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SrI vishNu sahasranAmam - Slokam 26.

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SrI vishNu sahasranAmam -Slokam 26.

 

suprasAdah prasannAtmA viSva-sr*t viSva-bhug-vibhuh |

sat-kartA sat-kr*tah sAdhuh jahnur_nArAyaNo narah ||

 

Om suprasAdAya namh

Om pransannAtmane namah

Om viSva-sr*je namah

Om viSva-bhug-vibhave namah

Om sat-kartre namah

Om sat-kr*tAya namah

Om sAdhave namah

Om jahnave namah

Om nArAyaNAya namah

Om narAya namah.

 

238. su-prasAdah - The Giver of good favors.

 

Om suprasAdAya namah.

 

Sobhanah prasAdha dAtr*tvAt suprasAdah - For those who surrender

to Him He confers all that is good. In fact He goes further and confers

the good to those who are His enemies as well, as in the cases of

rAvaNa, SiSupAla, duryodhana, etc., by conferring moksha on them

ultimately. In other words, whatever bhagavAn confers, it is for the

good of the recipient. This concept is repeatedly pointed by svAmi

deSikan in the dayA-Satakam when he describes the dayA aspects of the

different incarnations. Thus for instance, in the paraSu-rAma

incarnation, when He destroyed the evil kshatriya kings, He really got

rid of their sins, and sent them to moksha. In the kalki incarnation,

when He will destroy those at the end of the kali-yuga who are soaked in

sin, it is only to wash them of their sins and re-establish a

dharma-oriented kr*ta yuga where their jIva-s can flourish again that

this act of His is undertaken.

 

The writer in dharma cakram points out that there are those of

us who will do good to those who are bad to us, in addition to those who

follow the rule of an eye for an eye, and worse still, there are those

who do bad to those who are good to them. SrI mahA-vishNu is one who

does always what is good for everyone irrespective of how they are

towards Him. Meditation on Lord vishNu with this guNa implied by this

nAma will give us the right frame of mind to follow the sAttvic path.

 

239. prasannAtmA - He with a clear mind; Of delightful nature.

 

Om prasannAtmane namah.

 

He is of delightful nature because He has no desires and no

wants since He has realized all desires - avApta-sarva-kamatvAt. Or

because He is extremely merciful by nature - karuNArdra-svabhAvAt. Or

He is prasannAtmA because His mind is not contaminated by passion

(rajas) and inertia (tamas). SrI P.B. aNNangarAcArya svAmi points out

that He has a clear mind because He is unaffected by likes and dislikes.

SrI cinmayAnanda gives the interpretation that He is All-Blissful

because He is not affected by sorrows resulting from association with

matter and its imperfections (guNa-s). He is of a clear mind, without

being affected by the tamasic and rajasic guNa-s.

 

The dharma cakram writer gives the example of the three

brothers, rAvaNa, kumbhakarNa, and vibhIshaNa, respectively dominated by

rajasic, tAmasic, and sattvic guNa-s. rAvaNa was indulging in

non-righteous acts under the influence of kAma, and brought

self-destruction as a result. Kumbha-karNa was inactive under the

influence of tamas. VibhIshaNa on the other hand had the clarity of

mind aided by his sattvic guNa. He could save SrIlankA from destruction

and could attain the grace of the Lord because of his clear thinking.

Meditating on the nAma prasannAtmA will lead to the clarity of mind that

bhIshma could command, when he advised duryodhana prior to the start of

the mahAbhArata war that they won't win a war fought on immoral and

unethical grounds, and the support of the Lord will be on the side of

dharma. prasannatA results out of the dominance of sattva guNa.

 

240. viSva-sr*t - The Creator of the Universe.

 

Om viSva-sr*je namah.

 

viSvam sr*jati yo sa viSva-sr*t. He created this Universe out

of kindness unmindful of its merits and deficiencies. In Sankara

pATham, this nAma is given as viSva-dhr*g - The Overseer of the cosmos.

Prof. SrInivAsa rAghavan points in his writings in SrI nr*simha priyA

that other pATha-s are viSva-sr*shT and viSva-sr*g.

 

In the context of the interpretation based on viSva-dhr*g - the

overseer or ruler of the cosmos, the dharma cakram commentator

rhetorically asks the question - Do we rule our mind, or does our mind

rule us? If we learn to rule over our mind, then we can rule our

family, our nation, etc., and also know the Ruler of everything. And we

get this conditioning of our mind through meditation on the Lord who is

viSva-dhr*g.

 

SrI satyadevo vAsisshTha gives the meaning based on the root

dhr*sh prAgalbhye to be bold, confident, proud, or brave. He is

viSva-dr*k because He has created this world with skill (cAturya),

prouldy, boldly. Everything He has created, including the different

seasons, the flowers, the different forms of life, etc., are constantly

displaying His brilliance in the different ways they reproduce

themselves, the different forms in which they appear, etc.

 

241. viSvabhug-vibhuh - He who pervades all things and protects them.

 

Om viSvabhug-vibhave namah.

 

vyApya bhunakti - pAlayati iti viSvabhug-vibhuh. SrI Bhattar

interprets this phrase as one nAma, whereas SrI Sankara interprets it as

consisting of two nAma-s, viSva-bhuk and vibhuh.

 

The interpretation for viSva-bhuk is given as viSvam bhu~nkte -

The Enjoyer of the Cosmos, or ViSvam bhunakti - The Protector. The

dharma cakram writer points out that He is the Protector for the

Universe in its expressed form with all its created beings or in its

unexpressed or pralaya form as well. This compares with the situation

of mortals like us who cannot do any good in protecting this world

either in our wakeful state or in our sleep state. SrI cinmayAnanda

gives the interpretation that He enjoys or swallows (bhuk) all

experiences (viSva). The Supreme Consciousness, apparently conditioned

by the mind and intellect, is the experiencer of joys and sorrows. Or,

the term can mean "One who absorbs all names and forms unto Himself at

the time of pralaya". SrI rAdhAkr*shNa SAstri gives the reference to

tiattirIya AraNyaka 10.91 - prabhuh prINAti viSva-bhuk. SrI satyadevo

vAsishTha gives an alternate interpretation based on bhuj kautilye to

bend, to curve, and says that the nAma can mean that He established the

world by bending or extending it in all eight directions.

 

Since SrI Sankara interprets vibhuh as a separate name, he gives

the meaning - One with multi-form - vividham bhavati iti vibhuh. He

became many from HiraNyagarbha downwards. Vividham bhAvayati is another

interpretation, again referring to the multi-forms. SrI rAdhAkr*shNa

SAstri gives the meaning that He is vibhu because He fills everything

everywhere - mahAntam vibhum AtmAnam - kaThopanishad 2.22. The dharma

cakram writer elaborates on the multi-form by giving reference to Lord

kr*shNa's words in the gItA in Chapter 10 starting with Slokam 21 and

going up to Slokam 38, where bhagavAn gives several examples of His

vibhUti-s, and then says in Slokam 40 that there is really no limit to

His vibhUti-s.

 

242. satkartA - He who honors the good.

 

Om satkartre namah.

 

satkaroti pUjayati iti satkartA - One who adores those who are

good and wise. SatkAram is worship. SrI rAma was known as sajjana

prati pUjakah - He who worships those in return who are good to Him.

SrI radAdhAkr*shNa SAstri gives the reference to rAmAyaNa -

bahu-SrutAnAm vr*ddhAnAm brAhmaNAnAm upAsitA (2-2-33) - He worships

those who are learned, old in age, and brAhmaNas.

 

The writer in dharma cakram points out the example of Lord rAma

praising hanumAn as soon as He saw him. The Lord rejoices to find those

who are in this category. The lesson we should take from this nAma is

that we should do acts that will make us fit for this kind of

recognition. Acts that fall in this category are those that give peace

of mind and inner happiness to the doer. By corollary, we should

desist from acts which lead to a feeling of self-centered

accomplishment, pride, etc. Our acts should be directed to His service,

and not for the satisfaction of the human ego.

 

243. satkr*tah - He who is worshipped by the sAdhus (even by those who

deserve to be worshipped).

 

Om satkr*tAya namah.

 

The word satkr*ta means pUjita - One who is worshipped. He is

the Object of worship for everyone. The nirukti summarizes SrI

Bhattar's vyAkhyAna for this nAma as arcAdibhih sajjanaih yah pUjitah

satkr*tah smr*tah. Prof. SrInivAsa rAghavAcArya svAmi in his commentary

in nr*simha priyA points out that when the ekAntins who worhsip only

mahAvishNu make their offerings to Him, no matter how small the offering

is, He considers it big by considering it as worthy of His Supreme

Status, and receives through His head what is offered at His feet, and

receives it personally and not through other intermediary gods. As if

this is not enough, He then feels that whatever He does to His devotees

is inadequate in return (recall Lord kr*shNa's feeling of being indebted

to draupati for ever when she cried out for help and He helped but not

by coming in person right away). The dharma cakram writer points out

that as a means of developing this devotion to Him, our vedas ask us to

worship our mother, our father, our teacher - mAtr* devo bhava,

pitr*devo bhava, AcArya devo bhava.

 

244. sAdhuh - One who carries out (whatever His devotees say).

 

Om sAdhave namah.

 

sAdhayati iti sAdhuh - One who carries out, or sAdhnoti iti

sAdhuh - One who makes it possible to carry out, through various means

that He has provided for the benefit of the beings that He has created.

Going as a messenger, acting as a charioteer, etc. are examples of His

carrying out His undertaking.

 

Even though Lord kr*shNa was Himself a king like duryodhana, He did

not mind doing the work of a messenger, and did not mind doing the work

of a charioteer which is like that of a servant to arjuna. Thus, sAdhu

here refers to His act of carrying out whatever He has to do to take

care of His devotees. He takes several incarnations in which He suffers

and gets insulted by the likes of duryodhana, SiSupAla, rAvaNa etc., and

appears as a fish, a boar, etc., and undergoes suffering and misery as

in the case of the rAma incarnation, all because He is a sAdhu, who

carries out what He has to in order to help His devotees.

 

The nAma sAdhu has also been interpreted as One who is

righteous, i.e., conducts Himself according to the code laid in the

vedas. And because He follows the righteous path always, He

accomplishes whatever He undertakes always. The lesson to take here is

(dharma cakram) that we should always follow the righteous path in

everything we do, and this will not only endear us to Lord vishNu, but

also lead to success in our just endeavors.

 

245. jahnuh - The Concealer (of His greatness from the non-devotees).

 

Om jahnave namah.

 

This nAma is derived from the root hA - tyAge to forsake.

abhakteshu Atma-mAhAtmyam apahnute iti jahnuh. jahAti avidushah jahnuh

is another derviation for the same meaning - He leads those devoid of

devotion away from the Supreme. SrI Bhattar gives the following quote

from udyoga parva:

 

"cakram tad-vAsudevasya mAyayA vartate vibhoh |

sApahnuvam pANdaveshu ceshTate rAhasattamah || (udyoga

parva 6.7.2)

 

"That discus of the Omni-present vAsudeva acts by His will for

the benefit of the pANdavas being invisible (to the eyes of others), O

Great King!".

 

SrI Sankara gives an addtional interpretation that He is jahnu

because He is the disintegrator of the Universe at the time of pralaya -

janAn samhAra-samaye apahnute apanayati iti jahnuh.

 

SrI rAdhAkr*shNa SAstri gives the incidence of Sage Jahnu who

hid the Ganges when bhagIrata brought Ganges(jAhanavI) to the Earth.

Similarly bhagavAn hides the Universe during pralaya into Himself, and

so He is jahnu.

 

In dharma cakram, we find a description of how His act of hiding

some things from us is really devoted to helping us in our day-to-day

life until we can really realize Him. Thus it is for our benefit that

we forget some of our bad experiences of the past, and do not know some

of the future incidences in our life ahead of time. In fact, this

process of things being hidden intermittently is the law of life, as for

instance the child being hidden in the mother's womb before being born,

the seed being hidden underground before it sprouts, the time of our

body's demise being hidden from us till the incident happens, the

outcome of a contest between two competing teams being hidden from them

till the incident concludes, and the same way, the jiva-s being hidden

in Him before the world is re-created after pralaya. This nAma should

help us forget the wrong-doings of others, and remember only the good

things in life. This training will help us realize Him in the process,

and then He does not have to use His act of hiding anything from us.

 

SrI satyadevo vAsisshTha also starts with the root hA tyAge to

give up, and interprets the nAma to mean that He is jahnu because He is

devoid of the defects such as kAma, krodha, lobha, moha, mada, and

mAtsarya, and is Suddha svarUpa. Ganges is jAhnavI because Ganges

washes away the sins.

 

246. nArAyaNah - The Supporter of the hosts of souls.

 

Om nArAyaNAya namah.

 

All the previous nAma-s referred to nArAyaNa through His other

incarnations or through His many guNa-s. Now SrI vyAsa gives the name

that only refers to mahA-vishNu, and that is not used to refer to any

other gods (such as the nAma-s rudra, Siva etc., which also occur in the

vishNu sshasranAma to refer to mahAvishNu). SrI Bhattar points out

that this nAma is spoken of in every upanishad, and the veda itself

gives the derviation of the name nArAyaNa thus -

 

yacca ki~ncit jagat sarvam dr*syate SrUyatepi vA |

antar-bahiSca tat-sarvam vyApya nArAyaNah sthitah ||

 

"Whatever object there is in the Universe that is seen or heard,

nArAyaNa remains pervading all that, both inside and outside".

 

SrI Bhattar gives several references to bring out the greatness

of this nAma.

 

"nArAyaNAya vidmahe vAsudevAya dhImahi |

tanno vishNuh pracodayAt || (taitti. nArAya. 6.1.28)

 

"nArAyaNa param brhma tattvam nArAyaNah parah |

nArAyaNa paro jyotir-AtmA nArAyaNah parah ||

(taitt. NArAya. 6.11)

 

"eko ha vai nArAyaNa AsIt| na brhamA na ISAnah na Apah na

agnishomi yau na eme dyAvA pr*thvI na nakshatrANina sUryah na candramAh

| (mahopanishad) etc.

 

SrI Sankara gives the following interpretation: nara refers to

Atman; nAra refers to ether and the other effects produced from it; He,

as their cause, pervades them and they are thus His abode (ayana).

Hence He is named nArAyaNa. He gives the following quote from

mahAbhArata supporting this interpretation:

 

"narAjjAtAni tattvAni nArANIti tato vidhuh |

tAnyeva cAyanam tasya tena nArAyaNah smr*tah || (anu.

Parva. 13.1.2)

 

"The tattva-s are called nAra since they are sprung from nara

(Atman); He is called nArAyaNa as they are His abode". Another

interpretation he gives is "narANAm jIvAnAm ayanatvAt pralaya iti vA -

Whom the jIva-s appraoch and enter (He is the abode of the beings during

pralaya). This is supported by 'yatpryantyabhisamviSanti' - Whom they

approach and enter - taittirIya upanishad 3.1. Or He is nArAyaNa since

He is the seat of the nAra-s or the tattva-s - nArANAm ayanam yasmAt

tasmAn-nArAyaNah smr*tah - brahmavaivartapurANa. (Note that this third

interpretation is that He is their seat, whereas the first

interpretation was that they are His seat). Manu-smr*ti gives the

following definition -

 

"Apo nArAh iti proktAh Apo vai narasUnavah |

tA yadasyAyanam pUrvam tasmAn-nArAyaNah smr*tah ||

(manu-smr*ti 1.10)

 

"nAra refers to waters (the panca-bhUta-s before they

inter-mixed and became visible through forms etc.) which He created. As

they are His original abode (i.e., during prlaya), He is called

nArAyaNa". SrI satyadevo vAsishTha draws the parallel between the

world being born out of the waters in which nArAyaNa is floating, and

the child that is born out of the mother's womb after being supported by

the waters in the mother's body.

 

In narasimha purANa, we have the following -

 

"nArAyaNAya nama ityayameva satyah

samsAra ghora visha samharaNAya mantrah |

Sr*Nvantu bhavyamatayo yatayo'starAgA

uccaistarAmupadiSAmyaham Urdhva-bAhuh || (narasimha purANa

18.31)

 

"This is the real mantra that destroys the deadly poison of

smasAra - nArAyaNAya namah. This I proclaim loudly with uplifted hands;

let the ascetics, with passions curbed and inteleects clear, listen to

me".

 

SrI rAdhAkr*shNa SAstri reminds us that the mantra-devatA that

we worship through the gAyatri mantra is SrIman nArAyaNa - dhyeyah sadA

savitr*mandala madhyavartI nArAyaNah. The dharma cakram writer refers

us to divya-prabandham - "nalam tarum Sollai nAn kaNdu koNdEn nArAyaNA

ennum nAmam" to remind us of the greatness of this nAma japam.

 

It is very important to note SrI Bhattar's concluding statement

of his vyAkhyAnam on this nAma. He points out that the secret of this

sacred mantra should only be properly learned by approaching an AcArya,

and not by reading the explanations like the one presented. His words

are that he does not want to say anything more on this nAma because its

greatness can only be learned from an AcArya, and is thus a matter that

should be seen by four eyes (the two eyes of the disciple and the two

eyes of the AcArya) and not by six eyes viz. he does not want to add

his two eyes further. So no amount of explanation on paper can bring

out the greatness of this nAma.

 

247. narah - a) He who is imperishable.

b) The Leader.

 

Om narAya namah.

 

SrI Bhattar gives the meaning that nara refers to one with

imperishable possessions, both sentient and non-sentient (both of which

are eternal by nature).

 

SrI Sankara gives the meaning "Leader" to nara, and gives the

quote from vyAsa (the source is not identified in my book) - nayati iti

narah proktah paramAtmA sanAtanah - Because He directs everything, the

eternal paramAtman is called nara.

 

SrI satyadevo vAsishTha also starts with the root as nr* naye

to lead, and gives the meaning as nayati - One who leads, or nr*Nati -

One who takes things away. He is nara since He takes this Universe from

kalpa to kalpa through many kalpa-s. nara also refers to water or

fluid, since this takes things from one place to another as it flows.

That there was only water everywhere before sr*shTi took place is

supported by the following vedic quote - tama AsIt tamasA

gUDhamagre'prakr*tam salilam sarvamA idam (r*g 10.129.3).

 

The dharma cakram writer points out that just as a mother leads

a child with the child's welfare in mind, and does not mind disciplining

the child for its own good when the child goes and eats dirt, or the

teacher tries to discipline a student who is not learning the knowledge

from the teacher, so also nara, viz. mahAvisNu, leads us all for our

good even if He has to mete out some punishment occasionally to get our

ways straightened out.

 

-dAsan kr*shNamAcAryan

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