Overview of Puranas – part 1

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                         INTRODUCTIONPRIVATE

 

                    THE FIFTH VEDA; PURANA

 

What is Purana?

 

The Veda is called Sruti (because it is learnt

 

 

   To make these four sections more easily performable Vyasadeva compiled these four parts into four seperate books. Being sympathetic towards the fallen souls of Kali-yuga, who are lazy, misdirected and have no inclination for spiritual life, Vyasadeva compiled the Puranas, from related historical facts, which explain the teachings of the four Vedas. In other words, the Puranas teach the Vedic literature in story form, making spiritual life more simple, and therefore in this age, they are more important.

 

Ref. (S.B. Canto 1 Ch.4 text 19-23)

 

   There are eighteen Puranas that are divided into three groups along with three predominating Deities.

 

   1) GOODNESS – Visnu

 

   2) PASSION  – Brahma

 

   3) IGNORANCE – Siva

 

They are divided in this way to gradually raise the conditioned soul from ignorance to pure goodness. The three divisions of the Puranas are compiled in this way to appeal to those people in these respective modes and to thus elevate them to the perfection

of life.

 

                    18 PURANAS

(Verse numbers and most important subject matters for devotees).

 

    LORD VISNU (Predominating Deity)

 

1)  Visnu Purana – 23,000 verses.

    Stories of various devotees;

    A description of varnasrama;

    The six angas of the Veda;

    A description of the age of Kali;

    It describes the Sveta Varaha Kalpa, Visnu dharmotara;

 

2)  Naradiya Purana – 25,000 verses.

    This purana contains a synopsis of everything;

    It describes Jagannatha Puri, Dwaraka, Badrinatha, etc.

 

3)  Padma Purana – 55,000 verses.

    Contains the glory of Srimad Bhagavatam;

    The stories of Rama, Jagannatha, Matsya, Ekadasi, Bhrgu, etc.

 

4)  Garuda Purana – 19,000.

    Subject of Bhagavad-gita;

    Reincarnation;

    Visnusahasranam;

    It describes the Tarsya Kalpa.

 

5)  Varaha Purana – 24,000 verses.

    Describes different Vrata;

    Lord Visnu’s glories.

 

6)  Bhagavata Purana – 18,000 verses.

    (Included by some in the mode of goodness).

 

    LORD BRAHMA (Predominating Deity)

 

7)  Brahmanda Purana – 12,000 verses.

    Describes the Vedangas;

    Describes the Adi Kalpa.

 

8)  Brahmavaivarta Purana – 18,000 verses.

    Contains the glories and pastimes of Radha and Krsna.

 

9)  Markendeya Purana – 9,000 verses.

    Stories of Rama and Krsna.

 

10) Bhavisya Purana – 14,500 verses.

    Contains the glories of devotional service;

    Prediction of Lord Caitanya.

 

11) Vamana Purana – 10,000 verses.

    Contains the story of Lord Trivikrama.

 

12) Brahma Purana – 10,000 verses.

 

 

    LORD SIVA (Predominating Deity)

 

13) Matsya Purana – 14,000 verses.

    Temple construction;

    Describes Vamana and Varaha Kalpas.

 

14) Kurma Purana – 17,000 verses.

    Contains the conversation between Krsna and the Sun-god;

    Danvantari;

    Describes the Laksmi Kalpa.

 

15) Linga Purana – 10,000 verses.

    Contains the glory of Lord Nrsmhadeva;

    Janardhana;

    The story of Ambarisha;

    The glories of Gayatri.

 

16) Siva Purana – 24,000 verses.

 

17) Skanda Purana – 81,000 verses.

 

18) Agni Purana – 15,400 verses.

    Contains the description of Salagrama;

    Describes the Isana kalpa.

 

All these Puranas describe five subjects. The Amarkhasa describes the Puranas as follows:

 

    sargas ca pratisarga ca

     vamsa manvantarani ca

    vamsanu caritam capi

     puranam panca laksanam

 

 

 

A Purana describes;

 

 

1)  SARGA (Creation)

 

2)  PRATISARGA (Recreation)

 

3)  VAMSA (History of the sages)

 

4)  MANVANTARA (Periods of Manu)

 

5)  VAMSANUCARITA (Geneology of Kings)

 

 

 

Ref. Chapter 12, Puranic Literatures.

 

 

 

 

    THE GREATNESS OF SRIMAD BHAGAVATAM.

 

After compiling the Vedic Literatures, Puranas, etc., Vyasadeva was still feeling unsatisfied. While thinking in this way Narada Muni reached the cottage of Vyasadeva and was asked about the cause of dissatisfaction. Narada Muni explained that because he (Vyasadeva) did not directly describe Krsna’s pastimes, and instead gave a license to enjoy sense gratification under religious principles, he was remaining unsatisfied. Narada then instructed Vyasadeva in the (Catur Sloka), S.B. 2:9:33-36; the essence of the Veda. Vyasadeva took these four verses and expanded them to compile the Srimad Bhagavatam, which is known as the ripened fruit of Vedic literature because it directly describes Krsna’s transcendental pastimes.

 

Ref. S.B. Canto 1, chapter 5.

 

 

Krsna instructedÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄCatur sloka to

  ³                                      ³

  ³                                      ³

Brahma                                 Brahma

  ³                                      ³

  ³                                      ³

Veda                                   Narada

  ³                                      ³

  ³                                      ³

Samhitas – Verses                      Vyasa

 

Brahmanas – City life                  Expanded the four verses                                         and compiled Srimad

Aranyakas – Forest life                Bhagavatam which is the

                                       ripened fruit of Vedic

                                       knowledge.

Upanisads – Philosophy

 

            Essence

               ³

     ÚÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÁÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄÄ¿

     ³                   ³

Bhagavad-gita        Upanisad

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

     padau yadiyau prathama dvitiyau

   tritiyaturyau kathitau yaduru

     nabhistatha pancama eva sasto

   bhujantaram doryugalam yathanyau

     mukharavindam dasamam praphullam

   ekadasau yasya lalatha pathakam

     siro pi yad dvadasa eva bati

   tamadidevam karuna nidhanam

     tamala varnam suhitavataram

   aparasamsara samudra setum

     bhajamehe bhagavata svarupam

 

Translation:

 

   I meditate on the most merciful Sri Krsna. Whose bodily hue is like a tamala tree. He has appeared for everyone’s benefit in the form of Srimad Bhagavatam. The srimad Bhagavatam is like a bridge for crossing over the unending ocean of birth and death.

The first and second cantos are His lotus feet.

The third and fourth cantos are His two thighs.

The fifth canto is His navel (waist).

The seventh and eighth are His mighty shoulders.

The ninth canto is His throat (neck).

The tenth canto is His face, which is like a fully bloomed lotus flower.

The eleventh canto is His forehead.

The twelth canto is His head.

                               (Padma Purana).

 

     krsna sva-dhamopagate

   dharma-jnanadibhih saha      

     kalau nasta-drsam esa

   puranarko ‘dhunoditah

 

   This Bhagavata Purana is as brilliant as the sun, and it has arisen just after the departure of Lord Krsna to His own abode, accompanied by religion, knowledge, etc. Persons who have loost their vision due to the dense darkness of ignorance in the age of Kali shall get light from this Purana.

                                      (S.B. 1:3:43)

 

   The Srimad Bhagavatam describes 10 subjects:

 

1)  Creation of the universe

2)  Subcreation

3)  The planetary systems

4)  Protection by Krsna

5)  The creative impetus

6)  The change of Manus

7)  The science of God

8)  Returning back to Godhead

9)  Liberation

10) Summum bonum

                             (S.B. 2:10:1)

 

                      KRSNA’S THREE ENERGIES

 

 

     visnu saktih para prokta

   ksetre-jnakhya titha para

     avidya-karma samjnaya

   tritiya saktir isyate

 

     The Supreme Lord has diverse and innumerable energies which are beyond our conception; however, great learned sages or liberated souls have studied these energies and have analyzed them into three parts. All of the energies are of visnu-sakti, that is to say they are different potencies of Lord Visnu. The first energy is para, transcendental. Living entities also belong to the superior energy. The other energies, or material energies, are in the mode of ignorance.

 

                     (Visnu Purana 6.7.61 quoted in Bg. page 26).

 

 

1)  ANTARANGA SAKTI – Internal Potency (Yoga-maya)

 

    sat     – samvit    – external potency

    cit     – sandhini  – knowledge potency

    ananda  – hladini   – pleasure potency

 

2)  BAHIRANGA SAKTI – External Energy (Maha-maya)

 

  1. a) bhumih- earth
  2. b) apah- water
  3. c) analah- fire
  4. d) vayuh- air
  5. e) kham- ether
  6. f) manah- mind
  7. g) buddhih- intelligence
  8. h) ahankara- false ego

 

                               (Bg. 7.4)

 

3)  TATASTHA SAKTI – Marginal Potency (Living Entities)

 

                               (Bg. 7.5; 15.7)

 

    Krsna is the saktimana or the source of all energy.

 

                               (Bg. 7.6)

 

  1. a) The spiritual energy is eternal, full of knowledge and

       bliss. It is transcendental and beyond all changes of

       material nature.

 

  1. b) The external energy is the exact opposite and is therefore

       temporary, full of ignorance and misery. It is mundane and

       always changing.

 

  1. c) The marginal energy (jiva) also belongs to the spiritual

       energy, but because he has the independence to be either        in the spiritual world or the material world, he is called

       marginal.

 

    The whole manifestation is the Lord himself by diffusion of His different energies only, namely the internal, external and marginal. Such energy is siultaneously one with and different from the Lord (acintya-bheda-abheda-tattva).

 

                               (S.B. 2.9.27)

 

    The material world is also called Durga or jail. Just as the jail is for those people who break the laws of the government, this material world is created for those souls who do not like to accept Krsna’s supremacy. Just as the pupose of the jail is to reform criminals, in the same way the purpose of creation is to reform the conditioned soul or to get rid of his criminal desire to use Krsna’s property without Krsna.

 

                          (S.B. 2.10.46) (S.B. 2.9.19 purport)

 

 

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