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Shloka 118

Adhyāya 284: Tapas as a Corrective to Household Attachment

Parāśara’s Instruction

देवदेवेश्वर! जरायुज, अण्डज, स्वेदज तथा उद्धिज्ज--ये चार प्रकारके प्राणिसमूह आप ही हैं ।।

devadeveśvara! jarāyuja, aṇḍaja, svedaja tathā udbhijja—ye caturvidhāḥ prāṇisaṃghāḥ tvam eva. carācarasya sraṣṭā tvaṃ pratihartā tathaiva ca. tvām āhur brahmaviduṣo brahma brahmavidāṃ vara.

ビーシュマは言った。「ああ、神々の主、 देवदेवेश्वरよ。胎より生まれるもの、卵より生まれるもの、汗・湿りより生ずるもの、そして大地より芽生えるもの——この四種の生類は、その本質において皆、あなたの内にあり、あなたに依って立つ。あなたは動くものと動かぬもの一切の創造者であり、また劫末にはそれらを収めて引き戻す者でもある。ゆえに梵を知る者たちは、あなたをこそ『梵(ブラフマン)』そのもの、最高の実在と呼び、絶対を知る者の中の最勝として敬うのである。」

[{'term''devadeveśvara', 'definition': 'Lord of the lords (of gods)
[{'term':
supreme divine ruler'}, {'term''jarāyuja', 'definition': 'womb-born beings (mammals, etc.)'}, {'term': 'aṇḍaja', 'definition': 'egg-born beings (birds, reptiles, etc.)'}, {'term': 'svedaja', 'definition': 'moisture/sweat-born beings
supreme divine ruler'}, {'term':
organisms arising from dampness (traditional category)'}, {'term''udbhijja', 'definition': 'sprout-born beings
organisms arising from dampness (traditional category)'}, {'term':
plants/vegetation arising from the earth'}, {'term''prāṇisaṃgha', 'definition': 'multitude/assemblage of living beings'}, {'term': 'carācara', 'definition': 'the moving and the unmoving
plants/vegetation arising from the earth'}, {'term':
all existence'}, {'term''sraṣṭā', 'definition': 'creator'}, {'term': 'pratihartā', 'definition': 'withdrawer/destroyer
all existence'}, {'term':
one who brings about dissolution'}, {'term''brahmavid', 'definition': 'knower of Brahman (the Absolute)'}, {'term': 'brahma', 'definition': 'Brahman
one who brings about dissolution'}, {'term':
the supreme, ultimate reality'}, {'term''brahmavidāṃ vara', 'definition': 'best among the knowers of Brahman'}]
the supreme, ultimate reality'}, {'term':

भीष्म उवाच

B
Bhishma
D
Devadeveshvara (the Supreme Lord / Brahman)

Educational Q&A

The verse teaches the Lord’s all-encompassing sovereignty: all categories of living beings and the entire moving–unmoving cosmos depend on Him, and He alone is both the source (creation) and the end (dissolution). Hence, the highest spiritual authorities identify Him with Brahman, the ultimate reality.

In the Shanti Parva’s instruction-setting, Bhishma—speaking from his bed of arrows—offers a hymn-like affirmation of the Supreme, addressing Him directly and describing His cosmic functions and identity as Brahman, thereby grounding ethical and dharmic teaching in a theological-metaphysical vision.