Bali’s Worship of Sudarshana and Prahlada’s Teaching on Vishnu-Bhakti
पृथिव्यां यानि तीर्थानि पुण्यान्यायतनानि च तानि सर्वाण्यवाप्नोति विष्णोर्नामानुकीर्तनात्
pṛthivyāṃ yāni tīrthāni puṇyānyāyatanāni ca tāni sarvāṇyavāpnoti viṣṇornāmānukīrtanāt
ด้วยการสวดสรรเสริญพระนามของพระวิษณุซ้ำแล้วซ้ำเล่า ย่อมได้รับบุญผลครบถ้วนเสมือนบำเพ็ญ ณ ตีรถะทั้งปวงและสถานศักดิ์สิทธิ์อันเป็นที่ตั้งแห่งบุญทั้งหมดบนแผ่นดิน
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It does not negate pilgrimage; it asserts an equivalence of merit: sincere nāma-kīrtana can confer the same tīrtha-phala that would otherwise require extensive travel. This is a common Purāṇic strategy to universalize access to dharma when pilgrimage is difficult.
Āyatana literally means a ‘seat’ or ‘abode’; in Purāṇic usage it can include temples, sanctified groves, hermitages, and other consecrated loci of merit. The verse groups these with tīrthas to cover both ‘crossing-places’ (rivers/ghāṭas) and ‘holy seats’ (shrines).
Because the divine name is presented as a portable, ever-available locus of sanctity. The merit associated with many places is ‘collected’ into a single practice, making sacred geography spiritually accessible without physically traversing it.