Prahlāda Rejects Demonic Diplomacy and Proclaims Navadhā Bhakti
दिग्गजैर्दन्दशूकेन्द्रैरभिचारावपातनै: । मायाभि: सन्निरोधैश्च गरदानैरभोजनै: । हिमवाय्वग्निसलिलै: पर्वताक्रमणैरपि ॥ ४३ ॥ न शशाक यदा हन्तुमपापमसुर: सुतम् । चिन्तां दीर्घतमां प्राप्तस्तत्कर्तुं नाभ्यपद्यत ॥ ४४ ॥
dig-gajair dandaśūkendrair abhicārāvapātanaiḥ māyābhiḥ sannirodhaiś ca gara-dānair abhojanaiḥ
ເຖິງຈະໃຫ້ຊ້າງໃຫຍ່ໆເຫຍີບຢ່າງ, ໂຍນເຂົ້າໄປກາງງູຍັກນ່າຢ້ານ, ໃຊ້ມົນຕຣາອັນທຳລາຍ, ຜັກຕົກຈາກຍອດພູ, ກົນມາຍາ, ໃຫ້ພິດ, ປະຫວັດອົດອາຫານ, ທົນຕໍ່ຄວາມໜາວ ລົມ ໄຟ ແລະນ້ຳ, ຫຼືທັບດ້ວຍຫີນໜັກໆ ກໍຍັງຂ້າລູກຊາຍຜູ້ບໍ່ມີບາບນັ້ນບໍ່ໄດ້. ເມື່ອເຫັນວ່າທຳຮ້າຍພຣະຫຼາດບໍ່ໄດ້ເລີຍ ລາວຈຶ່ງຕົກໃນຄວາມກັງວົນອັນຍາວນານວ່າຈະເຮັດຫຍັງຕໍ່ໄປ
He employed many violent methods—elephants, deadly snakes, sorcery, imprisonment, poison, starvation, and exposure to extreme elements like fire, water, wind, cold, and crushing by mountains—yet Prahlāda remained unharmed.
Prahlāda is described as apāpa (sinless) and protected by his unwavering devotion to Bhagavān; the narrative emphasizes that a true devotee is safeguarded by divine will despite material dangers.
Steadfast devotion and integrity can keep one inwardly protected and fearless amid hostility, pressure, or hardship—encouraging resilience grounded in spiritual practice.