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narada-bhakti-sutrabhaktinaradadevotion

𑌯𑌲𑍍𑌲𑌬𑍍𑌧𑍍𑌵𑌾 𑌪𑍁𑌮𑌾𑌨𑍍 𑌸𑌿𑌦𑍍𑌧𑍋 𑌭𑌵𑌤𑌿

यल्लब्ध्वा पुमान् सिद्धो भवति in Grantha · 𑌗𑍍𑌰𑌨𑍍𑌥

🕉️ hindu·📿 11× repetitions·🕐 During devotional study and contemplation of the Narada Bhakti Sutra, in the early morning or evening·📜 Narada Bhakti Sutra, Sutra 4
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Origin & Story

Narada Bhakti Sutra, Sutra 4 · Attributed to Devarshi Narada · Ancient (classical period of the Bhakti tradition)

Having defined devotion as the supreme love for God, the sage Narada in this sutra proclaims its fruit: the one who attains such devotion becomes perfect, immortal and fully satisfied. The surrounding sutras explain that, having gained this love, the devotee no longer desires anything, grieves over anything, hates anything, delights in trifles or strives restlessly — for he has found the all. This aphorism is therefore cherished as Narada's assurance that the path of love brings the complete and final fulfilment of life.

As told in scripture

The Bhakti scriptures tell that great devotees who attained this supreme love lived in unbroken contentment and fearlessness, untouched by loss or death, because, having found God, they had found everything; their very lives became proof of the sutra's promise that the lover of God becomes perfect, immortal and satisfied.

The Mantra

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𑌯𑌲𑍍𑌲𑌬𑍍𑌧𑍍𑌵𑌾 𑌪𑍁𑌮𑌾𑌨𑍍 𑌸𑌿𑌦𑍍𑌧𑍋 𑌭𑌵𑌤𑌿 𑌅𑌮𑍃𑌤𑍋 𑌭𑌵𑌤𑌿 𑌤𑍃𑌪𑍍𑌤𑍋 𑌭𑌵𑌤𑌿

yal labdhvā pumān siddho bhavati amṛto bhavati tṛpto bhavati

Meaning:जिसे (भक्ति को) प्राप्त करके मनुष्य सिद्ध हो जाता है, अमर हो जाता है, और पूर्ण रूप से तृप्त हो जाता है।

Word-by-Word Meaning

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𑌯𑌤𑍍🔊yatWhich (devotion), that which
𑌲𑌬𑍍𑌧𑍍𑌵𑌾🔊labdhvāHaving attained, having obtained (used after gaining devotion)
𑌪𑍁𑌮𑌾𑌨𑍍🔊pumānA person, a human being, the individual
𑌸𑌿𑌦𑍍𑌧𑌃🔊siddhaḥPerfect, fulfilled, one who has accomplished the goal of life
𑌭𑌵𑌤𑌿🔊bhavatiBecomes, is
𑌅𑌮𑍃𑌤𑌃🔊amṛtaḥImmortal, deathless (freed from death and rebirth)
𑌤𑍃𑌪𑍍𑌤𑌃🔊tṛptaḥFully satisfied, content, wanting nothing more
𑌯𑌲𑍍𑌲𑌬𑍍𑌧𑍍𑌵𑌾🔊yal labdhvāOn attaining which (devotion) — sandhi of yat + labdhvā
𑌸𑌿𑌦𑍍𑌧𑍋 𑌭𑌵𑌤𑌿🔊siddho bhavatiBecomes perfect (attains the very purpose of human existence)
𑌅𑌮𑍃𑌤𑍋 𑌭𑌵𑌤𑌿 𑌤𑍃𑌪𑍍𑌤𑍋 𑌭𑌵𑌤𑌿🔊amṛto bhavati tṛpto bhavatiBecomes immortal, becomes fully content — the threefold fruit of devotion

Benefits of Chanting यल्लब्ध्वा पुमान् सिद्धो भवति

Declares the threefold fruit of devotion: perfection (siddhi), immortality (amrita) and complete satisfaction (tripti).

Assures the devotee that bhakti fulfils the entire purpose of human life.

Frees the heart from craving, for the one who has attained divine love wants nothing more.

Removes the fear of death by promising immortality through devotion.

A foundational sutra recited in the study of the Narada Bhakti Sutra.

Inspires steady devotion by showing its supreme and certain reward.

How to Chant यल्लब्ध्वा पुमान् सिद्धो भवति

Repetitions11times
Best TimeDuring devotional study and contemplation of the Narada Bhakti Sutra, in the early morning or evening
FaceEast or North

Recite this sutra slowly, resting on each of the three results — siddha (perfect), amrita (immortal), tripta (satisfied). Let it assure the heart that the path of love leads to complete fulfilment, so that worship is offered with faith and without anxiety for results. It is best contemplated after the opening sutras that define devotion, as part of a reflective reading of the Narada Bhakti Sutra.

Frequently Asked Questions

This page shows the complete यल्लब्ध्वा पुमान् सिद्धो भवति written in the Grantha script — the same Sanskrit/Hindi verses, transliterated character-by-character so you can read and chant comfortably. Tap any line (or the ▶ button) to hear it recited aloud.
Yes — only the script changes; the words and their meaning are the original. The verse-by-verse meaning, benefits and how-to-chant guidance on this page apply exactly the same.
It means 'on attaining which (devotion) a person becomes perfect, becomes immortal, and becomes fully satisfied.' It is a sutra of the Narada Bhakti Sutra describing the supreme fruit of bhakti.
The sutra names three: the person becomes siddha (perfect, accomplishing the goal of life), amrita (immortal, freed from death and rebirth), and tripta (fully satisfied, wanting nothing more). Devotion is thus shown to give complete and final fulfilment.
Because in attaining supreme love for God the devotee has gained the highest of all things. Having the Lord, there is nothing further to desire, so the heart rests in perfect contentment, free of the restlessness of craving.
Earlier sutras define bhakti as supreme love for God; this sutra states its fruit — that on attaining such love a person becomes perfect, immortal and content. Together they show both what devotion is and what it bestows.

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