Gradations of Bliss and Knowledge; Lakṣmī’s Special Insight; The Rarity of Bhakti in Kali-yuga; Nīlā’s Vow and Śrīnivāsa Darśana
संस्कारात्प्रथमं चाहमं गनाभ्यः समावृणे / ओमित्युक्तः पुनर्वाक्यमुवाच मधुसूदनः
saṃskārātprathamaṃ cāhamaṃ ganābhyaḥ samāvṛṇe / omityuktaḥ punarvākyamuvāca madhusūdanaḥ
Una, bilang bahagi ng saṃskāra, ako’y nararapat na napalibutan at napangalagaan ng mga banal na tagapaglingkod. Pagkasambit ng “Om,” muling nagsalita si Madhusūdana (Panginoong Viṣṇu) ng mga salitang ito.
Narrator (introducing Lord Vishnu/Madhusudana’s speech)
Concept: Saṃskāra and mantra establish sacred order; ‘Om’ as the auspicious preface to divine instruction.
Vedantic Theme: Praṇava as the sonic symbol of Brahman; ritual purity as a support for receiving higher teaching.
Application: Begin study, vows, or worship with centering (praṇava/japa) and create a protected, distraction-free sacred space.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: ritual enclosure (saṃskāra space)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 3.19.67 (Madhusūdana’s ensuing assurance)
This verse marks “Om” as the formal invocatory utterance that sanctifies the setting and signals the beginning/continuation of authoritative teaching, linking discourse to sacred rite (saṃskāra).
It functions as a transition line: after ritual sanctification and the utterance of Om, Lord Vishnu (Madhusūdana) resumes speaking—typical of Purāṇic dialogue structure where instruction is introduced with sacred preliminaries.
Begin serious study, japa, or śrāddha-related recitation with a mindful “Om” and a brief sanctifying intention (saṃkalpa), treating spiritual instruction as a consecrated act rather than casual speech.