Manifestation of the Śrī Vāsudeva Hymn in the Glory of Guru-tīrtha
Cyavana Narrative within the Vena Episode
नैवेद्यमात्रेण सुभक्षितेन सुचक्रिणस्तस्य महात्मनस्तु । श्रीवाजपेयस्य फलं लभंते सर्वार्थयुक्ताश्च नरा भवंति
naivedyamātreṇa subhakṣitena sucakriṇastasya mahātmanastu | śrīvājapeyasya phalaṃ labhaṃte sarvārthayuktāśca narā bhavaṃti
Dengan sekadar mempersembahkan naivedya berupa hidangan yang elok kepada Tuhan yang berjiwa agung itu, pemegang cakra yang indah, manusia memperoleh buah yajna Vājapeya yang mulia dan menjadi dikurniai segala hajat yang diingini.
Unspecified (narrative voice within Bhūmi-khaṇḍa context)
Concept: Simple devotional offering (naivedya) to Viṣṇu can confer the merit of great śrauta sacrifices, because the Lord is the true recipient and fulfiller of all aims.
Application: Offer food with cleanliness, gratitude, and remembrance before eating; treat daily meals as sanctified when first dedicated to Nārāyaṇa, and cultivate generosity by sharing prasāda.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A serene household shrine becomes a cosmic altar: a devotee places a silver plate of fragrant, well-prepared naivedya before Viṣṇu, whose Sudarśana gleams like a sun-disc behind His shoulder. The humble offering radiates outward into a visionary overlay of a grand Vājapeya sacrifice—golden pillars, soma vessels, and chanting priests—showing how bhakti contains the essence of yajña.","primary_figures":["Vishnu (Sudarshana-dhara)","devotee householder/priest","attendant deities or sages (subtle, visionary)"],"setting":"Temple or home altar with tulasi pot nearby, brass lamps, conch and bell; faint superimposed śrauta-yajña pavilion in the background as a spiritual vision.","lighting_mood":"temple lamp-lit","color_palette":["sapphire blue","gold leaf","vermilion red","ivory white","emerald green"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Vishnu seated on a jeweled throne with Sudarshana halo, devotee offering an ornate naivedya platter; heavy gold leaf embellishment on crown, chakra, and arch; rich reds and greens, gem-studded ornaments, traditional South Indian iconography, glowing brass lamps and conch at the base.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: intimate shrine scene with delicate brushwork; Vishnu in deep blue with a subtle chakra aura; devotee presenting naivedya; cool, lyrical background where a faint yajna-mandapa appears like a dream—thin columns, tiny priests, soft Himalayan palette and refined faces.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: bold black outlines, natural pigments; Vishnu with large expressive eyes and stylized chakra; devotee in simple attire offering naivedya; lamp-lit temple interior with red/yellow/green dominance and rhythmic ornamental borders.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: Vishnu as the central deity framed by lotus motifs and ornate floral borders; naivedya platter foregrounded; peacocks and cows as auspicious witnesses; deep blues and gold with intricate patterns suggesting yajna vessels and sacred abundance."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"devotional","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"moderate-narrative","voice_tone":"reverent-soft","sound_elements":["temple bells","soft conch shell","low priestly chant","crackling ghee lamp"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: नैवेद्यमात्रेण → नैवेद्य-मात्रेण (समास/विग्रह: नैवेद्यस्य मात्रेण); सुचक्रिणस्तस्य → सुचक्रिणः तस्य; लभंते → लभन्ते; सर्वार्थयुक्ताश्च → सर्वार्थयुक्ताः च; भवंति → भवन्ति.
The verse elevates bhakti-based worship—simple devotional offering—to the status of major Vedic ritual merit, suggesting devotion can confer results traditionally associated with elaborate sacrifices.
“Sucakrin” means “the bearer of the beautiful discus,” a standard epithet of Lord Viṣṇu, referencing the Sudarśana-cakra.
Sincere offering (even something as simple as well-prepared food) made with devotion is portrayed as spiritually potent and conducive to holistic well-being (“sarvārtha-yukta”).