The Sarasvata Hymn to Vishnu (Vishnu-Pañjara) and the Redemption of a Rakshasa
ब्रह्म भूत्वा जगत् सर्वं सदेवासुरमानुषम् यः सृजत्यच्युतो देवस्तमस्मि शरणं गतः
brahma bhūtvā jagat sarvaṃ sadevāsuramānuṣam yaḥ sṛjatyacyuto devastamasmi śaraṇaṃ gataḥ
Having become Brahmā, that Acyuta Deva who creates the entire universe—together with gods, asuras, and humans—to Him I have gone for refuge.
{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
The phrasing 'brahma bhūtvā' supports a Purāṇic theological idiom where Viṣṇu is the ultimate source who either assumes the creator-function or manifests/empowers Brahmā as His office. The intent is supremacy and causality: creation proceeds from Acyuta.
It signals totality across moral and ontological categories—celestial, anti-celestial, and terrestrial—indicating that all beings within saṃsāra are included in the created order and thus under the same divine source.
It is a formal declaration of surrender: the speaker grounds refuge not in a limited deity of one function, but in the transcendent Lord who underlies even the creator-role, making Him the most reliable shelter.