Bhakti-māhātmya: The Marks of the Vaiṣṇava and the Liberating Power of Exclusive Devotion
अज्ञानिनः सुखरे समधिक्षिपन्तो यत्पापिनो ऽपि शिशुपालसुयोधनाद्याः / मुक्तिं गताः स्मरणमात्रविधूतपापाः कः संशयः परमभक्तिमतां जनानाम्
ajñāninaḥ sukhare samadhikṣipanto yatpāpino 'pi śiśupālasuyodhanādyāḥ / muktiṃ gatāḥ smaraṇamātravidhūtapāpāḥ kaḥ saṃśayaḥ paramabhaktimatāṃ janānām
جاہل لوگ بھی بےپروا ہو کر طعن و تشنیع کرتے رہے، اور شِشُپال و سُیودھن جیسے گنہگار بھی—محض اسمِ یاد سے گناہ دھل جانے پر—مکتی کو پہنچ گئے؛ پھر اعلیٰ بھکتی والوں کی نجات میں کیا شک؟
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Even hostile remembrance of the Lord can purify and lead to liberation; therefore, unwavering bhakti certainly leads to mokṣa.
Vedantic Theme: Nāma/smaraṇa as purifier; the Lord’s grace surpassing moral calculus while still affirming bhakti as the highest means; the paradox of ‘dveṣa-bhakti’ (fixation through enmity) yielding liberation by constant absorption.
Application: Cultivate steady remembrance (japa, kīrtan, contemplation); transform negative fixation into conscious devotion; avoid despair over past faults—commit to sincere practice now.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: repeated glorification of Viṣṇu-smaraṇa and nāma as destroyers of pāpa; bhakti as the sure path to liberation
This verse states that even mere remembrance can shake off sins and lead to liberation, highlighting smarana as a powerful devotional practice.
By citing Śiśupāla and Suyodhana, it teaches that contact with the Divine—here framed as remembrance—can burn away sin and culminate in moksha.
Cultivate daily remembrance of Vishnu (japa, nāma-smaraṇa, prayer); it builds devotion and directs life away from harmful actions and fear-based religiosity.