Akrūra’s Prayers (Akrūra-stuti): The Lord as Cause of Causes, Virāṭ, and the Goal of All Paths
नम: कारणमत्स्याय प्रलयाब्धिचराय च । हयशीर्ष्णे नमस्तुभ्यं मधुकैटभमृत्यवे ॥ १७ ॥ अकूपाराय बृहते नमो मन्दरधारिणे । क्षित्युद्धारविहाराय नम: शूकरमूर्तये ॥ १८ ॥
namaḥ kāraṇa-matsyāya pralayābdhi-carāya ca hayaśīrṣṇe namas tubhyaṁ madhu-kaiṭabha-mṛtyave
ຂໍນອບນ້ອມແດ່ພຣະມັດສະຍະ ຜູ້ເປັນເຫດແຫ່ງການສ້າງ ຜູ້ວ່າຍໃນມະຫາສະໝຸດແຫ່ງປຣະລະຍ. ຂໍນອບນ້ອມແດ່ພຣະຫຍະຊີຣະ/ຫຍະກຣີວະ ຜູ້ປະຫານມະທຸ ແລະ ໄກຕະພ. ຂໍນອບນ້ອມແດ່ພຣະກູຣະມະອັນຍິ່ງໃຫຍ່ ຜູ້ທົງຮັບພູມັນທຣ. ຂໍນອບນ້ອມແດ່ພຣະວະຣາຫະ ຮູບສຸກຣ ຜູ້ສຳຣານໃນລີລາຍົກແຜ່ນດິນຂຶ້ນ.
The Viśva-kośa dictionary states that the word akūpārāya indicates the king of tortoises.
This verse offers worship to the Lord as Matsya, who moves within the ocean of dissolution, indicating His protection and guidance even during cosmic devastation.
Akrura recognizes Krishna as the Supreme Lord and therefore glorifies Him through His well-known divine manifestations and deeds, expressing reverence and surrender.
It strengthens faith that the Lord removes destructive forces—externally and within the mind—encouraging a devotee to seek refuge in Him during fear, chaos, or temptation.