SrI vishNu sahasranAmam - Slokam 36.
From the Bhakti List Archives
• July 10, 1998
SrI vishNu sahasranAmam - Slokam 36. skandah skanda-dharo dhuryo varado vAyu-vAhanah | vAsu-devo br*had-bhAnuh Adi-devah purandarah || om skandAya namah om skanda-dharAya namah om dhuryAya namah om varadAya namah om vAyu-vAhanAya namah om vAsudevAya namah om br*had-bhAnave namah om Adi-devAya namah om purandarAya namah 329. skandha - He who dries up (destroys). om skandAya namah. skandayati Soshayati iti skandah - One who destroys the asura-s and other evil-doers (SrI BhaTTar). skanda also can mean One who melts like butter when it comes to helping His devotees, or flows like nectar in the thoughts of His bhakta-s - skandati iti skandah (This is one interpretation that SrI Sankara gives). SrI rAdhAkr*shNa SAstri gives reference to gItA - senAnInAm aham skandah (gItA 10.24) - I am skanda among the chiefs of armies. Here skanda refers to subrahmaNya, who is considered the chief among the chiefs of armies. 330. skanda-dharah - The Supporter of skanda. om skanda-dharAya namah. (SrI BhaTTar) - BhagavAn is the supporter of skanda, the commander-in-chief of the army of gods. The above quote from gItA thus states that skanda is a part of bhagavAn's vibhUti or glory. SrI Sankara's interpretation for the term skanda is "righteous path - dharma patham", and so the vyAkhyAna he gives is that bhgavAn is the upholder of the path of dharma. 331. dhuryah - The Supporter. om dhuryAya namah. One of the meanings for the word 'dhur' is load. He bore the weight of the mandara mountain in His kUrma incarnation, and so He is the Supporter. He is also the Supporter of the Universe - bhuvana-bhr*te. SrI satyadevo vAsisshTha gives an alternate meaning also for the word "dhur" - the front part of an object, and interprets the nAma to mean that bhagavAn is the mArga-darSi or one who shows the path for everyone. 332. vara-dah - The Grantor of boons. om varadAya namah. varAh abhIpsitah arthah, tam dadAti iti vara-dah. varam also means "the best", and so One who gives the best to those devotees who pray to Him with detachment is vara-da. The dharma cakram writer reminds us that the best for us is "nalam tarum Sollai nAn kaNDu konDEn nArAyaNA ennum nAmam" per tirumangai AzhvAr. Needless to say what one gets by chanting the nAma of nArAyaNa - "kulam tarum Selvan tandiDum aDiyAr paDu tuyar Ayina ellAm nilam taram Seyyum.... peRRa tAyinum Ayina Seyyum". 333. vAyu-vAhanah - He who has vAyu as His vehicle. om vAyu-vAhanAya namah. BhagavAn rides on and drives vAyu, the life-breath of the world. In tiruvezhukkURRirukkai, we have - mEdagum aim-perum bhUtamum nIyE - He controls the pa~nca bhUta-s such as air etc. The dharma cakram writer points out that while air is very important for us to live, this nAma should remind us that mahA vishNu who makes the air move is just as important to us, and thus we should learn to meditate on Him. SrI Sankara gives the vyAkhyAna that bhagavAn controls the atmosphere in the seven regions of space. SrI rAdhAkr*shNa SAstri describes in detail about these seven regions which are controlled by seven different sons of kaSyapa and diti, because of the powers given to them by bhagavAn. They are called the sapta-maruta-s. Six of these regions are listed by many of the authors. These regions are: the space between earth and the clouds, that between the clouds and the sun, that between the sun and the moon, the moon and the stars, the stars and the planets, and the planets and the sapta-r*shi manDala. It is said that it is because of the pressure exerted by these regions of air that the various stellar objects keep from colliding with each other. The next 12 nAma-s are interpreted by SrI BhaTTar as referring to adhyAtma vAsudeva or para vAsudeva form of bhagavAn. Prof. A. SrInivAsa rAghavan notes that coincidentally, the vAsudeva mantra also has 12 akshara-s in it. 334. vAsu-devah - He who pervades and sports. om Vasu-devAya namah. This nAma occurs again as nAma 701. The name indicates that bhagavAn is vAsu and He is deva. vAsu is derived from vas - to reside and to envelope. sarvam vasati - everything lives in Him, and sarvatra vasati - He lives everywhere. He is vAsu since He lives in the world making it live within Himself like a mother and also protects it by covering it like a bird that protects its young ones with its out-spread wings. He is deva because He plays, wishes to conquer, and shines. He also protects the beings as described above (vAsu) as a leelaa, and so He is vAsu-deva. The word deva is derived from div - krIDAyAm - to play. So all His acts are leelaa-s. The following quotes are given by SrI Sankara and SrI BhaTTar to support the interpretation: "chAdayAmi jagad-viSvam bhUtyA sUrya ivAmSubhih | sarva-bhUtAdhi-vAsaSca vAsu-devah tatah smr*tah || -moksh dharma 12-328-36) "Like the sun with his rays, I am covering the whole universe, and also I am residing in all beings; hence I am called vAsudeva". "vasanAt sarva-bhUtAnAm vasutvAt deva-yonitah | vAsudevastato j~neyah yogibhis_tattva darSibhih || (udyoga 69-3) "I am the abode of all beings, and with a divine form I live in all of them. Therefore I am known as vAsudeva by the yogi-s who have realized the truth". "sarvatrAsau samastam ca vasatyatreti vai yatah | tatah sa vAsudeveti vidvadbhih paripaThyate || (vishNu purANam 1.2.12) "Learned men declare that bhagavAn is called vAsudeva because He abides in all things, and al things abide in Him". "sarvANi tatra bhUtAni vasanti paramAtmani | bhUteshu ca sa sarvAtmA vAsudevastatah smr*tah || (vishNu purA. 6.5.80) "All beings remain in the paramAtman, and He is in all beings; hence the omnipresent is called vAsudeva". SrI v.v.rAmAnujan points out that bhagavAn got this name also by His incarnation as the son of vasudeva. The dharma cakram writer brings out the subtle point that bhagavAn is in everything and everywhere, and yet successfully conceals Himself from all except His devotees. He successfully conceals Himself while being present in everything as the antaryAmi, controlling the air, the sun, the planets, etc., having svayam-prakASa, etc. SrI BhaTTar points out that like the nAma nArAyaNa, this nAma is also a rahasyam whose meaning should be learnt from an AcArya, and so is not discussed in further detail. 335. br*had-bhAnuh - He of profuse luster. om br*had-bhAnave namah. br*hat means huge, very large. bhAnu means rays. SrI Sankara gives the following reference: "br*hanto bhAnavo yasya candra sUryAtigAminah | tair-viSvam bhAsayati yah sa br*had-bhAnurucyate || (udyoga 70.4) "He, whose great rays surpass the sun, moon, and others, and He who illuminates the universe through them, is called br*had-bhAnuh". SrI rAdhAkr*shNa SAstri gives the support from muNDakopanishad - na tatra sUryo bhAti na candra tArakam nemA vidyuto bhAnti kuto'yamagnih | tameva bhAntam anubhAti sarvam tasya bhAsA sarvamidam vibhAti (2.2.10). The sun and moon get their luster from Him. The dharma cakram writer points out that while the sun gives light to the external world, BhagavAn gives light to the Sun as well as the light needed for us to realize our internal self. 336. Adi-devah - The First Deity. om Adi-devAya namah. That He sports with the worlds as He pleases is indicated by the nAma Adi-devah. As was seen earlier in "vAsu-devah", the term deva refers to His leelA or sport in creation, protection, and destruction of all the beings. He plays with the act of creation etc. just like a child playing on the seashore by building and smashing sand-castles (SrI v.v.rAmAnujan). "akhila bhuvana janma sthema bhangAdi leele" - It is His sport to go through this cycle of creation, protection and destruction. SrI Sankara's vyAkhyAnam is "Adih kAraNam" - The First Cause. SrI rAdhAkr*shNa SAstri gives the definition from niruktam - "devo dAnAdva dIpanAdvA dyotanAdvA dyusthAno bhavati (7.25) - deva is one who gives in plenty, one who shines and makes others shine, and one who dwells in space". BhagavAn is Adi-deva in this sense. 337. purandarah - The destroyer of cities (of asura-s etc.). om purandarAya namah. puram dArayati iti purandarah. In tripura samhAram by Siva, bhagavAn became the arrow for Siva, and in addition, being the antaryAmi for him, helped in the destruction of the three cities. "puramoru mUnRerittu" - tiruvAi mozhi 1.1.8 (SrI v.v.rAmAnujan). SrI rAdhAkr*shNa SAstri points out that the term puram is also used to refer to the three SarIra-s viz. the sthUla, sUkshma, and kAraNa sarIra-s. He is purandara because He has torn apart these three and is the AtmA beyond these three SarIra-s. -dAsan kr*shNamAcAryan
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