The story of Hiranyakasyapu and Prahalada emphasises how complete faith in the Supreme protects us from all dangers and evil.
Hirayakasyapu was a demon king, egocentric, pompous, powerful and wicked. He hated Maha Vishnu and considered him his enemy. His subjects were forced to chant his name and sing his praise and forbidden from worshipping Vishnu. When his son Prahalada was born, he became a devotee of Vishnu, singing his praise and chanting his name at all times, by the grace of sage Narada.
Hiranyakshayapu was angry.
Hiranyakasyapu ordered Prahalada’s death,
unbothered by the child’s tender age. He tried poisoning him, getting him trampled under wild elephants, throwing him from the mountains, and finally burning him in a
pyre. So strong was Prahalada’s faith in Vishnu that he chanted Vishnu’s name
as he went through the ordeals and escaped unscathed each time.
Hiranyakashyapu was invincible.
He was seething with anger. He was sure he could not be defeated by Vishnu for he had the most
unlikely boon that he had obtained from Lord Brahma. He could not be killed by any man or animal. He could not be killed during the day
nor at night. He could not be killed by any weapon. He could not be killed either outside or inside the house. If the gods declared war, he was invincible.
Hiranyakashyapu demanded to know where Vishnu was.
Prahalada with folded palms said, 'Father, Bhagavan Vishnu is all pervading. He is everywhere. There is no place where he is not present.'
‘Is he in this pillar?’ he thundered. 'If he is there, let him come out before I sever your head from your body.'
‘He is, father. He is everywhere, he is in this pillar too,’ said little Prahalada, with complete faith in Vishnu and unafraid of the demon king.
Hiranyakasyapu broke open the pillar with a strike of his mace and Maha Vishnu sprang out of it – in a form no one had seen before.
Vishnu did not let his little devotee down.
Lord Vishnu broke out of the pillar, appearing as Narasimha, with the face of a terrifying lion and body of a man. Lord Brahma's boon no longer could protect the demon. Lord Narasimha was neither a man nor an animal, yet he was half man and half animal. He growled fiercely as walked up to the demon, and all the fourteen worlds shook with his roar. Thunder and lightening struck the entire universe.
The sun had not yet set. It was dusk, the time opportune,
it was neither day nor night. The Lord carried the demon king to the threshold of the house. The demon was now neither inside nor outside the house. He placed the demon on his
lap and with the slightest touch of his sharp nails – needing no weapon – tore
open his belly, killing him instantly.
Prahalada’s faith in Maha Vishnu did not dwindle even for a
fraction of a second. Shri Vishnu did not break his little’s devotee’s faith either.
How strong is your faith in the Supreme?
Our belief and faith are conditioned by the nature of our
soul. If our faith in the Supreme is strong, we can be sure that the one we
trust will never let us down.

Very good word and an equally good story to drive home the point. Faith is what takes us forward. The belief. The trust. If we don't have faith we won't have peace. We have faith in God (the almighty power) and also in people, on whom we depend.
ReplyDelete- Pradeep at Time and Tide
Thank you so much, Pradeep! That faith itself later becomes the basis for complete surrender or sharanagathi.
DeleteWhat a great reminder, for all of us! Faith can move mountains...Very well written, Shubhangi....loving this series and learning so many new things all over again. I trust in the Almighty, with all my heart and soul!
ReplyDeleteThe minute I thought of Faith as the word, the story of Prahalada came to mind. Thank you for your kind words, Esha! let's keep trusting Him and keep moving those mighty mountains!
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