HomeVamana PuranaAdh. 69Shloka 16
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Vamana Purana — Merit of the Vamana Purana, Shloka 16

The Merit of Hearing and Reciting the Vamana Purana (Phalaśruti)

त्रिसंध्यं च पठन् शृण्वन् सर्वपापप्रणाशनम् असूयारहितं विप्र सर्वसम्पत्प्रदायकम्

trisaṃdhyaṃ ca paṭhan śṛṇvan sarvapāpapraṇāśanam asūyārahitaṃ vipra sarvasampatpradāyakam

ప్రాతః, మధ్యాహ్నం, సాయంకాలం—త్రిసంధ్యలలో పఠించడం, శ్రవించడం సమస్త పాపాలను నశింపజేస్తుంది. ఓ విప్రా, అసూయలేక చేసినప్పుడు అది సర్వసంపదలను ప్రసాదిస్తుంది.

Unspecified in the provided excerpt (within Adhyaya 69’s didactic discourseaddressed to a ‘vipra’)
Vishnu
Nitya-karma (daily religious discipline)Tri-sandhyā observancePaṭhana and Śravaṇa as purificatory actsRemoval of pāpa (sin)Asūyā (envy/fault-finding) as an obstacle to spiritual fruitProsperity (sampat) as a dharmic result

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

FAQs

They are the daily transitional times—dawn, midday, and dusk—traditionally used for sandhyā-vandana and related recitation. Purāṇic texts treat these liminal periods as especially potent for purification and for stabilizing daily dharma through regular practice.

Asūyā is a subtle ethical impurity: disparaging the speaker, the text, other listeners, or the rite itself. The verse teaches that inner hostility undermines the receptivity required for śravaṇa/paṭhana to yield its promised fruits.

In Purāṇic idiom, ‘sarva-pāpa-praṇāśana’ primarily indicates strong purification and removal of impediments, often leading to prosperity and eligibility for higher aims. Liberation (mokṣa) typically requires sustained realization-oriented practice in addition to such purificatory disciplines.