Janaka Instructs Śuka: Āśrama-Sequence, Guru-Dependence, and Marks of Liberation
भावितैः कारणैश्चार्यं बहुसंसारयोनिषु । आसादयति शुद्धात्मा मोक्षं हि प्रथमाश्रमे ॥ २२ ॥
bhāvitaiḥ kāraṇaiścāryaṃ bahusaṃsārayoniṣu | āsādayati śuddhātmā mokṣaṃ hi prathamāśrame || 22 ||
أيها المبجَّل، بأسبابٍ مُهذَّبةٍ ومُنمّاةٍ على وجهٍ حسن (رياضاتٍ صحيحة) تراكمت عبر ولاداتٍ كثيرة في دوّامة السَّمْسارا، فإن النفس الطاهرة تنال الموكشا حقًّا—حتى في الأشرمَة الأولى من الحياة.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in the Moksha-dharma dialogue)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It teaches that moksha is not bound to age or social stage; when the inner self is purified by rightly cultivated causes (sādhana) carried over many lives, liberation can arise even in the first āśrama.
While not naming bhakti explicitly, it supports a core bhakti principle: steady cultivation of purifying practices over time (such as remembrance, worship, and surrender) ripens the heart, making liberation possible even early in life.
The verse emphasizes āśrama-dharma (life-stage discipline) and the practical principle of kāraṇa (effective means): sustained training and purification—supported by right conduct and study—are treated as the operative causes for moksha.