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Shloka 6

Brahmā’s Yogic Vision of Sadyōjāta in the Śvetalohita Kalpa

सद्योजातं ततो ब्रह्म ब्रह्म वै समचिन्तयत् ततो ऽस्य पार्श्वतः श्वेताः प्रादुर्भूता महायशाः

sadyojātaṃ tato brahma brahma vai samacintayat tato 'sya pārśvataḥ śvetāḥ prādurbhūtā mahāyaśāḥ

అప్పుడు সদ్యోజాతుడైన బ్రహ్మ పరబ్రహ్మాన్ని ధ్యానించాడు. వెంటనే అతని రెండు పార్శ్వాల నుండి శ్వేతవర్ణముతో ప్రకాశించే మహాయశస్సుగల దివ్యులు ప్రాదుర్భవించారు.

sadyōjātamnewly born, just manifested
sadyōjātam:
tataḥthen, thereafter
tataḥ:
brahmāBrahma (the creator)
brahmā:
brahmaBrahman, the Absolute
brahma:
vaiindeed
vai:
samacintayatcontemplated, meditated upon
samacintayat:
tataḥthen
tataḥ:
asyaof him
asya:
pārśvataḥfrom the sides
pārśvataḥ:
śvetāḥwhite, luminous
śvetāḥ:
prādurbhūtāḥmanifested, came forth
prādurbhūtāḥ:
mahāyaśāḥof great fame/glory, illustrious
mahāyaśāḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating the creation sequence to the sages of Naimisharanya)

B
Brahma
B
Brahman

FAQs

It frames creation as arising from contemplation of the Supreme, implying that all ritual (including Linga-puja) is rooted in turning the mind toward the transcendent Pati—Shiva as the ultimate ground beyond created forms.

By emphasizing Brahmā’s contemplation of Brahman prior to emanation, it points to a higher reality beyond the creator—aligned with Shaiva Siddhanta where Pati (Shiva) is the supreme principle, and created orders emerge only after orientation to that Absolute.

Dhyāna (contemplation) is central: inner concentration precedes outward manifestation—an idea echoed in Pashupata-oriented discipline where the pashu (soul) turns inward from pasha (bondage) toward Pati through meditative absorption.