Harihara Revelation and the Kurukshetra Tirtha Cycle: Sthanu in Vishnu and the Sanctification of Saptasarasvata
ज्ञानाधिरमशेषेण शेषपापं जयेत् ततः शारीरं वाचिकं यत् तु मानसं कायिकं तथा
jñānādhiramaśeṣeṇa śeṣapāpaṃ jayet tataḥ śārīraṃ vācikaṃ yat tu mānasaṃ kāyikaṃ tathā
ثمّ، بالابتهاج بالمعرفة على التمام، ينبغي قهرُ ما تبقّى من الإثم. (الفعل/الإثم) منه ما هو جسدي، ولفظي، وذهني؛ وكذلك ما هو بدنيّ الفعل (kāyika).
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In Purāṇic dharma passages, jñāna spans both: disciplined understanding of dharma/ātma-tattva and the inward assimilation that reforms conduct. The phrase ‘aśeṣeṇa’ (completely) suggests not mere information but transformative absorption that burns ‘residual sin’ (śeṣa-pāpa).
Many dharma taxonomies distinguish ‘bodily’ as the locus (śārīra) and ‘kāyika’ as enacted deeds (karma) as opposed to mere condition. The verse appears to emphasize that purification must address both embodiment and action, alongside speech and mind.
The teaching implies a fourfold audit of conduct during pilgrimage/worship: restrain bodily harm and indecorum, purify speech, discipline the mind, and correct outward actions. Knowledge (jñāna) is presented as the integrating force that makes ritual and yātrā genuinely purificatory.