Tīrtha-Māhātmya: Catalog of Sacred Places and the Supreme Inner Tīrtha
कृते शौचे मुक्तिदं च शार्ङ्गधारी तदन्तिके / विरजं सर्वदं तीर्थं स्वर्णाक्षं तीर्थमुत्तमम्
kṛte śauce muktidaṃ ca śārṅgadhārī tadantike / virajaṃ sarvadaṃ tīrthaṃ svarṇākṣaṃ tīrthamuttamam
کرت یُگ میں شَؤچ کے قریب شَارنگ دھاری بھگوان مُکتی داتا کے طور پر جلوہ فرما ہیں۔ پاس ہی ویرجا—ہر نعمت دینے والا بے داغ تیرتھ—اور سُورن آکش نامی اُتم تیرتھ ہے۔
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Divine presence sanctifies place and time; remembrance of Viṣṇu (Śārṅgadhārī) and approach to pure tīrthas yields comprehensive welfare (sarvada).
Vedantic Theme: Smṛti of Bhagavān as purifier; kṣetra as upāya supporting bhakti that matures toward śānti and liberation-eligibility.
Application: Anchor pilgrimage in Viṣṇu-smaraṇa (especially Śārṅgadhārī), keep śauca (outer/inner cleanliness), and combine snāna with nāma-japa and dāna.
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: tīrtha cluster/kshetra vicinity
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.81 (tīrtha-kathana; yuga-linked sanctity motif)
This verse presents them as exceptionally potent pilgrimage-fords—Virajā as ‘stainless’ and ‘all-bestowing,’ and Svarṇākṣa as ‘supreme’—highlighting tīrtha-yātrā as a means of purification and spiritual attainment.
It explicitly calls the Śārṅga-bearer ‘muktida’ (giver of liberation), implying that proximity to Viṣṇu and engagement with sanctifying sacred spaces are linked with release from bondage.
Treat pilgrimage and sacred practice as inner cleansing: combine devotion (Viṣṇu-smaraṇa), ethical purity (śauca), and disciplined worship—so the ‘tīrtha’ becomes both an outer visit and an inner transformation.