मानससृष्टिः, रुद्रोत्पत्तिः, मन्वादिवंशः, प्रलयचतुष्टयम्
ब्राह्मो नैमित्तिकस् तत्र यच् छेते जगतः पतिः प्रयाति प्राकृते चैव ब्रह्माण्डं प्रकृतौ लयम्
brāhmo naimittikas tatra yac chete jagataḥ patiḥ prayāti prākṛte caiva brahmāṇḍaṃ prakṛtau layam
ఆ ప్రళయాన్ని బ్రాహ్మమూ నైమిత్తికమూ అంటారు; అందులో జగత్తాధిపతి భగవాన్ యోగనిద్రలో శయనిస్తాడు. ప్రాకృత ప్రళయం వచ్చినప్పుడు ఈ సమస్త బ్రహ్మాండము ప్రకృతిలో లయమవుతుంది.
Sage Parāśara (teaching Maitreya)
Speaker: Parasara
Topic: Kinds of pralaya (dissolution) and the Lord’s yogic repose; absorption of the brahmāṇḍa into Prakṛti.
Teaching: Cosmological
Quality: authoritative
Creation Stage: Kalpa
Cosmic Hierarchy: Brahmanda (universe)
Concept: Naimittika pralaya is the periodic dissolution at Brahmā’s night wherein the Lord rests, while in prākṛtika pralaya the entire brahmāṇḍa dissolves back into Prakṛti under Viṣṇu’s sovereignty.
Vedantic Theme: Maya
Application: Contemplate impermanence of cosmic cycles to cultivate vairāgya and steadiness in devotion.
Vishishtadvaita: Viṣṇu remains the transcendent Lord (niyantṛ) over Prakṛti and the universe even as they are withdrawn into their causal state.
Vishnu Form: Narayana (cosmic)
Bhakti Type: Shanta (peaceful)
Jagat Karana: Yes
This verse frames Naimittika pralaya as a Brahmā-related cosmic pause in which the Lord of the universe rests, emphasizing that dissolution is a regulated phase within divine order rather than chaos.
Parāśara distinguishes a deeper dissolution—Prākṛta pralaya—where even the brahmāṇḍa (cosmic egg) is absorbed back into Prakṛti, indicating a return of manifested cosmos to its primordial material ground under Vishnu’s sovereignty.
Vishnu is portrayed as Jagatpati, the governing Supreme who remains constant through creation and dissolution; even when the universe withdraws into Prakṛti, the cosmic process is shown as resting upon the Lord’s transcendent lordship.