Mukti-tattva Upadeśa: Knowledge as the Direct Cause of Liberation
धर्मज्ञानप्रसूनस्य स्वर्गमोक्षफलस्य च / तापत्रयादिसन्तप्तश्छायां मोक्षतरोः श्रयेत्
dharmajñānaprasūnasya svargamokṣaphalasya ca / tāpatrayādisantaptaśchāyāṃ mokṣataroḥ śrayet
El árbol de la mokṣa florece con dharma y conocimiento verdadero, y da por fruto el cielo y la liberación final. Quien es abrasado por las tres aflicciones y otras penas, refúgiese en la sombra de ese árbol de liberación.
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Mokṣa is approached as a living 'tree' nourished by dharma and jñāna; taking refuge in it cools the burning of saṃsāric afflictions.
Vedantic Theme: Tāpatraya-nivṛtti through jñāna grounded in dharma; liberation as the cessation of suffering and establishment in the Self.
Application: Cultivate ethical living (dharma) and discriminative insight (jñāna); when distressed by mental/physical/worldly pains, turn to study, contemplation, and renunciation-oriented practice as refuge.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 2.49.101-104 (guru-upadeśa, antakāla-vairāgya, final duty of tattvajña)
This verse presents dharma and true knowledge as the very “blossoms” that lead to the fruits of higher states—svarga and ultimately moksha—making them foundational disciplines for liberation.
It says that those burned by the threefold afflictions should seek refuge in the “shade” of the moksha-tree—i.e., adopt a liberation-oriented life grounded in dharma and spiritual insight.
Live ethically (dharma), cultivate discernment and study (jñāna), and respond to stress and hardship by aligning daily choices with long-term spiritual freedom rather than short-term impulses.