Saṃsāra-duḥkha: Karmic Descent, Garbhavāsa, Life’s Anxieties, Death, and the Call to Jñāna-Bhakti
तस्मात्संसारदावाग्नितापार्तो द्विजसत्तम । अभ्यसेत्परमं ज्ञानं ज्ञानान्मोक्षमवान्पुयात् ॥ ३९ ॥
tasmātsaṃsāradāvāgnitāpārto dvijasattama | abhyasetparamaṃ jñānaṃ jñānānmokṣamavānpuyāt || 39 ||
Por tanto, oh el mejor de los dos veces nacidos, quien es atormentado por el ardor del incendio forestal del saṃsāra debe cultivar con diligencia el conocimiento supremo; por el conocimiento, en verdad, se alcanza la liberación (mokṣa).
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
It frames saṁsāra as a consuming forest-fire and prescribes parama-jñāna (supreme spiritual knowledge) as the direct remedy, declaring jñāna to be the means that culminates in mokṣa.
This verse primarily teaches jñāna-yoga, but in the Narada Purana’s larger framework, such knowledge matures into single-pointed God-oriented understanding and dispassion—conditions that support steady Vishnu-bhakti even when the verse itself does not explicitly name devotion.
No specific Vedanga (like Vyākaraṇa, Jyotiṣa, or Śikṣā) is taught here; the practical takeaway is disciplined abhyāsa—regular cultivation of liberating knowledge through study, reflection, and contemplation.