Sat-saṅga, Dharma-Nīti, Karma-Phala, Śauca, and Vairāgya
Overcoming Grief
ब्रह्मा येन कुलालवन्नियमितो ब्रह्माण्डभाण्डोदरे विष्णुर्येन दशावतारगहने क्षिप्तो महासङ्कटे / रुद्रोयेन कपालपाणिपुटके भिक्षाटनं कारितः सूर्यो भ्राम्यति नित्यमेव गगने तरमै नमः कर्णणे
brahmā yena kulālavanniyamito brahmāṇḍabhāṇḍodare viṣṇuryena daśāvatāragahane kṣipto mahāsaṅkaṭe / rudroyena kapālapāṇipuṭake bhikṣāṭanaṃ kāritaḥ sūryo bhrāmyati nityameva gagane taramai namaḥ karṇaṇe
Pagpupugay sa Kataas-taasang Sanhi: Siya na nagtatakda kay Brahmā na parang magpapalayok sa loob ng sisidlan ng kosmikong itlog; Siya na naghulog kay Viṣṇu sa malalim na hiwaga ng sampung avatāra sa gitna ng malaking panganib; Siya na nagpagala kay Rudra bilang pulubing asceta na may mangkok na bungo sa kamay; at Siya na nagpapapaikot sa Araw sa langit magpakailanman.
Narrator (praise-stuti within the Vishnu–Garuda dialogue context)
Concept: There is a Supreme Cause (kāraṇa) that regulates Brahmā, directs Viṣṇu’s avatāra-līlā, impels Rudra’s mendicancy, and sets the Sun’s perpetual course—revealing an overarching sovereignty beyond even the deities’ roles.
Vedantic Theme: Īśvara as nimitta-kāraṇa and cosmic governor; deities as offices within order; invitation to surrender of ego and recognition of the one underlying principle.
Application: Contemplate cosmic order to reduce anxiety; cultivate devotion and humility; accept role-dharma while remembering a higher governance.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: cosmic/celestial expanse
Related Themes: Garuda Purana cosmological and theological passages on īśvara’s governance (general parallel)
This verse frames all divine functions—creation, preservation, dissolution, and cosmic motion—as governed by one ultimate principle, encouraging devotion and surrender to the source behind all karmic and cosmic order.
By emphasizing a regulating Cause (kāraṇa) behind even the gods’ roles, the verse supports the Purana’s larger teaching that the universe runs by law (dharma/niyati), under which beings experience the results of karma in life, death, and afterlife states.
Cultivate humility and ethical discipline by remembering that power and circumstances are governed by higher law; practice daily prayer/recitation (stuti), and align actions with dharma to reduce suffering and confusion.