नरकासुरवधः, अदीतिकुण्डल-प्रत्यर्पणम्, तथा भारावतरण-लीला
भौमो ऽयं नरको नाम प्राग्ज्योतिषपुरेश्वरः करोति सर्वभूतानाम् उपघातम् अरिंदम
bhaumo 'yaṃ narako nāma prāgjyotiṣapureśvaraḥ karoti sarvabhūtānām upaghātam ariṃdama
ହେ ଅରିନ୍ଦମ! ପ୍ରାଗ୍ଜ୍ୟୋତିଷପୁରର ଈଶ୍ୱର, ଭୌମ ନାମରେ ପରିଚିତ ଏହି ନରକ ସମସ୍ତ ଭୂତଜନଙ୍କୁ ଘୋର ଉପଘାତ କରୁଛି।
Sage Parāśara (narrating to Maitreya)
Avatara: Krishna
Purpose: Kṛṣṇa is called to destroy Naraka (Bhauma) whose tyranny harms all beings and disrupts the divinely upheld order.
Leela: Yuddha
Dharma Restored: Safety of creatures and restoration of righteous rule under Viṣṇu’s sovereignty
Concept: Adharma is identified by its universal harm (sarvabhūtānām upaghāta), warranting decisive protection by the Lord’s righteous power.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma
Application: Assess actions by their impact on all beings; oppose systems that cause broad harm, using proportionate and dharmic means.
Vishishtadvaita: Dharma is grounded in the Lord’s sovereignty: the world is His domain, and protection of beings is an expression of His immanent governance.
Vishnu Form: Hari
Bhakti Type: Dasya
This verse frames Naraka as a sovereign of Prāgjyotiṣa whose rule becomes oppressive to all beings, setting the moral and narrative ground for divine correction and the restoration of dharma.
By highlighting harm to “sarva-bhūtas,” Parāśara depicts tyranny not merely as political failure but as a cosmic violation that demands rebalancing within Viṣṇu’s overarching governance of order.
Even when Viṣṇu is not named in the verse, the Purāṇic logic is clear: the Supreme sustains dharma, and widespread injury to beings signals a breakdown that ultimately falls under Viṣṇu’s protective sovereignty.