The Glory of the Vāsudeva Hymn: Boons, Japa across the Yugas, and Ascent to Vaikuṇṭha
विष्णुरुवाच । स्तोत्रं पवित्रं परमं पुराणं पापापहं पुण्यमयं शिवं च । धन्यं सुसूक्तं परमं सुजाप्यं निशम्य राजा स सुखी बभूव
viṣṇuruvāca | stotraṃ pavitraṃ paramaṃ purāṇaṃ pāpāpahaṃ puṇyamayaṃ śivaṃ ca | dhanyaṃ susūktaṃ paramaṃ sujāpyaṃ niśamya rājā sa sukhī babhūva
พระวิษณุตรัสว่า ครั้นได้สดับสโตตรนั้นอันบริสุทธิ์ยิ่ง ประเสริฐสูงสุด มีอำนาจตามปุราณะ ขจัดบาป เปี่ยมบุญ และเป็นมงคลแล้ว พระราชาก็มีความสุข สโตตรนั้นเป็นสิริมงคล ถ้อยคำไพเราะ และเป็นยอดแห่งบทสวดที่ควรสาธยายซ้ำๆ
Viṣṇu
Concept: Hearing and repeating a pure hymn is itself a supreme purifier—sin-destroying, merit-filled, and auspicious—bringing immediate inner well-being.
Application: Adopt daily stotra-śravaṇa/japa (even brief): choose a Viṣṇu hymn, listen attentively, repeat with steadiness; treat it as a discipline that reshapes mood and conduct.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Visual Art Cues: {"scene_description":"Viṣṇu speaks with calm authority in a luminous court-like space, while a weary king listens as if a burden has lifted from his chest. The hymn’s words appear as subtle golden syllables drifting like lotus petals, dissolving dark smoke-like traces of sin around the listener and leaving a clear, bright aura.","primary_figures":["Viṣṇu","The king (rājā)","Attendant sages/courtiers (optional, subdued)"],"setting":"A sanctified audience hall that blends temple and celestial aesthetics—pillars with lotus carvings, a small altar lamp, and a distant glimpse of a tīrtha-ghāṭa mural.","lighting_mood":"divine radiance","color_palette":["lotus pink","gold leaf","peacock blue","ivory white","smoky charcoal (dissolving)"],"tanjore_prompt":"Tanjore painting style: Viṣṇu seated with conch and discus implied, speaking blessing; the king kneels with folded hands, golden Sanskrit syllables floating between them; heavy gold leaf on halos, ornaments, and syllable-forms; rich reds/greens, embossed textures, traditional South Indian temple pillars and lotus motifs.","pahari_prompt":"Pahari miniature style: intimate dialogue—Viṣṇu serene, the king softened by relief; delicate golden script motifs like petals; cool blues and warm ochres, refined faces, airy architectural backdrop with lyrical restraint.","kerala_mural_prompt":"Kerala mural style: frontal Viṣṇu with stylized eyes and bold outlines, gesture of teaching; king in añjali; warm yellow-red-green palette, ornamental borders, mantra-syllables as decorative gold forms across the scene.","pichwai_prompt":"Pichwai cloth painting style: central Viṣṇu figure framed by lotus creepers; golden syllables patterned like floral motifs; deep blue ground with gold highlights, symmetrical border, temple-lamp elements and peacocks in corners for auspiciousness."}
Audio Atmosphere: {"recitation_mood":"devotional","suggested_raga":"Yaman","pace":"slow-meditative","voice_tone":"serene","sound_elements":["tanpura drone","soft temple bells","conch shell (distant)","gentle hand-cymbals","quiet breathing pauses"]}
Sandhi Resolution Notes: विष्णुरुवाच = विष्णुः + उवाच (विसर्ग-लोप/उकारादि संधि).
It is described as supremely purifying (pavitra), authoritative/ancient (purāṇa), sin-destroying (pāpāpaha), merit-filled (puṇyamaya), and auspicious (śiva), as well as well-spoken (susūkta) and especially fit for repeated recitation (sujāpya).
By stating that the king became happy upon hearing the stotra, it presents śravaṇa as a direct means to receive auspiciousness, inner uplift, and the fruits of merit associated with sacred praise.
The verse implies that honoring and engaging with sacred speech—especially hymns that praise the divine—purifies conduct and mind, reduces sinful tendencies, and supports a life oriented toward merit and auspicious living.