The Recitation of the Thousand Names of Rādhā and Kṛṣṇa (Yugala-Sahasranāma) and Śaraṇāgati-Dharma
कोटिकल्पांतभ्रूभंगा अप्राप्तप्रलयाच्युता । सर्वसत्त्वनिधिः पद्मशंखादिनिधिसेविता ॥ १६५ ॥
koṭikalpāṃtabhrūbhaṃgā aprāptapralayācyutā | sarvasattvanidhiḥ padmaśaṃkhādinidhisevitā || 165 ||
Kahit sa wakas ng milyun-milyong kalpa, hindi sumisimangot ang kanyang kilay; nananatili siyang matatag at di natitinag, at hindi nadaraig kahit hindi pa dumarating ang pralaya. Siya ang kayamanang-taguan ng lahat ng nilalang, pinaglilingkuran ng mga banal na yaman gaya ng Padma at Śaṅkha (banal na kabibe) at iba pang makalangit na kayamanan.
Narada (within Narada–Sanatkumara dialogue context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
It praises an unshakable divine principle—steady even across kalpa-endings—and portrays it as the inexhaustible source (nidhi) supporting all beings, symbolized by divine treasures like Padma and Śaṅkha.
By depicting the deity’s unwavering, ever-protective nature and inexhaustible abundance, it encourages bhakti grounded in trust (śraddhā): the devotee turns to the ever-steady refuge rather than to transient worldly conditions.
The verse uses technical Purāṇic-Vedic cosmology terms (kalpa, pralaya) and precise compound formation (samāsa), aligning with Vedāṅga concerns such as Vyākaraṇa (grammar) and Nirukta-style semantic clarity.
Read Narada Purana in the Vedapath app
Scan the QR code to open this directly in the app, with audio, word-by-word meanings, and more.