Bhṛgu is mentioned in the
Shiva Purana and the
Vayu Purana, where he is shown present during the great
yajna of
Daksha (his father-in-law). He supports the continuation of the
Daksha yajna even after being warned that without an offering for
Shiva, it was asking for a catastrophe for everyone present there. In the
Tattiriya Upanishad, he is described to have had a conversation with his father Varuni on
Brahman. In the
Bhagavad Gita,
Krishna says that among sages, Bhrigu is the representative of the opulence of
God.
Testing the Trimurti The
Bhagavata Purana describes a legend in which sages gathered at the bank of the river
Sarasvati to participate in a great
yajna. The gathered sages could not decide who among the
Trimurti (supreme trinity) of Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva was pre-eminent and should be the recipient of the
yajna. They deputed Bhrigu to determine this answer. Upon being entrusted with the task, Bhṛgu decided to test each of the Trimurti. He first visited Brahma at
Satyaloka, and to test his patience, he refused to sing in his praise or prostrate before him. Brahma grew angry, but realised that his son was testing him and allowed him to pass. Bhṛgu left for
Kailasha, the abode of Shiva. Upon seeing the sage, Shiva rose to his feet and moved forward with great joy to embrace the sage. Bhṛgu, however, refused the embrace, and tested him by calling the deity a maligner of social conventions and rituals. Shiva was infuriated and prepared to strike the sage with his
trident, but was calmed by his consort,
Parvati. The sage then travelled to the abode of Vishnu,
Vaikuntha. Vishnu was resting his head on the lap of
Lakshmi when the sage arrived. Bhṛgu kicked Vishnu on the chest to wake him up, enraged by the perceived insult. Vishnu woke up, greeted Bhṛgu, and starts massaging his feet, regarding his chest to have been sanctified due to its contact with the sage's foot. Overpowered with emotion, Bhṛgu went back to the sages and declared
Vishnu to be the greatest among the Trimurti. According to some traditions, Vishnu's consort
Lakshmi grew angry at him because the chest was considered as Lakshmi's place (
vakshasthala) and left Vaikuntha to be born on earth. She was found on a lotus flower, and was raised by Bhrigu and his wife Khyati, which is why another name of Lakshmi is Bhargavi, daughter of Bhṛgu. Since she was found on a lotus, she is also called Padmavati. A variation of this is the legend behind
Tirupati, in which a furious Lakshmi is born as Padmavati on earth and Vishnu assumes the form of
Srinivasa and
Venkateswara. ==Associated sites ==