THE HINDU ONLINE : God's compassion, His foremost quality
From the Bhakti List Archives
• October 17, 1995
http://www.webpage.com/hindu/current/21/0624b.html Go to : |Weekly edition |THE HINDU Main Menu| ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- God's compassion, His foremost quality ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: 06-10-1995 :: Pg: 24 :: Col: c Cl: Religion MADRAS, Oct. 6. The Supreme Being according to Sri Vaishnavism is the abode of countless auspicious qualities (kalyana gunas). While He is the transcendent Lord of the entire creation of non sentient and sentient beings, which makes Him the only sole refuge of all, His nature of easy accessibility (saulabhya) on the other hand makes it possible for human beings with all their weaknesses to approach Him for succorn. Sriman Narayana the Supreme One is also known as Bhagavan because He is the home of the six gunas jnana, bala, aishvarya, virya, sakti and tejas which have an important function in His role of creation, sustenance and dissolution of the universe. The philosophy of this religion gives an important place to the gunas of the Lord in the context of the redemption of the souls. In his discourse Sri Veeraraghavachariar said, Vedanta Desika in his Dayasatakam with poetic ingenuity goes to the extent of declaring that without His guna of compassion (daya) all other auspicious traits of the Lord will amount to blemishes. Like the wealth of a rich man which only causes destruction when it is not put to charitable cause, without compassion all other qualities of the Lord will not be of any help to us. This stotra work of 108 verses in ten different virutta styles on the compassion of God is believed to have been composed with inspiration from Nammazhvar's outpourings of the compassion of Lord Srinivasa in his Tiruvoymozhi. One may rightly wonder when the Almighty has innumerable auspicious qualities fit to be eulogised. His transcendent (Paratva) nature emphasises His omnis cience, Lordship and omnipotence but, if His saulabhya nature does not come to the fore it will not be of any benefit to human ity. Thus with his rare genius Desika personifies the quality of daya as a consort of the Lord making all his other gunas subser vient to her. When His quality of jnana shows up the faults of human beings it is His daya which intercedes on their behalf and makes Him overlook the faults. Further Desika explains in this poem that it is His compassion which urges Him to create this universe to provide an opportunity to the souls to strive for their salva tion. It is His compassionate grace which sustains the entire creation and when necessary withdraws it into Himself. Another important point he makes here is that the Lord who is considered as the first teacher to humanity, out of His compassion comes to the world to teach the scriptural truths from time to time in the form of different Acharyas. He compares the Lord's compassion for man to that of a mother's unconditional love for her child. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Go to : |Weekly edition |THE HINDU Main Menu| ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Copyright © 1995 THE HINDU & PARALOGIC CORPORATION.
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