Adhyaya 0 — Opening Benediction and Invocation of Narayana, Sarasvati, and Vyasa
यद्योगिभिर्भवभयार्तिविनाशयोग्यम् आसाद्य वन्दितमतीव विवक्तचित्तैः ।
तद्वः पुनातु हरिपादसरोजयुग्मम् अविर्भवत्क्रमविलङ्घितभूर्भुवः स्वः ॥
yadyogibhir bhavabhayārtivināśayogyam āsādya vanditam atīva vivaktacittaiḥ |
tad vaḥ punātu haripādasarojayugmam avirbhavat-kramavilaṅghita-bhūr-bhuvaḥ-svaḥ ||
愿哈利(毗湿奴)那一双莲华之足净化汝等——瑜伽行者以深沉内摄之心与明辨之智所证得并礼敬者,能摧灭由畏惧轮回而生的苦恼;且当其显现时,一步跨越 Bhūḥ、Bhuvaḥ、Svaḥ 三界之境。
Liberation is portrayed as the cessation of saṃsāra-born fear and distress through steady attainment (āsādya) and reverent contemplation (vandita) of the supreme refuge. The emphasis on vivakta-citta suggests disciplined discrimination and interior withdrawal as prerequisites for transformative devotion.
This verse functions as maṅgalācaraṇa (an auspicious invocation) rather than one of the five pancalakṣaṇa topics (sarga, pratisarga, vaṃśa, manvantara, vaṃśānucarita). It is a conventional preface establishing spiritual authority and auspiciousness before entering purāṇic narration.
Hari’s ‘stride’ transcending Bhūḥ–Bhuvaḥ–Svaḥ evokes the Vāmana/Trivikrama symbolism: the Supreme is beyond all conditioned planes of experience. For yogic reading, ‘lotus-feet’ indicate the stable locus of meditation; transcending the three worlds signifies surpassing waking, dreaming, and deep sleep (or gross, subtle, causal levels) toward the unconditioned.