Sanatkumāra’s Bhāgavata Tantra: Tattvas, Māyā-Bonds, Embodiment, and the Necessity of Dīkṣā
अनादिनिधना तत्त्वं कलाख्यं जनयत्यपि । एकतस्तु नृणां येन कलयित्वा मलं ततः ॥ ४९ ॥
anādinidhanā tattvaṃ kalākhyaṃ janayatyapi | ekatastu nṛṇāṃ yena kalayitvā malaṃ tataḥ || 49 ||
Thực tại vô thủy vô chung cũng sinh ra nguyên lý gọi là “Kalā” (năng lực/độ lượng hiển lộ). Nhờ đó, mặt “mala” (uế nhiễm) của con người được đo lường và phân chia theo phần.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It presents Kalā as a manifested power arising from the eternal Reality, which regulates embodied life by apportioning “mala” (defilement), implying that bondage operates through measurable, governed principles—not randomness.
By identifying impurity (mala) as something regulated and knowable, the verse supports the bhakti framework where disciplined purification—through devotion, vows, and right conduct—can counteract the conditions that obscure realization of the eternal tattva.
The verse uses the technical idea of “kalā/kalanā” (measurement, regulation), aligning with Vedāṅga-style analytical thinking (especially Jyotiṣa and systematic enumeration of principles) to explain how time/measure relates to embodied impurity.