श्री वेङ्कटेश प्रपत्तिः — Benefits & How to Chant
श्री वेङ्कटेश प्रपत्तिः
Complete guide to chanting correctly for maximum benefit
Benefits of Chanting श्री वेङ्कटेश प्रपत्तिः
Expresses complete surrender (prapatti/saranagati) at the feet of Lord Venkateswara
Invokes the grace of both Lakshmi and Vishnu, as the hymn begins by seeking the Goddess's intercession
Believed to grant the Lord's protection and freedom from the fears of worldly existence
Deepens loving devotion through detailed meditation on the Lord's sacred feet
Recited daily at Tirumala, it connects the devotee to the living temple tradition
The final verse instills the highest aspiration
to belong wholly to the Lord and never to oneself
How to Chant श्री वेङ्कटेश प्रपत्तिः
Instructions
Sit facing an image of Venkateswara after bathing. Begin by meditating on Goddess Lakshmi (verse 1), then recite the fifteen verses of surrender, dwelling on the Lord's feet with each refrain 'śrī-veṅkaṭeśa-caraṇau śaraṇaṃ prapadye'. At Tirumala it follows the Suprabhatam and Stotram and precedes the Mangalasasanam. Conclude with the sixteenth verse as a prayer to be the Lord's eternal servant.
Spiritual Significance
It is a cherished belief at Tirumala that the Lord Himself, whose right hand points downward toward His own feet (the varada-hasta of the moolavar deity), is forever inviting every soul to take refuge there; the surrendered devotee who recites this Prapatti is held to be eternally accepted and protected, freed from the fear of samsara.
Origin & History
Source: Sri Venkatesa Suprabhatam corpus, recited daily at the Tirumala temple
Author: Traditional (part of the Suprabhatam–Stotram–Prapatti–Mangalasasanam sequence attributed to Prativadi Bhayankaram Annangaracharya); the fifteenth verse honours Sri Manavala Mamuni
The Prapatti forms the surrender portion of the daily liturgy of Lord Venkateswara at Tirumala. After the Lord is awakened by the Suprabhatam and extolled by the Stotram, the devotee performs prapatti — casting himself in total surrender at His feet — before concluding with the Mangalasasanam. The hymn's loving, detailed contemplation of the Lord's feet, beginning with the Goddess as intercessor, embodies the very heart of the Sri Vaishnava doctrine of saranagati.