Brahmā’s Tapasya, the Vision of Vaikuṇṭha, and the Lord’s Seed Instructions
Catuḥ-śloki
श्यामावदाता: शतपत्रलोचना: पिशङ्गवस्त्रा: सुरुच: सुपेशस: । सर्वे चतुर्बाहव उन्मिषन्मणि- प्रवेकनिष्काभरणा: सुवर्चस: ॥ ११ ॥
śyāmāvadātāḥ śata-patra-locanāḥ piśaṅga-vastrāḥ surucaḥ supeśasaḥ sarve catur-bāhava unmiṣan-maṇi- praveka-niṣkābharaṇāḥ suvarcasaḥ
毗昆塔诸住民肤色如天青般光耀,双目似莲瓣,衣着微黄,形体端严俊美。众皆四臂,佩戴珍珠项链与宝石镶嵌的徽章饰物,通体放光。
The inhabitants in Vaikuṇṭhaloka are all personalities with spiritual bodily features not to be found in the material world. We can find the descriptions in the revealed scriptures like Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam. Impersonal descriptions of transcendence in the scriptures indicate that the bodily features in Vaikuṇṭhaloka are never to be seen in any part of the universe. As there are different bodily features in different places of a particular planet, or as there are different bodily features between bodies in different planets, similarly the bodily features of the inhabitants in Vaikuṇṭhaloka are completely different from those in the material universe. For example, the four hands are distinct from the two hands in this world.
This verse describes divine, four-armed beings—radiant, jewel-adorned, lotus-eyed—indicating Vaikuṇṭha-like spiritual forms associated with the Lord’s presence.
To convey Brahmā’s direct vision of the transcendental realm and its inhabitants, strengthening faith in the Lord’s personal form and the reality of the spiritual world.
Contemplating the Lord’s attributes—beauty, purity, and divine majesty—helps steady the mind, deepen bhakti, and replace anxiety with remembrance of the sacred.