Kali’s Complaint to Brahma and the Arrival of Śrī (Jayaśrī) in Bali’s Reign
श्रुतिः स्मृतिर्धृतिः कीर्तिर्मूर्तिः शान्ति क्रियान्विताः पुष्टिस्तुष्टी रुचिस्त्वन्या तथा सत्त्वाश्रिता गुणाः ताः सर्वा बलिमाश्रित्य व्यश्राम्यन्त यथासुखम्
śrutiḥ smṛtirdhṛtiḥ kīrtirmūrtiḥ śānti kriyānvitāḥ puṣṭistuṣṭī rucistvanyā tathā sattvāśritā guṇāḥ tāḥ sarvā balimāśritya vyaśrāmyanta yathāsukham
{"has_teaching": true, "teaching_type": "bhakti", "core_concept": "Anavasāda supported by vidyā: the wise do not succumb to despair; readiness for surrender to divine will is implied.", "teaching_summary": "Having understood the principle of equanimity/karma, the daitya-lord is urged not to grieve; true learning manifests as unshaken composure.", "vedantic_theme": "Śaraṇāgati-ready mind: steadiness and humility as prerequisites for devotional surrender; sattvic buddhi.", "practical_application": "In moments of humiliation or loss, recall one’s higher values and learning; choose truthful, dharmic action over emotional collapse."}
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
It implies that Bali’s rule aligns with Vedic revelation and dharma-tradition: he protects sacred order, honors ritual and ethical norms, and thus becomes a stable seat where scriptural authority is effectively ‘at home’ in society.
The text deliberately complicates simplistic Deva/Asura binaries. By attributing sattvic qualities to Bali, it presents him as morally luminous and spiritually disciplined—making his later submission to Viṣṇu an exemplar of dharma (especially dāna and satya) rather than a defeat of mere wickedness.
‘Mūrti’ can mean ‘embodiment’—the idea that Bali’s virtues are not theoretical but concretely manifest in his person and court. It can also suggest a dignified, well-ordered royal presence that gives ‘form’ to prosperity, peace, and right action.