एतत्सारं योगिनां ध्यानरूपं भक्तिग्राह्यं श्रद्धया चिन्तयेच्च । चातुर्मास्ये जन्मकोट्यां च जातं पापं दग्ध्वा मुक्तिदः कैटभारिः
etatsāraṃ yogināṃ dhyānarūpaṃ bhaktigrāhyaṃ śraddhayā cintayecca | cāturmāsye janmakoṭyāṃ ca jātaṃ pāpaṃ dagdhvā muktidaḥ kaiṭabhāriḥ
Dies ist das wahre Wesen: die Gestalt der Meditation der Yogins, durch Bhakti erfassbar; man soll es mit Glauben betrachten. In der Zeit des Cāturmāsya verbrennt Kaiṭabhāri (Viṣṇu) die Sünden, die sich über Krore von Geburten angesammelt haben, und schenkt Befreiung.
Skanda (deduced from Adhyāya continuity before Brahmā’s speech begins at v.43)
Type: kshetra
Scene: A devotee-yogin seated in meditation during the rainy-season Cāturmāsya, visualizing Viṣṇu as Kaiṭabhāri; a haloed Viṣṇu burns karmic darkness like fire consuming soot, with tīrtha waters and lamps nearby.
Faithful contemplation of the mantra-essence—through yoga and devotion—purifies even ancient karmic burdens and leads to liberation.
The verse emphasizes a sacred time (Cāturmāsya) more than a named location; no specific tīrtha is stated here.
Contemplate (cintayet) the essence with śraddhā, especially during Cāturmāsya; implied practices include japa and dhyāna.