त्वद्रूपधारिणश् चान्तः सर्वभूतम् इदं जगत् त्वत्तो यज्ञः सर्वहुतः पृषदाज्यं पशुर् द्विधा
tvadrūpadhāriṇaś cāntaḥ sarvabhūtam idaṃ jagat tvatto yajñaḥ sarvahutaḥ pṛṣadājyaṃ paśur dvidhā
ສັບພະສັດທັງປວງໃນຈັກກະວານນີ້ລ້ວນຖືຮູບຂອງພຣະອົງ ແລະພຣະອົງສະຖິດຢູ່ພາຍໃນເປັນອັນຕະຣະຍາມີ. ຈາກພຣະອົງເກີດຍັດຍະເອງ—ທັງການຖວາຍທັງມວນ (ສັຣວະຫຸຕະ), ຮະວິສທີ່ປົນນົມສົ້ມແລະເນີຍໃສ, ແລະສັດບູຊາສອງປະການ.
Sage Parāśara (in a theological exposition/hymnic passage addressed to Vishnu, spoken to Maitreya in the broader dialogue)
Speaker: Parasara
Topic: Antaryāmin indwelling in all beings; the Lord as the very substance of yajña and its components
Teaching: Devotional
Quality: authoritative
Concept: All beings bear the Lord’s form and He abides within; even yajña—oblation, offering-mixtures, and victim—derives from Him.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma
Application: Offer daily actions as yajña by remembering the indwelling Lord in oneself and others, sanctifying work, food, and relationships.
Vishishtadvaita: Antaryāmin doctrine: the Lord indwells and supports real plurality (beings/ritual acts) as His body (śarīra-śarīrī-bhāva).
Vishnu Form: Narayana
Bhakti Type: Shanta
Antaryamin: Yes
Jagat Karana: Yes
This verse frames yajña as a divine expression: the ritual, its oblations, and even its components are rooted in Vishnu, making sacrifice a cosmic principle rather than a merely human act.
He presents Vishnu as both the form of the world (everything ‘bears His form’) and the inner presence (antaḥ), expressing a theology of immanence while retaining Vishnu as the supreme source.
Vishnu is portrayed as the supreme reality behind both creation and sacred order: the universe and the means of sustaining dharma (yajña) are ultimately grounded in Him.