Threefold Suffering, Twofold Knowledge, and the Definition of Bhagavān (Vāsudeva); Prelude to Keśidhvaja–Janaka Yoga
अविद्यातरुसंन्भूतं बीजमेतद्द्विधा स्थितम् । पंचभूतात्मके देहे देही मोहतमोवृत्तः ॥ ८७ ॥
avidyātarusaṃnbhūtaṃ bījametaddvidhā sthitam | paṃcabhūtātmake dehe dehī mohatamovṛttaḥ || 87 ||
Ang binhing ito, na sumibol mula sa punò ng kamangmangan (avidyā), ay nananatili sa dalawang anyo. Sa katawang binubuo ng limang elemento, ang may-katawan ay kumikilos sa ilalim ng pagkalito at kadiliman (tamas).
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in Moksha-Dharma context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: none
It identifies ignorance (avidyā) as the root “seed” of bondage and explains that embodiment in the five-element body easily places the self under delusion (moha) and inertia/darkness (tamas), which sustains saṃsāra.
By pointing to moha and tamas as the operating forces in embodied life, it implicitly supports bhakti as a purifying discipline: devotion to Vishnu steadies the mind, reduces tamasic delusion, and turns the seeker toward clarity (sattva) and liberation.
No specific Vedanga (like Vyakarana, Jyotisha, or Kalpa) is directly taught in this verse; the practical takeaway is philosophical discrimination—recognizing the five-element body as a field where tamas and moha arise, prompting disciplined sādhana.