Atithi-satkāra and the Consolation of Wise Counsel (अतिथिसत्कारः प्रज्ञानवचनस्य च पराश्वासनम्)
श्रीभगवानुवाच तयो: संलग्नयोर्युद्धे रुद्रनारायणात्मनो:
śrībhagavān uvāca | tayoḥ saṃlagnayor yuddhe rudra-nārāyaṇātmanoḥ, sarvalokeṣu sarvabhūtāni sahasodvignāny abhavan | agnir devo yajñeṣu vidhivat hutānāṃ viśuddha-haviṣāṃ grahaṇaṃ na śaśāka |
O Bem-aventurado disse: “Arjuna, quando Rudra e Nārāyaṇa — cada qual encarnando o poder divino do outro — se enredaram em batalha, todos os seres, em todos os mundos, foram subitamente tomados de alarme. Até Agni, nos sacrifícios, já não conseguia aceitar as oblações puras oferecidas devidamente segundo o rito.”
अर्जुन उवाच
The verse highlights that when divine powers clash, the disturbance is not merely local but cosmic: fear spreads across beings and even sacrificial order falters. Ethically, it underscores the Mahābhārata theme that violence—especially among the powerful—shakes dharma and disrupts the sustaining institutions of the world, such as yajña.
Bhagavān describes a moment when Rudra and Nārāyaṇa become fully engaged in battle. The shock of their confrontation agitates all creatures in all realms, and Agni himself becomes unable to receive the properly offered, pure sacrificial oblations—signaling a breakdown of normal cosmic-ritual functioning.