Viṣṇu as Seed-Cause: Pañcarātra Emanations, Tattva-Unfolding, and the Avatāra Chronology
स एव विष्णुः समभूद्ब्रदर्यां नारायणाख्यः शमलापहश्च / तपस्तप्तुं शिक्षयितुं त्वृषीणां तिरस्कर्तुं ह्यप्सरसां सहस्रम्
sa eva viṣṇuḥ samabhūdbradaryāṃ nārāyaṇākhyaḥ śamalāpahaśca / tapastaptuṃ śikṣayituṃ tvṛṣīṇāṃ tiraskartuṃ hyapsarasāṃ sahasram
ସେଇ ବିଷ୍ଣୁ ତଥା ନାରାୟଣ ନାମେ, ପାପହର ଭାବେ ସେଠାରେ ପ୍ରକଟ ହେଲେ। ତପ କରିବାକୁ, ଋଷିମାନଙ୍କୁ ତପଶିକ୍ଷା ଦେବାକୁ, ଏବଂ ବିଘ୍ନ କରିବାକୁ ଆସିଥିବା ସହସ୍ର ଅପ୍ସରାଙ୍କୁ ତିରସ୍କାର କରି ଦୂର କରିବାକୁ॥
Lord Vishnu (teaching Garuda/Vinatā-putra in the Garuda Purana dialogue frame)
Concept: Tapas and sense-restraint (indriya-nigraha) as a purifier; the Lord as pāpa-hara who models and teaches austerity.
Vedantic Theme: Īśvara as the inner ruler enabling purification (citta-śuddhi) that supports knowledge and devotion.
Application: Cultivate disciplined practice (fasting, vows, meditation) and reduce distraction; treat temptations as tests of steadiness rather than invitations.
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana (Dharma/Moksha-khanda): recurring praise of Nārāyaṇa as pāpa-hara; exhortations to tapas and self-control (general thematic parallels)
The verse presents tapas as a deliberate discipline taught by Nārāyaṇa himself—meant to purify sin (śamala) and strengthen steadiness of mind even amid strong temptations.
By calling Nārāyaṇa “śamalāpaha” (remover of impurity), it links divine embodiment and spiritual practice with the removal of moral/ritual defilement—an underlying theme behind many Garuda Purana instructions on dharma and purification.
Adopt a consistent discipline (tapas) such as daily japa, restraint in consumption, and ethical vows—training the mind to remain steady when distractions arise.