Cosmic Appointments, Viṣṇu’s Vibhūtis, Fourfold Operation, and the Symbolism of Ornaments and Weapons
विनाशं कुर्वतस् तस्य चतुर्धैवं महात्मनः विभागकल्पना ब्रह्मन् कथ्यते सार्वकालिकी
vināśaṃ kurvatas tasya caturdhaivaṃ mahātmanaḥ vibhāgakalpanā brahman kathyate sārvakālikī
婆罗门啊,当那位大心的主宰施行毁灭(劫尽)之时,关于祂四重分化的观念被宣说为恒常之理,历一切时而不变。
Sage Parāśara (in discourse to Maitreya)
This verse frames dissolution as an ordered, fourfold principle rather than chaos—an enduring structure through which the Lord withdraws the cosmos in a regulated way.
By calling the doctrine sārvakālikī, Parāśara emphasizes that the pattern governing dissolution is timeless and recurs across cycles of creation and withdrawal.
Vishnu is implied as the supreme governor whose will and order preside even over destruction, reinforcing a Vaishnava view of the cosmos as sustained by a highest, intelligent reality.