Guest guest Posted November 6, 1998 Report Share Posted November 6, 1998 SrI vishNu sahasranAmam - Slokam 43. SrI vishNu sahasranAmam - Slokam 43 - Part 2. 400. nayah - He who draws everyone towards Himself. om nayAya namah. nayati iti nayah - One who draws everyone towards Himself; one who leads everyone in their spiritual illumination. When rAma reached daNDakAraNyam, the r*shi-s there were drawn to Him, and they entrusted their protection solely to Him, even though they had their tapo-balam. SrI v.v.rAmAnujan refers us to bhagavAn's words in His varAha incarnation - nayAmi paramAm gatim - I will lead everyone to the Ultimate, viz. moksham. The dharma cakram writer points out the examples of arjuna being led in the right path by bhagavAn through the gItopadeSam. Meditation on this nAma of bhagavAn should reveal to us that the path to moksahm is to be drawn towards Him and to follow His lead. 401. anayah - He who cannot be spirited away. om anayAya namah. SrI bhaTTar gives the example of the futile effort of rAvaNa to lift and carry away lakshmaNa when he was lying on the battleground after being struck by the Sakti weapon by rAvaNa. He also gives an alternate interpretation based on ayah - the means which brings prosperity; an-ayah then means He without whom there is no prosperity. SrI Sankara's interpretation that He is one who is not led by anyone, unlike He who leads everyone in the spiritual path. SrI satyadevo vAsishTha gives the examples of bhagavAn being the opposites simultaneously. One meaning he gives for nayah is One who moves. anayah is One who does not move. He gives reference to 'tadejati tanaijati', anejadekam manaso javIyo (ISAvAsya upanishad), aram kAmAya harayo vadhanvire sthirAya hinvan harayo harI turA (r*g veda 10.96), etc. The dharma cakram writer nicely illustrates how rAma always acted in the path of dharma without anyone having to lead Him. When he had to go the forest, others including sage vasishTha tried to persuade Him to accept the kingdom instead and rule, but rAma did not swerve from the path of dharma and adopted that path without having to be told by anyone. When He returned back from the forest and became the king, some citizens commented that sItAdevi had been in another person's house and should not occupy the throne with SrI rAma. Because rAma wanted to set an example to His citizens, He sent her instead to vAlmIki's ASramam, and showed them the path of dharma of the king. Thus, He never needed to be led by anyone, anayah. 402 (664). vIrah - Valiant. om vIrAya namah. He is vIra because He destroys at once those who are a source of suffering to the pious by discharging His wapons which are ever ready to carry out His commands. He is a source of terror to His enemies. SrI Sankara bhAshyam is "vikramaSAlitvAt vIrah - One who is valorous". SrI v.v.rAmAnujan points out that vIra, saurYa, and parAkrama are among the mahA-guNa-s of bhagavAn, and the reference to vIrya here by bhIshma can be taken to refer to all three guNa-s. vIrya is the quality of inducing terror in the hearts of the enemies; Saurya is derived from the word SUra - the ability to cause havoc among the enemies' ranks by single-handedly penetrating their ranks; and parAkrama is the ability to cause enormous damage to enemies' side while not being even slightly hurt Himself. rAma is referred to as mahAvIra in raghu-vIra-gadyam (The starting line is jaya jaya mahA-vIra!). SrI bhaTTar giveas reference to the following: mArIca tells rAvaNa about rAma - "vr*kshe vr*kshe ca paSyAmi cIra kr*shNAjinAmbaram | gr*hIta dhanusham rAmam pASa hastamiva antakam || (rAmA AraNya 39.14)" "In every tree I see rAma dressed in tree bark and black deer-skin and His bow drawn as though He is the god of death with the rope in hand". "brahma-daNDa prakASAnAm vidyut-sadr*Sa varcasAm | smaran rAghava-bANAnAn vivyate rAkshaseSvarah || (yuddha 60.3)" "rAvaNa, the king of rAkshasa-s, became uneasy whwn he even thought of the arrows of rAma, which hasd the luster of the club of brahma and the glitter of the lightning". "mAta~nga iva simhena garuDeneva pannagah | abhibhUto'bhavad-rAjA rAghaveNa mahAtmanA || (yuddha 60.2)" "The king (rAvaNa) was overpowered by the powerful rAma like the elephant by the lion, and the serpent by garuDa". SrI v.v.rAmAnujan gives several references to prabandham: - In tiruccanda viruttam, tirumazhiSai sings - "anRu ila~ngai nIRu Seidu SenRu konRu venRi koNDa vIraNAr"; - n perumAltirumozhi we have "ve~nkadirOn kulattukkOr viLakkAit-tOnRi viN muzhudum uyyakkoNDa vIran tannai" (10.1); mazhu vAL Endi vevvari naRcilai vA~ngi venRi koNDu vEl vEndar pagai taDinda vIran tannai (10.3); - pollA arakkanaik kiLLik kaLaindAanai" in tiruppAvai, referring to the ease with which rAma finished rAvaNa whose power was unheard of; - "vennarakam SerA-vagaiyE Silai kunittAn - tiruma~ngai in SiRiya tirumaDal referring to rAma's act of torturing kara and dUshaNa during their fight to the point that they did not need a spearate anubhavam of living in narakAm. SrI satyadevo vAsishTha gives references to the Sruti: Sr*Nve vIro vindamAno vasUni mahad-devAnAm asuratvam ekam (r*g 3.55.10) sa ghA vIro na rishyati yamindro brahmaNaspatih somo hinoti martyam (r*g 2.28.4) SrI rAdhAkr*sNa SAstri gives a beautiful description of His vIra. The source is not identified, but the description is worth repeating here: "yasmat sva-mahimnA sarvAn lokAn sarvAn devAn sarvAn Atmanah sarvANi bhUtAni viramati virAmayati ajastram sr*jati visr*jati vAsayati, yato vIrah karmaNyah sudr*ksho yukta-grAvA jAyate deva-kAmah tasmAt ucyate vIram iti". He cannot be opposed, cannot be conquered, and His skills will be self-evident and will subdue His enemies automatically. 403. SaktimatAm-SreshThah - The Greatest among the powerful. om SaktimatAm-SreshThAya namah. SaktimatAmapi SaktimattvAt SaktimatAm SreshThah. He is the most praiseworthy among the powerful gods and others. He is more powerful than the likes of brahma the Creator. The likes of indra could not destroy rAvaNa, and they surrendered to bhagavAn as a result seeking His protection. rAma with the axe (i.e., paraSurAma) says to SrI rAma: "aakshayyam madhu-hantAram jAnAmi tvAm syreSvaram - I know that you are indestructible; You are the slayer of madhu (the asura), and You are the Lord of all the gods" (rAmAyaNa bAla 76.17). SrI bhaTTar also gives reference to hanumAn's words to rAvaNa - "devASca daityASca niSAcarendra! gandharva vidyAdhara-nAga-yakshAh | rAmasya lokatraya-nAyakasya sthAtum na SaktAh samareshu sarve || (sundara 51.44) "O King of the rAkshasa-s! The gods and the asura-s, gandharva-s and vidyAdhara-s, nAga-s, and yaksha-s - all these cannot stand against rAma, the Lord of the three worlds, in the battle". 404. dharmah - Virtue Incarnate. om dharmAya namah. SrI satyadevo vAsisshTha derives the meaning from the root dhr*~nj - dhAraNe to support; dhArayati iti dharmah - that which supports is dharmah, dhAryate vA yena jagat iti dharmah - He by whom this Universe is supported is dharmah. SrI bhaTTar points out that He is Virtue Incarnate because He sustains all beings by conferring prosperity and salvation on them. In yuddha kANDa brahma says of Lord rAma - lokAnAm tvam paramo dharmah - Thou art the Supreme Dharma in all the worlds. In mahAbhArata we have "sAkshAt devah purANO'sau sa hi dharmah sanAtanah - He is ancient God Himself and also the eternal dharma incarnate". About kr*shNa incarnation - "ye ca vedavido viprAh ye ca adhyAtmavido janAh | te vadanti mahAtmAnam kr*shNam dharam sanAtanam || "Those brAhmins who are well-versed in veda-s, and those who realized the Brahman, declare in one voice that the great SrI kr*shNa is the eternal dharma incarnate". SrI v.v.rAmAnujan refers to mArIca's words about rAma - rAmo vitgrahavAn dharmah - rAma is dhrama incarnate. He also points that ANDAL calls Him "dharumam aRiyAk kurumban" in nAcciAr tirumozhi, obviously out of the sheer intense liberty she has towards her Lord, and out of her intense fondness to Him. SrI cinmayAnanda discusses in some detail the significance of this term "dharma". By example, he points out that the dharma of sugar is sweetness, the dhaarma of fire is heat, etc., and thus the dharma of an the individual in this sense is the soul, without which the individual does not exist. Since bhyagavAn is the one Self that supports all the individuals, He is the Ultimate Dharma. SrI rAdhAkr*shNa SAstri reminds us of "dharmo rakshati rakshitah, dharma eva hato hanti" - dharma protects those who protect it, and destroys those who destroy it. dharma is like the guides on both sides of the road; if we follow them, we reach our destination safely; if we go outside the limit, or if we collide with the guides, we encounter suffering. bhagavAn is this guide for those who want to follow it. Those who don't follow it pay dearly. The dharma cakram writer gives several examples of where dharma has protected those who followed it, and destroyed those who tried to ignore it. In the former category are hariScandra, the pANDava-s, etc. In the latter category are rAvaNa, duryodhana, etc. BhIshma tried his very best to advise duryodhana that no one who follows dharma can be defeated in the end, no matter how many bhIshma-s try to help duryodhana. But he won't listen, and ultimately paid the price for adharma. Same was the case with rAvaNa, who would not listen to vibhIshaNa-s advice. Meditation on this nAma of mahAvishNu should teach us the basic lesson that dharma protects those who follow it, and adharma will have no end other than self-destruction. 405. dharmavid-uttamah - The foremost among those who are conscious of dharma. om dharma-vid-uttamAya namah. No further evidence is needed for this than that sages such as vasishTha, vAmadeva, and mArkaNDeya who were the guru-s for rAma resorted to Him for a knowledge of dharma (SrI BhaTTar). The dharma cakram writer remarks that it is not easy to recognize what is dharma and what is not dharma. bhagavAn has created the Sruti-s as His commandments to explain to us what is dharma. To realize what is dharma, meditation on mahaAvishNu is the path. For this ,a clean mind is necessary. This is what is taught in tirukkuraL - manattuk-kaN mASilan Adal anaittu aRan. SrI Sankara points out that all Sruti-s and smr*ti-s are His commandments, and hence He is called the greatest of the knowers of dharma. SrI rAdhAkr*shNa SAstri gives reference to vishNu dharmottara - Srutis-smr*tI mamaivA~gnye (76.31). -dAsan kr*shNamAcAryan Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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