Eulogy of the Sun-god in the Purāṇas

Sūrya is indeed a natural phenomenon that is deified as deity in the
Purāṇas following the Vedic tradition. Due to his immense power, the deity
is eulogized with great importance right from Vedic times. The Vedic texts
were familiar with the eulogy of the deity with different traits. But in
the Purāṇas, some other modes of worshipping the deity were developed, and
along with the recitation of the mantras dedicated to the Sun, these modes
of worship also have introduced. The deity is worshipped as one of the five
prominent deities in the Purāṇas.

The Sun-god is worshipped as a sectarian deity in the Purāṇas. The worship
of the Sun in the Purāṇic period has given rise to independent cult called
the Saura-cult. The glimpses of the sectarianism relating to the Saura-cult
can be observed in the two Epics, the Rāmāyaṇa and the Mahābhārata.

The Rāmāyaṇa informs about a region on the mountain Cakravān, where,
Viśvakarmā installed a cakra, i.e. the Sun-god having one thousand spokes,
i.e. the thousand rays of the deity:

caturbhāge samudrasya cakravānnāma parvataḥ/

tatra cakrasahasrāraṃ nirmitaṃ viśvakarmaṇā//

The Viśvedevas, Maruts, Vasus and other gods worshipped the Sun-god there,
and the hill was always blessed with the grace of the Sun. Again, a
reference is found in the Rāmāyaṇa about the ascetic Sun-worshippers, those
resided near the river Mandākinī, who adored the deity with arms upwards.
The Mahābhārata has referred to the thousand and eight numbers of the
Sun-worshippers met with in the camp of the Pāṇḍus.

Due to his prominence as an atmospheric deity, the Sun-god has been
worshipped right from the Vedic age. The numerous aspects of the deity have
given rise to independent forms of the Sun, e.g. Sūrya, Savitṛ, Mitra,
Varuṇa, Dakṣa, etc., in the Vedic pantheon. Of these, Mitra, Varuṇa, Dakṣa,
etc., have constituted a special class of gods, called the Ādityas. The
Ṛgvedasaṃhitā primarily mentions the six Ādityas, viz. Mitra, Aryaman,
Bhaga, Varuṇa, Dakṣa and Aṃśa, which have developed elsewhere as eight, and
finally have numbered as the twelve Ādityas, and have been identified as
the twelve months of the year.

They are called Ādityas, as because they are born from the Aditi, the
divine mother:

ādityaḥ eva tāvat kasmāt āditya ucyate…aditeḥ putra iti vā/

aditirdevamātā tasyāḥ putraḥ/

soʹyamāditeyaḥ sannāditya ityucyate/

The tradition of worshipping the Sun-god in his various forms is maintained
in the Epic and the Purāṇic period. The different epithets and
characteristics of the deity have given rise in the post-Vedic period
different forms of the Sun. In the Yuddhakāṇḍa of the Rāmāyaṇa, Rāma was
advised by the sage Agastya to worship and satisfy the Sun-god with the
recitation of the Ādityahṛdaya. The Ādityahṛdaya is mentioned as the old
mystery, i.e. guhyaṃ sanātanam, by which the enemies can be conquered in
the battlefield. In the hymn, the Sun-god is eulogized with his various
names, e.g. Āditya, Savitṛ, Sūrya, Khaga, Pūṣan, Bhānu, Divākara,
Haridaśva, Saptasapti, Śambhū, Tvaṣṭṛ, Mārtaṇḍa, Aṃśumān, Hiraṇyagarbha,
Śiśira, Tapana, Ahaskara, Ravi, Agnigarbha, Kavi, etc Again, in the
Mahābhārata, one hundred and eight names of the Sun-god are specified. They
are, Sūrya, Aryaman, Bhaga, Tvaṣṭṛ, Pūṣan, Arka, Savitṛ, Ravi, Aja, Kāla,
Mṛtyu, Kha, Śukra, Budha, Prabhākara, Indra, Vivasvat, Soma, Viṣṇu, Rudra,
Skanda, Tejasāṃpati, Dharmadhvaja, etc. All these hundred and eight names
of the Sun direct different aspects and activities of the deity. The
tradition of worshipping the deity in his one hundred and eight names is
continued up to the Purāṇas, and moreover, somewhere in the Purāṇic texts,
they are mentioned as more than thousand.

Along with such development, gradually, the Vedic approach of worshipping
the Sun-god also has become changed. The Rāmāyaṇa refers to the
Sandhyopāsanā, in worship of the deity In the Mahābhārata, along with the
invocations or hymns or the mantras, the deity is worshipped with the
offerings of arghya, flower-garlands and scents and with vows and fasts,
and ascetic penances of various kinds. The mighty king Saṃvaraṇa
worshipping Sūrya with all these articles achieved his daughter Tapatī, as
the reward of his devotion. All these modes of worshipping the Sun-god have
fully developed in the Purāṇic period, and in the Purāṇas, the deity is
found worshipped as an independent deity with different modes and
appellations.

K Rajaram  IRS  27/28/1/24

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