Kālayavana’s Rise, Dvārakā’s Founding, and Muchukunda’s Awakening (Śaraṇāgati & Brahman-Stuti)
मथुरावासिनो लोकांस् तत्रानीय जनार्दनः आसन्ने कालयवने मथुरां च स्वयं ययौ
mathurāvāsino lokāṃs tatrānīya janārdanaḥ āsanne kālayavane mathurāṃ ca svayaṃ yayau
阇那尔达那先将摩图罗的民众带到安全之处;当迦罗耶伐那逼近时,他亲自前往摩图罗,为护持信众而独自承担危难。
Sage Parāśara (narrating to Maitreya)
Avatara: Krishna
Purpose: To shield the people of Mathurā by relocating them to safety while personally confronting the imminent threat of Kālayavana.
Leela: Loka-rakshana
Dharma Restored: Protection of devotees and righteous rule through strategic self-sacrifice and leadership
Concept: The Lord places the safety of His devotees first, taking peril upon Himself as the supreme protector.
Vedantic Theme: Dharma
Application: Practice responsible compassion: ensure others’ safety and well-being before confronting crises personally.
Vishishtadvaita: Divine compassion (dayā) expresses itself in concrete historical acts, not merely transcendence—God’s accessibility to devotees.
Vishnu Form: Krishna
Bhakti Type: Dasya
This verse highlights Krishna’s role as protector: he first secures the citizens, then personally turns toward the threat, showing divine kingship where the Lord bears danger to preserve dharma and his devotees.
Parāśara narrates a deliberate sequence—relocate the vulnerable, then confront the approaching enemy—presenting Krishna’s actions as purposeful governance rather than mere battlefield impulse.
Janārdana appears as the Supreme Lord acting within history: his protection of devotees and calm mastery over impending danger exemplify Vishnu’s sovereignty and sustaining power in the world.