Showing posts with label Appeal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Appeal. Show all posts

Thursday, June 18, 2026

Utsav pyare.

One of the most beautiful aspects of the worship of Lord Vishnu in the great temples of India is that the Infinite, Formless Supreme is lovingly treated as a living divine person. The Lord who sustains countless universes allows Himself to be served as a child, a prince, a bridegroom, a king, a friend, and finally as the resting Lord of the cosmos.

This is not merely ritual. It is theology expressed through affection.

The Lord Awakens

Before dawn comes the Suprabhata Seva.

The temple doors open gently. Hymns are sung. Lamps are brought. Bells ring softly. The Lord is awakened as though He has been resting.

Devotees sing:

"O Lord, arise. The world awaits Your glance."

In great temples such as Tirumala Venkateswara Temple, the awakening ceremony is among the most cherished moments of the day.

Though He never sleeps, He allows His devotees the joy of waking Him.

The Royal Bath

The Lord is then bathed in the Abhisheka.

Water, milk, curd, honey, sandalwood, turmeric, fragrant herbs, and sacred waters are offered.

The bath symbolizes:

Purification of the devotee's mind.

Gratitude to the Lord.

Celebration of divine beauty.

After the bath He is carefully dried and adorned.

The Divine Adornment

This is the Alankara.

The Lord becomes:

A child Krishna.

A majestic Rama.

A royal Narayana.

A victorious Varadaraja.

A compassionate Venkatesha.

Crowns, jewels, silk garments, garlands, tulasi leaves, and fragrant flowers transform the sanctum into a heavenly court.

Every ornament tells a story.

The Kaustubha gem. The Vaijayanti garland. The Srivatsa mark. The conch and discus.

The devotee sees not stone but the living Lord.

The Morning Audience

Now the Lord grants Darshana.

Just as a king sits in court to hear his subjects, the Lord receives His devotees.

People come with:

Joy.

Sorrow.

Gratitude.

Questions.

Tears.

He listens to all.

No prayer is too small.

Feeding the Lord

The Lord is offered Naivedya several times a day.

Rice, fruits, sweets, butter, milk preparations, and countless regional delicacies are lovingly prepared.

The offering is not because God needs food.

Rather:

The devotee wishes that the Lord should eat before anyone else.

The food returns as Prasada, carrying divine grace.

The Lord Enjoys Music

In many temples the Lord listens to:

Vedic chanting.

Divya Prabandham.

Kirtanas.

Bhajans.

Instrumental music.

Saints such as Nammalvar, Andal, Purandara Dasa and Tyagaraja sang not to display musical skill but to delight the Lord.

The temple becomes a concert hall where the sole audience is Vishnu Himself.

The Swing Festival

The Dolotsava or Unjal Seva is especially charming.

The Lord and Lakshmi are seated on a decorated swing.

As devotees sing gently, the swing moves rhythmically.

This represents:

The tenderness of divine love.

The movement of the universe.

The peaceful companionship of the Divine Couple.

After the solemnity of royal worship, the Lord appears relaxed and approachable.

Almost like a beloved member of the family.

The Divine Marriage

One of the most emotional ceremonies is Kalyanotsava.

The wedding of the Lord and His consort is celebrated with full grandeur.

Priests chant marriage mantras.

Garlands are exchanged.

Sacred threads are tied.

Rice is showered.

Music fills the air.

The devotees become members of the wedding party.

Poets often imagine the Lord as a shy bridegroom.

Though He is the ruler of creation, He appears gentle and almost human in His divine modesty.

Lakshmi's presence transforms majesty into affection.

The Lord Goes Among His People

Perhaps the most touching ceremony is the Utsava procession.

The Lord leaves the sanctum.

He mounts various vehicles:

Garuda.

Hanuman.

Elephant.

Horse.

Serpent.

Swan.

Chariot.

The message is profound:

Not every devotee can reach the sanctum, so the Lord Himself comes out to meet them.

The streets become sacred.

Balconies become shrines.

Entire towns become temples.

The Brahmotsava

The grandest celebration in many Vishnu temples is the Brahmotsava.

Tradition says that Brahma himself first conducted this festival.

For several days the Lord appears in different forms and on different vahanas.

Each procession teaches a spiritual lesson.

The Lord is:

King.

Protector.

Teacher.

Warrior.

Friend.

Savior.

Day after day He encourages His devotees through divine presence.

It is as if heaven descends to earth.

The Evening Court

As sunset arrives, lamps are waved.

The Lord appears especially beautiful in the glow of oil lamps.

This is the time of reflection.

The day's activities are gently brought to completion.

Devotees offer gratitude for the blessings received.

The Lord Retires

Finally comes Ekanta Seva and Shayana Seva.

The Lord is offered milk.

Soft hymns are sung.

The sanctum grows quiet.

The divine bed is prepared.

The Lord is ceremonially put to rest.

The doors close.

The world sleeps under His protection.

Yet devotees know that He never truly sleeps.

As the Bhagavad Gita assures us:

While all beings rest, the Lord remains the silent witness.

The Hidden Meaning

From awakening to sleep, from childhood to marriage, from royal processions to intimate music, every temple ritual teaches one truth:

God is not merely worshipped; He is loved.

The devotee feeds Him, dresses Him, sings to Him, marries Him, takes Him on processions, rocks Him on a swing, and finally puts Him to bed.

In return, the Lord accepts these acts of affection and allows Himself to become a member of the devotee's family.

Thus temple worship is really a continuous divine drama in which the Supreme Lord willingly becomes accessible to human love.

The wonder is not that devotees serve Vishnu as a child, bridegroom, king, or friend.

The wonder is that the Lord of Vaikuntha gladly agrees to play every one of those roles for the joy of His devotees.

The Lord loves ceremonies for it brings his devotee close to him. Vying for just one glance of the decked up Lord and his consort. Pleasing st the same time fleeting too. Yes yet again the yearning comes 

Dhara.

  The words sanātana (सनातन) and dharma (धर्म) were not coined by any single person. They are very ancient Sanskrit words that developed within the Vedic tradition over many centuries.

Dharma

The word dharma comes from the Sanskrit root dhṛ (धृ), meaning "to uphold," "to support," or "to sustain." It appears in the ancient Vedic literature, including the Rig Veda, which was composed more than 3,000 years ago. In the Vedas, dharma refers to the cosmic order, righteousness, duty, and the principles that sustain life and society. 

Sanātana

The word sanātana means "eternal," "beginningless," or "everlasting." It is also an ancient Sanskrit word found in classical Hindu scriptures. It was used as an adjective to describe eternal truths, eternal beings, or eternal principles. 

Sanātana Dharma

The phrase Sanātana Dharma means "the Eternal Dharma" or "the Eternal Way."

No known individual invented this expression. The words occur separately in ancient literature, and phrases such as "dharmaḥ sanātanaḥ" ("eternal dharma") are found in texts such as the Manusmriti and the Bhagavata Purana. 

As a collective name for Hinduism, however, "Sanātana Dharma" became especially prominent during the 19th century, when Hindu thinkers and reformers used it as a self-description instead of the foreign-derived term "Hinduism." 

Dharma: an ancient Vedic Sanskrit word, not coined by any known person.

Sanātana: an ancient Sanskrit word meaning eternal.

Sanātana Dharma: a traditional expression meaning "Eternal Dharma"; not invented by one individual, though its use as a name for Hinduism became widespread in the 19th century. 

From the traditional Hindu perspective, Sanātana Dharma is considered anādi (without beginning) and therefore not the creation of any human founder.

a profound comparison. Both the Ramayana and the Mahabharata teach Dharma, but they teach it in very different ways.

The Ramayana: Dharma as the Ideal Path

The Ramayana shows Dharma as a clear, shining road.

Rama knows his duty and follows it.

Sita knows her duty and follows it.

Lakshmana, Bharata, Hanuman—all become examples of steadfast Dharma.

The distinction between right and wrong is usually clear.

The Ramayana asks:

"When Dharma is known, can you live it?"

Rama's life becomes the answer.

The epic is therefore often called the Maryada Purushottama's journey—the perfection of righteous conduct.

The Mahabharata: Dharma in a Complex World

The Mahabharata presents Dharma amidst confusion.

Bhishma is righteous, yet supports a flawed throne.

Karna is generous, yet stands with adharma.

Yudhishthira is truthful, yet speaks a half-truth.

Arjuna hesitates between compassion and duty.

Krishna constantly guides people through situations where every choice has consequences.

The Mahabharata asks:

"When Dharma is hidden among many competing duties, how will you find it?"

The answer is not always obvious.

Thus it is said:

"What is found here may be found elsewhere; what is not found here is nowhere."

The Mahabharata is a vast laboratory of Dharma.

A Beautiful Analogy

If Dharma were a river:

The Ramayana shows the river flowing through a calm valley.

The Mahabharata shows the same river during floods, storms, rocks, and whirlpools.

The water is the same. The challenges are different.

Another Comparison

Ramayana

Mahabharata

Dharma demonstrated

Dharma debated

Ideal characters

Human characters

Clear choices

Difficult choices

Rama embodies Dharma

Krishna explains Dharma

Teaches by example

Teaches by inquiry

"Do as Rama did"

"Think as Krishna taught"

What We Gain from Both

Without the Ramayana, we might not know what Dharma looks like in its purest form.

Without the Mahabharata, we might not know how to preserve Dharma when life becomes complicated.

Together they tell us:

The Ramayana teaches us how Dharma shines.

The Mahabharata teaches us how Dharma survives.perhaps that is why India preserved both epics. One gives us the ideal, the other gives us the real. Between Rama's certainty and Krishna's wisdom lies the complete education of Dharma.