HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 60Shloka 51
Previous Verse

Vamana Purana — Sin-Destroying Hymn (Part 1), Shloka 51

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

एतत् पवित्रं त्रिपुरध्नभाषितं पठन् नरो विष्णुपरो महर्षे विमुक्तपापो ह्युपशान्तमूर्ति संपूज्यते देववरैः प्रसिद्धैः

etat pavitraṃ tripuradhnabhāṣitaṃ paṭhan naro viṣṇuparo maharṣe vimuktapāpo hyupaśāntamūrti saṃpūjyate devavaraiḥ prasiddhaiḥ

हे महर्षी, त्रिपुरवधकर्त्याने उच्चारलेला हा पवित्र स्तव जो विष्णुपरायण मनुष्य पठण करतो, तो पापमुक्त होऊन शांतस्वभावी होतो आणि प्रसिद्ध श्रेष्ठ देवांकडून पूजिला व सन्मानिला जातो।

Narrative voice addressing ‘Mahārṣi’ within Pulastya’s instruction to Nārada (contextual continuity)
Śiva (Tripuradhna/Tripurāntaka)Viṣṇu
Phalaśruti (benefits of recitation)Pāpa-śamana through stavaŚaiva–Vaiṣṇava unity (Śiva-spoken hymn benefiting Viṣṇu-devotee)Devotional identity (viṣṇu-para)

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

FAQs

Purāṇic stava traditions often cross-sectarian boundaries to assert theological concord: a hymn uttered by Tripuradhna (Śiva) can purify and elevate a Viṣṇu-centered practitioner, signaling shared dharmic efficacy and mutual honoring among deities.

It indicates not merely ritual purity but a transformed inner state—tranquility, reduced agitation, and moral steadiness—presented as the experiential mark of pāpa-release produced by recitation.

As a hyperbolic phalaśruti formula: the reciter gains exceptional esteem, protection, and auspiciousness, portrayed as recognition even by divine beings—an idiom for supreme religious merit and social-spiritual honor.