Jñāna-hetu-nirūpaṇa
On the Causes/Means of Knowledge
नाडीं समाविश्य तदा विरिञ्चो न वेद नारायणमेकवच्च / तदा शृणोत्तं कमलासनं प्रभुस्तपस्तप द्व्यक्षरं सादरेण
nāḍīṃ samāviśya tadā viriñco na veda nārāyaṇamekavacca / tadā śṛṇottaṃ kamalāsanaṃ prabhustapastapa dvyakṣaraṃ sādareṇa
Então Virincha (Brahmā), ao entrar na nāḍī (canal sutil), não conseguiu reconhecer Nārāyaṇa como o Uno. Nesse momento o Senhor instruiu, com reverência, o Brahmā assentado no lótus, por meio do mantra de duas sílabas: “Faze tapas—tapas.”
Lord Narayana (Vishnu)
Concept: Without inner purification/discipline, even Brahma may not recognize Narayana’s oneness; the Lord prescribes tapas with a two-syllabled mantra as the means to realization.
Vedantic Theme: Sadhana as prerequisite for aparoksha-jñāna; mantra-tapas as upaya; ekatva-darśana of Narayana.
Application: Adopt disciplined practice (japa/tapas) under right intention; use concise mantra practice with reverence and steadiness to deepen recognition of the One.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: subtle-body locus
Related Themes: 3.12.11 (Brahma performs tapas); 3.12.12 (Vishnu manifests and grants boon)
The verse presents tapas as the Lord’s direct instruction to Brahmā—an essential discipline for clarity, realization, and the unfolding of cosmic knowledge.
By mentioning entry into a nāḍī, the verse frames perception and recognition of the Supreme as linked to subtle-body processes, implying that realization may be obscured or revealed through inner spiritual states.
Adopt steady self-discipline—regular meditation, mantra-japa, and ethical restraint—performed with reverence, as a modern form of tapas aimed at inner clarity and devotion.