Veṅkaṭācala Māhātmya: Bhakti-Lakṣaṇa, Nārasiṁha-tīrtha, and the Secret Darśana-Vidhi of Śrīnivāsa
सहस्रसूर्याधिककान्तिकान्तः सविद्युत्त्वान्मानुषाणां रमेशः / ऋष्यादीनां दृश्यते चन्द्रवच्च सन्मानुषाणामपरोक्षो हरिस्तु
sahasrasūryādhikakāntikāntaḥ savidyuttvānmānuṣāṇāṃ rameśaḥ / ṛṣyādīnāṃ dṛśyate candravacca sanmānuṣāṇāmaparokṣo haristu
ဟရီ (ဗိဿနု) သည် နေတစ်ထောင်၏ အလင်းထက်ပင် တောက်ပ၍ မိုးကြိုးလျှပ်စီးကဲ့သို့ ရောင်လက်သည်။ သာမန်လူတို့အတွက် ထိုသခင်သည် ဝေးကွာသကဲ့သို့ ဖြစ်သော်လည်း၊ ရှင်ရသီတို့နှင့် ထိုကဲ့သို့သူတို့အတွက် လမင်းကဲ့သို့ ထင်ရှားစွာ မြင်ရပြီး၊ သီလဂုဏ်မြင့်သူတို့အတွက် ဟရီကို တိုက်ရိုက်သိမြင်ခြင်း (အပရောက္ခ) ဖြစ်၏။
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Perception of God varies with inner purity and qualification: for the unrefined He is remote; for ṛṣis He is as evident as the moon; for the truly sādhus He is aparokṣa (immediate).
Vedantic Theme: Aparokṣānubhūti as the culmination of sādhana; gradation of adhikāra (manda/madhyama/uttama) and the role of sattva-śuddhi.
Application: Cultivate sattva through discipline, truthfulness, and devotion; seek sādhus and śāstra; move from conceptual belief to lived, immediate remembrance and ethical nobility.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.24.10-11 (further gradation of visibility; Kali-yuga misperception)
This verse states that Hari is not merely an object of belief; for the truly virtuous (sat-mānuṣa) He becomes aparokṣa—directly evident—showing that inner purity and dharma mature into immediate spiritual knowing.
It contrasts three levels: ordinary people experience the Lord as remote; sages perceive Him clearly (like the moon); and the genuinely noble realize Him directly—implying that spiritual refinement changes perception.
Cultivate dharma, truthfulness, and devotion with steady practice; the teaching is that ethical living and inner purification make spiritual insight more immediate rather than merely conceptual.