Sṛṣṭi-varṇana, Bhārata-khaṇḍa-mahātmya, and Jagad-bhūgola
Creation, Glory of Bhārata, and World Geography
यस्मात्परं नापरमस्ति किंचिद्यस्मादणीयान्नतथा महीयान् । व्यात्पं हि तेनेदमिदं विचित्रं तं देवदेवं प्रणमेत्समीङ्यम् ॥ ८३ ॥
yasmātparaṃ nāparamasti kiṃcidyasmādaṇīyānnatathā mahīyān | vyātpaṃ hi tenedamidaṃ vicitraṃ taṃ devadevaṃ praṇametsamīṅyam || 83 ||
彼を超えるものはなく、彼と別なるものもまた無い。最も微細なるものよりも微細でありながら、ただ大きさにおいて最大というだけではない。彼によってこの驚異の宇宙は遍く満たされている。その「デーヴァ・デーヴァ」—神々の神、求め近づくに値する御方に、合掌して礼拝せよ。
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta (peace)
Secondary Rasa: bhakti (devotion)
It declares the Supreme as unsurpassed and all-pervading—beyond comparison by size or category—and teaches that liberation-oriented life begins with reverent surrender (praṇāma) to that Deva-deva who is the true object of seeking.
By emphasizing the Lord’s complete pervasion of the “wondrous universe,” it grounds bhakti in constant remembrance and worship: since all rests in Him, the devotee responds with humility, seeking Him as the only ultimate refuge and offering praṇāma.
No specific Vedanga technique (like Vyākaraṇa, Jyotiṣa, or Kalpa ritual procedure) is taught here; the practical takeaway is upāsanā-practice—regular praṇāma and contemplation of the Lord’s subtlety and all-pervasion as a discipline supporting mokṣa.