Viṣṇv-ekapūjya-nirṇaya; Gaṅgā-Viṣṇupadī-māhātmya; Kali-yuga doṣa; Puṣkara-dharma of Viṣṇu-smaraṇa
तदुदरमतिवेगात्सम्प्रविश्यावहन्तीं जगदघततिहन्तुः पादकिञ्जल्कशुद्धाम् / निखिलमलनिहन्त्रीं दर्शनात्स्पर्शनाच्च सकृदवगहनाद्वा भक्तिदां विष्णुपादे / शशिकरवरगौरां मीननेत्रां सुपूज्यां स्मरति हरिपदोत्थां मोक्षमेति क्रमेण
tadudaramativegātsampraviśyāvahantīṃ jagadaghatatihantuḥ pādakiñjalkaśuddhām / nikhilamalanihantrīṃ darśanātsparśanācca sakṛdavagahanādvā bhaktidāṃ viṣṇupāde / śaśikaravaragaurāṃ mīnanetrāṃ supūjyāṃ smarati haripadotthāṃ mokṣameti krameṇa
Entrando con gran rapidez en su corriente y dejándose llevar por ella—este río, purificado por el polvillo de los pies del Destructor de los montones de pecado del mundo—borra toda mancha. Con sólo verlo, tocarlo o bañarse en él una sola vez, concede devoción a los pies de Viṣṇu. Quien recuerda a ese río supremamente digno de culto, blanco como el resplandor lunar y de ojos de pez, nacido de los pies de Hari, alcanza gradualmente la liberación.
Lord Vishnu (narrating to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Tīrtha-sevā (darśana/sparśana/snana/smaraṇa) of Gaṅgā as a direct means to inner purification, Viṣṇu-bhakti, and krama-mokṣa.
Vedantic Theme: Śuddhi of antaḥkaraṇa as an aid to bhakti and liberation; grace mediated through sacred presence (tīrtha as upāya).
Application: Visit or mentally recollect Gaṅgā; perform respectful darśana, touch, and snāna with sankalpa for Viṣṇu-bhakti; cultivate remembrance (smaraṇa) daily as a purifier when physical access is absent.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: sacred river/tirtha
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.29 (Gaṅgā-māhātmya context); Garuda Purana Pretakalpa passages where tīrtha/puṇya mitigates pāpa (general thematic link)
This verse presents the river born from Hari’s feet as a direct purifier: even seeing, touching, or bathing once is said to destroy impurities and awaken devotion to Viṣṇu, culminating in gradual liberation.
Liberation is described as krameṇa—attained step by step—through purification and the arising of bhakti at Viṣṇu’s feet, supported by remembrance and contact with the sacred river.
Cultivate remembrance of Hari, practice inner and outer purity, and treat sacred acts (darśana, sparśa, snāna) as supports for ethical living and sustained devotion rather than as mere ritual.