Sṛṣṭi-krama, Pratibimba-Upādhi, and Viṣṇu as Primary Brahman
with Pralaya and Nāma-Stuti
दैत्यादिकान्दुः खमतीन्ह यस्मात्तमस्यन्धेसर्वदा चित्स्वरूपी / तस्मादाहुर्दुः स्वरूपी हरिस्त्वं दुः खस्वरूपात्त्वं च दुः खी हरे त्वम्
daityādikānduḥ khamatīnha yasmāttamasyandhesarvadā citsvarūpī / tasmādāhurduḥ svarūpī haristvaṃ duḥ khasvarūpāttvaṃ ca duḥ khī hare tvam
因为你超越了诸代提耶等众生的苦患,即使在无明的盲暗之中,你也恒常安住于清净觉知之性。故人称曰:“哈利啊,你是止息忧苦之相。”而因你摄受受苦者之境况,噢哈利,你亦被说为“与其同受其苦”。
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Hari is eternally of the nature of consciousness and transcends duḥkha, yet is praised as the one who ends sorrow and compassionately identifies with sufferers.
Vedantic Theme: Īśvara’s transcendence (pāramārthika) alongside compassionate immanence (vyāvahārika); grace as duḥkha-kṣaya.
Application: When overwhelmed, remember the divine as untainted awareness; cultivate trust that compassion meets suffering; practice nāma-smaraṇa to shift from ‘andhatamas’ to clarity.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: repeated portrayal of Viṣṇu as śaraṇya and duḥkha-hara in hymns and consolatory passages to the bereaved; Garuda Purana (Preta-kalpa): emphasis that remembrance of Hari protects amid fear and suffering
Here it indicates that Hari is intimately connected with the removal of sorrow—so close to the suffering beings that he is described in relation to their duḥkha, while remaining essentially pure consciousness.
It contrasts blind tamas (the obscuring darkness) with Hari’s cit-svarūpa nature, teaching that the divine reality is not overcome by ignorance even when beings are trapped in it.
Cultivate remembrance and devotion to the higher consciousness in times of distress, and practice compassion—helping others in sorrow while staying anchored in clarity and dharma.