Lakshmi, the Goddess of Wealth, is welcomed by all. As a consort of
Vishnu, she abides in his heart. When he sleeps on his snake bed, she takes her
place at his feet. She is indispensable to the Lord in his form as sustainer,
for the created world cannot be maintained without wealth. She is often
depicted standing on a red lotus blossom in full bloom, a symbol of Truth – the
source of all wealth. Lakshmi sits at Vishnu’s feet as representative of the
material wealth at his disposal, and she abides in his heart as the bestower of
spiritual wealth.
These descriptions indicate the true nature of material and spiritual
wealth and the means to obtain them. As long as a person craves for material
wealth alone, without caring for the Truth that supports it, he is on the
unsafe foundation. Lakshmi is reputed to be fickle by nature; material wealth
is very elusive and often disappears in no time. If one does not give value to
the Truth, even when one possess wealth, one will not receive satisfaction from
it, because one becomes deluded and confused by the pouring of the waters of
desire (vasanas) over the wealth. The picture of Gaja-Lakshmi surrounded
by elephants pouring water from their trunks indicates this continuous flow of
desire. ‘Gaja’ means elephant; but it is derived from the root gaj,
which means ‘confusing’ or ‘bewildering’. Desires agitate our minds and create confusion.
Whenever Vishnu incarnates on Earth, Lakshmi is also born to serve him in
his earthly tasks. The story of the Ramayana is none other than the story of
Lakshmi and Narayana in their incarnations as Sita and Rama. This epic clearly points
out how the pursuit of material wealth for its own sake leads to the
destruction. Ravana, who kidnapped Sita, thereby separating the Lord from his spouse,
was destroyed in the end; whereas his brother, Vibhishana, who helped return
Sita to Rama, received his blessings and became the king of Lanka.
How can one become endowed with both spiritual and material wealth? A
beautiful story connected with Lord Venkateswara of the Seven Hills illustrates
this. Once the sages wanted to know who was the best among the Trinity – Brahma, Vishnu or Siva. Sage
Bhrigu went first to Brahma, the
Creator. When he arrived, Brahma was in an assembly hall which was full
of wise and learned persons. Having entered it, Bhrigu took a seat without
saluting or greeting the Creator. Brahma’s face grew red at this discourtesy,
but he controlled himself and did not speak out. Bhrigu mentally noted that
Brahma was rajasika by temperament and soon left.
Next, he went to Kailasa, where he encountered Siva dancing with Parvati
in the private hall. When Bhrigu entered without announcing himself Siva became
furious and took his trident to kill the sage. However, Parvati intervened and
prevented him from injuring Bhrigu. Bhrigu noted that Siva was tamasik
in nature.
Continuing his pursuit, he then went to Vaikuntha to find Lord Vishnu asleep
on the snake bed. Pretending to be angry, Bhrigu gave him a hard kick on his chest
for being asleep when his guest entered. Vishnu woke up with a start and found
beside him the raging and fuming sage. Repenting for his rudeness, he began to
massage the foot of Bhrigu, all the while comforting him: “O Sage, please
excuse my inadvertence. Your soft foot must have been terribly hurt when it hit
may hard chest. Please allow me to massage it and reduce the pain”. Bhrigu
noted with satisfaction that Vishnu was sattvika – he was truly great
and the best among the three. However, he did not notice that the cunning
Vishnu, while massaging his foot, had surreptitiously plucked the special eye
from his foot. All would have been well but for one factor – Lakshmi, dwelling
in the heart of Vishnu, felt insulted because Bhrigu has virtually kicked her
when he kicked her abode. She felt irritated by the soft approach of Vishnu in
pacifying the sage, instead of punishing him for his wrongful action.
Disgusted, she left the side of Narayana and came down to Earth to hide herself
beyond his reach.
Bereft of Lakshmi, Narayana became impoverished. Unable to maintain the worlds
or keep up his own good cheer, he became miserable and came down to the earth
to search for her. Making his way to the seven hills, where she was hiding, he
suffered long trials before he discovered her. He wedded her in the form of
Padmavati on the hill where he had attained happiness by reuniting with his
beloved. Lord Venkateswara is the riches of all deities. He receives the
maximum offerings from his devotees. Known to be the fulfiller of desires, he also
has the power to remove distress of any kind.
The story illustrates how to attain inner and outer glory, both of which are
the expressions of Lakshmi. When a
person becomes a ‘Bhrigu’, that is ‘a shining intellect’, he will begin probing
into the three gunas that are responsible for the existence of the worlds:
rajoguna creates, tamoguna kills and sattvaguna sustains.
The world is a movement in the space-time continuum; hence, it is called ‘pada’
in Sanskrit- padyate iti padah – that which goes is pada. An eye
on the movement, or pada, reveals to Bhrigu the true nature of the
world. Once the discovery is made, the eye will no longer be on the movement;
thus the story states that the ‘eye’ on his foot (pada also means foot)
was removed by Vishnu. The person becomes calm and quiet, unmoved by the moving
world of the three gunas.
Lakshmi stands with gold coins spilling form one hand, but she offers the
lotus with another – an offering to cultivate the nobler emotions and
sentiments of the heart. When one chooses the inner wealth, she lays all else
at one’s feet.
*The article is by Pujya Swamini Saradapriyananda. Taken from
Tapovan Prasad, November, 2013 issue. Tapovan Prasad is a CCMT publication.
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