Matsya Purana
Matsya Purana
Matsya Purana
CONTENTS
-> Purana
-> Introduction
-> Story
-> Conclusion
-> References
PURANA
The oldest puranas date from the middle of the first
millennium B.C., but the basic texts that have come down to us
appeared chiefly in the second half of the first millennium. The most
valuable, by literary and historical considerations, are the
Markandeya Purana, Vayu Purana, Vishnu Purana, Bhagavata Purana,
and Matsya Purana. Depending on which god the purana is dedicated
to, there are Vishnuite, Saiva, and Brahmanic puranas, but, as a
whole, they express the basic religious, social, and ethical principles
of Hinduism.
In content and form, the puranas resemble ancient Indian epic
poetry. They present cosmogonic legends, myths about the origins of
all creatures, and the genealogy of the gods, divine sages, and
legendary dynasties. The ethical and metaphysical ideas of the
puranas influenced most of the philosophers of medieval India. Poets
and dramatists also used the myths of the puranas in their works.
The Bhagavata Purana, in which the cult of ecstatic love for god
(bhakti) is preached and legends about the life of Krishna are retold,
has especially influenced religious and literary traditions in the
modern Indian languages.
INTRODUCTION
STORY
Along with Brahma, the creator and Shiva, the destroyer, Lord
Vishnu is one of the three main male deities in Hinduism and they
are together known as the TRIMURTI. Being a part of the Trinity, He
has taken ten incarnations and the ten Avatars of Lord Vishnu or the
Dashavatara are the several forms He took whenever the universe
was in turmoil. Each of Vishnu’s Avatars had the same purpose which
they achieved by different means. This divine purpose was the
restoration of Dharma or righteousness and to save the planet and
the good people from the hands of evils, demons or Asuras.
It is said that, during the Satya Yuga, the people on earth had become
irreligious and disorderly in the way they lived their lives. This is
when the Gods collectively decided to flood the earth and prepare it
for the process of renovation. Lord Brahma, the creator, had been
given the guidelines to remodel the earth by Lord Vishnu. These
guidelines were the Vedas, the four principle books of Hinduism.
Lord Brahma decided to rest before this grand task as he was quite
tired from the process of creation.At this time, a horse-headed
demon named Hayagriva ( not t be confused with Lord Hayagriva, the
avatar of Vishnu who is considered as a symbol of wisdom and
knowledge) came out of Brahma’s nose and stole the Vedas from him.
Then Hayagriva went and hid himself deep in the oceans of the earth.
Meanwhile, a pious king named Satyavrata who was a great admirer
of Lord Vishnu, regularly worshipped Lord Vishnu and wished to
meet Him. So Lord Vishnu decided to pay a visit to Manu.
Satyavrata,the king of pre-ancient Dravida and a devotee of
Vishnu, who later was known as Manu was washing his hands in a
river when a little fish swam into his hands and pleaded with him to
save its life. He put it in a jar, which it soon outgrew. He then moved
it to a tank, a river and then finally the ocean but to no avail. The fish
then revealed himself to be Vishnu and told him that a deluge would
occur within seven days that would destroy all life. The fish told
Manu that at the end of Kali yug, the mare who lived at the bottom of
the ocean would open her mouth to release a poisonous fire. This
very fire will burn the whole universe, Gods, constellations and
everything. The seven clouds of doomsday would then flood the earth
until everything was a single ocean. Therefore, the fish instructed
Satyavrata to build an ark to take “all medicinal herbs, all the
varieties of seeds, and accompanied by the seven saints” along with
the serpent Vasuki and other animals. As the time of the flood
approached, Manu’s ark was complete. As the flood swept over the
land, Manu asked Vishnu why mankind had to meet such a deadly
fate to which Matsya Vishnu told Manu that he was the only moral
man alive and that he would be the father of the future generations of
men. Matsya killed Hayagriva and returned the Vedas to Brahma.
Then he tied himself to Manu’s ark using Vasuki as a rope and
protected them from the storm and the floods. When the storms
ended and the water subsided, Matsya Vishnu left Manu and the
others at the Himalayas, where they could begin human civilization
again.
CONCLUSION
REFERENCES: