Dāna-vidhi: Pātra-nirṇaya, Go-dāna-mahima, and Rules of Acceptance
श्रान्तसंवाहनं रोगिपरिचर्या सुरार्चनम् / पादशौचं द्विजोच्छिष्टमार्जनं गाप्रदानवत्
śrāntasaṃvāhanaṃ rogiparicaryā surārcanam / pādaśaucaṃ dvijocchiṣṭamārjanaṃ gāpradānavat
تدليكُ المُتعَب وترويحُه، وخدمةُ المريض وتمريضُه، وعبادةُ الآلهة، وغسلُ أقدامِ أهلِ الاستحقاق، وتنظيفُ ما بقي بعد طعامِ البراهمة—كلُّ ذلك يُعَدّ كأجرِ هبةِ بقرة.
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue to Garuda/Vinatā-putra)
Concept: Sevā, śauca, and devārcana—especially compassionate care—can equal the merit of major donations; dharma is accessible through service.
Vedantic Theme: Karma-yoga orientation: sanctifying action through humility and service; purification of mind via selfless care.
Application: Prioritize hands-on service: care for sick, support caregivers, maintain cleanliness in shared spaces, and practice respectful hospitality.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Type: household/temple/service settings (sickroom, shrine, dining area)
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.98 (equating various meritorious acts with go-dāna)
This verse equates compassionate acts—soothing the tired and nursing the sick—with high-merit gifts like cow-donation, showing that practical compassion is a prime source of puṇya.
By highlighting acts that generate puṇya (merit), it implies that ethical service and worship strengthen one’s auspicious karmic balance, which the Purana connects with better post-death outcomes and reduced suffering.
Regularly help the exhausted, care for the ill, keep a discipline of worship, and practice respectful cleanliness and service toward elders/teachers—treating these as serious spiritual duties, not minor courtesies.