HomeMatsya PuranaAdh. 3Shloka 16
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Shloka 16

Matsya Purana — Brahmā’s Four Faces

गुणेभ्यः क्षोभमाणेभ्यस् त्रयो देवा विजज्ञिरे एका मूर्तिस् त्रयो भागा ब्रह्मविष्णुमहेश्वराः //

guṇebhyaḥ kṣobhamāṇebhyas trayo devā vijajñire ekā mūrtis trayo bhāgā brahmaviṣṇumaheśvarāḥ //

جب گُنوں میں ہیجان (کَشوبھ) پیدا ہوا تو تین دیوتا ظاہر ہوئے۔ حقیقتاً صورت ایک تھی، مگر تین حصّوں میں—برہما، وِشنو اور مہیشور۔

guṇebhyaḥfrom the guṇas (sattva, rajas, tamas)
guṇebhyaḥ:
kṣobhamāṇebhyaḥbeing stirred/agitated
kṣobhamāṇebhyaḥ:
trayaḥthree
trayaḥ:
devāḥgods/deities
devāḥ:
vijajñirewere born/came forth/manifested
vijajñire:
ekāone
ekā:
mūrtiḥform/essence
mūrtiḥ:
trayaḥthree
trayaḥ:
bhāgāḥportions/aspects
bhāgāḥ:
brahmāBrahmā (creator aspect)
brahmā:
viṣṇuViṣṇu (preserver aspect)
viṣṇu:
maheśvaraḥMaheśvara/Śiva (dissolver aspect)
maheśvaraḥ:
Suta (narratorial voice of the Purana; cosmogonic exposition)
BrahmaVishnuMaheshvaraGunas (Sattva-Rajas-Tamas)Trimurti
CreationCosmogonyGunasTrimurtiTheology

FAQs

It explains creation at the level of first manifestation: when the guṇas become active (kṣobha), the supreme principle appears as three functional powers—creation (Brahmā), preservation (Viṣṇu), and dissolution (Maheśvara).

By presenting one reality operating through three functions, it supports a dharma-based worldview: rulers and householders should uphold order (Viṣṇu-like maintenance), initiate constructive works (Brahmā-like creation), and remove harmful disorder (Śiva-like restraint), all as harmonized duties.

While not giving direct Vāstu rules, the verse underpins later iconography and ritual practice: temple worship often honors the Trimūrti as three aspects of one divine essence, guiding how deities may be conceptually related within a sacred complex.