Explanation of the Final Dissolution (Ātyantika Laya) and the Arising of Hiraṇyagarbha — Subtle Body, Post-Death Transit, Rebirth, and Embodied Constituents
भुक्त्वा तु भोगदेहेन कर्मबन्धान्निपात्यते तं देहं परतस्तस्माद्भक्षयन्ति निशाचराः
bhuktvā tu bhogadehena karmabandhānnipātyate taṃ dehaṃ paratastasmādbhakṣayanti niśācarāḥ
အကျိုးကို ခံစားရန်ရှိသော ကိုယ်ခန္ဓာ (ဘောဂဒေဟ) ဖြင့် ခံစားပြီးနောက်၊ ကမ္မချည်နှောင်မှုမှ ပြုတ်ကျစေသည်။ ထို့နောက် ထိုကိုယ်ခန္ဓာကို ညလှည့်သွားလာသော သရဲတစ္ဆေမျိုးတို့က စားသောက်ကြသည်။
Lord Agni (in discourse to Sage Vasiṣṭha, typical Agni Purāṇa narration frame)
Vidya Category: {"primary_vidya":"Philosophy","secondary_vidya":"Dharmashastra","practical_application":"Cultivates detachment and ethical restraint by contemplating post-mortem consequences of karma and the impermanence of subtle bodies.","sutra_style":true}
Encyclopedic Reference: {"reference_type":"Description","entry_title":"Bhogadeha (enjoyment-body) and its dissolution","lookup_keywords":["bhogadeha","karmabandha","preta","nishachara","post-mortem body"],"quick_summary":"The jiva experiences karmic results through a temporary enjoyment-body; once its function ends, that subtle form is discarded and becomes prey to terrifying beings, underscoring the perishability of post-death embodiments."}
Concept: Karmic embodiment is instrumental and temporary; even post-mortem bodies are subject to dissolution once their karmic purpose is fulfilled.
Application: Use memento-mori contemplation to reduce craving for pleasure and to prioritize dharma, dana, and self-restraint.
Khanda Section: Preta-karmaphala & Naraka-vicara (After-death consequences; karmic bondage and post-mortem states)
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: vairagya
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"A translucent bhogadeha, having completed its karmic enjoyment, is cast down; shadowy night-roaming beings tear at the discarded form in a liminal cremation-ground atmosphere.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala temple mural style, dark cremation-ground at night, pale subtle-body falling from above, fierce nishacharas with exaggerated eyes and fangs, limited earthy palette with dramatic outlines, symbolic flames and smoke, devotional-epic composition","tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting with gold work, central pale bhogadeha rendered as luminous silhouette, surrounding nishacharas in stylized forms, ornate border, gold highlights on flames and clouds, moralizing scene with icon-like symmetry","mysore_prompt":"Mysore painting style, instructional narrative panel: jiva leaving bhogadeha, labels implied by gestures, soft shading, delicate linework, subdued night palette, clear sequencing of ‘cast down’ then ‘consumed’","mughal_miniature_prompt":"Mughal miniature, detailed charnel ground with trees and ruins, translucent figure falling, ghoulish beings in dynamic poses, fine brushwork, atmospheric night sky, marginal floral motifs"}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"contemplative","suggested_raga":"Bhairavi","pace":"slow","voice_tone":"epic"}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: karmabandhānnipātyate → karma-bandhāt nipātyate (द् + न् sandhi); tasmādbhakṣayanti → tasmāt bhakṣayanti (त् + भ् sandhi).
Related Themes: Agni Purana: Preta-karmaphala/Naraka-vicara section (surrounding verses on preta, naraka, and karmic bodies); Agni Purana: Dharma-kanda discussions on papa-punya and gati
It conveys afterlife doctrine: the jīva experiences karma-phala via a “bhoga-deha” (enjoyment-body), and once that phase ends, that body is discarded and becomes prey to niśācaras—used to underscore the impermanence of post-mortem embodiments.
Beyond ritual and dharma, the Agni Purāṇa catalogs metaphysical subjects like karma theory, subtle bodies, preta/naraka imagery, and post-death transitions—integrating ethics with cosmology and eschatology.
It stresses that karmic enjoyment is temporary and even the post-enjoyment body is perishable, motivating detachment (vairāgya) and dharmic conduct to avoid painful post-mortem consequences.