Kula-amṛta: Śiva’s Teaching to Nārada on Viṣṇu-Dhyāna and Mokṣa
वाक्यातीतं त्रिकालज्ञं विश्वेशं लोकसाक्षिणम् / सर्वस्मादुत्तमं विष्णुं सदा ध्यायन्विमुच्यते
vākyātītaṃ trikālajñaṃ viśveśaṃ lokasākṣiṇam / sarvasmāduttamaṃ viṣṇuṃ sadā dhyāyanvimucyate
مَن يداوم على التأمّل في فيشنو—الذي يتعالى عن الألفاظ، العالِم بالأزمنة الثلاثة (الماضي والحاضر والمستقبل)، ربّ الكون وشاهد العوالم كلّها، الأسمى فوق كلّ شيء—ينال الخلاص.
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Nitya-dhyāna of the supreme Viṣṇu—beyond speech yet omniscient—destroys bondage and yields liberation.
Vedantic Theme: Nirvacanīyatā/Anirvacanīya-brahman (beyond words) with sākṣitva (witness-consciousness); liberation through steady contemplation on the Supreme.
Application: Daily fixed-time meditation on Viṣṇu with these epithets (vākya-atīta, trikāla-jña, lokasākṣin), using japa + dhyāna and returning attention to the witnessing presence.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.232.16-18 (refrain: sदा ध्यायन् विमुच्यते); Garuda Purana mokṣa-oriented stotras and nāma-dhyāna passages in the same adhyāya context
This verse states that steady, continual meditation on Vishnu—recognized as the supreme, all-knowing witness—leads to liberation (vimukti), making dhyana a direct means to moksha.
Rather than focusing on external conditions, it emphasizes inner alignment: remembrance and meditation on the Supreme Witness dissolves bondage, implying the soul’s release from karmic entanglement and repeated birth.
Maintain daily Vishnu-smaraṇa (remembrance)—through japa, meditation, or mindful recitation—cultivating ethical living and reducing fear and attachment by anchoring the mind in the Supreme.