Brahman Beyond the Elements and the Three States (Turīya) — Dhyāna Leading to Brahma-realization
सर्वगोप्तृ सर्वहन्तृ सर्वभूतात्मरूपि च / बुद्धिधर्मविहीनं वै निराधारं शिवं हरिम्
sarvagoptṛ sarvahantṛ sarvabhūtātmarūpi ca / buddhidharmavihīnaṃ vai nirādhāraṃ śivaṃ harim
พระองค์ทรงเป็นผู้พิทักษ์ทั้งหมดและผู้ทำลายทั้งหมด ทรงเป็นรูปแห่งอาตมันในสรรพสัตว์ แท้จริงทรงเหนือคุณลักษณะของพุทธิและธรรม ไร้ที่พึ่งอื่น เป็นมงคล—พระหริ (วิษณุ).
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Hari is both protector and destroyer, the inner Self of all; beyond buddhi-dharma (conceptual/intellectual attributes), supportless, auspicious.
Vedantic Theme: Paramātman as antaryāmin; transcendence of upādhis (buddhi/guṇa-dharmas); Brahman as ādhāra of all yet itself nirādhāra.
Application: Cultivate fearlessness by seeing the same Self in all; loosen rigid moral/intellectual self-images (buddhi-dharma) while maintaining ethical conduct; meditate on the indwelling Hari as the true ‘I’.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.91.10 (overseer); Garuda Purana 1.91.14 (nirvikāra, vedānta-vedya)
This verse frames Hari as the inner Self (ātman) present in all beings, making devotion and liberation-oriented knowledge converge: realizing the indwelling Lord is central to mokṣa.
By presenting Hari as beyond intellect-based classifications and as the inner Self, it implies that the soul’s highest refuge is not merely ritual merit but realization/surrender to the supreme, independent Lord.
Cultivate ethical living and devotion while remembering the same Self pervades all beings—this reduces harm, strengthens dharma in conduct, and supports a liberation-focused mindset.