Nārada’s Hymn to Viṣṇu
Nāradasya Viṣṇu-stavaḥ
व्योमादिभिर्भूषितमात्मसंज्ञं निरंजनं नित्यममेयतत्त्वम् । जगद्विधातारमकर्मकं च परं पुराणं पुरुषं नतोऽस्मि ॥ ३१ ॥
vyomādibhirbhūṣitamātmasaṃjñaṃ niraṃjanaṃ nityamameyatattvam | jagadvidhātāramakarmakaṃ ca paraṃ purāṇaṃ puruṣaṃ nato'smi || 31 ||
我顶礼那至上本初之人——至高的《普罗那》——以虚空等诸宇宙原理为庄严;名为自我,清净无垢,恒常不变,其真实不可量度;为世界之安排者,而又无所作为。
Narada
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: bhakti
Secondary Rasa: shanta
This verse functions as a Vedāntic-style salutation: it identifies the Supreme Person as the inner Self (Ātman), eternally pure and immeasurable, who governs creation without being bound by karma—guiding the reader toward devotion grounded in non-dual spiritual insight.
Bhakti here is expressed as śaraṇāgati (reverent surrender): Narada bows to the Supreme Purusha described with exalted attributes (stainless, eternal, creator yet actionless), teaching that true devotion contemplates God’s transcendence while offering humble obeisance.
No specific Vedāṅga technique (like Vyākaraṇa or Jyotiṣa) is taught in this verse; however, it uses precise cosmological terminology (vyoma and “ādi”) typical of sāṅkhya/vedic creation categories, useful for correctly interpreting Purāṇic cosmology in recitation and study.