maitreya uvÄca
evaá¹ hiraṇyÄká¹£am asahya-vikramaá¹
sa sÄdayitvÄ harir Ädi-sÅ«karaḥ
jagÄma lokaá¹ svam akhaṇá¸itotsavaá¹
samÄ«á¸itaḥ puá¹£kara-viá¹£á¹arÄdibhiḥ
maitreyaḥ uvÄca - ÅšrÄ« Maitreya said; evam - thus; hiraṇyÄká¹£am - HiraṇyÄká¹£a; asahya-vikramam - very powerful; saḥ - the Lord; sÄdayitvÄ - after killing; hariḥ - the Supreme Personality of Godhead; Ädi-sÅ«karaḥ - the origin of the boar species; jagÄma - returned; lokam - to His abode; svam - own; akhaṇá¸ita - uninterrupted; utsavam - festival; samÄ«á¸itaḥ - being praised; puá¹£kara-viá¹£á¹ara - lotus seat (by Lord BrahmÄ, whose seat is a lotus); Ädibhiḥ - and the others.
The Lord is spoken of herewith as the origin of the boar species. As stated in the VedÄnta-sÅ«tra (1.1.2), the Absolute Truth is the origin of everything. Therefore it is to be understood that all 8,400,000 species of bodily forms originate from the Lord, who is always Ädi, or the beginning. In Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ Arjuna addresses the Lord as Ädyam, or the original. Similarly, in the Brahma-saá¹hitÄ the Lord is addressed as Ädi-puruá¹£am, the original person. Indeed, in Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ (10.8) the Lord Himself declares, mattaḥ sarvaá¹ pravartate: “From Me everything proceeds.â€
In this situation the Lord assumed the shape of a boar to kill the demon HiraṇyÄká¹£a and pick up the earth from the Garbha Ocean. Thus He became Ädi-sÅ«kara, the original boar. In the material world a boar or pig is considered most abominable, but the Ädi-sÅ«kara, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, was not treated as an ordinary boar. Even Lord BrahmÄ and the other demigods praised the Lord’s form as a boar.
This verse confirms the statement in Bhagavad-gÄ«tÄ that the Lord appears as He is from His transcendental abode for the sake of killing the miscreants and saving the devotees. By killing the demon HiraṇyÄká¹£a He fulfilled His promise to kill the demons and always protect the demigods headed by BrahmÄ. The statement that the Lord returned to His own abode indicates that He has His own particular transcendental residence. Since He is full of all energies, He is all-pervasive in spite of His residing in Goloka Vá¹›ndÄvana, just as the sun, although situated in a particular place within the universe, is present by its sunshine throughout the universe.
Although the Lord has His particular abode in which to reside, He is all-pervasive. The impersonalists accept one aspect of the Lord’s features, the all-pervasive aspect, but they cannot understand His localized situation in His transcendental abode, where He always engages in fully transcendental pastimes. Especially mentioned in this verse is the word akhaṇá¸itotsavam. Utsava means “pleasure.†Whenever some function takes place to express happiness, it is called utsava. Utsava, the expression of complete happiness, is always present in the Vaikuṇá¹halokas, the abode of the Lord, who is worshipable even by demigods like BrahmÄ, to say nothing of other, less important entities such as human beings.
The Lord descends from His abode to this world, and therefore He is called avatÄra, which means “one who descends.†Sometimes avatÄra is understood to refer to an incarnation who assumes a material form of flesh and bone, but actually avatÄra refers to one who descends from higher regions. The Lord’s abode is situated far above this material sky, and He descends from that higher position; thus He is called avatÄra.