Maṅgalācaraṇa, Naimiṣāraṇya-Sabhā, Sūta-Āhvāna, and Narada Purāṇa-Māhātmya
यो नाम जात्यादिविकल्पहीनः परः पराणां परमः परस्मात् । वेदान्तवेद्यः स्वजनप्रकाशः समीड्यते सर्वपुराणवेदैः ॥ ६७ ॥
yo nāma jātyādivikalpahīnaḥ paraḥ parāṇāṃ paramaḥ parasmāt | vedāntavedyaḥ svajanaprakāśaḥ samīḍyate sarvapurāṇavedaiḥ || 67 ||
其圣名本离一切分别,如出生、种姓等;祂超越一切超越者,为诸至上之至上,高于最高。祂可由吠檀多而知,并对自身的奉爱者自显光明;一切《往世书》与诸吠陀皆赞颂祂。
Suta (narrating the Narada Purana context; invocatory praise of the Supreme, identified as Vishnu/Narayana in Purāṇic usage)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It establishes the Supreme Lord as beyond social and ontological categories (birth, caste, conceptual distinctions) and affirms that authentic knowledge of Him arises through Vedānta and devotional self-revelation, validated by both Veda and Purāṇa.
By calling Him “svajanaprakāśa”—self-manifest to His own—this verse teaches that the Lord is ultimately known not merely by argument but by grace and intimacy with devotees, a core Purāṇic principle of Vishnu-bhakti.
The verse points to Vedānta (Upaniṣadic culmination of Vedic study) as the decisive means of knowing the Supreme; it does not directly teach a specific Vedāṅga technique (like Vyākaraṇa or Jyotiṣa) but frames scriptural authority as Veda + Purāṇa.