष्णवातवर्षाम्बुवैद्युतादिसमुद्भवः तापो द्विजवरश्रेष्ठ कथ्यते चाधिदैविकः
śītoṣṇavātavarṣāmbuvaidyutādisamudbhavaḥ tāpo dvijavaraśreṣṭha kathyate cādhidaivikaḥ
Oh, el mejor de los nacidos dos veces: el sufrimiento que surge del frío y del calor, de los vientos y las lluvias, de las inundaciones y los relámpagos, y de lo semejante, se declara aflicción ‘adhidaivika’.
Sage Parāśara (teaching Maitreya)
Speaker: Parasara
Topic: Adhidaivika suffering caused by cosmic/daivika forces (weather, lightning, floods)
Teaching: Cosmological
Quality: authoritative
Cosmic Hierarchy: Lokas
Concept: Sufferings arising from cold, heat, wind, rain, flood, and lightning are adhidaivika—stemming from the governing powers of nature.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma
Application: Practice equanimity toward climate and circumstance; prepare wisely while accepting what lies beyond personal control.
Vishishtadvaita: Natural forces operate as the Lord’s niyati (ordered governance); the jīva’s dependence (śeṣatva) is highlighted amid uncontrollable daivika events.
Vishnu Form: Narayana
Bhakti Type: Shanta
This verse defines adhi-daivika tāpa as misery caused by external cosmic powers—weather, lightning, floods—showing how the Purana classifies suffering within the ordered governance of the universe.
Here Parāśara identifies one category—adhi-daivika—by listing natural and celestial causes, distinguishing it from inner (ādhyātmika) and interpersonal/creature-based (ādhibhautika) forms of suffering taught in the same framework.
By placing even uncontrollable natural calamities within a classified cosmic order, the teaching supports the Vaishnava view that the universe operates under higher sovereignty—ultimately grounded in Vishnu as the supreme regulator of dharma and cosmic law.