Āhnika-Dharma: Dawn Purification, Sandhyā-Upāsanā, Tarpana, Pañca-Mahāyajñas, and Aśauca Rules
आत्मतीर्थमिति ख्यातं सेवितं ब्रह्मवादिभिः / क्षीरवृक्षसमुद्भूतं मालतीसम्भवं शुभम्
ātmatīrthamiti khyātaṃ sevitaṃ brahmavādibhiḥ / kṣīravṛkṣasamudbhūtaṃ mālatīsambhavaṃ śubham
এটি ‘আত্মতীর্থ’ নামে প্রসিদ্ধ এবং ব্রহ্মবাদী মহর্ষিগণ দ্বারা আশ্রিত। এটি ক্ষীরবৃক্ষ থেকে উদ্ভূত, মালতী থেকে জন্ম নেওয়া, স্বভাবতই মঙ্গলময়।
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda)
Concept: The highest tīrtha is the Self—approached by Brahmavādins; purity is rooted in inner realization rather than mere external travel.
Vedantic Theme: Ātman as the ultimate refuge and purifier; inner sacred geography superseding outer rites when knowledge dawns.
Application: Treat daily contemplation/self-inquiry as ‘inner pilgrimage’; cultivate sāttvika surroundings (fragrance, cleanliness) to support steadiness.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: symbolic inner pilgrimage-site; also garden/forest imagery (milky tree, mālatī)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.50.12 (mānasa snāna = ātma-vedana)
This verse presents Ātma-tīrtha as a highly auspicious sacred locus, esteemed enough to be frequented by Brahman-realization teachers, implying strong purificatory and contemplative value.
By naming the place ‘Ātma-tīrtha’ (a ‘tīrtha of the Self’) and associating it with Brahmavādins, the verse frames tīrtha-sevana as supportive of Self-knowledge and Brahman-oriented contemplation.
Approach sacred places (or any ritual act) with the intention of inner purification and self-inquiry—seeking the ‘tīrtha’ within, not merely external merit.