The Explanation of Sandhyā and Related Daily Observances
Saṅdhyā-ādi Nitya-karma-Vidhi
दीपिका रेचिका चापि मोचिका च पराभिधा । सूक्ष्मासूक्ष्मामृता ज्ञानामृता चाप्यायिनी तथा ॥ १४१ ॥
dīpikā recikā cāpi mocikā ca parābhidhā | sūkṣmāsūkṣmāmṛtā jñānāmṛtā cāpyāyinī tathā || 141 ||
Beliau juga disebut Dīpikā (Penerang), Recikā (Penyuci/Pengosong), Mocikā (Pembebas), dan Parā (Yang Tertinggi). Demikian pula, (Beliau dikenali sebagai) Sūkṣmā (Yang Halus), Asūkṣmāmṛtā (Nektar melampaui yang halus), Jñānāmṛtā (Nektar Pengetahuan), serta Āpyāyinī (Yang Menyuburkan).
Sanatkumara (in dialogue context with Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
The verse lists traditional epithets that describe mantra/inner spiritual power by its functions—illumination, purification, liberation, subtlety, and nourishment—showing that one reality is approached through multiple experiential names.
While framed in technical vocabulary, the names imply devotional transformation: the Divine (or Divine mantra) ‘illumines’ the heart, ‘purifies’ tendencies, and ‘liberates’ the devotee—core outcomes of Vishnu-bhakti even when taught through mantra-śāstra language.
It reflects mantra-śāstra/vedāṅga-style classification: assigning precise names to subtle effects (illumination, cleansing, nourishment), useful for disciplined recitation, contemplation, and understanding how mantras are described in technical traditions.