Vamana’s Birth during Bali’s Horse-Sacrifice and the Mapping of Vishnu’s Sacred Presences
त्वं धाता च विधाता च संहर्ता त्वं महेश्वरः महालय महायोगिन् योगशायिन् नमो ऽस्तु ते / 62.41 इत्थं स्तुतो जगन्नाथं सर्वात्मा सर्वगो हरिः प्रोवाच भगवान् मह्यं कुरूपनयनं विभो
tvaṃ dhātā ca vidhātā ca saṃhartā tvaṃ maheśvaraḥ mahālaya mahāyogin yogaśāyin namo 'stu te / 62.41 itthaṃ stuto jagannāthaṃ sarvātmā sarvago hariḥ provāca bhagavān mahyaṃ kurūpanayanaṃ vibho
آپ ہی دھاتا اور ودھاتا ہیں؛ اور آپ ہی سنہارتا، اے مہیشور۔ اے مہالَی، اے مہایوگی، یوگ-شائی—آپ کو سلام۔ یوں ستوت کیے جانے پر جگن ناتھ، سب کے آتما اور سراسر پھیلے ہوئے ہری نے مجھ سے فرمایا: اے وِبھو، میں تمہارا اُپنَین (یَجنوپویت کی رسم) انجام دوں گا۔
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Purāṇic stutis often employ ‘shared’ supreme epithets across sectarian boundaries. Here, “Maheśvara” functions as a title of the Supreme Lord rather than a strict sectarian identifier, reinforcing a theological unity where Viṣṇu is praised with names also associated with Śiva.
“Yogaśāyin” points to Nārāyaṇa’s cosmic posture of yogic sleep (yoga-nidrā), the transcendent stillness from which creation proceeds and into which it is withdrawn—matching the triad dhātā/vidhātā/saṁhartā.
The narrative pattern is: praise → divine favor → authorization into dharma/śāstra. Upanayana marks formal entry into Vedic discipline; the verse frames it as a divinely sanctioned rite, not merely a social ceremony.