Purushottama Stotram — The Lord Beyond Creation Yet Resting on the Ocean of Milk
Among the many hymns dedicated to Lord Vishnu, the Purushottama Stotram attributed to Dharmarāja (Yama) possesses a distinctive beauty. It combines the warm devotional imagery familiar to temple worshippers — the Lord reclining upon Ādiśeṣa in the Ocean of Milk, adorned with Śrīvatsa, Vanamālā, Śaṅkha, Chakra and Gadā — with lofty Vedantic language describing the Supreme as uncreated, beyond the senses, subtle, eternal, manifest and unmanifest at once.
The hymn reminds us that the Lord worshipped in temples is not merely a divine figure among many. He is Purushottama — the Supreme Person, the foundation of existence itself.
Dharmarāja Uvāca
१
नमस्ते भगवान् देव लोकनाथ जगत्पते ।
क्षीरोदवासिनं देवं शेषभोगानुशायिनम् ॥
Namaste bhagavan deva lokanātha jagatpate
kṣīrodavāsinaṃ devaṃ śeṣabhogānuśāyinam
Salutations to You, O Divine Lord, Master of the worlds, Lord of the universe, dwelling in the Ocean of Milk, reclining upon the couch of Śeṣa.
The hymn opens not with philosophy but with a familiar sacred image.
The Lord rests in the Kṣīra-sāgara — the Ocean of Milk. In Purāṇic symbolism, this is not ordinary water but the luminous cosmic ocean of purity and potentiality. Upon Ādiśeṣa, the endless serpent of eternity, the Lord reclines in serene sovereignty.
The universe may be restless — but the Divine rests in perfect composure.
२
वरं वरेण्यं वरदं कर्तारमकृतं प्रभुम् ।
विश्वेश्वरमजं विष्णुं सर्वज्ञमपराजितम् ॥
The Excellent One, worthy of choosing, giver of boons, the Creator — yet Himself uncreated; Lord of the universe, unborn Vishnu, omniscient and unconquered.
A profound paradox appears immediately:
कर्तारम् अकृतम् — “Creator, yet uncreated.”
Everything in creation has a cause.
But what is the cause of the Cause?
The hymn answers: the Supreme creates all things, yet is not Himself produced by anything else.
This echoes the Upanishadic vision of the unborn source from whom worlds arise.
३
नीलोत्पलदलश्यामं पुण्डरीकनिभेक्षणम् ।
सर्वज्ञं निर्गुणं शान्तं जगद्धातारमव्ययम् ॥
Dark like the petal of a blue lotus, lotus-eyed, omniscient, beyond the guṇas, peaceful, supporter of the universe, imperishable.
The Lord is suddenly described in intimate visual detail:
blue-lotus hued. Lotus-eyed. Beautiful.
Yet in the same breath:
निर्गुणम् — beyond guṇas.
How can the Lord possess form and still be nirguṇa?
Vedantic traditions explain that nirguṇa here does not mean “featureless emptiness.” Rather, it means free from the three material guṇas — sattva, rajas and tamas.
His form is not material limitation.
It is transcendental auspiciousness.
४
सर्वलोकविधातारं सर्वलोकसुखावहम् ।
पुराणं पुरुषं वेद्यं व्यक्ताव्यक्तं सनातनम् ॥
Ordainer of all worlds, giver of joy to all realms, the Ancient One, the Supreme Person, knowable, manifest and unmanifest, eternal.
This verse is rich with theology.
The Lord is:
पुराणम् — ancient beyond imagining.
पुरुषम् — the Supreme Person.
वेद्यम् — knowable through revelation, devotion, and realization.
व्यक्ताव्यक्तम् — both manifest and unmanifest.
He appears in consecrated temples, sacred narratives and avatāras.
Yet He also transcends all visible form.
५
परावराणां स्रष्टारं लोकनाथं जगद्गुरुम् ।
श्रीवत्सोरस्कसंयुक्तं वनमालाविभूषितम् ॥
Creator of the high and the low, Lord of the worlds, teacher of the universe, adorned with the mark of Śrīvatsa upon His chest and decorated with the Vanamālā garland.
Now theology becomes iconography.
The Śrīvatsa mark upon the divine chest recalls the inseparable presence of Śrī Mahālakṣmī.
The Vanamālā is not mere ornament. In devotional symbolism it represents the Lord’s loving relationship with creation — the universe itself worn like a garland.
६
पीतवस्त्रं चतुर्बाहुं शङ्खचक्रगदाधरम् ।
हारकेयूरसंयुक्तं मुकुटाङ्गदधारिणम् ॥
Clad in yellow garments, four-armed, bearing conch, discus and mace; adorned with necklaces, armlets, crown and ornaments.
Each emblem carries meaning:
Śaṅkha (Conch) — divine sound, awakening, protection.
Chakra (Discus) — cosmic order, time, righteousness.
Gadā (Mace) — strength, sovereignty, destruction of ignorance.
The Lord is majestic, yet every ornament becomes theology.
७
सर्वलक्षणसम्पूर्णं सर्वेन्द्रियविवर्जितम् ।
कूटस्थमचलं सूक्ष्मं ज्योतिरूपं सनातनम् ॥
Perfect in every auspicious mark, yet beyond all senses; changeless, unmoving, subtle, radiant, eternal.
Again the hymn presents a sacred paradox.
He is सर्वलक्षणसम्पूर्णम् — complete with every divine characteristic.
Yet:
सर्वेन्द्रियविवर्जितम् — beyond material senses.
The Upanishads often describe Brahman as:
“Without hands, yet grasping all. Without feet, yet moving everywhere.”
The Lord is not limited by bodily mechanisms.
Rather, all sensory power exists because of Him.
८
भावाभावविनिर्मुक्तं व्यापिनं प्रकृतेः परम् ।
नमस्यामि जगन्नाथमीश्वरं सुखदं प्रभुम् ॥
Free from being and non-being, all-pervading, beyond Prakṛti — I bow to Jagannātha, the Lord, giver of blessedness.
The hymn culminates in transcendence.
The Supreme is beyond nature (प्रकृतेः परम्).
Beyond categories.
Beyond limitation.
Yet the response of the devotee is beautifully simple:
“नमस्यामि — I bow.”
After theology, surrender.
Temple Lord and Upanishadic Absolute
One of the most striking features of this stotram is its effortless movement between two modes of speaking about God.
The Lord is:
reclining on Śeṣa,
wearing yellow silk,
holding Śaṅkha and Chakra,
and simultaneously:
unborn,
beyond guṇas,
beyond senses,
manifest and unmanifest,
eternal radiance.
There is no contradiction.
The beautiful Lord of devotion and the transcendent Brahman of Vedanta are one reality.
That is the grandeur of Purushottama.
This hymn teaches that the Supreme Lord is not confined either to abstract philosophy or visual devotion alone.
He is:
the blue-lotus Lord of the sanctum,
the cosmic ruler of the worlds,
the subtle eternal reality beyond Prakṛti,
and the compassionate refuge before whom even Dharmarāja bows.
Such is Purushottama — the Supreme Person, eternally beyond creation, yet intimately present within it.







