Jāmbavatī’s Vaiṣṇava-Ācāra: Grace, Sense-Consecration, and Pilgrimage to Śrīnivāsa on Veṅkaṭādri
जपादीनां कुर्वतां पापनाशो विष्णोर्ध्यानात्सद्य एवाधनाशः / अनुसंधानाद्रहितं सर्वमेव कृतं व्यर्थमेवेति चाहुः
japādīnāṃ kurvatāṃ pāpanāśo viṣṇordhyānātsadya evādhanāśaḥ / anusaṃdhānādrahitaṃ sarvameva kṛtaṃ vyarthameveti cāhuḥ
行持持咒(japa)等法者,罪业得以消灭;观想毗湿奴主(dhyāna),贫困立刻除尽。然而人们说,若无内在的系念与相续观照(anusaṃdhāna),所作一切,终究皆为徒然。
Lord Vishnu (teaching Garuda/Vinata-putra in the Preta Kanda discourse)
Concept: Ritual and repetition (japa) purify, meditation on Vishnu removes poverty swiftly, but without anusaṃdhāna (continuous inner recollection/intentional awareness), practice is vain.
Vedantic Theme: Antahkarana-shuddhi and ekagrata: outer action must be yoked to inner awareness; otherwise karma becomes mechanical and loses transformative power.
Application: During japa/puja, keep a steady thread of meaning: name-form-quality of Vishnu, breath awareness, and intention; reduce multitasking; review mind-wandering and return to remembrance.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana: repeated stress on Vishnu-smarana as purifier and on sincerity (bhava) over mere form
This verse states that without anusandhana—continuous mindful connection to the deity/meaning—any ritual act (including japa) becomes fruitless, even if outwardly performed.
It distinguishes outcomes: japa and related practices destroy sins, while meditation on Vishnu is said to remove poverty immediately—yet both require inner attentiveness to be truly effective.
Do japa or prayer with focused remembrance: keep the meaning and the presence of Vishnu in mind; avoid mechanical repetition by returning attention to the mantra and intention.