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Shloka 6

जपयोगयोः तुल्यफलनिर्णयः

Adhyāya 193: Adjudication of the Comparable Fruits of Japa and Yoga

मोक्षाश्रमं यक्षरते यथोक्तं शुचि: सुसंकल्पितमुक्तबुद्धि: । अनिन्धन ज्योतिरिव प्रशान्तं स ब्रह्मलोकं श्रयते मनुष्य:

bharadvāja uvāca | mokṣāśramaṁ yakṣarate yathoktaṁ śuciḥ susaṅkalpitamuktabuddhiḥ | anindhana-jyotir iva praśāntaṁ sa brahmalokaṁ śrayate manuṣyaḥ ||

Dijo Bharadvāja: Quien, purificado, con firme resolución y con la mente liberada del apego, practica la disciplina del mokṣa-āśrama (la vida de renuncia, saṃnyāsa) exactamente como la enseñan las escrituras, alcanza el mundo de Brahmā: sereno y luminoso, como un fuego que arde sin combustible.

{'mokṣāśramam''the āśrama (stage/discipline) oriented to liberation
{'mokṣāśramam':
renunciant order (saṁnyāsa)', 'yathoktam''as stated
renunciant order (saṁnyāsa)', 'yathoktam':
according to instruction (scriptural prescription)', 'śuciḥ''pure
according to instruction (scriptural prescription)', 'śuciḥ':
cleansed (externally and internally)', 'su-saṅkalpita''well-resolved
cleansed (externally and internally)', 'su-saṅkalpita':
properly oriented in intention', 'mukta-buddhiḥ''one whose mind/intellect is freed (from attachment, delusion, grasping)', 'anindhana-jyotiḥ': 'a light/flame without fuel
properly oriented in intention', 'mukta-buddhiḥ':
self-sustaining radiance', 'iva''like
self-sustaining radiance', 'iva':
as', 'praśāntam''fully pacified
as', 'praśāntam':
stilled', 'brahmalokam''Brahma-world
stilled', 'brahmalokam':
realm/state associated with Brahman/Brahmā (highest spiritual attainment in this context)', 'śrayate''resorts to
realm/state associated with Brahman/Brahmā (highest spiritual attainment in this context)', 'śrayate':
takes refuge in', 'manuṣyaḥ''a human being
takes refuge in', 'manuṣyaḥ':

भरद्वाज उवाच

B
Bharadvāja
M
mokṣāśrama (saṁnyāsa)
B
brahmaloka
A
anindhana-jyoti (fuel-less flame/light)

Educational Q&A

Liberation-oriented life (mokṣāśrama/saṁnyāsa) succeeds through purity, freedom of intellect from attachment, and living exactly by the prescribed discipline; the result is a serene, self-sustaining spiritual radiance culminating in brahmaloka.

In Śānti Parva’s instruction on dharma and liberation, Bharadvāja describes the fruit of properly practiced renunciation: the renunciant who follows the scriptural method with a purified, unattached mind attains the tranquil Brahma-world, likened to a flame that shines without fuel.