The Description of Kāśī (Kāśī-māhātmya): Avimukta, Kapālamocana, and Śiva’s Purification
यज्ञशिष्टाशिनः काशीकांत ऋद्धिसमन्विताः । नात्र स्नानं प्रशंसंति न जपं न सुरार्चनम् ॥ ६६ ॥
yajñaśiṣṭāśinaḥ kāśīkāṃta ṛddhisamanvitāḥ | nātra snānaṃ praśaṃsaṃti na japaṃ na surārcanam || 66 ||
凡食用祭祀余供者,蒙迦尸所爱且具足福裕者——在此迦尸,他们不再称扬仪式沐浴,不再推崇持咒诵念,也不把礼拜诸天当作别样手段;因为此圣地自身即具无上灵验。
Suta (narrating the Kashi Mahatmya section of the Narada Purana)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: adbhuta
Secondary Rasa: shanta (peace)
It teaches the exceptional sanctity of Kāśī: the tīrtha itself is portrayed as so potent that ordinary auxiliary practices like ceremonial bathing, japa, and separate deva-worship are not emphasized as primary means there.
By downplaying external ritual as the main focus in Kāśī, the verse points toward concentrated inner orientation—faith, surrender, and single-pointed devotion—where the sacred presence of the kṣetra supports direct spiritual attainment.
Ritual-practice hierarchy is implied: snāna (tīrtha bathing), japa (mantra discipline), and arcanā (deva worship) are acknowledged as standard sādhanas, yet the text asserts that in certain kṣetras their relative necessity changes—an applied understanding of ritual context rather than a new Vedāṅga technique.