The Second Sin-Destroying Hymn (Pāpaśamana Stava) and the Syncretic Praise of Hari-Hara
यज्ञध्वज नमस्तुभ्यं धर्मध्वज नमो ऽस्तु ते तालध्वज नमस्ते ऽस्तु नमस्ते गरुहध्वज
yajñadhvaja namastubhyaṃ dharmadhvaja namo 'stu te tāladhvaja namaste 'stu namaste garuhadhvaja
{"bhagavata_parallel": "Bhāgavata Purāṇa 8.23 (aftermath: Lord’s supremacy and unconquered nature; victory over pride)", "vishnu_purana_parallel": "Viṣṇu Purāṇa 6.7 (Puruṣottama doctrine); also Vaikuṇṭha descriptions in 2.6", "ramayana_connection": null, "mahabharata_echo": "Bhagavad Gītā 15.18 (Puruṣottama); jaya-victory acclamations in epic battle liturgies", "other_puranas": ["Padma Purāṇa (Vaikuṇṭha-māhātmya)", "Skanda Purāṇa (Kurukṣetra māhātmya parallels)"], "vedic_reference": "Ṛgveda 1.154 (Viṣṇu’s supreme station; victory through cosmic stride as background)"}
{ "primaryRasa": "vira", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }
Purāṇas frequently equate Viṣṇu with yajña: He is the recipient, inner essence, and sustaining power of sacrificial order. Calling Him “Yajñadhvaja” makes sacrifice itself His defining ‘standard,’ aligning ritual order with divine sovereignty.
It is a hallmark Vaiṣṇava epithet: Viṣṇu is ‘marked by Garuḍa’ on His banner, signaling His identity as the Lord who rides Garuḍa and whose presence dispels obstacles and affirms protection. It also distinguishes Him iconographically from other deities in multi-deity narratives.
Not always. ‘Palm-bannered’ appears across Sanskrit traditions as a banner-epithet; in this stuti it functions as one among several dhvaja-compounds emphasizing the Lord’s emblematic supremacy. Without additional surrounding verses specifying a particular mythic episode, it is best treated as a poetic honorific rather than a precise narrative identifier.