Gradations of Bliss and Knowledge; Lakṣmī’s Special Insight; The Rarity of Bhakti in Kali-yuga; Nīlā’s Vow and Śrīnivāsa Darśana
संस्कारात्प्रथमं चाहमं गनाभ्यः समावृणे / ओमित्युक्तः पुनर्वाक्यमुवाच मधुसूदनः
saṃskārātprathamaṃ cāhamaṃ ganābhyaḥ samāvṛṇe / omityuktaḥ punarvākyamuvāca madhusūdanaḥ
সংস্কারের প্রথম পর্যায়ে আমি দেবগণ দ্বারা যথাবিধি আবৃত (রক্ষিত) হলাম; আর “ওঁ” উচ্চারিত হলে মধুসূদন পুনরায় বাক্য বললেন।
Narrator (introducing Lord Vishnu/Madhusudana’s speech)
Concept: Saṃskāra and mantra establish sacred order; ‘Om’ as the auspicious preface to divine instruction.
Vedantic Theme: Praṇava as the sonic symbol of Brahman; ritual purity as a support for receiving higher teaching.
Application: Begin study, vows, or worship with centering (praṇava/japa) and create a protected, distraction-free sacred space.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: ritual enclosure (saṃskāra space)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.19.67 (Madhusūdana’s ensuing assurance)
This verse marks “Om” as the formal invocatory utterance that sanctifies the setting and signals the beginning/continuation of authoritative teaching, linking discourse to sacred rite (saṃskāra).
It functions as a transition line: after ritual sanctification and the utterance of Om, Lord Vishnu (Madhusūdana) resumes speaking—typical of Purāṇic dialogue structure where instruction is introduced with sacred preliminaries.
Begin serious study, japa, or śrāddha-related recitation with a mindful “Om” and a brief sanctifying intention (saṃkalpa), treating spiritual instruction as a consecrated act rather than casual speech.