Mokṣopāya: Bhakti-rooted Jñāna and the Aṣṭāṅga Yoga of Viṣṇu-Meditation
चराचरात्मके लोके नित्यं चानित्यमेव च । सम्यग् विचारयेद्धीमान्सद्भिः शास्त्रार्थकोविदैः ॥ ४७ ॥
carācarātmake loke nityaṃ cānityameva ca | samyag vicārayeddhīmānsadbhiḥ śāstrārthakovidaiḥ || 47 ||
လှုပ်ရှားသည့်အရာနှင့် မလှုပ်ရှားသည့်အရာတို့ပါဝင်သော ဤလောက၌၊ ပညာရှိသည် သာသနာကျမ်း၏ အဓိပ္ပါယ်မှန်ကို ကျွမ်းကျင်သည့် သုတေသနကောင်းသူများနှင့်အတူ၊ နိစ္စနှင့် အနိစ္စကို မှန်ကန်စွာ ဆင်ခြင်သုံးသပ်သင့်သည်။
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: none
It teaches viveka (discernment): seeing the transient nature of the changing world while recognizing the eternal principle, and doing so through guidance from saintly, scripture-grounded teachers—an essential foundation for moksha.
By emphasizing satsanga and śāstra-artha, it supports bhakti indirectly: devotion matures when one learns from realized devotees and understands what is lasting (the Lord and dharma) versus what is fleeting (worldly attachments).
It highlights śāstra-artha-kovidatva—competence in interpreting scripture correctly, a practical outcome supported by Vedanga disciplines like Vyākaraṇa (grammar) and Nirukta (etymology) for precise meaning.