HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 59Shloka 77
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Vamana Purana — Sarasvata Hymn to Vishnu, Shloka 77

The Sarasvata Hymn to Vishnu (Vishnu-Pañjara) and the Redemption of a Rakshasa

पुण्यपापविनिर्मुक्ता यं प्रविश्य पुनर्भवम् न योगिनः प्राप्नुवन्ति तमस्मि शरणं गतः

puṇyapāpavinirmuktā yaṃ praviśya punarbhavam na yoginaḥ prāpnuvanti tamasmi śaraṇaṃ gataḥ

{"location": "Saro-tīrtha (Sarasvatī–Kurukṣetra tīrtha-cycle context)", "location_type": "tirtha", "region": "Kurukṣetra-kṣetra, Sarasvatī-pradeśa", "sacred_significance": "Tīrtha-stuti that frames the Lord as creator through Brahmā-form; reinforces tīrtha as a site for contemplating cosmic origins.", "cosmic_realm": "bhuloka"}

Unspecified in the provided excerpt (stuti voice within the Saro-māhātmya narrative frame).
Vishnu
Mokṣa (freedom from rebirth)Transcending puṇya and pāpa (beyond karmic duality)Yogic attainment and its culminationŚaraṇāgati

{ "primaryRasa": "shanta", "secondaryRasa": "karuna", "rasaIntensity": 0, "emotionalArcPosition": "", "moodDescriptors": [] }

FAQs

Both merit (puṇya) and sin (pāpa) are forms of karma that yield results within saṃsāra. Liberation is described as transcending karmic accounting altogether—going beyond dualities that keep one within the cycle of reward and consequence.

Purāṇic diction allows layered meanings: entering can signify attaining the Lord’s supreme state (parama-pada), abiding in His presence, or realizing identity/union in a Vedāntic sense. The decisive marker here is the result: no return to punarbhava (rebirth).

By referencing yogins, the verse underscores that even the highest disciplined practitioners culminate in the same final refuge: the Supreme Lord. It also elevates the stuti’s claim—this refuge is not merely for ordinary devotees but is the consummation of yogic striving.