Varṣa-devatā Worship in Jambūdvīpa: Hayagrīva/Hayaśīrṣa, Nṛsiṁha, Kāmadeva (Pradyumna), Matsya, Kūrma, and Varāha
जरायुजं स्वेदजमण्डजोद्भिदं चराचरं देवर्षिपितृभूतमैन्द्रियम् । द्यौ: खं क्षिति: शैलसरित्समुद्र- द्वीपग्रहर्क्षेत्यभिधेय एक: ॥ ३२ ॥
jarāyujaṁ svedajam aṇḍajodbhidaṁ carācaraṁ devarṣi-pitṛ-bhūtam aindriyam dyauḥ khaṁ kṣitiḥ śaila-sarit-samudra- dvīpa-graharkṣety abhidheya ekaḥ
Mahal kong Panginoon, ipinahahayag Mo ang Iyong mga enerhiya sa di-mabilang na anyo: mga nilikhang isinilang sa sinapupunan, sa itlog, at mula sa pawis; mga halaman at punong tumutubo sa lupa; lahat ng gumagalaw at nakatayo—mga deva, banal na rishi, mga pitṛ, mga nilalang, at maging ang mga pandama; pati ang kalangitan, ang mga mataas na daigdig, at ang mundong ito na may bundok, ilog, dagat, karagatan, pulo, planeta at mga bituin. Lahat ay pagpapakita ng Iyong kapangyarihan, ngunit sa pinagmulan Ikaw ay iisa, walang kapantay; walang anuman sa kabila Mo. Kaya ang sansinukob na ito ay hindi huwad, kundi pansamantalang paglitaw ng Iyong di-maarok na lakas.
This verse completely rejects the theory of brahma satyaṁ jagan mithyā, which states that spirit, or Brahman, is real, whereas the manifested material world, with its great variety of things, is false. Nothing is false. One thing may be permanent and another temporary, but both the permanent and the temporary are facts. For example, if someone becomes angry for a certain period, no one can say that his anger is false. It is simply temporary. Everything we experience in our daily lives is of this same character; it is temporary but real.
It lists the major categories of birth—womb-born, sweat-born, egg-born, and sprouting—along with moving and nonmoving beings, and concludes that despite many forms and names, their ultimate basis is one Supreme Reality (the Lord).
Śukadeva Gosvāmī speaks this verse to King Parīkṣit while describing the cosmic arrangement and the devotional vision that sees all manifestations as ultimately resting in Bhagavān.
By practicing devotional remembrance and respect—seeing all beings and nature as connected to the Supreme—one reduces envy and pride, and strengthens gratitude, service attitude, and steady bhakti.