Prahlada’s Pilgrimage and the Origin of the Sudarshana–Trishula Exchange (Jalodbhava Episode)
अङ्गोपाङ्गानि देवर्षे पूजयित्वा जगद्गुरोः सुरूपाम्यभिजायन्ते प्रत्यङ्गङ्गानि चैव हि
aṅgopāṅgāni devarṣe pūjayitvā jagadguroḥ surūpāmyabhijāyante pratyaṅgaṅgāni caiva hi
Wahai Devarṣi, setelah memuja anggota dan bagian-bagian penunjang Sang Guru jagat, maka anggota dan sub-anggota diri pun sungguh menjadi elok, serasi, dan indah rupanya.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
In Nakṣatra-Puruṣa style observances, the cosmos and the deity are contemplated as an integrated body. Limb-wise worship trains attention, purity, and completeness (pūrṇatā), making the devotee’s own embodied life a mirror of cosmic order.
Purāṇic vrata-phala is often both: literally, it promises health/beauty as karmic fruit; symbolically, it indicates harmonization of one’s faculties (indriyas) and capacities through disciplined devotion.
Within this passage’s flow (culminating in “Keśava” in the next verse), “Jagadguru” is best read as Vishnu/Keśava, praised as the supreme instructor whose worship grants purification and auspicious embodiment.