Pitṛ-Stuti, Tarpaṇa, and the Ritual Power of Recitation in Śrāddha
ततो वर्षशतं दिव्यं तपस्तेपे महामनाः / तत्र स्थितश्चिरं कालं वनेषु नियमस्थितः / आराधनाय स तदा परं नियममास्थितः
tato varṣaśataṃ divyaṃ tapastepe mahāmanāḥ / tatra sthitaściraṃ kālaṃ vaneṣu niyamasthitaḥ / ārādhanāya sa tadā paraṃ niyamamāsthitaḥ
随后,那位大心者修行苦行达一百天界之年。久住林野,安住于戒律与持守之中;为求礼敬,他当时奉行了至上的克制之法。
Lord Vishnu (narrating to Garuda/Vinata-putra in the Garuda Purana dialogue frame)
Concept: Long, regulated tapas (niyama) generates spiritual potency and eligibility for divine response.
Vedantic Theme: Sadhana-chatushtaya support: dama/niyama and titiksha (forbearance) as preparatory virtues; karma-yoga through disciplined observance.
Application: Commit to a time-bound vow (e.g., a vrata/discipline cycle) with clear rules; cultivate consistency over intensity spikes.
Primary Rasa: vira
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Type: forest/ashrama
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: recurring motif of niyama and vrata as means to obtain siddhi/boons; later dharma sections praising restraint
This verse presents tapas, sustained over a long duration, as a core means of inner purification and spiritual power, undertaken specifically to make worship effective and transformative.
By emphasizing niyama (disciplined restraint) and prolonged tapas, the verse points to self-mastery as the foundation for higher realization—suggesting that liberation-oriented progress begins with regulated conduct and sincere worship.
Adopt consistent daily disciplines—truthfulness, moderation, devotional practice, and periodic vows (like fasting or japa)—so worship is supported by conduct, not just intention.