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XII
VISHNU, THE ALL-PERVADING GODHEAD
Rig-veda 1.154
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Of Vishnu now I declare the mighty works, who has measured out the earthly worlds and that higher seat of our self-
accomplishing he supports, he the wide-moving, in the
threefold steps of his universal movement.
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That Vishnu affirms on high by his mightiness and he is
like a terrible lion that ranges in the difficult places, yea, his lair is on
the mountain-tops, he in whose three wide movements all the worlds find their dwelling-place.

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Let our strength and our thought go forward to Vishnu the
all-pervading, the wide-moving Bull whose dwelling-place
is on the mountain, he who being One has measured all this
long and far-extending seat of our self-accomplishing by
only three of his strides.
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He whose three steps are full of the honey-wine and they
perish not but have ecstasy by the self-harmony of their
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nature; yea, he being One holds the triple principle and earth
and heaven also, even all the worlds.
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May I attain to and enjoy that goal of his movement, the
Delight, where souls that seek the godhead have the rapture; for there in that highest step of the wide-moving Vishnu is
that Friend of men who is the fount of the sweetness.
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Those are the dwelling-places of ye twain which we desire
as the goal of our journey, where the many-horned herds
of Light go travelling; the highest step of wide-moving
Vishnu shines down on us here in its manifold vastness.
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COMMENTARY
The deity of this hymn is Vishnu the all-pervading, who in
the Rig-veda has a close but covert connection and almost
an identity with the other deity exalted in the later religion,
Rudra. Rudra is a fierce and violent godhead with a beneficent aspect which approaches the supreme blissful reality of
Vishnu; Vishnu's constant friendliness to man and his helping
gods is shadowed by an aspect of formidable violence, — "like a
terrible lion ranging in evil and difficult places", — which is spoken of in terms more ordinarily appropriate to Rudra. Rudra is
the father of the vehemently-battling Maruts; Vishnu is hymned
in the last Sukta of the fifth Mandala under the name of Evaya
Marut as the source from which they sprang, that which they
become, and himself identical with the unity and totality of' their
embattled forces. Rudra is the Deva or Deity ascending in the
cosmos, Vishnu the same Deva or Deity helping and evoking the
powers of the ascent.
It was a view long popularised by European scholars that the
greatness of Vishnu and Shiva in the Puranic theogonies was a
later development and that in the Veda these gods have a quite
minor position and are inferior to Indra and Agni. It has even
become a current opinion among many scholars that Shiva was
a later conception borrowed from the Dravidians and represents
a partial conquest of the Vedic religion by the indigenous culture
it had invaded. These errors arise inevitably as part of the total
misunderstanding of Vedic thought for which the old Brahmanic
ritualism is responsible and to which European scholarship by
the exaggeration of a minor and external element in the Vedic
mythology has only given a new and yet more misleading form.
The importance of the Vedic gods has not to be measured by
the number of hymns devoted to them or by the extent to which
they are invoked in the thoughts of the Rishis, but by the functions which they perform. Agni and Indra to whom the majority
of the Vedic hymns are addressed, are not greater than Vishnu
and Rudra, but the functions which they fulfil in the internal
and external world were the most active, dominant and directly
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effective for the psychological discipline of the ancient Mystics; this alone is the reason of their predominance. The Maruts, children of Rudra, are not divinities superior to their fierce and mighty
Father; but they have many hymns addressed to them and are
far more constantly mentioned in connection with other gods,
because the function they fulfilled was of a constant and immediate importance in the Vedic discipline. On the other hand,
Vishnu, Rudra, Brahmanaspati, the Vedic originals of the later Puranic Triad,
Vishnu-Shiva-Brahma, provide the conditions of the Vedic work and assist it from
behind the more present and active gods, but are less close to it and in
appearance less continually concerned in its daily movements.
Brahmanaspati is the creator by the Word; he calls light
and visible cosmos out of the darkness of the inconscient ocean
and speeds the formations of conscious being upward to their
supreme goal. It is from this creative aspect of Brahmanaspati
that the later conception of Brahma the Creator arose.
For the upward movement of Brahmanaspati's formations
Rudra supplies the force. He is named in the Veda the Mighty
One of Heaven, but he begins his work upon the earth and gives
effect to the sacrifice on the five planes of our ascent. He is the
Violent One who leads the upward evolution of the conscious
being; his force battles against all evil, smites the sinner and the
enemy; intolerant of defect and stumbling he is the most terrible
of the gods, the one of whom alone the Vedic Rishis have any
real fear. Agni, the Kumara, prototype of the Puranic Skanda,
is on earth the child of this force of Rudra. The Maruts, vital
powers which make light for themselves by violence, are Rudra's
children. Agni and the Maruts are the leaders of the fierce struggle upward from Rudra's first earthly, obscure creation to the
heavens of thought, the luminous worlds. But this violent and
mighty Rudra who breaks down all defective formations and
groupings of outward and inward life, has also a benigner aspect.
He is the supreme healer. Opposed, he destroys; called on for aid and
propitiated he heals all wounds and all evil and all sufferings. The force that battles is his gift, but also the final peace
and joy. In these aspects of the Vedic god are all the primitive
materials necessary for the evolution of the Puranic Shiva-Rudra,
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the destroyer and healer, the auspicious and terrible, the Master
of the force that acts in the worlds and the Yogin who enjoys
the supreme liberty and peace.
For the formations of Brahmanaspati's word, for the actions
of Rudra's force Vishnu supplies the necessary static elements,
— Space, the ordered movements of the worlds, the ascending
levels, the highest goal. He has taken three strides and in the
space created by the three strides has established all the worlds.
In these worlds he the all-pervading dwells and gives less or
greater room to the action and movements of the gods. When
Indra would slay Vritra, he first prays to Vishnu, his friend and
comrade in the great struggle (1.22.19), "O Vishnu, pace out in
thy movement with an utter wideness" (I V.I 8.11), and in that
wideness he destroys Vritra who limits, Vritra who covers. The
supreme step of Vishnu, his highest seat, is the triple world of
bliss and light, paramam padam, which the wise ones see extended
in heaven like a shining eye of vision (1.22.20); it is this highest
seat of Vishnu that is the goal of the Vedic journey. Here again
the Vedic Vishnu is the natural precursor and sufficient origin
of the Puranic Narayana, Preserver and Lord of Love.
In the Veda indeed its fundamental conception forbids the
Puranic arrangement of the supreme Trinity and the lesser
gods. To the Vedic Rishis there was only one universal Deva of
whom Vishnu, Rudra, Brahmanaspati, Agni, Indra, Vayu, Mitra,
Varuna are all alike forms and cosmic aspects. Each of them is in
himself the whole Deva and contains all the other gods. It was
the full emergence in the Upanishads of the idea of this supreme
and only Deva, left in the Riks vague and undefined and sometimes even spoken of
in the neuter as That or the one sole existence, the ritualistic limitation of
the other gods and the progressive precision of their human or personal aspects under the
stress of a growing mythology that led to their degradation and
the enthronement of the less used and more general names and
forms, Brahma, Vishnu and Rudra, in the final Puranic formulation of the Hindu theogony.
In this hymn of Dirghatamas Auchathya to the all-pervading
Vishnu it is his significant activity, it is the greatness of Vishnu's
three strides that is celebrated. We must dismiss from our minds
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the ideas proper to the later mythology. We have nothing to do
here with the dwarf Vishnu, the Titan Ball and the three divine
strides which took possession of Earth, Heaven and the sunless
subterrestrial worlds of Patala. The three strides of Vishnu in
the Veda are clearly denned by Dirghatamas as earth, heaven and
the triple principle, tridhātu. It is this triple principle beyond
Heaven or superimposed upon it as its highest level, nākasya
pṛṣṭhe
(1.125.5), which is the supreme stride or supreme seat of
the all-pervading deity.
Vishnu is the wide-moving one. He is that which has gone
abroad, — as it is put in the language of the Isha Upanishad, sa paryagāt, — triply extending himself as Seer, Thinker and Former, in the superconscient Bliss, in the heaven of mind, in the
earth of the physical consciousness, tredhā
vicakramāṇaḥ.
In those three strides he has measured out, he has formed in all their extension
the earthly worlds; for in the Vedic idea the material world which we inhabit is
only one of several steps leading to and supporting the vital and mental worlds
beyond. In those strides he supports upon the earth and mid-world,—the earth the
material, the mid-world the vital realms of Vayu, Lord of the dynamic
Life-principle, — the triple heaven and its three luminous summits, trīṇi
rocanā. These heavens the Rishi describes as the higher seat of the fulfilling. Earth, the mid-world
and heaven are the triple place of the conscious being's progressive self-fulfilling,
triṣadhastha (1.156.5), earth the lower seat, the
vital world the middle, heaven the higher. All these are contained
in the threefold movement of Vishnu.¹
But there is more; there is also the world where the self-fulfilment is accomplished, Vishnu's highest stride. In the second
verse the seer speaks of it simply as "that". "That" Vishnu,
moving yet forward in his third pace affirms or firmly establishes, pra stavate, by his divine might. Vishnu is then described in a
language which hints at his essential identity with the terrible
Rudra, the fierce and dangerous Lion of the worlds who begins
in the evolution as the Master of the animal, Pashupati, and
moves upward on the mountain of being on which he dwells,
¹Viṣṇor nu kam vīryāṇi pra vocam, yaḥ
pārthivāni vimame
rajāmsi; yo askabhāyad uttaram
sadhastham, vicakramāṇas tredhorugāyaḥ.
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ranging through more and more difficult and inaccessible places,
till he stands upon the summits. Thus in three wide movements
of Vishnu all the five worlds and their creatures have their habitation. Earth, heaven and "that" world of bliss are the three
strides. Between earth and heaven is the Antariksha, the vital
worlds, literally "the intervening habitation". Between heaven
and the world of bliss is another vast Antariksha or intervening
habitation, Maharloka, the world of the superconscient Truth
of things.¹
The force and the thought of man, the force that proceeds
from Rudra the Mighty and the thought that proceeds from
Brahmanaspati, the creative Master of the Word, have to go forward in the great journey for or towards this Vishnu who stands
at the goal, on the summit, on the peak of the mountain. His is
this wide universal movement; he is the Bull of the world who
enjoys and fertilises all the energies of force and all the trooping
herds of the thought. This far-flung extended space which appears to us as the world of our self-fulfilment, as the triple altar
of the great sacrifice has been so measured out, so formed by
only three strides of that almighty Infinite.²
All the three are full of the honey-wine of the delight of existence. All of
them this Vishnu fills with his divine joy of being. By that they are eternally
maintained and they do not waste or perish, but in the self-harmony of their
natural movement have always the unfailing ecstasy, the imperishable
intoxication of their wide and limitless existence. Vishnu maintains them
unfailingly, preserves them imperishably. He is the One, he alone is, the
sole-existing Godhead, and he holds in his being the triple divine principle to
which we attain in the world of bliss, earth where we have our foundation and
heaven also which we touch by the mental person within us. All the five worlds
he upholds.³ The tridhātu, the triple principle
or triple material of existence, is the Sachchidananda of the
¹Pra tad viṣṇuḥ stavate
vīryeṇa, mṛgo na bhīmaḥ kucaro
giriṣṭhāḥ; yasyoruṣu triṣu vikramaṇeṣu, adhikṣiyanti
bhuvanāni viśvā.
²Pra viṣṇave
śūṣam etu manma, giriksita
urugāyāya vṛṣṇe; ya idam dirgham prayatam
sadhastham, eko vimame tribhir it padebhiḥ.
³Yasya trī
pūrṇā
madhunā padāni,
akṣīyamāṇā
svadhayā madanti; ya u tridhātu
pṛthivīm
uta dyām, eko dādhāra
bhuvanāni viśvā.
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Vedanta; in the ordinary language of the Veda it is vasu, substance,
ūrj, abounding force of our being, priyam
or mayas, delight and love in the very essence of our existence. Of these
three things all that exists is constituted and we attain to their
fullness when we arrive at the goal of our journey.
That goal is Delight, the last of Vishnu's three strides.
The Rishi takes up the indefinite word "tat" by which he first
vaguely indicated it; it signified the delight that is the goal of
Vishnu's movement. It is the Ananda which for man in his ascent
is a world in which he tastes divine delight, possesses the full
energy of infinite consciousness, realises his infinite existence.
There is that high-placed source of the honey-wine of existence
of which the three strides of Vishnu are full. There the souls that seek the
godhead live in the utter ecstasy of that wine of sweetness. There in the supreme stride, in the highest seat of wide-moving Vishnu is the fountain of the honey-wine, the source of
the divine sweetness, — for that which dwells there is the God-head, the Deva, the perfect Friend and Lover of the souls that
aspire to him, the unmoving and utter reality of Vishnu to which
the wide-moving God in the cosmos ascends.1
These are the two, Vishnu of the movement here, the eternally stable, bliss-enjoying Deva there, and it is those supreme
dwelling places of the Twain, it is the triple world of Sachchidananda which we desire as the goal of this long journey, this
great upward movement. It is thither that the many-horned
herds of the conscious Thought, the conscious Force are moving —that is the goal, that is their resting-place. There in those
worlds, gleaming down on us here, is the vast, full, illimitable
shining of the supreme stride, the highest seat of the wide-
moving Bull, master and leader of all those many-horned herds, —Vishnu the all-pervading, the cosmic Deity, the Lover and
Friend of our souls, the Lord of the transcendent existence and
the transcendent delight.2
' Tad asya priyam abhi pātho aśyām, naro yatra devayavo madanti; urukramasya sa hi
bandhur itthā, viṣṇoḥ pade parame madhva utsaḥ.
8 Tā vām
vāstūni
uśmasi gamadhyai, yatra gāvo
bhūriśṛngā
ayāsaḥ,
atrāha tad urugāyasya
vṛṣṇaḥ, paramam padam ava
bhāti bhūri.
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