Andhaka’s Defeat, the Bhairava Manifestation, and His Redemption as Bhṛṅgī Gaṇapati
सूक्ष्मस्त्वं व्यक्तरूपस्त्वं त्वमव्यक्तस्त्वमीश्वरः त्वया सर्वमिदं व्याप्तं जगत् स्थावरजङ्गमम्
sūkṣmastvaṃ vyaktarūpastvaṃ tvamavyaktastvamīśvaraḥ tvayā sarvamidaṃ vyāptaṃ jagat sthāvarajaṅgamam
พระองค์ทรงละเอียดลึกซึ้ง; พระองค์ทรงปรากฏเป็นรูป; และพระองค์ก็ทรงไม่ปรากฏ—โอ้พระผู้เป็นเจ้า. ด้วยพระองค์ จักรวาลทั้งปวงนี้ ทั้งที่อยู่นิ่งและที่เคลื่อนไหว ถูกแผ่ซ่านครอบคลุม.
{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "adbhuta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Purāṇic theology often holds that the Supreme is transcendent (unmanifest to ordinary perception) yet can assume manifest forms for grace, protection, and revelation. The verse compresses this into a single doctrinal statement of simultaneous immanence and transcendence.
It is a comprehensive merism: ‘immobile and mobile’ together denotes all categories of existence. The hymn thus asserts that nothing—living or non-living—lies outside the Lord’s pervasion.
It borrows philosophical vocabulary (vyakta/avyakta, sūkṣma) familiar from Sāṅkhya and Vedānta, but deploys it devotionally: the categories become attributes of the praised Lord rather than abstract metaphysical principles alone.