HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 60Shloka 50
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Vamana Purana — Sin-Destroying Hymn (Part 1), Shloka 50

The Second Sin-Destroying Hymn (Pāpaśamana Stava) and the Syncretic Praise of Hari-Hara

केशवस्याग्रतो गत्वा स्नात्वा तीर्थे सितोदके उपशान्तस्तथा जातो रुद्रः पापवशात् ततः

keśavasyāgrato gatvā snātvā tīrthe sitodake upaśāntastathā jāto rudraḥ pāpavaśāt tataḥ

["Stuti (devotional praise)", "Pāpa-nāśana (removal of sin)", "Nāma-smaraṇa (invocation through divine epithets)", "Bhakti as purification"]

Narrative voice within Pulastya’s discourse to Nārada (continuing context from Adhyaya 60)
Viṣṇu (Keśava)Śiva (Rudra)
Tīrtha as purifier (snāna-mahima)Pāpa-śamana (removal/appeasement of sin)Śaiva–Vaiṣṇava convergence (Rudra pacified at Keśava-associated tīrtha)

{ "primaryRasa": "adbhuta", "secondaryRasa": "shanta", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

The verse frames Sitodaka as a tīrtha whose snāna (ritual bath) produces upaśama—pacification of inner disturbance and the quelling of pāpa’s effects. In tīrtha-mahātmyas, bathing is the primary act that converts a geographic site into a lived soteriological practice.

The phrasing is best read as a mythic-idiomatic statement: even Rudra, when engaged in a fierce or punitive mode ‘under the sway of pāpa’ (i.e., in relation to sin’s consequences in the world), becomes appeased at this place. It magnifies the tīrtha’s power rather than imputing ordinary moral fault to the deity.

It explicitly names Sitodaka as a distinct tīrtha/water-body and implicitly anchors it to a Keśava locus (a shrine or sacred presence), indicating a pilgrimage node defined by both hydrology (the water) and cult (Keśava).