Mahālakṣmī’s Forms, Brahmā’s Fourfold Origin, Vāyu’s Names and Soteriology, and Bhāratī’s Manifestations
ब्रह्माण्डान्तः पद्मनाभो यो जातः कमलासनः / स चर्तुमुखसंज्ञां चाप्यवाप खगसत्तम
brahmāṇḍāntaḥ padmanābho yo jātaḥ kamalāsanaḥ / sa cartumukhasaṃjñāṃ cāpyavāpa khagasattama
హే ఖగసత్తమా! బ్రహ్మాండములో పద్మనాభుని నుండి ఉద్భవించిన కమలాసనుడు ‘చతుర్ముఖ’ అనే నామమును కూడా పొందెను.
Lord Vishnu
Concept: Brahmā (Kamalāsana, Caturmukha) arises from Padmanābha; the creator is rooted in Viṣṇu, reinforcing Viṣṇu’s supremacy and worthiness of devotion.
Vedantic Theme: Brahmā’s contingent origin; īśvara as upādāna/nimitta in Purāṇic idiom; devotion grounded in the ultimate source.
Application: In worship and study, trace all powers back to the source (Padmanābha); cultivate humility and devotion; use the lotus image as a meditation symbol for emergence of clarity from the navel-center of the divine.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: cosmic structure
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.16.16; Garuda Purana 3.16.17; Garuda Purana 3.16.18; Garuda Purana 3.16.20
This verse states that the lotus-seated Brahmā, born within the cosmic egg from Padmanābha, attained the name ‘Caturmukha,’ indicating his four-faced form.
It presents a cosmological sequence: within the brahmāṇḍa (cosmic egg), Padmanābha is the source from whom Brahmā (kamalāsana) arises, establishing Viṣṇu as the foundational origin in this account.
It encourages reverence for the cosmic order and humility—seeing one’s duties (dharma) as part of a larger, divinely grounded creation rather than mere personal ambition.