Gāruḍa-Māhātmya and Tārkṣya-Stotra: Fruits of Hearing/Reciting and the Power of Garuḍa’s Praise
सूताच्छ्रुत्वा शौनकस्तुनौमिषे मुनिभिः क्रतौ / अहं ब्रहेति संध्यायन्मुक्तोभूद्गरुडध्वजात्
sūtācchrutvā śaunakastunaumiṣe munibhiḥ kratau / ahaṃ braheti saṃdhyāyanmuktobhūdgaruḍadhvajāt
سوت سے سن کر، نَیمِش کے مُنیوں کے یَجْن سَتر میں شونک نے سَندھیا کے وقت ‘اَہَم برہْم’ کا دھیان کیا اور گَروڑ دھوج بھگوان وِشنو کی کرپا سے موکش پا لیا۔
Sūta (narrator) recounting the result for Śaunaka at Naimiṣāraṇya
Concept: Liberation arises through Brahma-jñāna (‘ahaṃ brahma’) supported by śravaṇa and sealed by Bhagavat-prasāda (Garuda-dhvaja Viṣṇu).
Vedantic Theme: Mahāvākya-realization and jīvanmukti/kaivalya framed within bhakti-compatible grace (prasāda) theology.
Application: Maintain sandhyā-time contemplation; practice disciplined listening to śāstra, then nididhyāsana on non-duality while cultivating devotion to Viṣṇu as the giver of steadiness and release.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: forest-tirtha / sacrificial ground (यज्ञशाला)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana (contextual): Naimiṣa-saṃvāda framing passages; mokṣa-by-jñāna sections; Viṣṇu-nāma and prasāda motifs recurring across Uttara-khaṇḍa/Upadeśa portions (edition-dependent).
In this verse it is presented as a liberating contemplation: meditating on the truth “I am Brahman” leads to moksha when grounded in right hearing (śravaṇa) and sustained reflection.
It outlines a concise path: hearing sacred instruction (from Sūta), practicing contemplative meditation at the proper time (sandhyā), and attaining release by the Lord’s grace (Garuḍadhvaja, Viṣṇu).
Regularly study authentic scripture, keep a daily meditation discipline (especially at dawn/dusk), and cultivate God-centered remembrance—aiming for inner detachment and ethical living aligned with dharma.