शुद्धे त्रिषवणस्नातस्त्रिरात्रोपोषितो द्विजः / सेतुबन्धे नरः स्नात्वा मुच्यते ब्रह्महत्यया
śuddhe triṣavaṇasnātastrirātropoṣito dvijaḥ / setubandhe naraḥ snātvā mucyate brahmahatyayā
O duas-vezes-nascido, em pureza, que se banhou nas três sandhyā (aurora, meio-dia e crepúsculo) e jejuou por três noites—ao banhar-se em Setubandha, o homem é libertado do pecado de brahma-hatyā (matar um brāhmaṇa).
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Prāyaścitta: disciplined bodily and mental purification, combined with tīrtha-snāna, can attenuate/neutralize heavy pāpa and restore dharmic standing.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-śuddhi as preparation for jñāna/bhakti; the mind becomes fit (adhikāra) through tapas and niyama.
Application: Adopt structured repentance: fasting/abstinence, daily purification practices, and pilgrimage/service as part of ethical repair—paired with sincere resolve not to repeat harm.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Type: tīrtha (sea-shore/bridge-sacred zone)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: prāyaścitta and tīrtha-snāna passages for mahāpātakas (general internal thematic linkage)
This verse presents Setubandha as a powerful tīrtha where ritual bathing, supported by purity and disciplined fasting, functions as prāyaścitta (atonement) even for grave sins.
It links karmic burden (mahāpātaka like brahma-hatyā) with remedial dharma—purity, repeated sandhyā-bathing, and fasting—showing that intentional purification practices can lessen obstructive karma that binds the jīva.
Adopt disciplined purification: regular sandhyā practice, periodic fasting with ethical restraint, and sincere pilgrimage/holy bathing as a supplement to repentance, restitution, and non-harming conduct.