Next Verse

Vishnu Purana — Amsha 1 - Cosmic Origination, Shloka 1

वासुदेवस्वरूपनिरूपणं—सर्गक्रमश्च

Vāsudeva’s Nature and the Ordered Process of Creation

अविकाराय शुद्धाय नित्याय परमात्मने सदैकरूपरूपाय विष्णवे सर्वजिष्णवे

avikārāya śuddhāya nityāya paramātmane sadaikarūparūpāya viṣṇave sarvajiṣṇave

Sembah sujud kepada Viṣṇu: Yang tak berubah, maha suci, kekal; Sang Ātman Tertinggi—senantiasa satu dalam hakikat dan wujud; Tuhan yang meliputi segalanya, menang atas segala.

अविकारायto the unchanging
अविकाराय:
Sampradana (Recipient/सम्प्रदान)
TypeAdjective
Rootअविकार (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, चतुर्थी (4th/चतुर्थी), एकवचन; विशेषण
शुद्धायto the pure
शुद्धाय:
Sampradana (Recipient/सम्प्रदान)
TypeAdjective
Rootशुद्ध (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, चतुर्थी (4th/चतुर्थी), एकवचन; विशेषण
नित्यायto the eternal
नित्याय:
Sampradana (Recipient/सम्प्रदान)
TypeAdjective
Rootनित्य (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, चतुर्थी (4th/चतुर्थी), एकवचन; विशेषण
परमात्मनेto the Supreme Self
परमात्मने:
Sampradana (Recipient/सम्प्रदान)
TypeNoun
Rootपरम (प्रातिपदिक) + आत्मन् (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, चतुर्थी (4th/चतुर्थी), एकवचन; कर्मधारयः—‘परमः आत्मा’
सदाalways
सदा:
Sambandha (Adverbial/सम्बन्ध)
TypeIndeclinable
Rootसदा (अव्यय)
Formअव्यय (कालवाचक क्रियाविशेषण)
एक-रूप-रूपायto him whose form is ever one
एक-रूप-रूपाय:
Sampradana (Recipient/सम्प्रदान)
TypeAdjective
Rootएक (प्रातिपदिक) + रूप (प्रातिपदिक) + रूप (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, चतुर्थी (4th/चतुर्थी), एकवचन; तत्पुरुषः—‘एकरूपस्य रूपम्’/‘one-form nature’; विशेषण
विष्णवेto Viṣṇu
विष्णवे:
Sampradana (Recipient/सम्प्रदान)
TypeNoun
Rootविष्णु (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, चतुर्थी (4th/चतुर्थी), एकवचन
सर्वजिष्णवेto the all-conquering
सर्वजिष्णवे:
Sampradana (Recipient/सम्प्रदान)
TypeAdjective
Rootसर्व (प्रातिपदिक) + जिष्णु (प्रातिपदिक)
Formपुंलिङ्ग, चतुर्थी (4th/चतुर्थी), एकवचन; तत्पुरुषः—‘सर्वेषु जिष्णुः’ (all-conquering); विशेषण

Sage Parāśara (invocatory verse at the opening of his teaching to Maitreya)

V
Vishnu

FAQs

It establishes Vishnu as the unmodified Supreme Reality behind all changing creation, making cosmology and history dependent on an eternal, stable divine ground.

By invoking Vishnu as pure, eternal, and ever of one essential form, Parāśara frames his teaching as revelation of the highest principle rather than a merely mythic narrative.

It presents Vishnu as the ultimate sovereign over all powers—cosmic, moral, and temporal—so every cycle of creation and dissolution is ultimately under his supremacy.