SrI vishNu sahasranAmam - Slokam 50 - Part 1.
From the Bhakti List Archives
• March 22, 1999
SrI vishNu sahasranAmam - Slokam 50 - Part 1. svApanah sva-vaSo vyApI naikAtmA naika-karma-kr*t | vatasaro vatsalo vatsI ratna-garbho dhaneSvarah || om svApanAya namah om sva-vasAya namah om vyApine namah om naikAtmane namah om naika-karma-kr*te namah om vatsarAya namah om vatsalAya namah om vatsine namah om ratna-garbhAya namah om dhaneSvarAya namah 466. svApanah - He who lulls people into sleep. om svApanAya namah. SrI BhaTTar's vyAkhyAnam is that bhagavAn in His mohini incarnation lulled into sleep the asura-s who had not been put away as described in the previous nAma, using His beautiful smile, sweet glances and the play of His eyebrows, and thus made them forget that He was distributing the nectar to the deva-s exclusively. SrI satyadevo vAsishTha's anubhavam of this nAma is "svApayati nidrApayati pralayakAle sarvam prakr*tAviti svApanah" - He puts everyone to sleep at the time of pralaya. Even though He makes everyone sleep, He Himself is wide awake. This svApanatva guNa of bhagavAn is reflected again in everything He creates after the pralaya also. The Sun puts everyone to sleep when the night comes, but the sun itself does not sleep. SrI rAdhAkr*shNa Sastri refers to gItA 7.25 - "nAham prakASah sarvasya yoga-mAyA-samAvr*tah, mUDho'yam nAbhijAnAti" - His paratva has been concealed to the non-devotee in bhagavAn's incarnations because He appears like all of us in His body, appearance, and talk etc., and so they don't recognize Him as paramAtmA. He who does not see what is in front of Him is as good as a person who is sleeping. The dharma cakram writer gives the analogy of the animal life vs. the human life. Humans are "awake" in the world of intelligent reasoning, in which the animals are "asleep", i.e., they are not capable of operating in this domain as well as humans can do. Similarly the ordinary human is asleep to the world of the j~nAni. The path for the ordinary human to become awake in the world of the j~nAni is to chant the nArAyaNa mantra - "nalam tarum Sollai nAn kaNDu koNDEn nArAyaNA ennum nAmam" is AzhvAr aruLic-ceyal. This is the lesson we should take from this nAma. 467. sva-vaSah - He who is under His own control. om sva-vaSAya namah. Continuing on his anubhavam of the mohini incarnation, SrI BhaTTar explains that after bhagavAn put the asura-s to sleep, He plays as He likes with the deva-s, consistent with His absolute independence. The bhAvam here is that bhagavAn is not under the control of anyone or anything else, and He is only under His own control. He does not need anyone's help or support for whatever He does. Everything else is under His control. He does His acts of creation etc. as He wishes. He does not also have any desire that is out of His reach (based on vaS - kAntau to wish, to desire - SrI satyadevo vAsishTha). BhagavAn is sva-vaSah because He has everything that He desires within Himself, does not have any desire outside of Him, and rejoices with His own Self. SrI Sa~nkara bhAshyam is that bhagavAn is Independent, being the cause of creation, preservation and withdrawal of the Universe - svatantrah. The dharma cakram writer points out that it is only when one does not have any need that one can be totally independent. tiruvaLLUvar refers to bhagavAn as "vENDudal vENDAmai ilAn". ANDAL's words are "kuRaivu onRum illAda gOvindA". When we are under the control of our mind, we lose our independence, and do whatever our mind dictates. Then we become dependent on others. This nAma teaches us that we should learn to control our mind and get it under our control instead of being controlled by our mind. Meditating on this nAma of bhagavAn will give us this discipline. The more we are able to devote ourselves to bhagavAn, the more our mind will get under our control. 468. vyApI - The Pervader. om vyApine namah. SrI BhaTTar-s vyAkhyAnam is that bhagavAn pervades everyone with His own Power and gives energy to them. At the time of churning the Mik-Ocean, He pervaded the deva-s, the asura-s, the mandAra mountain, vAsuki and others, and gave them the energy to churn the ocean. SrI v.v.rAmAnujan refers us to nammAzhvAr 1.1.10 - "paranda taN paravai uL nIr torum paranduLan....karandu e~ngum paranduLan ivai uNDa karanE". (paravai here refers to an expanse of water - Ocean). SrI rAdhAkr*shNa Sastri gives reference to the Sruti - avyaktAt-tu parah purusho vyApakah ( muNDaka 2.3.8). SrI cinmayAnanda points out that in philosophy pervasiveness indicates subtlety. BhagavAn is all-pervasive, and so is subtler than the subtlest. Since the cause pervades the effect (e.g., gold pervades all gold ornaments), so also bhagavAn who pervades everything is thus the Cause of everything. The dharma cakram writer observes that All-pervasiveness also implies limitlessness, since whatever there is and wherever it is, BhagavAn pervades it, and so there is no limit to Him. This limitless emperumAn just projects Himself such that we see whatever little we see based on our limitations. Meditating on this nAma of bhagavAn will broaden our ability to see this Limitless vyApI. SrI satyadevo vAsishTha gives several references from the Sruti - parItya bhUtAni parItya lokAn parItya sarvAh pradiSo diSaSca (yajur), pr*shTo divi pr*shTo agnih pr*thivyAm pr*shTo viSvA oshadhIrAviveSa (r*g), yo agnau rudro yo apsv-antarya oshadhIr-vIrudha AviveSa (atharva); etc. 469. naikAtmA - He of diverse forms. om naikAtmane namah. SrI BhaTTar's anubhavam is that bhagavAn assumed several forms at the time of churning - as vishNu to help the gods and the asura-s to churn, as the tortoise to support the mandAra mountain, and as mohini to distribute the nectar. SrI rAdhAkr*shNa SAstri reminds us of the similarity between this nAma and nAma 139 - caturAtmA. A more general interpretation is that bhagavAn expresses Himself through all the forms of His creation. The dharma cakram writer points out that the different forms of gods that the followers of different religions worship are all an expression of bhagavAn, and it is because of their ignorance of bhagavAn being a naikAtmA that they think they are worshipping different deities and fighting within themselves. SrI satyadevo vAsishTha gives the root of the word AtmA as ata - sAtatyagamane - to go constantly, which nicely explains the nature of the AtmA. BhagavAn is everywhere in the form of the father, the mother, the son, the disciple, the teacher, the husband, the wife, the friend, etc., since He is the antaryAmi in everything. SrI vAsishTha gives several references to the Sruti in support of the interpretation of this nAma, among which are the following - tadev-Agnis-tad-Adityas-tadu vAyus-tadu-candramAh | tadeva Sukram tad-brahma tA Apah sa prajApatih || (yajur. 32-1); tvam hi nah pitA vaso tvam mAtA Satakrato babhUvitha (r*g 8.98.11). 470. naika-karma-kr*t - He who performs diverse acts. om naika-karma-kr*te namah. SrI BhaTTar explains the nAma by giving the example of His churning the ocean, supporting the mountain, overcoming the enemies, distributing the nectar, etc. SrI v.v.v rAmAnujan gives the quotes from nammAzhvAr - kUDi nIraik-kaDaindavArum amudam dEvar uNNa asurargaLai vIDum vaNNa~ngaL Seidu pOna vittagamum (tiruvAimozhi 5.10.10), and from tirumaZhiSai AzhvAr - malai Amai mEl vaittu vASugiyaic-cuRRi talai Amai tAn oru kai paRRi alaiyAmal pIrak-kaDainda perumAn (nAnmugan 49). SrI Sa~nkara points to diverse actions such as creation, sustenance, etc. as a way of interpreting this nAma. SrI rAdhAkr*shNa Sastri points to His actions in the form of candra, sUrya, agni, etc. and helping to serve us. The dharma cakram writer gives a view which summarizes all the above by pointing out that everything that ever takes place is His action and nothing else. Examples of this abound. We are instruments in His creation, but we are not creators. From one mango tree, only another mango tree can come, and we can't create something else from a mango seed. We are the instruments and He is the kartA. If we have this realization, the benefits (karma phalam) of none of the actions for which we are the instruments will accrue to us. SrI satyadevo vAsishTha continues his interpretation based on his previous interpretation of naikAtmA. BhagavAn who is in many forms (father, mother, son...), performs many actions in the form of the father, mother, son, etc. -To be continued in Part 2. -dAsan kr*shNamAcAryan
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