Gift of Sudarshana — The Gift of Sudarshana: Shiva’s Boon to Vishnu and the Sanctification of Virupaksha
तसमिन् हते देवरिपौ मुरारिरीशं समाराध्य विरूपनेत्रम् लब्ध्वा च चक्रं प्रवरं महायुधं जगाम देवो निलयं पयोनिधिम् // वम्प्_56.43 सो ऽयं पुत्र निरूपाक्षो देवदेवो महेश्वरः तमाराधय चेत् साधो क्षीरेणोच्छसि भोजनम्
tasamin hate devaripau murārirīśaṃ samārādhya virūpanetram labdhvā ca cakraṃ pravaraṃ mahāyudhaṃ jagāma devo nilayaṃ payonidhim // VamP_56.43 so 'yaṃ putra nirūpākṣo devadevo maheśvaraḥ tamārādhaya cet sādho kṣīreṇocchasi bhojanam
[{"question": "Why is Puṣkara emphasized here (puṣkarāgreṇa)?", "answer": "In the Vāmana Purāṇa’s tīrtha-oriented framing, the rescue narrative is anchored in a sanctified geography. Mentioning Puṣkara highlights the merit-laden setting: the devotee’s appeal arises from a sacred water-body/tīrtha, reinforcing the text’s broader project of mapping holiness onto landscape."}, {"question": "What is the significance of the ‘golden lotus’ in Gajendra’s act?", "answer": "The lotus functions as a ritual offering (upacāra) and a symbol of purity and sattva. ‘Golden’ (kāñcana) intensifies its auspiciousness, marking the stotra as not merely verbal but also accompanied by a devotional gesture of offering."}, {"question": "How does ‘sahasraśubhanāmānam’ relate to Purāṇic theology?", "answer": "It signals a theology of the Supreme as accessible through many epithets/names (nāma), a common Purāṇic devotional strategy. The ‘thousand names’ motif also anticipates the stotra’s style: layered attributes rather than a single sectarian identifier."}]
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
This is a standard Purāṇic strategy to assert functional unity and mutual honor between sectarian theologies: Viṣṇu receives a supreme weapon through Śiva’s grace, while Śiva is praised as ‘devadeva’. The episode teaches that divine powers operate through reciprocal reverence rather than rivalry.
The ‘cakra’ is the Sudarśana, Viṣṇu’s paradigmatic cosmic weapon. Its acquisition through ārādhana frames it not merely as an inherited attribute but as a boon grounded in dharma, tapas, and divine sanction.
The only explicit geography is ‘payo-nidhi’ (the Ocean), indicating Viṣṇu’s return to his watery abode (often associated with Kṣīroda/Śvetadvīpa traditions). It situates the narrative in a cosmographic register typical of the Vāmana Purāṇa.