Brahmāṇḍa-Āvaraṇa Nirūpaṇa, Virajā-Setu, and Prākṛta–Vaikṛta Sṛṣṭi
ते सर्वे विरजानद्यां सम्यक् स्नात्वा विसर्ज्य च / लिङ्गदेहं ततः पश्चान्मोक्षं विन्दन्ति ते हरेः
te sarve virajānadyāṃ samyak snātvā visarjya ca / liṅgadehaṃ tataḥ paścānmokṣaṃ vindanti te hareḥ
તેઓ બધા વિરજા નદીમાં વિધિપૂર્વક સ્નાન કરીને, પછી લિંગદેહ (સૂક્ષ્મ દેહ)નો ત્યાગ કરે છે; ત્યારબાદ હરિનું મોક્ષ પ્રાપ્ત કરે છે.
Lord Vishnu (narrating to Garuda)
Afterlife Stage: Moksha
Concept: Snāna in Virajā and abandonment of the liṅga-deha culminate in mokṣa that is ‘of Hari’ (Hari-sambandhī mukti).
Vedantic Theme: Transcending subtle-body identification; liberation as cessation of upādhis and entry into the Lord’s state/abode.
Application: Cultivate detachment from subtle identifications (ego, vāsanā); practice Hari-smaraṇa and sattvic purification so that at the end there is effortless ‘casting off’ of the subtle body.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: transcendent river/tīrtha-boundary
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: liṅga-śarīra discussions in Pretakalpa/Mokṣa passages; Garuda Purana: Vaikuṇṭha/Hari-loka descriptions where liberation is framed as reaching Hari
In this verse, bathing in the Virajā symbolizes final purification at the end of the post-death journey, enabling the soul to relinquish the subtle body and move toward liberation.
It presents a culminating step: after proper purification (Virajā-snāna), the jīva abandons the liṅga-deha (the subtle body that carries impressions) and then attains Hari’s moksha.
Live and practice in a way that reduces attachment and karmic residue—devotion to Hari and inner purification are emphasized as the conditions that ultimately support freedom from the subtle-body identity.